War
Delhi War Conference
1.
asked the Secretary of State for India whether he can give the House any information regarding the War Conference held at Delhi, and the offers made by Indian princes and ruling chiefs of aid to the British Government?
The Delhi Conference has been held in response to the Prime Minister's Message inviting the Government and the people of India to redouble their efforts in the common cause. The Viceroy's object in convening it was to invite the co-operation of all classes in sinking domestic discussions, in securing their active support of measures for developing the man-power and resources of the country, and in cheerfully bearing the burdens necessary to that end.
As regards the last part of the question, particulars have not yet reached the Secretary of State.Could the right hon. Gentleman say whether the response made by the princes and ruling chiefs in India has been as much as was expected by the Secretary of State?
The Secretary of State has not yet received this information.
Indian Army (Officers' Pay)
2.
asked the Secretary of State for India whether all officers of battalions of the British Army serving in India receive Indian rates of pay; whether he can state what is the difference between the pay received by a lieutenant in an Infantry regiment serving in India and serving in France; whether he can say whether such officers of the British service serving in India and drawing pay from the Indian Army funds are eligible for the receipt of the children's allowance granted under a recent Royal Warrant; and, if not, whether it is proposed to extend the benefits of the Royal Warrant to the dependants of officers of the British Army serving in India?
The reply to the first question is in the affirmative, and to the second that the pay and allowances of a lieutenant of British Infantry amount approximately to £24 15s. per month, and in India to Rs. 300, plus Rs. 30 special allowance (if a New Army or Territorial officer), equivalent to £24 0s. 9d. at the rate of exchange hitherto current, and to £24 15s. at the new exchange rate of 1s. 6d. With regard to the third question, the Royal Warrant which granted children's allowance does not apply to officers drawing Indian pay. But a revision of the Indian rates of pay of subalterns, and the extension of officers in receipt of Indian pay of the grant of children's allowance is being considered by the Government of India.
Will the right hon. Gentleman make representations to hasten a decision in this matter in view of the fact that officers of the lowest rank—lieutenants—are receiving no higher pay while serving in India than while serving in France; and that, therefore, their wives and children are quite as much in need of these allowances as those officers in the British Army?
I will bear in mind what the hon. Gentleman says.
Food Supplies
Cadets' Rations (Holidays)
4.
asked the Secretary to the Admiralty if boys at Osborne and Dartmouth receive during the term or the holidays rations in excess of those allowed to other boys of the same age; and, if so, what is the difference in the rations?
Perhaps my hon. Friend will put this question down again next week. The colleges are in vacation, and I have not been able to obtain the necessary information in time for reply to-day.
17.
asked the Under-Secretary of State for War if young men at Woolwich and Sandhurst receive during the term or the holidays rations in excess of those allowed to other young men of the same age; and, if so, what is the difference in the rations?
During the term the scale of rations for cadets of Woolwich and Sandhurst is the same as that for soldiers of similar age in graduated battalions. No arrangements for their feeding in the holidays are made by the military authorities.
Are they on the scale of the Home Defence Army?
They are on a special scale suitable for boys under training.
Does that apply to those at Training Cadet Schools?
I am not quite clear upon that point. Perhaps my hon. Friend will give me notice.
Is it not the case that the physical work required of these young men at Woolwich and Sandhurst is very much greater than for others?
I think it is a matter of common knowledge and universal acceptance that boys between seventeen and nineteen want a larger proportion of food than more mature adults.
Prisoners' Rations
19.
asked whether any German prisoners are or have been during the last month allowed 1 lb. of butter per week?
The answer is in the negative.
Camp Rations
20 and 21.
asked the Under-Secretary of State for War (1) what is the general rule with regard to staff- sergeants or other non-commissioned officers who are allowed to live outside camp with their wives and families in respect of rations; have they the same privilege as commissioned officers and are allowed to draw rations from the camp to be consumed at home, or must they choose between drawing their rations and consuming them in camp, or else accept 7s. per week in lieu of rations and buy their rations in the town on the usual scale allowed by food ticket to the ordinary civilian; is the general Regulation on the subject carried out at Grantham Camp; (2)whether non-commissioned officers living out of camp are not given the privilege of drawing their rations and consuming them out of camp, but have instead to accept 7s. per week in lieu of rations and live on the civilian scale allowed by food tickets; whether, as a result, such non-commissioned officers can only obtain 15 ozs. of meat per week as against a soldier's ration of 70 ozs.; is he aware that in consequence it is difficult for a man engaged in physical instruction or who may be sent abroad at short notice to keep fit; and will the War Office issue instructions that the same privileges be accorded to non-commissioned officers as are given to commissioned officers in this matter?
