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German Declarations
The SpectatorThe various speeches delivered by German politicians' in the course of the past week provide ample food for reflection. First comes Herr Hitler at Munich, with the declaration...
NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorMil. ROOSEVELT is not merely the greatest living opportunist; he must be very nearly the greatest opportunist- of all time—to use the word, not in any derogatory sense, as...
OFFICES : 99 Gower St., London, 11r .C.1. Tel. :
The SpectatorMUSEUM 1721. Entered as second-class Mail Matter at the New York, N.Y. Post Office, Dec. 23rd, 1896. Postal subscription 30s. per annum, to any part of the world. Postage on...
A New War on Overcrowding Sir Hilton Young's new housing
The Spectatorstatement is welcome as 'a 'promise of a great step forward by the Government. It has proceeded with much energy and success in its programme of slum-clearance, which will lead...
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Lord Gainford on Coal Royalties It is interesting to find
The SpectatorLord Gainford,. speaking as President of the Coal Industry Society, advocating the nationalization of the royalties, with a view to securing " the best underground working...
A B.B.C. Inquiry The meeting at the House of Commons
The Spectatoron Monday between Sir John Reith and 150 Members of Parliament seems to have resolved itself into a testimonial to the merits of the Director-General of the B.B.C. Sir John...
The Shop and the Store Mr. Walter Elliot's pointed hint
The Spectatorthat the distributive trades of the country would do well to organize themselves in such a way that they can speak and negotiate with the Government as a single unit raises a...
The German Spy System The terror in Germany has to
The Spectatora large extent done its work, and therefore to a large extent been mitigated. But the decree regarding the secret police issued by General Goering last week gives some...
Civil Flying There is no country in the world to
The Spectatorwhich civil aviation is a matter of such vital importance as it is to Britain— firstly, and mainly, owing to the need of speeding up and regularizing means of communication...
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Some Signs of Spring The hounds of spring may be
The Spectatoron winter's traces•— spring began officially last Wednesday—but there is not much sign of their own traces so far. Among the customary outward portents of the season—other than...
The big debate in the House was concerned with Imperial
The SpectatorDefence. Mr. Attlee made a most notably impartial and reasonable plea for a Ministry of Defence, which was countered by the Prime Minister with a description of how the existing...
Next come proposals for an increase in the flat rate
The Spectatorof benefit. It is pointed out in that connexion that if the taxpayer took over the debt of the Fund the cost (15,500,000) would be just about equal to the cost of restoring the...
EconomiC Sanctions Five Fellows of Oxford Colleges have issued a
The Spectatorvaluable and suggestive memorandum on the general question of economic sanctions, taking the view, which is entirely just, that if this country has any intention of carrying out...
Policing the ;Fishing Grounds There was something a little ingenuous
The Spectatorabout Mr. Noel Skelton's description in the House of Commons on Tues- day Of the efforts being made to design " Q-ships," which shall look like trawlers but be iri fact...
The Week in Parliament Our Parliamentary Correspondent writes : The
The Spectatorchief interest of the week has been discussions in the lobbies rather than in the Chamber. These discussions have naturally concentrated chiefly on Budget prospects, and have...
The Juvenile Workless In his broadcast speech last Tuesday Mr.
The SpectatorLloyd George called attention to the favourable condition of London in regard to unemployment as contrasted with cities in the north. This fact is worth bearing in mind when we...
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THE CONDITION FOR DISARMAMENT
The SpectatorT HE EMPEROR WILHELM II once assured Austria that lie would be found at her side in shining armour in ease of need. Vigorous though he can be in expression himself, Signor...
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THE LIBERAL PARTY PROGRAMME
The SpectatorT HE statement of policy, issued by Sir Herbert . Samuel on behalf of himself, his colleagues and the Liberal Party Organizations, is an attempt to compress into narrow compass...
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For once in a way I rather wish I had
The Spectatorseen the boat-race instead of listening to it. The broadcast was less . success- ful than usual. No one would have gathered fro m it that Bradley put on what some critics...
