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NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorS INCE the conquest of Catalonia General Franco has been assured of recognition by the British and French Govern- ments, and it is not likely to be withheld much longer....
The Voices of America Several important voices have been wafted
The Spectatoracross the Atlantic in the past week. Attention has naturally centred chiefly on President Roosevelt's observation to the Press last Saturday that the fortnight's holiday on...
Chinese Successes China has this week won several successes in
The Spectatorher war with Japan ; no end to the war is in sight, and japan, having bound herself to enter into no negotiations with Chiang Kai- shek, must accept a state of perpetual...
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The Cardinals' Choice The Conclave in Rome in which the
The Spectatornew Pope will be elected will begin on the evening of Wednesday, March 1st, and will be remarkable because the entire college of 62 cardinals will be present. Of the 62, 35 are...
Sir Stafford Cripps' campaign for a Popular Front con- tinues
The Spectatorto agitate the Labour Party ; on Monday it was re- ported that the Labour Party was to be " purged " of his followers, but not even the Labour Executive is likely to take so...
British Industries Fair It is true, as the Duke of
The SpectatorGloucester pointed out at the opening of the British Industries Fair, that peace for our export trade, is, in Lord Burleigh's words, " the sovereign sole medicine of all." It...
The Situation in Abyssinia There are certain important regions of
The Spectatorthe world regard- ing which we have to depend on information that is always inadequate, and not always reliable. One of them is Abyssinia. In view of the inevitable marshalling...
Polish Diplomacy The critical nature of the European situation is
The Spectatorreflected in the intense diplomatic activity centring on Warsaw at the present time ; whatever the issue of the crisis Poland will have a decisive role to play. This week the...
* * * * Britain's Naval Programme On Tuesday, the
The Spectator' King George V,' the first battleship built by Great Britain for fourteen years, was launched on the Tyne. She is of 35,000 tons, mounting ten 4-inch guns in three' turrets,...
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* * * *
The SpectatorLord Halifax's speech and Budget prospects obviously influenced the debate on Monday and Tuesday on the Defence Loan. Attendance was astonishingly poor on Monday, and the debate...
In last week's Notes Mr. George Rublee was inadvertently spoken
The Spectatorof as retiring from the chairmanship of the Evian Committee on Refugees. Lord Winterton is, of course, chairman of the committee; Mr. Rublee was Director.
Building Society Law Mrs. Borders did not exercise her able
The Spectatoradvocacy in vain before Mr. Justice Bennett, in the case in which there was claim and counter-claim between her and the Bradford Third Equitable Benefit Building Society. Some...
Ministers replying for the Government at the end of debates
The Spectatorare falling into the bad habit of reading prepared speeches and ignoring questions that have been put to them, or arguments to which at least courtesy demands some sort of...
Liberty and Vigilance It is the business of an organisation
The Spectatorlike the National Council for Civil Liberties to be so much on the alert for abuses as to seem sometimes to be looking for trouble. But it is entitled to claim that its...
The Week in Parliament Our Parliamentary Correspondent writes : A
The Spectatorweek ago Lord Halifax made his now famous speech to the Conservative Members Foreign Affairs Committee. It seems to have created almost a revolution in back- benchers' minds....
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THE £2,000,000,000 POLICY
The SpectatorW HEN Mr. Oliver Stanley said at a Mining Associa- tion dinner on Tuesday that " it might be that in the future they would look back on the events they celebrated that night...
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THE PALESTINE DEADLOCK
The SpectatorT HE Palestine Conference appears to have reached the deadlock which all except the most confirmed optimists foretold when it opened. The Jews and the Arabs have stated their...
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I spoke last week of the difficulty of deciding how
The Spectatormuch importance to attach to the persistent reports of an alarming deterioration of the German railway system's locomotives, rolling-stock and permanent way. As it happened,...
Mr. A. P. Herbert raises a nice question when he
The Spectatorcalls on the President of the Board of Trade to refuse a licence to a company bearing the name Oxford Group (formed for the purpose of holding any moneys given or bequeathed to...
