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NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorrimiE challenge of the London strikers to the superior -I- interests of the public has caused an extremely threatening situation. When we write on Thursday, the tramway and...
This matter must be faced. Happily Mr. Ramsay MacDonald made
The Spectatorit clear in his statement in the House of Commons on Wednesday night that he is alive to the significance of events. He announced that an Emergency Committee had been set up. A...
* * * * We have written in a leading
The Spectatorarticle on the whole problem of London traffic, of which the present strike is only a particular aspect, but here we must briefly describe the character of the Government's...
Negotiations for the settlement of the tramway and omnibus strike
The Spectatorbroke down late on Tuesday night. In response to the demand of the tramway men for an increase of 8s. a week, the employers offered 5s. a week to the uniformed men, with...
* * * * The Committee will report to the
The SpectatorMinister from time to time, and will have power to hold inquiries. Power is conferred on the Minister to require the various authorities to submit to him details of such work as...
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In Edinburgh, on Monday, Mr. Baldwin spoke with his usual
The Spectatorfeeling and point about unemployment. He referred to the prosperous condition of the banks and insurance companies, and said that when such prosperity coincided with the...
The whole policy of " AM-in " insurance is taking
The Spectatorshape rapidly. We cannot call to mind any political idea which has appealed to so many people of different shades of thought, and has won not only their assent but their active...
The situation in the mining dispute is a little better.
The SpectatorThe Government's policy of making every attempt to keep the affair out of politics is still maintained, The owners' offer, which was a sort of halfway house between the present...
The week's news from Ireland has been disquieting then tragic,
The Spectatorand now ominously meagre. The Army mutiny which we described last week is not settled. A severe Cabinet crisis has developed which may yet mean the fall of the Cosgrove...
* * * * M. Poincare was unexpectedly defeated in
The Spectatorthe French Chamber on Wednesday on a purely domestic issue and he immediately resigned. This looks, on the face of it, an event of first-rate European importance, but when we...
The crux of the situation seems to be that the
The Spectatormen are demanding a high minimum wage which the owners cannot agree to if they preserve the present principle of profit sharing. For if they did so they would be in the position...
The object of the crime, it cannot seriously be doubted,
The Spectatorwas to embroil the Free State with this country. It is obviously the work of that party in Ireland which is almost incredibly reckless of human lifeâand of every- thing...
* * * Mr. Baldwin then dwelt upon the difference
The Spectatorbetween Socialist principles and the principles of such a scheme of " All-in " insurance as Unionists could accept. Any unified scheme must, in his opinion, be contributory,...
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In the House of Commons on Tuesday there was a
The Spectatorfull debate on the question of Singapore. As we have written at length on this subject in a leading article, we shall say little of the debate. Sir Robert Horne made out as good...
On Tuesday the Greek Assembly passed a resolution to establish
The Spectatora Republic. Only a few weeks ago the same Assembly passed an exactly contrary resolution. That the men of modern Greece can change their minds not only quickly, but...
It seems, after all, that Persia is not to become
The Spectatora Republic. The New Year is being celebrated out there, and the present Government, which is of a decidedly progressive character, had decided to make this national festival an...
Bank Rate, 4 per cent., changed from 8 per cent.
The SpectatorJuly 5, 1923 ; 5 per cent. War Loan was on Thursday, 1011 ; Thursday week, 100* ; a year ago,. 1.0111.
The Report substantiates the charge that Sir Richard Squires obtained
The Spectatormore than £4,000 from the funds of the Liquor Control Department through the medium of Mr. Meaney, who was then Liquor Controller. The Commissioner adds that Sir Richard...
In this connexion an interesting statement was made on the
The SpectatorItalian financial and currency policy by Mr. George Manzi Fe at the annual meeting of the British Italian Banking Corporation. He pointed out that Italy was not attempting to...
As it is we may allow ourselves a certain amount
The Spectatorof hope that the irreconcilable elements have overreached themselves by this crime. If only Mr. Cosgrave's Govern- ment can succeed in catching the criminals there is real hope...
The Commissioner who has been inquiring into the charges against
The SpectatorSir Richard Squires (who was Prime Minister of Newfoundland from 1919 until July, 1923) and some of his colleagues has issued his Report. It is very painful reading. Mr. Warren,...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorFRANCE AND MR. MACDONALD. W E are approaching what we fear is going to prove one of the supreme danger points in the history of mankind. If things go well, if, that is, we can...
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THE CONTROL OF LONDON.
The SpectatorTRAFFIC. A SOLUTION of the traffic problem in London is long overdue, but it now seems that we arc likely to get one in a hurry. The London tramway and omnibus strike is...
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SINGAPORE AND IMPERIAL DEFENCE.
The SpectatorW HAT is the position now with regard to Singapore ? The Government has decided not to proceed with the construction of a battle-fleet base, but to complete the fuelling...
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" ZIP ZIP ZENITH !"
The Spectator(AND SOME OBSERVATIONS ON THE TOWN OF LEICESTER). By A. WILLIAMS-ELLIS. " IP ZIP ZENITH ! " cried Mr. George F. Babbitt LJ through his megaphone as he whirled his- rattle and...
