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On Friday week the enemy began to fall back northwards
The Spectatorfrom the Marne, leaving machine-gun detachments at every point of vantage in the rough wooded country to delay the pursuit. The French and Americans followed him up quickly....
The Australians have distinguished themselves in two more local attacks.
The SpectatorNear Morlaneourt last Sunday they captured two lines of trenches with one hundred and forty-three prisoners, thus advancing our lines once more between the Ancre and the Somme...
Thursday week was the critical day, the results of which
The Spectatorcompelled the enemy to evacuate the Marne Valley. The Franco-American troops, attacking from the west the road from Soissons to Chateau- Merry, and advancing also from the south...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE Second Battle of the Marne has developed most favourably during the past week. General Foch pressed his advantage with such vigour that the enemy last Saturday retreated...
The enemy on Monday began to offer a much stronger
The Spectatorresistance, and heavy fighting developed on the west and south of the salient, now little mo'e than ten miles in depth from its northern base on the Vesle. Near Soissons a...
The Independent Air Force has had a very busy week
The Spectatorin Germany, especially in Baden and Wurttemberg. Our airmen visited Offen- burg by night on Thursday week and Monday and in daylight on Tuesday. They attacked Stuttgart by night...
The fact that the enemy made a regular attack, preceded
The Spectatorby a strong bombardment, on the French lines east of Oulchy on Tuesday, coupled with the reference in Tuesday's German report to " our new lines north of the Ourcq," seems to...
To complete this brief survey of the battle, we must
The Spectatoradd that General Gouraud in Champagne, net content with having smashed the enemy offensive on July 15th, began at once to recover by local attacks the broad outpost zone that he...
THE PAPER SHORTAGE.
The SpectatorTO OUR READERS.âIt is now necessary for readers to place a definite order for the " Spectator" with their Newsagent or at one of the Railway Book- stalls. Should any reader...
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On Tuesday week Mr. Justice Sankey began his investigation into
The Spectatorthe position of enemy aliens. He is assisted by five other members of the Aliens Advisory Committee. His task is to inquire into the circumstances of twenty-four thousand...
We earnestly appeal to the -Government to end this scandal
The SpectatorThey have had numerous proofs that whenever they take deter- mined ⢠action an appeasement immediately follows. The truth is that a large part of Irish popular opinion is...
It was an ominous sign that in his few remarks
The Spectatorabout Conscription Mr. Shortt talked only of trying to avoid it. He appealed for the help of the Nationalists to make voluntary recruiting a success is order that Conscription...
The Times of Wednesday summarized the Report of Mr. Justice
The SpectatorRowlatt's Committee on sedition in India. The .Report, whioh-ds unanimous, shows the association of the Bengal seditionists with German plots, the abortive effort to ship arms...
Field-Marshal von Eichhom, the German Military Dictator of the Ukraine,
The Spectatorwas assassinated at Kieft on Tuesday. A bomb was thrown at him and his adjutant while they were in the street; both died from their injuries. The assassin is said by the Germans...
In the House of Commons on Monday Mr. Dillon brought
The Spectatorforward a motion to the effect that the Irish policy of the Government was inconsistent with the principles for which the Allies were fighting. It would be vain, even if we had...
Mr. Dillon's frame of mind is indeed impossible and hopeless.
The SpectatorThe Irish Nationalists-have often been misled, but we do not think that they have ever had so bad a leader as Mr. Dillon. He beats the air with his phrases about the insults and...
Every one will admit that the Government have made grotesque
The Spectatorblunders in their treatment of Ireland. But if there had been the least sign of steady and loyal helpfulness on the part of Mr. Dillon and his friends, the worst of the blunders...
He went on to explain that he had most reluctantly
The Spectatorcome to the oonclusion that the inquiries of the Committee must be secret, for the simple reason that much of the evidence would be given by agents of Intelligence Departments,...
The Westminster Gazette on Tuesday published a striking article which
The Spectatorprofessed to give certain facts about the Ministry of Informa- tion under Lord Beaverbrook. The chief officials of this Ministry, which is a Ministry just as much as - the...
Mr. Asquith dissented from the proposal to refer the Irish
The Spectatorproblem to President Wilson. Yet another effort ought to be made at home to achieve an Irish settlement. Mr. Boner Law was well justified in saying at the end of the discussion...
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At the Central Criminal Court on Monday, Sir Joseph Jonas,
The Spectatorsteel manufacturer, a former Lord Mayor of Sheffield, was fined £2,000, and his clerk, C. A. Vernon, £1,000, with the costs of their prosecution, for the misdemeanour of...
The Select Committee on National Expenditure in its fifth Report,
The Spectatorwhioh was published last Saturday, tells the strange a story of the efforts of the War Office, the Admiralty, and the Ministry of Munitions to obtain a British supply of...
