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Scotland We have tried to make this issue of the
The SpectatorSpectator of especial interest to Scotsmen and - Scotsivomen, in the fullest confidence that we could not pOSSIbly make it thereby of less interest to humbler folk. Here let us...
The King's message expressed His trust that under the â¢
The SpectatorUnion the Assembly would still " hold aloft the Lamp of Faith in Our ancient Kingdom of Scotland." Last Saturday Lord Cecil addressed a large party given by the . Lord High...
EDITORIAL' AND PUBLISHING OFFICES : 99 Gower Street, London; W.C.
The Spectator1.âA Subscription to the SpzerteroR costs Thirty Shillings per annum, including postage, to any part - of - the world. The SPECTATOR is registered as a Newspaper. -The Postage...
, India There is rather less hope, but as yet
The Spectatorno certainty, ' that the Federal Structure Committee will meet in , London as early as June 29th, the date suggested by the Secretary of State in a dispatch which electrified...
News of the Week
The SpectatorGeneva T HE session of the Council of the League of Nations came to an end last Saturday. As we have dealt with some of its work in a leading article, and a correspondei%t at...
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On Friday, May 22nd, the Lower House received the Land
The SpectatorBill, and Dr. Addison said of it on the motion for adjournment that " they would not get a satisfactory policy which would be permanently successful unless it inspired public...
Lord Rutherford's speech last week evoked a letter to The
The SpectatorTimes of the 22nd from Sir Harry McGowan, giving the view of an international industrialist. He wrote that it was now possible to undertake this-hydrogenation of coal on any...
China The constitution unanimously passed by the Peoples' Convention which
The Spectatorbroke up at Nanking last week is well termed provisional. If the Convention itself cannot be said to have been deliberately " packed," its results, outwardly so flattering to...
Parliament The Whitsuntide recess relieved Parliament from its labours after
The SpectatorFriday, May 22nd, until the Members return to Westminster on the eve of Derby - Day. On Thursday, the 21st, the Upper House passed the Agri- cultural Land (Utilization) Bill as...
British Industry The Ministry of Labour issued last week its
The Spectatorreport for 1980, which it describes as an " outstandingly bad year "âthat is no worse news (though -worse Englisl) that we have learnt to expect The Ministry tries to offer...
Mineral oil has been prominent at home and abroad. The
The Spectatordisposal of the Iraq supplies has been settled for the time, greatly to the advantage of that country's revenues, which will benefit long before those who have spent £4,000,000...
More troops have gone to Burma, where the , rebels in
The Spectatorthe jungle continue to emulate gangsters in everything save in making irresponsible bloodshed profitable. Much practical spade-work is being done in India, if not behind the...
Egypt To ⢠those who remember the struggles between the
The SpectatorEgyptian Liberal Party and the Wafd there must be something cynical about their alliance against the predent Government. They gambled before the election on the tactical...
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Professor Einstein at Oxford Oxford honoured Professor Einstein with the
The Spectatordegree of D.Sc. last Saturday, when he gave the last of his three Rhodes lectures on his theory of Relativity. It was significant of the courage of lecture-goers that the Pro-...
* * * * By-Elections The results of two by-elections
The Spectatorwere declared at the end of last week. They made no change in the strength of the parties in the House of Commons. In the Stroud Division of Gloucestershire the figures were :...
The ' Empress of Britain ' On Wednesday the '
The SpectatorEmpress of Britain' sailed from Southampton on her maiden voyage to Canada. Her construction and launching are another of those milestones which, even in these depressed days,...
Bank Rate 21 per cent., changed from 8 per cent.
The Spectatoron May 14th, 1931. War Loan (5 per cent.) was on Wednesday 102* ; on Wednesday week, 1021; a year ago, 102,, Funding Loan (4 per cent.) was on Wednesday 961; on Wednesday week,...
* * * * Empire Day May 24th, Queen Victoria's
The Spectatorbirthday, has now been recognized as Empire Day for nearly forty years, and officially since 1916. This was due in great measure to the pertinacious idealism of Lord Meath, and...
The Labour Conference The question of hours of work in
The Spectatorcoal mines is due for discussion at the International Labour Conference at Geneva, which began on Thursday. The draft convention which failed to pass last year's Conference on...
That science knows no. frontiers has been well demon- strated
The Spectatorby -the eager welcome that Professor Einstein's novel theories have received from the outset. Unlike his ,predecessors in this field of research, he has not had to write for...
