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There is rather more hope of a settlement in the
The Spectatorengineering dispute than when we wrote last week. Sir Allan Smith, President of the Employers' Federation, has been in conference with a deputation appointed by the National...
Lord Derby told the members of the Junior Carlton Club
The Spectatoron Friday, March 17th, that he had declined the India Office because he thought that he could serve his party best by remain- ing outside the Government. He denied that he...
We are reminded of the man who complained that his
The Spectatorcharacter had been grossly defamed and threatened instant legal action if a full retractation and apology were not published. When, however, the offender retorted that what he...
It is much the same thing as happens when two
The Spectatorarmies are facing each other in line. After perhaps a long period of quiet a few rifle shots ring out and the firing is taken up all along the line, though nobody quite knows...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorrpHE PRIME MINISTER, whose provisional resignation is in Mr. Chamberlain's pocket, has decided to postpone the evil day. This corroborates our opinion that Mr. Lloyd George...
We quote an item of news from the Morning Pose
The Spectatorof Tuesday which needs little comment :- We quote an item of news from the Morning Pose of Tuesday which needs little comment :- " A strike of the employees of Wallsend...
The Prince of Wales completed his long and arduous tour
The Spectatorbi India on Friday, March 17th, when he embarked at Karachi for Ceylon and Japan. The Prime Minister in a message to him expressed with truth " the admiration with which the...
TO OUR READERS.
The SpectatorReaders experiencing difficulty in obtaining the " Spectator " regularly and promptly through the abolition of the Sunday post or other causes should become yearly subscribers,...
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In the House of Lords on Wednesday the Iriah Bill
The Spectatorwas again in Committee. Lord Carson, referring to the criticism that ae a Law Lord he ought not to play an Active part in politics, said that if he had thought for one moment...
Economists and financiers representing the five Allied Powers have met
The Spectatorin London this week for- a preliminary discussion of the questions that will be raised at the Genoa Conference. According to the Times the main subject debated was the revival...
On Tuesday, when the Free State Bill was considered in
The SpectatorCommittee, Lord Peel made it clear that the Government could not accept any amendments. Lord Lansdowne, speaking with his usual wisdom, which is invaluable in debate, said...
The Irish Free State Bill was read a second time
The Spectatorin the House of Lords on Thursday, March 16th. Lord Carson described it as a piece of hypocrisy, inasmuch as the Government knew that the Sinn Feiners who signed the Treaty were...
In the by-election at Cambridge on Thursday, March 16th, Sir
The SpectatorDouglas Newton, the Conservative candidate, headed the poll with 10,897 votes. Mr. Dalton, the Labour candidate, was second with 6,954 votes, and Mr. Cope Morgan, the Indepen-...
The Conference on affairs of the Near East began in
The SpectatorParis on Wednesday. It was agreed that the Allies should demand a three months' armistice along the whole front in Asia Minor. It remains to be seen what answer the Turks will...
The Indian Legislative Assembly has rejected some of the new
The Spectatortaxes proposed by the Governmentânotably the increased excise duty on cotton goods--and has out down other items by way of protest against the military expenditure of...
The new Kingdom of Egypt was proclaimed on Thursday, March
The Spectator16th. The Sultan assumed the style of King Fuad There were public rejoicings in Cairo and the other towns. The faction formerly led by Zaghlul tried to raise a riot in Cairo but...
Mr. Gandhi and his lieutenant, Blinker, were tried at Ahmeda-
The Spectatorbad on Saturday last and pleaded guilty. Gandhi, in_ one of those fantastic speeches which to. the Western mind suggest that he is insane, declared that to preach disaffection...
We are glad to see that Lord Robert Cecil, in
The SpectatorTuesday's Tinies, has called attention to the gross ill-treatment inflicted on. Airs Stan. Harding, a British journalist, by the Bolsheviks. She⢠went to Russia in June, 1920,...
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Lord Londonderry moved an amendment that the terms of reference
The Spectatorto the Boundary Commission should be submitted for approval to both Houses of Parliament on an Address being presented to the Throne. He explained that his proposal was not a...
Sir Henry Wilson, who was asked by the Ulster Premier
The Spectatorfor' his advice in regard to the best way of restoring law and order in Northern Ireland, gave it in plain terms. The South and West, ho said, were " a welter of chaos and...
