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The question between the Spectator and the Chancellor of the
The SpectatorExchequer is per se a small one, and need not further trouble us or our readers. We feel bound, however, to express our deep regret that one who holds so high an office in the...
This was exactly what he set out to do. Speaking
The Spectatoramid a continuous uproarâsome of the Deputies stood up and made menacing gestures at him at intervals â he declared, according to the Times report, that the Government had...
There was an exceptionally unruly debate in the French Chamber
The Spectatoron Tuesday, when M. Briand was called upon to explain the action of the French Government in the recent railway strike. At the beginning the Socialists caught sight of M....
We desire to express our thanks for the kindly and
The Spectatorgenuine was in which our contemporaries in the Press have defended the Spectator from the attacks of Mr. Lloyd George. The journals with which the Spectator has often found...
The Persian reply to the British Note was delivered last
The SpectatorSaturday, and was in accordance with expectations. It pro- poses that the suggested surcharge on the Customs three months hence should be made at once, and that the Persian...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorO N Saturday last the Chancellor of the Exchequer made a speech at Crediton in which he vehemently attacked the editor of the Spectator. We publish elsewhere a verbatim report...
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Wednesday's Times contained a letter from Mr. Frederic Harrison protesting
The Spectatoragainst the proposed reversal of the Osborne judgment. He pointed out that Parliamentary government would be at an end if Members no longer repre- sented constituencies, but...
The able writer who signs himself " Pacificus " has
The Spectatorbeen continuing, apropos of the Veto Conference, his Constitutional studies in the Times. In effect he proposes, though in terms so cloudy that we may presume they are based...
The Times published on Tuesday a letter from Lord Salisbury
The Spectatorsetting forth a new scheme for the solution of the education question. The scheme, which was prepared jointly by three Committees, including one of the House of Laymen of the...
The Sofia correspondent of the Times sends a very dis-
The Spectatorquieting despatch to Thursday's issue on the condition of Macedonia. The "Macedonian Internal Organisation," which suspended its activities after the Turkish Revolution of July,...
We believe that the cool discussions of a Convention would
The Spectatorbe bound to show that Unionist policy has done a great deal already for Ireland, and that it would be an enormous mistake to throw over a policy so promising. We believe, also,...
The inaugural meeting of the Oxford branch of the Research
The SpectatorDefence Society was held on Monday, with Dr. Osier in the chair. Lord Cromer, the president of the Society, delivered a powerful speech in support of the movement. The ease for...
On Tuesday the German Emperor and Empress arrived in Brussels
The Spectatoron a visit to the King of the Belgians. It will be remembered that the first official visit of King Albert and Queen Elizabeth after their accession was to Berlin. It is...
On Tuesday the King of Greece, on the recommendation of
The SpectatorM. Venezelos, decided to dissolve the National Assembly. The Times correspondent says that of the 208 votes lately cast in favour of the Government, only 157 were given without...
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On Thursday the Daily Telegraph published from its naval correspondent
The Spectatora very important statement asserting that the German shipbuilding programme has been suddenly delayed owing to a radical alteration in the type of gun now being mounted in the...
The airship which has been built by MM. Lebaudy for
The Spectatorthe proprietors of the Morning Post travelled on Wednesday from Moisson, near Paris, to Aldershot with eight passengers. The journey of two hundred miles occupied nearly five...
After a trial at the Old Bailey which lasted for
The Spectatornearly five days, Dr. Crippen was convicted last Saturday of murdering his wife, and condemned to death by the Lord Chief Justice. In spite of a most ingenious defence, the...
It seems certain from the Local Government Board circular issued
The Spectatoron Tuesday night that the four mysterious deaths in Suffolk during the last week of September were caused by plague. Although an examination of a part of the remains failed to...
This week's Punch contains a most amusing cartoon repre- senting
The Spectator"The New John Bull, after the Proposed 'Federalise, tion ' of the British Isles." He has discarded his historic costume, and is dressed instead in a kilt, a cut-away coat and a...
In the course of Wednesday the price of Consols fell
The Spectatorat one time as low as 7814, though there was afterwards a rally. A fall to such a point became only a matter of time the moment it was decided to restrict the Sinking Fund as it...
We regret to have to record the death of Prince
The SpectatorFrancis of Teck, the second brother of Queen Mary, who passed away after a few weeks' illness last Saturday in his forty-first year. Prince Francis of Tack, who retired from the...
The result of the by-election to fill the vacancy in
The SpectatorSouth Shields caused by the appointment of Sir William Robson as a Lord of Appeal was announced on Thursday night:â Mr. Russell Rea (L.) ... ... 7,929 Mr. Vaughan Williams...
Bank Rate, 5 per cent., changed from 4 per cent.
The SpectatorOct. 20th. Consols (2i) were on Friday 79kâFriday week 80A-.
