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THE CABINET STIRABOUT
The Spectator90HE Cabinet changes announced on Thursday are I better calculated to impair confidence in the Govern- ment than to increase it. The Prime Minister's authority over the House of...
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NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorI T is obviously as distressing to the great majority of the French nation as it is to their friends in this country to learn that efforts are being made by some members of the...
Revenue and Expenditure
The SpectatorIn making estimates in war-time a Chancellor of the Exchequer is necessarily making provision for the unknown on both sides of the balance-sheet. Sir John Simon may congratulate...
M. Molotoff's Ambiguities
The SpectatorThe speech of M. Molotoff, the Russian Prime Minister and Commissar for Foreign Affairs, delivered before the Supreme Council of the Soviet Union last week, was sus- ceptible...
The German White Book
The SpectatorThe German White Book, containing documents alleged to have been found among the Polish Foreign Office archives at Warsaw, is another example of the mischief which German...
Mr. Wang Installed
The SpectatorThe Government of Central China, under Mr. Wang Ching-wei, whom Japan has established at Nanking as her protége, was duly inaugurated with a singular absence of ostentation last...
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The details of the re-shuffle became known at Westminster late
The Spectatoron Wednesday night. There was little surprise, for the impression had already become general that no broadening of the basis of the Ministry was intended. Apart from the...
able that the Executive Committee of the National Union of
The SpectatorConservative Associations should be submitting a resolution to their forthcoming party conference deprecating criticism " designed to undermine the authority of the Government."...
The Week in Parliament .
The SpectatorOur Parliamentary correspondent writes: Mr. Chamber- lain's statement on the progress of the war contained no surprises. It was merely the official announcement of decisions,...
The Refugee Committees
The SpectatorThe Home Secretary has now completed the appointment of chairmen of the advisory committees which are to recon- sider some of the cases of aliens who have been exempted...
Food and the Ploughing-up Policy
The SpectatorOn the Minister of Agriculture's statement that there were 53,000 tractors in the United Kingdom at the outbreak of war and that 17,000 more will have come into use by the...
The Price of Food
The SpectatorThe Labour Party was undoubtedly expressing a general grievance when it complained of the high prices of food in the House of Commons last Tuesday ; and it was no doubt right...
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THE EVE OF ACTION ?
The SpectatorS INCE the last issue of this journal went to press the Supreme War Council of the Allies has met in London to take important decisions regarding the immediate future of the...
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PARLIAMENT AND THE GOVERNMENT
The SpectatorT HE Parliament which reassembled last Tuesday is nearly five years old, and in normal circum- stances would be due for dissolution. But now it sees its life extended for an...
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A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorB RITISH diplomats from the Balkans are flocking home this week, and cynics, I suppose, would suggest that some of them might with advantage stay at home. I have no idea of...
The Nuremberg Rally is fixed for November as usual, and
The Spectatoris to be called," A Victory Rally." Last year it was fixed for November as usual, and was to be called " A Pea,_. Rally." It was not held.
I don't know whether the B.B.C. thought it was taking
The Spectatora tisk in inviting Sir Joseph Addison to take the place of "Onlooker" last Friday. If so it was a risk that justified itself abundantly. Sir Joseph, who was Counsellor of...
Three of the first four films made at the instigation
The Spectatorof the Ministry of Information—they were given a private showing on Tuesday, before M. Frossard and Sir John Reith —are exactly of the sort to be encouraged. (The exception is a...
I had known J. A. Hobson for, I suppose, thirty-odd
The Spectatoryears. His death removes a figure which fits into no precise category. He was an economist of real distinction, but never recognised as orthodox by the orthodox ; his theory...
Two conversations. At 2.3o one day this week someone stopped
The Spectatorme. " A man I know," he said, " has just been putting in for a commission in the Guards. The first ques- tion he was asked was ' Do you hunt? ' " At 3.3o someone quite...
We are a logical race. " One of my constituents,"
The Spectatoran M.P. friend, a supporter of the Government, tells me, " said after Munich that he must vote against me in future because of the Government's disgraceful capitulation. Now he...
—News Chronicle headline.
The SpectatorPerfectly right. Let America wrap herself in her owil virtue and constrict herself in her own corsets. JANus.
