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NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT AST Wednesday, when King George stepped from the LI gangway of the 'Empress of Australia' on to Canadian soil, amid a thunderous welcome from his Canadian subjects, was a day...
Neither Arabs nor Jews are likely to approve the Govern-
The Spectatorment's decision, but by far the bitterest attacks will come from the Jews, whose declared ambition it has been to increase immigration till the Arabs become a minority in...
The Decision on Palestine The Government's new solution of the
The SpectatorPalestine problem is not satisfactory, for the decisive reason that no solution of that problem could be. A situation exists in Palestine which makes it impossible for what are...
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The Military Training Bill The Government.may well be gratified with
The Spectatorthe progress the Military Training Bill is making in the House of Commons. The measure's smooth passage is due largely to the Government's willingness to accept a number of...
Yugoslavian Uncertainties Prince Paul, the Regent of Yugoslavia, returned from
The Spectatorhis visit to Italy on Monday ; the Italian Press insists that the growing political friendship between Italy and Yugoslavia has added further support to the Axis, and hopes that...
The Japanese at Amoy The Japanese have taken advantage of
The Spectatorthe situation in Europe to put Anglo-American policy in the Far East to a severe test. Last week Japanese troops landed at the treaty port of Amoy, on the coast of Fukien, and...
A Loan for General Franco General Franco's friends in this
The Spectatorcountry have always asserted that after the civil war he would inevitably turn to Britain for financial aid. So far they have not been justi- fied by events. But there is no...
The Anglo-Turkish Agreement The Anglo-Turkish agreement, announced in London and
The SpectatorAnkara last week, has been received with the greatest satis- faction by every country which is co-operating in the peace- front—and with mingled dismay and hostility in Rome and...
France's Recovery Since M. Daladier on his colonial tour learned
The Spectatorto speak the language of strength and not of weakness, French. public opinion has undergone a remarkable rhsnge. The spirit of Munich is indeed still alive ; M. De:at can ask...
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Question time on Monday revealed the fact that the British
The SpectatorAmbassador in Spain has had instructions to attend General Franco's Victory March in Madrid. Mr. Davidson, the young Labour Member for Maryhill, who is gradually making a name...
How Parliament is going to cope with all its outstanding
The Spectatorbusiness within a measurable space of time remains a mystery. There is no obstruction, and all parties desire to see the defence measures on the Statute Book as soon as...
`The House is not at all happy over the position
The Spectatorof Cabinet Ministers who hold directorships in private companies. The matter has arisen over Lord Runciman's directorships. The Lord President of the Council is not a favourite...
Trade Unions and Conscription Meanwhile a number of trade unions
The Spectatorhave been declaring against conscription, with varying degrees of emphasis. The President of the Confederation of Shipbuilding and Engin- eering Unions, Mr. J. W. Stephenson,...
National Service and the Refugees Recent criticism of the refugees
The Spectatorhas sought Sp darken their sombre lives even further by suggesting that thcy are trene- filing from the hospitality of this country, and not offering their services in the event...
The Week in Parliament Our Parliamentary Correspondent writes: The House
The Spectatoris in a strangely optimistic mood at the moment. The reason for it is not very clearly defined, but there is a feeling that the corner to Peace has been turned at last. Now that...
The Legacy of Germany In these days of political tension,
The Spectator'particularly between Great Britain and Germany, it should never be forgotten what the Germany of the last four or five generations has given to the world. Violent as may be the...
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RUSSIA AND PEACE
The SpectatorI T may or may not be true that, as many signs seem to indicate, the Dictators have not only reached but passed the peak of their power. Certainly none of the factors, like the...
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LET BRITAIN SPEAK
The SpectatorTODAY Great Britain is spending over £400,000,000 a year on war preparations, on guns, on shells, on warships, on aeroplanes, on soldiers. This vast expendi- ture is justified...
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One more example of Herr von Ribbentrop's folly or per-
The Spectatorversity. A recent visitor to Paris was told, with all solemnity, by a former diplomat, a non-German in touch with official German opinion, that Herr von Ribbentrop and his...
I never thought I should live to get a shock
The Spectatorfrom that long- established, staid, dispassionate record of events, the Annual Register, which no less a personage than Edmund Burke founded in 1758. If there is one thing more...
Hard things are often said about British diplomacy, and not
The Spectatorall of them are undeserved. But—thanks, admittedly, in the main to Herr Hitler—enough has been achieved by British diplomacy in the past two months to make Herr Hitler sick with...