Memories are short, and I suppose the announcement Of the
The Spectatordeath of General Stuart-Wortley this week will have recalled to comparatively few of those who noticed it the famous Daily Telegraph interview with the Kaiser which helped to...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The Spectator" T N our private lives we have learnt to consider the - .11. rights and feelings of our neighbours. If we did the • same in international affairs world-peace would be more...
The Master of the Temple, after being considered well in
The Spectatorthe running for the Bishopric of Ely—now filled by the quite unexpected appointment of Bishop of Hull— is, I see, being mentioned both for the Deanery of St. Paul's and the...
A visit to the Exhibition of British Art just before
The Spectatorit closed last Saturday left one impression, at any rate, on my mind. While landscape, the glory of English painting, was very meagrely represented, of portraits there was...
In apologizing for intruding into a sphere not properly his
The Spectatorown when he delivered the first Clarke-Hall memorial . lecture on Monday, the Archbishop of York was perhaps • forestalling the kind of criticism that his incursion into...
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THE STATE OF GERMANY SOME CONCLUSIONS
The SpectatorBy H. POWYS GREENWOOD T HE difficulty of giving an exhaustive description of National Socialism and its results within the limits of space available for this series of articles...
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WILLIAM MORRIS (Born March 24th, 1834)
The SpectatorBy LORD OLIVIER W ILLIAM MORRIS was an Aesthete—a name which, the Industrial Revolution having well nigh destroyed the thing, had to be borrowed from Greek and can only be...
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CHILDREN AND HISTORICAL FILMS
The SpectatorBy SIR. CHARLES GRANT ROBERTSON (Principal and Vice-Chancellor of Birmingham University) B Y " children" is meant boys and girls under the age of sixteen, and, therefore,...
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SPRING AT WHIPSNADE
The SpectatorBy HERBERT PALMER A PPROACHING Whipsnade from the south you gather it quickly into view by fixing your eyes on the figure of a huge white lion which has been cut deeply into...
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ON SPRING AND POETRY
The SpectatorBy EDMUND BLUNDEN P ERCHED in the upheaved roots of the fallen elm, I got my share of the mid-day sun, and missed some of the still spiteful wind ; and if at moments the sun...
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THE BOOM OF THE BITTERN
The SpectatorBy ANTHONY BUXTON I HAVE been asked on a raw wet day in March to write something " springish " connected with birds. There is, and there has been for some time, a Missel Thrush...
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THE SCOTTISH FARMER'S FUTURE
The SpectatorBy JOSEPH F. DUNCAN S COTLAND is one of the most sparsely populated countries in Europe, and one of the most highly industrialized. It has only 9 per cent. of its occupied...
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BULL DANCE IN GUATEMALA
The SpectatorBy ALDOUS HUXLEY T HE Bull Dance is celebrated round about Christmas time ; but already, though we were only in Lent, the Indians had started their preparations for it. News...
LAST OF THE LONGFELLOWS
The SpectatorBy S. K. RATCLIFFE T HE last surviving daughter of the most popular poet who ever wrote in English; has just died in Cambridge, Massachusetts, at the age of 78. Annie Allegra...
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Human Histories
The SpectatorTHE multitudinous dead, like books unread, Are somewhere in the library of Time. Glimpses we get, of what they felt and said, Humdrum and homely, or loftily sublime ; But...
UN LOCH-NESS FRAIKAIS
The Spectator[D'UN CORRESPONDANT PARISIEN] L E serpent de mer est-il un animal legendaire enfant6 par l'imagination de quelque brillant nouvelliste, ou repond-il vraiment a une realite...
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GENERALLY RELEASED NEXT WEEK.
The SpectatorTU Constant Nymph.-This version of Margaret Kennedy's novel, directed by Basil Dean, suffers from lack of time for character - development but has many good scenes. Vietofia...
"La Robe Rouge." At the Academy
The SpectatorTins French talkie is based on a play by Brieux which is said to have led to a repeal of the French law permitting the examina- tion of prisoners in the absence of their...