Happily Mr. Montagu made his own reservations. " India was
The Spectatorat the moment not ready. Disaster would await any one who wished to give Home Rule to India to-day. . . . So far as he could discover, the whole of India was opposed to Home...
Baron von Hussarek succeeded Dr. von Seidler as Premier of
The SpectatorAustria last week, and on Saturday obtained a majority of 19 votes in the Lower House for his Provisional Budget. The new Premier made vague promises, of the Austrian official...
Lord Robert Cecil, speaking on the Foreign Office Vote in
The Spectatorthe House on Wednesday, accepted in principle the changes recom- mended by the Royal Commission. The officials of the Foreign Office and of the Diplomatic Service should, he...
The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council on Monday once
The Spectatormore proved its capacity to deal with the most complex problems of Empire by determining the long dispute between the Chartered Company and the Legislative Council of Southern...
In the House of Commons on Thursday week Sir George
The SpectatorCave made a brief and guarded statement upon the Hague Agreement for the exchange and better treatment of prisoners of war. It provides for the repatriation of all combatant...
Speaking at Cambridge last Saturday, Mr. Montagu said that critics
The Spectatorof his Report on India had made attacks on the educated Indian people. He did not know what was to be gained by libelling the progressive part of the people of India. " Let us...
The Government on Friday week announced that if the strikers
The Spectatorin the munition factories at Coventry, or those who were threatening to strike in other places, were absent from work on Monday, they would be called up for military service....
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorBRITISH SHIPBUILDING. 'T HE statement by the First Lord of the Admiralty in the House of Commons on Tuesday was delivered in a more optimistic manner than the facts warranted....
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.1.11N, FIFTH YEAR OF WAR.
The SpectatorI T seems that the opening of the fifth year of war will coincide with a definitely new phase in the field. The effect of General Foch's brilliant counterstroke is that the...
THE VERDICT. IN " ISAACS VERSUS HOBHOUSE " AND ITS
The SpectatorLESSONS. T HE Marconi Libel Case ended (July 25th) in a verdict for the defendant, Sir Charles Hobhouse. Counsel on both sides admitted that the issue was " which of two men,...
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THE SECRET TREATIES.
The SpectatorT HE publication by the Bolsheviks of a Treaty made by Great Britain, France, and America with the Murman Regional Councilâthe accuracy of which cur Foreign Office neither...
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A
The SpectatorWINTER IN A FRENCH CHATEAU. Y OU who write to Captain Blank, Nth Brigade, H.Q., B.E.F.. France, can you picture your gallant correspondent's lodging ? If the Censorship and the...
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GRANNY AMPUTEE.
The SpectatorG RANNY AMPUTEE sat up and cried ! She was called Granny Amputee by that inevitable habit of all hospitals which labels all old ladies " Granny " and other patients by their...
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[To THZ EDITOR or THL " SPEC/11'08.']
The SpectatorSts,âMay I be allowed space in your columns to comment upon Mr. Roberts's letter which appeared in your issue of July 20th? Mr. Roberts remarks that his visits to Delhi and...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The Spectator[Letters of the length of one of our leading paragraphs arc often more read, and therefore more effective, than those which fill treble the space.] THE MONTAGU REPORT. [To rez...
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ITO THE EDIFOR OF THE " SPECT&TOR."1
The SpectatorSIR, â Evidently there is to be considerable discussion, both in your columns and in the country generally, of the changes con- templated in the administration of India....
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THE SOURCES OF TAXATION.
The Spectator[To TRY EDITOR or THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR,âAfter many months of discussion of the question of a capital levy, it seems clear that no satisfactory conclusion can be reached on...
THE " LEIPZIGER NEUESTE NACHRICHTEN." [To TEL EDMOR or THE
The Spectator" SPECTATOR.") Sia,âI understand that the Austrian postal authorities have for- bidden the circulation and delivery of the Leipziger Nette.sle Nachrichten owing to an attack...
PRAETERIT AETAS.
The Spectator(To THZ EDITOR or TEL " SPECTATOIL.n] SIR, âIs "S. W." right in ascribing the depressing effect of hills on his friend to her growing old P I well remember my first experience...
THE CZECHO-SLOVAKS IN SIBERIA.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF TEE " SPECTATOR."] Sin,âI have found to-day (July 29th) in the North China Daily Newsâas telegraphed from Shanghaiâwhat I have been looking for in our...
CULTIVATION IN THE ROYAL PARKS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] Sin,âMr. Thomas's letter in your issue of July 20th and your comments thereon put the matter so clearly that there is little more to add....