I have been sent a cutting from The Times, accompanied
The Spectatorby some pungent comments to which I can take no excep- tion. The essential sentence, which reaches me underlined, runs : ." Boil two small live lobsters." That unadorned in-...
I referred last week to the use made by a
The Spectatorpropaganda news-sheet published in Bavaria, called News from Germany, of comments on the international situation in The New Pioneer, and mentioned that according to the...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorV ARIOUS explanations are proffered for the substitution of M. Maisky for M. Potemkin or M. Molotoff as dele- gate of U.S.S.R. at the League of Nations Council meeting next...
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AMERICA AND THE KING
The SpectatorBy ERWIN D. CANHAM T HE royal visit to the United States of course raises real problems, which must have been well weighed before it was undertaken. There has been...
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SOUTH AFRICA AND THE NAZIS
The SpectatorFROM A SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT Cape Town, May 5. H ERR HITLER'S fiftieth birthday was marked in South West Africa by the extremely modest scale of the German population's...
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THE CITIZEN AS SOLDIER
The SpectatorBy DR. DAVID THOMSON 11 0W will the future historian interpret the peace-time introduction of conscription into Britain? What place will it have in that chapter which—unless...
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BULGARIA WEIGHING THE CHANCES
The SpectatorBy HUGH SETON-WATSON B ULGARIA is one of the States defeated in the World War, and feels that she has several injustices to be re- paired. By the Treaty of Neuilly she lost to...
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THE FIGHTING MAN'S PAY
The SpectatorBy COMMANDER • RUSSELL GRENFELL I N a democracy, the man who shouts the loudest gets the most. He who shouts less loudly does not get so much ; while the man who either does...
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CANCER: A NEW APPROACH
The SpectatorBy F. SHERWOOD TAYLOR C ANCER is the second among the killing diseases. Every year some seventy thousand of our countrymen die from its effects, not in most cases without...
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AFTERNOON TEA
The SpectatorBy MARK BEN NEY Y half-past three the old men began to arrive. They came singly, huddled against the thin persistent Sabbath rain, poor, patient old men who carried all their...
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CARVED IN THE DELICATE EYE
The SpectatorFRIGHTENING, tawny and steep, Carved in the delicate eye Are summitless crags, that keep Faith with humanity, That pillar the hidden sky Like Atlas, mortally bowed By weight...
Commonwealth and Foreign
The SpectatorNEW FOUND LAND REVISITED By THOMAS LODGE [Mr. Lodge was a member of the Commission of Government for Newfoundland from 1934 to 1937] T WENT to Newfoundland in 1934 with the...
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True it is that Lord Curzon was apt to address
The Spectatorother human beings in the manner of "the Divinity addressing black-beetles." Yet he was always careful to make it clear (a) that he regarded black-beetles as entertaining little...
Two names at such a moment should be recalled to
The Spectatorgrate- ful remembrance: the names of Curzon and of Venizelos. Did Ismet Pasha, now InOnii, I wonder, allow his mind the other night to ffick back across the years ; to meet...
It was this mixture of supremacy and boyishness which, in
The Spectatorspite of their interminable wrangles, impressed itself upon Ismet Pasha and his staff. "Evidemment," Riza Nour once said to me, in his Anatolian French, "Ler' Kerzoon n'est pas...
It may be that I have a professional prejudice against
The Spectatorsudden diplomacy. I confess that I do not regard as de- pendable agreements which have not had many years in which to solidify and to mature. The foundations of this present...
Moreover, Lord Curzon would vary his moods of con- temptuous
The Spectatorand sombre magnitude with the March sunshine of boisterous geniality. I recollect an occasion, in 1920, when he was visited in London by M. Stamboliski, the Agrarian Prime...
True it is that the first Lausanne Conference ended in
The Spectatora dramatic rupture. Yet assuredly it was one of the most valuable diplomatic failures that there has ever been. Curzon arrived at Lausanne to face a Turkish delegation...
PEOPLE AND THINGS
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON T HE Turkish agreement has been welcomed as a fine diplomatic performance. It is more than that. It represents the integration of those natural interests,...
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STAGE AND SCREEN
The SpectatorTHE THEATRE "Bridge Head." By Rutherford Mayne. At the Westminster Theatre.--" The Intruder." By Francois Mauriac At Wyndham's Theatre. ALONG the western seaboard of Ireland,...
THE CINEMA
The Spectator"Jamaica Inn." At the Regal. —" J'Etais une Aven- turiere " and "The Londoners." At the Academy. Tuts passionate, full-blooded yarn could only have been con- ceived by a young...