The Cinema
The Spectator" The Emperor Jones." At the Marble Arch Pavilion ABOUT half of this film is over before Brutus Jones, the ambitious negro, reaches the island which is the scene of Eugene...
A Broadcasting Calendar
The SpectatorFRIDAY, MARCH 23rd 2.25 The Grand National described from Aintree : R. C. Lyle and W. Hobbiss. .. N. 7.15 Annuals : the Hon. V..Sackville-West. Suggestions from a practical -...
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Wood-Pigeons
The SpectatorFarmer and gamekeeper are slow to learn that birds are their friends, not their enemies. The occasional folly and mischief of a friend make more impression than his plodding...
With a elithate so uncertain, the best evidence that winter
The Spectatoris over is our own behaviour rather than the weather, which may be as stormy and cold as January or as serene as September. Small boys have been spinning tops for three weeks...
The Tolpuddle Martyrs On March 19th, one hundred years ago,
The Spectatorsix labourers of Tolpuddle, Dorset, were condemned to seven years' trans- portation for having formed a union at which an oath was taken. Their wages were seven shillings a...
The Flower Harvest The Penzance Flower Show was held last
The Spectatorweek. Few of us are so blessed as to be able to live in the shelter of Mount's Bay, where there really is no winter. In the Midlands a daffodil is in flower here and there, but...
But in altering the breeding season, man has to assume
The Spectatorthe responsibility of providing food and shelter unavailable in natural conditions. This is expensive, and so, where out-of- season breeding shows no advantage, he does not...
Adaptable Nature.
The SpectatorThe way of animals is to bear their young in the spring, so that they can mature, or advance to independence, under the kindest conditions of weather and with an abundance of...
• Country Life
The SpectatorOfficial Spring Spring, bearing gifts, is no more to be trusted than the Greeks. She is as fickle and treacherous, and as devious and protracted in fulfilment. What she weaves...
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THE ROPE TRICK
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—The following may interest Colonel Elliot. The famous Mahommedan traveller, Ibn Batuta, who was in the service of Sultan Muharnmad,Bin...
SAFE MILK FOR THE SCHOOLS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Dr. Wilson's article again tempts me to ask for a little space to take up the cudgels in defence of the farmer. I admit that it is,...
Letters to the Editor
The Spectator[Correspondents are requested to keep their letters as brief as is reasonably possible. The most suitable length is that of one . of our " News of the Week" paragraphs. Signed...
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THE • LIMITS OF BIRTH-CONTROL
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] Sin,—The letters in your issue of March 10th from H. C. A. Colville and W. A. Bread seem to me exactly to touch the root of the problem in its...
MOTHERS AS MINISTERS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Mr. Robert Anderson says that " because a woman decides that she wishes to be a minister, it does not follow that a church must accept her...
THE CUCKOO'S SECRET
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—I ignored Captain Bernard Acworth's original letter as being beneath serious notice. That judgement would appear correct in the light of...
[To . the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSin.—It is worth while considering the detailed account which Dr. J. H. Dewey of New York gives of his experience of the Rope Trick, on p. 298 of New Testament Occultism,...
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HOMECROF TS [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Mr. Graves
The Spectatorasks how a homecrofting group are to pay for the attentions of doctors and dentists. The answer, put into the fewest words, is as follows : (a) The group con- tribute their work...
SANATORIA OF THE EMPIRE
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] Sin,—Some time ago I contributed an article to your pakes upon Empire Sanatoria." I am now spending a winter in Jamaica, and so far as this...
Poem
The SpectatorEVEN whilst I watch him I am remembering The quick laugh of the wasp gold eyes. The column turning from the staring pane Even while I see I remember, for love Is soaked in...
MR. HERBERT PALMER
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Mr. Michael Roberts is very careless or wilfully mis- leading, for in quoting my lines from the letter addressed to my young friend, Roy...
EASTERN THOUGHT AND PSYCHICAL PHENOMENA
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Mr. Gerald Heard, in his interesting review of the book In Defence of Miracles : A New Argument for God and Survival, by Mr. Malcolm...