Mr. R. S. Hudson's journey to Moscow, Warsaw and other
The SpectatorEuropean capitals may mean a good deal for the country and a good deal for himself ; for the country, because the increase of British export trade is a matter of the first...
The Committee engaged in considering the question of the Speaker's
The Spectatorseat is likely, I gather, to advise against any change in the present arrangement, whereby the Speaker, as one of the 615 members of the House, stands in the ordinary way for an...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorI GET from more than one source surprising reports about the hostile attitude adopted by the Quai d'Orsay, and M. Bonnet in particular, towards British journalists in Paris. I...
One of the tragedies of the present situation in Europe
The Spectatoris the tendency of a new—and necessary—charitable appeal to sidetrack an old one in the public mind. Take the Basque children. Most of those who came to this country have been...
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A.R.P.: CALL IN TILE MINERS
The SpectatorBy COL. DAVID DALE LOGAN O satisfactory development in the field of A.R.P. in the last six or seven months is the shifting of attention from the gas bomb danger to the high...
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THE FUTURE OF FARMING-II
The SpectatorBy SIR DANIEL HALL [This is the second of three articles on the prospects of British agriculture] N my article in last week's Spectator the conclusion was I reached that the...
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IRISH EXTREMISTS
The SpectatorBy R. B. D. FRENCH T HE " Irish Republican Army "' may or may not be responsible for the present disturbing series of outrages in England, but there can be little doubt that...
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BROADCASTING IN GERMANY
The SpectatorBy FRANCIS GOWER I T is extremely important to study the broadcasting system of a country which is today one of the most powerful in the world. Germany has a population of...
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A FEDERAL PALESTINE
The SpectatorBy A SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT T HE Middle East, lying in the centre of the civilised world, at the cross roads of three continents, is of vital importance to the British Empire....
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BLOOD TESTS AND PATERNITY
The SpectatorBy W. J. BROWN T HE practical application of blood tests to the problems of paternity has long been discussed in medico-legal circles and the second reading of Lord Merthyr's...
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EVENING PIECE
The SpectatorBy L. A. G. STRONG " 0 00-EE-EEE." With a queer little whining noise, the old man straightened his back. He leaned on the handle of his three-pronged fork, peered into the can,...
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LES RUES ET LEURS NOMS
The Spectator[D'un correspondent parisien] Dom Cannes a maintenant son square Neville Chamberlain. Plusieurs autres villes de France ont donne a une de leurs rues le nom du Premier...
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PEOPLE AND THINGS
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON T WAS reading the other day the memoirs of a former 1 American diplomatist. It was not an interesting book, since its author possessed little memory for, or...
The explanation is, I think, that we, owing to our
The Spectatorclimate and our curious habit of taking physical exercise, have strong appetites. Few things are so inimical to good cooking as animal hunger. I am confirmed in this theory by...
I am not myself much of a restaurant snob, yet
The Spectatorit is a sorrow to me that I am never recognised by head-waiters. I have moments of envy for those of my friends whose appearance in any restaurant from San Francisco to Omsk...
I return to my American diplomatist and the subject of
The Spectatorfood. This adaptable citizen of the United States found that he could enjoy his food everywhere, even in Japan: but not in England. He contended that the muffin was the only...
This French invasion of London did immense harm to our
The Spectatornational cooking. Tomato soup started calling itself " Pompadour " or " Portugaise " and pea soup " Demidoff." In place of the fish pies and oyster patties of coaching days we...
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Commonwealth and Foreign
The SpectatorSOUTH AFRICA AND THE COMMONWEALTH By G. H. CALPIN, Editor, " The Natal Witness " How far British foreign policy is moulded and fashioned on the will and wish of the British...
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THE CINEMA "La Femme du Boulanger " anti " The
The SpectatorMarch of Time." At the Film Society. JEAN GIONO must undoubtedly be considered among the front ranks of modern French writers, and Marcel Pagnol no doubt approached the...