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THE WAR SURVEYED : TIME AS A BELLIGERENT
The SpectatorBy STRATEGICUS F Mr. Chamberlain's reference to naval operations in the I neighbourhood of Jutland means a real change of policy, the event may have an influence on the war far...
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THE ALLIES AND RUSSIA
The SpectatorBy LEON BLUM [The Socialist Leader, who was Prime Minister of France in 1936-7 and 1938, is Editor of "Le Populaire "1 T HE truth must be faced. The cruel and dangerous peace...
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FEDERAL UNION EXAMINED IV
The SpectatorBy WILSON HARRIS DROF. LIONEL ROBBINS' article in last week's 1 Spectator reveals, as I hoped and expected, the existence of a considerable area of common ground between him as...
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IRON-ORE CARGOES AND THE LAW
The SpectatorBy AN INTERNATIONAL LAWYER O N March 1st, 1915, Mr. Asquith, when announcing the first retaliatory measures providing for the seizure of goods of German origin or destination,...
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BELGIUM AND THE WAR
The SpectatorBy LOUIS PIERARD (Deputy for Mons) A FTER seven months of war, the Belgians have come to believe in miracles. Seven months of war, and they continue to enjoy the benefits of...
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THE PUBLIC SCHOOLBOY'S VIEW
The SpectatorBy MARK BONHAM-CARTER O NCE more an attack has been launched against the public schools, and once more parents, politicians and schoolmasters have expressed their opinions on...
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TALE-LESS DONKEY
The SpectatorBy M. ST. CLARE BYRNE T HE last time I listened to Haw-Haw he had a cold in his nose. It made his voice a little more human . but otherwise he was in good form—good enough to...
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NEUTRALS' VIEWS
The SpectatorStockholms Tidningen (Sweden): Great Britain and France insist that Norwegian newt ::; one-sidedly favours Germany, and they demand a This is a demand which the Norwegians...
CALEDONIAN MARKET
The SpectatorA WORK-BASKET made of an old armadillo Lined with pink satin now rotten with age, A novel entitled The Ostracised Vicar With a spider squashed flat on the title-page, A...
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Commonwealth and Foreign BRITAIN AND SWISS MISCONCEPTIONS
The SpectatorA SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT By Switzerland, March 28th, 1940. HE affair of Finland's surrender to Russia has been so I successfully exploited by the Germans that, rather than...
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It is strange to realise how large a part the
The Spectatorpuny triumph plays in Nazi, and indeed in Fascist, mentality. How indicative of the uncertain and therefore ungenerous mind is this delight in small humiliations, in the tweak...
Assuredly it is a sorry thing that we in England
The Spectatorshould celebrate the turn of the year by so puny and jocose a festival. Why should we disfigure that happy day by send- ing people on false errands, by providing them with false...
We are all, I suppose, possessed of prejudices which may,
The Spectatoror may not, derive from painful experience in childhood. I cannot remember that I have ever suffered much from prac- tical jokes. My dislike of that ungainly form of humour is,...
This, I feel, may be a lesson which in our
The Spectatorgreat crisis can be taught us by the grotesque silliness of our April cele- bration. When I was a child it was a delight to me to inform my nurse, on April 1st, that her...
The French are well aware, of course, that with the
The Spectatorcoming of the spring something affects the fancy of the young men and foolish things are apt to happen : " Quant les feves sont en fleur Les fous sont en vigueur." But even in...
I have heard that in the villages of Bavaria and
The SpectatorThuringia it is otherwise. There, upon the first of April, the young men disguise themselves as trees, are sprinkled with water by the maidens, and thereafter discard their...
PEOPLE AND THINGS
The SpectatorBy HAROLD NICOLSON I T is a cause of regret that we, who live for so many months under the pall of winter or in the harshness of a retarded spring, should possess no myth or...
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ART
The SpectatorBritish Painting since Whistler. " At the National Gallery. IN general—a well-arranged exhibition, well worth arranging. But debit side first. The usual mixed-exhibition...
BALLET
The Spectator"Lac des Cygnes." At Sadler's Wells. THE ballet, so far undiminished in essential strength by the calls of military service, returned to Sadler's Wells on Monday with a...