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Pigs, Be British
The SpectatorBy GRAHAM GREENE THE pig in our literature has always been credited with qualities peculiarly British. Honest, a little stupid, com- mercially-minded perhaps, but with a trace...
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The German Tragedy
The SpectatorThe Tragedy of a Nation : Germany 1918 - 1934. By Prince Hubertus Lowenstein. With an Introduction by Wickham Steed. (Faber and Faber. 7s. 6d.) Tim author of this challenging...
The End of Queen Aime
The SpectatorEngland Under Queen Anne. III. The Peace and the Protestant Succession. By George Macaulay Trevelyan. 0.31. (Li:I:igniting. 21s.) %Vim this volume, Professor Trevelyan's...
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Henry McCardie
The SpectatorMr. Justice McCardie. By Goargo Pollock. (John Lane. 15s.) Tins, as the dust cover informs us, is " the official biography " of the late Mr. Justice McCardie compiled by a...
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The Circling Year
The Spectator; The Yeoman's England. By Si William Beach Thomas. (Maclehose. 8s. 6d.) NATURE—if one may retain this old and convenient figure—. has provided a good many pleasing puzzles for...
Change in Africa
The SpectatorAn African Speaks for his People. By Parmenas Githendu Mockerie. With a Foreword by Professor Julian Huxley. (The Hogarth Press. 3s. 6d.) " IT is one thing," says Professor...
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Academic Psychology
The SpectatorHypnosis and Suggestibility. By Clark L. Hull, Ph.D. (Appleton - Century Co. 15s.) ALTHOUGH it is common knowledge that acute differences exist between various schools of...
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A Conservative Democrat
The SpectatorSalvidge of Liverpool : Behind the Political Scene, 1890-1928. By Stanley Salvidge. (Hodder and Stoughton. 18s.) STANLEY SALVIDGE, the son of Sir Archibald Salvidge, did not...
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Wassermann
The SpectatorMy Life as German and Jew. By Jacob Wassermann. (Allen and Unwin. 7s. 6d.) WERE it not for the recent events in Germany, Herr Wasser- mann's book might be dismissed as the work...
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The American Transcendentalist
The SpectatorThe Life of Emerson. By Van Wyck Brooks. (Dent. 10s. 6d.) ACCEPTING the title of this book in its most literal and limited sense, Mr. Brooks has done his work very finely...
The Seventeenth Century Synthesis
The SpectatorThe Seventeenth Century Background. By Basil Willey. (Chatto and Windus. 12s. 6c1.) ENGLISII historians have not as a rule been attracted to the writing of histories of English...
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The Ivory Tower
The SpectatorPaul Valery. By G. Turquet-Milnes. (Cape. 5s.) IT is surprising that the work of Paul Valery and Charles Maurras should not have been more deliberately studied in this country...
Vincent Van Gogh
The SpectatorVan Gogh. By Peter Burra. (Duckworth. 2s.) Tins short biography of Van Gogh appears in the series known 'as Great Lives," and within the limits thus imposed, Mr. Burnt has done...
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The Tolpuddle Martyrs
The SpectatorThe Tolpuddle Martyrs: By Marjorie Firth and Arthur Hopkinson ; with a Foreword by the Right Hon. Waltei Elliot, M.P. (Martin Hopkinson. 3s. 6d.) CiN March 19th, 1834, at....
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Eternal People—Eternal Problem
The SpectatorThe Jews in the Modern World. By Dr. A. Ruppiu. (Mae. raisin. .15s.). .- _ _ - • • 014E - outcome of recent events in Europe has been a spate of literature concerning the...
Schwabenstreich
The SpectatorMozart On The Way To Prague. By Eduard Moerike. (Blackwell. 5s.) Was: is a " fragment of imaginative composition " short and not at all to the point, but at least short, which...