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CRUELTY IN SPORT.
The SpectatorT HERE is a Bill before Parliament in which powers are sought to prohibit the coursing or chasing of released captive animals. It is aimed more particularly at the coursing of...
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Since the doctrine of self-determination has been so widely _accepted
The Spectatorthroughout the world, there is not so much reference to the White Man's Burden, but the burden is there just as much as when Kipling wrote his lines : " Take up the white man's...
How little, for the -most part,. .we stay-at-homes appre- ciate
The Spectatorthe great tasks which are being carried on by the rank and file of our Colonial Service Under tropic skies ! Merely because our idea of our Imperial responsibilities has...
Turning to the United States, a country with which I
The Spectatorkeep in close touch, I should like to endorse what the editor of the British Weekly says. In one of the most important American magazines lying on his table he finds not one...
THE
The SpectatorENGLISH-SPEAKING WORLD. BY EVELYN WRENCH. A S April 23rd, the opening day of the British Empire Exhibition at Wembley, draws near, the affairs of that great enterprise occupy...
Such were my reflections as I read the extremely interesting
The Spectatoraddress- of Sir Hugh Clifford, the Governor of Nigeria, to his Legislative Council delivered at Lagos early in February. Perhaps in the year of the Wembley Exhibition the...
Cbt sptttattfr.
The Spectator5 The subscription rates of the Spectator post free to any part of the world are as follows :- One Year .. .. .. .. 80s. Od. Six Months .. ⢠⢠.. .. 15s. Od. Three Months...
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Sir Hugh Clifford takes Lord Leverhulme to task for his
The Spectatorcriticism of the administration of Nigeria as being " extravagant and inefficient," and it would certainly appear that the Governor of Nigeria is more than able to hold his own...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorA CIVIC SENSE IN ENGLAND ? [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sia, â Since I see that, to the interest of your readers, you are seeking to increase the amenities of our...
Judging by present indications the year 1924 will be the
The Spectatorbest one from the immigration standpoint which Canada . has experienced since 1914. A feature of the immigration this year is the number of domestic servants going from the...
In common with many other West Indian travellers, Lord Harris,
The Spectatorwho has just returned from the Caribbean, has fallen a victim to the delights of the pawpaw, which enjoys a widespread popularity in tropical countries by reason of its...
ARCHITECTURAL NOTES.
The SpectatorTHE SECOND EXHIBITION OF THE ARCHITECTURE CLUB, GROSVENOR HOUSE. IT is a most healthy sign when one generation feels perfectly sure that it is doing better work than its...
If the present Government desires to demonstrate that it is
The Spectatornot indifferent to the welfare of the British Common- wealth, which it certainly is not, why does it not invite all ' the Members of Parliament throughout the British...
A deputation of British Members of Parliament is to visit
The SpectatorSouth Africa this autumn, thanks to the initiative of the Empire Parliamentary Association. Among the visiting British delegates will be Mr. J, H. Thomas, the Colonial...
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DEAN INGE ON THE POPULATION QUESTION.
The Spectator1 1[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin,âIt is not for me to intervene between the Dean of St. Paul's and his critics, but as a fellow-member of the Eugenics Education...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR, â Unless someone more fitted
The Spectatorshould have done so, perhaps you will allow me to suggest a few necessary qualifications of the arguments put forward with such assurance by your correspondent, " Homo Sapiens"...
ASYLUM REFORM.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] &aâAs regards the composition of the proposed Royal Commission which is, we hope, shortly to be appointed to inquire into defects in lunacy...
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[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âWhile in full agreement
The Spectatorwith your article in the Spectator of March 8th, " The Shut Door Stands Ajar," I consider the safety of the sane individual is of vital interest to the public. The Times of...
EMPLOYERS AND REDUCED PRODUCTION.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âIn discussing the present position of industry it is well to differentiate carefully between the export and home trade. In the matter...
COMPREHENSIVE NATIONAL INSURANCE. THE EMPLOYERS' CONTRIBUTION.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âSir J. A. R. Marriott, M.P., in his informative article in your current issue, invites criticism of his scheme. You were good enough to...
LORD ASTOR AND THE DRINK TRADE.
The Spectator(To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âLord Astor, at a meeting of the Cambridge Union held on March 4th, is reported to have said, " Later, when with the Ministry of Food, he...
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WHAT DID BYRON LOOK LIKE ?
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âI observe from your last issue that we are both of us in a scrape over Byron. I fear, indeed, that your own plight, Sir, is even more...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âI quite agree with
The SpectatorMr. Shanks that the ordinary employer who has to sell his wares against unlimited competition, must continually strive to increase output in order to reduce cost, but what about...
A SHAKESPEAREAN EMENDATION.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âThere is a vexed passage in Cymbeline (Act III., Scene 4, 134-137) about which I should like to express a view. I quote it here from the...
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VICTORIA HOUSE.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin,âI have read with much interest in your Architectural Notes of this week the remarks of Lord Gerald Wellesley on the new building which...
BRITAIN AND AMERICA.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âI have just read a letter from C. B. Wingate, of Durham, California, which I am sure is an exaggeration of conditions on the Pacific...
