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The Hungarian Government, with the consent of the Emperor, has
The Spectatordecided not to give up the Civil Marriage Bill. It has the right, it appears, of reintroducing a rejected measure ; this has been done at once, and the Bill will again be sent...
One wonders sometimes whether there exists on the -Continent anything
The Spectatorlike a general dislike to the Conscription which may hereafter express itself in legislation. Nothing would alter the organisation of Continental society so com- pletely, or so...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE French Opportunists have found a strong man in M. Casimir-Thirier. The Radicals have been very angry at -what they think his concessions to clericalism, and on Thursday...
Mr. Mundella has resigned his office as President of the
The SpectatorBoard of Trade. And, indeed, in that position it was inevit- able that he should do so, for it would probably have devolved on him, and, under certain circumstances, must have...
On Wednesday the cabmen of London went on strike, that
The Spectatoris to say, about 5,000 hansom-cab drivers ceased to hire their vehicles of the cab-owners. They say that they are charged from 15s. a day to 19s., according to the season, and...
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Notes from Ireland has reprinted a remarkable letter on "
The Spectatorland.grabbing," written by Canon Doyle, and read at a meeting of the County Wexford National Federation. " With the objects of your meeting," says Canon Doyle, "I am in full and...
Mr. Fowler, the Indian Secretary, made a speech at Wol-
The Spectatorverhampton on Wednesday, in answer to a congratulatory address from the five hundred who represent the Glad- stonian party in Wolverhampton, in which he gave an account of the...
A grand conference of miners is going on in Berlin,
The Spectatorand the- English, represented by Mr. Burt, Mr. Wilson, Mr. Woods, and others, are taking a leading part. The English meet with their customary fate. The Germans, Austrians,...
The discussion as to the possession of Samoa has advanced
The Spectatora step or two this week. The American Government has notified officially its wish to relinquish its share in the tri- partite protectorate, and the future of the island rests...
The annual convention of delegates of the Irish National League
The Spectatorof Great Britain was held on Saturday in the City Hall, Liverpool, under the presidency of Mr. T. P. O'Connor, M.P. We have dealt elsewhere with the facts made public, the...
Marshal Peixoto has sent away the Portuguese Minister. from Brazil,
The Spectatorand has withdrawn the Brazilian Minister from Lisbon. His ostensible reason for the rupture is the conduct, of the Portuguese in protecting the Brazilian insurgents who. took...
The Co-operative Congress met at Sunderland on Monday,, the presidential
The Spectatoraddress being delivered by Mr. Tweddell, the chairman of the Newcastle branch of the Wholesale,âa co-operator noted for his share in the establishment of a great flour-mill at...
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There is nothing in the whole world so expensive as
The Spectatora Radical improvement made in the interests of economy. It appears from a Parliamentary paper just issued, that during the past year the Attorney-General drew a sum of over...
The four Welsh Members who have thought it right to
The Spectator-desert the Government on the ground that Welsh D;sestab- lishment has not been given that important position in the procedure of the Session which they had been promised that...
A well-informed writer in the Times contends that the public
The Spectatordoes not obtain the full advantage obtainable from the canal system of the United Kingdom. That system now in- cludes 3,813 miles of canal, which cost about £32,749,000, and...
The American Census Bureau has just issued a Report which
The Spectatorcontains some curious figures. It appears that the disparity between the sexes is even greater than in England, but it is the other way, the males exceeding the females by...
The Archbishops and Bishops of the Church of England -(with
The Spectatorthe exception of the Bishop of Worcester) have signed a protest against Mr. Asquith's Bill for Disestablishing and Disendowing the Welsh Church, which is very moderate in -tone,...
At Bradford, Mr. Alderman Tillett has attacked Dr. Barrett for
The Spectatorhis warning against turning the pulpit into an organ of political propagandism, in terms which show that he does not know, or even guess, what Dr. Barrett means by personal...
Mr. Burdett, in this year's issue of his "Official Intelligence,"
The Spectatorthat admirable account of all stocks and shares dealt in on 'Change, gives an estimate of the amount of foreign stocks held in Great Britain. This can be gathered pretty...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE IMMEDIATE FUTURE. TA ET us take advantage of the Whitsuntide holiday to review the situation for a moment, if possible, with- out prejudice and without bondage to any...
