MERCHANDISE MARKS BILL
DENOUNCED BY INCHCAPE BUT HE DID NOT VOTE! Australian and N.Z. Cable Association. LONDON. December 2. In the House of Lords, the Merchandise Marks Bill was read a second time by 50 votes to 26, after Lord Inchcape, who tecently joined the Conservative Party, though he is still n, free trader, had made a vigorous denunciation of the Bill. He said that i: was preposterous, and would involve an increase in the number of functionaries who batten on the people. He was convinced that if tho Government interfered with the free interchange of commodities, Great Britain would become a more cypher. Taxation would wipe out the country’s wealth. The proposals only sounded right to those who knew a little of business. Lord Beauchamp congratulated Lord Inchcape on his speech, and asked if he was going to vote against the Bill. Lord Inchcape replied that he was not going to support the Bill, but he was not going to vote against it.
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New Zealand Times, Volume LIII, Issue 12621, 4 December 1926, Page 5
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164MERCHANDISE MARKS BILL New Zealand Times, Volume LIII, Issue 12621, 4 December 1926, Page 5
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