22 OCTOBER 1937

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NEWS OF THE WEEK

The Spectator

TTALY, who, having pledged herself to non-intervention 1 in Spain, has admitted officially that she has 40,000 soldiers serving there, cannot complain if any conciliatory...

The Nine-Power Conference Conferences require preliminaries, but in view of

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the urgent need for rapid action, and the fact that an appeal to the nine signatories of the Washington Treaty of 1922 was decided on as long ago as October 6th, the convocation...

The War in China Japan's campaign in China is said

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to depend on the belief that her sweeping successes in the North will destroy the spirit of resistance in the Chinese at Shanghai. This object has not yet been attained, both...

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Japan's Finances In the Financial Supplement which forms part of

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this issue of The Spectator Viscount Kano, London manager of the Yokohama Specie Bank, gives reasons for confidence in Japan's economic and financial situation. He has none the...

The Palestine Outrages The situation in Palestine gives rise for

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serious anxiety, Arab terrorism showing signs of increasing rather than diminishing. Last Friday a detachment of police was ambushed by Arabs near Bethlehem, and two British...

Republican Offensive The end of last week saw the opening

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of the long-awaited Republican offensive on the Aragon front, and the Nationalist forces, after severe fighting, have been driven back in the neighbourhood of Saragossa, which...

Desperate Remedies Signor Mussolini expects to raise £65,000,000 by the

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10 per cent. levy on the capital of joint stock undertakings, and the new taxes which were announced this week ; the levy, to be paid in 15 instalments by 1940, will be applied...

Czechoslovakia's Germans It is well to estimate at its obviously

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accurate value the outcry in the German Press about the election-meeting fracas at Teplitz-Schoenau in Bohemia on Sunday between the Sudetendeutsch supporters of Herr Henlein...

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Air Raid Precautions One of the first questions to be

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discussed by the new Parliament is that of air raid precautions. The recent Government announcement that only some ro or 12 per cent. of the cost of measures of protection...

" Lancashire's Remedy " The Lancashire cotton industry has made

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many attempts in the past, by reorganisation, to improve its condition. But these have, in the main, failed owing to the extreme hetero- geneity of the industry, with the...

* * * * The Question of Colonies The correspondence

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that has broken out afresh in The Times on the subject of German colonies is adding, and could add, little to a discussion that was long since worn thread- bare. The sound...

The Greatest Physicist The death of Lord Rutherford has robbed

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the world of perhaps its greatest physicist. Rutherford, while creating the modern view of matter, yet adhered to the nineteenth- century tradition of expressing his ideas in a...

* * * * Geography and Birth-rate Although the probability

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of a declining population is by now a well-worn topic, Sir William Beveridge, speaking at Oxford last Saturday, dealt with a new and impor- tant side of the problem when he...

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NATIONALISM AND GOD

The Spectator

T HERE can be few of those who read Lord Hugh Cecil's letter in last Monday's Times who did not recognise with thankfulness that the gift of prophetic utterance had not...

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THE PRICE OF FOOD

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T HE successful Labour candidate at North Islington last week attributed his election to working-class resentment at the rising cost of living and especially at the rising price...

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A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK

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T HE damages for libel awarded to Lord Camrose and the Daily Telegraph—£12,500 and £7,5oo respectively— against the Fascist paper Action are heavy, and the amount of damages in...

The different daily papers in their endeavours to find adequate

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explanations for the slump on Wall Street on Tuesday, seem, oddly enough, hardly to mention one factor which, to judge from what I hear privately, played a considerable part. A...

Signor Mussolini is in an increasingly difficult position, but various

The Spectator

London papers are doing what they can to help him. Take, for instance, headings like the following, from last Saturday's Daily Herald : MR. EDEN RUNS AWAY : DUCE LEFT A FREE...

The announcement that a ticket-office common to all the four

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great railways has just been opened near Paddington seems curiously belated. For years past there have been " consolidated ticket offices" in different parts of New York and...

The Duke of Windsor has not lived up to the

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character I gave him last week. I said quite accurately then that during his visit to Germany he had (except in response to a young gentleman of three) rather studiously avoided...

I referred a few weeks ago to the new edition

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of the Bible, printed as ordinary literature, with verse and chapter divisions omitted, and the archaic spelling of the translators of 1611 brought up to date when necessary....

I do not invariably write with enthusiasm of the Daily

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Express and its views, but this editorial paragraph from its issue of Wednesday seems worth quotation : " Mussolini has not paid for Abyssinia yet, orders a 10 per cent. capital...

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MR. DE VALERA AND THE REPUBLIC

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By L. T. FLEMING F REE STATE politics, it would appear, have once again reached that stage where those behind cry " Forward ! " and those before cry " Back ! " It is true that...