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The World in Council
The SpectatorO N the whole the world may be well satisfied by the acts and deliberations of the Council of the League of Nations which closed its latest session last Saturday and will again...
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Scotland To-day
The SpectatorBY WALTER ELLIOT, M.P. S COTLAND to-day is a small state in a large empire, and suffers from the uneasiness of both. The small states of the world are nowadays jealous and...
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Self-Government for Scotland
The SpectatorBY Tim DUKE OF MONTROSE. " S COTLAND is the only white nation in Europe 1 .0 that does not manage its own affairs "âso said Miss Elma Campbell, the Nationalist candidate in...
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Oil from Coal
The SpectatorBY JOHN STRACHEY. FF VER since the War, and after the present depression in the British mining industry set in, the nation has been thinking' of the possibility of what is...
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The Colour Bar
The Spectator[The Spectator does not necessarily agree with all the views of the writers contributing to this series on the Colour Bar. Our object in publishing the series is to attempt some...
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The Idea of GodâIX
The Spectator[Next week Mr. G. P. MalalasPkera, of Ceylon University College, will write on " The Idea of God in Buddhism."] The' Hindu Idea of God EY S. RADHAKRISHNTAN If we ask for the...
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Some Golf Caddies
The SpectatorBy IAN HAY. T HE other day, while sheltering from a summer snowstorm on a Surrey golf course, I entered into an idle discussion with my partner (and contemporary) as to how many...
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The The Fisherman's Dream of Scotland
The SpectatorBy MAURICE IIEADLAM. T HE keen and impecunious fisherman may find occupation, both -pleasing and inexpensiveâit will shorten- a train journey or a-dull committee -meeting...
The Weather
The SpectatorBY GERALD HEARD. - M ETEOROLOGY is not - yet a : it "his not . - yet gone beyond being a well-informed gue§s. - At first sight it seems ridichldus that, after generation§ of...
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A HINT TO ADVERTISERS.
The SpectatorSeveral London firms and garages have adopted the practice of leaving advertising matter in people's cars while the owners are absent. Sometimes they enclose their leaflets in...
A Penny of Observation
The SpectatorORDEAL BY HOLIDAY The Holiday Spirit, to which so many references are made at this time of year in the columns of our contemporaries, is something very different from the "...
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Correspondence
The Spectator[THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS COUNCIL AND EUROPEAN COMMITTEE.] [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.} SIR,âThe iiinultaneous meetings of the League of Nations Council and the League's...
Music
The Spectator[COVENT GARDEN Orrate.] THE German season at Covent Garden has been consistently well attended. The Ring, of course, is now an established ritual here ; and Rosenkavalier,...
AN INTOLERABLE PEST.'
The Spectator" Can you please tell us," asks a correspondent of one of our daily contemporaries, "how to get- rid of bats in the church ? " There are various ways of getting rid of bats in...
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ATTEXPTED SUICIDES.
The SpectatorNot fewer than seven females, of different ages, attempted to put a period to their existence on Monday. One of them, whose name is unknown, had taken oxalic acid ; she was...
A Hundred Years Ago Two men were hanged on Wednesday
The Spectator; one for sheep-stealing, the other for stealing in a dwelling-house. It was alleged, in aggro.- vation of the crime of the former, that his character was badâhe was what the...
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The claims of the p ⢠lace to become an official
The SpectatorPark are worth some investigation. Nowhere else in Great Britain is found a block of mountains of such combined breadth and height. Their vertebrae of granite and gneiss give...
* * * * FISH FOOD.
The SpectatorIn a neighbouring district of this Western country some of us made a little investigation into the food of a very different animal. It was the period just before the rise of the...
Country Life
The SpectatorBANFF AND BANFF. Scotland may be said to have won a victory in the field of aesthetics over England and Wales. While the clairits of Dartmoor, Snowdonia, Dovedale and the Lakes...
a *
The SpectatorThe threat to the Scottish rivers is perhaps not so serious as against the small domestic rivers near London ; but a beneficent change begins to be seen. The Lee commissioners...
THE BEST ZOO IN THE WORLD._
The SpectatorIt is probably true to say that not half a person per cent. expected the new Zoo opened on Whit Saturday, at Whipsnade, to be as good as it was. The bluebells were thicker, the...