A soldier living with his family receives a consolidated money allowance to cover rations, lodgings, etc. When in receipt of this allowance, the soldier is not entitled to draw rations in kind. The question whether any alteration should be made in the existing Regulations or in the rate of the consolidated allowance is being considered.
Is this rate 7s. per week?
No; there is a consolidated allowance, which, speaking from memory, amounts to 20s. or 21s. a week.
Dates (Retail Prices)
33.
asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Food whether his attention has been drawn to the retail prices at which dates are selling; and whether he has considered the advisability of fixing the selling price?
37.
asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Food whether any control price for the sale of dates has been fixed; whether there is any adequate supply in this country to enable dates to be supplied with any approach to uniformity throughout the country; and whether he is aware that the only dates obtainable in most shops cost between 2s. 6d. and 3s. per 1b.?
There are two distinct classes of dates sold in this country—Persian dates, of which a considerable quantity has been purchased by the Ministry of Food; and Tunis and Egyptian dates, of which small amounts have arrived on private account. The latter are in the nature of a luxury, generally packed in fancy boxes, and no maximum price has been fixed for them. The maximum retailprice of the Persian dates, which are now being distributed, is fixed by Order at 6d. a lb. The supply available is about one-third of a normal year's supply, and is being distributed with uniformity throughout the United Kingdom through the ordinary trade channels
Can the hon. Gentleman give us any idea when these dates will be likely to be distributed and be obtainable at the ordinary shops?
I understand that already at one or two places there are small queues of date-eaters waiting outside the shops.
34.
asked what is the quantity of dates to be sold at 6d. per lb. which have been imported; and are they all being put on the market?
The total amount imported is 6,300 tons. Of this quantity 470 tons were distributed to the Admiralty and the Navy and Army Canteen Board, 100 tons arrived in an unsatisfactory condition, which did not allow of their being kept, and were, therefore, sold immediately; 330 tons are being held back as a reserve, and the remainder are being put on the market.
How soon does the hon. Gentleman expect the dates will be put on the market, as he says there are queues waiting for them?
The only reason for holding them back is that we are awaiting additional supplies, and desire to place them on the market at one time.
Heavy Manual Workers
35.
asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Food whether, in view of the scarcity of cheese and the fact that it is a necessary diet for those engaged on heavy work, the Ministry would arrange for such persons only being entitled to buy cheese?
The question of the supply and distribution of cheese is at present under consideration, and I will see that my hon. and gallant Friend's suggestion is borne in mind.
36.
asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Food what precautions the Ministry are taking to see that only those engaged on heavy work are furnished with the special cards for heavy workers?
Under the provisional arrangement now in force, supplementary ration cards for heavy workers are issued only on an individual application, stating the nature of the work and verified by a certificate by the employer or other responsible person. The general subject of supplementary rations is under further consideration. I am in consultation with the representatives of organised labour, and hope to make an announcement shortly.
Can the hon. Gentleman say how many supplementary rations have been issued up to the present time?
No; I only know that many thousands of the forms have been correctly filled up and the applications made, but as to the exact number, I should require notice.
Steamship "Glenart Castle" (Loss)
5.
asked the Secretary to the Admiralty whether he can now give the explanation of Commander Sir Edward Nicholl as to his statement that the German submarine which sank the "Glenart Castle" received information by a spy from Newport, that there were spies in every port in the Bristol Channel, and that he knew because he was examination officer for the Bristol Channel?
Sir Edward Nicholl was at the time serving under the War Office. He has been asked for an ex- planation by that Department. I understand his explanation has not yet been received, but that steps are being taken by the War Office to hastem the reply.
How many weeks have passed since this statement was made?
The statement was made on the 3rd March, and on the 11th March I said that an explanation would be asked for. I shall have the opportunity myself of speaking to Sir Edward Nicholl on Tuesday.
His Majesty's Ship "Vindictive" (Public View)
6.
asked the Secretary to the Admiralty whether it is proposed to repair His Majesty's ship "Vindictive" or to leave this historic ship in her present condition as an example and inspiration to the public?
Representations in the sense of the latter part of my hon. and gallant Friend's question have already reached us from a number of quarters The matter is under consideration.
Russia
7.
asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether he will say whether the United States and France have now Ambassadors in Russia
The answer is in the affirmative, but they are not accredited to any Russian Government.
Will the right hon. Gentleman say why the British Government have not someone there of equal dignity to those two foreign representatives?
I have said these Ambassadors are not accredited. They are not acting as Ambassadors.
47.
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he is aware that Mr. Konstantine Dmitrivitch Nabokoff, who was dismissed from his post in London by the Russian Government, is now employed by the so-called Russian Government Committee, at India House, Kingsway; whether Mr. Nabokoff has at any time during the past six months asked for or received any financial assistance from the British Government, either for himself or for the Russian Government Committee; and whether he will consult the present Russian Government as to whether Mr. Nabokoff should be returned to Russia or conscripted with other Russians into the British Army?
