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- NEWS OF THE WEEK T HE military situation in Spain remains
The Spectatorpractically sta g nant, thou g h General Franco is understood to be preparin g a further mass attack on Bilbao, whose capture would, in his belief, be the turnin g -point of the...
It is fairly safe to predict that one result of
The Spectatorthe Imperial Conference will be a decision to subsidise the construction of new ships for the Canada-Australia route. Sir Edward Beatty, President of the Canadian Pacific...
Diplomats' Journeys If the ceaseless scurryin g of diplomatists across the
The Spectatorface of Europe produced half the effect the personalities concerned hope, the relationships between the States of the continent would be under g oin g transformation daily....
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Liberal Split in Canada The speech in which Mr. Hepburn,
The SpectatorLiberal Premier of Ontario, last week repueir.ed his allegiance to the Liberal Government at Ottawa brought to a head a quarrel which has long been threatening. Mr. Hepbum's...
Electricity and the Public The Government's proposals for reorganising the
The Spectatordis- tribution of electricity were made available to parliament and the public on Tuesday, having been previously commu- nicated to the industry itself—for what purpose it is...
Mr. Morrison and the Farms In the debate on agriculture
The Spectatorin the House of COMM 3ns on Monday Mr. Morrison's comprehensive review revealed much Welcome progress, though the Liberals, led by Mr. Lloyd George, claimed that the...
Britain and the Baltic States Lord Plymouth's visit to the
The SpectatorBaltic States is not an event of the first importance, but it may have valuable conse- quences, none the less. There has been too little contact between this country and...
Health Ministry and Nation , Sir Kingsley Wood is recognised
The Spectatoras one, of the most successful Ministers in the Cabinet, and his speech On the vote for his department . on Tuesday was an admirable record of sound administration. From the...
Great Britain's Gold Policy Sir John Simon's statement on monetary
The Spectatorpolicy in the House of Commons on Tuesday had a sedative effect on the gold market, which during the last week has given way to alarms, due to fears of a fall in the price of...
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The Bill to increase Ministers' salaries has now passed to
The SpectatorAnother Place. The report stage was chiefly notable for a speech by Sir Stafford Cripps on the duties and emolu- ments of the Law Officers. The Liberals renewed their attack on...
Mr. Lloyd George's speech foreshadows a new departure. Instead of
The Spectatorsubsidising various products, subsidise marketing. Presumably, although he did not say so, this would mean lower prices for the urban consumer. Members of different parties have...
Sir Kingsley Wood is another Minister who, up to the
The Spectatorpresent, has been invariably successful. His appearance and manner are both disarming, though no one who has followed his career can have any doubt that he is one of the most...
With the rise in the cost of living it seems
The Spectatorlikely that the issue of food taxes will re-emerge. It played a considerable part in the recent by-election at Wandsworth and is, I hear, figuring largely in the eleven contests...
Air Force Accidents The list of disasters sustained by Royal
The SpectatorAir Force machines during last week-end, following on a still longer list of casualties which marked the Empire Air Day displays a week earlier, has awakened very general and...
The Week in Parliament Our Parliamentary correspondent writes : On
The Spectatorthe Ministry of Agriculture Vote interest was fairly equally divided between Agriculture and the Minister. There must be occasions in the life of every occupant of the Treasury...
Preparation for the Slump No one with any foresight and
The Spectatorany regard for the lessons of the past expects the process of recovery which has con- tinued now for some five years to go on for ever. The slump is awaited as inevitable, and,...
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BACK TO PURITANISM?
The SpectatorD R. INGE has the reputation of being provocative, and the sermon he preached in Winchester Cathedral on Sunday achieved a large measure of that publicity which headlines and...
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A NEW WAY WITH PRISONERS
The SpectatorT HERE will no doubt always be some people who believe that the more savagely criminals are punished the better it is for everyone else. Fortunately they grow fewer, and by...
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A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorT HE "revolt of the Simonites " was diligently worked up in advance by certain lobby correspondents, but it never looked like amounting to much. Such revolts rarely do. The...
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FIFTY YEARS OF COLOSTIES
The SpectatorBy LORD LUGARD About six-sevenths of the area of this Colonial Empire, and over two-thirds of its population, lie in the continent of Africa. These African territories are the...
