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INDEX.
The SpectatorFROM JANUARY 2nd TO JUNE 26th, 1926, INCLUSIVE. TOPICS OF THE DAY. CTOR'S Art, Concerning the : "English as she is Spoke " 314 II. Reflex Emotion .. 360 Advertise, Should...
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London; Printed by W. SPEAIGHT AND Sims, LTD., 98 and
The Spectator99 Fetter Lane, E.C. 4, and Published by THE SPECTATOR, LTD., at their Offices No. 13 Yoric Street, Covent Garden, London, W.C. 2. Saturday, July 24, 1926.
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It must not be forgotten, however, that the groups of
The Spectatorthe Left, apart from the Radicals, are showing a disagreeable temper. They have produced what they euphemistically call a " counter-proposal " to M. Doumer's scheme, but the...
5- The members of the cave having, no doubt, ascertained
The Spectatorthat there . were plenty of substitutes for their places, came to heel. There are better signs of Government stability in France now than there have been for several weeks. This...
NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorBRIAND has proved once more that safety often - 4, -7- 1 -* lies in daring. His Minister of Finance, M. Doumer, is _disliked by many of his fellow-Ministers of the Left partly...
The statement issued by M. Briand's Cabinet after the meeting
The Spectatorof Tuesday explained that M. Doumer would submit certain reforms of "direct taxation in conformity with democratic principles "—this in response to the Left—but that these...
THE CIRCULATION OF THE " SPECTATOR "
The SpectatorWe have received the following report from our auditors :— To the Directors of The SPECTATOR, Limited, 13 York Street, W. C. 2. Gentlemen, We have examined the Company's...
EDITORIAL AND PITBLISELING OFFICES: 13 York Street, Covent Garden, London,
The SpectatorW.C.2.—A Subscription to the " Spectator " costs Thirty Shillings per annum, including postage, to any part of the world. The Postage on this issue 8: Inland, hi., Foreign, hi.
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King - making in Arabia was expedient in wartime; but the Hashimite
The SpectatordYnisty set up in the Hejaz has not -endured. King Hussein was a useful and expensive ally against Turkey, but in peace time his relations with Egypt became difficult for all ....
The United . States has accepted the invitation to take part
The Spectatorin the preliminary Disarmament Conference at Geneva. The question therefore arises how she will conduct her relations with the League. There must be some form or convention by...
When people are angry they are apt to say things
The SpectatorWhich they would willingly withdraw in more sober Moments. That is why much nonsense is being talked about the British "monopoly." All traders in all countries try to get the...
The Tacna-Arica controversy between Chile and Peru has reached such
The Spectatora state- of confusion that it is difficult to see how it can be solved. It is extremely irksome for President Coolidge to have this task of arbitration on his hands. Whichever...
As regards the Mosul question itself, there is not much
The Spectatorfresh news to record. The Angora Government-is quietly thinking things over, and is reported to have decided against a warlike policy. This quiescence and a belated recollection...
Mr. Hoover is conducting in America an angry agitation against
The Spectatorthe price of British rubber. We cannot compli- ment him on either his manner or his method. He talks of the British " monopoly " and of a policy of unfairly exacting a tribute...
On Tuesday Signor Mussolini unexpectedly visited Sir Austen Chamberlain at
The SpectatorRapallo. The visit was officially described as merely an act of courtesy, but such a description is always a signal in .Continental countries for opening a Pandora's box of...
During his recent hurried visit to Paris Tewfik Rushdi Bey,
The Spectatorthe Turkish Minister for Foreign Affairs, signed with M. Tehiteherin a new political.Treaty. The Paris corres- pondent of the Times says that the Treaty is generally re- garded...
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At an inquest this week on a young barrister who
The Spectator. committed suicide it was stated that he had consulted psycho-analyst and had afterwards expressed the sense • of degradation which resulted. It may be that this young man...
England has lost a historic house and the Lyttclton family
The Spectatora beloved home by the burning of Hagley Hall last week. Of the precious contents of the library collected by several heads of the family and the valuable pictures only a remnant...
However, Ibn Saud has begun well. He made no attempt
The Spectatorto kill his predecessor or massacre in his success any more of those who had opposed his grasp at power. He has made a quite reasonable agreement with Iraq for which Sir Gilbert...
We have received from the Secretary of the General Medical
The SpectatorCouncil a copy of a letter which has appeared in the daily Press, and puts his Council's position in regard to Dr. Axham in a rather new light. The Council can only register "...
After long and difficult negotiations the Government has bought the
The SpectatorHendon Aerodrome, about three hundred acres, from the Grahame-White Aviation Company. Claims and counter-claims between the parties dating from the War make it difficult to...
