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INDEX FROM JANUARY 7th TO JUNE 24th, 1938, INCLUSIVE.
The SpectatorTOPICS OF THE DAY A FRICAN Crown Colonies, the 1132 Air Raid Precautions : a Working Mode l Air Raids and the Citizen.. .. 4 9 - - How Paris Does It .. 665 - - a Police Class...
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NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorTN North China, Japan continues her series of advances : in South China she appears to have met with difficulties. In Shantung the Japanese advancing from the Yellow River have...
Palestine Delays It would be going too far to describe
The Spectatorthe Government's new announcement on Palestine as a step towards throwing the Peel Commission's report into the melting-pot, for it is stated quite explicitly that the decision...
The Fight for Teruel The battle for Teruel continues ;
The Spectatorand in itself this refutes the Nationalist claims to have taken the city, together with General Rojo, the Republican commander-in-chief. Rival reports of the battle conflict...
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Lord Rutherford and Transmutation Lord Rutherford's presidential address to the
The Spectatorjubilee session of the Indian Science Congress, prepared just -before his death, and read to the Congress by Sir James Jeans on Monday, dealt with the " new alchemy," that is to...
National Rumanian Christianity Rumania's allies, especially France, will not be
The Spectatorreassured by her new " National Christian " Government's statements that no changes are intended in foreign policy or in Rumania's system of alliances. Indeed, it is believed...
Italy in Abyssinia Although Italy has now been in occupation
The Spectatorof Abyssinia for some eighteen months and has successfully stamped out all military opposition, an important message to The . Times from Jibuti throws an instructive light on...
French Finances Though 33 hours after its appointed time, the
The SpectatorFrench- Budget was eventually approved this week, without great opposition, and perhaps with less apprehension than for several years. The final estimates for the ordinary...
The New Cabinet in Egypt Whether the Egyptian crisis is
The Spectatorcooling down or boiling up is still uncertain. Nahas Pasha having been dismissed because he would not agree to the form of arbitration proposed by the King on the differences...
President Roosevelt on Democracy The domestic aspects of President Roosevelt's
The Spectatoraddress to Congress on Monday are discussed in a leading article on a later page. For the world outside the United States the few sentences the President devoted to foreign...
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The remainder of the legislative programme for the present session
The Spectatordoes not give much promise of excitement. But the Government Whips would scarcely be justified in looking forward to a period of tranquillity. The present House of Commons is...
The Press has been full of rumours about Mr. Churchill.
The SpectatorWill he be brought back into the Cabinet ? Among the rank and file of M.P.s on both sides of the House his appoint- ment would be received with approval and surprise. Approval,...
The Coming Penal Reform Bill Sir Samuel Hoare has recently
The Spectatorgiven further information on his plans for prison reform. In a letter to his constituents he describes his Prison Reform Bill as overdue, and this phrase has given rise to hopes...
Parliamentary Notes Our Parliamentary Correspondent writes : In last week's
The SpectatorSpectator " Janus " quoted Lord Runciman's recent declara- tion that he " deplores and detests " marketing schemes and similar Socialist contrivances, he himself having been a...
Family Allowances The decision of Messrs. Pilkingtons, the St. Helens
The Spectatorglass manufacturers, to introduce a system of family allowances for their workers is more than a commendable piece of social benevolence. The proposal, which will operate from...
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THE CONTROL OF CAPITAL
The SpectatorI N his address to Congress on Monday President I Roosevelt praised democracy as a political system which makes for peace, because government is genuinely in the hands of the...
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BRITISH SELF-ADV ERTISEMENT T HE necessity laid on this country of
The Spectatorcountering the propaganda with which the broadcasting systems of certain totalitarian countries is nightly filling the air, was discussed in these columns last week. That the...
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There are, so far as I know, no official statistics
The Spectatorregarding betting, and any unofficial estimates are obviously open to fair challenge. It may be doubted whether the promoters of football pools would ascribe authority to the...
Vegetables are bulky commodities, and transport is neces- sarily a
The Spectatorconsiderable constituent in their retail price. Even so there is point in a note which someone, preparing a cauli- flower for the saucepan, found slipped in between leaves and...
The business of extinguishing Radio-Normandie, so far as its broadcasts
The Spectatorin English are concerned, seems a little portentous. The B.B.C., unlike American and various Continental stations, quite rightly includes no advertising in its programmes, but...
