[745.] Daily Herald for February 21, 1922.
[746.] Ibid., March 18, 1920.
[747.] See Report of Annual Conference of the Social Democratic Federation in Morning Post for August 6, 1923, where it is said that "Whole-hearted denunciation of Sovietism was the chief feature of the day's discussion," etc.
[748.] Evening Standard for January 15, 1924.
[749.] Daily Telegraph for January 8, 1923; Daily Mail for January 24, 1923.
[750.] Report of speech by Adeline, Duchess of Bedford, at a public meeting to protest against the treatment of political prisoners in Portugal, April 22, 1913, quoted in Portuguese Political Prisoners, p. 89 (published by Upcott Gill & Son).
[751.] Evening Standard, May 14, 1923.
[752.] That this use of the cinema for revolutionary propaganda is deliberate was proved to me by personal experience. A man who had been struck with the dramatic possibilities of something I had written wrote to ask if he might place it before a certain well-known film producer in America. I gave my consent, and some time later he informed me that the producer in question regretted he could not film my work as it might appear to be anti-Bolshevist propaganda. Soon after this the same producer brought out a film on the same subject with the moral turned round the other way, so as to make the whole thing subtly revolutionary, and brought this over to England, where he advertised it as anti-Bolshevist propaganda! This is typical of the duplicity displayed by these propagandists.
[753.] Quoted in Le Problème de la Mode, by the Baronne de Montenach, p. 30(1913).
[754.] Robison, Proofs of a Conspiracy, pp. 251, 252 (1798).