STAGE AND SCREEN
The SpectatorTHE CINEMA Hitler, the Beast of Berlin." At the London Pavilion.— The March of Time: No. 12. MANY must have hoped that the present war would not produce the more unnecessary...
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Spring Visitors When spring sets in, even " with its
The Spectatorusual severity," hun- dreds of observers record the date of arrival of the first immi- grant birds, which included before March was out sand- martins, as well as wheat-ear and...
Returning Duck It is a surprise to find that the
The Spectatorexperiences of bird observers near London and in the extreme West of Wales have been closely similar in recent months. On the great London water reservoirs, as on the new decoy...
THE PILGRIMS TO THE FEDERAL MOUNTAINS
The SpectatorSEE, we are set for mountains, and though they lie below the horizon still we go to them. Some of us know the gains that such a conquest brings, and others fill knapsacks with...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorRevolutionary Ploughs How very different are East and West England, not le. :a on the farm. More tilth is just an incident to the Eastern farm or country house. It is a...
White Stoats
The SpectatorWhether the cause was the hard winter, or some freak of albinism, I do not know, but that rarity of the south, the white stoat, has been seen in two places in Hertfordshire. One...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The Spectator[Correspondents are requested to keep their letters as brief as is reasonably possible. Signed letters are given a preference over those bearing a pseudonym, and the latter must...
SIR,—One is glad to see that Professor Robbins would confine
The SpectatorFederation to Europe, firmly rejecting the proposal to draw in other democracies. Ten years' residence in America has convinced me of the utter impracticability of including...
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PRUSSIA AND GERMANY
The SpectatorStem-Rubarth's idea about Germany without Prussia is no doubt a very good one ; indeed, I consider it the only solution which might bring about, if not the final destruction, at...
THE FUTURE OF HUMANISM
The SpectatorSIR, —Dr. Gilbert Murray's kind and generous letter prompts me to ask your leave to add something for which there was not room in my article. " He that is not against us is on...
THE METROPOLITAN CITY .
The SpectatorSnt,—Heat rather than light may come from the friction between Mr. Pick and Mr. Osborn. The subject is far too important for this to be the result. Mr. Pick has succegded in...
SIR, Canon Barry's both friendly and critical article on Professor
The SpectatorGilbert Murray's book, Stoic, Christian and Humanist, is thought-provoking for one who subscribes to Dr. Murray's views. The Canon is criticising the philosophy of a man whose...
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LORD TRENCHARD'S AIR FORCE SIR,—" Strat egicas " in his
The Spectatorvery interesting article in your issue of March 29th states that Air-Marshal (General) Trenchard had in the Independent Air Force a command of " nearly 350,000 officers and...
THE ANTI-WAR MINORITY Sta,—Yours is the first recognition with which
The SpectatorI have met of the existence of a minority who. oppose the continuance of me war. But I do not think you over-estimate its extent and its importance. You cannot judge the...
SHIPOWNERS AND WAR PROFITS
The SpectatorSIR,—In the debate in the House of Commons, and in subse- quent Press comment, concern is expressed about the post- war position of the shipping industry, having regard to the...
MR. SUMNER WELLES AND THE NAZIS
The SpectatorSul,—The sudden outburst of Nazi accusations against the American Government, timed to coincide with the return of Mr. Sumner Welles to Washington, would suggest that his recent...
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" BRITAIN "
The SpectatorSIR,—Like Mr. Steel Maitland, I was intrigued by Mr. Corbett's saying that he doesn't " use that word ever." Unlike him, I am not pained, only filled with admiration. What I...
THE BANNED AREAS OF SCOTLAND
The SpectatorSta,—One of the many points in the Report of the Economic Committee on the Highlands and Islands which has been shelved because of the war was the need to encourage tourist...
A NORWEGIAN ON FINLAND
The SpectatorSIR,—I have just received the following letter from a Norwegian friend of mine whose husband has been fighting in Finland. She says : our hearts are heavy for gallant little...
SIR,—I have had letters of almost identical wording as Mr.
The SpectatorSteel Maitland's ; but tolerant is not the word I should have used myself about some of them. May I answer him? I do not knowingly use one word when obviously meaning another....
" CONFUCIUS, HE SAY . . ."
The SpectatorSIR,—The " Confucius, he say . . ." advertisements mer:- boned in " A Spectator's Notebook " seem to me to raise a point of taste. One is left wondering whether people would...