Sit modus an rebus—there is reason in all things—and it
The Spectatorhas always been especially hard for Bishops to decide in what degree of state to live. Someone will no doubt remind me, what I have momentarily forgotten, who it was who wrote...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorT HE appointment of Sir Robert Vansittart, whose ability, experience and knowledge are beyond dispute, to the new post of Chief Diplomatic Adviser has aroused little enthusiasm...
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OVER EIGHTY ON UNDER THIRTY
The SpectatorBy H. W. NEVINSON [The writer was at a Public School and Oxford, and has served for many years on daily and weekly papers as leader-writer, literary editor, and...
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INDIA IN TRANSITION : V. TREMBLING THRONES
The SpectatorBy RICHARD FREUND T HERE was a hush, and everybody rose. A tall, bearded man had come in through the door, followed by two attendants clad in red long-coats braided with gold....
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AIR RAID PRECAUTIONS : A WORKING MODEL
The SpectatorBy W. T. WELLS L AST week The Spectator published, under the heading " Design for Air Raids " an article in which the writer, Mr. Noel Carrington, expressed the view that a...
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BOARDER OR DAY-GIRL ?
The SpectatorBy MABEL HOWAT "T HERE is a homelike atmosphere in the school." How many parents have experienced a feeling of relief as they read these words in the prospectus of a school to...
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ARAB AND JEW
The SpectatorBy PREBENDARY WILSON CASH M OST people in England, are deeply interested at the tangled situation in Palestine today, and the more so because the Arabs were at one time the...
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THE BLIND
The SpectatorBy H. E. BATES O NCE a week, every market day, the man Osborn and his wife drove down to the town in the old Ford tourer piled up with chicken crates, to take their girl to the...
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WIRELESS FOR PRISONS
The SpectatorTHE amount subscribed by The Spectator readers for the provision of wireless sets to the convict prisons of Great Britain stands at a little over Doc), and arrangements to equip...
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STAGE AND SCREEN THE THEATRE "A Midsummer Night's Dream." By
The SpectatorWilliam Shakespeare. At the Old Vic LET it be said at once that this is as fine a production of a comedy by Shakespeare as anyone could wish for. Of the plays now running in...
THE CINEMA Stage Door." At the Re g al--" Wells Fargo." At
The Spectatorthe Carlton--" Popeye the Sailor." At the Carlton IT must be admitted right away that Stage Door is certain to be a big box-office success, and one may suppose that to box-...
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In the seventeenth century Europe was perhaps more than usually
The Spectatorobviously at cross-purposes. With the Counter- Reformation triumphant in the southern half of the continent; and the northern States increasing daily inwealth and benefiting by...
ART
The SpectatorSeventeenth-Century Art at Burlington House Tim exhibition at Burlington House may be considered from three different points of view. First it gives us a cross section of art...
It will probably be more profitable to mention one or
The Spectatortwo of the paintings which make the present exhibition really armor- tant, apart from those already described. The big room is quite properly devoted to Rubens and van Dyck....
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More Polecats
The SpectatorA sad fatality, in which a baby was bitten by a polecat, has made public the revival of this animal, which at one time was thought to have gone the way of the pine-marten. It...
Winter Catkins A writer on winter flowering shrubs, a most
The Spectatorprolific subject, expresses an almost venomous dislike of Garrya elliptica. It has not, of course, the quaint freshness of the witch hazel, but it has long seemed to me one of...
A New Theory A theory both new and plausible has
The Spectatorbeen suggested to me by a young naturalist who is likely to make fame : it will excuse a further reference to the now rather hoary problem of the spotted woodpecker's music. The...
A Garden Poison
The SpectatorThat excellent mstitution the Board of Green-keeping Research, which works on behalf of the British Golf Unions, has completed an enquiry into a new poison of rather more...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorMore Subsistence Production The admirable farms, gardens, crafts and industries for unemployed miners organised under the general title of " Sub- sistence production," are...
The Squirrels Hoard In parts of Buckinghamshire and Hertfordshire every
The Spectatorwalnut tree that fruited was cleared by..gtey squirrels. I gave one particular example the other day ; another example, from Buckinghamshire, suggests that the squirrels picked...
A Tall Dog Story
The SpectatorThis Christmas (which is, of course, a story-telling season) I was told with full detail and great conviction the tallest story of a dog's intelligence and skill in orientation...
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OUR TOTALITARIAN CHURCH
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR, — Among the interesting letters of your correspondents I have not noticed any one which deals adequately with the crisis in the recent...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The Spectator[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" paragraphs. Signed...
