21 DECEMBER 1929

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For our part we hope that the Bill will proceed

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to Committee. Although we 'admit its insufficiency, the main objeetive should be to get all brains to work on a more or less agreed measure. If the second reading should be...

It will be remembered that the Bill provides for marketing,

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the reduction of hours from eight to seven and a half, and a National Wages Board. The Central Marketing Council will control twenty-one district marketing schemes and allocate...

News of the Week

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The Coal Mines Bill. TUESDAY in the House of Commons was memorable for two speeches which displayed debating power at its highest. The speech of Mr. William Graham, who moved...

We may pass over the speech of Sir Philip Cunliffe-

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Lister, who moved the Unionist motion of rejection, because it was insignificant compared with that of Sir Herbert Samuel. Sir Herbert's chief line of attack was that the Bill...

EDITORIAL AND PUBLISHING OFFICES : 99 Gower Street, London, W.C.

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1.—A Subscription to the SPECTATOR COsis Thirty Shillings per annum, including postage, to any part of the world. . The SPECTATOR is registered as a Newspaper. The Postage on...

He went on to say that he had been accused

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of deliber- ately increasing the price of coal, but the intention of his Bill was not to sell British coal abroad at a loss, but to help it to compete successfully in the...

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The Naval Conference The Japanese delegates to the Naval Conference

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have spent four days in Washington discussing naval questions. It is known that in reply to the American suggestion that cruiser strength for Great Britain, America and Japan...

German Finance We wrote last week about the unfavourable memoran-

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dum submitted by Dr. Schacht on German fiscal policy and on the Young Plan. On Thursday, December 12th, the Chancellor asked the Reichstag for a vote of confidence on the...

Last week the problem of the Austrian Constitution was solved

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by the agreement of both parties to a modified reform. Herr Schober was reappointed Chancellor under the new regime ; the President issued his appeal to the Army to withstand...

Great Britain and France On Thursday, December 12th, Mr. Arthur

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Henderson made a happy reference to the entente of peoples which binds Great Britain and France in their common task of building the temple of peace. He did not minimize the...

A New President in Greece Early last week, Admiral Konduriotis,

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President of the Greek Republic, resigned his charge on the grounds of health. There was a pleasing and rather astonishing agreement in choosing his successor. The Minister of...

Clearly there is a danger of dearer coal for everybody.

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It would be mad to take away from industry, through an increase in the price of coal, the benefits which have only just been bestowed upon it by derating. Sir Herbert summed up...

In this connexion we note an interesting letter from Mr.

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A. H. Pollen, the well-known naval expert, who writes to the Manchester Guardian that " the way to make others give up submarines is to give them up our: selves." We quite...

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The Cotton Slump The cotton industry is still in the

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Slough of Despond. Meetings this week have disclosed the fact that the depression extends to the Egyptian no less than to the American sections. The figures of export trade show...

Runnymede The munificent gift to the nation of one hundred

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and two acres of riverside land, containing Runnymede, combines the exquisite beauty of Thames scenery with some of the most precious of historical associations. The late Mr....

Sir Henry Jackson Admiral of the Fleet Sir Henry Jackson,

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who has died at the age of seventy-four, held some of the highest com- mands, both on land and afloat, without being much known to the public. His silent industry and high...

China Chiang Kai-shek and the Nationalist Government at Nanking seem

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to be holding out against their enemies much better than had been expected. These enemies are divided into moderates and extremists, and the Peking correspondent of the Times...

Bank Rate, 5 per cent., changed from 51 per cent.

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on December 12th, 1929. War Loan (5 per cent.) was on Wednesday 99*; on Wednesday week, 100 ; a year ago, 102* ; Funding Loan (4 per cent.) was on Wednesday 85}; on Wednesday...

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Who Speaks for the Unionist Party

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T HE policy of the Unionist Party, so far as it affects domestic affairs and the relations of the party to the Government and the Liberals, may be said to concern only Unionists...

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France and Great Britain T HERE is no more urgent task

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before the statesmen of this country than to wrench off the mask which has for so long hidden from French eyes the real face of England.' We need not discuss now whether or not...

The Experiment in Ceylon TrH Constitutional changes which have just

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been • accepted, by a small majority, in the Ceylon Legislative Council, will be followed with intense interest by every serious student of democratic method. If the experiment...

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The Week in Parliament

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O N Thursday of last week the Unemployment Insurance Bill " as amended " was considered, and Mr. Oliver Stanley delivered a notable speech, in the course of which he analysed...

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In Defence of the Faith

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V.—The Wondrous Fellowship [Mr. Alger Thorold, the writer of this article, is a Roman Catholic scholar. He is at present editor of The Dublin Review. He has written on the...

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The French Gold

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T HE 1929 gold drain. from London to Paris, its causes, and its effects on British interests, deserves to be looked at from more than one point of view. It is a matter that...

