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Drought and Recovery in the U.S.A.
The SpectatorPress reports from the United States very naturally concentrate - on . the catastrophic effects of the drought, for its devastations are even worse than anticipated. The maize...
NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT HE strategic situation in Spain is hard to discover with any accuracy from the reports which the rival forces are issuing. There are practically no foreign journalists now in...
Spain and Europe The diplomatic exchanges caused by the Spanish
The Spectatorrevolt have reached stalemate ; we may congratulate ourselves it is not worse, for at least the threat of inter- vention, which would- mean ._war, has been averted....
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France--and Poland The visit of General Gamelin, head of the
The SpectatorFrench General Staff, to Warsaw is an event of some importance. His principal contact there will be with General Rydz- Smigly, the General Inspector of the armed forces of...
Agreement with Egypt The Anglo-Egyptian negotiations have proceeded un- impeded
The Spectatorto a most satisfactory conclusion. Agreement having been reached first on the military clauses of the proposed treaty and then on the Sudan, there remained the complicated...
The New German Ambassador The appointment of Herr von Ribbentrop
The Spectatoras German Ambassador in London is in accordance with expecta- tions, and, it may be added, with the general desire in this country. The long delay in the choice of a successor...
The Position in Abyssinia News from Italian sources in Abyssinia
The Spectatoris scarce and rigidly controlled. As might be expected it is in complete contradiction to the stories which from time to time emanate from Gore, which is the main centre of...
Austria's Recovery There is reason for regret as well as
The Spectatorsatisfaction in the ending of the League of Nations' financial tutelage of Austria. Dr. Rost van Tonningen, the League's financial representative at Vienna, has decided that,...
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Olympic Achievements The athletic events in the Olympic Games were
The Spectatorconcluded on Sunday, and left no doubt of the supremacy of the United States, the rise of Germany and Japan as athletic as well as political Powers, and the eclipse of Great...
Last week, when flour rose to 38s. 6d. per sack,
The Spectatorit was expected that bread, which rose on the same day from 74d. to 8d. per quartern loaf, would go up another id. this week. Actually flour has dropped back to 86s. ; but there...
'Social Credit in Alberta Mr. Aberhart, the Social Credit Premier
The Spectatorof Alberta, last week made his first issue of " velocity dollars," certificates with a nominal value of the dollar, and valid for one year, at the end of which they may be...
The Unrest in .Greece _General Metaxas' coup d'etat in Greece
The Spectatorlast week was sudden but not unexpected. It was directly caused by the calling of a general strike by the Communists, which General Metaxas called "a threat of bloodshed." There...
Hope for Tyneside The acquisition by the North Eastern Trading
The SpectatorEstates Company of a site for development in the Team Valley, near Gateshead, is tangible evidence that the Government means to fulfil one of its most attractive election...
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DO COLONIES PAY ?
The SpectatorG ERMANY'S desires and Italy's attainment, fol- lowing on Japan's, have beyond question brought the subject of colony-owning very much into the foreground of international...
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THE ROADS AND THE DOLE
The SpectatorT HE . last unemployment figures showed the number of unemployed in Great Britain in a certain day in July to be 1,650,000—a deplorable total, though the lowest since 1930. The...
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A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK M Y paragraph of last week regarding the
The Spectatorimpending contest for a successor to Lord Hugh Cecil as Mem- ber for Oxford University could not then be made more explicit without breach of confidence. Now that it is known...
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WHAT SHOULD WE, FIGHT FOR ?-IV
The SpectatorBy SIR ARNOLD WILSON ; M.P. [The NM:and last of the articles in this series is by Sir Norman Angel!, and will appear next week.] I AM not pacifist either. by temperament or on...
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WHITHER AUSTRIA ?
The SpectatorFrom A SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT Vienna, August Thus the Nazis proper—those who want the Anschluss, the whole Anschluss and nothing but the Anschluss- have recovered from their...
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THE VICISSITUDES OF A LEGACY
The SpectatorBy SIR JOHN HARRIS T HE West Indian Islands are commemorating this year one of those 'strange romances associated with ' British colonial development of which there are at least...
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UNEMPLOYMENT AND MORALE
The SpectatorBy ROGER B. LLOYD L ARGE-SCALE unemployment has been so constant a phenomenon for several years past that it has now gathered to itself a technical language of its own, of...
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IUNCRINJANGA
The SpectatorBy YONE NOGUCHI T dawned at Siliguri three hundred and fifty miles to I All the travelling outfits fastened at the back of a motor-car, I was now ready to run up a mountain...
