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A DESPICABLE TRICK

AUSTRALIAN PRIME MINISTER THE VICTIM. (From Our OVvn Correspondent.) SYDNEY, April 26. Details of the trick played recently upon the Australian Prim© Minister, Mr Hughes, show that the act was a most despicable one and was obviously the work of someone of very cunning and) unscrupulous character. Mr Hughes, some months ago, received a gift of £25,000 in cash, subscribed by admirers in Australia and Britain of his services to the Empire during the war. Mr Hughes, who had been a poor man, accepted the money —and thereupon every Labour body and newspaper in the country began to shriek at him. The question whether the money should have been taken was open to debate; and Mr Hugbess position was not made easier by the consistent refusal of the promoters of the testimonial to publish the names of the subscribers. An attempt was recently mad© in Parliament to have Mr Hughes’s seat declared vacant on the ground that certain laws ; forbad© the acceptance of a gift, but this move failed. Then, a few days ago, the Mayor of Bendigo—Mr Hughes’s constituency—received) a letter apparently from Mr Hughes. “I have decided,” says the letter, “on the eve of my departure for England, to signify my appreciation of the loyal support always given to me by the constituency of Bendigo, to donate for its need a part of the £25,000 recently presented to me, in the following manner:—£sooo to the miners’ sick fund, £SOOO to the Bendigo School of Mines, and £SOOO to farming interests, through the Bendigo Agricultural Society.” • The letter then goes on to ask for a conference of the three bodies named, to formulate a scheme by which the amounts specified could be most usefully allotted. The Mayor accepted the letter as genuine, and proceeded to arrange the conference for last Tuesday afternoon. Some time on Tuesday, however, news of the “gift” reached Mr Hughes, and ho then publicly denounced the whole thing as a hoax, worked to do him political harm. “ I have given instructions to the police to ascertain who the writer was,” said Mr Hughes “If it were true that I were making these gifts, it, would be one of the most shameless acts of attempting to bribe a. constituency in the whole history of Australia.” Mr Hughes has left for England, with the mystery unsolved.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT19210507.2.32

Bibliographic details

Otago Daily Times, Issue 18239, 7 May 1921, Page 7

Word Count
392

A DESPICABLE TRICK Otago Daily Times, Issue 18239, 7 May 1921, Page 7

A DESPICABLE TRICK Otago Daily Times, Issue 18239, 7 May 1921, Page 7

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