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Mr. Asquith then said :— " The dissolution of Parliament
The Spectatoris in this country one of the prerogatives of the Crown. It is not a mere feudal survival, but it is part, and I think a useful part, of our constitutional system, for which...
Thus, we have all the data before its by which
The Spectatorto predict the course of politics during the next Session. It is obvious that the Government must go out and that Labour must go in. It seems difficult to 'resist Mr. Asquith's...
We have written in our leading columns on Mini- sterial
The Spectatorprospects and what in the circumstances the Labour Party can expect and have a right to expect. We do not, however, want our readers to suppose that we have the slightest...
* * * * There remained, therefore, one more party
The Spectatordecision to make, and that not the least important. This was the decision of the Liberal Party. On Tuesday, at the meeting of the Liberal Members of the House of Commons, at the...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorW HEN we wrote last week, only the first of the series of important political decisions necessitated by the election had been taken. That was Mr. Baldwin's decision to remain in...
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M. Poincare, of course, makes some reservations in , advance. He
The Spectatorsays that France must retain the pledges . she has taken, although she is willing to help the Reich to restore its currency and finances. The position may be described summarily...
The result of the Indian elections seems to be lest:,
The Spectatoralarming than might at first sight be -supposed. In broad outline the extremist Swaraj party has gained about a third of the total representation in the Legislative Assembly;...
At the same thaw, we do not far a inoment
The Spectatorthat in intention the Labour leaders arc any less patriotic: or less desirous than Unionist and Liberal statesmen of taking the people of this country happy and prosperous and...
On Tuesday the King and Queen of Greece were -
The Spectatorexpelled from their -country. -It is difficult to know how far to sympathize with the young King, who, ever since _the flight of his father, has been a prisoner rather than IL...
Itisexintsion is thc immediate res . Out:kr-tile elections to the National
The SpectatorAssembly. The electoral law was lately modified in such a way that the Government could do pretty well what they liked in the constituencies. In these circumstances -the...
On the other hand, it is idle to pretend that
The Spectatorthe new Legislatures will -be either as -experienced or as easy to work with as the Old. The bad tactics of the Swaraj Party gave a chance to the Indian experimerit, but that...
The situation as between Germany and France is appreciably more
The Spectatorhopeful. Although the two committees of experts to be appointed under the Reparation Com- mission will not be the equivalent of the general Commis- sion which was proposed from...
On Tuesday the Tangier Convention was signed by the delegates
The Spectatorof France, .Spain and Great Britain, although the Spaniard reserved the right of ratification at Madrid. The best that _ean be said of the result of the Convention is that it...
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On Thursday, December 13th, Lord Alfred Douglas was sentenced to
The Spectatorsix months' imprisonment in the Second Division for a criminal libel on Mr. Winston Churchill, whom he had charged with concocting a false report about the Battle of Jutland for...
General Smuts, in a speech made in South Africa, and
The SpectatorMr. Massey, in an interview just before his departure for New Zealand, have both spoken strongly on the necessity of carrying through such promises of Imperial preferences as...
The Judge in such cases is also in a difficulty,
The Spectatorbecause, well knowing that there is little to be said for the prisoner, he must not appear to be unfairly restricting whatever in the nature of a case the defending counsel can...
The position of the Caliph, who by the act of
The SpectatorMustapha Kemal and the Grand National Assembly at Angora has been stripped of nearly all his powers spiritual and tem- poral is causing trouble in Turkey. The Times has pub-...
Bank Rate, 4 per cent., changed from 8 per cent.
The SpectatorJuly 5, 1923; 5 per cent. War Loan was on Wednesday, 99kt , Thursday week, 100 fi; a year ago, 99i.
* * * * The Times of Friday, December 14th,
The Spectatorpublished a letter from Bishop Bury, correcting a statement, which was recently attributed to him, and to which we called atten- tion at the time, that the Orthodox Church in...
It seems that the Aga Khan and Mr. Ameer Ali
The Spectatorposted their warnings simultaneously to Constantinople and Angora. When the letter was received at Constantinople it was published by three Turkish editors in their news- papers...
If this is to be the rule the Dominion Prime
The SpectatorMinisters (who come as it is at the greatest inconvenience to them. selves and their countries) will hesitate to come in future, and a great instrument of Imperial organization...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorA LIBERAL MINISTRY ? T HE main residual fact of the elections is that the voters by a majority of over two to one have rejected the policy of the Labour Party. It is true that...
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THE PROGRESS OF M. POINCARg.
The SpectatorPOINCARE may say that he is as fixed as the 1 3 - 1 -• earth was once supposed to be. Eppur si muove —nevertheless he moves. If events henceforth are wisely managed at the...
pittatar.
The Spectator5 5 The subscription rates of the Spectator post free to any part of the world are as follows :- One Year •• .. .. .. 80s. Od. Six Months .. 1St Od. Three Months • • . • • •...