My right hon. Friend has asked me to answer this question. The answer to the first and third parts of the question is in the negative; to the second part in the affirmative.
Can we be told how much money has been advanced by the Government to representatives of the Russian Czarist Government—not the present Government?
That is a question of which I shall require notice.
Diplomatic Service (Mr G Young)
8.
asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs if he will state by what Government Departments and on what duties Mr. George Young has been employed since he ceased to be a member of the Diplomatic Service?
Mr. Young obtained employment at the Admiralty.
Emperor Of Austria
9.
asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs if he will publics has a White Paper so much information as to the letter of the Emperor of Austria to Prince Sixte of Bourbon and of the steps taken in consequence thereof as has been communicated to the French Chamber of Deputies?
The question appears still to be under discussion by the Parliamentary Commissions of the Navy, Army, and Foreign Affairs, who, as far as I am aware, have not yet reported to the French Chamber. No action, therefore, of the nature suggested to the hon. Member Appears possible at present, but I will arrange that the House shall be put in possession of any public declaration made by the French Government on the subject.
Ceylon
Appointment Of Governor
10.
asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies whether he is aware that the President of the Ceylon Reform League is Sir P. Arunachalam, a retired Ceylon Civil servant and a member of the Ceylon Executive Council; and whether this representative of Ceylon native opinion will be consulted in any proposal to appoint a new Governor of Ceylon?
The answer to the first part of the question is in the affirmative, and to the second part in the negative.
11.
asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies whether he has received from the Ceylon Reform League any protest against the proposed appointment of Sir Hugh Clifford as Governor of Ceylon; whether he is aware that the late Sir J. Anderson as Governor was regarded with great confidence and was popular with the whole native population, and that Sir Hugh Clifford is regarded as unsympathetic; and whether he will now announce that there is no intention of appointing Sir Hugh Clifford?
The hon. Member will now be aware, from public announcements, that His Majesty has approved the appointment of Sir William Manning as Governor of Ceylon in succession to Sir John Anderson.
May I ask whether the policy of Sir John Anderson will be continued, at the definite wish of the Government, by the new Governor?
That question does not arise out of the answer.
I will put it down.
Matabele Expedition
Offers To Natives
12, 13, and 14.
asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies (1) whether he has considered the document disclosed before the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council on 25th April, alleged to have been signed by Sir L. S. Jameson on 14th August, 1893; whether he is aware that this document purports to offer free farms of 3,000 morgen each to each member of the Victoria Force for Matabeleland; whether this document was issued at the time with the knowledge or sanction of the Colonial Office; on what date the Colonial Office was first made acquainted with the terms or tenor of these promises; (2) whether he is aware that in a case now being heard by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council it was disclosed that each member of the Victoria Force which took part in the Matabele Expedition in 1892 was offered fifteen reef and five alluvial claims; whether this offer was made with the knowledge or authority of the British Government; whether it has been at any time subsequently confirmed or admitted; whether it is the practice of the Colonial Office to offer such territorial considerations to persons taking part in expeditions under British command; (3) whether he has seen the report of disclosures made before the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council last week, in which the loot taken in the Matabele Expedition of 1893 was apportioned as to one-half to the British South Africa Company and one-half to the officers and men of the Victoria Force; whether this arrangement, which meant depriving the natives of their means of peaceful livelihood, was made after consultation with the Colonial Office or any officials acting under the Colonial Office; if not, whether at any later date it was communicated to the Colonial Office; if so, what action was taken by the Colonial Office on hearing the terms of the proclamation of Sir L. S. Jameson, who offered these terms to the Chartered Company and its servants?
The disclosures referred to in the hon. Member's three questions have long been matters of discussion, and the facts and their bearing on the position of the natives were raised in the House of Commons at the time. They have only attracted attention now in consequence of the proceedings before the Privy Council, and I must decline further discussion of them while the case is still before the tribunal.
In view of the possible misuse of these revelations by the enemy in neutral countries, can the Government make some statement on the subject?
No; I do not think that would be at all desirable.
Why not?
Soldiers (Attendance At Meetings)
15.
asked the Undersecretary of State for War whether any further speeches on the War which soldiers are compelled to attend, such as that recently delivered at Blackpool, have been or are intended to be arranged?
I regret that my inquiries are not yet complete, but I will write to my hon. Friend as soon as I am in a position to do so.
Prisoners Of War (Refusal To Work)
18.
asked the Undersecretary of State for War what are the disciplinary measures which officers in charge of German prisoners of war are allowed to take if the prisoners refuse to do a fair amount of work?