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THE COMING CONFERENCE AT LEEDS. T HE Edinburgh reviewer who suggested
The Spectatorthe other day to Lord Rosebery that he could hardly do better than keep his party amused and out of mischief by setting them to work, or rather to play, with the reform of the...
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M. CARNOT. T HE French correspondent of the Daily Chronicle asserts
The Spectatorpositively that M. Carnot has finally made up his mind not to offer himself in November for re-election to the Presidency, and has even announced this to his friends, so that no...
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THE ANTI-PARNELLITES. T HE Anti-Parnellite party is in a state of
The Spectatorsuspended dis- integration. The law of their being, the force of circumstances, the genius of the race, all demand that the Anti-Parnellites should be shattered into a thousand...
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THE CAB-STRIKE.
The SpectatorT HE public is rather in a fog about this Cab-strike. It misses two leading points, one of them telling against the drivers, and the other very strongly in their favour. The...
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DR. PERCIVAL AND THE WELSH CHURCH.
The SpectatorW HIT-MONDAY brings consolation to newspaper correspondents as well as to bank clerks. We were inclined to think that Dr. Percival's letter on Disestablish- ment in Wales, which...
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THE INCREASE OF SUICIDE. T HERE is hardly a single daily
The Spectatornewspaper now which does not contain the record of some remarkable suicide, often of more than one. And we have suicides of all ages. On Thursday, there was the story of a...
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THE ROMAN CATHOLIC VIEW OF INSPIRATION. T HE Baron Friedrich von
The SpectatorHugel, one of the most learned and subtle of the critics of Biblical literature in the Roman Catholic Church either in this or any other country, and to most of us, at least,...
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"NEARNESS."
The SpectatorI F the public wish to settle the Cab-strike, as they settle most strikes, by paying a little more, they can, we ima- gine, manage it without much difficulty. At present they...
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THE LIMIT OF SIZE IN ANIMALS.
The SpectatorT HE largest pair of horses shown at the Cart-Horse Parade last Monday were two bays owned by the Thames Bank Distillery. These gigantic animals stood eighteen hands, and...
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THE STUDY OF CHARACTER.
The Spectator" AM very fond of the study of character," was the remark- of a young girl, once made in our hearing. "That is all very well," was the answer of the person addressed, "but you...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE PAPAL ENCYCLICAL AND MR. GORE: [To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,âMay I comment on Mr. Gore's paper in the Guardian (April 11th), and the powerful, because...
CORRESPONDENCE.
The SpectatorMISS SHAW ON AUSTRALIA. [The following is a letter from a successful workman in Sydney to a friend and patroness at home.] Sydney, March 1st, 1894. MADAM,âHaving had the...
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PUBLIC OPINION AND THE BUDGE1
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR 07 THE " EPECTâ¢7011." . 1 Sin,âIn connection with your recent remarks upon the above question, you may care to learn the opinions of one from a:nong the lower...
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MR. ASQUITH'S WELSH DISESTABLISHMENT BILL.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,âThe following authentic figures may interest your readers :âThe gross annual value of the ecclesiastical endow- ments of Wales is,...
WOMAN AND LABOUR.
The SpectatorI To THE EDITOR OE THE " SPECTATOR: P i do not read the Spectator, because I cannot accept its premises, and fail to follow its logic ; but I have always looked upon it as a...
PHIL/] AND GIZEH.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR, â It will be curious to notice what effect the recent political change in Egypt will have upon the Philm question. The advocates of...
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PROFITS OF COAL PITS. [To THE EDITOR OF THE "
The SpectatorSPECTATOR:] SIR,âIn your very kindly notice, in the Spectator of May 5th, of my artiae in the Nineteenth Century, you say, "If a minimum wage can be paid in order to...
THE RECOGNITION OF LIKENESSES BY ANIMALS. [To THE EDITOR OF
The SpectatorTHE SPECTATOR."] SIR,âThe following instance bears on the subject discussed in the Spectator of May 5th. We had for a newcomer to our circle a little terrier dog. I was...
DOGS AS ART CRITICS. pro THE EDITOR OE THE "SPECTATOR."]
The SpectatorStn,âApropos of the recognition of pictures by dogs (Spec- tator, May 5th), I think you may be interested in the two following facts which came under my notice a few years...