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I N the current number of the Nineteenth Century there is,
The Spectatoras I mentioned last week, an article by Lord Bledisloe and Mr. Christopher Tumor—those two redoubtable champions of the English countryside—on the subject of Danish farming. The...
INDIA.
The SpectatorSOME PROBLEMS OF GOVERNMENT AND TRADE. BY LORD INCHCAPE. 1 1HE task of governing India is one which the wisest, the most talented, the most widely experienced men have...
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WINTER SPORTS.
The SpectatorT HE season for Alpine sports has come, and many a heart is being moved among those to whom the call of the mountains and the snows is potent, nay, imperative. To lie awake in...
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THE
The SpectatorENGLISH-SPEAKING WORLD. BY EVELYN WRENCH. T HE United States Chamber of Commerce has launched a nation-wide Anti-Litter campaign, and it is one which might well be copied in...
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THE THEATRE.
The SpectatorAT THE OLD VIC. THE CHESTER NATIVITY PLAY AND DICKENS'S " A CHRISTMAS CAROL." TICE Paynters and Glasiors of Chester, whose nativity mystery is " The Play of the Shepherds,"...
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POLITICS AND DRINK.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—You know much better than I can tell you that the prospects of any social reform, however desirable, are injured rather than advanced by...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE DUKE OF NORTHUMBERLAND AND THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—I enjoy the vigour of the Duke of Northumberland's language, but there is a...
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LORD BUCKMASTER'S BILL.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin,—This Bill, as passed some time since by the Lords, contains one clause—that relating to lunacy—to which, considering the deplorable...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIRS In her analysis
The Spectatorof the attitude of the public towards the Bishop of Oxford's Liquor (Popular Control) Bill does -Lady Astor seriously wish us to believe that in temperance matters there are...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sia,—I should like to
The Spectatorask Lord Buckmaster one question. If his so-called remedies for hard cases become law, what guarantee can he give us that England will not follow the example of America, where...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] her article under the
The Spectatorabove heading, Lady Astor, speaking of the Liquor (Popular Control) Bill, says that " The Trade has attacked the compensation scheme of the Bill on account of the provision for...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—I read with great
The Spectatorinterest the article by Lady Astor on " Politics and Drink " in your last issue. I have always supported a Prohibition policy, and I think a prohibitionist country will beat a...
LIFE MEMBERSHIP BY INSTALMENTS.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—From the fact of the publication in your issue of December 8th of " Commoner's " letter regarding life mem- bership by instalments, I...
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MR. VILLARD'S LETTER.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sia,—As one of your American readers I am constrained to send you my most indignant protest against the com- munication on " The Effects of...
THE REJECTED AGRICULTURAL SUBSIDIES.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin, —In your issue of December 15th, Mr. Philip Morrell writes on " The Defeat of Subsidies," speaking later of the offer as a " programme of...
THE AUTOMATIC TELEPHONES.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—The less undiscerning of your readers may be feeling that there was just a shade too much emphasis in the protesta- tions made on the eve...
MR. RAMSAY MACDONALD.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sia,—In your issue of November 17th there appeared an article by Mr. Ramsay MacDonald on " The Purpose of an Opposition." This was prefaced by...
" THE REVOLUTIONARY IDEA IN FRANCE.'
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—As your review of my book, The Revolutionary Idea in France, called forth not only a protest in your own columns from Lord Sydenham but a...
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THE REFERENDUM.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] see I am quoted in your last issue with regard to the question of a Referendum. Your correspondent says he does not quote my exact words—surely...
POETRY,.
The SpectatorAUBADE. (From " The Princess in the Sleeping Wood.") AT dawn the ancient chamberlain Came like someone who has lain For years beneath the deepest water. . . . He called the...
CINEMAS FOR CHILDREN.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—In your issue of October 6th and two weeks afterwards you had correspondence relating to the lack of suitable cinema films for children....
ACROSTICS.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—I notice from your issue of October 20th that you ask for the views of readers on the suggestion to publish a weekly acrostic in your...
ENGLAND'S CHRISTMAS DINNER.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] wonder what sort of meal the housewives amongst your readers would say was a real British Christmas dinner. Most of them, I imagine, would...
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THE SAYINGS OF QUEEN ELIZABETH.*
The SpectatorTins is a difficult book to review impartially in the Spectator. Our reason for this remark is to be found in the following passage traken from the introduction " The first...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHIS WEEK'S BOOKS. Tins seems to be a gala week for the Cambridge University Press. All but two of the books we have selected this time as the most noteworthy have been...
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DIVIDED REVISIONISTS. * IT is much to be wished that the
The Spectatordebates of the National Assembly on Revision should be opened by the reading of the Preface to the Prayer-book. This Preface is directed against the Puritans of the Restoration...