THE INTERNAL TEMPERATURE OF TREES. [To the Editor of the
The SpectatorSPECTATOR.] SIR,âFor some time now I have been trying, in vain, to obtain any concrete knowledge as to the minimum internal temperature of trees and shrubs. This, in view of...
THE " SPECTATOR " AND FRENCH POLICY. [To the Editor
The Spectatorof the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âIn your issue of March 15th, which has only just reached me, you speak of " The French quickness to discover an unfriendly motive 'where none is...
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EXTRACTS FROM LETTERS.
The SpectatorCOULD SPEKE RETURN.â" Scipio Africanus " writes " The article ' Could Speke Return,' in your issue of March 15th, shows rather clearly the rapidity with which things in...
MR. COPPARD, MR. BULLETT, AND KATHERINE MANSFIELD.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR, âI have not suggested anything so foolish as the notion that the subjective and objective methods in literature can be entirely...
DJEM AND THE KNIGHTS OF RHODES.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âReading " The Last Crusade " in Mr. Asquith's Studies and Sketches, I find the following statement :â" The conqueror of...
LATE REDWINGS IN LONDON.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âOn Monday of last week, March 17th, I saw a flock of redwings in St. James's Park. This is the latest date onwhich I have ever seen...
POETRY.
The SpectatorMADEMOISELLE RICHARDE. BESIDE the haunted lake where Nereids seem Court ladies in a dark transfigured dream, Who were perfected in their glacial chill By Mademoiselle...
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A. BOOK OF THE MOMENT.
The SpectatorTHE LETTERS OF CHARLES GREVILLE AND HENRY REEVE. The Letters of Charles Greville and Henry Reeve. Edited by A. H. Johnson. (London : T. Fisher Unwin. 21s. net.) THIS is a book...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHIS WEEK'S BOOKS. MEssas. T. FISHER UNWIN tell us that in Poincare Mr. Sisley Huddleston states the case for and against the French occupa- tion of the Ruhr so cleverly and...
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A GENTLE VICTORIAN.
The SpectatorCorincriotsrs of modern letters can at their best make a double appeal. They arc the most human and companionable of biographies, drawing us by countless unpretentious threads...
PROTEUS CUT IN TWO.
The SpectatorTolstoy and Modern Consciousness. By Janko Lavrin. (Collins. 6s. net.) MODERN criticism is a game easy to play. Mr. Janko Lavrin plays very well : he keeps all the rules, he is...
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THE RIG-HT OF REBELLION.
The SpectatorMa. LASKI made his name as one of the modern school of political theorists, who can see little good in sovereignty. They search in the writings of Maitland and Gierke for a...
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COLD COMFORT FOR THE YO1ING.
The SpectatorThe Chilswell Book of English Poetry. Compiled by Robert Bridges. (Longman. 68. 6d. net.) THE ground of poetry is love, not wisdom. This is true in ultimates, in the most...
FICTION.
The SpectatorCONTRASTS. Tony. By Stephen Hudson. (Constable. Os.) No one who finds pleasure in a vivid contrast could better satisfy his craving than by reading, successively, Mr. Stephen...
THIS GOODLY FRAME.
The SpectatorThe Right Place. By C. E. Montague. (Chatto and Windus. 7s.) Mu. MONTAGUE'S last book of essays, it will be remembered, -was called Disenchantment, and was a troubled, stinging...
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INCUNABULA MEDICA. By Sir William Osier, Bt., M.D., F.R.S. (Printed
The Spectatorfor the Bibliographical Society at the Oxford University Press.) It hardly seems credible that four years have now elapsed since the death of Sir William Osier. Such a stream...
The gift of making economics interesting to the uninitiated is
The Spectatorpossessed by very few writers ; but Mr. Hartley Withers is certainly among that number, and his latest work may be recommended to all who would obtain an insight into present -...
OTHER NOVELS âA. S. F. By John Rhode. (Geoffrey Bles.
The Spectator7s. 6d. net.)âThe illicit but very profitable traffic in cocaine provides the motive for a series of adventures and mysteries which the reader will find both entertaining and...
SHORTER NOTICES.
The SpectatorSTAINED GLASS TOURS IN SPAIN AND FLANDERS. By Charles Hitchcock Sherrill. (John Lane. 12s. 6d. Oat.) Mr. Sherrill quotes, with evident relish, the words of a visitor to Leon :...
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CHARLES SHANNON and AMBROSE McEVOY. " Con- temporary British Artists
The SpectatorSeries." Edited by Albert Rutherston. (Ernest Benn, Ltd. 8i5. 6d. not each.) These two volumes, like the John, Nash, Orpen, Nicholson and Rothenstein- published last year, in...
FINANCE-PUBLIC & PRIVATE.
The Spectator[BY OUR CITY EDITOR.] MARKETS HESITATING. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR, â Most of the influences operating upon the Stock Markets during the past week have been...
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FINANCIAL NOTES.
The SpectatorThe latest figures of Public Income and Expenditure all tend to heighten expectations of the present financial year ending with a surplus in the National Revenue over...