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INDEX FROM JULY 3rd TO DECEMBER 25th, 1936, INCLUSIVE.
The SpectatorTOPICS OF THE DAY A BYSSINIAN Recovery, Chances of. .. 92 Abyssinia To . day .. 372 Advertising, the Science of.. 389 Aiken, Newton, Article by .. .. 410 Air Defence,...
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The Failure and After The general view that though on
The Spectatorthis occasion sanctions have failed, the attempt to apply them was worth making, was best expressed by M. Litvinoff, who held that while in the existing circumstances it would...
NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT HE meeting of the League Assembly at Geneva has been, and could not but be, a melancholy affair. The abandonment of sanctions was made inevitable by the declared views of...
Italy and the World The relation of Italy to the
The SpectatorLeague and to international discussions generally remains problematic. The elaborately plausible memorandum which she placed before League delegates on Tuesday advances matters...
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The Problem of the Straits Though the Montreux Conference on
The Spectatorthe Dardanelles has been suspended to allow some of the delegates to attend the League Assembly at Geneva, informal con- versations can be carried on as well at one end of the...
Mr. Duff Cooper's Speech Read in the fullest reports available
The Spectatorin English news- papers, the now notorious speech made by Mr. Duff Cooper at a dinner of the Association Franco-Grande Bretagne in Paris last week is by no means the irre-...
Civil Service and Strikes Mr. Neville Chamberlain, answering a question
The Spectatorin the House of Commons on Tuesday, explained unam- biguously his attitude to the " stay-in " strike threatened by Civil Servants. The legal position did not interest him. Civil...
The Crisis in Palestine Ambushes, bomb outrages, attacks on military
The Spectatorpatrols and on the railways continue in Palestine, and in the opinion of many competent observers worse is still to come. Perhaps the greatest danger is that the Arab leaders...
France and the War Industries President Lebrun on Friday signed
The Spectatorthe Bills approved by the French Cabinet, " for the nationa- lisation of the manufacture of war material." They provide for nationalisation by decree, but it is not expected...
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When the debate began at 7.30 p.m. it was obvious
The Spectatorthat the Opposition were handicapped by the extreme narrowness of the issue upon which they had elected to fight. With characteristic Parliamentary ineptitude they had chosen...
It was just the kind of argument on which Sir
The SpectatorJohn Simon, who, in the absence of the Prime Minister, was in charge of the debate, might be expected to score heavily, and brilliantly he handled it. " I have here," he said, "...
The Week in Parliament Our Parliamentary Correspondent writes : As
The Spectatorso often in the House of Commons the storm bur,t from a cloudless sky. Members had assembled on Monday afternoon in scanty numbers expecting a humdrinn Parliamentary day...
Unemployment Assistance
The SpectatorThe announcement by the Minister of Labour in the House of Commons on Tuesday that the new Unem- ployment Assistance Regulations would, at last, be published on July 14th,...
Electricity and Efficiency While the wholesale distribution of electricity has
The Spectatorbeen reorganised, its retail distribution remains chaotic and inefficient. Over 600 different undertakings, using 43 different voltages and levying different rates, supply the...
6 ‘ The Spectator's " Net Sale Elsewhere in this issue
The Spectator(on p. ii.) will be found a statement regarding the current net sale of The Spectator. The figures—an average weekly sale of 21,060 copies over a period of 52 weeks—are the...
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PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT OR MR. LANDON ?
The SpectatorT HE American political scene has undergone notable changes during the past month. When the first of the great party conventions met, in Cleveland, the result of the November...
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THE GOVERNMENT AND THE B.B.C.
The SpectatorT HE Report of the Ullswater Committee on the future of broadcasting in Britain has now been followed by a 'White Paper giving the Government's decisions on the Committee's...
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A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorS IR AUSTEN CHAMBERLAIN'S resignation from the Executive Committee of the League of Nations Union is undeniably a blow to the Union. Sir Austen has been an admirable member of...
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THE EVOLUTION OF JOSEPH CHAMBERLAIN
The SpectatorBy R. C. K. ENSOR O N July 8th, 1836, in the then countrified suburb of Camberwell, was born of pure English descent Joseph Chamberlain. His father's family, of Wiltshire...
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INDIA REVISITED : X. WHAT OF TOMORROW ?
The SpectatorBy F. YEATS-BROWN [Mr. Yeats-Brown's eleventh article, which will appear next week under the title " Martial India," describes a visit to the N.W. Frontier and discusses the...
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RELIGIONS AND RELIGION
The SpectatorBy DR. NICOL MACNICOL A WORLD . Congress opens in London this week inspired. by the aim of promoting " a fellowship of common understanding and mutual appreciation " among the...