* * * DESECRATED RIVERS,
The SpectatorAt the moment no animal seems to need sanctuary so much as the rivers themselves, in Scotland as in England and Wales. They are grossly violated in every sort of way ; and it is...
a a a All who visit the wilder parts of
The SpectatorBritain must wonder a little at their Joneliness. I spent a day recently on a grouse moor in the West. It belongs, so to say, to the public. Much of it, that is to say, is...
* a a a . POPULOUS RryErts.
The SpectatorHow yeasty with life most waters are ! In one stream stocked with fish some years 'ago a good deal of water butter- cup was planted 'in order to give shelter for the fish as...
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[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sur,âHaving lately spent a
The Spectatoryear in the United States may I mention one or two facts about the relations of black and white people there ? An American friend of mine, a native of Boston, teaches in a...
Letters to the Editor
The Spectator[in r:Tea, of the length of many of the Idlers which we receive, we would remind correspondents that we often cannot give space for long letters and that short ones are...
THE COLOUR BAR
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SvEcraron.] Sia,âIn the Spectator of April 11th, a correspondentâan Afrieantates that a body of Bishops has made the following startling discovery :...
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[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âIf " there is
The Spectatornothing incompatible between 100 per cent. enthusiasm for the British Commonwealth and 100 per cent. enthusiasm for the League " (Spectator, May 23rd, page 810), then,...
THE LEAGUE AND THE PRESS [To the Editor of the
The SpectatorSPECTATOR.] Sta,âI am sure all your readers must have been pleased with your spirited paragraphs on " The League and the Press." It is, as you say, absurd to mock at the...
SLAVERY IN SIERRA LEONE [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSIR,âThe conflicting accounts of West African slavery may be due to the inconsistencies of a transitional stage. The hardships of the servile status had been mitigated, and...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âI venture to point
The Spectatorout the inaccuracy of that part of the last paragraph but one of the article on Colour Bar, by Professor L. W. Lyde, in your issue of May 16th, which reads thus : " There...
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IMPRISONMENT OF BOYS ON REMAND
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sm,âSpeaking from experience of thousands of lads between the ages of sixteen and twenty-one who have been committed to prison on remand...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âMr. Denyer's thirty-six years'
The Spectatorexperience as a Magis- trate's Clerk entitles him to a respectful hearing, but others of equal weight hold very different opinions. I call as witness on my side the Prison...
THE NEW ZEALAND EARTHQUAKE
The Spectator[To' the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âWould you be so kind as to allow me to appeal to any of your readers interested in New Zealand for the church in the dioCese affected...
THE WALLACE CASE
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âThe case of Mr. William Wallace, whose appeal against the sentence of death passed upon him at Liverpool was allowed by the Court of...
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GREAT CRESTED GREBE
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,âYou were kind enough to publish a letter last November on the subject of our inquiry into the distribution of the Great Crested Grebe in...
POINTS FROM LETTERS RURAL AMENITIES.
The SpectatorThe case for Rural Amenities has now been recognized as a responsibility for the Government : the report of the Royal Commission on National Parks has been published, and the...
LETTERS OF BEARDSLEY.
The SpectatorI am editing a collection of nearly 200 letters written by Beardsley to his publisher, Leonard Smithers, between the years 1895 and 1898. As these are not a complete col-...
TRAPPING WILD ANIMALS FOR FUR.
The SpectatorAt the annual meeting of the National Federation of Women's Institutes at the Albert Hall, where some 8,000 women delegates from all over the country were assembled, the...
LOTTERIES
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPEcriszron.] SIR,âI have been much interested in the views expressed in your columns on the subject of Lotteries, because I have given a good deal of...
Song for Telemachus
The SpectatorDARK Ithaca rises from the waters of the sunlit midday sea, and in the silence of the sun stands the palace of Ulysses. Over the crags and the rising roofs is the tower where...
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"Spectator" Competitions
The SpectatorRULES AND CONDITIONS Entries must be typed or very clearly written on one side of the paper only. The name and address, or pseudonym, of the competitor must be on each" entryand...
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The Modern Home
The SpectatorIts Origins I HAVE been whiling away part of a wet week (ye godsâall nine of youâa wet week by the sea, in Italy, in May ! What an excuse for Lars Porsena !) by exploring...
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John Aubrey
The Spectator1931.) 1642, when I first came to Oxon." A COMPLETE, or almost complete, transcript of Aubrey's manuscripts was published in 1898 by the Clarendon Press: edited with scholarly...
