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We have received from the Government of the Common- wealth
The Spectatorof Australia an exceedingly interesting Memorandum on the proposed organisation of a National Guard for the land defence of Australia. It gives in detail the scheme for the...
In the House of Commons on Friday week the second
The Spectatorreading of the Unemployed Workmen Bill was rejected by a majority of 149 (265 to 116). The significance of the division- list is not confined to the large number of Liberals who...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorI T is with great regret that we again record the fact that the Prime Minister's condition shows no improvement. The continuance of a state of which the best that can be said is...
The German Imperial finances look more difficult the more they
The Spectatorare examined. On Tuesday they were discussed by the Budget Committee of the Reichstag, and the Times corre- spondent says that the Imperial Debt, which amounts to over...
The dispute between China and Japan over the capture of
The Spectatorthe Tatsu-Maru ' was settled at the end of last week. The modified Japanese demands to which China consented included a sufficient apology for the hauling down of the Japanese...
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The Times of Tuesday makes the following announcement: —"His Lordship
The SpectatorMr. Justice Warrington yesterday made an order sanctioning an agreement under which a company will be forthwith formed to take over the business of the publica- tion of the...
In the Commons on Wednesday Mr. Clynes and 'Mr. Kelley,
The Spectatorboth Labour Members, moved and seconded a Resolution that the working day in all trades and industries should be limited by law to a maximum of eight hours. Mr. Harold Cox...
On Monday the honorary freedom of the City of London
The Spectatorwas presented to Miss Florence Nightingale at the Guildhall. Miss Nightingale was too infirm to appeai, and the oak casket containing the resolution was received on her behalf...
A meeting of the Central Council of the Church of
The SpectatorEngland Temperance Society was held at the Church House on Tuesday. It was presided over by the Archbishop of Canterbury, and attended by a very large number of Bishops....
• Lord Lansdowne, dealing with the alleged compensations for reduotion,
The Spectatorpointed out that we could not have lower units and fewer units without the production of fewer Reserves. The organisation of the Special Reserve filled him with mis- givings....
The question of the naval policy of the Government was
The Spectatorraised in the House of Lords on Wednesday by Lord Cawdor in a long and critical speech. In reply Lord Tweedmouth reiterated the familiar statement that it was absolutely...
The adjourned debate in the Lords on the Motion of
The SpectatorLord Midleton, who had asked for any minute of the Army Council approving the further reduction of the Regular artillery and the Report for 1907 of the late Inspector-General,...
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We also desire to endorse the Morning Post's very sound
The Spectatorcriticism of the proposal to alter the system under which the value of licenses is now estimated. We are further inclined to agree with the Morning Post in viewing with favour...
Thursday's Times contains a long and important letter on old-age
The Spectatorpensions, signed by Sir William Anson, Mr. J. A. Baines, Sir William Chance, Professor Foxwell, Mr. H. Hobhouse, and Mr. Edmond H. Wodehouse. Their main object is to urge, even...
Lord Hugh Cecil in Thursday's Times draws attention to the
The Spectatortreatment which the Unionist Free-traders are receiving from the 'Tariff Reformers, in spite of the fact that on questions outside the Fiscal issue many of the Unionist...
The Bishop of St. Asaph has introduced into the House
The Spectatorof Lords a Bill for the solution of the education problem which accepts without qualification the two principles of public control and the abolition of tests. It provides that...
A special Army Order was issued on Wednesday announcing the
The Spectatorforthcoming formation of an Officers' Training Corps. The corps is to train public-school boys and members of the Universities with a view to their becoming Special Reserve...
The Morning Post in a leading article in Wednesday's issue
The Spectatormakes so just and so sound a comment upon the Council's resolutions that we feel we cannot do better than quote a portion of it :— " Opposition to a time-limit, regardless of...
Bank Rate, 3 per cent., changed from 34 percent. March
The Spectator19th Consols (24) were on Friday 87 on Friday week 87A-.
The Rev. Benjamin Waugh, founder of the National Society for
The Spectatorthe Prevention of Cruelty to Children, died on Wednesday week. Born in 1839, he became a Congregational minister at Greenwich. It was he who convinced the British public, first,...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorA VICTORY FOR COMMON-SENSE. W E are delighted to be able to record that common- sense has prevailed, and that the Labour Party's Unemployed Bill was defeated on Friday week by...
