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News of the Week
The SpectatorThe Lambeth Conference TOTE have written in our first leading article a general review of the conclusions reached at the Lambeth Conference. At the end of last week the...
The whole document displays great dignity and an abounding charity.
The SpectatorIt does not show forcefulness in a corresponding degree. It would have attracted mania who will decry it if it had held up starkly unbending ideals boldly without admitting...
The vulgar will pay most attention to the Resolutions of
The Spectatorleast general import, namely, those upon divorce and birth-control. The latter was the only subject upon which there is a Resolution passed without unanimity but by a majority...
EDITORIAL AND PUBLISHING OFFICES : 99 Gower Street, London, W
The Spectator.0.1.—A Subscription to the SPECTATOR costs Thirty Shillings per annum, including postage, to any part of the world. The SPECTATOR is registered as a Newspaper. The Postage on...
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* * * * Germany and the League French "
The Spectatornerves" have, of course, been inflamed by the evident intention of Germany sooner or later to invoke Article 19 of the Covenant for the purpose of reconsideration of the "...
The United States and Trade We mentioned last week the
The Spectatorestimates of the millions of men out of work in the United States as comparahle to our own figures of distress and as worse in the richest country in the world than in any but...
The negotiations with the imprisoned leaders of Congress are still
The Spectatorgoing on and there are grounds for reasonable hope in the report that Sir Tej Bahadru Sepru and Mr. Jayakar transmitted to the Viceroy a letter authorizing them to discuss the...
Soviet Russia
The SpectatorOn Tuesday, August 12th, a useful White Paper (CM/ 3641, price 2d.) was issued from the Foreign Office, embodying a translation of extracts from the laws in force in respect of...
France The strikes in the French textile mills still paralyse
The Spectatorthe chief manufacturing industry of Northern France, though a few workers have returned, and there is hope of peace soon. In Paris we regret that the Minister for War has...
India It is reported from India that the Afridis in
The Spectatortheir recent raid were armed and equipped on a scale hitherto unknown. Late on Friday, August 15th, Martial Law was proclaimed at Peshawar, although the establishment of special...
* * * * China Events have moved in China,
The Spectatorand moved at last in favour of the Nanking Government as against the North. Chiang Kai-shek's armies have advanced and taken Tsinanfu, apparently with ease. Feng Yu-hsiang has...
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* * * * Films and the Law
The SpectatorOne of the most valuable products of the recent Colonial Office Conference has now been made available for the use of administrators in British Colonies, Protectorates, and...
* * * * The Trade Unions The Agenda of
The Spectatorthe Trades Union Congress which is to be held in September of this year is one of the first clear indications of the feeling of the Trade Unions towards rationalization. In many...
* * * * This attitude will call forth protests
The Spectatorfrom the advocates of economy. But economy has less intrinsic virtue than value as a useful adjunct of a forward policy. We have tried before now to explain why a greater...
The ' R100'
The SpectatorOn Saturday, August 10th, the ' R100' moored at Cardington after completing her return journey from Montreal in fifty-seven hours, two hours more than the Graf Zeppelin took...
Foreign Visitors
The SpectatorThere is a silver lining to the general cloud of depression in the returns of the Tourist Traffic from the United States to Great Britain. In spite of the troubles in Wall...
* * * * The Miners' Federation The Conference of
The Spectatorthe Miners' Federation at Weston- super-Mare came to an end last week. Mr. T. Richards occupied the chair, though Mr. Herbert Smith, the stalwart Yorkshire representative, stood...
* « * *
The SpectatorBank Rate, 3 per cent., changed from 3} per cent. on May 1st, 1930. War Loan (5 per cent.) was on Wednesday 1031} on Wednesday week, 10311 ; a year ago, 101/1 Funding Loan (4...
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The Lambeth Report
The SpectatorA LL those who heard the great sermon preached in St. Paul's by the Archbishop of York at the opening of the Lambeth Conference, with its solemn emphasis on the over-ruling...
THE SPECTATOR.
The SpectatorBefore going abroad or away from home readers are advised to place an order for the SPECTATOR. The journal will be forwarded to any address at the following rates :- One Month...
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This Russia n Business
The SpectatorO F all the cleavages in international politics, poten- tially the most dangerous is that which divides the Communist government of Russia from the rest of the world. It is...