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SCIENCE AND THE SNAKE
The SpectatorSHERWOOD TAYLOR By F. T HE war between Man and the Serpent is as old as the human race, yet only in the present century has any considerable victory been won by ourvecies. In...
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ARE WE GETTING DULLER?
The SpectatorBy RAYMOND B. CATTELL M OST people who take an intelligent interest in broad trends in human affairs are by now accustomed to the notion that the population of this country...
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DEAR LAND OF ,GHOSTS-11
The Spectator• By HENRY W.' NEVINSON A T the end of my former article I said that during 'my • first wanderings in Greece my mind was entirely occupied with the ghosts of her ancient past,...
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THE FATE OF A CHRISTIAN EXPERIMENT
The SpectatorBy E. C. H. ARNOLD B EHIND the recent suppression of the Rhon Bruderhof in Germany, and the expulsion of its members, lies an interesting story of one of the few attempts of...
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THE CLOCK STRIKES
The SpectatorBy JAN STRUTHER There is no telling when the clock will chime. So many different things may set it off : an unexpected glimpse of our own profile in a triple mirror ; or...
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MARGINAL COMMENTS
The SpectatorBy LAWRENCE ATHILL The chemist, it is true, segregates his goods in sealed bottles and packets labelled with doses and descriptions, while the newsvendor, leaving more to the...
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UNKNOWN JAVA
The SpectatorCommonwealth and Foreign By WILLIAM PATON The main interest, however, of Java lies in the people themselves. They present the remarkable phenomenon of a nation whose religion...
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THE CINEMA
The Spectator"You Only Live Once." At the London Pavilion-- wings of the Morning." At the New Gallery Fferrz LANG appears to be qualifying as the Beddoes of the cinema ; his latest film is...
MUSIC
The SpectatorSTAGE AND SCREEN Toscanini and Beethoven SIGNOR TOSCANINI'S full stature as a conductor was once more revealed to us last week in performances of Beethoven's Sym- phonies in E...
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ART
The SpectatorCezanne CEZANNE left between eight and nine hundred oil paintings when he died in 1 . 906. At the Lefevre Gallery are brought together twenty-eight of them, as• well as seven...
• - TAUCHNITZ CENTENARY
The Spectator[Von einem deutschen Korrespondenten] AM 2. Juni, 1837, griindete der zwanzigjahrige Buchhandler Christian Bernhard Tauchnitz in Leipzig einen Verlag, der mehr zur...
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COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorA Farmers' Centenary A centenary Of peculiar interest is imminent. About this date a hundred years ago Gilbert and Lawes were together inspired by the thought that a new secret...
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EVERYDAY LIFE IN GERMANY
The SpectatorLETTERS TO THE EDITOR [Correspondents are requested to keep their letters as brief as is reasonably possible. The most suitable length is that of one of our "News of the Week"...
fro the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSia,—Having lived in Germany since 5935 I am at a loss to know why your correspondents should base their comparisons of prices in Germany on the present nominal exchange rate of...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—In his answer to
The Spectatorthe article," Everyday Life in Germany," Mr. E. Horsfall-Ertz says that in Germany a family consisting of 2 adults and s child aged 11 years could live quite "com- fortably and...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—If you will pardon
The Spectatormy tardy contribution, possibly some of your readers would be interested in some figures based on the budget of one whose income approximates to that of Mr. Horsfall-Ertz's...
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LLAMAS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR, —Mr. Graham Greene's justifiably vitriolic exposures of modern shams, as typified by the films, are among the week's most stimulating...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—I hope that your
The Spectatorreaders who own cars will not be led by J. M.'s letter in The Spectator of May 28th to argue from the fact that the number of people killed on the road is more or less the same...
GIBBON AND THE SPANISH WAR
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SrEcrKroa.] &Il i —To pretend that history repeats itself is a pleasant game, not always lacking in serious lessons. Some interesting parallels to...
MURDER STATISTICS AND FREE WILL
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,--j. M. asks "Is there any possible way of reconciling the theory of Free Will with the remarkable uniformity of the annual number of...
SMOKE ABATEMENT
The Spectator[Tc the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] Sra,—I see in your issue of May 28th last certain questions arising on Mr. W. R. Gordon's letter under the heading of "Smoke Abatement."...
JAPANESE EXPANSIONISM
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] Sut,—Your correspondent, Mr. Jenkins', reply to my letter about Japanese expansion once again reveals familiarity with a type of paper to...