Rilke's Lyrics
The SpectatorPoems. By Rainer Maria Rilke. Translated by J. B. Leishmarm (The Hogarth Press. 3s. tid.) RILKE is one of the most significant of modern poets. His work is difficult, but it has...
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A Satirist in the Savannah
The SpectatorNinety-Two Days. By Evelyn Waugh. (Duckworth. 12s. 6d.) ON the dust-wrapper Mr. Waugh confronts us with a prismatic compass and an air of determination. He needed both. His 92...
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The Happy Journalist
The SpectatorHERE we have the reminiscences of a man who glories in his trade. He has been a journalist all his life since he was fifteen, has climbed up every rung of the ladder from...
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Fiction
The SpectatorBy BONAMY DOBREE • 7s. 6d.) A FORTNIGHT ago I ventured. to suggest that the English novel often failed to make its effect - because the author s did not stick to their theme,...
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Gramophone Notes -
The SpectatorRecords of Chamber Music WITH the exception of a Finale to the Quartet in B Flat, Op. 130 and an isolated Rondo, the String Quartet in F Major, Op. 133 was the last piece of...
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The Modern Home
The SpectatorRedecoration [Enquiries arising out of articles on " The- Modern Home" should be addressed to the Editor of TRH SPECTATOR, 99 Gower Street, W.C. 1, and marked " Modern Home" in...
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Travel
The SpectatorOberammergau : The World's Greatest Drama Tim secluded village of Oberammergau, nestling in a valley of the fir-clad Bavarian Highlands, will be a Mecca this sum- mer for...
The Travel Manager will be glad to assist readers in
The Spectatortheir arrangements for visit to Oberinnmergau. Please address your inquiry-to the Travel Manager, THE SPECTATOR, 99 Gower Street, W.C. 1, and enclose stamped envelope for reply.
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Motoring.
The SpectatorSpring on the Roads of the World FOR a thousand adventurous families next week is one of the most important of the whole year, for at the end of it the cars that have been laid...
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Finance
The SpectatorProtecting the Investor SOMEWHERE near the top of almost all Prospectuses of new Issues of Capital, the Investor will find a statement to the following effect : " Application...
Financial Notes
The SpectatorRELAPSE AND RECOVERY. THE Stock Markets during the past week have experienced both a relapse and a recovery. The former, which was specially pronounced in English Railway...
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APOLLINARIS PROFITS.
The SpectatorAlthough the profits of Apollinaris and Presta, Ltd., for the past year showed a small decline compared with the previous year, this is accounted for by the fact that some heavy...
CHARTERED BANK REPORT.
The SpectatorThe report of the Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China for the-year 1933 shows an upward tendency in profits Which amounted to £467,467 - as compared with £454,499 in...
MAPLE'S HIGHER PROFITS.
The SpectatorIn examining the report of Maple & Co. for the year ending January 31st last it must be noted that the comparison is with a previous-report covering-thirteen months. Therefore,...
HALIFAX BUILDING SOCIETY.
The SpectatorThis Society seems to go from strength to strength, and the report covering the Operations for the year ended January 31st last- shows that during the year there were large...
A PROSPEROUS INDUSTRIAL.
The SpectatorIt is always pleasant to comment upon a prosperous Home Industrial concern, especially when that prosperity is pro- gressive. The reports of Cerebos, Limited, almost incline one...
Those companies engaged in the export of frozen meat from
The SpectatorArgentina have had of late to face considerable diffi- culties, and in view of that fadt and the experience of a few years ago, the latest report of the Smithfield and Argentine...
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SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD NO. 77.
The Spectator14D L IILILIIIPUITIII AINJ A ZM LIR' AI FIUITITI El Am NI CIA' AINI Ca DI El RI Ft DI A I HIST I AMt. YI SI Al 01 xi ni ni PI L, RI Ul LI SI FI I AININI El Li V I I LI El...
" The Spectator" Crossword No. 78 Br XANTJIIPPE.
The SpectatorIA prize of one guinea trill be given to the sender of the first correct solution of this werk's crossword puzzle to be opened. Envelopes should be marked " Crossword Puzzle,"...