STAGE AND SCREEN
The SpectatorTHE THEATRE Macbeth." By William Shakespeare. At the Arts Theatre, Cambridge. BY long-standing tradition a Marlowe Society production is anonymous ; but sometimes the name of...
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And By Contrast Such experiences were not calculated to improve
The Spectatormy friend's view of humanity. But others did. It was good to have a messenger specially sent from a couple of almost eighty to say, " We will take three children. Who knows how...
In the Garden Almost a hundred and fifty years ago
The SpectatorGilbert White com- plained that the " bull-finches make sad havoc among the buds of my cherry and apricot trees; they also destroy the buds of the gooseberries and...
Evacuation and Country People The Government's scheme for the evacuation
The Spectatorof children is not being well received in country districts. A friend took on the job of a house-to-house census in a village—outside of and three times as large as her...
The Bill
The SpectatorThe Bill has already sailed smoothly through the House of Lords, but has been wrecked in the Commons. It has now been withdrawn in order that a necessary amendment may be made,...
* * * *
The SpectatorThe First Orchard The first of the orchards is in bloom : the orchard of hazel- nuts. The trees are like bush-apples; the straight avenues between them are misty yellow with...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorProblem of Decreasing Wildfowl For some years the question of the numerical status of migratory geese and duck has been causing concern to orni- thologists and sportsmen. A...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The Spectator[Correspondents are requested to keep their letters as brief as is reasonably possible. Signed letters are given a preference over those bearing a pseudonym, and the latter must...
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WAR : THE CHRISTIAN'S DILEMMA [To the Editor of THE
The SpectatorSPECTATOR] SIR,—It would occupy more space than you could grant adequately to indicate the Christian pacifist's view of and response to the dilemma which the Dean of St. Paul's...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR, — In your last issue
The SpectatorDr. Jacks asks for a list of examples from history of unselfishness in the dealing of State with State. He imagines (I fear correctly) that " the list would not be very imposing...
SHOULD STATES BE UNSELFISH ?
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—I am sorry if Dr. Bevan thinks that I ignored the point of his article. I answered the points in it which seemed to be relevant to our...
THE WAR IN SPAIN
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Stu . ,—I am all for stripping the Spanish conffict of the partisan exaggeration (on both sides) in which it has been drenched ; and among those...
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[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR]
The SpectatorSIR,—The articles by the Dean of St. Paul's entitled " War: the Christian Dilemma " raise certain points which seem to me, a humble and unlearned Christian, to require...
THE MACMAHON CORRESPONDENCE [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR, — For
The Spectatorobvious reasons I do not wish to open a lengthy discussion on the Near Eastern Question while the matter is still in a critical stage of discussion, but you have raised one...
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THE DEFEATISTS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sta,—May I reply to Mr. Capper-Johnson? My reference to the Society of Friends was not offensive either in tone or intention: my reference to...
(To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR]
The SpectatorSta,—Mr. C. E. M. Joad's characteristic, though somewhat facile, analysis of University moods gave many of his readers, I rather suspect, a not unpleasant sensation of "...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR, —In his article "
The SpectatorWho are the Defeatists? " in your issue of 3rd inst., Sir Arnold Wilson attributes to Cowper the phrase " forecasting the future of uncertain evils." Did Cowper ever write...
CYNOMANIA
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sta,—Some people love dogs and some do not. Mr. Vulliamy goes too far in calling mere dog-lovers " cynomaniacs ": we are all of us free to...
LEADERLESS YOUTH
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—As one of the " leaderless youth " of whom Mr. Joad writes so perceivingly in your issue of February ,7th, I should like to stress the...
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HOME TRUTHS FROM AMERICA " [To the Editor of THE
The SpectatorSPECTATOR] SIR, — I do not take in The Spectator, but often see it. I was shocked to read the article, " Home Truths from America," and feel it was a very great pity to publish...
THE UNEMPLOYED [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—In an
The Spectatorarticle dealing with unemployment appearing in last week's Spectator it is stated that there are 2,000,000 men unemployed. May I point out that the returns published by the...
