CENSURE DEBATE
LLOYD GEORGE UNEASY GROWTH OF UNEMPLOYED (United Press Assn—By Electric Telegraph—Copyright.) LONDON, October 26. In the Censure debate, Lloyd George said the Governor of the Bank of England recently made an ominous speech. He declared he was lost and did not know what to do. Thus the man who above all others had been a guide to Ministers for a decade, admitted that he could not foresee what was going to happen. Lloyd George said he felt uneasy. As the oldest member of the Commons, he asked whether Government had any plan to deal with the three millions of unemployed except to wait and see what the tariffs would do? By the end of the present year, it would cost at least three hundred and fifty millions to keep the unemployed deteriorating in idleness. Millions of idle money could he employed in providing better houses, Toads and public works and on land settlement.
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Inangahua Times, 27 October 1932, Page 3
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155CENSURE DEBATE Inangahua Times, 27 October 1932, Page 3
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