Combatant prisoners of war can be dealt with:
Could the right hon. Gentleman say what these punishments are?
I have just told my hon. and gallant Friend.
Army Dental Surgeons
22.
asked the Under-Secretary of State for War if his attention has been drawn to reports received from a dental surgeon to seven Red Cross hospitals to the effect that many men have been invalided home as a result of bad teeth, and that the recovery of others who are wounded is retarded as a result of septic teeth, also that most of these men had bad teeth when they joined, and were sent out to the front without proper dental treatment; and whether, in view of the necessity of utilising our manpower to the full, the War Office will now take steps to place the dental examination of the teeth of recruits and the dental care of serving soldiers on a more satisfactory basis?
The War Office has already taken steps to place the dental examination of the teeth of recruits and the dental care of serving soldiers on a satisfactory basis.
23.
asked how many dental surgeons are now employed as such in the Army; how many dental surgeons previously employed as combatants have received dental commissions; if it is proposed to increase the number of dental surgeons holding commissions; and, if so, by what number?
The total number of dental surgeons now employed in the Army is 584; 233 dental surgeons who were previously employed as combatants have received dental commissions. It is proposed to increase the number of dental surgeons holding commissions, but the actual number is not fixed.
Military Service
Medical Officers (Temporary)
24.
asked the Under-Secretary of State for War whether an official memorandum has recently been sent to temporary medical officers in France whose yearly contracts are about to expire, stating that they will require to renew their agreements unless their release is asked for by some public body or by a medical practitioner requiring their services at home; and. if so, having regard to the terms of the Military Service Act, will he say why this action has been taken?
I am not aware of any memorandum of the nature suggested by my hon. Friend. A letter from the Ministry of National Service has been sent to all such officers requesting them to continue their services in the Royal Army Medical Corps on the expiration of their contracts. The letter also states that the privilege which has hitherto been accorded of laying before the Central Professional Committees any difficulties which individuals may have in continuing their services, will not be affected.
Volunteer Officers
26.
asked the Under-Secretary of State for War whether he is now in a position to make any statement with regard to the arrangements made by the Army Council with regard to the status of Volunteer officers who are called up under the new Military Service Act; and will they be transferred as officers in the Army, or will they be placed in some cadet corps for instruction, or will they have to join up as privates?
Volunteer officers and ex-Volunteer officers between the ages of thirty-five and forty-five will be sent to cadet battalions, in so far as there are vacancies. These vacancies arc, however, very few in number. Generally, therefore, the arrangement will be that they will have the opportunity of joining the Inns of Court or Artists' Officers Training Corps, where there will be special platoons appropriate to their age and class. This applies only to Volunteer officers and ex-Volunteer officers who held their commissions before the passing of the Act.
Royal Army Medical Corps (Railway Fares)
30.
asked the Financial Secretary to the War Office whether medical men who are called up to serve as officers in the Royal Army Medical Corps are required to pay their own railway fares from their homes to London; and whether he is prepared to remedy the hardship thus caused to doctors resident in Scotland or at a distance from London?
Royal Army Medical Corps officers do not necessarily join for duty in London on first appointment, but proceed from their homes to their stations direct. Free travelling for this journey is not admissible.
Invalided Soldiers
53.
asked the Minister of National Service whether a soldier invalided out of the Army before the War who had served overseas is specifically excluded from being called up under the Schedule of the new Military Service Act?
Any disabled man who has served in the field or at sea in any previous war is excepted from liability to military service by Clause 4 (a) of the First Schedule to the Military Service (No. 2) Act, 1918. If my hon. and gallant Friend has any particular man in mind I will gladly advise him as to his position.
Work Of National Importance
54.
asked the Minister of National Service whether a man who had served for nineteen weeks with the Colours and was discharged on 6th October, 1917, as unfit for war service, and is now an insurance clerk, has to find work of national importance; and, if so, within what time from the 6th October, 1917, has he to find this class of work?
Employment as an insurance clerk is not considered to be work of national importance. A disabled man who is not already on work of national importance is bound to use his best endeavours to obtain such work if he wishes to avail himself of the provisions of the Act. Full particulars of the time within which he should obtain such work and the procedure to be followed are set out in National Service Instruction 29 of 1918, which has been published and widely circulated.
Cannot the hon. Gentleman give the House some further information? How long is a man given after he has been discharged?
Oh, he is officially given a month, but in practice, in genuine cases, we use the greatest elasticity in extending that period.
Civilian And Military Doctors
55.
asked the Minister of National Service if he is aware that in the past military doctors have not paid the slightest attention to the opinions of civilian doctors, and that, in consequence, many men utterly unfit have been called up for service at a useless cost to the country; and if, under the more serious conditions now prevailing, he will see that the opinions of civilian doctors are reasonably considered?