British For eign Policy
The SpectatorSpeeches on Foreign Affairs. By Sir Edward Grey (the Viscount Grey of Fallodon). Selected with an introduction by Paul Knaplund, Ph.D. London. (Allen and Unwin. 10s. 6d.) Jr is...
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A Michelangelo's Sonnets
The SpectatorIn the Days of the Giants. By W. J. Doherty. With an Intro- ⢠duction by Viscount Knebworth. . (Harrap. 10s; 6d.) ME qualities which make a man a master in any particular...
Discovering America
The SpectatorThe States through Irish Eyes. By E. OE. Somerville. (Heinemann. 8s. 6d.) The States through Irish Eyes. By E. OE. Somerville. (Heinemann. 8s. 6d.) New York. By Paul Morand....
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London's Pride
The SpectatorOld London Bridge. By Gordon Home. (Lane. 3Js. . 6d.) IN this volume, strikingly illustrated by the reproduction of contemporary prints and maps, Major Home, Who is London's...
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The Scottish National War Memorial
The SpectatorTheir Name Liveth : the Book of the Scottish National War MOST truly national is the Scottish War Memorial. In no way is the sense, of Scottish unity in this high matter more...
A Plea for Religion
The SpectatorThe Prospects of Humanism. By Lawrence Hyde. (Gerald Howe. 10s. 6d.). - - Ma. LAWRENCE HYDE'S first book, The Learned Knife . , attracted the attention of the discerning,...
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" Beautiful Enemies " THE twelve addresses on the relations
The Spectatorbetween religion and science which were broadcast by the B.B.C. last autumn ttracted an unusual amount of attention ; partly because f the peculiar interest of the matter and...
East and West WHAT is a travel-book ? A book
The Spectatorwhich tells of the travels of someone else or a book which tells you how to conduct yours ? A book which dilates on the food, the beds, the sanitation and motor-bus routes (all...
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Fiction
The SpectatorThe Rough and the Smooth Hatter's Castle. By A. J. Cronin. (Gollancz. 8s. 6d.) Friends and Relations. By Elizabeth Bowen. (Constable. 7s. 6d.) John Boddy. By Temple Thurston....
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MY HUSBAND SIMON. By Mollie Panter-Downes. (Collins, 7s. 6d.)âMisunderstood by
The Spectatora Philistine husband what should -a young writer do when offered a contract and the " protection " of her American publisher ? Miss Panter-Downes slickly and shrewdly reports...
YEHUDA. By Meyer Levin. (Cape. 7s. 6d.)âThe founding of the
The Spectatornew Israelite nation in the land of Israel is hard. Yehuda, who might perhaps have been a great violinist, worked on the farm commune of Carmel. A strange, mannered novel, with...
THE COMPFJ.LED HERO. By Richard Heron Wart (Gollancz. 7s. 6d.)âHow
The Spectatorboring these adolescent bohemians " and their Montparnasse parties can be I Mr. Ward contrives to be mildly ironical, is frequently faCetious, and unblushingly gives his...
⢠A CERTAIN MAN. By Oliver Onions. (Heinemann. 7s. 6d.)âA
The Spectatormagic coat turns Christopher Darley, adver- tising man, into a Christian or a pagan-or something else disappointingly sentimentalized by the author.
Mr. Elliot O'Donnell seems tireless in his exploration of the
The Spectatorsupernatural, and the results which he gives us in his latest volume Rooms of Mystery (Phillip Allen, 8s. 6d.) are enough to make the nervous terrified at the idea of spending...
MING AND MAGNOLIA. By Catherine I. Dodd. (Jarroldz 7s. 6d.)âThe
The Spectatormotif of this incoherent story is an unlucky Chinese vase which impels a self-conscious young woman to rewrite a Queen Anne period diary she discovers. A bewildering pot-pourri.
Some Books of the Week Tim Poet Laureate recently contributed
The Spectatorto this journal a poem on Adam and Eve, as Chaucer might have told their story. The poem was obviously a jets ftesprit, but it showed -how closely Mr. John Masefield has studied...
OUT OF FOCUS. By Joan Haslip. (Cobden-Sanderson. 78. 6d.)âThese letters
The Spectatorfrom a young woman to a middle- aged novelist, though charmingly written, fail to " put across " either atmosphere or character convincinglyâa difficulty inherent in the...