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LA VIE SOUS LA MENACE
The Spectator[D'un correspondent parislenj IMPOSSIBLE d'y ediapper. On a beau voiler la chose sous des formules anodines—" evenements," " developpements," "con- tingences "—chacun sait que...
OPERA
The SpectatorII Trovatore at Covent Garden HALF-A-CENTURY ago Mr. Bernard Shaw contributed to critical case-law a valuable judgement which has never yet been upset. In the case of The World...
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Birds and Noises
The SpectatorThe plover is the most beneficial and the least harmful of birds. Its beneficences are unqualified on any farm land. At the other extreme comes the starling in the...
The Ideal Grass
The SpectatorThose wise persons who direct the Green Research Com- mittee at Bingley Hall in Yorkshire have now further enhanced the reputation of that most congenial . variety of grass...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorCourageous Plovers The birds that build no nests worthy of the name seem to be less sensitive to disturbance than others. You can, for example, hardly persuade a peewit to...
Doomed Bracken
The SpectatorThere are many ways of earning the blessing invoked by Dean Swift on the head of him who makes two blades of grass grow where one grew before. Captain Holt has dis- covered one...
Destruction Dates
The SpectatorThe date approaches when the work is best done. The only really effective time for either cutting or bruising bracken is during the period of early growth when the roots are...
A New Handicap On the subject of golf, on some
The Spectatorvery rural links, I came upon a method of handicapping that was new to me. The inferior, or less perfect of two players, habitually receives from his opponent half a stroke at...
In the Garden One of the most memorable garden spectacles
The Spectatorin England is the mound of barberies at Wisley when the flower is full The most popular of all bushes is said to be Thunbergi, whose purple leaves especially appeal to American...
Grass and Fruit Tress It is a commonplace among fruit-growers
The Spectatorthat grass checks the growth of young trees, and it is thought by some that it has a definitely toxic effect. Yet the grass must not be maligned. In the fruit-growing districts...
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[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—With reference to Mr.
The SpectatorDouglas Reed's letter in your issue of May 5th, he may not perhaps have observed that the matters to which he refers are under the active consideration of the Government, and...
THE NEGEV AND THE JEWS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—As the originators of the Negev plan—or rather as two of the people most closely concerned with its revival—we have naturally followed with...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The Spectator[Correspondents are requested to keep their letters as brief as is reasonably possible. Signed letters are given a preference over those bearing a pseudonym, and the latter must...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—Mr. Douglas Reed doth
The Spectatorprotest too much. We are already fully acquainted with his views on immigrants and aliens, and in his desire to carry on his work of spreading racial prejudice—for, after all,...
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ANXIETY AND THE CRISIS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—Mr. Harold Nicolson's article of May 12th is to my mind both right and wrong in condemning the Government's policy of keeping the public...
BRITISH DIPLOMATS TODAY
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] am very glad you are taking so active a part in pressing for reform of our diplomatic service. Few things are more important in the present...
OURSELVES AND RUSSIA
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—i was interested to read the comments by Janus on the Prime Minister's most unfortunate reply to a question about the desirability of...
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ASPECTS OF CONSCRIPTION
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—Mr. C. Brian Phillips, of Bootham School, fears that military training may have a brutalising effect on the minds of those trained and may...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] is' not fair of
The SpectatorThe Spectator to say that Ulster men can enlist in the Territorials. Ulster has no Territorials. We have in County Antrim a reserve garrison battery of artillery, and recently a...
CHRISTIANITY AND WAR
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sta,—The last thing I wish to do is to prolong a correspond- ence which is unlikely to lead to anything because Admiral Eyres and myself are...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR]
The SpectatorSIR,—Owing to the fact that so much publicity has been given to the word " conscription " in Press descriptions of the Government's new policy for six months' compulsory train-...
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LITTLE ENGLAND BEYOND WALES
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—Sir W. Beach Thomas is quite wrong in describing the area by St. David's Head in Pembrokeshire—offered to the National Trust—as "this bit...
THE FOURTEEN POINTS AND THE PEACE
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR, —With reference to the "Fourteen Points," may I ask for information on the following question? Not long ago, in a letter to The Times, it...
VIEWS ON MR. JOYCE
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] S1R,—I am surprised to read the impertinent note in your last issue which is offered as a review of Finnegans Wake. I fully appreciate the...
"THE TIMES"
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—If there is a real danger of the German executive basing their policy on an erroneous conviction that this country will default on its...