I presume that the statement refers to the practice of the old Recruiting Boards. Under the present arrangements for the medical examination of recruits, every effort is made not only to obtain evidence of each man's medical history, but to weigh this evidence carefully before deciding on a man's grading.
Medical Grading
56.
asked whether medical grade No. 2 now includes the old category B 2 as well as categories B 1 and C 1?
The answer is in the negative. The classification by grades introduced last autumn superseded the former classification by categories. There is no precise parallel between the grades and categories. Men in category B 2 are administratively regarded as in Grade 3 until they are re-examined and graded by a National Service medical board. Thereafter they are liable to the conditions affecting the grade in which they are placed.
The standard of medical grading by National Service medical boards have not been altered. The only variation is, as I stated in answer to the hon. Member for West Leeds on the 18th April, that a slightly lower standard of vision has been adopted in accordance with the views expressed by a committee of military and civil ophthalmic specialists.Would it be possible to give the standard conditions adopted now?
Practically they have been published now, and I believe they are on sale.
Water Companies' Employes
57.
asked whether the Order M.N.S. Form R. 49 cancels the partial exemption granted to employés of water companies over thirty-one years of age in Memorandum R. 165 issued on 5th December last; and whether, in view of the fact that the staffs of skilled men employed by the provincial water companies have been reduced to the minimum necessary for the maintenance of the supply of water in their areas, it is intended to withdraw any more of these men?
The Memorandum referred to in the first part of the question is still in operation, and is not affected by the Decertification Order of 9th April. As regards the latter part, I can only refer my hon. Friend to my reply to his question on the same subject on 25th April.
One-Man Businesses (Scotland)
59.
asked the Secretary for Scotland whether the circular to tribunals regarding one-man businesses has yet been issued in Scotland whereby owners of such businesses will be put on the same footing as they are in England and Wales or whether his Department has still got this matter under consideration?
The circular to which my hon. and learned Friend refers was issued at the beginning of February. It places the owners of one-man businesses in Scotland upon the same footing as similar men in England and Wales.
Soldiers' Leave
25.
asked whether the soldiers who have been three years in Gallipoli, Egypt, and Palestine, as, for example, the l/6th Highland Light Infantry, and who have been moved to France, will be given first leave when circumstances permit, in view of the facts that they have been so long abroad and that they were promised early leave on the evacuation of Gallipoli?
At the present time all leave from France is in abeyance, but I can assure my hon. Friend that cases such as he mentions in his question will receive the sympathetic consideration of the Field-Marshal Commanding-in-Chief as soon as the circumstances permit.
Enemy Shells And Explosives
27.
asked the Undersecretary of State for War whether he has now completed his inquiries as to whether any of our wounded men in the recent German advance have suffered from any new kind of explosive shell or any new form of gas; and whether he can make any statement on the subject?
Reports have been obtained from various hospitals in the London district, and there does not appear to be any evidence which would lead the medical authorities to believe that any wounds to our soldiers have been caused by a new kind of explosive, chemical shell, or gas used by the enemy.
Wool
29.
asked the Financial Secretary to the War Office whether, if a farmer raises objection to sending his wool to any particular wool broker on account of unsatisfactory dealings with him in the past, the district executive officer of the Wool Purchasing Department will give him the option referred to in answer to a question in this House on 19th December last?
As I informed the hon. Member, in answer to the previous question to which he refers, the district executive officer will always consider any reasonable objection raised.
Railway Accommodation (German Prisoners)
42.
asked the President of the Board of Trade if his attention has been drawn to the fact that at Bournemouth two English women with first-class tickets were turned out of a first-class railway compartment and put into a third-class compartment, in order to permit of German officers under escort occupying the first-class carriage; and whether instructions will be given that in the future no English woman is to be turned out of her seat to make room for any German, and that if there is no empty first-class carriage available German officers will be carried in any compartment regardless of class?
My right hon. Friend has asked me to answer this question. As regards the first two parts, I would refer my hon. Friend to my reply on Monday last to the hon. and gallant Member for Christchurch. The answer to the last part of the question is in the affirmative.
43.
asked the President of the Board of Trade why an English commercial traveller was recently turned out of a first-class smoking compartment at a station on the Midland Railway to make room for a party of German officer prisoners, and whether he is aware that his luggage was thrown out on the platform by one of the station officials?
If the hon. and gallant Member will let me know when and where the incident to which he refers took place, I will inquire into the circumstances.
Is it necessary to treat these inhuman Huns in this way, by putting them into a first-class compartment, with the result that our own people have to travel by truck or any other way they can?
That is a question of policy which does not arise out of the answer.