The Morning Postâwhich for reasons that we cannot fathom is
The Spectatorstill the only London paper to give a full and accurate account of the anarchy in Irelandâhas begun to publish daily articles on " Ulster's Frontier War," which deserve to be...
The Sinn Feiners during the past week have redoubled their
The Spectatormurderous activities in Belfast, where many Protestant men and women have been shot dead in the streets or bombed in their houses, and there are, of course, the usual reprisals....
Mr. Kellaway, the Postmaster-General, said on Tuesday that the Post
The SpectatorOffice commercial accounts would show a deficit of £2,000,000 for the current year, but would yield a surplus of £9,000,000 in the coming year. He disputed the suggestion of...
Other recommendationsâon most of which the 10 per cent. reduction
The Spectatorreally dependsâare that the charges should fall with the index figure of the cost of living ; that the extra mileage rate should be reduced ; that there should be...
The Report of the Select Committee on the telephone service
The Spectatorwas issued on Wednesday. It is a very valuable and most interesting document. It points out that there is " a universal antagonismâoften unreasonableâto British telephone...
Mr. Do Valera, at meetings in the South of Ireland
The Spectatorlast week, openly avowed his determination to defeat the Treaty, whether the Irish electors favoured it or not. He declared in so many words that his Republican followers would...
Mr. Amery made a statement on the Navy Estimates in
The Spectatorthe House of Commons on Thursday, March 16th. He declared that before the Washington Conference the Admiralty could not recommend a reduction of more than £4,600,000. As the...
Bank Rate, 4} per cent., changed from 5 per cent.
The SpectatorFeb. 16, 1922 ; 6 per cent. War Loan was on Thursday, Jai ; Thursday week, 96i ; a year ago, n7..
Sinn Feiners perpetrated three more brutal murders in Galway on
The SpectatorThursday, March 16th. One gang entered a hospital where three Irish constables were lying ill and shot them in their beds. Two of the three were killed on the spot ; the third...
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THE COURSE OF THE CRISIS AND TWO WARNINGS.
The Spectator%AT E have given our reasons for believing that . the Unionist Party is not going to let itself be tricked into supporting Mr. Lloyd George's demand that, though he will not...
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorMR. LLOYD GEORGE AND HIS SYSTEM OF ALTERNATIVES. M R. LLOYD GEORGE has a master hand in the matter of alternatives. If one plan does not suit try the Dther. It is true that his...
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_ SIR HENRY WILSON'S ADVICE TO ULSTER.
The Spectatorrr\frE Government and people of. Northern Ireland could ⢠not have received better advice than that tendered to them by Sir Henry Wilson in his Report to Sir James Craig. It...
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SELF-GOVERNMENT IN THE PRILTMNES AND IN BRITISH.. INDIA.
The Spectator[COMMUNICATED.] THE' three great democracies of the West are at present confronted with similar problems in the adnainistra- , tion of the Oriental races under their rule....
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THE NEED FOR SETTLEMENT IN THE NEAR EAST.
The SpectatorI Paris on Wednesday the Conference was opened at 1 which everyone hopes the problems of the Near East will at last be solved. One might say without exaggera- tion that it is a...
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THE GREAT PARTNERSHIP OF INDUSTRY.
The SpectatorS INCE we appealed in our last two issues for a clear statement of the employers' case in the engineering lock-out a pamphlet has been issued in the name of the Engineering and...
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MENTAL UNIFORMS.
The SpectatorA NEW hotel has been set up in New York, which is being run upon new lines. The proprietor is a great believer in first impressions and the value of a pleasant mental...
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FINANCE PUBLIC AND PRIVATE.
The SpectatorINTERNATIONAL DEBTS. MARKETS QUIETERâGERMAN REPARATION PAY- MENTS--â¢A SUGGESTED SCHEMEâVIEWS IN THE CITY â ATTITUDE OF AMERICA â PRIVATE INITIATIVE. [To THE EDIT= OP...
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_ LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The Spectator[Leiters of the length of one of our leading paragraphs are often more read, and therefore more effective, than Mose which fiU treble the space.] --- THE ARCHBISHOP OF...
" DEAR WOOLLCOIEE,âPeople ask me to appeal publicly for aid
The Spectatorto the Charity Organization Society. I find it necessary to refrain, save in the rarest instances, from writing directly to the Press on behalf of causes which are seeking...