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Woes of the Caged T T is a privilege to be

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allowed once again to register a protest against wild animal performances in circuses. Gradually public opinion is growing against the practice (only recently Sir Percival...

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A Christmas Tree for Eileen T HE Christmas trees grow in

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a little copse on a farm in Kildare. They look across the fields towards the gleam of the slow running Barrow. Beyond the river rise the gentle hills of Leix, which was Queen's...

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Correspondence

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A LETTER FROM OXFORD. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—The Michaelmas Term, now a thing of the past, was especially interesting because of the problems that had to be...

Art

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ISTVAN SZEGEDI-SZOTS. AT GIEVES GALLERY. HUNGARIANS are traditionally a people of vehement tem- perament, and their land and climate arc exposed to violent extremes : bleak...

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The American small town, indicted by Sinclair Lewis and strongly

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resenting the indictment, finds another accusing finger pointing its way in a report issued by the Federal Department of Justice. An official analysis of commitments to penal...

AN INTER-COLLEGIATE REPERTORY THEATRE.

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Past and present students of New York's universities and colleges are co-operating to organize an intercollegiate reper- tory theatre. The theatre will be established in a...

SCIENCE AND AGRICULTURE.

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Something of the change which modern mechanical inven- tion is bringing to agriculture is indicated by the success which has attended the use of the aeroplane to assist Southern...

American Notes of the Week

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NEUTRAL RIGHTS. The discussion of neutral rights provoked by the British White Paper is particularly unfortunate, in view of the cumu- lative effect of earlier statements by...

A JUDICIAL REFORM REFERENDUM.

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The National Economic League, whose membership includes distinguished jurists, university presidents, industrial leaders and other representative citizens, announces the result...

" ROAD MOPES."

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Massachusetts has decided to speed up " road mopes," or motorists who dawdle along the highways in contempla- tion of the scenery, or for any other cause. Traffic rules have...

" TAPPING " MESSAGES.

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Several instances of telephone wire tapping by police and Government agents in efforts to obtain evidence in prohibition cases have led to the introduction of a Bill into...

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The League of Nations

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Co-operation as Security Nosonv can deny that the whole of our economic life to-day is international. The World Economic Conference in 1927 only served to register a fact which...

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FAVOURED ROOTS.

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it is remarkable that the popularity of the sugar-beet is not withdrawing support from the mangold. In Denmark the increase in root-growing is one of the surprises of recent...

Two ESTABLISHED FLOWERS.

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In the garden of a famous county house I saw last week a great quantity of the two flowers brought over from the Far East a few years ago by Mr. Ward. The charms of both have...

MORE MILK.

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Not once but many times the National Farmers' Union has- been criticized, if not abused, for deserting the Milk Publicity campaigners. There was a good chance of a fruitful...

IRISH GAME.

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A parliamentary debate on the preservation of game in the South Irish Parliament was interesting in itself and produced a number of surprising statements about natural history....

Country Life

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A NEW WOOD PRESERVER By a happy coincidence the formation of the new association for preserving timber (discussed in this place last week) coincides with news of an invention...

THE FARMERS' FRIEND.

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During a visit to the Huntingdonshire fen land -last week I saw both on road and rail a great many tons of sugar beet. It was the crop of the moment, and is beginning to be...

A NEW BEAN.

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The Brobdingnagian roots, when piled into a facade, make a satisfying spectacle at most Christmas shows ; but in botanical interest they yielded at Smithfield to the display of...

The same cry about the disappearance of game birds, especially

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the partridge, is heard in the Isle of Man, where it has even been suggested that public bodies should encourage, and presumably pay for, the introduction of Hungarian birds....

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[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.]

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Sin,—One cannot fail to recognize the force of all that Dr. Norwood says in the above article ; it is, of course, difficult to bridge the gulf between the public school and our...

Letters to the Editor

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TRADE REALITIES [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Snt,—Sfou have stated in no unmeasured terms certain realities in connexion with British export trade and not before`the...

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SHI,—Mr. Lionel James is

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certainly right in saying that the time for class-fusion among boys is when they are quite young. Shortly before'the War, I met a lady in Gerinany who told me that she received...

TO MAKE ENGLAND ONE NATION [To the Editor of the

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SPECTATOR.] Sni,—It is with unusual pleasure that I have read the splendid letter in your columns over the signature of Lionel James. I- submit, Sir, that boys of all classes...

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THE LAW AND MEDICINE [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.]

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SIR,—It has been sometimes remarked by judges and magistrates that the law takes no account of psychology, by which it would appear to be meant that the law persistently,...

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.]

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Sm,—Your patriotic zeal in the matter of dust-carts and. that kind of important thing emboldens me to reinforce your general argument with a point of detail. If you will visit...

