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NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE news of the week from Matabeleland is rather con- fused. It may be taken as certain that the whole Matabele tribe has rtsen, and that to dislodge its impis from the hills...
The Italians on April 2nd inflicted a somewhat severe defeat
The Spectatoron the Dervishes, Colonel Stevani, in command near Kassala, driving back an advancing column with heavy loss. He was inclined to follow up his victory, but was ordered by...
The new Italian Ministry is trying seriously to remedy the
The Spectatorshameful condition of affairs in Sicily. The Premier, who is a Sicilian and understands the island, has appointed a Senator, Count Codronchi, Civil Commissioner of Sicily, with...
The French Senate, urged on by the Moderates and by
The Spectatorall the classes which dread the Income-tax Bill, is not disposed to abandon its quarrel with M. Bourgeois. It insisted on Friday week on "further explanations" as to the...
The Times published on Saturday a letter from its corre-
The Spectatorspondent in Paris confirming even in details the explanation we suggested on Saturday last of the fall of M. Berthelot. That Minister fell because the Russian Government refused...
The National Union of Teachers, who have met at Brighton
The Spectatorthis week, have been chiefly engaged in discussing the Edu- cation Bill, on which they have passed a great number of elaborate criticisms. They wish for an Education Authority...
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS.
The SpectatorWith the " SPECTATOR" of Saturday, April 25th, will be issued, gratis, a SPECIAL LITERARY SUPPLEMENT, the outside pages of which will be devoted to Advertisements. To secure...
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An authentic story from Zanzibar well illustrates the sort of
The Spectatorthings which happen when a system of slavery is tolerated. An Arab named All Bin Abdulla, of Pemba, owned a slave called Muftah. This slave ran away, but was caught and restored...
The American, Irish, and English Cardinals have joined in an
The Spectatorappeal on behalf of a permanent tribunal of arbitration to decide disputes among the English-speaking races without war. Cardinals Gibbons, Logue, and Vaughan, passing by...
The defeat of the Chinese by Japan is still producing
The Spectatorcon- sequences. The Times of Thursday announces that the Regent of Nepal, irritated by continuous outrages from Thibet, has forwarded an ultimatum to the Lamas at Lhassa, and...
On Wednesday Mr. Leonard Courtney, addressing his con- stituents at
The SpectatorBodmin, made a powerful protest against the advance into the Soudan, and pleaded that there was still time to keep the expedition within bounds. The idea of the reconquest of...
A very serious accident marked the first public use of
The Spectatorthe mountain railway up Snowdon on Easter Monday. In a narrow saddle about half-way between the top and bottom of the mountain the gradient is steep and the curve very sharp....
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The world has all been talking of the curious resemblance
The Spectatorbetween the story of Mrs. Humphry Ward's "Bessie Costrell" and that of Lucy Clack, living in an Oxfordshire village near Bampton, who was convicted on Tuesday, and sentenced to...
The rapid increase of population in Germany, due, it is
The Spectatorbelieved, to the increase of manufactures, is becoming of political importance. According to the corrected return of the Census taken on December 2nd, 1895, the Empire now...
Sir Charles Dilke has issued a paper in which he
The Spectatorinvites the politicians of the Gladatonian party to consider whether some very moderate scheme of Home-rule,—partaking ap. parently more of a provincial local government than of...
We deeply regret to record the death on Good Friday,
The Spectatorat the comparatively early age of fifty-one, of Mr. James Ash- croft Noble, who had been for many years a regular con- tributor to the literary columns of the Spectator. He was...
London has been quite excited this week over a murder
The Spectatorcommitted with circumstances of unusual atrocity. An old Jew umbrella-maker named Levy, a man of seventy-five, had -accumulated considerable means, and lived in a small house in...
The Report of the Royal Humane Society for 1895 shows,
The Spectatoras always, some splendid examples of heroism and self-sacrifice. No fewer than eight hundred persona received recognition for saving, or attempting to save, life. They actually...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE STRUGGLE OF CLASSES IN FRANCE. T HE struggle between classes which is going on in France is becoming highly interesting, all the more because, if we are not greatly...
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THE EDUCATION BILL IN THE COUNTRY.
The SpectatorHE shriek against the Education Bill which the Opposition journals raised on its first introduction has not found itself echoed in the country. The Con- ference of the National...
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WANTED, A POLICY FOR THE OPPOSITION.
The SpectatorW E never remember within the last fifty years a time in which the Opposition were so completely with- out a policy on which they could hope to dwell with the slightest hope of...