Budget Proposals
Excise Duty
49.
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he is aware that, in addition to the Excise Duty of 50s. per standard barrel of beer, a further surcharge of 25s. per standard barrel has been imposed by the Ministry of Food on munition ale, thus increasing the duty on munition ale to 75s. per standard barrel; what is the amount received from this surcharge on munition ale for the month of April and how has this money been disposed of; and whether Government Departments controlling commodities have the power to surcharge such commodities up to any extent they please without Parliamentary authority or control?
The maximum barrelage which a brewer for sale is authorised to brew under the Intoxicating Liquor (Output and Delivery) Order, 1917, may be increased, within prescribed limits, by such further amount, if any, as in his case may be authorised by licence of the Food Controller if he complies with tin conditions subject to which such licence is granted. In view of the fact that licences to brew additional beer for munition workers must necessarily be confined to brewers in munition areas, it was decided that these licences should be granted only to brewers who were willing to pay to the Food Controller for the credit of the Exchequer a fee of 25s. per standard barrel in excess of the duty. The payments for the month of April will slightly exceed £80,000. I may add that all the areas are now covered by brewers who are willing to accept this condition.
Under what constitutional authority is this surcharge made?
I shall require notice of that question. It is quite a new point to me.
Has this surcharge been made during any part of the financial year ending 31st March, and if so, how much?
That question also I shall require notice of.
Income Tax
50.
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he is aware that, although it is the general practice to allow clerks to be assessed for the purposes of Income Tax on their average earnings for three years, surveyors of taxes in some places refuse to allow this, especially in cases where a clerk has changed his employment; and whether he will issue Instructions for a uniform procedure of assessing clerks on their average income, as is done in the case of professional men?
I am not aware of the eases to which the hon. Member refers, but if he will give me particulars I will look into the matter.
Professional Men (Incomes)
51.
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he will favourably consider the insertion in the Finance Bill of a provision rendering professional incomes, where increased emoluments have been earned during the War, liable to the operation of the Excess Profits Tax?
This is a matter which has been very carefully considered, but, having regard to the existing reliefs and allowances in the Excess Profits Duty, the extension of that duty to professions would produce but a small yield, while diverting the energies of surveyors of taxes from other and more profitable Revenue work.
52.
asked the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he will favourably consider the insertion in the Finance Bill of a provision exempting the income of members of the legal and other learned professions who have given up their practice in order to undertake military or naval duties from the operation of the rule of the three years' average?
Provision already exists to meet the cases contemplated by my hon. Friend. In this connection I would invite his attention to Sections 11 and 12 of the Finance Act, 1917.
Representation Of The People Act, 1918
Service Proxies
38.
asked the President of the Local Government Board when he expects to be able to issue the necessary Order in Council with reference to the appointment or nomination by sailors and soldiers of proxies under the Representation of the People Act, 1918?
An Order in Council on this subject is in course of preparation, but I am not in a position at the moment to say at what date it may be possible to issue it.
Registration Forms
40.
asked the President of the Local Government Board whether he is aware that registration officers in the London area are delivering the new registration forms at houses without making proper inquiry as to the persons residing there and are simply leaving the forms to be filled up by the occupiers and posted to the registration officers; whether he is aware that a large proportion of these forms are not being returned; and whether, with a view of saving labour and time and obtaining efficient registers, he will instruct registration officers to make a proper house-to-house canvass and fill up the forms forthwith by their canvassers on the information obtained?
The view which I hold, and which I have represented in a circular issued to registration officers, is that a house-to-house inquiry will be necessary in practically every registration area. If, later on, the hon. Member becomes aware of cases in which no such inquiry is proposed to be made, and will furnish me with particulars, I will communicate with the registration officer who is responsible for the preparation of the lists. I hope, however, the hon. Member will recognise the extraordinary difficulties under which registration officers are working at the present time.
Increase Of Rent, Etc (Amendment), Bill
39.
asked the President of the Local Government Board whether, in view of the influx of aliens due to air raids into residential areas near London, he proposes to introduce a Bill which will protect tenants of houses of a larger annual rental than £26 a year from being dispossessed of their houses by such aliens and others who are willing to pay higher rents?
I would refer my hon. and gallant Friend to what I said yesterday on the Third Reading of the Increase of Rents, etc. (Amendment), Bill. I am afraid I cannot give any undertaking to introduce legislation of the kind he desires.
Is the right hon. Gentleman not aware of the great public feeling on the question, and is it not possible to introduce legislation stopping these aliens from moving about from one place to another during the War?
I am aware of the public feeling, but I am also aware of the fact that there is congestion of business in the House of Commons.
