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The Nicaraguan Liberals tried to break away from American tutelage
The Spectatorby raising money in Europe instead of in the United States, but the active disapproval of Washington was too much for them. Cuba, it is true, has all the independence she wants...
When the clash of principles comes in Congress, as come
The Spectatorit must, it will have to be decided whether the State Department can continue to pretend that things can both be and not be. The United States is deeply committed by what may be...
The United States Navy programme has been explained to the
The SpectatorNaval Affairs Committee of the House of Repre- sentatives by Mr. Wilbur and Admiral Hughes. The programme, which is to cover five years (though the date for beginning is not...
In the Nicaraguan House of Deputies on Tuesday an Electoral
The SpectatorBill was introduced, which the New York correspondent of the Times says proposes "a virtual United States dictatorship at the next General Elec.. tion." The Bill provides that...
Blind politicians were no doubt incapable of seeing then that
The Spectatorthe United. States could never_ again retire within her hard shell of isolation, but most thinking einiericans saw the truth plainly enough, Chief among them was Mr. Roosevelt,...
News of the Week
The SpectatorT EElearned and able Americans who are representing the "United States at the Pan - American Congress mar succeed in keeping the discussions off dangerous lines, but that will...
EDITORIAL AND PIALISHENG OFFICES : 13 "York Street, Covent Garden,
The SpectatorLondon, VP .C. 2.—A Subscription to the SPECTATOR 60148 Thirty Shillings per annum, including postage, to any part of the world. The SPECTATOR i8 registered as a Newspaper. The...
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Meanwhile the British Government, by way of setting a good
The Spectatorexample,, have made yet another naval cut which will mean a saving of £5,500,000. - One of the three 8,000-ton cruisers which were to have been built in the year 1928-29 is to...
When the employers discovered that Mr: Bell had 'pub- lished
The Spectatorthis - statement they issued a statement 'of 'their own to the effect that it had been "recommended that a Small sub-Committee should be ferined to &insider all the proposals...
Only the general Principles of the Bill have so far
The Spectatorbeen agreed upon and it is thought that it will not be completed until next month. The "Big Navy" idea, however, has triumphed in the Naval Affairs Committee. Nevertheless, it...
Mr. Kellogg in his latest Note to France on the
The Spectatorout- lawing of war objects both to the suggestion that a pact between America and France might be signed in advance of pacts with other nations and to the suggestion that the...
On Tuesday the Joint Conference between representa ,- tives of the
The Spectatoremployers and the operatives. opened,' and after sitting - for an hour • and three-quarters adjourned apparently for a fortnight. The employers said that there was a definite...
The point about aggressive war is a real difficulty. The
The SpectatorLeague is committed to deal with aggressors, though aggression is not defined. The question, therefore, is whether Mr. Kellogg is proposing such a sweeping declaration that it...
The resistance of the operatives to the proposals . or the
The SpectatorLancashire cotton spinners and manufacturers is as determined as we expected it would be. It is most. unfortunate that the employers should have proposed. to increase working...
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,Monday the ashes of Thomas Hardy were laid in Poets'
The SpectatorCorner, Westminster Abbey. They lie by the side of 'Dickens and are surrounded by the tombs of Johnson, Thickeray, Macaulay, Tennyson and Browning. The pall bearers were the...
By an Army . Order the lance has been abolished as
The Spectatora weapon of war. The decision to keep lances for cere- monial purposes is, however, wise, for in the whole realm of. military spectacle there is nothing finer than an advance of...
On Thursday, January 12th, the Conference 'between members of the
The SpectatorGeneral Council of the T.U.C. and Sir Alfred Mond's group began its work with earnestness and enthusiasm. Only one dissentient voice was raised: Mr. Cook denounced the whole...
On Monday a Conference, at which Sir Kingsley Wood presided,
The Spectatorwas held to consider means of preventing disaster , from flood in London. A- sub-committee repre- senting the London County Council, the Thames Con- servancy, the Port of London...
McCartney "joined up" in the War when he was only
The Spectatorfifteen and seems to have been both capable and gallant. Afterwards he became a Communist. Perhaps politics went to his head. Perhaps he lost his money, of which he had...
On Wednesday the Lord Chief Justice passed very heavy sentences
The Spectatoron W. T. McCartney, an Englishman, and George Hansen, a German, who were convicted of spying on behalf of the Soviet Government. Both were sentenced to ten years' penal...
