3 



ppcar highly trained 



:md COB u obser 



The t appears to me, of 



Bonn's work is as follows: Alter a careful 



i, he exposes 



absolute fatuity of the 



yarded as a settle- 



md (jiu-stion. The Land 



-chase Acts are, of course, recognised 



a considerable advance, in point of 

 there are two serious draw- 

 hem they are irregular in their appli- 

 ihus often work extreme injustice, 

 .-dally to the better class of tenant-farm^ 

 1 a more serious and fundai c 



they have placed the idea of property before 

 Irish tenant as something which he has 

 to be bribed into acquiring, not as the goal 

 and reward of self-denial and of strenuous 



tort. It, therefore, behoves those who 

 look a little ahead of the difficulties and 

 of the present day to consider how 

 best to danger that jnoj city gained 



li a way may produce not a bracing but a 

 slackening of industrial energy and ambition. 

 Dr. Bonn finds the one sure hope of the nation 

 in t ngthcning and extension, in the widest 