THE HAUNTED HOUSE [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR]
The SpectatorSIR,—Mr. E. S. P. Haynes' bedside reading is evidently as amazing as his letter or indeed of his sense of charm in building. Houses have been, and will continue to be, saved by...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR]
The SpectatorSIR,—One of the very few objections to the abolition of the dog is that we should be deprived of the pleasure and edifica- tion of hearing women talk to them.—Your obedient...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR, — I think your correspondent
The Spectatorwho would abolish dogs must have lived some time in the East to have acquired his strange views concerning them. There is a legend that our Blessed Lord, once passing a dead...
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BOOKS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorWellington in Civil Life (John Hayward)... ... 308 The Greatness of George Stubbs (Geoffrey Grigson) 309 Danubian Destiny (Richard Freund) ... 310 Value and Capital (Honor...
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THE GREATNESS OF GEORGE STUBBS
The SpectatorThe Anatomy of the Horse. By George Stubbs. With a Modern Paraphrase by Professor J. C. McGunn, M.R.C.V.S., M.R.C.P., L.R.C.P., assisted by C. W. Ottaway, M.R.C.V.S. (Heywood...
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PURE ECONOMICS THIS book is the most important original contribution
The Spectatorto pure economics since Mr. Keynes' General Theory of Employ- ment, Interest and Money. Herein lies the reviewer's quandary. It is possible to offer a reasonably enduring first-...
EUROPE BEYOND THE AXIS
The SpectatorDanubian Destiny. By Graham Hutton. (Harrap. 7s. 6d.) THE map of Europe that was changed last year had been studied by generations of Continental staff officers and tested, in...
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THE CONDITION OF THE NAVY
The SpectatorThe Navy from Within. By Vice-Admiral K. G. B. Dewar. (Gollancz. I 5S .) ADMIRAL DEWAR'S story of his thirty-eight years' service in the Navy is not so -much an autobiography as...
GET YOURSELF RUNNING . . .
The SpectatorHigh, Wide and Deep. By C. Madeleine Dixon. (Allen and Unwin. I25. 6d.) THIS book is an account of the play of a group of ten children, aged from two to five, at a school in...
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GENIUS AND INSANITY
The SpectatorTHE strange, rich beauty of Smart's Song to David, written while the author was supposed to be out of his mind and published in 1763, needs to be recalled as the preliminary to...
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TIMES AND PLACES
The SpectatorA Flying Start : A Memory of the Nineteen Twenties. By Rene MacColl. (Cape. 8s. 6d.) The Sheltering Tree : An Autobiography. By Netta Syrett. (Bles. los. 6d.) Indian Ink. By...
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EMIGRANTS AND EDITORS
The SpectatorThe Emigrants. Edited by Hector Bolitho and John Mulgan. (Selwyn and Blount. 12s. 6d.) THIS book, with its artful distribution of white pages and its mere joke of an index,...
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CRIME MARCHES ON
The SpectatorDouble Death. By Various Hands. (Gollancz. 7s. 6d.) 7s. 6d.) Murder in the Bud, though it contains no murder and little detection, is the best of these crime novels, for it...
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FICTION
The SpectatorBy FORREST REID The Great Squire. By Francis Stuart. (Collins. 8s. 6d.) A DESIRE for continuity ever urges me to begin these articles with an introductory preamble, but a...
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THE NATURE OF CREATIVE ACTIVITY By Viktor LOwenfeld
The SpectatorViktor Lowenfeld has spent fifteen years in the Hohe Warte Institute for the Blind in Vienna, teaching blind and weak- sighted children to draw, paint and sculpt. On the...
SAGA OF THE DISCOVERY' By L. C. Bernacchi Captain Scott's
The Spectatort Discovery,' now moored at Temple Stairs for all to see, is a historic ship in the tradition of Drake's ' Golden Hind ' and Franklin's Erebus ' and Terror.' Now her saga has...