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WIMBLEDON
The SpectatorBy FREDERIC PROKOSCH IWIIT INIBLEDON has changed," said the old lady IT with the parasol, gently ; " the spirit of Wim- bledon has died, the delight has gone." Then she spoke...
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ICE TRAVEL
The SpectatorBy MICHAEL SPENDER The glaciers of the Arctic on the one hand and of the sub-tropics on the other are not easily pictured in terms of the familiar glaciers of Switzerland. The...
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FAREWELL JAFFA. !
The SpectatorBy JOHN SAYLER W E sat in the gravel-bedded garden of the German restaurant. Haifa was quiet tonight. No spit- ting, no demonstrations, no bombs. In the corner sat three of the...
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M 1RGINAL COMMENTS
The SpectatorBy E. L. WOODWARD Maldon Annie.' She sailed at slack water for Green- wich, and took the tide merrily on her return. She made a second voyage at half-past four, but if you...
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POLAND AND HER NEIGHBOURS Commonwealth and Foreign [To the Editor
The Spectatorof THE SPECTATOR.] SIR, —Since Marshal Pilsudski's death just over one year ago Poland's internal as well as foreign policy has undergone numerous changes, some of great...
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Russian Ballet at the Alhambra
The SpectatorSTAGE AND SCREEN The Ballet FOKIKE has produced this summer at the Alhambra two creations that overtop by far any new ballet seen in London since the production of Choreartium...
The Cinema
The SpectatorFury is Herr Fritz Lang's first American picture. The importation of Continental directori is always a nervous business, Hollywood offers so much in the way of technical...
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Opera
The SpectatorMr. Christie's Good Wine I FORGET whether among the proverbs that Charles Lamb proved to be untrue was included that which lays down that Good Wine needs no Bush. If omission...
Jeux de Hasard
The Spectator[D'un correspondant parisien] PENDANT que nous ecrivons ces lignes la radio &um ere les gagnants de la tranche du Grand Prix de la Loterie Nationale, ce sweepstake is la...
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COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorBritish Hoopoes In a record of the birds seen this year in the south-eastern counties some special emphasis is laid on the hoopoe and the thick-kneed plover. These two were...
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[To the Editor of TIIE SPECTATOR.] read with amazement in
The Spectatoryour issue of April 24th a letter written by the Duke of Montrose which says " that the Act which has just been passed has been accepted generally by the Natives of South Africa...
THE SOUTH AFRICAN FRANCHISE
The SpectatorLETTERS TO THE EDITOR [Correspondents are requested to keep their letters as brief as is reasonably possible. The most suitable length is that of one of our "News of the Week"...
THE PALESTINE SITUATION
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—It would be interesting if Mr. Jeffries would further elucidate his description of the Palestine Arab as " perpetually unheard,...
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PREPARATION FOR WAR [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSIR,—Is it not time that our country and its government did some clear thinking on the question of preparation for war ? Since the Great War it has been elear that any future...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—It is curious to
The Spectatornotice how often logic turns out to be the use of words to " get out of " facts. As your corre- spondent points out, the Roman Church denies "dictatorship" with all the force of...
RECOGNITION OF ANNEXATION
The Spectator[To the Editor of TUE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—I read the article entitled " The Right Way with Italy " in your last number with general assent, except on one point, as to which I feel...
RELIGION AND DICTATORSHIP
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Mr. Lloyd asks why dictators think Christians dangerous. I should say for the reason that Christians stand today, in their minority...
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A CONGRESS OF FAITHS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR, —You will, I hope, allow me to support Miss Cunning's letter upon the World Congress of Faiths, which will be held in London between July...
WHAT IS CHARACTER ?
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE ScEcrxroa.] listened to a lecture recently, in which the speaker discussed the peculiarities of the various human types, national and individual. At the...
SIGNS OF THE -TIMES
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—The greybeards—and not only the greybeards—are apt to shake their heads in disapproval of modern psychologists and modern novelists. They...
HAGGIS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTA'TOR.I Sin,—There is nothing peculiarly Scots in the custom of using the paunch of a sheep or other animal as a cooking pot. Very possibly it was the...
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MR. YEATS-BROWN ON INDIA
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—The only test anyone can apply to determine whether a cbntribution on India can be treated seriously is to see what the contributor has...
IS THE LAW A HASS ?
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—In the case instanced by " J.P." it does not seem that the law is a " Hass " : I am not so sure about your correspon- dent. I. know that...
A THREAT TO THE ALL-RED ROUTE
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] • SIR,—The All-Red Route, upon which we Britishers rightfully pride ourselves, is seriously threatened, and unless immediate steps are taken...