Lord Rayleigh, the Chancellor of the University of Cam- bridge,
The Spectatorpresided at a dinner given on Friday week to celebrate the publication by the University of the eleventh edition of the "Encyclopaedia Britannica." Mr. S. H. Butcher observed...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The Spectator!r HE FOlTNDATIONS OF UNIONISM. O NE of the most curious things about the sudden plunge that a certain number of Unionists, including the able editor of the Observer and the...
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THE TEACHINGS OF TRAFALGAR.
The Spectator!TIRE Trafalgar Day celebrations have naturally turned 1 men's attention to the question of the Navy, and sea power. Those who are not content with a superficial view of the...
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THE MOHAMMEDAN APPEAL TO GERMANY.
The SpectatorI T would be useless to guess exactly how far the excited meeting at Constantinople which appealed to the German Emperor to act as the saviour of the Moslem world expressed the...
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MR. LLOYD GEORGE ON OLD-AGE PENSIONS.
The Spectatorm R. LLOYD GEORGE in his speech at Crediton claimed for himself the credit of the Old-Age Pensions Act. This is a little inconsiderate to his colleagues in the Cabinet. The...
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OLD-FASHIONED HUMOUR. E LEGANT and subtle youth often tries its hand
The Spectatorat new forms of humour for no better reason than that the old is thought to grow stale. Every generation has its humour, and thinks poorly of that which went before, as much...
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SUBTERRANEAN PASSAGES.
The SpectatorI T has been said that during the recent disturbances in Lisbon several Jesuits escaped from their establishments by underground passages. Whether these reports are literally...
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CHILDREN'S GARDENING.
The SpectatorG ARDENING as a lesson for children is an idea new to the age. In the old days a child's garden was a very simple business. It had certain rules and traditions. It began,...
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⢠⢠COE,RESPONDENCE.
The SpectatorSOME MODERN FRENCH BOOKS. [TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIB,âOnce more you will allow me to begin my occasional letter with Madame de Dino's now famous Chronique,...
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THE CONFIRMATION TEST FOR ENGLISH CHURCHM.ANSHIP.
The Spectatori70 TRY EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR:9 SIR,âMany English Churchmen will feel indebted to you for your consistent advocacy of the greatness and largeness of the English Church,...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorMIL LLOYD GEORGE AND THE "SPECTATOR." MO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.'] Sin,âI enclose a verbatim report made by me of the portion of Mr. Lloyd George's speech at. Crediton...
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THE NEED OF THE HOUR.
The Spectator[To TIM EDITOil OP TEl " SPECTATOR:1 SIR, - 4 have read your two articles, "The Need of the Hour" and "An Immortal Speech" (Spectator, October 22nd), with special interest and...
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" FEDERALISM " IN 1844 AND IN 1910.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTLT011."] Sra,âIt may be profitable, now that Federalism as a substitute for Home-rule is being dangled before the English public, to recall the...
MR. STEPHEN GWYNN AND MR. PATRICK FORD.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.1 Sin,âI have been considering bow to reply to the letters about Mr. Patrick Ford, and have decided to leave the expression of my very sincere...
MR. GWYNN AND THE CONCENTRATION CAMPS.
The Spectatorpro THE EDITOR OF THE "SNECTATOR:'] have only just read Mr. Stephen Gwynn's letter in your number of October 8th. Others have dealt with his dealings with Patrick Ford, but...
[TO THE EDITOR Of THE "SPECTATOR.']
The SpectatorSIR,âIn regard to your comment on the above in your lead- ing article of last week, in which you desire to unite all conservative forces to turn out the Government, there is...
MR. LLOYD GEORGE AT CREDITON.
The Spectator[To TEL EDITOR OF THE " SFECTATOR.1 SIN,âI dare say your attention will have been drawn to an extremely violent speech directed against you which was delivered at Crediton,...
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[To THE Errror. or THE "Sracraror."] Sin,âEvery one who values
The Spectatorthe observance of decencies in our public life must regret the ill-mannered attack which the Chancellor of the Exchequer has thought fit to make upon the Spectator and upon...
[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR, â The Spectator does not
The Spectatorneed to be defended by its friends, even when its editor is violently assailed on a public platform by a Minister of the Crown ; indeed, in the opinion of many, to be the object...
[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR, â I was disgusted, though
The Spectatornot surprised, to read in the Sunday Chronicle of the 23rd inst. a report of a speech by Mr. Lloyd George which shows that he has reverted to his Lime- house style, and...
[TO THE EDITOR 01 THE "SPECTATOR."]
The SpectatorSIR,âI am sorry you have allowed the champion opportunist, Mr. Lloyd George, to advertise himself in connexion with your journal, although you get before the public as well as...
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ITO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."'
