Mr. Gandhi Told Newspaper Correspondents That The...
a great mistake if they thought that the manufacture of salt and the boycott of foreign cloth and of liquor were temporary political arguments. Indian Nationalists intended that......
The Debate Was Continued On Tuesday When The Chief Event
was the shattering attack on the Bill by Sir John Simon in what many listeners thought was about the best speech lie has ever made. He quoted with neatly designed effect from......
The New French Government M. Laval Succeeds M. Steeg As
French 'Prime Minister. He had confidently hoped to form a Ministry which would reflect the most stable voting power in the Chamber, but although he relied upon the......
Mr. Baldwin Quietly Asked For Any Instances Of Injustice...
the Act of 1927. The Government spokesmen could not, or at least did not, produce any. It has been said that there have been nine hundred trade disputes since the Act of 1927......
He Reduced The Main Consequences Of His Bill To Four
: revolutionary and political strikes would be illegal but sympathetic industrial strikes would not ; no one would be charged with intimidation if he had acted legally ; every......
The Liberals And Unemployment One Explanation Of The...
of the Liberals towards the Government is that they have noir hopes of getting the Government to grant a large loan for development works on Liberal lines. A few days ago it was......
India We Have Discussed In A Leading Article The Very
satis- factory Indian debate in the House of Commons on Monday and need say no more about it here. The main subject of anxiety now is the reaction of the Congress Party in India......
The Most Interesting Point In The Continued Debate On...
was the quite unexpected statement of the Solicitor-General, Sir Stafford Cripps, that under the Bill the strike of 1926 would have been illegal. The Labour Members were stunned......