THE DUST-CARTS OF BRITAIN [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.]

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SIR,—I was glad to read the article in last week's Spectator on dust collection in London, and hope you will invite corre- spondence on the matter. The dust collection in the...

THE TRUTH ABOUT ULTRA-VIOLET LIGHT [To the Editor of the

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SPECTATOR.] SIR, When are we to know the truth about ultra-violet light ? A year or two ago medical men in all parts of the country were hailing treatment by means of "...

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OUR NEW RELIGION

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[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sm,—Your issue of December 7th contains a review of a recently' published book, Our New Religion, by the Rt. Hon H. A. L. Fisher, and it must...

SCIENCE IN FARMING

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[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—I, too, read your comments on agriculture in " A Better . England," and, unlike Mr. C. R. Enock, thoroUghly approved of them. Mr. Enock,...

THE MODERN ATTITUDE TO THE • BIBLE [To the Editor

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of the SPECTATOR.] Sta,--Yon describe Canon Vernon Storr as " a - leader of the Evangelical Group Movement and a distinguished Biblical Scholar," and as such he describes the...

A HOMECROFT TRAINING CENTRE

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[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—In view of the nation's constant liability to periods of grave industrial distress, any real proposals showing how the working classes may...

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HUMANE SLAUGHTER OF PIGS [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.]

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Sot,—The enclosed letter, which appeared in the Sheffield Telegraph of December 12th, will, I am sure, both. interest and gratify you. It is very largely owing to the...

SIR ERNEST WOODFORD BIRCH [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.]

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Sin,—The unexpected death from pneumonia of Sir Ernest Woodford Birch, a former British resident in Perak, and Chair- man of the Overseas League, has • caused , deep sorrow to...

HERR SCHEFFER AND THE SOVIET [To the Editor of the

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SPECrATOR.1 Sts,—As one who has for several years been following Russian affairs with some care, I was much interested and somewhat surprised at your article of December 14,...

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POINTS FROM LETTERS Ix DEFENCE OF THE FAITH.

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Your •correspondent, Dr. Arthur Pollok Sym, in his .letter printed in, your issue of . November 30th, 1929, objects to the rise of the pronoun ." it " in relation to the Holy...

A Hundred Years Ago

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THE " SPECTATOR," DECEMBER 19TH, 1829. THE Cacacir. The Times has announced that certain Church reforms are contemplated, as sweeping in principle as any reformer could wish....

Village Epitaph

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FAT, portentous, gallant, comic, Here our grocer-lady lies. It would take an astronomic Table to epitomize With planet, star, and constellation All her qualities aright....

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We have one more children's book, which we did not

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review in our Christmas Book Supplement, which we should like to recommend heartily to all mothers and friends of children from between the ages of five and ten ; it is Mrs....

Mr. Beckles Willson arrived in London at the age of

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twenty- two, an ambitious young Canadian, determined to conquer Fleet Street. The year was 1892: " I had burst into a London gorged with literary novelties : Kipling, Marie...

" Crime is largely a matter of digestion ; a

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well-cared alimentary canal is the surest means of promoting bene- volence." We have seen this urged before, as an excuse for a new cookery book, and it is true, if not the...

The fmal verdict on Zimbabwe, in Rhodesia, is given by

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that experienced archaeologist, Miss Gertrude Caton-Thompson, in Antiquity for December. (Gloucester. John Bellows, 5s. 6d.). As she told the British Association last summer,...

We know of no hunter who can write with such

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economy and simplicity as Mr. F. L. Puxley. Many books appear on animals and how to destroy them, and nearly all of them are bad. It is rarely that we find a book like In...

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The Competition

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WE recently asked a contributor to write an article containing suggestions for a Better World, and we received the following reply :—" A short recipe would be : murder half the...

Mr. E. T. S. Dugdale has done great service to

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all who are interested in pm-War diplomacy by making an orderly selection from the German Diplomatic Documents, 1871-1914, of which the German Foreign Office has printed many...

Some Books of the Week

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IN one form or another the slave trade is always with us, and this (if no other- reason were forthcoming) would suffice to justify Great Britain and the Slave Trade, by W. L....

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Three Books on Canada

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Sir George Parkin : A Biography. By Sir John Willison, LL.D. (Macmillan. 12s. 6d.) PROFESSOR CHESTER W. NEW, Professor of History in McMaster University, Toronto, has written...

An Eighteenth Century Country Parson

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James Woodforde. Diary of a Country Parson. Vol. IV. Edited by John Beresford. (Oxford University Press. 12s. 6d.) This is the fourth volume of the delightful eighteenth century...

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Odysseys Ancient and Modern

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To say that Mr. Sargeaunt has written a brilliant book would be a misrepresentation. To begin with, it is not exactly a book, but a series of individual studies of classical...