PIONEER SHIPOWNERS By Clement Jones Mr. Clement Jones, who is
The Spectatorwell versed in the history of our merchant service, wrote, some years ago, the biographies of sixteen pioneer shipowners. He has now produced a second volume containing the...
CURRENT LITERATURE
The SpectatorNELSON'S WIFE By E. M. Keate Many authors have written at large about Nelson's mistress, Lady Hamilton, but Mr. Keate is apparently the first bio- grapher of Nelson's wife, the...
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MOTORING
The SpectatorThe Oldest Problem of All Of all the motoring problems that await solution the most obstinate is probably that of the glaring headlights. It must certainly be the oldest, as the...
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Travel 1Votes
The SpectatorNEW ZEALAND THE growth of aviation in recent years has been so rapid that it is difficult to keep pace with day to day developments, yet each new record flight to Australia,...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorTHESE are stirring times in the City when we are told two months in advance (without any leakage) at least the main outlines of the Budget, and the Chancellor of the Exchequer...
LORD HORNE ON GREAT WESTERN PROSPECTS
The SpectatorFirst among the railway chairmen to vouchsafe us his views, Lord Home opens up a moderately hopeful prospect for Great Western stockholders. Last year's sharp fall in net...
THE OUTLOOK FOR GILT - EDGED The market's first reactions have been
The Spectatorthe obvious ones— a fairly sharp rise in industrial ordinary shares, with tobacco and brewery shares well in the lead, and an uncertain ten- dency in gilt-edged and other...
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LIFE INSURANCE PROGRESS
The SpectatorThe accounts of the leading life insurance companies, both mutual and proprietary, which are now being published, leave no doubt that 1938 was a year of rapid progress, even...
FINANCIAL NOTES COURTAULDS' PROSPECTS OF RECOVERY
The SpectatorON the face of it the preliminary statement of Courtaulds could hardly have been worse. A decline of over £2,000,000 in profits to an insignificant figure, a dividend reduced...
Venturers' Corner One hesitates, in these days, to recommend warehousing
The Spectatorand textile shares, but quotations are so low that I feel that a buyer is probably getting in on attractive terms. The case of Cook, Son and Co. (St. Paul's) preference shares...
FINANCE AND INVESTMEN T (Continued from page 327) L.N.E.R. RESULTS
The SpectatorWith the announcement of the London and North- Eastern results the home railway story for 1938 is complete. I did not expect the L.N.E.R. to spring a surprise on the market, and...
* * * * PETER 1013INSON RESULTS
The SpectatorAnother West End store company to come well out of the past year is Peter Robinson, of Oxford Street and Regent Street. That company's net earnings for the year ended January...
GOOD STORES RESULTS
The SpectatorFurther results have now been announced by leading depart- ment store companies showing surprisingly favourable earnings in spite of difficult trading conditions. John Barker...
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COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorGREAT WESTERN RAILWAY LORD HORNE ON THE " SQUARE DEAL" The Annual General Meeting of the Great Western Railway Company was held on Wednesday last at Paddington Station, London,...
COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorBOVRIL LIMITED NEED FOR LOOKING AFTER BRITISH COMPANIES ABROAD PRESIDING at the forty-second annual general meeting of Bovril Limited, on Wednesday, the Lord Luke, K.B.E....
MEAT TRADE PROBLEMS Lord Luke, who presided at Wednesday's meeting
The Spectatorof Bovril, Ltd., urged that a body analogous to the Department of Overseas Trade should be set up to look after the interests of British companies working abroad. He urged that...
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"THE SPECTATOR" CROSSWORD No. 335
The SpectatorBY ZENO [A prize of a Book Token for one guinea will be given to the sender of the first correct solution of this week's crossword puzzle to be opened. Envelopes should be...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 334
The SpectatorR AI SI PI El RI Sl01 s 11Awn] is' T7 MITI TIO1U1 CIHI AIN D to to I WIMP EIPILIAIUISII Ti YIOIF RI Pill WIN/ SIA BI LI E I IRINISICIAIL E LIEISIS SI EJEITIHIJ IGI SIAITIS...