| Show tO MIT IRISH i I p OBSTRUCTION ION IONI I V I Chamberlain ha Says Commons Cammons Will V Adopt Strong Str rg Rules AS TO fO TILE THE BOMS Clio Time JUi U Conn consa M u or N Iy fly y 10 bO Edinburgh Oct 20 1 r lain Iho tho th colonial addressing moro inoru than persona In Waver Vaar Market Edinburgh announced that the thu government Intended to frame neY nW MI rules ruIe tot for th the hUe houie of commons eo 80 o a ato ato to limit Irish Irth obstruction Vo o sf he said to bring Which shall give to the majority of ot O the tho th commons greater con Oll wt tret over cr Its oWn business and greater control over the tho men who Insult ana 1 It and Uth we Wt shall endeavor or to protect tho the mother of ot parliament nom flom ih thc o e who would destroy her use usefulness useI I and reputation hut But this was not flOt tho tM only thing that Mr ir h declined the govern moot mont intended to do V Tho The m representation of at Iris Ire Ireland Inland land h I he h said fl abuse abuso and Ind scan scandal dal No 00 o alteration could bo made ex cx except V In Of t u dissolution nM we w tire are not con that Hut when we gui got Bearer to t the thU ho limo wo shall hall ask you whether 1 you tuU think Ii i I tion is BO so to tt you CU It h l so fiO 1 bio bk bl to the national Interests that It U It 1 I desirable d to have Itao It on a n scale stale whIch I cle too Irish a tt representation enot enol l the proportionate oC of Ireland II nIl I The colonial eol el went on 11 to point out that on tho the bulK basis of ot population tion lion Ireland hall had thirty too many In lb the house of at commons and ou the tho th basis of ot her contributions for Im penal purposes purpose as considered at tho time Of or O the union sho sh had hat from flom roth forty to fitly members too many manyI I 1 say that this thi constitutes an art abuse bus bushe he ho continued rind and nd there th rc Is no reason why It should bo 10 perpetuated perpetuate I II Ic I another portion of ot the tho speech which was largely large devoted d to the Irish question que ho he observed V If It these gentlemen who now openly for tor the MaMI and pray for tor the theD Boors D rs It If they hwy th had a parliament of their own If It nil all of the strings of Irish got gov had been In their hands hand It If they had ilu lit ti power Is It not certain they would have refuted to have paid their contribution to the tho war und and that would have placed pieced us In tn a 1 position or The relations of ot a tho the parliamentary op opposition opposition Opposition position with tho the Irish party Mr 4 S Chamberlain said he ho considered dan dangerous dangerous V to the tile empire In reviewing tho the war In South Africa Which he declared had been forced up upon upon t on Great Britain by the Boers he sala sate the government acknowledged that thai It IwO ht d maUt ma t a n mistake as to the time ot ott ott t ending int In war and that he admired A tho the timidly tt ll of ot the Doers DoeN but he ha In that thul It was the tho duty of Oren Great I to meet this tenacity With c l ual locution Then Th n followed tollo ed what Is II as a most moat Important dec declaration I think the time ling has come or 01 U Is coming the colonial when measures of ot greater severity Re I may be bC b nece ary Rry and Imd It If that tim comes we cnn can lind precedents for tor any anything tiling thing we WO do In tho the notions actions of ot those nations who now criticize e our barbar barbarity barbarIty ity it and but whose In hi Poland In hi and in the lit litIn In hi In Bosnia and In the war we have never 4 approached |