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NEWS OF THE WEEK
The SpectatorT HE Ministerial changes announced on Monday leave the strength of the Cabinet little changed. Lord Harlech is a distinct loss. As Mr. Ormsby-Gore he had a consistently sound...
A Disturbing Speech Signor Mussolini's speech at Genoa on Saturday
The Spectatorno doubt had purposes not written on its surface, but it is hardly calculated to increase enthusiasm for the Anglo-Italian agreement in this country. The Duce presumably had his...
Signor Mussolini and Spain The Spanish Government stubbornly refuses to
The Spectatoradmit defeat, and though General Franco's advance continues, it has lost its momentum and his gains are small and slow. Entrenched behind their rivers, swollen by the summer...
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Mexico and Britain The rupture of diplomatic relations between Great
The SpectatorBritain and Mexico is greatly to be deplored, most of all because it increases the difficulties of achieving a satisfactory settle- ment of the oil question. The ostensible...
Belgium's New Government The Cabinet crisis in Belgium has been
The Spectatorresolved, for the moment, by the formation of a Government under M. Spaak, the former Foreign Minister and Belgium's first Socialist Prime Minister. Fortunately, in the new...
Japan's Offensive Last week Japan's great offensive on the Lunghai
The Spectatorrailway appeared to have been held ; but it has been continued with renewed momentum, and the Chinese, after fighting severer than any that has yet been seen in the war, are...
Herr Hen lein's Visit Mr. Churchill spoke with surprising, and
The Spectatorpossibly injudicious, confidence at Bristol on Monday on the prospects of a satisfactory settlement in Czechoslovakia. Mr. Churchill had just seen Herr Henlein, the Sudeten-...
Hungary's New Government One of the chief tasks of the
The Spectatornew Hungarian Government, under Dr. Imredy, is to suppress the violent activities of the Hungarian National Socialists who, especially after the Ansdiluss, have caused great...
Uneasiness in France M. Daladier and his Government may congratulate
The Spectatorthem- selves on the success of the k28,000,000 Defence Loan which, issued this week on very generous terms, was heavily over- subscribed. Yet French public opinion remains...
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It is occasionally suggested that debates in Parliament should be
The Spectatorbroadcast. No one would gain more from this innovation than Mr. Buchanan, whose speeches seldom receive the attention from the Press that they deserve. His acquaintance with the...
The new Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Labour, Mr.
The SpectatorLennox-Boyd, blotted his copy-book a few weeks ago when he ventured in a public speech to anticipate the Prime Minister's decision regarding assurances to Czecho- slovakia. But...
The Week in Parliament Our Parliamentary Correspondent writes : For
The Spectatorthe moment, at any rate, the sacrifice of Lord Swinton has strengthened the Government's position in the House of Commons. After last week's debate on military aviation all...
The Home Secretary and Official Secrets Sir Samuel Hoare's statement
The Spectatorin the House of Commons last week has not entirely dispelled the alarm which is widely felt regarding the use recently made of the Official Secrets Acts. It is true that the...
QUESTIONS FROM SCHOOLS
The SpectatorIn the course of last term arrangements were made with a large number of public and secondary schools, for both boys and girls, whereby copies of The Spectator were supplied at...
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GLOOM OVER GENEVA
The SpectatorN O one who has ever believed in what the League of Nations stands for can fail to be profoundly depressed as he turns his gaze on Geneva today. The hundred-and-first meeting of...
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AFTER LORD SWINTON
The SpectatorT HE Prime Minister, despite his personal convictions, has at length accepted the verdict of -public opinion, and allowed Lord Swinton to resign in face of the criticism that...
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The demand for the report, by the way, is astonishing.
The SpectatorThe first edition of 2,50o was sold out on the morning of publication (as I have reason to know, since I tried in vain to buy a copy, and only secured one in the end through the...
Though not all the three thousand guests said to have
The Spectatorbeen invited to the reception at the Italian Embassy on Wednesday actually appeared there, enough came to create formidable traffic jams all round Grosvenor Square and all round...
Sir Charles Bressey's traffic proposals refer, of course, primarily to
The SpectatorLondon, and London (I speak as a Londoner) has rather a way of thinking itself the only city that matters, but actually what is most interesting in his report is the series of...
The average age of members of the reconstructed Cabinet is
The Spectatoralleged to be 53 ; that is still some way short of senility. To the two obvious questions, Is the Cabinet strengthened , in average ability ? and Is its general political...
