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Dear Sir John Anderson
Government House,
6th November 1914.
119
I do not wish to make this an official communication lest it should be thought that the relations between myself and the Kajor General Kelly were not harmonious. The contrary is the case. They have always been and still are most cordial. It is of course my business that they should be maintained on that footing both in peace and war.
At the same time it is right that you should know that some regrettable incidents have occurred, springing from a misconception on the part of many military officers in the Colony and of Major General Kelly himself as to the effect of the Order-in-Council of October 1896, concerning the interpretation of Clause 3(1) of which I have found it necessary to address the Secretary of State officially.
At first General Kelly and his merry men took the view that the Order-in-Council constituted a declaration of Martial Law, and the General himself wrote to me that under "Martial Law" I could fix the price of some barbed wire his Chief Engineer had bought without going through the formalities prescribed in the Order-in-Council. It was not till I sat down and wrote out a Memorandum explaining what is meant by Martial Law that the false position taken up was abandoned. The Military Authorities then fell back on the position they are now
LEX A.L
Intere) yentTOJJA
MIEI, JI, IS
.ba
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