The Indian National Congress at Cawnporc has ended in a
The Spectatorhuge majority for a resolution demanding an imme- . diate "Dominion Status" in default of which there is to be a campaign of "mass civil disobedience." It looks bad ; but the...
Ever since the Armistice conciliatory spirits have been working for
The Spectatorpeace in the shipbuilding industry which, since the boom, has been more and more depressed until its records of employment are the unhappiest in Great Britain ; and yet no...
Bank Rate, 5 per cent, changed from 4 per cent.
The Spectatoron December 3rd, 1925. War Loan (5 per cent.) was on Wednesday 1004; on Tuesday week 1004 ; a year ago 1011. Funding Loan (4 per cent.) was on Wednesday 851; on Tuesday week...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorA TAX ON BETTING: A NEW SUGGESTION M R. CHURCHILL'S answer to the deputation which visited him on December 22nd, in order to advocate a tax on betting, was neither encouraging...
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THE CHINESE WAR
The SpectatorT HE confusion of the civil war in China is a little less confused than it was. The figures of Chang Tso-lin, the Manchurian War Lord, and Feng Yu-hsiang, the Christian General,...
THE TACNA-ARICA DISPUTE
The SpectatorT HE Tacna-Arica_ dispute, which has aroused both Americas to acute interest, is hardly understood in Europe, so little known is the territory which is its subject, so distant...
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SHOULD ENGLAND ADVERTISE?
The Spectator"B UT what the Engligh need is not self-confidence but self-advertisement. The more they conquer. their modesty, the more rapid will be their success.' Their foundation is...
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NATIONALIZED MINES
The SpectatorO UR Socialists intend to introduce another Mines Nationalization Bill. For what purpose ? Nationalized mines abroad have yielded none of the great good things promised. They...
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SUNDAY MUSIC J
The SpectatormHERE has been so far during the present season in London only one orchestral concert on a Sunday. But the strict Sabbatarian need not give premature thanks as at a -sign of...
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THE SOUND OF MANY WATERS S OON after the Boer War
The Spectatormy husband obtained an appointment in 'South Africa under the Education bepaitm6nt of the Transvaal. He was established in a small dorp on the veldt, midway between Ermelo and...
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MOTORING NOTES
The SpectatorLUBRICATING THE ENGINE A Tnix film of oil must always be maintained where the surfaces of all the working parts of a motor-car engine are in contact. Undue wear and tear is...
Tim cinema to the ordinary seeker after recreation is not
The Spectatorexactly productive of thought. The bulk of picture-theatre frequenters simply go, without inquiring much what they will get, for a change of scene from the home, the factory or...
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CORRESPONDENCE
The SpectatorA LETTER FROM OSLO [To the Editor of the SrEcTAT0n.1 Sta,—In Norway deflation sits enthroned as the only possible fiscal policy. After a period of amazing vacillation during...
THE SPECTATOR.
The SpectatorBefore going on their holidays readers are advised to place an order for the SPECTATOR. The journal will be forwarded to any address at the following rates :- One Month .. 2s....
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[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sui,—To argue with Canon
The SpectatorGreen is to court disaster, but having held two benefices in Salford I can claim to be familiar with the conditions which I take it have done much to form his opinion on the...
LETTERS - TO THE EDITOR A TAX ON BETTING [To the
The SpectatorEditor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin,—It has been my good fortune to be associated with Canon Green in so many philanthropic endeavours that - I am conscious of a certain pain in...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin,—Many of your readers
The Spectatorwill wish success to the appeals your -columns for the introduction of the totalisator and for, taxation on betting. You cannot possibly stop betting, the speculative propensity...
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RUSSIA TO-DAY [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR:.
The SpectatorSIR,—In the Spectator of December 26th, there appeared an article signed T. II. Milken, giving the writer's impressions of Moscow, and expressing the hope that passport...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSta,—The description of Moscow as it is to-day, contained in the Spectator of December 26th, is most interesting. We are all extremely anxious to know the truth regarding Soviet...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—I have read with
The Spectatorconsiderable interest your article, "The Need for a Tax on Betting," and also Canon Green's letter. There are two objections to the proposed tax, regu- larizing an evil, and the...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—In your issue dated
The SpectatorDecember 26th, 1925, there is an article on "Russia To-day," with an editorial note that it will probably surprise most people, and I think those readers who are interested...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sta,—I greatly regret the
The Spectatorline you are taking on this question which is one of our greatest social and moral evils as is evidenced by those whose lives are spent in working among the poorer members of...
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THE OSTEOPATHS
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SeEcTAroa.] Sin,—Doctor Graham Little has referred to me in his recent inaccurate and ill-advised letter regarding osteopaths and their practice. The only...
[To the Editor of The SPEcrAToa.] Sta,—I trust your desire
The Spectatorto be fair will give me space. For years patients of mine have gone to osteopaths, with my knowledge, and, often, approval, so that I might judge what the osteopaths could do ;...