Petrol Supplies
44.
asked the President of the Board of Trade whether it is proposed, in the interests of economy of petrol, to place any restriction upon the distances that may be travelled in the country by petrol-driven cars belonging to tradesmen and co-operative stores soliciting orders and delivering goods?
The President of the Board of Trade has recently appointed a Road Transport Board, one function of which will be to determine what further measures are necessary to ensure the most economic use of road transport vehicles. The Road Transport Board, through its local officers, will investigate the questions referred to by the hon. Gentleman, and will decide what restrictions, if any, shall be placed upon the distances travelled by vehicles used for soliciting orders and delivering goods.
House Of Commons (Payment Of Members)
45.
asked the Prime Minister if he is aware that£250,000 is being allotted annually to the payment of Members of this House; that the nation is in need of money, and that this sum represents the interest on£5,000,000 at 5 per cent.; and if he will withhold the salary of Members and use the money so saved for the purpose of paying the interest of such £5,000,000 until such time as the country can better afford the luxury of paid legislators?
I do not see my way to adopt my hon. Friend's suggestion.
Is the right hon. Gentleman aware of the very strong feeling in the country that this House should set an example in this matter?
I dare say there are many people who have that feeling, but I think it would arouse very acute controversy if we were to start that question here.
Dardanelles Commission
46.
asked the Prime Minister whether the proceedings of the Dardanelles Commission will be made public?
I regret that I cannot add anything to the reply which I gave to the hon. Member for Lanarkshire (North-West) on the 16th January last.
British Ships (Conveyance Of Stores And Troops)
41.
asked the Parliamentary Secretary to the Shipping Controller whether British ships, when employed for the conveyance of stores or troops for account of the United States, France, or Italy, receive the same rates of remuneration in respect of such employ- ment as are paid by those countries in respect of equivalent services performed by ships on their own register and flying their own flags?
The owners of British requisitioned ships receive British rates of remuneration, irrespective of the service on which the ships are employed. I think the hon. Member will see that that is the only course we could take. The financial arrangements between this country and the Allies on account of shipping services rendered by and to this country are too complicated to be explained within the limits of an answer to a question. Generally, they are on a reciprocal basis.
Exchange Buildings, Glasgow
60.
asked the Minister of Labour, with reference to the new Exchange buildings acquired in Glasgow, whether the present tenants have been informed that they must leave at a very early date; if so, at what date; is he aware that some of these tenants are serving with the forces at the front, while others are dependants of soldiers so serving; and is it intended to evict these?
The tenancies of the present occupants of the premises expire in the ordinary course at Whitsun term day, and the tenants have received formal notice from the proprietors of the premises to give up the premises on the expiration of their tenancies. The Minister of Labour would be prepared to assent to arrangements being made as far as practicable for allowing them to remain in occupation until the premises are required for the necessary work on alterations. My right hon. Friend is informed that one of the tenants is at present serving with the forces, and that the wife of a soldier is the tenant of another part of the premises. Inquiries are being made whether it would be possible to allow either or both of these tenants to occupy a portion of the premises without seriously interfering with the use of the remainder for the work of the Department.
Will these tenants on their return be allowed to utilise the same premises as they are now utilising?
We shall endeavour to make arrangements as suitable as possible for them, and I cannot say more.
Defence Of The Realm Act Regulations
62.
asked the Home Secretary whether his attention has been called to the fact that E. D. Morel, lately convicted on his own evidence of offences against the Defence of the Realm Regulations, has now joined the Independent Labour Party; whether he is conducting a pro-German propaganda in the country; and whether he proposes to take any steps in the matter?
I have no information to the effect stated in the first two parts of the question. If this person should again contravene the Defence of the Realm Regulations proceedings would at once be taken against him.
Is it not a fact that the only charge that can be made against Mr. Morel was that of accepting the offer made by the niece of the Foreign Secretary to send one of his books, and does he not think that the hon. and gallant Member at this moment might be better employed than in bringing insinuations against a braver man than himself?
I made no insinuations of any kind. I cannot accept the hon. Member's statement as to the nature of the offence, and I do not think it is desirable that I should go into it.
66.
asked the Home Secretary whether he is aware that the police have entered the business premises of Mr. S. H. Street, printer, Mitcham Lane, Streatham, have dismantled all his printing machines, injuring beyond repair one press worth between £40 and £50; whether he knows that the police produced no warrant for these proceedings, and ultimately departed after locking the door and taking away the key; whether he can state under what Regulation the police are allowed to destroy a man's property on the premises and to lock out the man from his own premises; whether the police held an order from a justice of the peace requiring the premises to be closed; if so, why this order was not produced; and for what purpose and under whose instructions these proceedings were taken?
