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M. Herriot made his statement on the London Confer- ence
The Spectatorin the French Chamber on Thursday, August 21st. lie took the bOld line that he was there not . by s.ny means as an apologist but as -the bearer of very substantial .;...
• . NEWS OF TETE WEEK.. .
The SpectatorT HE Dawes scheme has already been accepted by_the French Government and is certain to be signed by the German Government, even if the Reichstag rejects it. But although we are...
On Tuesday the French Senate spent the whole day in
The Spectatordebating the London. Agreement. The —feature of On Tuesday the French Senate spent the whole day in debating the London. Agreement. The —feature of the debate was the long...
When the debate was continued last Saturday much interest was
The Spectator'excited by_ the speech of General Desticker, who quoted Marshal Foch as having declared that the occupation of the Ruhr had nothing to do with the security of France. ' Marshal...
* *• * * The debate in the French Chamber
The Spectatorwas continued on . Friday, August 22nd, when M. Herriot explained that Mr. MacDonald's letter about the Ruhr, which a Coth!. munist . delegate had described as a "disavowal of...
EDITOWAL ;AND . PUBLISHING 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.
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On Friday, August 22nd, in the Reichstag the German Government
The Spectatorattempted to explain their position - with regard to the London Conference, but were compelled - to postpone the debate owing to the interruptions of the Communists. Dr. Marx...
Herr Stresemann was the most successful in standing up to
The Spectatorthe ferocity and bitterness of the Nationalists. His ripostes were very good, and after all he had on his side the substantial fact that the London Agreement- means the...
• In the- Bengal Legislative Council on Tuesday the Swarajist
The Spectatormotion for the total rejection of Ministers' salaries was carried by 68 votes to 66. This is a grave incident, though it was not unexpected. The question now is whether the...
Protectionists in the Labour ranks are'growing in numbers. That is
The Spectatornot to be wondered at. Labour Parties all over- the world, except in Great Britain, are Protectionists. The step from protecting one's labour to protecting the results of one's...
The situation in Bengal is extremely unpleasant, as ' there
The Spectatorhave been familiar symptoms such -as in previous times preceded outbreaks of violence. Mr. C. R. Das, who leads the Opposition in the Bengal Legislative' Council and is Mayor of...
In Dublin, last Saturday, many of the- old associates , of
The SpectatorMichael Collins met to pay a tribute to his memory. The Times - correspondent - rightly calls the meeting significant, as all the speeches were in- the same strain-- in strong...
The .Labout Party agents in the country, as we read
The Spectatorin the–Westminster- Gazette of Wednesday, have been- warned to bereadY for. a Possible General Election in the, first week of December. We wish we could think that; local...
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It is not altogether satisfactory that the privileged position of
The Spectatorthe Liverpool men should continue to be a cause of heart-burning and jealousy to their fellow-worker s throughout the rest of the country, but probably it could not be helped....
During the War Great Britain was compelled to pretend that
The Spectator.the Southern Irish were friendly and to treat them as though they were, though all the time they were stabbing us in -the back. They would have been less formidable as...
The building dispute which had lasted seven weeks- was settled
The Spectatorlast Sunday. Work was resumed on Monday., The terms of settlement were an immediate increase of id. an hour, except in towns where there has been id. increase since September...
Mr. Joseph MacGrath said that if the Republicans had not
The Spectatorlately impressed the public by their progress, the reason was that they recognized that a step in the wrong direction might be-the end-of a forward movement. He advised his...
If Republicanism in Ireland extends as it is doing now,
The Spectatorthe time will come when the British Government will discover that even if the miracle of a boundary settle- ment should be perfo - rmed, nothing will have been settled after...
Mr. W. Walters Butler, 'Chairman of Messrs. Mitchell and Butlers,
The Spectatorone of the largest brewery companies in the Midlands, said recently at the annual meeting of the company that in his opinion the temperance problem could be solved only by the...
Bank Rate, 4 per cent., changed from 3 per cent.
The SpectatorJuly 5th, 1923. - 5 per cent. War Loan was on - Thursday, 1011; Thursday week, 101i ; a year ago, 102f. 31 per cent. Conversion Loan -was on Thursday, '774 r ; Thursday week,...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorREPARATIONS AND INDEBTEDNESS. I N spite of grumblings, protests and threats the Agreement of the Allies is going through. The French Senate on Tuesday did not merely let it...