As had been expected, several changes in the Ministry were
The Spectatorannounced at the end of last week. Sir George Hennessy becomes Treasurer of H.M. Household in the place of Colonel George Gibbs, who has been created a Peer. Major William Cope...
Bank Rate, 41 per cent., changed from 5 per cent.,
The Spectatoron April 21st, 1927. War Loan (5 per cent.) was on Wednesday 1011; on Wednesday week 101 f d - ; a year ago 1011. Funding Loan (4 per' cent.) was on Wednesday 891; on Wednesday...
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The Pan-American Congress
The SpectatorT HE United States had a very good reason for organizing an immensely strong diplomatic and legal delegation to take part in the Pan-American Congress at Havana this week. When...
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The Problem of the Reich O N Monday, in Berlin, a
The SpectatorConference, over which the Chancellor presided, met to consider the extra- ordinarily difficult subject of the relations between the Reich and the Federal States. At present...
The Pauper and the Slum
The SpectatorT HERE is only one way of elucidating the pauper problem sketched in my article of last week. It lies in investigating the paupers themselves. There is, for instance, the " A "...
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Thomas Hardy
The SpectatorN OW that the last notes of the symphony have died 1 away, we may be able to review with some calm- ness the noble composition of Thomas Hardy's life work. Conventional...
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Marginal Notes
The SpectatorTHERE are some books that we cherish for their wit or wisdom, some that we deli g ht in because of their ancient bindin g s ; but the book about which I write, althou g h it is...
The Workhouse of Ardee
The SpectatorI ORB GREY OF FALLODON says somewhere that when he was youn g he was obli g ed to make a rule for himself: never to think of fishin g after one season had ended till a month (or...
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Twenty-five M.F. - H's on the Digging of Foxes IN a footnote
The Spectatorto one of the letters on Fox-hunting which we recently printed, we wrote : "Setting aside for the present the _ethics of fox-hunting, there can be no two opinions as to the...
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M us ic
The Spectator[OPERA. AS A. HABIT OF MIND.] "THE most effective way of solving the opera problem is to create a habit of mind." This sentence occurs in a Spectator article which I wrote...
THE SPECTATOR.
The SpectatorBefore going abroad or away from home readers are advised to place an order for the Spacmuroa. The journal will be forwarded to any address at the following rates :- One Month •...
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Correspondence
The SpectatorA LETTER FROM CAIRO. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.], SIR,—As October waned, Cairo rubbed its eyes and awoke from its summer languor. Every week steamers from Europe were...
Poetry
The SpectatorTo Jimmy BIDDING HIM TO A SABINE SUPPER To-MORROW, if these omens hold Of rising glass and sunset-gold, If anticyclone's • brooding calm Fill the rich dusk with warmth and...
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Only a few weeks after the General Strike in 1926,
The Spectatorfor instance, Mr. Pugh, as chairman of our Trades Union Congress, who had been breathing threatenings and slaughter against our economic system, might have been seen sitting at...
The Swiss Government gave the valuable site, the Germans a
The Spectatorstained glass window overlooking the main stairway, the French Cohen as tapestry for the room where the Governing Body holds its sessions, Japan two magnificent cloisonné vases,...
Quite franldy, as I walked those trim paths to the
The Spectatorpylon- guarded doorway, carved like a Hindu temple, that admits the inquirer to the hall of the I.L.O., I felt that the world had scraped along for a good many centuries without...
To what purpose, I had asked myself, were all the
The Spectatorarrays of files in the long corridors I had traversed, who read in the charming library of light cherry-wood with its tiers of steel - galleries, what eyes scanned the 2,700...
Let us consider roughly the scope of its activities. The
The SpectatorLabour Conference meets yearly, representing 43 States Members, who sent last year a total of 189 delegates and 184 substitutes and advisers. Each Member State has the right to...
A visit to Geneva soon dispels this false impression. M.
The SpectatorAlbert Thomas is reputed to be the cleverest man in Europe, and although I had not the pleasure of meeting him I can say with truth that he has helpers of the highest ability. I...
The object of the organization, comprising as we have seen
The Spectatora full Conference, a selected Governing Body, and an adminis- trative Bureau, may be briefly summarized as the creation of effective international collaboration in all spheres...
The League of Nations
The SpectatorThe International Labour Office "IF some millionaire were to endow an Institute, how easy I should find it to spend his money ! I should begin with a publicity department to...
