Tag: 100 Years Ago

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 10 February 1925

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 10 February 1925

    10 FEBRUARY 1925

    Parliament resumes to-day. In the House of Lords the Archbishop of Canterbury is to put a question regarding the expulsion of the Ecumenical Patriarch. In the House of Commons the second reading stage of the Church of Scotland (Property and Endowments) Bill will be taken.

    Mr Neville Chamberlain, Minister of Health, speaking at Plymouth with reference to the housing problem, said that he was sorry to see that already some people, whose motives, he feared, were not above suspicion, were taking upon themselves to crab the demonstration houses, which some of them certainly had not yet even seen.

    Steel-sheeted houses are strongly criticised by a technical committee appointed by the National Housing and Town Planning Council.

    Mr Lloyd George, in receiving the freedom of Hull, spoke on the part the politician played in the Great War.

    Mr A. J. Cook, Secretary of the Miners’ Federation, in an interview regarding Mr Hodges’s proposals for solving the problems in the mining industry, said nationalisation would be more likely to appeal to the coal owners than unification.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 9 February 1925

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 9 February 1925

    9 FEBRUARY 1925

    The British Government’s Note setting out in reply to M. Clementel’s request its policy with regard to inter-Allied debts has been received by the French Government. The Note suggests the lines on which discharge of obligations between Britain and France should be effected. It is reported to have been favourably received by M. Herriot.

    Following the American example, China has withdrawn from the International Opium Conference. The delegate stated that present conditions in China unfortunately made it impossible for the Chinese Government to enforce effectively its policy of prohibiting the production of opium for other than medicinal and scientific purposes, but these conditions, he added, were only temporary.

    Mr. Champ, Industrial Secretary of the N.U.R., speaking at Grantham, said that while there should be no talk of strikes until all other resources of reason and argument had been exhausted, there would be no cool dropping of their demands. If extreme action were needed they would not shrink from it.

    The Executive of the National Union of Railwaymen have decided to refer the whole of their programme to the Central Wages Board.

    President Cosgrave, speaking at Cavan, said there was no need for pessimism regarding the future of the Free State. They were far from being bankrupt. The running of Republican candidates in the partitioned North of Ireland for the Imperial Parliament was, he considered, a political blunder of the first magnitude.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 8 February 1925

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 8 February 1925

    8 FEBRUARY 1925

    Sources close to the British Government said that they were disappointed with the withdrawal of the American and Chinese delegations to the Geneva Opium Conference.

    Sir William Joynson-Hicks, the Home Secretary, said that the Government would be introducing legislation to gain powers which would restrict the activities of the underworld and undesirable nightclubs.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 7 February 1925

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 7 February 1925

    7 FEBRUARY 1925

    The “American delegation has withdrawn from the second Opium Conference at Geneva, stating in a memorandum that the difficulties encountered make it clear that the purpose for which the Conference was called cannot be accomplished.

    The Turkish Government’s reply to the Greek Note of protest against the expulsion of Mgr. Constantine rejects the suggested reference of the dispute to the Hague Court, and insists that the question is a purely internal one.

    The Duchess d’Alpuferi was fired at in Paris by one of her former tenants, a farmer named Danre, and wounded. The man was taken in custody.

    A meeting of the Executive of the N.U.R., hurriedly called to consider the railway deadlock, lasted all day, without a decision being reached.

    Professor Grierson, speaking at the annual dinner of the Aberdeen University Edinburgh Association–at which the principal guest was Professor Mackintosh, Aberdeen–complained that the entrance of women into the University had introduced an element of distraction.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 6 February 1925

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 6 February 1925

    6 FEBRUARY 1925

    Objection has been taken by Britain to the presence of two Turkish experts with the Mosul Boundary Commission on the ground that they are undesirables, whose presence is resented in Mosul, and who quite recently were engaged in an attempt to stir up the local population against the mandatory Power. The Turkish Government denies the British charges.

    Sir Philip Cunliffe-Lister, at Edgware, replied to Mr Runciman’s criticism of the Government’s proposals in regard to the safeguarding of industries. The Government, he said, were following the same course as a previous Liberal Administration, so that their action could not be unconstitutional.

    Lord Mackenzie has been appointed chairman of a Committee set up by the Secretary for Scotland to consider the question whether it is desirable that further provision should be made as regards Scotland for appeals in criminal cases tried on indictment.

    Evidence on behalf of Scottish Co-operative Societies was given before the Commission on Food Prices. It related mainly to meat and the charges to be met in its preparation.

    Successful experiments have been made at Southampton with a wireless telephone service between ships and the shore which may be linked up with the General Post Office land telephone lines.

    The Rotor ship Buckau left Danzig for Leith.

    In trade union circles, indications point to the early development of a stubborn struggle in connection with the railway companies’ proposals to reduce wages.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 5 February 1925

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 5 February 1925

    5 FEBRUARY 1925

    The draft of the British reply to the Clementel memorandum, which latter asked for a declaration of British policy with regard to inter-Allied debts, has been passed by the Cabinet. Broadly speaking, the Note will reaffirm the Government’s adherence to the policy of the Balfour Note.