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"GERMAN CHARACTER AND BRITISH APATHY." (To THE EDITOR OF THE
The Spectator" SPECTATOR.") hold no brief for the German nationâGod forbid! This war has cost me a son. Though of genuine British stock, this son was born over twenty-three years ago in...
THE LATE EX-EMPEROR OF RUSSIA.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] Pis,âI venture to think that the tone of your paragraph in the last issue of the Spectator on the murder of the ex-Emperor of Russia...
" REX V. BILLING."
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR. OF THE " SPECTATOR."] Eni,âMy amazement is deepened by Pr - ofessor Hazel's letter in your issue of July 27th. Bowman v. The Secular Society decided that a...
[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR.") SIR,âI am glad
The Spectatorto see that you are not among those who have let pass the murder of the ex-Tsar without a few words of pity and commiseration in your last number. Those who think at all about...
THE LAND AND THE SOLDIER.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR or THE " SPECTATOR."] Sra,âIn your interesting article the other day on the subject of soldier settlement you lay stress on a point which is constantly...
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" HOWLERS."
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] " What is a fool's paradise ? " A. " Please, Sir, a lunatic
THE WOMEN'S HOLIDAY FUND.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR,âI venture once more to ask for your valuable support in appealing for help for the Women's Holiday Fund. We are not now assisting...
POETRY.
The SpectatorTHE FALSE BRETHREN. [" Seamen never forget and seamen never forgive, and they have looked upon their deed not once but a hundred times. . . . In every foreign port the Germans...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorGOVERNMENT AND THE WAR.* PROFESSOR SPENSER WILKINSON has collected in this volume son s Oxford lectures delivered before the war and other lectures and essays written since...
NOTICE.âWhen "Correspondence" or Articles 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 agree- ment with the views therein expressed or with the mode...
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BRITAIN'S WAR-RELIEF WORK IN FRANCE.⢠Ties aim of this record
The Spectatorcould not be better described than in the words of Id. Paul Cambon when he speaks of " the admirable work of the men and women of Great Britain who have come, as in a holy * For...
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WORKHOUSE CHARACTERS.*
The SpectatorThis is a " good book "âin every sense of the phrase. It is well written, it is realistic, it is humorous, and it is edifying. All this does not affect the fact that it is...
SHOOTING DAYS.â¢
The SpectatorA CERTAIN metaphysician recently misanthropically remarked (a propos of Euclid) that it appeared impossible for any book to combine accuracy with intelligibility, still less...
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SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator[Notice in Chit column doe, not necemarily preclude subsequent review.] TICE AUGUST MONTI:MIDS.âThe Nineteenth Oentury has a timely article on " The Greatest ' League of...
FICTION.
The SpectatorKAREN. * MRS. SIDGWIOIC'S new novel is the story of a high-spirited English girl who marries a German officer of rank before the war, remains in Germany for two years after his...
The Reproduction of Sound. By Henry Seymour. (W. B. Tattersall,
The Spectator10s. 6d.)âIn the last twenty years the talkingmachine has passed definitely from the stage of an unusually objectionable and blatant toy to that of a musical instrument of...
RICLDABLE NOVEL3.âThe Lonely Stronghold. By Mrs. Baillie Reynolds. (Cassell and
The SpectatorCo. 6a.)âA decidedly original story of life in an old "Pale" in the extreme North of England. The author contrives to introduce exciting adventures without their becoming...
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The Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge has done a service
The Spectatorto students of all ages in issuing two cheap and well-printed pamphlets containing Selections from Matthew Paris and Selections from Giraldus Cambrensis (9d. each), edited, with...
The Patrimony of the Roman Church in the Time of
The SpectatorGregory the Great. By Edward Spearing. (Cambridge University Press. 13s. net.)âMiss Spearing has done well to edit this scholarly essay by her brother, a young Cambridge...
Natural Science and the Classical System in Education. (W. Heine-
The Spectatormann.. 2s. 6d. net.)âOf these essays new and old, edited by Sir Ray Lankester for the Committee on the Neglect of Science, the most suggestive are the Master of Balliol's plea...
In the current number of History (Macmillan and Co., le.)
The Spectatorwill be found an admirable address on " America's Entry into the War," by Professor A. C. McLaughlin, of Chicago University. His account of the slow crystallization of American...
Ypres. By C. J. Magrath. (Red Triangle Press. ls.)âThis little
The Spectatorhistory of Ypres, with a plan and photographs arranged in pairs to show some of the famous buildings before the war and their remnants at the present time, will interest both...
We have received a highly interesting Report for 1918 from
The Spectatorthe Rhodesia Munitions and Resources Committee, formed in 1915 at the request of the Ministry of Munitions to take stock of the country's resources and to see how they could be...