"CHURCH FOLK-LORE."
The SpectatorI TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,âThe tale quoted by your reviewer in the Spectator of May 5th from "Church Folk-Lore," may be found in Mr. Baring-Gould's interesting...
THE CHURCH PATRONAGE BILL.
The Spectator[To THZ EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. " ] SIR,âIn these days, when Churchmen are awakening to the great Church principle of Brotherhood, patronage obtained by money or...
SIR WATKIN WILLIAMS WYNN. [To THE EDITOR OF THE "
The SpectatorSPECTATOR:1 SIR,âHad Mr. Asquith stated the whole truth in his reply to Mr. Morton in the House of Commons, I am certain that a journal of so high a reputation as the...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorM. DE HEREDIA.'S " TROPHIES."* IT is rare that a previously unknown author, on the strength of a single volume of verse, should attain at once to the con- siderable position...
POETRY.
The SpectatorHE DISENCHANTED LAKE. I DO not wish on that isle-flowering, fair, Moon-lighted water e'er to float again, The ghosts of golden summers would be there Piercing one's heart with...
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MR. STREET'S CRITICISMS.*
The SpectatorTHE theories of Rousseau, the purposes of Rabelais, and the special character with which the sea invests the verse or the prose that springs from it, the architectural...
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THE LATEST CHAMPION OF A GLACIAL AGE.* WE doubt very
The Spectatormuch whether this book ought ever to have been published; its author, an acute and clever observer who had travelled widely, was frank and courageous in opinions and very...
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THE MAKING OF NORTH AMERICAN GEOGRAPHY.*
The SpectatorTHE story of the earliest geographical discoveries in the Northern Continent of America is more or less identical with the story of the first French settlements upon the St....
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THE CASE OF THE BRITISH EAST AFRICA C 0 MPAN
The SpectatorY.* Audi alteram, partem is a plea to which the average Briton never turns a deaf ear, and since the results achieved by the Chartered Company in East Africa have of late been...
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MR. CRAWFORD'S LAST NOVEL.* As a matter of mere personal
The Spectatortaste, the present writer must confess to a keener relish for those stories of Mr. Marion Crawford's which have a strong romantic interest, than for those more recent novels in...
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THE YELLOW BOOK.*
The SpectatorHISTORY repeats itself, and we have once more an oppor- tunity of refreshing our memories over the fable of the mountain and the mouse. Flourishes of trumpets heralded a...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The Spectator2 Treatise on Wines. By L. L. W. Thudichum, M.D. (G. Bell and Sons.)âDr. Thudichum, who, some twenty years ago, pub- lished an exhaustive work on wine, in conjunction with Dr....
The Clergy Directory, 1894. (J. S. Philips.)âThere is little to
The Spectatorbe said about this volume. It gives a variety of information which the compilers have no doubt taken a great amount of pains to make as correct and complete as possible. On many...
Blizzard. By Thomas Pinkerton. (Swan Sonnenschein and Co.)âThis is a
The Spectatortale of the extravaganza order. A mild-mannered parson becomes possessed of a dog who ought to get him into all kinds of scrapes, but somehow contrives to benefit him. There is...
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We may mention together The Medical Register, 1894. (Spottis- svoode
The Spectatorand Co.)âThis volume contains, as usual, all information that concerns the legal status of the medical profession. Some interesting statistics are given on p. 83. The number...
An Unsatisfactory Lover. By Mrs. Hungerford. (F. V. White and
The SpectatorCo.)âMiss " Terry " O'More is a "wild Irish girl" ; Mr. Trefusis is a calm Englishman, whom Miss Terry consents to marry, because it would be a good thing for her brothers. He...
A little book, called Talks with Mothers, by C. Northeote
The Spectator(Simpkin, Marshall, and Co.), will be found most useful by those who hold mothers' meetings, or who have friends among those who come to them. It is a book which will appeal to...
The Juridical Review ,published in Edinburgh (Messrs. William Green and
The SpectatorSons), is a valuable addition to the legal periodicals of the country. It is well conducted and well written, and contains papers upon a great variety of subjects. It was...
The Record of Technical and Secondary Education, which is published
The Spectatorquarterly, continues to discharge the important, if matter-of-fact, duty of marking the progress made by County 'Councils and cther local authorities in the administration -of...