The Revolution
The Spectator"I AM bowed down to earth with other men's words. See ! My hand trembles with the stress of thought ; Nor can I lift the load of memory. Surely the time hie come to heal; the...
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Music in the. Cinema BOOKS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorBy DYNELEY HUSSEY Music came into the Cinema originally to perform the most menial of tasks. Once the novelty of seeing projected photographs moving, or rather flickering, upon...
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Castlereagh's Reputation
The SpectatorCastlereagh. By Sir John Marriott. (Methuen. 15s.) Iv would be difficult to think of any statesman whose reputation has enjoyed so striking a renaissance as that of Castlereagh....
Smuts and the World
The SpectatorTo write the second volume of Smuts' life has been a much more difficult task than to write the first. The first depicted Smuts against the background of the relative...
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Heads a Hammer, Tails a Sickle Dawn Over Samarkand. By
The SpectatorJoshua Kunitz. (Lawrence and Wishart. 7s. 6d.) How tiresome is the propagandist, and how oddly ineffective I When he pleads a cause, juggles in the abstract with ideas, he is...
Russia Revisited
The SpectatorMoscow Admits a Critic. By Sir Bernard Pares. (Nelson. 2s. 643.) Tax genesis of this book will be familiar to most readers of The Spectator, since a substantial part of it...
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-The Life of Charles James Fox. By Edward Lascelles. (Oxford
The SpectatorCharles James Fox I: University Press. 15s.) `A GEOLOGIST accustomed to describe the emergence of new formations in terms of ages and eras might well say that :since 1929 all...
The Art of Conversation Good Talk. By Esme Wingfield-Stratford. (Lovat
The SpectatorDickson. 6s.) Tuts " Study of the Art of Conversation " is pleasant and thorough, but Mr. Wingfield-Stratford does himself con- siderable disservice by leaving the most...
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Scotland Yard's Revenge
The SpectatorSix Against the Yard. (Selwyn and Blount. 78. 6d.) The President's Mystery Story. (The Bodley Head. 7s. 6d.) DETECTIVE-FICTION writers, with their gifted amateurs who make...
Sean O'Faolain
The SpectatorBird Alone. By Sean O'Faolain. (Jonathan Cape. 7s. 6d.) THE achievement of the author of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man was as much one of demolition as of creation....
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Fiction
The SpectatorBy WILLIAM PLOMER Guest of Reality. By Par :Lagerkvist.. Translated by Erik Mesteito'n a ii c):D. W.' Harding. 7s. 6d.) The Birds. By Frank Baker. (Peter Davies. 7s. 6d.)...
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The July Periodicals -
The SpectatorMR. J. A. SPENDER, whose experience and moderation are known to all, deals frankly with " The Root of the Mischief " in the Contemporary. There is a new kind of fear hanging...
A PALADIN OF ARABIA
The SpectatorCurrent Literature By Major N. N. E. Bray Lieutenant-Colonel Leachman, the subject of this book (Unicorn Press, 12s. 6d.), was one of those men to whom the War gave great...
THE FORTUNES OF HARRIETTE
The SpectatorBy Angela Thirkell Written mainly to blackmail her former lovers, the Memoirs of Harriette Wilson turned out to be as light-hearted and vivid a picture of Regency society as...
. ROUGH. PASSAGE
The SpectatorBy Commander R. D. Graham Rough Passage (Blackwood, 7s. 6d.) is Commander Graham's account of his recent voyage in the Emanuel ' from Fal- Mouth to Newfoundland, Labrador and...
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Two New Cars 15 Riley and 12 Wolseley
The SpectatorMotoring AETR0LT GH there is no possible basis of comparison between these two cars and none is needed, they have one point of resemblance in that they are good examples of the...
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- Electric Supply Itiiestmints
The SpectatorFinance THE Report of the Committee on Electricity Distribtition, of which Sir Harry McGowan was Chairman, represents nearly twelve months' work by Sir Harry and his two...
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Financial Notes STOCK EXCHANGE FACTORS.
The SpectatorBUSINESS on the Stock Exchange shows little sign of a return of the activity which occupied dealers a few months ago, but the turnover is probably up to the normal for the time...
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"The Spectator" Crossword No. 197
The SpectatorBY Zmeo 1.4 prize of one guinea well be given to the sender of the first correct solution of this week', crossword puzzle to be opened. Envelopes should be marked " Crossword...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD NO. 196 SOLUTION NEXT WEEK
The SpectatorThe winner of Crossword Puzzle No. 196 is Eustace Ridley, County Hall, S.E. 1.