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Spender, Harold

"Home Rule Second Edition"

1s.) in a chapter
(iv.) entitled "The Present System of Government, in Ireland," by
G.F.H. Berkeley. There are 67 Boards, of which only 26 are under direct
control of the Irish Secretary. No Parliamentary statute applies to
Ireland, of course, unless that country is expressly included by name.
[7] See, for a popular account of this Synod, Green's "History of the
English People," Vol. I., p. 55.
[8] The central Civil Service is predominantly Protestant, and in
municipalities like Belfast the Catholics hold a very small proportion
of the salaried posts.
[9] Census for 1911. Preliminary Report. Page 6.
[10] Census Summary. Preliminary Report. Page 6.
[11] See "The Statesman's Year Book," 1911, pp. 877-8.


THE HOME RULE CASE
THE CASE THAT HAS CHANGED--AND IS
NOW STRONGER
i.--THE COUNCILS AND
ii.--THE LAND.
"They saved the country because they lived in it, as the others
abandoned it because they lived out of it."
GRATTAN.


CHAPTER II.
THE HOME RULE CASE

Those who, like myself, visited Ireland last summer as delegates of the
Eighty Club included some who had not thoroughly explored that country
since the early nineties.


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