    With reference to the presence of two undesirable Turkish experts—said to be ex-convicts—with the Turkish delegation on the Commission of Inquiry into the Mosul boundary question, a protest signed by Mr. Austen Chamberlain has been addressed to the Secretary-General of the League of Nations.

    Our special representative on board the Rotor ship Buckau states that with favourable weather the vessel will likely leave Danzig this evening for Leith.

    No immediate crisis is expected to arise in connection with the railwaymen’s dispute, and it is thought the respective claims will be referred to the Wages Boards.

    Mr. Runciman, speaking at Reading, criticised the Government’s scheme for the safeguarding of industries, which he described as a new Protection policy.

    The Commission on Food Prices heard evidence on behalf of the Scottish master butchers. It was contended that there was no profiteering by the trade in Scotland.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 4 February 1925

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 4 February 1925

    4 FEBRUARY 1925

    At a meeting in London the demands by the N.U.R. for wages increases and improved conditions of service were rejected by the railway companies, who submitted proposals for a reduction in wages.

    The Dean of Durham, at a debate with a railwayman at Stockton, again defended his declaration that the railway workers’ demands were selfish.

    A settlement was reached in the London electricians’ dispute, and the strike notices were withdrawn.

    A Command Paper states that any duties proposed for the safeguarding of industries shall be imposed for a limited period and in a Finance Bill in which that period will be prescribed. The procedure to be followed by the Committees into applications is given, and it is stated that no application will be entertained in respect of articles of food and drink.

    Receipts from Estate Duty so far point to a surplus over the Budget estimate, in which case Local Authorities will benefit.

    A Supplementary Estimate has been issued, which shows that an additional sum of over seven and a half million is required by the various Civil Services before the end of the year.

    Our London Correspondent understands that the Cabinet decided to postpone the dispatch of the Debts Note to France in order that it may receive further consideration at another meeting, when the Marquis Curzon is expected to be present.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 3 February 1925

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 3 February 1925

    3 FEBRUARY 1925

    The Greek Note of protest against the expulsion from Constantinople of the Ecumenical Patriarch has been delivered to the Turkish Government. Feeling on the question is intense among the Greek community, by whom the Turkish action is regarded as a breach of faith and a violation of international treaty obligations.

    Lord Blanesburgh has been appointed principal British delegate on the Reparation Commission in succession to Lord Bradbury.

    An Opposition motion in the French Chamber of Deputies, framed in the interest of the retention of the Embassy to the Vatican, was resisted by M. Herriot, who made the question one of confidence. The motion was rejected by 314 votes to 250.

    Mr. Neville Chamberlain, Minister of Health, speaking at Manchester, referred to the gravity of the housing problem. Regarding steel houses, he said that if the public wanted them, it was not going to tolerate obstruction, whatever form it might take, or from whatever quarter it might come.

    Sir W. Johnson-Hicks, the Home Secretary, speaking at Deptford, referred to the Communists’ proposals to carry out propaganda in the British fighting forces.

    Mr. J. R. Clynes, M.P., speaking at Mitcham, said that British Trade Unionism was required to make a stand against those who were fostering divisions among the rank and file, hoping for complete disruption. Their energies were spent in waving revolutionary banners, and in worshipping the names of Russian leaders. Mr. Clynes said they must emphatically resist the efforts being made to form minority movements within the Trade Union ranks.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 2 February 1925

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 2 February 1925

    2 FEBRUARY 1925

    The greatest indignation has been caused in Greece by the expulsion of the Ecumenical Patriarch from Constantinople. The Greek Government have dispatched a protest to Angora.

    A Washington telegram gives extracts from American Press comment on President Coolidge’s reply to M. Emile Daeschner when he presented his letters of credence as French Ambassador. The extracts indicate, says the message, how little sentiment will influence the debt settlement.

    A Paris telegram announces the death of the Duc de Gramont.

    The funeral of the late Field-Marshal Lord Grenfell was attended by special representatives of the King and other members of the Royal Family. The first portion of the service took place at St. Mary’s Church, Bryanston Square, London, and the interment at Beaconsfield. Full military honours were accorded.

    Speaking in Birmingham, Mr Austen Chamberlain, Foreign Secretary, said that Old Europe was consumed in the fires of the Great War, and the New Europe had yet to be built on foundations that might give peace and security to the nations of the world.

    Campaigning in the election precipitated in Southern Ireland by the resignation of the M’Grath group of Deputies was begun during the weekend. President Cosgrave, speaking at a Government meeting in College Green, Dublin, met with a good deal of organised interruption. Addressing a Republican meeting in County Roscommon, Mr De Valera said he had nothing to tell them beyond what he told them six years ago on the same platform. There was no use wishing for freedom unless they were prepared to make the necessary sacrifices to attain it.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 1 February 1925

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 1 February 1925

    1 FEBRUARY 1925

    It was reported that Prince George, who had tonsillitis, was making good progress.

    A statement by the English & Scottish Co-operative Wholesale Society denied that the price of tea was so high due to speculative buying on their behalf.