" Liberal women, appalled by the National Government's mishandling of
The Spectatorinternational affairs, opened wide the floodgates of their indignation when the Council of the Women's Liberal Federation met yesterday. Speaker after speaker flayed the...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorT HERE can be nothing very conclusive in arguments about what King George V said in 1914, when all that is on written record is what someone said he said. But the story...
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LEFT WING IN FRANCO SPAIN
The SpectatorBy GEORGE EDINGER I ENTERED Spanish Nationalist territory with a list of written questions compiled by my Liberal and Labour friends. I think I am the first visitor with Left...
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LONDON ROADS AND LONDON TRAFFIC
The SpectatorBy MERVYN O'GORMAN I T is a testimony to the interest created by Sir Charles Bressey's Greater London Traffic Survey that it should be out of print on the morning of...
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POLAND AND HER NEIGHBOURS
The SpectatorBy W. J. ROSE " M Y complaint about the Poles," said a well-known expert. on European affairs not long since, " is that they are too little ready to co-operate." I have pon-...
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THE CHOICE OF A CAREER : II. MEDICINE
The SpectatorBy OUR MEDICAL CORRESPONDENT [This is the second of a short series of articles on conditions in the principal careers open to .boys and girls from secondary schools. Next...
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JOHN WESLEY AND THE EMPIRE
The SpectatorBy J. GRANGE RADFORD W HEN the Earl of Meath chose May 24th, Queen Victoria's birthday, as Empire Day, it did not, doubtless, occur to him that it was on this date in the year...
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IRVING'S LAST CURTAIN AT DRURY LANE
The SpectatorBy EDITH HUNTINGTON TOMBES I T was my privilege to be present at both the first and the last nights of Irving's season at Drury Lane in the spring of 1905. No one knew it would...
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Under Thirty Page
The SpectatorTHE USE OF LEISURE II By WALTER ALLEN [The writer, aged 27, is a graduate of Birmingham University, a3d has been a Scho3lm2ster, Lecturer and Novelist] IT can only have been...
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Commonwealth and Foreign
The SpectatorHENLEIN'S ANTI-NAZI RIVAL FROM A SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT IT is commonly supposed that the Germans of the Czechoslovak Republic unanimously support the Sudetendeutsche Partei...
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STAGE AND SCREEN
The SpectatorTHE THEATRE " People of Our Class." By St. John Ervine. At the New Theatre THREE old ladies sat behind me at People of Our Class. They had come determined to enjoy. Arriving...
"Amphitryon 38." By Jean Giraudoux. Adapted by S. N. Behrman.
The SpectatorAt the Lyric Theatre. THE legend of Amphitryon has been a gift to comic writers for centuries, and Mr. Giraudoux's cryptic title makes obscure acknowledgment to some...
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. . NEC MERGITUR "
The Spectator[D'un correspondant parisien] La franc ne vaut plus que neuf centimes environ. Les tech- niciens vous expliqueront que nous avons maintenant un franc a niveau minimum, qui...
THE CINEMA
The Spectator" Housemaster." At the Regal—" The Challenge." At the London Pavilion IF A Yank at Oxford was in essence American, House- master gratifyingly shifts the balance ; it is nothing...
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The Latest Arrivals
The SpectatorThe Ice-saints see the arrival of the latest migrants. Birds arrive on our shores in all months of the year. There is a to and fro passage that is continual, very nearly...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorMay-time Disasters The most disastrous of all the frosts that have fallen on England for many years occurred five days before the festival of the Three Ice-saints, of whom...
A Dove's Meal The greediest of all the birds, though
The Spectatorthey do not trouble most gardens, are the ring-doves. Happily they are quite as fond of the early leaves of several forest trees as of cultivated garden crops, though on due...
A Blue Scare An unpopular bird in another garden, as
The Spectatorindeed in most gardens that it frequents, is the jay, whose taste in green peas as well as in small eggs and young it is hard to satiate. Many sorts of devices have been tried...
In the Garden Up to this date the garden has
The Spectatorowed more than usual to the very common flowers. For a number of weeks by far the most beautiful thing in our garden has been a low bank (with a sweet- briar hedge on the top)...
An Immoral Cuckoo
The SpectatorThe unpleasant character of the cuckoo is, I fear, further blackened by a modern instance of its selfish behaviour. Last year a pair of water wagtails, whose nest was built in...
Tree Sense Our " tree sense " is to be
The Spectatorfurther stimulated by a conference en trees held by " the Men of the Trees " at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, from July 16th to 2 St. German trees as well as Empire trees are to...
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THE RIGHT WAY WITH ROADS [To the Editor of THE
The SpectatorSPECTATOR] SIR, —I should like to support " Janus " and oppose Mr. C. Boyd Bowman on the question of the roads. The plan of the latter is to make new trunk roads and to "...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR]
The SpectatorSnt,—Canon Barry in his article on the Churches and the Common Life states that a radical rethinking of theology in terms of twentieth-century life and action is the first...