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THEODORE ROOSEVELT.*
The SpectatorLoan CriAnNwoon did a very useful service to the English- speaking world by his life of Lincoln. He has done another by his study of the personality of Theodore Roosevelt. Like...
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THE MAKING OF ITALY.* THIS book has appeared at a
The Spectatormost opportune moment. Italy is passing through a crisis of which we English, to judge by the comments in our newspapers, fail entirely to grasp the significance. It is to be...
MORE LIGHT.* Dn. Sairr.mr is an enthusiast who knows how
The Spectatorto impart his enthusiasm to others.. He is not a child crying for the moon but a scientist crying for the sun, who can produce very good reasons indeed why his request should be...
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FICTION:
The SpectatorANTIC HAY.* Pr is a more grateful task to praise Mr. Huxley than not to praise him. For our sakes he has ransacked the ages and despoiled the climes ; he has made us familiar...
BAKST.*
The SpectatorTins magnificent volume is not quite in the usual picture- book tradition. The reproductions of Bakst's drawings and colour work are splendid, the binding and paper sumptuous,...
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A TRIANGLE.t
The SpectatorMR. BARING must be rather handicapped by his reputation for versatility : since the Industrial Revolution life has become so specialized that the man of many pies is inevitably...
GOOD IN PARTS.*
The SpectatorTins novel of Mr. Blaker's is so unequal in its parts, so dis- appointing as a whole, that it might almost have been written by two persons : the one gifted in the perception...
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THE MASTERY OF THE KEYBOARD. By George Denham. (Cecil Palmer.
The Spectator5s. net.) In this book there are no new theories for attaining virtu- osity, but very helpful suggestions for beginners and for pianists who have reached a moderate...
SONGS FOR BOYS. By Boys of Throston SehooL (Printed by
The SpectatorF. W. Mason, Hartlepool. 6d. net.) This is a collection of 105 poems, produced by an entire class of 40 boys in standard V. at Throston Boys' School, Hartlepool, (Continued on...
The Daily Mail Year Book is, as usual, full of
The Spectatorinteresting and useful information of every sort and kind. It is the best of ephemeral encyclopaedias. The lightning biographies of a thousand notable people are very good, but...
The authors' attractive suggestions set forth in this well- illustrated
The Spectatorbook seem to imply that the income we " ought to have " is something over £1,000 a year. For the reason- ably comfortable and civilized existence of an English family to-day a...
LOOKING AFTER JOAN. By John Palmer. (Christophers. 7s. 6d.) This
The Spectatoris the story of the girl who could not look after herself and of the people who tried to do it for her. There is the Diana-like Barbara who quotes Hamlet, and always orders the...
THE LEANING SPIRE. By George A. B. Dewar. (The Chelsea
The SpectatorPublishing Co. 6s. not.) " My motive in preparing a new edition of- this book," writes Mr. Dewar, " is that it interested my wife who knew well the neighbourhood out of which...
FAIR WEATHER COMETH. By May Stanley. (Parsons. 7s. 6d. net.)
The SpectatorThis is a Canadian story with a feminist bias. It is written in a pleasant, interesting way, and should fmd an enthusiastic public. The best thing in the book is the author's...
SHORTER NOTICES.
The SpectatorTHE ARCHITECTURAL REVIEW. (Price 29. 6d.) The December number of the Architectural Review is worthy of special attention. The first article on " The Theatre of Sabbioneta "...
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In America there are about three million Jews. Half of
The Spectatorthis number lives in New York City. Of the whole number, about 500,000 arc Spanish and German Jews. The other 2,500,000 are " Polish " or " Eastern " Jews, descendants of the...
SEAMANSHIP FOR YACHTSMEN. By Francis B. Cooke. (Edward Arnold. 12s.
The Spectatorad. not.) Mr. Francis B. Cooke has written most of this book before, and yet he has ne a r written it so well. After all, there is not much new that anybody can say about the...
Into a sort of literary Queen Mary's Gift Book Mr.
The SpectatorCallender has collected stories, essays, poems and pictures by authors and artists whose work has been published at the sign of The Windmill (Messrs. Heinemann, Ltd.). The...
This is perhaps the best kind of book that can
The Spectatorbe written for the amateur dressmaker, for it assumes complete ignorance of the subject on the part of the reader, and only attempts- - to instruct in that which can be attained...
FINANCE-PUBLIC & PRIVATE.
The Spectator[BY OUR CITY EDITOR.] WHAT IS CREDIT ? . [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Last week at the close of my letter I felt it my duty to emphasize the serious view taken in...
Children—of every age—who like original ideas will be charmed with
The SpectatorMiss Curtis Brown's zeollection - of " Quite Wild Animals." The drawings, ,which are reminiscent of "Lear's delightful_ figures, are very convincing, while the character...
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FINANCIAL NOTES.
The SpectatorCongratulations to the Midland Bank on the proposed further extension of its borders, for, although some few years ago the " Midland " invaded the area north of the Tweed by its...