8 APRIL 1922, page 1

Mr. Lloyd George Must Prove His Political Good Faith By

telling us exactly and in unmistakable terms upon which side he is going to be in the future. The country is tired of first a rush to the left, accompanied by a whisper to the......

We Have Dealt With The Protests Made In The House

of Commons on Wednesday against the intellectual dishonesty, to give it no harder name, involved in a Conservative and Centre Party led by a man of advanced Liberal views such......

The Debate Was Continued By Lord Wolmer, Who Complained That

the Government had boxed the compass of half a dozen questions. No one had the slightest idea where Mr. Lloyd George would be in regard to Ireland, Russia, India, Egypt or any......

If We Strip The Incident Of The Rhetoric And The

personal feeliiig that were engendered and get down into the essential fact, we shall find it to be this : The majority of the Unionist. Party, though somewhat bewildered, as is......

Mr. Mcneill, In Seconding The Resolution, Made A Plucky And,

as we believe, a thoroughly sound plea for resignation, rather than sticking to office, by Ministers when they were no longer able to support principles which they had supported......

After Captain Elliott, The Able And Impulsive Member For...

had declared that he would never desert Mr. Micawber,- Mr. Gideon Murray very appropriately complained that the reply of the Leader of the House had been a bitter attack on......

News Of The Week.

T HE vote of want of confidence in the Coalition Government, moved on Wednesday night by Sir William Joynsen- Hicks, led to a brisk debate. His essential point was that Mr.......

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