[To the Editor of Tini SPECTATOR] SIR,—It is an honour
The Spectatorto elicit comments from your pen, such as you attach to my letter on the German colonial claims and the Fourteen Points, and I am sorry to persist. But in one particular you...
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THE BURNING OF WASHINGTON
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sit,—In a recent discussion on the burning of Washington in the War of 1812-15, in The Spectator, no allusion is Made to the fact that it was...
THE FINAL WORDSWORTH
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sta, — Your reviewer's words that the later letters of Words- worth contain — " remarks on his own poetry ; glimpses of his kindness to young...
THE BICYCLE IN WARTIME
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR, —How are important civilian workers, particularly those in factories producing food or war supplies, going to get to work if war comes? A...
GERMANS BY RACE
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Snt,—You say, on May 12th, that the democracies clung to the be:ief that Herr Hitler's aim was "simply to extend the frontiers of the Reich...
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BOOKS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorSecurity (R. C. K. Ensor) . 860 Workmen's Compensation (Dingle Foot, M.P.) ... 862 Guide to Modern Wickedness (Dr. W. R. Inge) 862 Eyewitness in Czecho-Slovakia (Shiela Grant...
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THE INJURED WORKMAN
The SpectatorWorkmen's Compensation. Vol. 1. Social and Political Development. By Sir Arnold Wilson, M.P., and Professor Hermann Levy. (Oxford University Press. vas.) As long ago as 188o...
THE CONDITION OF EUROPE
The SpectatorMn. JOAD is, in my opinion (since I generally happen to agree with him), doing good service by his books on what Carlyle might have called the condition-of-Europe question. That...
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TEMPORARY EXTINGUISHMENT
The SpectatorEyewitness in Czechoslovakia. By Alexander Henderson. (Harrap. los. 6d.) IT was the tragedy of the Czechs that their significance for the rest of Europe was understood too...
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MR. SPENDER AND OTHERS
The SpectatorThe Still Centre. By Stephen Spender. (Faber. 6s.) Letter to a Comrade. By Joy Davidman. (Oxford University Press. 98.) IT is six years since Mr. Spender published his first...
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THROUGH AN INMATE'S EYES
The SpectatorBorstal Lives. By Louis Edward. (Gollancz. 9s.) IF the number of books lately written round the subject of those unhappy folk who have lost their liberty through breaches of the...
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HANNAH LIGHTFOOT
The SpectatorThe Lovely Quaker. By John Lindsey. (Rich and Cowan, ifs.) VERY little is known of Hannah Lightfoot. She married a Mr. Axford in 1753 at the Quaker Meeting-House or at Keith's...
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THE BUSINESS LIFE OF SAVAGES
The SpectatorMANY people nowadays feel on intimate terms with the domestic lives of the Trobrianders, and soon the economic habits of the Tikopia may be equally familiar. For this island of...
A TRAVELLER OF SENSIBILITY
The SpectatorEastern Visas. By Audrey Harris. (Collins. 12s. 6d.) THERE is a saying of Confucius quoted by Miss Harris which she might fairly have taken as the motto for her book : "If you...
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DOVER TO MOUSEHOLE
The SpectatorSailing on the South Coast. By K. Adlard Coles and T. L. Stecken. (Shell Guides. 5s.) THE quality of Shell publicity entitles this firm to rank as public benefactors, and in...
THE OBJECTIVE APPROACH
The SpectatorFOR an intelligent observer today it is Very difficult to remain entirely unbiassed about what is happening in the Soviet Union. For an intelligent Russian immediately before...
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FICTION
The SpectatorBy FORREST REID Gangway Down. By Dave Marlowe. (Harrap. 8s. 64.) MR. DAVE MARLOWE'S first book, Coming, Sir ! was an autobiography wherein he described his life as a waiter...
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THE YEAR BOOK OF EDUCATION In the eighth year of
The Spectatorits existence the Year Book of Educa- tion (Evans, 35s.) maintains its former high standards. It surveys the finance, the philosophy, and the organisation of modern education...
The Annual Register (Longmans, 3os.) provides its customary review of
The Spectatorpublic events at home and abroad. It is invaluable as a work of reference—not for the factual information con- tained, though this is abundant, but because of the general...
ELIZABETH GARRETT ANDERSON, 1836-1917 By Louisa Garrett Anderson This concise
The Spectatorbiography of the first Englishwoman to practise here with an English medical qualification (Faber, los. 6d.) has been written by her daughter who has, like her mother, attained...