New "Novels
The SpectatorSILVER LEY. By Adrian Bell. (Cobden-Sanderson. 7s. 6c1.) âThere is little incident in this chronicle by a poet turned farmer, but he presents a very balanced and sane picture...
MY PARTICULAR. MURDER. By David Sharp. (Bean, 7s. 6d.)âA quick
The Spectatormoving tale of adventure among crooks, exceptional because it is not a mystery story.
THE EARTH TOLD ME. By Thames Williamson. (Harrap, 7s. 6d.) â A
The Spectatortriangle situation among people who are slow and passionlesi is irksome.. Mr. , Williamson is a bette r observer of local customs in Alaska than he is a creative artist.
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Mr. F. A. Mackenzie, an experienced and capable journalist, has
The Spectatoraccomplished the task of writing Lord Beaverbrook, An Authentic Biography (Jarrolds, 18s.) with his usual facility. That the materials for constructing anything like a...
With the admirable design of developing and making avail- able
The Spectatorfor study circles and popular teaching the findings of the Lambeth Conference, Messrs. Nisbet have begun the publication under distinguished auspices of a " Lambeth Series " of...
Some Scottish Books " WHAT I have set down, I
The Spectatorhave set down half in idleness and half out of that affection which is common to man and trees for the soil in which they have been for ages rooted," is Mr. Cunninghame Graham's...
* * * * Others beside Mr..Hardcastle " love everything
The Spectatorthat's old," and like him enjoy "old manners, old books, and old wine." A great many people in their time have enjoyed Robert Chambers' Traditions of Edinburgh, a new and...
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The SpectatorAnything that comes from the pen of Sir Herbert Maxwellâ historian, archaeologist, Scottish patriot and anglerâis valuable. In this case it is The Place Names of Galloway...
U-Boat Stories, by Karl Neureuther and Claus Bergen (Constable, 10s.),
The Spectatoris a collection of personal narratives by all ranks and ratings of their war experiences. The best of them are clear, simple stories of endurance, resource and daring. Many of...
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The SpectatorSo perfervid a Scot is Mr. Alastair Alpin MacGregor that even from his home in Chelsea he will write in A Last Voyage to St. Kilda (Cassell, 7s.. 6c1.) " he is driving a pickle...
Glisgow celebrating her Civic and Empire Week from May 29th
The Spectatoruntil June 6th. In honour of these celebrations the Book of Glasgow has been published by the Corporation of the City of Glasgow Civic and Empire Week Comniittee for the price...
We welcome a reprint of the late Reverend Alexander Warrack's
The SpectatorA Scots Dialect Dictionary (Chambers, 5s.). Mr. Warrack was one of thegreatest authorities on Scottish dia- lectal usages, and this volume will furnish an additional impetus to...
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Travel
The Spectator[We publish on this page articles and notes which may help our readers in making their plans for travel at home and abroad. We shall be glad to answer questions arising out of...
Scotland for the Motorist
The SpectatorI CAN see only one drawback to the motorist's enjoyment the beauties of Scotland, and that is the clim.ste. Given Inc With the weather, touring over the greater part of the...
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* * * *
The SpectatorWas Pontius Pilate born in Scotland ? Mr. D. C. Cuts bertson in Highlands,- Highways and Heroes (R. Grant, 7s. so says that the fact is "admitted," and there is certainly j e...
Another of the Kitbag Travel Books, also invaluable ie the
The Spectatorholiday maker in Switzerland, is Mr. Arnold Lunn) Switzerland : Her Topographical, Historical and Lit Landmarks (Harrap, 7s. ad.). This book was published 1928, but it is not...
Nobody is more competent to write on Burgundy than Mr,
The SpectatorStephen Gwynn. With his taste for the best wines and tlx best dishes he could not have a more fertile field to wane in. He describes in his book Burgundy (Harrap, 7s. edl one of...
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The SpectatorIn all Scotlandâand Scotland is very generous in the matte of trout-fishingâthe best centre for a real fishing holiday is Whitebridge, in Inverness-shire, while Loch Lomond...
Admirably indexed, well tabulated with numbers of null and illustrations,
The SpectatorThe Pocket Guide to the IVest Indies, by Algernon Aspinall (Sifton, Praed, 10s.), is an essential additi to the Library of any traveller to these most interest' islands. It is...