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IMPARTIAL JUSTICE
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—On a day when both the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition were deploring the use of official propaganda there was taking...
WIRELESS FOR PRISONS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—HONV nice to have wireless sets added to the libraries, charabancs excursions and other amusements provided for our gaolbirds ! • I only...
RELIGIOUS FILMS [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSnt,—In your issue of December 31st Dr. Gregory, discussing the film, Where Love Is, God Is, asked three questions of Mr. Basil Wright, none of which were answered in the reply...
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FOOT - AND - MOUTH DISEASE [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR, —I
The Spectatorhave shown Mr. S. L. Bensusan's article to several farmers round here, and have discussed it with several others in this district, and three points emerge. (i) Present...
SOUTH AMERICA'S INDIANS [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR]
The SpectatorSut,—May I answer Mr. Bertram Norton's letter in your issue of December 31st criticising my recent article on " South America's Indians"? I cannot understand his first...
WHAT CANADA THINKS OF BRITAIN [To the Editor of THE
The SpectatorSPECTATOR.] have read with great interest your article, " What Canada thinks of Britain." The writer, Miss Sylvia Stevenson, says that the provinces of Canada are alike only in...
THE VOICE OF UNDER THIRTY [To the Editor of Tim
The SpectatorSPECTATOR.] Sto,—The recent series of articles by men and women under thirty appears to me to indicate more than anything else how necessary it is for an older generation to...
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NEUJAHRSBRAUCHE
The Spectator[Von einem deutschen Korrespondenten] DASS Neujahr auf den r. Januar Mit, ist fiir uns eine grosse Selbstverstandlichkeit. Wenn wir aber durch die Lander und Zeiten wandern, so...
[To the Editor of ,THE SPECTATOR.] Sra,—Will you allow the
The SpectatorUnknownWitness, one of the thousands of clergy who do understand their people, but are unnoticed and silent about their work, to speak on this vital matter ? I have been in...
" HUMAN UNDERSTANDING AND ITS WORLD "
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] Snt,—In his review of my book, Human Understanding and Its World, in your issue of December 17th, Mr. F. Sherwood Taylor represents me as...
ELEVEN O'CLOCK MATINS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] Sm,—May I remind you that Matins (as found in the Book of Common Prayer) is a translation and adaptation of the monastic offices of lauds,...
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BOOKS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorAssignment in Utopia (Prof. E. H. Carr) .. New Writing (Edward Sackville-West) .. England Expects Every American To Do His Duty (Sir Frederick Whyte) .. . • • • • • The Last...
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SAUCE FOR THE GANDER
The SpectatorI BELIEVE it is nowadays g enerally a g reed that literary excellence, unlike that of some other arts, is critically inseparable from the material used in its composition and...
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CHAMPAGNE. MAY, 1918 Ma. ROGERSON is well aware that he
The Spectatoris braving the taunts of the young in once more writing about " the old men's boring old war " : but he wistfully believes, and rightly, that the " old sweats " will like to...
NELSON'S SIGNAL : NEW STYLE
The SpectatorEngland Expects Every American To Do His Duty. By Quincey Howe. (New York : Simon and Schuster. $2.) Emu Englishman should read this book. It is provoking; stimulating, candid,...
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A SURGEON'S CASE-BOOK
The SpectatorLeaves from a Surgeon's Case-Book. By James Harpole. (Cassell. 8s. 6d.) FROM internal evidence it would appear that Mr. James Harpole, who has written under this pseudonym, is...
THE LAST OF THE BALLAD-MONGERS
The SpectatorVictorian Street Ballads. Edited - by W. Henderson. (Country Life. 7s. 6d.) THE rotary printing-press, as much as anything, crushed the life out of the ancient and not...
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FICTION
The SpectatorFORREST REID By Dickson. 7s. 6d.) Commander of the Mists. By D. L. Murray. (Hodder and Stoughton. 8s. 6d.) I HAVE always had a particular liking for pastoral novels—tales like...
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WITH THE CORNERS OFF By Commander A. B. Campbell
The SpectatorCommander Campbell is already well known to a large public from his broad- cast talks ; his book (Harrap, 8s. 6d.) is written in much the same vein. It is a collection of...
WATCH CZECHOSLOVAKIA By Richard Freund
The SpectatorMr. Freund has written an admirable little book (Nelson, zs. 6d.) on a sub- ject on which it is highly important for the public of this country to be well- informed....