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GLENEAGLES [To the _Editor of THE SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSut,—As the owner of Gleneagles, may I draw your attention to the Scottish Travel Notes in the May 28th issue of your paper ? Let me draw your attention to the way in which...
THE GENERATION OF GENTLEFOLK [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSta,—Under this heading Mr. Hamish Miles asks a question. Quoting Miss Yonge and the astounding "Eric," he desires to know what relation there was between Artistic Convention...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR, —It was doubtless a
The Spectatorslip of the pen which made your reviewer, Mr. Hamish Miles, speak of Miss Yonge's "im- peccably Broad Church outlook," but, all the same, the accusation is enough to make the...
SENIOR SCHOOLS IN RURAL AREAS [To the Editor of THE
The SpectatorSPECTATOR.] am one of the managers of the Rotherfield group of Council Schools. This group includes the parish of Crow- borough, which was cut out of the old parish .of...
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BENTLEY THREE-DECKERS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] Sta,—May I be allowed to protest against one statement in the article published under the above title in your issue of May 7th ? The writer,...
"TWO LEAVES AND A BUD"
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—.AS Two Leaves and a Bud purports to be a novel and not a tract, I am not surprised that it has called forth the represen- tations which...
THE DUKE OF WINDSOR
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] was pleased to see Janus' remark : "Whoever may have been responsible for the decision that none of the Duke's relatives and no British...
PUSEY HOUSE
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] Si,—In the little village from which I write stands Pusey House, in which E. B. Pusey was born 137 years ago. In the grounds of the house is a...
SIR,—Owing to the paragraph in "A Spectator's Notebook" [To the
The SpectatorEditor of THE SPECTATOR.] of June 4th about the Duke of Windsor's marriage, I am ceasing to subscribe to The Spectator.—Yours faithfully, Cotswold Lodge, Cheltenham. G. M. PEACH.
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SULTAN KEBIR "
The SpectatorTHE DAY BOOKS OF By E. L. WOODWARD IT is not easy to calculate now much money has been spent in the last thirty years upon teaching English children to read or speak French,...
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WHAT ARE WE . PRESERVING?
The SpectatorTHE land is the reservoir of fertility, to be handled in the way which is most serviceable now, and which will provide the largest yield of vital foodstuffs in an emergency....
Native Administration in Nigeria. - By Margery ' . Perham.
The SpectatorA MODEL _COLONY_ (Oxford University Press. 175. 6d.) STUDENTS of colonial policy, and indeed all who are interested in present-day Africa, ,have been eagerly looking forward...
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• BIRMINGHAM AND BEAUTY
The SpectatorALTHOUGH the gist of Dr. Pevsnees researches have been known to interested persons through his lectures and articles for some time, one has to be grateful to the Cambridge...
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PIGMENT AND POLITICS
The SpectatorHalf-Caste. By Cedric Dover. With a Preface on Prejudices by Lancelot Hogben. (Secker and Warburg. los. 6d.) - WRITERS on miscegenation are accustomed to appeal for...
THE LAST OF. THE LATINS .
The SpectatorLandor's Poetical Works. Edited by Stephen Wheeler. Three Vols. (Oxford University Press. 6os.) WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR is an example in English of the " pure " poet. Independent...
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- LADY CHARLEVILLE
The SpectatorThe Marlay Letters, 1778-1820. Edited by R. Warwick Bond. (Constable. 21s.) IRISH Society at the end of the eighteenth century was the scene of a remarkable transformation....
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APIECE OF MR. JOAD'S MIND
The SpectatorThe Thstarnent of Joad. By C. E. M. Joad. (Faber and Faber. Es. 6d.) LIKE its predecessor; The Book of Joad, this chapter of auto- biography contains little information about...
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ART FOR ALL
The SpectatorVincent Van Gogh. By W. Uhde. (Allen and Unwin. ros. 6d.) Rembrandt. By A. Bredius. (Allen and Unwin. mos. 6d.) The Art of Ancient Egypt. By H. Ranke. (Allen and Unwin. 75....
" KEATS THE MAN"
The Spectator" A NEW life of Keats set against the Georgian background. Here is Keats living and moving amongst his friends, telling his own story in his own delightfully racy idiom. This...