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THE RESERVES OF LABOUR.
The SpectatorW E have dealt in our previous article with the more • general aspects of the Unemployed Bill. There is one point, however, of very great importance which requires special...
THE AFFAIRS OF HAITI. T HE ugly stories which have come
The Spectatorfrom Haiti in the last few days describe a state of affairs which is re- current in that beautiful but unhappy island. As usual there was a revolutionary conspiracy, and as...
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A NEW SECRET SOCIETY.
The SpectatorW E are indebted to a correspondent of the Globe for the particulars of a political conspiracy of a new and formidable kind. For the most part English parties prefer to make the...
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MR. LLOYD-GEORGE. Mr. Lloyd-George's intervention was apparently equally cogent. There
The Spectatorremains the struggle in the engineering trades in the North of England, where the issue wavers. Possibly in that difficult corner also the President of the Board of Trade will...
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SHAKESPEARE AND NATIONAL SERVICE.
The SpectatorA S warm supporters of the policy of the National Service League, we note with satisfaction the progress which is being made by the League, and how very much greater and wider...
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M. SABATIER AND THE MODERNISTS.
The SpectatorM. SABATIER gave on the 10th of this month at the Passmore Edwards Settlement in TavistoCk Plade the last of three lectures upon the Modernist Movement in the Church of Rome....
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NEW YORK.
The SpectatorI N New York a curious and disquieting Exhibition has been opened at the Natural History Museum. It illustrates the congestion in the tenement-buildings of the city, and the...
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ROOKS.
The SpectatorW HEREVER there is a rookery, all over the country, the next two months will be a busy and interesting time. The birds have already come back and have begun operations, which at...
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CORRESPONDENCE.
The SpectatorOLD-AGE PENSIONS. fTo THE EDITOR OP TEN " SP2CTAT02.1 Six,—How will old-age pensions operate upon the London Unions ? is a question, perhaps, which I can answer with some...
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[TO THE EDITOR OF THE ,'SPEOTAY011:1
The Spectatorhave read with the greatest interest the correspond. ence as well as your• articles dealing with this subject. The principles which you enunciate in your issue of the 7th inst....
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorA CENTRE PARTY. tTo THE EDITOR Or THE " SPECTATOrt." . 1 SIII,—Your suggestion of a Centre Party is as sound as it is opportune and as opportune as it is sound. The Spectator...
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150 THE EDITOR OP THR "SPECTATOR:I
The SpectatorSID,—May I be permitted to add my plea for the formation of a Centre Party ? And I would propose the name of " Unionist Free-trader," as being less objectionable to the moderate...
LTo TER EDITOR OP THII " SPEC T AT OR:9
The Spectatoryour comments last week upon Lord Rosebery's speech you say : " As a matter of fact the dilemma [the choice between Socialism and Protection] can never occur, for the sufficient...
A CENTRE PARTY AND THE PROBLEM OF REPRESENTATION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR. OP THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—The suggested formation of a Centre Party brings out in a very striking way the crippling effects of our present electoral methods....
THE LICENSING BILL.
The SpectatortTo THU EDITOR OP THII "SPECTATOR.'] Sin,—In your interesting article of March 7th on the Licensing Bill you speak of the Bill's "many faults," of the "radical vice " of its...
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fTO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.' . ] Sin,—In the article on
The Spectatorthe Licensing Bill in your issue of March 7th one of the three amendments suggested is that the distiller should bear his "fair share in the provision of compensation." In the...
CONSERVATIVES AND TEMPERANCE REFORM.
The SpectatorTO THE EDITOR OH THE " SPECTATOR.".1 Srn,—Temperance reform should not be a question of party politics. It is not naturally so. But in present circumstances it is difficult for...
[TO THE Eorros OF THE " SPECTATOR. "] Sic., Whatever may
The Spectatorbe thought of other parts of the new Licensing Bill, there is one section of it to which special attention should be given by any who are keen on increasing national temperance....
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SUNDAY REFRESHMENT.