The Encyclopaedia Britannica follows the advance of modern knowledge like
The Spectatora shadow. It covers the same ground and is only just behind. The Book of the Year, of which this is the second (Encyclopaedia Britannica, 45s.), forms an annual supplement which...
CURRENT LITERATURE
The SpectatorThe English police have a reputation for being wonderful. Mr. Roger Courtney's book (Jenkins, los. 6d.) should earn similar praise for the Palestine Police Force, in which the...
MUSIC OF THE WIKEK
The SpectatorGLYNDEBOURNE OPERA OPENING NIGHT: JUNE 1. SIX WEEKS SEASON UNTIL JULY 15. MOZART: LE NOZZE DI FIGARO DON GIOVANNI COSI FAN TUTTE VERDI: DONIZETTI : MACBETH DON PASQUALE...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorIT is becoming clearer every day that given any really reliable basis for confidence in the international political out- look City markets would be well on the way to a...
CABLE AND WIRELESS YIELD
The SpectatorOne of the few speculative stocks which has managed to make real headway in recent weeks has been Cable and Wireless (Holding) ordinary, whose merits I have stressed on several...
* * AIRWAYS MERGER TERMS
The SpectatorThere is bound to be a good deal of wrangling over the airways merger , scheme, but I think the Government's pro- posals should and will go through. A cash price of 32s. 9d. for...
I.C.I. DIVIDEND POLICY
The SpectatorThe more one examines the position of Imperial Chemical Industries the clearer it becomes that this is a company which, having arrived in the industrial sense, is now deter-...
PEASE AND PARTNERS PROFITS
The SpectatorIt is unusual in these days to find a board of directors declaring an increased dividend out of a reduced profit, but this is what has happened in the case of Pease & Partners,...
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COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorLONDON AND MANCHESTER ASSURANCE COMPANY, LTD. THE CHAIRMAN'S REPORT THE seventieth ordinary general meeting of the London and Man- chester Assurance Company, Limited, was held...
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BURMAH OIL PROFITS
The SpectatorSome of the optimists seem to have been disappointed by the Burmah Oil results, good as they undoubtedly are. Allowing for last year's so per cent. scrip bonus, the 21 per cent....
A STANDSTILL DEBT MOVE
The SpectatorAs one expected, the German Standstill Debt Agreement has been renewed for another year without any substantial modification of the existing basis. True, there is a little extra...
COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorTHE LIVERPOOL AND LONDON AND GLOBE INSURANCE CO., LTD. 103rd ANNUAL REPORT A SUCCESSFUL YEAR THE one hundred and third annual general meeting of the Liver- pool and London...
Venturers' Corner There has been a significant rise in recent
The Spectatorweeks in the 5s. ordinary shares of Richardsons Westgarth and Co., the Tyneside firm of marine engineers. Early this year the quotation was down to is. 6d., but it has now...
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CABLE AND WIRELESS (HOLDING)
The SpectatorTHE tenth ordinary general meeting of Cable and Wireless (Hold- ing), Limited, was held on May 17th in London. The Rt. Hon. Lord Pender (the Governor) said that the profit for...
COMPANY MEETINGS
The SpectatorSOCIETY OF INCORPORATED ACCOUNTANTS NIR. WALTER HOLMAN, F.S.A.A., London, president of the Society of Incorporated Accountants, presiding at the annual general meet- ing of the...
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FINANCIAL NOTES
The SpectatorFOUR MONTHS' TRADE THE Overseas Trade Returns for April suggest two general conclusions : the volume of both imports and exports is con- tinuing to shrink ; as the shrinkage is...
KEPONG (MALAY) RUBBER
The SpectatorMany rubber companies have continued to produce at a rate substantially above their current quotas and to allow stocks to pile up on the estates. This method has the advantage...
LICENCES AND GENERAL INSURANCE
The SpectatorAmong those life-insurancr. offices which have shown con- tinuous progress through the difficult times of 1938 must be counted the Licences and General Insurance Company. The...
LONDON AND MANCHESTER ASSURANCE
The SpectatorMr. A. H. Dawes, chairman of the London and Manchester Assurance Company, announced at the meeting on Wednesday that the actuarial valuation of the company's industrial branch...
LIVERPOOL LONDON AND GLOBE
The Spectator" A distinctly successful year" was the description bestowed upon 1938 by Mr. A. Kentish Barnes, who presided at Wed- nesday's meeting of the Liverpool London and Globe Insur-...