CURRENT LITERATURE
The SpectatorTHE THOUSAND NIGHTS AND ONE NIGHT Rendered into English by Powys Mathers Mr. Powys Mathers' rendering into English of Dr. Mardrus' translation into French of The Thousand...
The Daily Mail Year Book (Associated Newspapers, is.) is planned
The Spectatoron a smaller scale, but on rather similar lines, and provides, for its size and price, a very useful amount of informa- tion. After a number of changes of title since its...
A complete directory of the whole of London is provided
The Spectatorby Kelly's Post Office London Directory (Kelly's Directories, 55s. and 7os.). The value of the maps (scale 4 miles to an inch) thii year is enhanced because of the tremendous...
SNOW ON THE EQUATOR By H. W. Tilman
The SpectatorThe author of this book (Bell, I2S. 6d.) is a well-known climber. He was one of the two climbers to reach the summit of Nanda Devi last year, and is to lead the next Everest...
REFERENCE BOOKS FOR 1938
The SpectatorWhitaker's Abnanack (6s. and 3s.) is at once the most compact and the most comprehensive of reference books, and the present volume, the loth annual edition, is even wider in...
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THE JANUARY MAGAZINES
The SpectatorLORD ELTON'S outspoken article in the Fortnightly on " The Decay of Opposi- tion " will not please his former Labour allies. He holds that " with evolu- tionary Socialism all...
GRAMOPHONE NOTES THE H.M.V. Company have made an experiment, which
The Spectatorone hopes they will find it worth while to repeat, in issuing at the unusually low price of 4s. a record two sets which one would not have expected to find outside the " Con-...
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Switzerland
The SpectatorIT should be remembered by those who contemplate a holiday in Switzerland, that this country has an all-the-year-round attraction. The Alpine meadows in spring- time make a...
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FINANCIAL NOTES
The SpectatorGOLD RESERVES THE position of the Exchange Equalisation Account on September 30th, disclosed at the end of the year, shows that the Exchange Account between March 31st and...
GAS AND ELECTRICITY
The SpectatorShareholders in g as undertakin g s need not worry about the rises in sellin g prices just announced. The increases, an which range between 3 and 4 per cent., have been made...
DESIGN FOR INVESTMENT.
The SpectatorIf there is one thin g that does seem clear, it is that a propor- tion of investors' funds should be held in the fixed-interest g roup of securities. Money may seem abnormally...
FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorMost investors will have taken their leave of 1 937 without re g rets. The year was one which opened with rare promise. Incipient recovery in the United States offered the hope...
BANK SHARE PROSPECTS
The SpectatorThe decision of the National Provincial Bank to sub-divide its shares into shares of a lower denomination is a step in th e ri g ht direction. A heavy-priced share may help to...
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COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorBOOKER BROTHERS, McCONNELL AND COMPANY BEST YEAR SINCE 1928 THE annual general meeting of Booker Brothers, McConnell and Company, Limited, was held on December 3oth at 14...
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More than one prominent caterer has recently disclosed the fact
The Spectatorthat from the financial standpoint the Coronation was not pure gain. It will be remembered that Lord Greenwood made that point to the shareholders of the Aerated Bread Company,...
DOMINION REEFS.
The SpectatorDominion Reefs, whose gold mining rights are in the Klerksdorp district of South Africa, was formed only in the middle of 1935 and the company has not yet reached the...
SILVER MARKET REPRIEVED.
The SpectatorThe decisions taken by the United States during the week have saved the silver market, temporarily at least, from the crash which might have followed the expiry of the...
GUARANTY TRUST POSITION.
The SpectatorThe statement of the condition of the Guaranty Trust Company of New York on December 31st shows total resources and deposits lower than the record figures of a year ago, a...
BOOKER BROTHERS, MCCONNELL AND COMPANY.
The SpectatorThis old-established firm of general merchants and sugar growers has paid dividends of not less than to per cent. for the past five years, and on occasion has distributed...
" THE SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD No. V6
The SpectatorBY ZENO [A prize of a Book Token for one guinea will be given to the sender of the first correct solution of this week's crossword puzzle to be opened. Envelopes should be...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD NO. 275
The SpectatorP UT H RIO INITIIIST El RI 1 AI RI RI E LI 0 GAIN S 13 RI 13101NT A N 0(1 S L EI 13 H 01 P 131Sn YLFE ROIH Ta l L F H I HI LI I 131 RIN 0 0 OI HIM AI LI I...