THE SQUIRE AND HIS CRITICS
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Being considerably interested in agricultural land in East Anglia and Yorkshire I have read with concern your ; review of a book called...
AN ALTERNATIVE TO LAND NATIONALIZATION
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—With reference to the letter of Mr. C. F. Ryder, in your last issue, I would point out that I do not advocate the turning of all labourers...
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A SUNDIAL INSCRIPTION
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR] Sta,—I note that you have awarded one of your prizes for a sundial inscription to Mrs. Brown for her poem. You say that the poem has about it...
POETRY
The SpectatorHOW INFINITE ARE THY WAYS I THOUGHT the night without a sound was falling ; But standing still, No stem or leaf I stirred, And soon in the hedge a cricket chirred ; A robin...
CROWDING AT THE ZOO
The Spectator[To the. Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sni,—Lately you have inserted several letters about the Zoo. 'A vivid remembrance of my visit a year ago is still marred by the thought of the...
THE "SPECTATOR" CHRISTMAS FUND FOR THE POOR CLERGY RELIEF CORPORATION
The SpectatorWE have to acknowledge the following further donations received by us or sent direct to the Poor Clergy Relief Corpora- tion (38 Tavistoek Place, Tavistoek Square, W.C. 1). A...
EXTRACT FROM -LETTER
The Spectator"A MAN'S DAY ON EARTH." Mr. Wixiwr PLATT (4 Hallswelle Road, Golders Green, London, N.W. 114 writes : "Your critic, in reviewing my book, A Man's Day on Earth, accuses me of...
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A BOOK OF THE MOMENT
The SpectatorTHE GREEK POINT OF VIEW [COPYRIGHT IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BY THE New York Times.] The Greek Point of View. By Maurice Hutton. (Hodder and Stoughton.) THIS is a...
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- THE "MEDIEVAL - - VILLAGE His must indeed be a rosy-tinted
The Spectatorview who, after a reading of Mr. Coulton's latest book,T, can stilt keep some hold on any romantic notions he may possess . concerning the Medieval village. "I have tried," says...
• CHRISTMAS COMPETITIONS
The SpectatorThe Editor offers two prizes of £5 each :- 1. For a new Tale for Children in not more than six hundred words of prose or sixty lines of verse : 2. For a new "Biography for...
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OPIUM
The SpectatorTula is a good book. It is a relief to read an American account of the opium question which is fair and impartial, and does not ignore the practical difficulties which confront...
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DIPLOMACY AT ITS BEST
The SpectatorTgIs is a pleasant story to read. It is the story of how for over a century the two great English-speaking nations have settled the differences between them not merely peaceably...
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ASPECTS OF ANGLO-CATHOLICISM
The SpectatorThe Anglo-Catholic Revival. By S. L. 011ard, MA. (A. R. Mowbray and Co. 3s. 6d. net.) IT is the prescriptive right of the English novelist to deal in theology, and Miss Sheila...
FLYING NORTHWARD
The SpectatorThis account by Captain Amundsen of his attempt with five companions to cross, by air, the Arctic Circle, employs our imagination, for it is More rousing than a Viking saga ; to...
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tirEsc studies of four soldiers of the eighteenth and nineteenth
The Spectatorcenturies—namely, Marshal Maurice de Saxe, Major-General Sir Robert Rolls Gillespie, Lord Peterborough, and Major- General James Wolfe—are selected from a number of" after...
MANY . English readers who - suppose that "the Fundamental Law of
The Spectatorthe American Constitution stands out unshaken like a Rock of Gibraltar in the midst of a changing world" will be surprised to discover, from Mr. Ilorwill's interesting and...
TILE sincerity of this "explanation of the position of a
The Spectatorpacifist towards war" need not be questioned, but it is unlikely to convince any readers who do not share the author's views. The suggestion that "Socialism is definitely...
FROM DAWES TO LOCARNO. By G. Glasgow. (London. E. Benn,
The SpectatorLtd. 78. (Id. net.) MR. GLASGOW'S views on Foreign politics are well known to readers of the Contemporary Review. Though Mr. Ramsay Macdonald is his favourite Foreign Minister...
CURRENT LITERATURE
The SpectatorA CENTURY OF EXCAVATION IN PALESTINE. By R. A. S. Macslister. (Religious Tract Society. 10s. (Id. net.) PROFESSOR MACALISTER'S review of modern research in Palestine is a most...
INDUSTRIAL LEADERSHIP. By S. S. Hammersley, M.P. (Simpkin, Marshall and
The SpectatorCo. 7s. 6d. net.) Mn. HAMMERSLEY is not a skilful writer of concise English, but he has firsthand knowledge of industry and, as a Member Of Parliament, some ideas of...
