The Landlord, However, Was No More Essential To...
a chain was to a watch, and the Government's plan was to place the parasitic interest last. Where farms fell vacant, and there was no one with an obvious right in equity to the......
On Monday Night Mr. Lloyd George Spoke To His Con-
stituents at Pwllheli on the Government's land policy. The life-blood of the rural districts was being poured into the veins of new lands across the seas. While labourers......
The Articles Now Appearing In The Times On "the Indian
Peril" form a remarkable sequel and supplement to those of Sir Valentine Chirol. That in last Saturday's issue, which deals with the causes and consequences of unrest, points......
Bank Rate,5per Cent., Changed From 41 Per Cent. Oct. 2nd.
Consols (2k) were on Wednesday 72—Friday week 711.......
The Root Of The Evil Is The Intervention Between The
Govern- ment and the masses of a small but steadily growing disaffected minority, who, instead of interpreting the demands of the people, devote their energies to outrageous......
In A Letter To The Town Tenants' League, Mr. Asquith
has added an important point to his recent speech on urban leases. He says that the Government intend, subject to all necessary reservations for the protection of the reasonable......
It Was Announced Yesterday Week That A Site Had Been
acquired in Bloomsbury for the Shakespeare Memorial National Theatre. The most serious objection to the Bloomsbury site is that it lies quite outside theatre-land, and that no......
Mr. Sidney Webb Has Done Good Service In Exposing A
grave anomaly in the working of the Insurance Act in the last issue of the New Statesman. The correspondence which has passed between Sir Robert Morant and himself clearly......
A Disastrous Fire Broke Out In Portsmouth Dockyard Last...
night, resulting in the destruotion of buildings and stores estimated at some £200,000 and the loss of two lives. The origin of the fire is at present unknown, but it appears to......
If The Government Action Under The Proclamations Was Good In
law, we do not see why they could not use them to prevent a barge-load of rifles being ferried from one side of the Thames Estuary to the other or sent along the Grand Junction......