Tests
The SpectatorW E cannot this week wait for the end of the final and deciding Test Match before writing of what is in everybody's thoughts. We are hoping that England will win as heartily as...
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Empire and Education : The Case for a Central
The SpectatorInstitute [Tho writer of this article is Professor of Education at McGill University, Montreal. He was formerly Director of Training at the University cf Cape Town.] T HE...
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Unemployment : Its Logical Solution—II
The Spectator[This is the second of two articles by a young business man who has had special opportunities of contact with British manufacturers and merchants.) S CE the cure for industrial...
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Pour Dire Bonjour
The SpectatorF IFTEEN years have passed. The pave is the saran There are still the same sort of houses and people in the villages round St. Omer, whose towers and spires are silhouetted...
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A Kashmir Ghost Story
The Spectator[Founded on Fact.] I SFAS feeling a little lonely all by myself in. the big old house and garden, and for the thousandth time cursed my ill-luck in having sprained my ankle...
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The Cinema
The SpectatorTIIE AVENUE PAVILION, which has in the past provided a critical cinema public with the best films that have been made in Europe and America, has now launched out on a new...
A Tale of Superstitions
The SpectatorReport of the Competition T HE extremes of the country of Britain have met in very lively and various rivalry over the competi- tion for the best story of a local superstition....
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Correspondence
The SpectatorA LETTER FROM GERMANY. THE EMERGENCY REGULATIONS : THEIR CAUSE AND CON- SEQUENCES. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin,—At the moment two things are in the forefront of...
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Great Britain and India
The SpectatorThe purpose of this page is to ventilate that moderate Indian opinion which, recognizing all the difficulties, yet believes in the continued association of Great Britain and...
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Country Life
The SpectatorTHE HISTORIC VILLAGE: A group of English villagers were discussing the other day, in intervals of work, a meditated revolution in the loveliest of all the villages of England,...
THE POSTPONED FIRST.
The SpectatorThe Irish Free State, in their new laws regulating sport, have given the partridges a longer lease of security. They may not be shot till the end of September. It is a reform...
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The SpectatorSEVEN POUNDS AN ACRE. The Oxford economists, whose good work is unceasing, have just published an analysis of profit and loss on the crop in many districts. In every case a...
A GARDENERS DISCOVERY.
The SpectatorA Gloucestershire gardener believes that he has found a cure for silver leaf, one of the most serious of tree maladies. Owing to the order that affected trees must be destroyed,...
* * * * This talk of the Cotswold villagers
The Spectatorwas reported to a pro- fessor of anthropology and kindred subjects, who had been long especially interested in the Down folk of Berkshire and other counties. He strongly...
SHOCKS on STOOKS?
The SpectatorThe approaching trials for combined harvesters, which do all the various jobs at one and the same time, have great mechanical interest, but are of less interest to British than...
* * * * I have seen testimonials from a
The Spectatornumber of plum-growers who declare that the cure was absolute, and among the more ardent believers is Mr. MacNamara, the Rector of the Parish of Flaxley. The discoverer's...
And why is it so foolish ? You would have
The Spectatorto know your country very well to answer.- It would be foolish, such was the essential point of the discussion, because you would be taking the valley people from their proper...
BEET AND WHEAT.
The SpectatorThe response of the engineer (often the best farmer) to changes in cultural practice is astonishingly quick, especially, I think, in Britain. What most surprises in touring the...
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[To the Editoi• of the SPECTATOR.] Sui,—The last mail which
The Spectatorarrived in India brought Lord Rothermere's latest contributions to the Daily Mail about India. A peculiar streak in Lord Rothermere's latest affec- tation of patriotism is his...
Letters to the Editor
The SpectatorGREAT BRITAIN AND INDIA [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin,—In the number of the Spectator for the week ending Saturday, August 9th, you expressed surprise that " Mr. Lloyd...
TOWARDS A EUROPEAN AGRARIAN CARTEL
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin,—There is much food for thought for the people of this country in the conference of the Ministers of Agriculture of nine countries of...
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[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—" W.'S " article
The Spectatorin your issue of the 9th instant calls for some reply. Father Jellicoe, his Aladdin, can only provide new dwellings for old at the same rents because charitable people provide...
AIR FORCE CONTROL [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Capt.
The SpectatorLiddell Hart has done your readers a service. But the real point that England will have to settle one day for herself, and prove to others, is that Air Force Control is not and...