THE LOCK-OUT AND ITS ISSUES.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR or THE " SPECTATOR."] S IR, I observe that you consider the public to have grounds of complaint that the employers have not made their case clear, but are you not...
THE C.O.S.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR or THE " Spzeriroa."] Sm,âI wish the small contribution which I enclose could have been larger. The British 'public would - soon find that without the voluntary...
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PRESIDENT LINCOLN ON "DEFLATION." [To THE EDITOR 55 THE "
The SpectatorSPECTATOR."] Sta,âThe Manufacturers' Record of March 2nd quotes from a letter of Lincoln read out in the U.S. Senate last meath the following passage :â " I warn the...
[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] Sia,âIn your leading
The Spectatorarticle you ask for more light on the engineering dispute and for definite cases to illustrate what employers mean by "managerial functions." The individual employer feels...
THE AGONY OF ULSTER.âDOES LOYALTY PAY? [To THE EDITOR or
The SpectatorTHE " SPECTATOR."] SIR, âAs one of Ulster's numerous friends in England may I be permitted to answer Mr. Grant's question? It behoves us to bear continually iu mind the...
[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR.") SIR, âIn the eternal
The Spectatorcontroversy between Capital and Labour it seems to me that the apologists for the former fail to recog- nize, or at any rate ignore, the one aspect Of the problem which looms so...
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MR. LLOYD GEORGE'S "LEVITY."
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPEOTATOR."] SIR,âThe Spectator seems, coincidentally, to have fallen into line with certain other journals in the resolve that Mr. Lloyd George must "...
THE SUCCESSION OF THE POPES.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] Sni,âThe prophecy assigning mottoes to the various Popes is commonly attributed to St. Malachy, Archbishop of Armagh and a friend of St....
BANKER POETS.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR."] Ste,âThe following correspondence in verse and in rhymed prose, which has lately passed between two eminent Bankers, will, I feel sure,...
WHAT SHOULD WE DO ABOUT THE RUSSIAN FAMINE? [To THE
The SpectatorEDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."1 V SIR,âCan you or any of your readers throw light on what is one's duty in regard to the Russian Famine? If the Russian Government were short of...
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MARLBOROUGH AND TOLLEMACHE.
The Spectator[To TaR.Earrcut. or TIM " Sezersroa."/ Snt,âIn reference to the letter under the above heading, which appeared in your issue of March 11th, I may mention that in the church...
DEATH CERTIFICATES.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR or THE " SPECTATOR.") Sin,âIn the latest edition of Taylor's Principles and Practice of Medical Jurisprudence, edited by Fred. J. Smith, M.D., it is stated,...
POETRY.
The SpectatorPOETRY AND THE SUBCONSCIOUS. Dena is the mind's deep dwelling, Roofed and walled and floored With ancient rock. There water, slowly welling Or slowly dripped, is stored In a....
[TO THE EDITOR 07 THE " SPIGTATOR."1
The SpectatorSra,âYour correspondent " E. D." will find all the information he requires as to the curious "Prophecies of St. Malachy " in Chambers's Encyclopaedia, under " Malachy, St.,...
AN ALTERNATIVE TO RABBIT-TRAPS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR or THE " SPECTATOR_") Sra,âMr. Douglas Gordon has written an excellent letter on humanity to rabbits. As a landowner I should be glad if he can suggest other...
A STRANGE SEA REPTILE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR or THE " SPEC7ATOZ."1 Sir,âWith reference to this subject I think it may interest your correspondents to hear that the garramooloccwh (not garramooloch, as...
"1111, MIND IS THE MAN."
The Spectator(To THE EDITOR or THE " SPECTATOR.") SIR,âA much earlier statement of this position than any of those which you have quoted is to be found in Aristotle's Ethics, Book X.,...
THE YOUNG CITIZEN SERIES.
The Spectator(To THE EDITOR or THE " SPECTATOR-9 SIR,âYou have been among the forces making for good citizen- ship and Empire in the sense of international brotherhood as distinguished...
NOTICE.âWhen " Correspondence" or Articles are signed - with the writer's
The Spectatorname or initials, or with a pseudonym, or an marked " Communicated," the Editor must not necessarily be held to be in agreement with the views therein expressed or with the mode...
THE " SPECTATOR " CHARITY ORGANIZATION SOCIETY FUND.