INVADED BRITAIN
The SpectatorSut,—The legend of the doings of the red-mantled women at Fishguard seems immortal. (Mr. Clark's pump adds a detail new to me.) Like most legends, it has a grain of truth. It is...
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REPORT ON COMPETITION NO. 28
The SpectatorREADERS were invited to state which of six specified famous historical characters they would most like to have been and to give their reasons in not more than 300 words. This...
THE SPECTATOR COMPETITIONS No. 3o
The SpectatorPRIZES of book tokens for £2 2s. and Li is. are offered for the best list of the " Six Greatest Fools in History." Competitors should briefly give reasons for their choice, and...
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Books of the Day
The SpectatorA German Leader Nemesis ? The Story of Otto Strasser. By Douglas Reed. (Jonathan Cape. los. 6d.) MR. DOUGLAS REED'S latest thriller breaks new ground. Everybody knew something...
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Gilt Off the Gingerbread
The SpectatorSince Yesterday : The Nineteen Thirties in America. By Frederick Lewis Allen. (Hamish Hamilton. I2S. 6d.) WHEN he wrote Only Yesterday, Mr. Allen was a pioneer, but over the...
Roman Reveries
The SpectatorRoman Fountain. By Hugh Walpole. (Macmillan. 8s. 6d.) SIR HUGH WALPOLE went to Rome last year under contract to describe the burial of the late Pope and the choice and...
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The Bad Lands
The SpectatorMR. Wu was a philosophical but public-spirited eye-witness of the civil war in the Chinese province of Sinkiang during the first half of the past decade. His book (which is...
Women Must Work
The SpectatorThree a Penny. By Anne Meredith. (Faber. Rs. 6d.) THERE are moments when one cannot help regretting that Nora Helmer ever slammed that Doll's House door. An occasional black ewe...
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An Important Revival
The SpectatorThe Political Economy of War. By A. C. Pigou. (Macmillan. is.) WHEN Professor Pigou wrote his Political Economy of War in 1921 the Great War was over, though its consequences...
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New Novels
The SpectatorFestival. By Hamilton Basso. (Jarrolds. 9s. 6d.) I HOPE it suggests no disparagement of Mr. Macdonell's previous work to say that the two most interesting features of his new...
Mr. Dylan Thomas
The SpectatorPortrait of the Artist as a Young Dog. By Dylan Thomas. (Dent. 7s. 6d.) Portrait of the Artist as a Young Dog — a barely appropriate title, for there is at least one other...
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Shorter Notices
The SpectatorFinland. By J. Hampden Jackson. (Allen and Unwin. 8s. 6d.) FINLAND'S surrender in no way diminishes the interest felt here in that gallant country. There has for some years been...
ASSOCIATED ELECTRICAL INDUSTRIES
The SpectatorIt is apparent from Sir Felix Pole's review at the Asso- ciated Electrical Industries meeting that shareholders can look forward to steady, but almost certainly not to...
FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS EVEN better than expected must be the verdict on the nation's revenue figures up to March 31st. Actually the Exchequer has received L54 millions more than the...
LIFE INSURANCE IN WAR
The SpectatorThe war presented the life insurance companies with numerous problems. Probably the most acute was what attitude to adopt when the assured dies from war causes either as a...
The Puritans. By Perry Miller and Thomas H. Johnson. (Allen
The Spectatorand Unwin. 16s.) THE plan of this book is excellent, given the purpose of bringing within a single volume, of 800 pages, a conspectus of New England Puritanism—its history and...
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PROVINCIAL CINEMATOGRAPH THEATRES
The SpectatorThe good financial results of cinema companies since the war are striking and largely unexpected. Theatres were closed for about two weeks on the outbreak of war, during which...
REFUGE ASSURANCE
The SpectatorIn rather different circumstances the Refuge Assurance Company has also done better than its strictly contractual requirements. This company's pre-war policies, unlike those of...
ERICSSON TELEPHONES
The SpectatorGROWING VOLUME OF DEFENCE ORDERS THE thirty-seventh annual general meeting of Ericsson Telephones, Limited, was held on Thursday, April and, at Kingsway Hall, London, W.C. Col....