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GLASGOW; OR, HERCULES AND HIS STABLE.
The SpectatorO NE morning early in the year 1860, forty or fifty prosperous-looking gentlemen might have been observed, mufflers or plaids round their necks and top hats pulled well down on...
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SOME YOUNG CONSERVATiVRS.
The SpectatorBY REGINALD BERKELEY, M.P. QO much has been written and said about the leaders, or the potential leaders, or those whom this critic or that critic would prefer to see as the...
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" ALL-IN " NATIONAL INSURANCE.
The SpectatorW E desire to draw attention to the excellent pamphlet—An " All-in " National Insuran64 Scheme: Security for all Workers and their Families; by T. T. Broad (M.P. 1918-22); Price...
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"SI LAVORA E SI MANGIA."
The Spectator• W E work and we eat," " si lavora e si mangia "— I heard the phrase repeated from one end of • Italy to the other : in Syracuse, Girgenti and Palermo, in Pesto, Salerno and...
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A FEATHERED ACE.
The SpectatorOf all predatory birds in these islands, the peregrine is second to none, not even the golden eagle. The latter may be king of the air as far as size and weight go, but for...
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MUSIC.
The SpectatorTHE "CADENZA." IF you look in that admirably laborious compilation, Grove's Dictionary of Music, under the word cadenza, you will find the following definition of the term : A...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE CANCER PROBLEM—FURTHER EVIDENCE NEEDED. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] . SIR,—Your issue of August 0th contained an article of mine entitled "The Cancer Problem : New...
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THE BOUNDARY PROBLEM. [To the . Editor'of the SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSm,—The writer of the article entitled "The Boundary Problem " in the issue of August 23rd of your journal appears to have felt the difficulty of sustaining his dual contention...
THE SPARK OF THE NATION'S LIFE.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sia,—What is wrong with British Trade ? Is it not largely that the cost of manufacture, or rather the cost of British- made articles delivered...
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RUSSIA AND COMMON SENSE.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Will you kindly permit me to ask a few questions in connexion with your article under the above heading ? (1) How can the Soviet be said...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—The Spectator has rather
The Spectatorstrongly defended the treaty with Russia. May I call your attention to a letter in the Times last Saturday by Mr. Evelyn Hubbard ? As a very regular reader of your paper, I...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—I have read with
The Spectatorinterest your article on the above subject. May I be allowed to disagree with your last para- graph? You say that there is "almost an exact analogy" between the position of...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Your correspondent who replied
The Spectatorin your issue of August 9th, under the title "Old Conservative," to my letter of the week before raises the very cogent point of the applica- tion of my "general ideas and...
TIIE REAL BAR TO INDIAN SELF- GOVERNMENT.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Srn,—I have read a letter in your issue of August 2nd, signed "An Indian," in which a reference to Australia is made. I have lived in Australia...
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'.1..11E LITERATE PEOPLE.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] was immensely interested in the article by Mrs. Williams-Ellis in last week's Spectator. I think the Welsh— ha country districts at least—might...
THE EDUCATIONAL SIDE OF BROADCASTING.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sitt,—I hope that readers of the Spectator may be interested in the educational side of the British Broadcasting Company's programme for the...
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STYBARROW CRAG, ULLS WATER.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—I have not seen any notice in your columns of what looks like an impending encroachment or disfigurement of certain at present unenclosed...
CRUELTY IN SPORT.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.' SIR,—Apropos of Mr. Stephen Gwynn's excellent reply to the extremely wrong-minded sentimentality expressed in Mr. G. H. Cunningham's letter...
POETRY.
The SpectatorTHE SWIMMER. WHEN I had crossed the hill at last, And reached the water's brink, "For once, in all my life," thought I- " I'll swim in water fit to drink. "In this calm...
THE PHILOSOPHY OF ADVERTISEMENT.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Few men will disagree with Mr. Wragg's general statement (Spectator, August 9th), "Philosophy teaches that a man's true wealth consists in...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] by chance, considering the
The Spectatordistance from which I write, my letter is not too late, I should like to add a word to what " Piscator " has already written in your issue of June 28th. Sportsmen, on landing a...
