ND m PD Q 0 er oo] mm Ce t 0 ¢) h <I M~ om ULSTER'S OPPORTUNITY: A UNITED IRELAND. An International Question. OME RULE for Ireland and for all Ireland H has suddenly developed into a question of urgent international importance, by the universal recognition of the right of Small Nations to a government of their own choice. In reply to the American demand for a statement of their objects in the War England and her Allies in a joint Note declared their determination to enforce “the reorganisation of Europe, guaranteed by a stable settlement based alike on the principle of nationality and on the right which all peoples, whether great or small, have to full security and free economic development. . . . The liberation of the Italians, Slavs, Roumanians, Czechs and Slovacs from foreign dominion.” England, for herself, in- sisted with special emphasis on the rights of Small Nations in the eloquent memorandum of Mr. Balfour which accompanied the joint Note of the Allied Powers. As Foreign Secretary of the Empire, Viscount Grey, representing his Government and his nation, speaking on October 23rd, 1915, declared — “T take it on the word of the Primd Minister that we shall fight until we have established the supremacy and right of free development under equal conditions, each in accordance with its genius, of all States, great and small, as a family of civilised mankind 3 ~~ 0) -— -) oN oO 4 52, [= i ! Zc .) - > El 1 He Hal bs io. 1 ht Ig © § iy j © IS is Ty. “tr 2 nn N |e oN nn oN Hy — 1 — on = 3 () £