MERCANTILE BANK OF INDIA
The SpectatorEFFECTS OF WAR THE forty-seventh annual meeting of the Mercantile Bank of India, Limited, was held on April and in London. Sir Charles A. limes, K.C.S.I., C.I.E., the...
HALIFAX BUILDING SOCIETY
The SpectatorIn an estimate of the building society outlook in these columns last month it was sugges . ted that a downward adjustment of the interest paid to shareholders and depositors...
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COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorASSOCIATED PORTLAND CEMENT MANUFACTURERS WAR-TIME PROBLEMS EXPORT DRIVE SIR P. MALCOLM STEWART'S ADDRESS THE forty-first ordinary general meeting of The Associated Port- land...
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BRITISH ALUMINIUM POSITION
The SpectatorAt the hnnual meeting of the British Aluminium Co., Mr. R. W. Cooper, the chairman, disclosed details of the contract under which this company has sold the whole of its 1940...
ERICSSON TELEPHONES
The SpectatorThe telephone equipment industry is one of those which can look forward to a substantial volume of business both in peace and war. Colonel Sir Harold A. Wernher was therefore...
VICKERS RESERVE POLICY
The SpectatorOrdinary stockholders in Vickers, Ltd., will find relief from their disappointment at the board's recent decision not to write up their capital in the explanation afforded by...
COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorAUTOMATIC TELEPHONE AND ELECTRIC COMPANY OUTPUT AGAIN INCREASED NATIONAL IMPORTANCE OF TELEPHONE INDUSTRY THE 20th ordinary general meeting of the Automatic Tele- phone and...
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COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorBRITISH INSULATED CABLES SATISFACTORY RESULTS FOR PAST YEAR DISTRIBUTION OF 20 PER CENT. THE forty-fourth ordinary general meeting of British Insulated Cab!es Ltd. was held on...
COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorVICKERS LIMITED 73rd ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING MR. A. A. Jamieson, the chairman of Vickers Limited, presided over the seventy-third annual general meeting of that company held on...
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OVERSEAS BANKING OUTLOOK
The SpectatorThere is already ample evidence, in the accumulation of sterling resources in the hands of Empire countries, of the favourable effect of war on the trade balances of the primary...
INDUSTRIALIST ON TAXATION
The SpectatorAlthough demand from some sources has been curtailed since the outbreak of war, the activities of the British Insu- lated Cables group have expanded since last September. At...
PROVINCIAL CINEMATOGRAPH THEATRES
The SpectatorIMPORTANCE OF CINEMAS IN WAR-TIME THE thirteenth annual general meeting of the Provincial Cinema- tograph Theatres, Limited, was held on Friday, March 29th at Film House,...
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COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorTHE NATIONAL BANK OF INDIA IMPROVED CURRENT AND DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS FAVOURABLE INDIAN TRADE BALANCE THE ordinary general meeting of The National Bank of India Ltd. was held on...
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ASSOCIATED ELECTRICAL INDUSTRIES, LIMITED
The SpectatorSTRONG FINANCIAL POSITION THE fortieth annual general meeting of Associated Electrical Industries, Ltd., was held on Friday, March 29th, at Bush House, Aldwych, London, W.C....
CEMENT INDUSTRY'S PROBLEMS
The SpectatorAssociated Portland Cement Manufacturers last year delivered a record tonnage of " Blue Circle " cement. But the financial result of the year was a decline of £191,099 in the...
COMPANY MEETINGS
The SpectatorBRITISH ALUMINIUM COMPANY THE ordinary general meeting of the British Aluminium Company, Limited, was held on Friday, March 29th, in London. Mr. R. W. Cooper, M.C. (chairman),...
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COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorBANK OF AUSTRALASIA IMPROVED TRADING PROFIT DIVIDEND MAINTAINED Tan one hundred and sixth annual general meeting of the Bank of Australasia was held, on March 28th, at the...
COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorHALIFAX BUILDING SOCIETY ASSETS REACH RECORD AMOUNT OF £129,000,000 THE eighty-seventh annual general meeting of members of Halifax Building Society was held on March ;oth at...
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RAND MINES RESERVES
The SpectatorYear by year the results of Rand Mines, which is closely associated with the Central Mining in the financing of the Kaffir goldmining industry, emphasise the strength and...