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MARGINAL COMMENTS
The SpectatorBy E. L. WOODWARD I HAVE 'been- told by Londoners that in their mazy, petrol-stinking streets there are still to be found six hansom cabs. We discovered one of the six last...
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AUSTRALIA'S POINT OF .VIEW
The SpectatorCommonwealth and Foreign [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] life:bourne, July. Sin,—One should not be surprised if the attitude of Australians towards international affairs, and...
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"Chinese White." By Dudley Hoys. At Daly's Ma: HOTS, having
The Spectatorevolved an exquisitely unconvincing plot, ' has given it an Oriental setting ; since his knowledge of China appears to be nil, and since at the same time he lays on the local...
STAGE AND SCREEN The Theatre
The SpectatorTHE trouble about Dr. Clitterhouse is that he never existed, that we know he 'never existed, and that his adventures have accordingly only an academic ingenuity. How easily it...
"Rhythm on the Range." At The Carlton The Cinema BING
The SpectatorCROSBY as a cowboy : Bing Crosby crooning . a prize bull to' sleep on a freight car : Bing Crosby more than ever like Walt Disney's Cock Robin : it needs some stamina 0 be a...
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L'Annonce Faite Par Marie
The Spectator[D'un correspondant parisien] D'AL•CUNS pretendent que In chute du cabinet Blum est proche. Certaines feuilles en indiquent mettle la date. Ce serait pour Ia mi-octobre, is la...
Ballet
The SpectatorRussian Ballet at Covent Garden AN aspect of ballet of which I have made little mention in this column is the one of decor and costume. The omission has been partly deliberate...
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COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorThe Grouseward Migration • The great social migration to Scotland is at least as vigorous as ever, though the sudden bout of popularity among Americans for the sport of...
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WHAT SHOULD WE FIGHT FOR ?
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"...
SOME DOUBTS ON INSURANCE
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sur,—For many years now I have read the very inter- esting Insurance Supplements in The Spectator, and have been struck by the oft-repeated...
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SPAIN AND PORTUGAL
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—As I write, Portugal is quiet and on the whole con- tented. Spain is ablaze with civil war. It is said' that Portugal went through and...
CHRISTIAN STATESMANSHIP
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Your readers will be profoundly grateful for your leader " Christian Statesmanship." They will also thank Lord Beaverbrook for the...
LORD BEAVERBROOK AND THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Your readers may be grateful to Lord Beaverbrook for his convincing demonstration of the hopeless futility of attempting to achieve...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSIR,—I am greatly pleased to find an increasing amount . of space in The Spectator devoted to the enunciation of the fundamentals of Christian Revolution. In the editorial...
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THE CONFLICT IN SPAIN
The Spectator• [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] Sm,—The letter from the London COrrespondent of the Madrid Herald, which appears in your last issue is not only deplorable in itself, but...
EUROPE AND SPAIN
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Your article, " Europe and Spain," in last week's SPectator says that " before the rebels, on their side, can establish a new Government...
POLICE AND AMATEURS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—In your issue of the 7th instant Mr. Honey makes the good suggestion that broadcast appeals should be made for motorists to report cases...
SPEECH THERAPY
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—The reference of " Janus " to the work of the Speech Therapists recalls that The Spectator published a Supplement, on March 80th, 1929, in...
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BRENT VALLEY SANCTUARY
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,– -May I, through your columns, ask for new supporters of the Brent Valley Bird Sanctuary to take the place of those whom, from time to...
SONGS OF THE EMPIRE
The Spectator[To the Editor of Tim SPECTATOR.] Sin,—As one ponders over the problem of Empire, one's mind turns naturally to the children, the leaders of tomorrow, and the importance of the...
BEER TAXES AND BEER PROFITS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Your correspondent Mr. A. H. Oliver agrees that beer is " abominably overtaxed " and argues that that is the cause of the poor quality...
OUR ONE-TIME ISLAND
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—The reference in your columns last week to M. Bleriot's flying the Channel, and to the sense thereby evoked in other countries that...
THE DEATH OF THE SOUL
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] beg to call your attention to the enclosed cutting from last week's The Spectator. It cries out in challenge to our. Faith. Is it possible...
AN INDIAN PUBLIC SCHOOL
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—As a housemaster at the Doon School, I am grateful to Mr. Yeats-Brown for his able description of what he saw during his welcome visit to...
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Fiona Macleod : A Forgotten Mystery BOOKS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorBy ARTHUR WAUGH RATHER more than thirty years have passed since the after- noon when, sitting at my office desk in Henrietta Street, Covent Garden, I was handed a telegram...
