OCR Text |
Show I Will Movie SJIster Covenant ft Nothing Less Exclusion of the ait Counties, brch 14. A settlement pie rule dlff lenity ap-n ap-n little advanced by liniment's great con-IJlflteritea con-IJlflteritea and, taking both political parties llqe, the deudlock to-; to-; Immovable aB before t'fl conciliatory offer o house of commons f the Ulster covenant that nothing less than ccluslon of the Protest-UlBtor Protest-UlBtor from the Irish Dublin instead of tho r option will bo con- fl covenantors demand ujMUsion of the four coun-trmngh. coun-trmngh. Londonderry ityHirfiich the Protestants iMty. but they want the 1L1K nlster excluded. tyLmhey say, would bo tho comrades in counties bKe are in tho minority, tlnSMSon to their covenant. itJBOarson, leader of the ttysBij .sent a message to ? ? llBrpreparationfl ore con- a!2Wouncement of the gov-tfBning, gov-tfBning, necessitates a still ugM)vement this year. Wo ttfHrice good in action all Waiving and preparing for JflBitwo years." JMtX side, tho government uflpr iat promier Ab- iJjjBe the absolulo limit of m,Kis Qt a basis for fur- " iMffrat lord of tho British rtBrn nt BrRJforJ York- ?$no that in principle I : details that it ia tho f majesty's government Make. ' ' lussoll, who is a close ler Asquith, writing in ilily Post, of which ho pices a differont view. SVithout Ulster. cal. clubs, everybody is ."Premier Ascjuith has n mind to let tho Na-Siafc Na-Siafc sooner or later ho Wedmond that tho only He is ono with the on- Ulster." .,.Ut newspapers declare yMiimli Mm Tiinli Nation- alist loader in the houso of commons, and his colleagues could not possibly support a bill containing furthor surrenders sur-renders from tho original scheme of home rule. Some of the Nationalist organs bitterly denounce the Nationalist, members for submitting to Premier Asquith As-quith 's terras. Littlo talk is now heard that the Orangomon's preparations to fight are a gigantic bluff. The covenanters claim to have 090,000 men drilling in Sir Edward Ed-ward Carson 'b army, with 00,000 rifles and Bomo pieces of artillery. The London newspapers are filled with pictures of Ulster men in Chilian clothes and with riflo and cartridge bolts, executing skirmish drills like trained soldiors. Churchill's Comment. Mr. Churchill, in commenting today in his Bradford address on the preparations prepara-tions being made in Ulster to resist nomo ruie. saiu: "The first British soldier or coast Snard who is attacked and killed by io Orangomcn, will raiso such an explosion ex-plosion in this country as the Tories little appreciate, and it will shake tho foundations of society." Percy Holden Illingworth, tho chief Liberal whip in tho houso of commons, speaking at tho Bamo meeting, said there would bo no general election until un-til the, homo rulo for Ireland, tho Welsh disestablishment and tho plural votiue bills had beon passod by parliament." |