The SpectatorSIR, â As a working man and a Liberal, I have some difficulty in following politics from your point of view, but am quite willing to correct my views if any of them are wrong....
MR. LLOYD GEORGE AND MOTORING.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."' x,âThe difficulty which you found in your article "An Immortal Speech" of reconciling Mr. Lloyd George's denunciations of motoring and...
[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR. " 1 Sut,âIn Mr. W.
The SpectatorW. Jacobs's "The Skipper's Wooing" it is 'observed of Henry's mother that she "possessed a tongue -which was famed throughout Wapping, and obtained honour- able mention in...
"AN IMMORTAL SPEECH."
The SpectatorITO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR.1 SIR â After so much rather flabby patronage of Mr. Lloyd George's City Temple speech, your article of last Saturday is very bracing and...
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SEA TRAINING FOR POOR BOYS.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,âReferring to the Conference of County Councillors - froin different parts of England, shipowners, and others interested in this...
"THE IDLE RICH.'
The Spectator[To TILE EDITOR OE TEl " SrEcrATos."] SIR,âMr. Lloyd George's anxiety to find employment for the "idle rich" reminds me of a story told by Lord Avebury in his address at the...
THE TURKS AND THE ARABS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.'l SIR,âHaving just returned from eight months' travelling under the Crescent and the Star in Turkish Arabia and Syria, perhaps the following...
THE CHANCELLOR OF THE EXCHEQUER AND HIS CRITICS.
The Spectatorpro THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."1 SIR, â May a Welsh Unionist shy in your impartial columns a word upon the critics of the Chancellor of the Exchequer P Granted that Mr....
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ACCOMMODATION OF MERCHANT SEAMEN IN THEIR SHIPS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] Stn,âThis subject was discussed in the Congress of the Royal Sanitary Institute at Brighton on September 9th,â see Times of September...
A ROMANCE THAT FAILED.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF TER "SPECTATOR."3 Sue,âOliver Wendell Holmes wrote a long ballad entitled "Agnes," a very beautiful and pathetic one, it is true, but most inaccurate. It was...
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SOME LETTERS TO PIUS X. [To THE EDITOR OF THE
The Spectator"SPECTATOR."] Sin,âThat my reference to the late Father Tyrrell should have given offence to his friends is a matter of regret to me, the more since it has caused one of them...
THE ODDFELLOWS AND THEIR FUNDS.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.) Sra, â By way of extolling the Holloway Societies, your corre- spondent "W. S." in your last issue attacks the Friendly Societies of which...
CHURCH OF ENGLAND ORDINATIONS.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sta,âYour correspondent who signs himself "A Priest of the Church of England" in last week's Spectator puts forward a question which is...
A ROYAL HERETIC.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] Sin,âIn your issue of September 24th you publish a letter from Mr. C. F. It. Allen, in which he quotes a passage from an early Chinese...
THE SCHOOL OF RUSSIAN STUDIES IN THE UNIVERSITY OF LIVERPOOL.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTAT0R."1 Sia,âMay I call the attention of your readers to the institution, of teaching of Russian subjects at the University of Liverpool ? For the...
ALPINES AND NATIONAL SERVICE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE 'SPECTATOR."' venture to write and tell you what a great success, thanks to your kindness, my National Plant League has been (see Spectator, June 25th). I...
A PROTEST.
The SpectatorLTO Tim EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."' Sin,âThe secretaries of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel are asking for £3,000 to fight "against Ramanism and Materialism"...
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POETRY.
The SpectatorTHE GARDEN FOUNTAIN. Fon my delight comes dipping wing About your shallows fluttering. Where, fearless, on the mossy brink The blackbird dips his bill to drink. The sun for my...
NOTICE.âWhen Articles or "Correspondence" are signed with the writer's name
The Spectatoror initials, or with a pseudonym, or are marked "Communicated," the Editor must not necessarily be held to be in agreement with the views therein expressed or with the mode of...
1300 KS.
The SpectatorTHE LIFE OF BENJAMIN DISRAELI.* WE congratulate Mr. Monypenny upon the first instalment of his Life of Disraeli. If he maintains in the succeeding volumes the very high level...
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BALZAC AND THE " COMEDIE HIIIIAINE."* Mn. LAWTON'S Balzac has
The Spectatormany qualities deserving of praise. He has collected and arranged his material with care and patience, his criticism is intelligent and moderate, and some of his chapters, more...
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LORD DALHOUSIE'S PRIVATE LETTERS.* WHEN Lord Dalhousie, "the greatest of
The Spectatorour Proconsuls," died he left instructions that his private papers should not be published for fifty years. The fifty years have passed, and ⢠Private Letters of the Marquess...