A TRUE POLICY OF PEACE [To the Editor of the
The SpectatorSPECTATOR.] SIR,—May I as a convinced pacifist be allowed to supplement your dissent from Mr. Norman Angell and the more blood- thirsty pacifists of the League of Nations Union...
RENTS [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSm,—After studying carefully the article by " W." on " Rents and Profiteering" (Spectator, August 9th), I have conic to the conclusion that I agree with much of it, though a...
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[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSte,—We read with interest the article on Rents and Profiteer- ing—by " W."—in your issue of the 9th inst. We sympathize with his point of view, but we venture to give some more...
CANCER [To (he Editor of the SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSin,--For a considerable time the daily Press has shown much interest in the cancer problem, but has confined its attention almost entirely to new means and methods of treating...
ONE IMPERIAL PROBLEM [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSin,—In view of the approaching conference between Great Britain and the Dominions, which, on this occasion, is fraught with so much importance; may I ask for a small space of...
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[To the Editor of the SracrsTon.] Sia,—If there was a
The Spectatorforum at which the voices of many plain men could be heard, the volume of approval of the two articles from the Rev. P. B. Clayton, and of the views expressed by the Hon....
JOHN BULL'S MOTHER
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—There is just one comment which I hope you will allow me to make on Mr. Stephen Coleridge's letter in your issue of this week. He...
THE SWALLOWS
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—" J. W. A.'s " itinerary probably explains the problem of the swallows. While he was in fairly populous districts he MN few swallows, but...
THE NEED FOR AERODROMES
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin,— At a time when the romantic side of flying is very much in the foreground, I suggest that a fitting corollary—perhaps not appealing so...
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POINTS FROM LETTERS BRITISH HOTELS.
The SpectatorFrom a wide experience I should say that there is hardly a word of truth in your correspondent's (Mr. Charles W. Stokes) article in the Spectator of the 2nd inst. The much...
A Hundred Years Ago
The SpectatorTHE " SPECTATOR," AUGUST 21sT, 1830. ROYAL Gossip. His Majesty, on visiting the gardens at Hampton Court, was received by the head gardener, who alighted from his carriage. "...
The Wind and the Corn
The SpectatorThe wind across the standing corn, Upon an August day :- When you were green, that now are ripe, I kissed the Maid of May. She had hawthorn petal shells On her cap and gown ;...
FRENCH NATIVE POLICY IN ALGERIA
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—In thanking your " Correspondent in Algiers " for his generous mention of my book, France in Tunis and Algeria, may I refer to a remark...
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Crabbed Youth and Age
The SpectatorWhims and Moods. By Thomas Thornely. (Cambridge Uni- versity Press. 5s.) IT is difficult not to associate artists, or indeed all the mankind of one's acquaintance, into groups....
Population and Policy
The SpectatorFades d'Asie. By Etienne Dennery. (Armand Colin. 15 frs.) BECAUSE it is impossible in the world of 1930 to separate the political from the economic aspect of population...
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Human Lion-Hunting
The SpectatorGlimpses of the Great. By George Sylvester Viereck. (Duck- worth. 21s.) THE thirty-two celebrities interviewed by the author of that extraordinary and in some ways deplorable...
DIRECT aubscribera who are changing their addresses are asked to
The Spectatornotify the SPECTATOR Office BEFORE MIDDAY on MON DA Y . OF EACII WEEK. The previous address to which the paper has been sent and receipt reference number should be quoted.
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The Progress of Physics
The SpectatorThe Mechanism of Nature. By E. N. da C. Andrade. (Bell. Os.). THE progress made by physics during the last forty years is without precedent in the history of science. Not only...
A Distributive Millionaire
The SpectatorGeorge Eastman. By Carl W. Ackerman. With an Introduction by Edwin R. A. Seligman, LL.D., Ph.D. (Constable. 24s.) Time life story of great American captains of industry ought to...
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Pro Bono Ecclesiae
The SpectatorA History of the Modern Church. By J. W. C. Wand, M.A., Follow of Oriel College, Oxford. (Methuen. Ss. Sd.) An Exegetical and Critical Commentary on the Book of Amos. By...
A Fatal Campaign
The SpectatorTHE full story of the Greco-Turkish War in Asia Minor, from 1920 to 1922, has not yet been told, for it would discredit too many Western Governments. But the reasons why the...