The SpectatorITO THE EDITOR OF THE "SpECrAToIt.1 Sra,—There is an important matter, in connexion with the Licensing Bill, which appears to have been almost overloOked by the framers and...
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HOW THE UNEMPLOYED LIVE.
The Spectator[To TEE EDITOR OF TES "SPECTATOH.'l Six, Your excellent letter No. XI. "to a working man" has recalled to my mind a curious example of the confusion which exists as a result of...
LORD ROBERT CECIL'S SEAT.
The Spectator[To TEl EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR." _I Stn,—The Confederates are again at work, and it is significant of the corrupting tendencies of Protection, and of the real aims of those...
[To THE EDITOR OF TEE "SPECTATOR." J Sta,—I am a
The SpectatorConservative, the son and grandson of Con- servatives. I am, moreover, rather in favour of Tariff Reform. But I am thoroughly disgusted with the tactics pursued by extreme...
UNEMPLOYMENT AND PROTECTION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE ° SPECTATOR." J SIE, — The allegation that German unemployment is less than English has been repeated ever since 1905, and has become a commonplace of...
GOVERNMENT SOCIALISM IN IRELAND AND ENGLAND.
The Spectator13 0 TUB EDITOR OF TUB BP ECTATOR:'1 Sin,—May a mere Irishman inquire at the founts of Imperial wisdom in any quarter why it is lawful to create public "lazzaroni" with public...
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SQUIRRELS.
The Spectator[To THR EDITOR or THE "SPROTATOIS,..1 SIR,—In your issue of March 7th you insert a letter from a correspondent on " Squirrels and Cocoanuts " which recalls to Me an experience...
THE DAYLIGHT BILL. [To rag Esrros OF THZ "SrscrAros."1
The SpectatorBra,—I thank you for again drawing attention in your last issue to my proposal that the hours of day shall be so arranged that during a period equivalent to one day of our...
A CORRECTION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] Sia,—The following extract is from your review of William Clarke's writings in the Spectator of February 15th :—" He asks : What can be...
XII. — THE OLD POOR LAW.
The SpectatorDEAR MR. I want to draw your attention to a fact too often forgotten. It is that we have tried, and tried very thoroughly, a system of State Socialism in England, and that it...
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MUSIC.
The SpectatorTHE THRESHOLD OF MUSIC. OF all the theories about the future of music, perhaps the most generally supported is that which, while admitting the possibility of great developments...
POETRY.
The SpectatorA VOICE FROM THE MINE. ["The Lord preserve us. We are , all trusting in Christ. "] NOT with a curse upon their lips, Not with the coward's whine, Manful they met life's dread...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorWORDSWORTH'S LETTERS.* Tan - L'aree volumes of Wordsworth letters now collected together for the first time by Professor Knight will be welcomed by all who are interested in...
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CIVILISATION AND WAR.*
The SpectatorCAPTAIN MAHAN has collected under the title of Some Neglected Aspects of War articles which we have already seen. Two of the articles are not by Captain Mahan, but by Mr. Henry...
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RECENT VERSE.*
The SpectatorWE congratulate Mr. Hardy on the completion of what, with all its strangeness and imperfections, is a very remarkable- poem. Four years ago, when the first part appeared, we-...
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BISHOP DIGGLE ON HOME LIFE.* THE Bishop of Carlisle has
The Spectatorwritten a very plain-spoken and courageous little book. Whether it carries the reader with it or not, it will certainly make him think, and not unfruitfully. • Home Life. By J....
THE REPROACH OF THE GOSPEL.•
The Spectator" THE influence of Christianity on mankind at large is, and has been, strangely disproportionate alike to its high claims, and to the reasonable expectation of those who saw its...
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THE STORY OF CRIME.*
The SpectatorMn. ADAM, who tells us that be is a. journalist, set himself the task some years ago of studying crime and prison life in all its phases. He has received facilities for the...
NOVELS.
The SpectatorTHE MAN WHO WAS THURSDAY.t WE are not quite sure whether Mr. Chesterton was well advised in adding " a Nightmare " to the title of his new fantasia. On the one hand, it has the...
