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                     PUBLIC MANAGEMENT IN IRELAND 
                    The extent to which the movement in favour of the public 
                      management of the liquor traffic is rapidly spreading is 
                      further illustrated by the recent formation of the Ulster 
                      Public-Houses Trust Company, Limited, which began operations 
                      at Carnmoney, near Belfast, in May, 1901. The promoters 
                      have but one inn at present, but they hope shortly to extend 
                      their operations and acquire other public-houses. The principles 
                      of management are practically the same as those adopted 
                      by the Bishop of Chester's Association.  
                    The inns are to be conducted as " refreshment-houses 
                      and not ' drinking bars'; food and non-intoxicants will 
                      be supplied as readily as intoxicants and during the same 
                      hours." The surplus profits, after allowing a sufficient 
                      sum for depreciation, reserve, and interest not exceeding 
                      5 per cent, on invested capital, " will be administered 
                      by carefully selected trustees for the benefit of the community." 
                     
                    THE CROWN AND SHAMROCK, CARNMONEY, NEAR BELFAST 
                     
                    
                       
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                           Date opened 
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                           Local Population 
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                           May 31st, 1901 
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                           1,500 
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                    The Company began operations by acquiring an inn in the 
                      parish of Carnmoney, about a mile beyond Glengormley, and 
                      seven miles north of Belfast. The inn, which is now named 
                      the Crown and Shamrock, had a bad reputation, and, according 
                      to the Belfast News-Letter, was formerly " the scene 
                      of frequent disturbances and irregularities of various kinds, 
                      and gave the police of the district continual trouble. The 
                      magistrates had, indeed, threatened to withdraw the licence, 
                      but the Company -topped in and saved the situation, and 
                      the house has titered on a new chapter in its history, which 
                      promises o be more satisfactory than its past career." 
                     
                    Considerable alterations were made in the premises in order 
                      to adapt them to the new requirements. "The areas in 
                      front of the house have been enclosed with neat fences of 
                      ash and oak, and provided with seats, and on the west side 
                      they terminate with a verandah of similar construction, 
                      leading to a glass door, by which entrance is gained to 
                      the principal room of the inn. This is a long, low-ceilinged 
                      apartment, containing a bay window of the old English type, 
                      with a cosy seat running round it, and not far from the 
                      window is an antique chimney-corner, such as may still be 
                      seen in old farmhouses and cottages in the counties of Antrim 
                      and Down. ... On each side of the fireplace is a ' seat 
                      for one,' and it is easy to imagine that on cold and damp 
                      days these cosy ingle-nook seats will be favourites with 
                      frequenters of the inn. The room is furnished with beech 
                      tables and rush-bottomed seats, and it is altogether as 
                      snug an apartment as one could desire. Adjoining it is the 
                      bar-room, which has undergone a complete transformation. 
                      The bar has been entirely remodelled, and arranged more 
                      in accordance with the requirements of such a hostelry, 
                      no undue prominence being given to intoxicating liquors." 
                      (Belfast News-Letter, June 1st, 1901. ). 
                    Persons frequenting the inn are not to be subjected to 
                      any rules or restrictions " other than those prescribed 
                      by law or sanctioned by the licensing authorities, but everything 
                      possible will be done by influence and example to prevent 
                      misconduct or the use of objectionable language, and to 
                      maintain the high standard of the establishment."  
                    There is no hard and fast rule about the amount of liquor 
                      to be supplied to a customer, but "the manager is under 
                      strict orders to carry out the spirit as well as the letter 
                      of the law, and refuse more to anyone who, according to 
                      his judgment, has had enough. And the judgment of the manager," 
                      it is added, " is not liable to the bias which might 
                      ensue from his personal loss, for he gets a fixed salary 
                      with a percentage or bonus on non-intoxicants, and has no 
                      interest in the sale of spirituous liquors at all." 
                      (Rev. E. C. Hayes, in an article in The Visitor, the 
                      organ of the Chinch of Ireland Temperance Society, July, 
                      1901) 
                    The precise method of appropriating the surplus profits 
                      has not yet been fixed, but the promoters, among whom are 
                      several local clergymen, " hope to be in a position 
                      to give generous assistance to many deserving projects which 
                      will benefit the large parish of Carnmoneyfor instance, 
                      a coal-fund, a poor-fund, or a fund for the support of a 
                      nurse for the sick poor in the district. This, however, 
                      is a matter for future consideration." It is certainly 
                      to be hoped that when this " future consideration " 
                      is given, these suggested appropriations will be modified, 
                      for in giving the inhabitants of the parish so direct an 
                      interest in the sales, they appear to be hardly less objectionable 
                      than the direct relief of rates sanctioned in Gothenburg. 
                     
                    The customers are drawn from three distinct classes; namely, 
                      (1) neighbouring mill-hands, (2) small farmers on their 
                      way to and from market, and (3) cyclists. At present the 
                      house is said to do most with the third class.  
                    The inn, which was opened on May 31st, 1901, has been working 
                      for too short a time to show decisive results, " but 
                      already," according to the testimony of the Eev. E. 
                      C. Hayes, one of the promoters of the experiment, " 
                      there is much to interest and very much to hope. Of course 
                      many are exceedingly puzzled as to what it all means. Difficulties 
                      daily arise for solution. And even after years of working 
                      it is not to be expected that one reformed house among scores 
                      of the normal type will have any startling effect upon the 
                      country-side. But a beginning must be made in every movement, 
                      and if this little social experiment succeeds, its originators 
                      are not without ambition for a wider activity. It was with 
                      that view they formed themselves into ' The Ulster Public-Houses 
                      Trust Company, Limited.' By increasing their capital according 
                      to need, they hope, as occasion affords, to buy up other 
                      housesor even apply for new licences when they are 
                      becoming necessary, and run them on the Oarnmoney model." 
                      (Article in The Visitor, July, 1901.) 
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