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A MODERN OUTLOOK.*
The SpectatorTHE " middle " articles in the Nation are always remarkable for their range and the freshness of their point of view, and in this volume Mr. Hobson has collected some of his...
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THE MOND COLLECTION.*
The SpectatorTHIS illustrated catalogue of the collection formed by Dr. Richter for the late Dr. Ludwig Mond gives us some idea of the pictures which eventually will belong to the National...
MR. BELLOC ON SOMETHING.* FrIont time to time Mr. Belloc
The Spectatorcollects the sketches which he- ⢠has contributed to various papers and publishes them, with an addition or two, in a small volume with a characteristic title.. The latest of...
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TRISTAN DA CUNHA.t
The SpectatorTHE island of Tristan Da Cunha is in the South Atlantic, about as far south of the Equator as Crete is north of it, with St. Helena for its nearest inhabited neighbour. It is...
WAGES IN THE COTTON TRA.DE.* Mn. WOOD has produced a
The Spectatorthoroughly painstaking and valuable study upon the movement of wages in the cotton trade during the past hundred years. From the figures which he has collected with so much...
NOVELS.
The SpectatorTHE RETUEN4 Mn. DE LA MARE'S somewhat rare excursions into the field of fiction are welcome for their twofold distinction,âof style as well as of thought. In his earlier...
NORWICH.*
The SpectatorTHIS is not a handbook to Norwich, though the visitor who wants to make an intelligent use of the occasion will do well to study it. It is an account of the industries of the...
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The Charm. By Alice Perrin. (Methuen and Co. 6s.)âThe sympathies
The Spectatorof the readers of this tale of Anglo-Indian life will be entirely with the Eurasian heroine. It cannot be doubted that Mark Rennard's marriage to the beautiful Teresa was an...
SOME BOOKS OF TIIE WEEK.
The Spectator[Under this heading vs notice such Boot:* of 00 week as hare not leen reserved for moms in other forms.] Studies in the Book of Isaiah. By the Rev. M. E. Glazebrook. (The...
Mezzogiorno. By John Ayscough. (Chatto and Winans. Gs.)â Although Mr.
The SpectatorAyscough gives his readers plenty of incident in his new novel, its real interest resides almost entirely in the drawing of character. Gillian, the heroine (she passes through...
READABLE NOVELS.--At the Villa Bose. By A. E. W. Mason.
The Spectator(Hodder and Stoughton. 6s.)âA first-rate story of its kind, the detection of crime, full of surprises, with as little as possible that can offend.-3fy Lady of Intrigue. By...
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Pope John XXIII. By Eustacs J. Kitts. (Constable and Co.
The Spectator12s. 6d. net.)âMr. Kitts draws for us in vigorous lines three characters,âthe Pope, Sigismuncl, King of the Romans, and John Hus. Baldassare Cossi was elected Pope on May...
Essays and Studies. By Members of the English Association. Collected
The Spectatorby A. C. Bradley. (The Clarendon Press. 6s. net.)â Mr. Henry Bradley discourses on "English Place-Names" in a paper fall of interesting information. Here is a specimen :â...
Old Continental Towns. By Walter M. Gallichan. (T. Werner Laurie.
The Spectator6s. net.)âIt could hardly be expected that any one should write equally well about twenty-five towns distributed over Italy, Germany, France, Spain ; in short, over Europe...
The Armenian Church. By Archdeacon Dowling. (S.P.C.K. "3s. 6d.)âArchdea.con Dowling
The Spectatortells us much that we are glad to 'know about the Armenian Church,âit is, we should say, the Archdeacon's special function to keep up personal intercourse with the chiefs of...
A Memoir of Ebenezer Henderson. By his Niece. (Andrew Elliot,
The SpectatorEdinburgh. 7s. 6d.)âEbenezer Henderson seems to have been a "character." In his early days he distinguished himself by an outrageous passion for practical jokes and by...
Annual of the British School at Athens, 1908-1909. (Macmillan and
The SpectatorCo. 25s. net.)âA conffiderable portion of this volume is given up to an account of the work which the school has been carrying on for four years in Laconia. The...
⢠Life of George Clark Hutton, D.D. By Alexander Ogilvie,
The SpectatorD.D. (A. Gardner, Paisley. 3s. 6d.)âAny one who may want to read the story of the events which had for a result the union of the Free and the United Presbyterian Churches may...
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Philips' Pictorial Pocket Atlas and Gazetteer (G. Philip and Son,
The Spectatoris. net) is in every way, for its contents, its execution, and its price, something of a wonder. Multitudes of facts, physical, political, and social, are crowded into it. We...
The A B C about Collecting. By Sir James Yoxall,
The SpectatorM.P. (Stanley Paul and Co. Ga. net.)âSir James Yoxall wrote a number of articles on the business of collecting. He put these together in a book at the request of many readers;...