The action referred to in this question was taken by the police under No. 51 of the Defence of the Realm Regulations in connection with the printing of a newspaper called the "Tribunal," and I have no reason to believe that they exceeded their powers. A portion of one machine was accidentally damaged, but I am informed that the damage is very slight. As regards the key, Mr. Street himself handed it to the police officers, saying that he was going away and that he would be obliged if they would lock the place up. When the removal was completed the key was handed back to Mr. Street. There was no necessity for an order from a justice of the peace.
Forcible Feeding, Warrington
63.
asked whether Emanuel Ribeiro, after fourteen months' forcible feeding at Lord Derby's War Hospital, Warrington, is still being forcibly fed at Wormwood Scrubs; whether he has received a letter from Mrs. Ribeiro giving particulars of his emaciated physical condition as a consequence of what he had undergone before his removal to prison; and whether he is now able to recommend the release of Ribeiro, in view of the length of time he has suffered and the uselessness of prolonging this treatment?
The answer to the first part of the question is in the affirmative. The man was received into prison on the 23rd March, and on the same date his wife wrote a letter, of which a copy was sent to me, to the effect that he was in a low state of health and in an emaciated condition. I asked for a special medical report upon the case, which was to the effect that the man was in good health but rather too fat owing to want of exercise. A further medical report received to-day shows that his health continues good and that he is losing fat and gaining muscle and is taking his exercise regularly. It appears to me, therefore, that there are no medical grounds for ordering his release.
Why was this man Ribeiro allowed to stay in this hospital for fourteen months, and who paid for him? Was it Lord Derby, the country, or who?
That question must be: addressed to the War Office.
Women's Army Auxiliary Corps
64.
asked the Home Secretary whether his attention has been called to the case of the Rev. R. H. Quick, who was fined £40 at the Congleton Borough Police Court on a charge of having spread false reports regarding the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps, which charge was founded on the fact that in a letter to the Secretary of the Social Purity League he had made inquiries as to the truth or otherwise of certain accusations which he bad heard from a soldier friend; and whether he will reduce the fine due to a well-meaning inquiry as to the behaviour of persons enrolled for employment under the Army Council?
My attention has not been called to this case, and no reason has at present been shown for reducing the fine. A well-meaning question, if published, may do great harm.
Is the right hon. Gentleman aware that there are too many of these well-meaning inquiries with regard to the women of this country at the present time?
I think my hon. and gallant Friend knows that I take that view.
Does the right hon. Gentleman not realise that if you crush all inquiries you only create and increase suspicion?
Enemy Aliens
65.
asked whether Germans who have been ordered from East Coast towns because of the chief constables reporting them as dangerous there, may now come to London to live and daily take part in the business of the City with impunity, in the same way as E. A. Meyer, who was ordered out of Westcliff-on-Sea and who immediately sought refuge in London and daily attends an office of German stockbrokers in Throgmorton Street; and will he say why espionage is possible in seaport towns where it is impossible in London?
I have nothing to add to the answers which I gave on the 24th April with regard to the case of E. A. Mcyer, a naturalised British subject. It is obvious that restrictions which are desirable in seaport towns do not necessarily apply to London.
Are we to understand that German refugees from seaport towns are coming to London in any number?
The hon. Gentleman knows that that is not so. This man is a British subject.
Elementary School Children (Maintenance Grants)
31.
asked the President of the Board of Education whether local education authorities have now the power to award maintenance Grants to children attending elementary schools beyond the age of fourteen; and, if so, under what conditions?
A local education authority have, under Section 11 of the Education (Administrative Provisions) Act, 1907, power to aid by scholarships or bursaries the instruction in public elementary schools of scholars from the age of twelve up to the limit of age fixed for the provision of instructions in a public elementary school by Section 22 of the Education Act, 1902.
Continuation Schools
32.
asked the President of the Board of Education whether, under Clause 10 of the Education Bill or otherwise, it will be possible for a local education authority and for persons who set up a continuation school under the control and direction of the local education authority to provide instruction for a greater number of hours than provided in the Education Bill?
The answer is in the affirmative, but attendance for the additional hours will not be obligatory.
Church Temporalities (Wales)
61.
asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department whether the Government actuary, Sir Alfred Watson, as stated in the Third Report of the Commissioners of Church Temporalities in Wales, has made a Report as to the operation of paragraph 2 of the Fourth Schedule of the Welsh Church Act, 1914; whether the Report has been submitted to the Representative Body of the Church in Wales; and whether the Government are prepared, in order that Welsh representatives in this House as well as the representatives of the Church should be made acquainted with its contents, to lay the Report upon the Table?
This Report was received and was communicated by the Commissioners to the Representative Body with a view to an agreement being arrived at in accordance with the Act. As, failing agreement, the question will have to be referred to arbitration, I do not think it desirable that the Report should be laid upon the Table at the present moment.