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...
EIRE AND THE KING [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR]
The SpectatorSnt,—Mr. Jeffries' letter in your issue of May 13th is most welcome to those who, like myself, have been interested as members of the rank and file of the Conservative party in...
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THOMAS ATKINS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sta,—I was extremely interested to read in The Spectator of May 6th Mr. Burdon's account of the original Thomas Atkins. Following his suggestion...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—In his letter concerning
The Spectatorthe position of the King in the Anglo-Irish Agreement, Mr. Jeffries writes : " It appears to me that the absence of the legal title His Majesty's Government in the United...
PEACE IN SPAIN
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Slit,—While sincere effort is being made to localise the Spanish War, and to put a stop to outside intervention, little, if anything, is being...
THE SCOTS AND THE SABBATH
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—The writer of the article under the above heading remarks very truly " there is no good reason why the restric- tions of the Jewish Sabbath...
THE USE OF LEISURE
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—The reco,&d of what some graduates do in their spare time, as revealed in the article " The Use of Leisure " is a shocking commentary on...
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ARMS FOR CHINA
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR, — It seems sometimes that the capacity for moral- indig- nation and moral courage is passing from the modern world. How else can we explain...
IS THE LAW AN ASS ?
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SI12,—AS a practising lawyer of some years' standing I must take exception to your statement that the law is often, if not always, an ass. On...
GERMANY AND EUROPE
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Six,—Mr. Powys Greenwood is, I think, mistaken in saying in last week's Spectator that : " nowhere does he (Hitler) advocate that Germans should...
" SONNETS OF SHAKESPEARE AND SOUTHAMPTON "
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sut,—Mr. Lawrence gives himself much pleasure in disposing of those with whom he disagrees. He says that I am a " Mr. Dick," the dear old...
" INFLUENCED " BOOKS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR, — May I be allowed to thank Dame Edith Lyttelton for finding a name for a class of book, the origin and purpose of which have hitherto...
FOOD AND WAR
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—The suggestion of Major E. P. Yeates for the private " home storage " of food supplies in war-time is excellent. The point may have been "...
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AMERICA'S PICTURE - NEWS [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR, — It is
The Spectatorinteresting to read in your article on " America's Picture-News," that the American picture papers have " got something " in the picture crime-stories they have lately...
THE FAITH OF A LIFETIME-
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR, — As one who has read with great interest the articles on Youth and Christianity which have appeared in recent issues, and as one too who...
A LIFE OF DR. ROOTHAM
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR, — May I crave a small space in your columns ? I am writing a Memoir of my father, the late Dr. Cyril Rootham ; and if any of your readers...
" TWILIGHT IN VIENNA "
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sm,—In your last issue Mr. Douglas Reed publishes a review of Twilight in Vienna, by Willi Frischauer, and of The Last Five Hours of Austria, by...
AN APPRECIATION
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sut,—I feel I must express to you my thanks for the insertion in your issue of May 6th, the contribution " Can I be a Christian ? "—VIII. It...
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BOOKS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorPAGE Mr. Gladstone (E. L. Woodward; . . • • 918 The Battle of the Books (E. E. Kellett) . . 919 War and Democracy (Frank Pakenham) 919 The Necessity of Freedom (H. W....
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WAR AND THE SOCIALIST THIS impressive symposium concernin g the ori g ins
The Spectatorof war and the way to prevent it emanates from a g roup of Labour publi- cists in their early thirties of whom and from whom we shall assuredly hear much in the future. Five out...
THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS History of the Legal Deposit
The Spectatorof Books. By R. C. B. Partrid g e. (Library Association. 18s.) AMID the crowd of recent books which are often little more than rehashings of old ones, it is a pleasure to li g...
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CHRISTIANITY AND POLITICS
The Spectator" I have a most zealous esteem and reverence for the constitution of government ; and I believe it to be so excellently poised that if the least branch of the prerogative be...
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A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY FUHRER
The SpectatorWallenstein : Soldier under Saturn. By Francis Watson. (Chatto and Windus. x5s.) THE appearance of this masterly biography is well-timed. Each day sees a sharpening of the...
A COUNTRY HAMPER
The SpectatorWithout Knowing Mr. Walkley. Personal memories by Edith Olivier. (Faber and Faber. 129. 6d.) WRITING reminiscences is an art all its own. It is not the same as autobiography....