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Russian Scandal
The SpectatorTsushima. By A. Novikoff-Priboy. (George Allen and Unwin. las.) . • By the end of the Tsarist regime the Russians had developed (nor have they yet by any means lost) a genius...
The Parnell Tragedy
The SpectatorParnell. By Joan Haslip. (Cobden Sanderson. 15s.) THE tragedy of Parnell was so terrible in its personal and pulAic consequences that it is still today poignant reading for...
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Soviet Finance
The SpectatorIN recent years many, authors have described social conditions and economic organisation in Russia. At the same time theoretical economists have discussed fully the problems of...
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Two Amateurs and a Professional Friends and Fiddlers. By Catherine
The SpectatorBowen. (Dent. 5s.) Musk, My Love ! •By Charlotte Haldane. (Arthur Barker. 7s. 6d.) Music's Handmaid. By Harriet Cohen. (Faber and Faber. 5s.) MRS. HALDANE and Mrs. Bowen...
Learning To Talk
The SpectatorInfant Speech. By M. M. Lewis. (Kegan Paul. 12s. 6d.) THE purpose of this book is to give an account of the process by which children arrive at the use and understanding of...
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Monetary Policy
The SpectatorTHE second volume of this publication is mainly technical ; but the first is one of the most interesting surveys published by the economic section of the League for a long time....
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Fiction
The SpectatorBy WILLIAM PLOMER Men in Arms. By George Slocombe. (Heinemann. 7s. Oda Choose a Bright Morning. By Hillel Bernstein. (Gollancz. 6s.) Think of the Earth. By Bertram Brooker....
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TOWARDS A NEW LEAGUE
The SpectatorCurrent Literature By H. N. Brallsford The reform of the League of Nations is essentially a topic of the day, and no one's views regarding - it awaken keener anticipation that...
RUSSIA — U.S.S.R.
The SpectatorEdited by P. Malevsky-Malevitch Russia — U.S.S.R, (Williams and Islorgate, 21s.) first apPeared in the United IStates three years ago, appendices Ifavinebeen added '-to the...
THE WAR . IN OUTLINE By Liddell Hart A really short
The Spectatorhistory of the War has been badly needed, and in this opportune and admirable volume (Faber, 5s.) Captain Liddell Hart has met the need so completely that he need fear few...
- OVER TYROLESE HILLS By F. S. -Smythe Mr. F.
The SpectatorS. Smythe, member and leader of Himalayan and other expeditions, is almost equally well known as a writer on mountaineering and as a climber with a brilliant record of...
-PHOTOGRAPHY TO-DAY . . . By D. A. Spencer Photography
The Spectator, To-day (Oxford University Press, 3s. 6d.) is Soinethingniore_than -a-handbook for amateur photographers. Yet it does not quite reach the standard of a source of know- ledge...
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IT is about the middle of August that the earnest.:
The Spectatorand economically-minded seeker after a really cheap car' gets his best chances. At most Wiles of the year, nowadays, one can pick up soimder second-hand cars' than was possible...
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Aiding the Investor
The SpectatorFinance FROM the correspondence I receive front time to time from readers of The Spectator I gather that a good many readers of these financial- columns would consider it...
The Public's Taste in Coins
The SpectatorTHE great public interest shown in the approaching new coins of King Edward VIII, the designs of which are said to have been approved by His Majesty, is indiCative of the...
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Financial Notes
The SpectatorRISE IN RAILS. Nor for the first time the month of August looks like belying its reputation for stagnation of business during the height of the holiday season. This year the...
Investment Notes
The SpectatorYIELDS ON PREFERENCE AND ORDINARY SHARES. To those unaccustomed to the vagaries of market movements, it may seem strange that the Ordinary shares of a company —usually an...
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. A Hundred Years Ago
The Spectator" THE Seecreroa," Averusx 13m, 1836. On Sunday last, Mr. Thomas Riddell, of Felton Park, High Sheriff of Northumberlinid, attended public worship at the Catholic chapel in...
"Th e Spectator" Crossword No. 20?
The SpectatorBY ZENO [A prize of one guinea will be given to the sender of the first correc solution of this week's crossword puzzle to be opened. Envelopes shoulo be marked " Crossword...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD NO. 202 SOLUTION NEXT WEEK The winner
The Spectatorof Crossword No. 202 is the Rev. J. S. Phillips, Highbrook Vicarage, Ardingly, Sussex.