SALE OF HONOURS.
FURNITURE DEALER CAUSED STIR. (“B™!*’’ Special). LONDON, Friday. “It is difficult to trace any instance of Royal patronage so misdirected as the clumsy batch of honours forced on the Sovereign near the close of the regime of the Lloyd George Coalition Government.”
This is the conclusion of Sir George Arthur, private secretary to _ the late Earl Kitchener, stated in his book, “The Life of the King.” which Messrs Jonathan Cape published on September 16th. ,
He describes Mr Lloyd George’s recommendations for honours as an unhappy occasion, suggesting that the Crown’s reliance on the advice of even the most responsible Minister should have limitations.
“A murmur could not bo repressed/ ’ he writes, “when a personally estimable furniture dealer, the conduct of whose business had not been too successful for the original shareholders, was to enjoy the same rank as general officers who led large armies to victory.” DEALINGS WITH ENEMY. “Of a second nominee,” Sir George Arthur Avrites, “it was stated that he gave evidence before the Income-tax Commissioner that in the middle of the war he transferred himself and his busirr : s, .capitalised at £20,000,000, to a domicile abroad in order to escape taxation. A third nominee admitted dealings with the enemy in Avar time, though within official knowledge. In the case of a fourth nominee the election was so bizarre that eventually Lord Birkenhead solved the difficulty by producing a letter in which Sir Joseph Robinson, the South African gold magnate, declined a peerage. It is understood the letter was not secured without difficulty, as Sir Joseph Robinson, being deaf, was for some time unable to gather whether the question concerned the increasing of the amount already deposited or the renouncing of the honour and the recovering of the cheque. ”
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Shannon News, 29 October 1929, Page 2
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294SALE OF HONOURS. Shannon News, 29 October 1929, Page 2
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