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EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY CARICATURE
The SpectatorCatalogue of Political and Personal Satires preserved in the Department of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum. Vol. VI, 1784-1792. By Mary Dorothy George, Litt. D....
A GUIDE-BOOK TO ROUMANIA
The SpectatorRoumanian Journey. By Sacheverell Sitwell. (Batsford. 8s. 6d.) IT must be a matter for marvel to anyone conversant with modern conditions of publishing that Messrs. Batsford...
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EVOLUTION OF A CITY
The SpectatorHERE is a valuable and eminently necessary addition to the somewhat scanty literature on the subject of local government. In this book Lady Simon describes and interprets the...
THE NONESUCH WHITMAN
The SpectatorWalt Whitman. Complete Poetry and Selected Prose and Letters. Edited by Emory Holloway. (The Nonesuch Press. 125. 6d.) THE NONESUCH Whitman has been, to all appearances,...
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FICTION
The SpectatorBy KATE O'BRIEN MR. WILLIAM FAULKNER is a writer handicapped and distin- guished by a particular exaction which he makes of readers and which we cannot always place at his...
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THE WORLD'S ECONOMIC FUTURE By A. Loveday and - Others "
The SpectatorWhat seems to me to give special value to this series," says Mr. D. H. Robertson in his appetising introduction to this collection of Halley Stewart lectures (Allen and Unwin,...
KITSONS OF LEEDS : 1837-1937 By Edwin Kitson Clark
The SpectatorColonel Kitson Clark's history of a century-old " firm and its folk by one of them " is much to be commended (Loco- motive Publishing Company, los.). Such books are of interest...
THE VOYAGES OF CADAMOSTO Edited by G. R. Crone
The SpectatorThe narrative of Alvise Cadamosto, the scholarly young Venetian who in 1454-6 made two voyages down the West African coast for Prince Henry of Portugal, is for the first time...
LION. AND JACKAL By Frank Brownlee
The SpectatorThat science owes much to story-telling for light on primitive thought and culture has been proved time and again from The Golden Bough onwards ; here is further recognition of...
FIRST THINGS FIRST By Frank Tilsley
The SpectatorThe present decade, the " ideological thirties," becomes increasingly manifesto-minded. The impulse to " state where one stands " philosophically, religiously and, above all,...
CURRENT LITERATURE
The SpectatorPOST-VICTORIAN POETRY By Herbert Palmer Here is a monument, if not to modern poetry, then to the industry of Mr. Herbert Palmer. His book (Dent, I2S. 6d.) contains 370 pages,...
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A SHORT HISTORY OF NAVAL AND MARINE ENGINEERING By Engineer-Captain
The SpectatorEdgar Smith Among the profound changes in man's way of living which the machine age has introduced, the complete transformation of life at sea is one of the most important. The...
GRAMOPHONE NOTES
The SpectatorTHE interest of recent recordings has been unusually dispropor- tionate to their abundance. Strangers to the recording list , have been few, and several of the recordings that...
SLAVERY THROUGH THE AGES By Lieut.-General Sir George MacMunn
The SpectatorAs Lady Simon observes in a preface, Sir George MacMunn's new book (Nicholson and Watson, I2S. 6d.) will serve a useful purpose by reminding readers that slavery is by no means...
A HISTORY OF ENGLAND By Frederick George Marcham
The SpectatorThe author of this book (Macmillan, 18s.) is Professor of English History at Cornell University. He covers his ground from prehistoric times down to the abdication in a little...
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TRAVEL NOTES
The SpectatorBELGIUM Belgium are of two classes : either they are IT is often argued that those who visit day-trippers and week-enders who go to places like Ostend and Blankenberghe, or...
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MOTORING
The SpectatorThe " Automatic Speed Limit"— That somewhat weatherbeaten suggestion, the automatic control of engine-speed, was brought up again the other day before the House of Lords Select...
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UNIT TRUSTS AS INVESTMENTS
The SpectatorBy HARTLEY WITHERS Utsar TRUSTS, or Fixed Trusts as they were originally called, have been opportunely invented to help investors to solve their problem in a time of exceptional...
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Company dividend announcements have to be quite exceptional in these
The Spectatordays to excite much enthusiasm in Throgmorton Street, and even Burmah Oil's 5o per cent. scrip bonus has proved rather a damp squib. Burmah Oil was my choice a year ago in the...
FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorRECESSION ? Yes, but major or minor ? This is the question to which the City is now searching for the answer. The April figures of steel production and oversea trade and the...
PLATT BROTHERS AGAIN
The SpectatorHaving taken a firm line against the original reconstruction proposals put forward by Plan Brothers (Holdings), the textile machinery makers, I cannot resist the temptation to...
