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Show Ml eland assured SBlegarded as Certain to Both Houses of Parliament. X WILL SIGN IT i Troubles Only Minor Ir That Will Not Usult Seriously. bio to The Tribune, jjf, March 7. Parliament is aa jrk as that body over works and jf oratory Is rather above the iyhilo litUo skirmishes occa-fen occa-fen up debates which after all more than mark time. Both jroparing for the final struggle, fcome when Mr. Asqulth opens and reveals the oxtont of iho i he Is prepared to make In the future position of Ulster. ,re to believe the Tory press i party is all split up In fac-' most radical of which aro said Continual fear lest Mr Asqulth r the white feather and con-exclusion con-exclusion of Ulster to avoid t rer Autonomy, p there Is not a singlo word of lis assertion. Mr. Asquith will h thing. In order to make a pt to bring about an arrango-vconsent arrango-vconsent he will offer Ulster jcal autonomy Inside home rule o additional safeguards for the ?of the Ulster protestants. neantinio the torlcs are doing .best to spread the impression ;lng Is personally against home fven thinking of pxerclslng the pgatlve, but nothing indeed Is bm the king's mind. Even if nought of doing so, recent Sweden would undoubtedly have .timely warning, but, in reality, tred by a personage, a former tho enjoys the contldcnco of the as far as King George has ex-hiself ex-hiself on the subject, ho seems hat Ireland, which so long and ihas been clamoring for home jd be given a chance to try it, 3le more as we have tried the In other places and every-Si every-Si marked success, i'lile Will Pass. - w iiuor incidents may take place felons may be made beforo the Jhls signature to the act which irishmen the right3 for which :beon lighting so bravely and but one thing Is sure, the i bill will pass and the king efuse to sign it, even though ns the risk of lowering himself b of the torles. 1 equally certain Is that even re may be and probably will be Mast, Ulster will not rush into 'if lor no other reasons than fe will find her leaders desert-i desert-i soon as they find that their i danger and because the unlon-igland unlon-igland will not movo a finger !,thc assistance of men who arc danger, hut will concentrate fforts on the coming struggle yd-C?eorge's land reform policy, is them In their most sensitive rable spot, while not a singlo h. from Bonar Law down, cares whether Ireland gets home rule ?hey have simply realized tho the government was unable to any further reforms until homo oen disposed of and they have Of tho Irish question as a buf- L Land Policy. tter of fact, the first sklrmlsh-Lnd sklrmlsh-Lnd reform have already been the house of commons, for at iig of February 18 Lloyd-ftnd Lloyd-ftnd policy was challenged billon bi-llon on two points, first that Of ID09 (the year of the famous jhlch broke the back of the lords), had been disastrous to jnd housing Interests, and sec-iuso sec-iuso the new policy was based X Inquiry. prtlons are equally flimsy. At n inquiry can hardly be called p Its findings have been made l volume of hundreds of pages lae of much more to come. The thing aboit it lies in the fact fovernment has found It advls-Wp advls-Wp secret the names of those proven themselves victims of gtf l-na monopoly. |