The SpectatorANY subscriptions sent to us, great or small, will be acknow. ledged in our columns and at once sent on to the C.O.S. Cheques should be made out to " The Spectator " and crossed...
The Editor cannot accept responsibility for any article, poems, or
The Spectatorletters submitted to him, but when stamped and addressed envelopes are sent he will do his best to return contributions in case of rejection. Poems should be addressed to the...
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" ALL FOR LOVE," BY JOHN DRYDEN.âTHE PHOENIX SOCIETY.
The SpectatorIN the Prologue to All for Love the reader may remember that Dryden describes himself as " unarmed " because he has for- sworn rhyming. While he constrained himself in his metre...
ART.
The SpectatorTHE JONES COLLECTION AT SOUTH. KENSINGTON. Ma. Joine JONES (1800-1882) must obviously have been extremely successful as tailor and army clothier, which was his business, before...
THE THEATRE ⢠DAVID G_ARRICK " AT THE QUEEN'S.
The Spectatorby get the same sort of a shock at the Queen's Theatre as when you hear a very beautiful, well-turned-out girl speak and she utters brainless inanities with the voice and accent...
SOME PLAYS WORTH SEEING.
The SpectatorPRINCES.âLast fortnight of the Gilbert and Sullivan Operas ⢠⢠QuEsx's.âThe Faithful Heart .. [Still palpitating tenderly, so to speak.] COcNT.âThe Silver Box [Notice...
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AMERICANS ON THEMSELVES.*
The SpectatorTHE two volumes before us will finally make Englishmen believe that a new epoch has dawned in America. Our readers may recall that Mr. Mencken (whose Prejudices, first and...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHE DUAL MANDATE Lti BRITISH TROPICAL AFRICA.* Tars is an invaluable work by a great colonial administrator. Sir Frederick Lugard has earned a very high place in the line of a...
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LORD HOOD AT TOULON.*
The SpectatorME occupation of Toulon by the British and Allied forces from August to December, 1793, at the invitation of the moderate Republicans and Royalists in the town, is a well-known...
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ANIMAL IMMIGRANTS IN NEW. ZEALAND.â¢
The SpectatorONE does not need to be a biological expert ir; order to appreciate the merit and profound interest of the book which a veteran New Zealander naturalist, Mr. G. M. Thomson, has...
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THE PREVENTION OF MALARIA.*
The SpectatorTHERE is in medicine no more romantic story than that of the fight against malaria, the scourge not only of the white man living in the tropics, but, as Dr. Watson shows in this...
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SIR EDWIN LUMENS.*
The SpectatorSID LAURENCE WEAVER is not only an exceedingly able archi- tectural critic, but also a writer of considerable distinction, and, with the work of Sir Edwin Lutyens as his 'theme,...
ANGLICANISM.* IT would be difficult to -find a better statement
The Spectatorof what the Church Times calls "the theology of the Spectator" than these lectures. They are exceptionally outspoken, exceptionally lucid, and exceptionally sane. That they...
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ANCIENT ART.*
The SpectatorThis bookâa translation from the Frenchâis rendered delightful by its extraordinarily good photographic reproductions of the arts of the ancients. The examples are most...
MR. BURGIN'S MEMOIRS.
The SpectatorMn. G. B. Br:morn, the veteran journalist and novelist, has written a second book of reminiscences, under the title of More _Memoirs (and Some Travels) (Hutchinson, 16s. net),...
DELEGATED LEGISLATION.
The SpectatorMLt CECIL T. CARR'S valuable little book on Delegated Legislation (Cambridge University Press, 7s. 6d. net) deals with a question which has attracted public notice in connexion...
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EUROPE IN CONVALESCENCE.
The SpectatorTHE title of Mr. Alfred E. Zimmern's vigorous and highly controversial essay, Europe in Convalescence (Mills and Boon, 5s. net), shows that he does not share the gloomy opinions...
The Eye of the Wift. By E. Temple Thurston. (Cassell.
The Spectator7s. 6d. net.)âNewspapers and magazines are essentially ephemeral. The present is pre-eminently theirs, but no single issue can be said to have a past or a future worth the...
The Tent of Blue. By Lady Dorothy Mills. (Duckworth.
