There is one question that I wanted to ask the Minister. It has been represented to me that Section 11 of the Principal Act, in sub-section (3), bears rather hardly on some people. Very often there are houses which have been divided and there are two families living in the one house. One may have a knowledge of Irish while next door the people, through no fault of their own, may have been partly anglicised. They say that considerable differentiation is being made between these two cases, some of them in the Minister's own district. I know that the Minister's main object in administering this Bill is to see that the very poor, quite regardless of anything else, get equal treatment in the matter. I do not want him or the House to think that this is in any way an attack on the teaching of the Irish language. The section states:
"In the making of building grants and improving grants the Minister shall give a preference to the occupiers of dwelling-houses in which the Irish language is habitually used as the home language of the house hold."
Of course, that is really quite all right, but I think the greatest leniency should be exercised and that the actual physical condition of the people should be considered. I hope the Minister will be able to tell us that in the allocation of this new £100,000 he will bear that in mind.