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Fiction
The SpectatorTHE BRIEF HOUR. By H. du Coudray. (Philip Allan. 7s. 6d.)—It is not really part of a reviewer's business to beg the reader's patience on behalf of an author, but Miss du...
THE BLACKTHORN WINTER. By Philippa Powys. (Constable. Os.)—Miss Powys has
The Spectatorselected some romantic material for a first novel, in which she tells the story of Nancy, a country girl, who, unable to resist the charm of a gipsy, deserts her blacksmith...
OUT OF STEP. By Derek Walker Smith. (Gollanez. 7s. 6d.)—This
The Spectatoris a first novel of considerable power and promise treating of school life as seen by a modern but exceptionally sensitive boy. The hero takes himself with a delicious pomposity...
AN EXPERIMENT IN SINCERITY. By John Erskine. (Putnam. 7s. 6d.)—The
The Spectatorbeginning of Mr. Erskine's latest novel is both interesting and original. Isabel and Winthrop have been married for some years and are quite comfortably settled. In a moment of...
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THE SUBTLE TRAIL. By Joseph Gollomb. (Heinemann. Is. 6d.)—The newness
The Spectatorof this detective novel consists in the discovery of a new motive for crime, a new method of com- mitting crime, and a new method and motive for detecting it. The murderer and...
* * * * Mr. Hugh Copley's The Letters of
The SpectatorTwo Fishermen (Warne, Os.) rings the changes on the catching of coarse fish in the English Midlands and strange fish in Nigeria with angling for heavyweights off the Lagos...
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The SpectatorWe suppose that Lionville as a caption to the frontispiece is what one might expect of a book entitled The Roaring Veldt, by Gretchen Cron (Putnam's, 21s.). It is really...
The Empire Parliamentary Association has, as we know, manifold activities,
The Spectatorbut it has not hitherto performed any such valuable service as has now been furnished by the local Branches in the Union of South Africa together with Adminis- trations of other...
THE WELL MEANING YOUNG MAN. By Luise end Magdalen King-Hall.
The Spectator(Herbert Jenkins. 7s. 6d.)—Wholly inoffensive, with a gay good humour rare in books of the kind, this diverting account of the surprising adventures of a modern young innocent...
General Knowledge Questions
The SpectatorOra weekly prize of one guinea for the best thirteen Questions submitted is awarded this week to Mrs. P. H. Sitters, 9 Dobraeina ulica, Belgrade, for the following :— Questions...
The July issue of the International Labour Review contains two
The Spectatorarticles of importance. M. Ulrico Aillaud explains the Act on the National Council of Corporations in Italy, a most necessary task in view of the constant vicissitudes of the "...
Some Books of the Week
The SpectatorWE admit to being surprised that Ancient Rites and Ceremonies, by Grace Keith Murray (Alston Rivers, 10s. 6d.), should have reached a second edition. What Mrs. Murray's public...
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It is no easy task to re-create the zest and
The Spectatorenthusiasm, the joyous plenitude, the scientific .acumen, and the quiet con- centration which go to the making of a personality at once so spirited and poised as Dr. Adami's....
The Competition
The SpectatorTim Editor offers a prize of two guineas for the best original Safety Jingle for Motorists. An example of the sort of thing suggested is the Seaman's Rule of the Road :- " When...
Mr. James Cleugh's rendering into English verse of the Odes
The Spectatorand Sonnets of Garcilaso de In Vega (The Aquila Press, limited edition, 28 3s.) is, if occasionally somewhat obscure, graceful and sympathetic. And, probably, he must not be...
Finance—Public & Private
The SpectatorProtecting the Investor Forzowixo upon the Hatry episode important amend- ments have been made in the Company Acts affecting the information to be given in the published...
Answers to Questions on Fruit in Literature
The SpectatorI. Robert Herrick : The Weeping Cherry.-2. Lucy Des- borough (Meredith The Ordeal of Richard Fevers/).-3. David (Browning : .Saul).-4. Mrs. Elton (Jane Austen : Emma Ch. 42.)...
Mr. John Brophy is a notable writer : he brings
The Spectatorto the con- sideration of the subjects he has chosen in Fanfare (Partridge, 7s. 6d.) more than a mere dexterity in words : he sees into the heart of things : he is strong and...
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Financial Notes
The Spectator" SAFETY FIRST " MARKETS. WE are now practically at the peak of the holiday season, and that circumstance is plainly reflected in the markets for public securities where...