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THE ARAB IN HISTORY
The SpectatorThe Unveiling of Arabia. By R. H. Rieman. (Harrap. I2S. 6d.) The Arabs. The Life Story of a People. By Bertram Thomas. (Thornton Butterworth. 2 IS.) MR. KIERNAN has a great...
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SHORT STORIES ;
The SpectatorDinosaur Tracks. -By Benedict Thielen. (Seeker and Warburg. 7s. 6d.) The Earliest Dreams. By Nancy Hale. (Lovat Dickson. 75. 6d.) The Gay and Melancholy Flux. By William...
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FICTION
The Spectator. By FORREST REID Rose Forbes. By George Buchanan.(Constable. 75. 6d.) Sugar in the r Air. BY E. C: Large. :(Cape. rjs. 6d.) • highland River.' By isTeil M. Gunn. (The Porpoise,...
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NOTTINGHAIVISHIRE IN THE CIVIL WAR By Alfred C. Wood Like
The SpectatorMiss - Coate's receiit study of the Civil War in Cornwall, Dr. Wood's scholarly book (Clarendon Press, is.) shows that a full account of the war Nottinghtunshire, where it began...
Centenary histories such as the great banks and other institutions
The Spectatorhave published recently are much to be encouraged. - The Legal and General Assurance Society, however, deserves a special word of Praise for allowing a lighthearted author to...
THE HAILEYBURY BUILDINGS By Wilfrid Blunt
The SpectatorMr. Blunt, who is the art master at Haileybury, has written, illustrated and published (at 3s. 9d. post free) a precise and witty account of the school buildings which is of...
HOLYROOD By Charles A. Malcolm
The SpectatorDr. Malcolm's little book would have been more worthy Of its place in • a Historic Buildings Series" (Duck- worth, 3s. 6d.) if he had taken more pains to describe the Palace...
CURRENT LITERATURE
The SpectatorCHATHAM HOUSE By Stephen King-Hall Having undertaken to raise an endow- ment fund for that very valuable institu- tion, Chatham House, Commander Stephen King-Hall, instead of...
-ENGLAND'S GREATER CHURCHES
The SpectatorBy C. B. Nicholson . As a stimulus to an architectural motor tour nothing could be better than Mr. Nicholson'slatelligent and attractive picture - book (Pafford, 3s. 6a.). He...
THE FIRST QUEEN ELIZABETH By Katharine Davies
The SpectatorElizabeth Woodville, a Lancastrian knight's widow, who married the Yorkist King Edward IV, was the first com- moner to become an English Queen. Her portrait at Queens' College,...
IRELAND AND THE - BRITISH EMPIRE, 1937 By Henry Harrison
The SpectatorMr. Henry Harrison's acquaintance with Irish politics dates back to the days when he was a-friend and colleague of Parnell ; throughout his career he has kept in c.lose tough...
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NORTHERN IRELAND
The SpectatorTRAVEL NOTES ONE of the great English novelists has described the Glens of Antrim as " Switzer- land in miniature," and that is a description with which few visitors will...
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WISE INVESTMENT
The SpectatorWRITING a week ago, " Custos " (for whom I am deputising for a brief interval), observed that the gold scare had been pushed into. the background. By the time his words were in...
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• CUSTOS REPLIES TO ENQUIRIES
The SpectatorR. H. C. (Brixham) —I agree that the earnings basis for Colvilles ordinary shares is strong, and that the shares are a sound industrial holding. My point is that the possi-...
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ELECTRICITY SUPPLY INVESTMENTS
The Spectator. FINANCE THE shares of the leading Electricity Supply undertakings, which have been considered to be gilt-edged in the matter of security for current dividends and, in...
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FINANCIAL NOTES
The SpectatorTHE "GOLD SCARE" PASSES. - ANOTHER " gold scare" has passed over the City, and, like its predecessors, has proved to have had no immediate foundation in fact. President...
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SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD NO. 245 SOLUTION NEXT WEEK
The SpectatorThe winner of Crossword No. 245 is Miss J. G. Drysdale, Wellholme Lea, Scotby, Carlisle.
THE SPECTATOR" CROSSWORD No. 246
The SpectatorBY ZENO [if - prize of a Book Tolthe for on - guineit wilt N giVen to the sender of the first correct solution of this week's crossword puzzle to be opened. Envelopes should be...