Second Edition. LLOYD GEOROE’S SPEECH.
A UNIONIST’S VIEW. IST Electric Telegraph— Copyright] (United Press Association.] (Received 9.0 a.m.) Lndoii, October 14. Lord Hugh Cecil (Unionise member for Oxford University) speaking at Ormskirk, said Mr Lloyd George neglected to apply the true princiles of economics to his theories, which were only advanced to catch the votes of Unionists. He was prepared to deal with the problem in a more practical way. He hoped it was untrue that Sir Rufus Isaacs was about to succeed Lord Alverstone. Such an appointment after the Marconi scandal would be an outrage. DISCUSSED BY THE SINGLETAXERS. London, October 14. At the Single-Taxers Conference ai Cardiff, Mrs Wedgwood threw the conference into confusion by attacking Mr Lloyd George’s land policy and the Liberal Party’s Cat and Mouse Act. Mr Wedgwood; Liberal member for Newcastle-under-Lyme, added that many would agree that the Chancellor’s' speech outlined no practical definite programme.
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVII, Issue 38, 15 October 1913, Page 6
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151Second Edition. LLOYD GEOROE’S SPEECH. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXVII, Issue 38, 15 October 1913, Page 6
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