ENGLISH SOCIALISM OF TO - DAY.* IT is one of the glories
The Spectatorof the British Constitution that under its aegis we are able to combine many, and sometimes divergent, principles in our scheme of government. We owe our liberties to its...
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The British Constitution Association. By Lord Balfour of Burleigh. (B.C.A.,
The Spectator23 Charing Cross. 3d.)—This address is full from end to end of powerful reasoning, cogent arguments put in a way which makes them easy of apprehension. Lord Balfour's main...
Rachel Chalfont. By Sophie Cole. (Duckworth and Co. 6s.) —There
The Spectatoris a class of modern novel which is merely concerned with the portrait of its heroine,—that is to say, the whole book is seen through her eyes. and nothing but her feelings and...
The Night that Brings Out Stars. By Georgette Agnew. (W.
The SpectatorHeinemann. 6s.)-There are passages in this story that make one feel hopeful about Mrs. Agnew's literary future. The Italian scenes, for instance, are excellent, especially that...
Portuguese Architecture. By Walter Crum Watson. (A. Con- stable and
The SpectatorCo. 25s. net.)—The subject of Portuguese architecture has never before been treated as a whole. Mr. Watson does not pretend that it is of first-ritte importance. There are no...
READABLE Novar.s.—Love and the Ironmonger. By F. J. Randall. (John
The SpectatorLane. 6s.)—A book which readers will either very much like or dislike, according as they are affected by the would-be comic point of view from which it is written.—The Lost...
SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator[Under this heading we notice each 'Books of the week as have not too reserved for review in other formal Notes. (Issued by the Unionist Free-Trade Club, 38 Victoria Street,...
The Congo State. By A. Castelein, S.J. (D. Nutt. 3s.
The Spectatornet.)— Professor Castelein—he occupies a Chair of "Natural Law," a fact which is not incapable of an ironic application—discusses in this book the "Origin, Rights, and Duties"...
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Newspaper Press Directory. (C. Mitchell and Son. 2s.)—After six "newspaper
The Spectatorobituaries," the most generally known name being that of Mr. Joseph Hatton, come various indexes and catalogues raisonnis of London, provincial, Welsh, Scottish, and Irish news-...
Messrs. Chapman and Hall and Mr. Henry Frowde publish an
The Spectatoredition of " The Works of Charles Dickens : Complete in Twenty Volumes," with the original illustrations by Cruikshank, "Phis," &c. (ls. 6d. net per vol.) — A Popular History of...
The Book of Ceylon. By Henry W. Cave. (Cassell and
The SpectatorCo. 12s. net; or in the three sections : " Colombo, &c.," 4s, ; " Kandy, &c.," 6s. ; "Northern Provinces, &c.," 4s.)—This volume seems to contain almost everything that can be...
In "Routledge's New Universal Library" (G. Routledge and Sons, ls.
The Spectatornet per vol.) we have The Tragedies of Sophocles, Trans- lated by Dean Plumptre, and Rienzi, by Lord Lytton.—In the same publishers' " Muses' Library " we get Poems of Bret...
We have received 'from Messrs. Frost and Reed, of Bristol,
The Spectatora fine etching by M. Victor Freillon of Mr. C. N. Hemy's picture (R.A., 1906) of " Lower Away !" a very spirited rendering of a scene in a yacht-race, when the wind has grown...
The Ordnance Survey at Southampton has published a map with
The Spectatorthe title of North - Western Trans - Frontier, which exhibits on the half-inch-to-the-mile scale the country which was the scene of the recent expedition. The whole country...
The New Bulletin, 1907. (Wyman and Sons. 5s.)—This volume is
The Spectatoras full as usual of curious and useful information. There is the strictly scientific portion, which has, of course, its own public; there are articles which appeal to a larger...
Catalogue of the Gladstone Library of the National Liberal Club.
The Spectator(Alexander and Shepheard.)—The Gladstone Library was opened by Mr. Gladstone not quite twenty years ago. Among the chief promoters of the scheme were Mr. John Noble and...
The Official Year Book of the Church. of England. (S.P.C.K.
The Spectator3s.)— This is a volume, it is almost needless to say, of the very greatest interest. It may be noted that nine Sees have been founded in the last thirty years at an expense of...