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OTHER NOVELS
The SpectatorAll Fools Together : a Bucolic History. By Charles Forrest. (Coffins. 7s. 6d. net.)—This is a first novel of something more than promise. The scene- is. rural England during the...
.- The Shadow of the Wolf. By R. Austin Freeman.
The Spectator(Hodder and Stoughton. 7s. f3d. net.)—Mr. Freeman is a recognized Master of mystery, and in his present venture he has displayed his constructive skill at its best. The method...
The Flying Emerald. By Ethelreda Lewis. (Iiodder and Stoughton. 7s.
The Spectator6d. net.)-----Mrs. Lewis has given us a stirring story of " German " South West Africa during the Post-War period, which, for all its incident and movement, is firmly based upon...
. The Power and the Glory. By Gilbert Parker. (Rockier
The Spectatorand - Stoughton. 7s. 6d. net.)---A romance of UM great La Salle, Sir . Gilbert Parker's story . deals • with: that famous soldier.explorees attempt to extend: French America...
FICTION
The SpectatorAN ENTERTAINING CONSPIRACY 1 The Gun Runners. By George A. Birmingham. (Hodder and Stoughton. 7s. 6d. net.) - • _ TiiEnE are tales of adventure of two kinds. One is told with...
Adventures in Understanding.. By David' Gra y son. (Hodder and Stoughton. 7s.
The Spectator6d. net.)—These character studies and sketches of life in an American city are linked together by a running commentary in which Mr. Grayson expounds his philosophy of life. It...
The Cobweb. By Margaretta Tuttle. (Hodder and •
The SpectatorStoughton. Is. 6d.)—Although this story, like many which come to Us from America, is curiously pedestrian in method, there is little or no padding. Its heroine is the daughter...
. The Cords of Vanity. By James Branch Cabal. (Bodley
The SpectatorHead. Is. 6d. net.)—With insufferable tedium and slickness Mr. Cahell relates the unpleasing amorous exploits of a plump and conceited young man.
Cloud Cuckoo Land. By Naomi Mitchison. (Cape. 7s. 6d. nct.)—Another.
The Spectatorof Mrs. Mitehison's enchanting and intimate _stories of life in ancient Greece, this time during the fast year( of the Peloponnesian War. The authoress is so sure of her...
Scotland's Heir. By Winifred Duke. ,(Chambers„ Is. 6d. net.)—The Young
The SpectatorPretender, has .appeared SO' Often in his- torical romance that it says much for Miss Winifred Duke's skill that she has been able to giVe a totieh of ffeshness even to so...
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THE COAL PROBLEM.
The SpectatorBefore dealing, however, with what appear at the moment to be probabilities with regard to the develop- ments early in the new year, and the general prospects for the...
. SPECULATIVE TENDENCIES. • • It might, of course, be
The Spectatorargued that variable dividend securities having risen so appreciably during the past two years, much might be said as to the likelihood of an early reaction. Such, of course,...
RISE IN VARIABLE DIVIDEND STOCKS.
The SpectatorOn the other hand, it is considered that variable divi- dend stocks and speculative and semi-speculative descrip- 1 tions may easily see a continuance of the activity which has...
IMPENDING ACTIVITIES.
The Spectator• But while the consensus of City opinion is against any acute outbreak of Labour troubles, it is frankly reccignized that the uncertainties surrounding the Coal industry, the...
The Mulberry - Bush and Other Stories. By Sylvia Lynd. (Macmillan. 6s.)--Delicate
The Spectatorsketches rather than stories, this collection speaks chiefly of the sorrows and joys of the very obscure, the unnoticed old maids, bachelors and children. They show much...
FINANCE-PUBLIC AND PRIVATE
The SpectatorNEW YEAR PROSPECTS BY ARTHUR W. KIDDY. Mum as I should like to be in the position of giving readers of this column an accurate forecast of financial, commercial and Stock...
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THE TRADE OUTLOOK.
The SpectatorIt is obvious, however, that, as regards the latter half of the year, much must depend upon how far we succeed in solving our industrial problems. A good deal of the optimism...
FINANCIAL NOTES
The Spectator- QUIET MARKETS. , The Stock Markets have been rather quiet during the past week, and in that respect have presented somewhat of a con- trast to the conditions which frequently...
MONETARY CONDITIONS.
The SpectatorThe usual pressure at the end of the year for accommodation in 'connexion with annual balance sheets has been in evidence in the Money Market, but with the turn of the year will...
CARRERAS.
The SpectatorIn view of the very satisfactory report, it is scarcely surprising that, at the recent meeting, the directors' proposal to increase the capital of the company by the creation of...
RANKING RESULTS.
The SpectatorJudging from present indications, the banking year has been only moderately favourable from the shareholders' point of view. It is quite true that the average value of loanable...