THE SPECTATOR.

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Before going abroad or away from home readers are advised to Flace am order for the SrEcraxoa. The journal will be forwarded to any address at the following rates :- One Month ....

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The Strength of the Hills

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(Arrowemith. 10s. 6d.) Climbs and Ski-Runs. By F. S. Smythe. (Blackwoods. 21s.) IT is a joy to the reviewer to find books which he can praise without qualification : this batch...

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India's Problems Thoughts on Indian Discontents. By . Edwyn Bevan. (Allen

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and Unwin. 6s.) IN this country, Indians have no warmer friend than Dr. Bevan; and in this little book he has taken upon himself the duty of a friend, in reasoning with them for...

New Foundations

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The World Court. By J. W. Wheeler-Bennett and Maurice Fanshawe. (Allen and Unwin. 10s.) The Reign of Law. By Kathleen E. Innes. (Hogarth Press. ls. 6d.) ONE of the great tasks...

Architecture

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Foundations of Architecture. By M. and N. Robertson. (Arnold. 3s. fid.) To judge by the supply, the public demand for books on architects and architecture is steadily...

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Experiments

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THERE is an agreeable fashion growing up among publishers of issuing longish short stories or single essays in small and orna- mental books at moderate prices. These books give...

THE MIRROR OF KONG HO. By Ernest Bramah. (Grant Richards

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and Humphrey Touhnin. 7s. 6d.)—Mr. Bramah's book was very good reading when he wrote it, and is still good reading to-day. His imaginary Chinaman on an educational visit to...

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More Books of the 'Week

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(Continued from page 950.) Possibly Prescott is not so widely read now as he used to be ' • he was too much of a romanticist for this sophisticated age. There can be few,...

" SHAVES for a penne, cuts hare from toopence and

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oyld and powdird into the barg ain " is part of an eighteenth-century barber's advertiseme nt, and is one of many tickling little scraps out of which Mrs. Lilian Boys Behrens...

Travel

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Chasing the Sun [We publish in this column articles and notes which may help our readers in their plans for travel at home and abroad. They are written by correspondents who...

THE BLUE PETER.

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It is appropriate to mention on this , page the December number of The Magazine of Sea Travel, The Blue Peter. The Editor, Mr. F. A. Hook, F.R.G.S., is to be congratulated on...

Joseph Hemard—a Critical Study, by Marcel Valotaire (Brentano's, 21s.) is

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one of a series of monographs intro- ducing modern French book-illustration to the English reader. Apart from the cover (which is both ugly and meaningless) the format is simple...

The first volume of a new series, The Poets on

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the Poets, is Miss V. Sackville-West's Andrew Marvell (Faber and Faber, 3s. 6d.). The essay is an excellent appreciation of Marvell, mide - still more enjoyable by the anthology...

General Knowledge Questions

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Questions on " The Army and Navy " Oun weekly prize of one guinea for the best thirteen Questions submitted is awarded this week to Mrs. G. L. Grant, The White Cottage, Norton,...

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When Christmas Gifts are Welcome

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CHRISTMAS is the season for giving. Let us, in accordance with our usual practice, indicate briefly some of the good causes that should be helped by our generous readers. First...

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Finance Public and Private British -

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Budgets* WHATEVER may be the true explanation of the depression in many of our leading industries—and the explanations are probably many—it is impossible not to be struck with...

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TIM MONETARY SITUATION.

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LAST week I endeavoured to show the close connexion which• existed between the rise in the Sterling Exchange and the monetary situation here, including the prospects of a lower...

STOCK EXCHANGE HOLIDAYS.

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It is not altogether surprising that dealers on the Stock Exchange here are feeling something akin to amusement that Wall Street should recently have been indulging in a good...

Unfortunately the Returns of our foreign trade for the month

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of November were again most discouraging, especially as regards the exports, which showed a decline for the month of over £3,000,000, while there was a small increase in the...

Financial Notes

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BANKING IN SOUTH AMERICA. Mn. RICHARD FOSTER, the Deputy Chairman of the Bank of London and South America, in the unavoidable absence through illness of the Chairman, Mr....

A.B.C. POSITION.

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With quite a substantial advance in gross profits, the report of the Aerated Bread Company for the past year shows that expenses mainly in the shape of higher rents, wages, &c.,...

BRAZIL.

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Commenting upon conditions of Brazil, Mr. Foster made a timely reference both to the coffee crisis through which the country is passing and also to the impending Presidential...

LARGE GOLD INFLUX.

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The reduction in the Bank Rate was due not only to the fact of the rise in the American Exchange but to the very large engagements of gold from this country. Altogether some-...

SOME MINING DIVIDENDS.

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Encouraging announcements have been made during the past week by several of the companies in what is known as the Johannesburg Consolidated Investment Group. The Van Ryn Deep...