The Spectator7s. 6d. net.)âThis novel opens with a rather depressing account of the unsuccessful marriage of a " smart " young couple, Geoffrey and Rachel Poynder, in which the husband's...
FICTION.
The SpectatorTHE RED SHADOW.* WHEN the present writer was handed this book for review, he was given to understand that it was a novel. But he has now very grave doubts. The language and the...
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POETS AND POETRY.
The SpectatorDR. LEAF AND THE GREEK ANTHOLOGY.* Dn. LEAP in these translations again proves himself what his friends knew himâa fine scholar and a man of great taste. He has very wisely...
SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator[Notice in this column does Ina necessarily preclude subsequent review.) The League of Nations Union at 15 Grosvenor Crescent is increasing its efforts to make the objects of...
Terrestrial and Celestial Globes. By Edward Luther Steven- son. (H.
The SpectatorMilford, for the Hispanic Society of America. 2 vols. 508. net.)âDr. Stevenson is evidently an enthusiastic student of globes and has brought together, in these substantial...
OTHER NOVELA.âThe White Hands of Justice. By 0. Binns. (Ward,
The SpectatorLock. 7s. 6d. net.)âA rich American girl, fired by the example of Mary Kingsley, goes exploring in the Portuguese Congo. It- becomes the task of her rival lovers to effect her...
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The Song of Songs. A New Translation by Morris Jastrow,
The SpectatorJunior. (Lippincott. 12s. 6d. net.)âThe late Dr. Jastrow left almost complete at his death this interesting and attractive new version of the Song of Songs, with a lengthy...
City Characters under Several Reigns. By T. H. S. Escott.
The Spectator(Effingham Wilson. lls. net.)âMr. Escott gossips pleasantly and discursively about many of-the leading financiers, bankers and merchants of the City, especially in the...
Potash. Revised by Sydney J. Johnstone. (Murray. 6s. net.)âThe Imperial
The SpectatorInstitute monograph on potash has been revised and enlarged. It now contains a full account of the Alsatian depositsâwhich have broken down the monopoly long enjoyed by...
The Book of Job : A Revised Text . and Version.
The SpectatorBy C. J. Ball. (Clarendon Press. 25s. -net.)âWe noticed recently two elaborate commentaries on Job. Dr. Ball's new commentary is concerned with the text and is warmly...
Yvette in. Italy and Titania's Palace. By Nevile Wilkinson. (Hodder
The Spectatorand Stoughton. 7s. 6d. net.)âA friend lent the author an old tower on the hill above Florence, to which he took his small daughter and a young companion for a painting...
Through Angola : a Corning Colony. By Colonel J. C.
The SpectatorB. Statham. (Blackwood. 28s. net.)âColonel Statham went to Angola in 1920 to hunt the giant sable antelope. He travelled into the interior both of Northern and of Southern...
The Ilistory of Carew (Pembrokeshire). By W. G. Spurrell. (Carmarthen
The Spectator: W. Spurrell & Sons. 7s. 6d. net.)âThe Vicar of Carew has written an interesting history of his parish, which contains a fine thirteenth-century castle, a church of somewhat...
David Copperfield : a Reading. . By Charles Dickens. (H.
The SpectatorSotheran. 15s. net.)âThis attractive little volume con- tains a reprint . of the selections from David Copper - field- privately printed in 1866âwhich Dickens made for his...
The Second Year of the Leay.e. By Harold W. V.
The SpectatorTemperley. (Hutchinson. Os. net.)âThis account of the work of the League of Nations during its second year, by a sober and painstaking Cambridge historian, deserves to be...
The Agricultural and Forest Products of British West Africa. By
The SpectatorGerald C. Dudgeon. (Murray. Is. 6d. net.)âMr. Dudgeon's admirable handbook was first published in 1911. Much has happened since then, and the changes and developments in West...
The Scottish Communion Office, 1764. By John Dowden. New edition
The Spectatorseen through the press by H. A. Wilson. (Clarendon Press. ⢠14s. net.)âThe late Bishop Dowden's elaborate history of the Scottish Liturgy, first published in 1884, was...
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Early British Trackways, Moats, Mounds, Camps and Sites. By Alfred
The SpectatorWatkins. (Hereford : Watkins Meter Co. ; and Simpkin, Marshall, 4s. 6d. net.)âMr. Watkins thinks that he has found, in Herefordshire, that pre-Roman trackways " were in...