INDIA AND AFRICA.
The SpectatorT "policy, so strongly advocated in the Times of Tuesday, of treating Eastern and Central Africa as a dependency of India rather than of England, is one which has attracted a...
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THE IRISH OUTLOOK.
The SpectatorI RELAND is quiet and Ireland is prosperous, and unless accident or faction manages to frustrate the plans of the Government the last of the grievances of the Roman Catholic...
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THE CHILDREN OF THE STATE.
The SpectatorW E perceive from our correspondence that the experts in Poor-law management think that our con- demnation of the Metropolitan pauper schools was a great deal too harsh. It was...
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MR. BIRRELL ON THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND.
The SpectatorM R. BIRRELL'S article in the current Nineteenth Century is, to our thinking, a singularly attractive piece of work. It is so in part from the curious detach- ment of the...
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THE NEW OLYMPIC GAMES.
The SpectatorI T is iniPmsible to get honestly interested in the revival of the Olympic games. They are not contested in the old place, but in Athens, or in the old way, but among the repre-...
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THE COMPANIONS OF ST. JOHN.
The SpectatorT HE secret society which appears to have been in existence for some ten years or so in Cambridge,—with branches in other places,—of the Companions of St. John, must have had no...
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ANIMAL WARFARE.
The SpectatorE VIDENCE of the astonishing sagacity and military organisation of the African baboons increases with the recent exploration of their favourite haunts, due to the troubles in...
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CORRESPONDENCE.
The SpectatorTHREE GENERATIONS OF LUNATIC CATS'. [TO THE EDITOR 07 THZ " SPRCTATOR."] THE alternations of temper in household cats are often sudden and violent, their spit-fire ways being...
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THE TRANSATLANTIC CATTLE TRADE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR Or TRY " SPECTATOR."] SIE, — Canadian bullocks, before they were excluded three years since, were worth 20 per cent. more than similar bullocks south of the...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorENGLAND AND THE UNITED STATES. [TO THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—The chance has now come for England to show whether the expressions of respect for the true kernel of...
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THE BUISSON INSTITUTION.
The Spectator[To ri EDITOR 07 TER "SPECTATOR. " ] SIR,—Allow me to express my great satisfaction at the news conveyed by Mr. Pirkis through your columns. An institute opened in England under...
THE ALLEGED BORDEAUX ATROCITY.
The SpectatorTo as EDITOR Or TRI " SPECTATOR:1 SIR,—In the portion of my letter originally quoted in the Spectator of March 14th, were the words :—" Nearly twenty thousand horses are said to...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorCAPTAIN YOUNGHUSBAND'S "HEART OF A CONTINENT."* THE speciality which distinguishes Captain F. Younghusbarraf as an explorer is the nonchalance with which he performed....
POETRY.
The SpectatorTHE GYPSY TAINT. FATHER is a townsman, mother from the far Green southern uplands where wealthy pastures are : My kith and my kindred are prosperous and sleek, Who feed well...
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ULSTER AS IT IS.*
The SpectatorMn. Macxxicarr possesses important special valifacation* for writing on Ulster As It Is. For more than a quarter of • Ulster As It Is; or, Twenty eight Tsars' Expsr.enca as an...
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THE ISLAND OF DR. MOREAU.*
The SpectatorTHE ingenious author of The Time Machine has found in this little book a subject exactly suited to his rather peculiar type of imagination. When he tried to conceive the idea of...
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OWEN ROE O'NEILL.*
The SpectatorWHEN last summer the House of Commons debated, with no little heat, whether Cromwell should have a statue, the Irish Members fiercely declared that if the tyrant and arch-enemy...
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SIR EDWIN ARNOLD'S TRAVELS.*
The SpectatorIT is to the papers upon Japan that the reader will turn first when he opens the volume before us. Sir Edwin Arnold has been known for a long time as a devotee of that...
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A LADY OF QUALITY.*
The SpectatorTHERE is always a brilliaut charm and an atmosphere of high spirits about Mrs. Hodgson Burnett's books, but we doubt whether her latest achievement will add much to her reputa-...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorChambers's Journal still retains its positively unique position among magazines as a combination of old-fashioned solidity and that "lightness" which is supposed to be the...
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Cottage Hospitals. By Henry C. Burdett. (Scientific Press Company.)—This is
The Spectatorthe third edition of Mr. Burdett's work (the second was published in 1880). The intervening years have witnessed, as our readers are probably aware, many changes, mostly, it is...