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Does any countryman remember to have seen the scenery of
The SpectatorBritain so altered by weather in a short time ? Whole lines of trees vanished in the gale ; and the floods that followed have turned land into lake and marsh. The Thames has...
Country Life
The SpectatorBErrEa Fewnwa. Amid the gloom persistently sprayed over the industry of farming in Britain, it is refreshing to find that our scientific bodies are outside the area of utter...
Most of the ringing in Europe is done on nestlings.
The SpectatorIn the U.S.A. most elaborate and ingenious methods have been devised for catching adult birds ; and it is claimed that the nets and traps entail no cruelty. This perhaps is hard...
THE WAY OF A BIRD.
The SpectatorOne of Solomon's four cardinal mysteries—if we may consider " eagle " as a picturesque word for bird—is being marvellously illustrated if not probed by modern investi- gators....
SHORT-LIVED BIRDS.
The SpectatorBirds' lives are short on the average, largely because the physical dangers are great. Though a parrot is said to have lived so long—on a Pacific island—that it became the only...
A WORD FOR CORN.
The SpectatorWhat is more surprising is that the Economists quote examples of considerable profits from corn-growing. One of the most practical of all our educational farms is Wye College ;...
The extent of America gives Canadians and citizens of the
The SpectatorU.S.A. in association a rare opportunity of studying migra- tion ; but even more romantic possibilities are open to biologists of England and South 'Africa, if they would co-...
MONEY IN HENS.
The SpectatorPoultry-keeping is, of course, a scientific business ; but it has never yet been taken in hand scientifically by the general farmer. He has kept hens and bought grain for them,...
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AN ECHO OF THE GENEVA NAVAL CONFERENCE [To the Editor
The Spectatorof the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Your correspondent, Mr. Candler, states that in American naval circles it is believed that at Geneva the Admiralty stood out for the six-inch gun cruiser...
Letters to the Editor
The SpectatorTHOMAS HARDY'S REALISM [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin, —Whilst reading the many tributes in the papers to Thomas Hardy, I have been reminded of a strange incident in...
REDUCTION OF NAVAL ARMAMENTS
The Spectator[To flee Editor of the SPECTATOR.] believe that failure to see the other side's point of view is responsible for a great deal of the misunderstanding and misrepresentation that...
THOMAS HARDY ON THE RIGHTS OF ANIMALS [To the Editor
The Spectatorof the SPECTATOR.] Sm,—Among the many things that will be said of Thomas Hardy's literary achievements, it is to be hoped that his views concerning the treatment of animals...
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[To UK Editor of the SPECTATOR.] , Sin,—" A Regular
The SpectatorReader" has taken me to task for my account of the debate on the Prayer -Book in the House- of Commons. I can only , say that the impression I gathered of the proceedings,...
REJECTED PRAYER BOOK
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Whilst sectional or party interests find expression, there does not seem to be much of an attempt at a synoptic view Of the serious...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSm,—In his criticism of your leading article on "Parliament and the Prayer Book," "Rural Layman " gives expression to those very sentiments which, based as they are on initial...
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ENGLISH MUSIC FESTIVAL AT PRAGUE [To the Editor of the
The SpectatorSPECTATOR.] Sia,—If your correspondent Mr. de Ternant will refer again to the first sentence of my article he will find that it was concerned with the European attitude towards...
• HOUSING AND THE FLOODS [To the Editor of the
The SpectatorSPECTATOR.] SIR, —May I point out to Mr. Robert Street, your correspondent, that the recent deplorable flood in Millbank occurred not in the Victoria Ward but in the ward of St....
THE METHODS OF LIFE ASSURANCE OFFICES [To the Editor of
The Spectatorthe SPECTATOR.] SIR, —In his article in your issue of January 7th, Sir William Schooling gives two reasons why in this country life assurance is not nearly so general as across...
MY IDEAL SCHOOL—WHERE CAN I FIND IT? [To the Editor
The Spectatorof the SPECTATOR.] wonder if any of your readers can help a father per- plexed in choosing a school fora boy. I have seen or considered the various public and other large...
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THE RELIGIONS OF INDIA
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin,—The answer to your first question in "General Know- ledge Questions," published in the Spectator of January 7th, caused some surprise. On...
" SUMMING'S UP "
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sur,—Your correspondent's reference to American epitaphs that contain advertisements reminds me of an inscription which is, or was, to be found...