HOW TO RECEIVE REPARATIONS.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin,—In your issue of August 23rd, Mr. Kiddy in his Finance article refers to "the cardinal principle of our having to discharge our own...
THE MANUFACTURE OF GREEN GLASS.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sia,—Having occasion to replace a green glass lamp-shade for the ordinary suspension lamp, I applied to a well-known firm of petrol gas...
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A BOOK OF THE MOMENT.
The SpectatorAN IMMORTAL LETTER. [COPYRIGHT IN UNITED STATES BY New York Times.] Sir Thomas Browne's Letter to a Friend, 1690. The Hasle- wood Reprints, No. 1. (Printed for Frederick...
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THE EGOTISTIC VACUUM.
The SpectatorMn. RICRWORD'S Rimbaud, different as it is in style and substance, is an admirable companion volume to Mr. Nicol. son's Verlaine. It completes our understanding of a relation-...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHIS WEEK'S BOOKS. Ma. JOHN BUCHAN'S anthology of Scots vernacular poetry, The Northern Muse (Nelson and Sons), is sure to make a tour of the work!, partly because of the...
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TWO BOOKS ON AGRICULTURE.
The SpectatorThe Rebuilding of Rural England. By Montague Fordham, M.A., Cantab. (Hutchinson and Co. 10s. 6d.) Agricultural Tribunal of Investigation : Final Report. (H.M.'s Stationery...
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MILITANT DIPLOMACY.
The SpectatorThe Diplomacy of Napoleon. By R. B. Mowat. (Edward Arnold. 165.) • IT is one of Sorel's theses that what led Napoleon on to dominate Europe, to crush Austria thrice, to set up...
THE CRAFTSMAN AS CRITIC.
The SpectatorTHE reviewer always shudders with dismay when he is invited to discuss another man's volume of critical essays, for the result is likely to be such very cold mutton. All the...
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A LABOUR LEADER.
The SpectatorTHERE was a time, not so long ago, when Mr. Robert Smillie appeared to many of us as a dark and even menacing figure, The great coal strike of 1912 has been obliterated in our...
THE NEW ARCHITECTURE.
The SpectatorIF we are bewildered by the sketches and photographs of Herr Mendelsohn's projected and completed works, we may turn to the foreword for enlightenment and read as follows :— "...
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SHORTER NOTICES.
The SpectatorTHE BIOLOGICAL FOUNDATIONS OF SOCIETY. By, Arthur Dendy, D.Sc., F.R.S. (Cassell. 7s. 6d. net.) This is an ambitious title for an unassuming and rather humdrum little book. It...
FICTION.
The SpectatorPLOT AND INCIDENT. The Little French Girl. By Anne Douglas Sedgwick. (Con- stable. 7s. 6(1.) The Link French Girl is a novel of the old style with a plot, misunderstandings,...
OTHER NOVELS.—Five in Family. By E. H. Anstruther (Mrs. J.
The SpectatorC. Squire). (John Lane. 7s. 6d.)—Readers of Mrs. Squire's former books will not need an introduction to this history of the Harding family. As in all narratives which con- tain...
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FINANCE—PUBLIC & PRIVATE.
The Spectator[BY OUR CITY EDITOR.] SOME ECONOMIC FALLACIES. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Although attention at the moment happens to be concentrated upon the question of the...
OLD LONDON CITY. A Handbook, partly alphabetical. By L. and
The SpectatorA. Russan. (Simpkiia. 3s. 6d. net.) The enthusiasm shown on every page of this interesting handbook should atone for its frequent inaccuracy and naivety of conjecture. Visitors...
Perhaps it is no achievement to write charmingly of the
The SpectatorScotch Highlands : so many chords of association wait in all our memories eager to respond. But Mr. Barnett plays upon them skilfully in this well-illustrated volume ; and he...
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FINANCIAL NOTES.
The SpectatorWhile investment stocks present a remarkably firm front, dealings undoubtedly are broadening out in the Industrial and in the semi-speculative markets. This is very well brought...