Venturers' Corner
The SpectatorTo recommend an electrical engineering share at this stage of the trade cycle may seem to be inviting trouble, but I will take the risk and outline the merits, purely as a...
Right from the start the unit trust movement has demon-
The Spectatorstrated a striking adaptability to investors' needs—and desires—and one cannot therefore be surprised that current conditions should bring forth a new trust catering for...
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COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorTHE LONDON AND MANCHESTER ASSURANCE COMPANY LTD. MR. WALTER H. BROWN'S REVIEW THE sixty-ninth annual general meeting of the London and Manchester Assurance Company, Limited,...
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BRITISH MATCH CORPORATION
The SpectatorA SATISFACTORY YEAR Ti E eleventh ordinary general meeting of the British Match Cor- poration Limited was held on May 18th in London. Mr. C. E. Bartholomew, O.B.E., the...
COMPANY MEETINGS
The SpectatorMENDARIS (SUMATRA) RUBBER AND PRODUCE CONSERVATIVE DIVIDEND POLICY THE twenty-seventh ordinary general meeting of the Mendaris (Sumatra) Rubber and Produce Estates, Ltd., was...
THE SOCIETY OF INCORPORATED ACCOUNTANTS
The SpectatorTHE IMPORTANCE OF NATIONAL ECONOMY MR. WALTER HOLMAN, F.S.A.A., London, President of the Society of Incorporated Accountants, presiding at the annual general meeting of the...
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BRITISH MATCH OUTLOOK.
The SpectatorAmong the company chairmen who have recently uttered a warning about the present level of taxation is Mr. Clarence (Continued on page 942) FINANCIAL NOTES (continued from page...
ACCOUNTANT ON PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
The SpectatorThe presidential address which Mr. Walter Holman delivered on Tuesday to the Society of Incorporated Accountants will be widely studied. His review, as an accountant, of the...
'FINANCIAL NOTES APRIL OVERSEA TRADE
The SpectatorTHE British oversea trade returns for April have been received with little satisfaction. At a time when leading industrialists are agreed that a growing volume of foreign trade...
PATALING RUBBER
The SpectatorWith'the decline in the rubber consumption of the U.S.A., which dropped by a further 2,503 tons in April, rubber chair- men are naturally laying more stress on the development...
MENDARIS (SUMATRA) RUBBER
The SpectatorAt the meeting of another company within the Harrisons and Crosfield agency Mr. Miller also foreshadowed an in- creased replanting programme. Mendaris (Sumatra) Rubber and...
INDUSTRIAL ASSURANCE PROGRESS.
The SpectatorMr. Walter H. Brown, who is retiring from the chairmanship of the London and Manchester Assurance Company after over So years' service, had some interesting figures to give the...
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ENGINEERING COMPONENTS LIMITED
The SpectatorRECORD PROFITS THE third ordinary general meeting of Engineering Components Limited, was held on May 12th at Winchester House, London E.C. Dr. P. G. Griffith (the Chairman),...
COMPANY MEETINGS
The SpectatorPATALING RUBBER ESTATES, LTD. GOOD RESULTS BUT OUTLOOK UNCERTAIN THE eighteenth annual general meeting of the Pataling Rubber Estates, Ltd., was held on May 13th at 19...
ENGINEERING COMPONENTS
The SpectatorIn announcing a record profit for the past year, Dr. P. G. Griffith, the chairman of Engineering Components, expressed the view that 1937 was an exceptional year, and that 1938...
KEPONG (MALAY) RUBBER ESTATES
The SpectatorA distinctly hopeful view of 'the future of rubber was expressed by. Sir Francis Vouks at the meeting of Kepong (Malay) Rubber Estates. Although he regarded the severity of the...
COMPANY MEETING
The SpectatorKEPONG (MALAY) RUBBER ESTATES THE thirty-third annual general meeting of the Kepong (Malay) Rubber Estates Limited was held on May 18th in London. Sir Francis Voules, C.B.E....
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SOLUTION NEXT WEEK
The SpectatorThe - wirnier" of Crossword No. 294 is Mrs. L. Lotke, to Manor Court, Aylmer Road, Highgate, N.2.
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 294
The SpectatorAIF' PI EIRI TIH OlUlt, HI 11 ,7 13 1 Ej R TI ED Ul Trr CI II LI E ICI ETD! NI IN ASISauk Sill NI EIS 1 IN / I 17 - rlir3TTLS El RI OJLAI C AIMI 11 CI El R . T AI B.. E...
" THE SPECTATOR" CROSSWORD No. 295
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...