THE SPRING SNOWFLAKE
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.1 • Srn,—I always read with interest in your page, "Country Life," contributed by Sir W. Beach Thomas, and my expe- rience in this neighbourhood...
LONDON TO CALIFORNIA
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR, — In a letter from Pau, Mi. Ferdinand Tuohy dogmatically asserts of the airplane that "it might be banished from the world to-morrow for...
DR HOOKBEAK
The Spectator[To the Editor Of the SkitTArOn..] Sra,—Interest has been aroused lately in your paper, and in others, as to the number of words dogs and other animals understand, and it is...
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THE BULL-DOG ANTS OF AUSTRALIA [To the Editor of the
The SpectatorSPECTATOR.] Sni,"—A review in this week's Spectator, under the heading "Sins and Splendours of Antdom," contains the sentence : "Among them (ants) we may still find primitive...
NATURE'S WEATHER WARNINGS [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin,—May
The SpectatorI give another saying about the weather current in many parts of the . country :— " Tis time to 'Stack your hay and corn When the old donkey blows his horn." This enables...
THE B.B.C.'s PRONUNCIATION [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.", SIR,—A
The Spectatorletter to B.B.C. headquarters having had no effect, can you persuade the authorities thereof that the e in economics,. economical, is long ? That chimerical should be pronounced...
RAILWAY TIME TABLES [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Referring
The Spectatorto Mr. J. O'Brien's letter in a recent issue of the Spectator, it is surely difficult to improve upon the L.M.S. Railway Company's system of showing all p.m.. train times with a...
ZOOLOGICAL GARDENS [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.'
The SpectatorSin,—It is reported that the project to establish a South London Zoological Garden has not found _ favour with the London County Council. The capture of wild creatures for...
THE MIGRATION OF BIRDS - [To the Editor of the
The SpectatorSPECTATOR.] Siit,– ; -/gr. Travers-Chubb, . in his interesting letter on bird migration, _mentions the "sun _theory ", of Benjamin Kidd only, to, refute it. But Kind was right...
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Art lovers have come to look for the Barbizon House
The Spectator_Record, which Mr. D. Croal Thomson has produced every Christmas since the War. In this charming annual he reproduces and comments upon some of the more notable pictures,...
The Federation of Swedish Industries send us Industry in Sweden,
The Spectatoran excellently printed and illustrated volume in English. The famous match industry is briefly dealt with— we should have been glad to read more on the subject. It is a...
. , A privately published symposium of reviews of Miss
The SpectatorMayo's Mother India can be obtained from the printers, MessrS. J. A. Thompson, South John Street, Liverpool. The reviews given are sensible and written by experts, but only...
Mr. Gordon Home's Canterbury of our Grandfathers and of To-day
The Spectator(published by the Homeland Association, 3s. 6d.) is, correctly speaking, a picture-book, though it contains a good many pages of clear and adequate description. Mr. Gordon Home...
, Mrs. Fawcett and Miss E. M. Turner have written
The Spectatora eulogy upon Josephine Butler specially for the Josephine Butler cen- tenary (The Association for Moral and Social Hygiene, 2s. 6d.). Biography overloaded with praise is apt to...
Canon Odom's Sketches of Historic Personages in Sheffield (William Townsend
The Spectatorand Sons, Sheffield, 3s.) is of more than parochial-interest. With simplicity and charm he tells of the celebrated people whose lives have touched the great steel centre,...
The department of Overseas Trade send us their excellent advance
The Spectatoredition of the Catalogue of the British Industries Fair to be held simultaneously in Birmingham and London from February 20th to March 2nd. The catalogue is published six weeks...
Some Books of the Week
The SpectatorYzi' another book about food comes to us from the Oxford University Press—Dr. Callow's Food and Health (2s. 6d.). Edmund Kin, the author tells us, is said to have altered his...
A Political Competition
The SpectatorTHE Editor offers two prizes of ten guineas each for the moat practicable programme for the next Unionist Government. One prize will be given to women of under twenty-five years...
General Knowledge Questions
The SpectatorA NUMBER of correspondents have written to point out that there was a , serious error in both question and answer -in the third of our General Knowledge Questions last week,...
The Short Story Competition
The SpectatorOWING to the very large number of entries received for the twenty guinea Short Story Competition, it is impossible to publish the result until February 4th. Will competitors be...
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More of Queen Victoria's Letters The Letters a Queen Victoria,
The Spectator1879-1885. Edited by George Earle Bookie. (Murray. 258.) IN no other monarchical country would the Sovereign have given permission for some of the letters in this volume to be...
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Poet and Mystic
The SpectatorPrayer and PoetrY: A Contribution to Poetical Theory. - -By Henri Bremond, of the French Academy. Translated by- Alger Thorold. (Bums, Oates and Washbourne. 7s. ed.) HARDLY...
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Facts and Fallacies about the Birth-rate
The SpectatorProceedings of the World Population Conference. Edited by Mrs. Margaret Sanger. (Edward Arnold. El.) This Conference, which opened at Geneva on August 81st last, was at first...
Will the New Airships Fly ?
The SpectatorMn. SPANNER has written a very large book to prove that it is waste of money to build airships and that they will certainly collapse, if not on their trial trip, then in the...
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A Story of Success
The SpectatorMy Life in Advertising. By Claude C. Hopkins. (Harpers. 12s. 6d.) • - • - - Through his father he experienced poverty, and he-, tells us he owed much to that condition :— "...
THE INDEX TO VOL. 1 . 39 OF THE " SOECTATOR 7
The Spectatoris Now Ready, price One Shilling (or lo cents) per copy, on application to INDEX DEPARTMENT, THE "SPECTATOR," LTD., .15 YoRK. STREET, LONDON, W.C. 2,. ENGLAND.
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The Fasces and the Future
The SpectatorThe Universal Aspects of Fascism. By J. S. Barnes. & Norgate. 10s. .6d.) THE author of this book, a Frenchwoman who has lived in Italy for many years and has made a deep study,...
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So Much Good. A Novel in a New Manner. By
The SpectatorGlibert Frankau. (Hutchinson. 7s. 6d.) WHY in a new manner? the reader asks himself after reading Mr. Frankau's latest romance. There are the same ingredients as before, a...
Fiction
The SpectatorChapters in our Social Story Hall. 70. (id.) THESE novels, either in their entirety or in their conclusions, are restless with varied impressions of contemporary society, some...
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Insurance
The SpectatorNON-PARTICIPATING POLICIES. ONCE again it is being announced that various life offices have reduced their rates of premium for non-participating life assurance. This course is...
The Centenary of the "Athenaeum' ,
The SpectatorThis week our contemporary, the Nation and Athenaeum, publishes the centenary number of the last-named journal, an event we have particular pleasure in recording, as we are...
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Finance—Public and Private
The SpectatorBritish Agriculture and Empire Resources THE annual bank meetings, which seem to be awaited with increasing interest every year, have had a good send- Off in the speech of Mr....
BANKING RESCLTS.
The SpectatorAs anticipated, all the leading banks have maintained their dividends for the past year, but at the same time some small diminution has been shown in profits. For the most part...
Financial Notes
The SpectatorMARKET TENDENCIES. THE immediate success which attended the flotation last week of the Indian Loan for £7,500,000 was one of those events which seems to indicate, for the...
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MIDLiND SHARi BONUS:. _
The SpectatorIn tour annual Banking Supplement, _Which will appear later on, we shall hope to deal in detail with the banking results for the past year. Special reference, however, must be...
AN IMPORTANT WORK.
The SpectatorIf there are any readers of the Spectator who desire to obtain a really clear apprehension of the great financial developments which have taken place since the War in the...
In another column I draw attention to the plea for
The Spectatorthe development of our Empire resources made by Mr. Goodenough at the annual meeting of Barclays Bank. Practical expression of M. Goodenough's views in this matter is, of...
An excellent half-yearly statement Of accounts is published - by
The Spectatorthe Standard Bank of South Africa. It shows the deposits to have increased during the year from $48,459,000 to 149,128,000. There is also an expansion in loans and advances,...
GOOD INSURANCE RESULTS.
The SpectatorThe annual valuation of the National Mutual Life Assurance Society, as at December 81st last, discloses a net surplus of £864,162. The ordinary rate of compound reversionary...
In the course of his remarliS at the annual meeting,
The Spectatorheld - last Monday, of the British-American Tobacco Company, the Chairman, Sir Hugo Cunliffe-Owen,gave a very interesting - summary of the growth in the prosperity of this great...
Answers to Boswell's "Johnson" Questions
The Spectator1. In the back parlour of Mr. Thomas Davie,s's bookshop in Russell Street, Covent Garden, on Monday, May 16th, 1763. 2. At 17 Gough Square, E.C.-3. Goldsmith.-4. A tavern...