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THE VOICE OF UNDER THIRTY -H

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[The author of this article, aged 18, has just gone up to one of the ,women's colleges at Oxford.] I ALWAYS feel slightly guilty when I think about " my generation." For one...

Page 9

THE BRITISH PRISON : IV. DISCIPLINE

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By LAWRENCE ATHILL [This is the fourth of-six articles in which Major Athill has embodied the conclusions he has reached as a result of a personal investigation into British...

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CONTROLLING REPRODUCTION

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P. SNOW By C. T HE sciences of living things are still in an unsettled condition. No one can say—as it is reasonable to say of physics—that the fundamental ideas have been...

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THE RETURN OF FRAY LUIS

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By J. V. BRYANT to sell goatsmilk cheeses at the corner of the square, heard it among the first and cried it aloud to all corners, waving a lumpy little cheese wrapped in dried...

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MARGINAL-. COMMENTS

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By MONICA REDLICH T HEREare to my mind few: pastimes more fascinating than to observe the divergence between the words which we use in our everyday speech and what we mean by...

Page 13

Commonwealth and Foreign

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RIVALRIES IN CENTRAL EUROPE By HUGH SETON-WATSON NOTHING strikes a visitor to Central Europe more forcibly than the complete domination of internal politics by external...

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STAGE AND SCREEN

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THE THEATRE " Measure for Measure." By William Shakespeare. At the Old Vic MR. GUTHRIE'S production of this bitter, rather intractable comedy has more virtues than faults,...

THE CINEMA

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"Les Perles de la Couronne." At the Curzon—" Le Roman d'un Tricheur." At the Academy—" Modern Inventions." At the London Pavilion — " Glock-Cleaners." At the Empire THE value of...

Page 15

ART

The Spectator

Specialists DURING the last thirty years or more the real innovations which have taken place in painting have been on the technical side rather than on the side of subject, if...

ARCHITECTURE

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Church Restoration ALMOST every month some ecclesiastical fabric becomes violently in need of funds. Church restoration and building are now a matter more of church finance than...

Page 16

Maligned Magpies?

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The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, which has been the target of some highly displeased critics, issues a seasonal quarterly that is always of interest ; but in its...

Rural Rulers

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It is worth while remembering that an ambition of this sort was the motive of the gift of Chequers to the nation. Lord Lee of Fareham, as he told me before the gift was made,...

* * * *

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" Ellum " A vigorous attempt is being made by the Timber Association to encourage the wooden house in Britain. The timber houses of the United States are held up as a model, and...

Sulphur Butterfly Last week I came upon a singularly gorgeous

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sulphur butterfly ; and the pleasure its appearance gave emphasised the impression that never before had I seen so few autumnal butterflies. The odd thing is that this general...

A Garden Guild

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An organ and an organisation of which more ought to be known is the Guild Gardener, an excellent monthly magazine, published by the Guild itself. Now this Guild, which spends...

COUNTRY LIFE

The Spectator

Salving England Salvation proceeds at an accelerated pace. Bits of the soul of the country are made safe week after week. The National Trust has just secured a most essential...

A New Authority That charming historian, and ardent supporter of

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the National Trust, Mr. George Trevelyan, launched a very definite campaign at the annual meeting of the Council for the Preservation of Rural England. The Government is to be...

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SHEEP OR STAGS ?

The Spectator

[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR, — Mr. George Blake's letter makes it clear that he meant his article to be taken seriously. His statements, therefore, call for serious...

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

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[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...

Page 18

THE IRISH INVASION

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[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Not being able to quote analytical statistics regarding the number of ex-service and native-born Irishmen on the dole in Liverpool Mr. L....

THE SAFETY OF MALTA [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.]

The Spectator

SIR,—May I be allowed to thank Mr. Olivieri-Munroe for amending my article on Malta, published in The Spectator of September Toth, in a letter (October 15th) which would imply...

MAGISTRATES versus MOTORISTS [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—By

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way of reply to Mr. Charles Wright I do not need to, and indeed, I cannot, add to any previous letters. We both seem to stick to our opinions and repetition adds to them no...

INDIA UNDER CONGRESS

The Spectator

[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Mr. C. F. Andrews' article on India under Congress in the last number of The Spectator seems to call for comment on at least two important...

Page 19

[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] read with interest Mr.

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Blunt's article on Picasso and Mr. Herbert Read's criticism of it. To me the important point implicit in Mr. Blunt's article was that Picasso belongs to a generation of...

PICASSO UNFROCKED [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] Sia,—Mr. Read

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calls attention to several important facts about Picasso, some of which were unknown to me, but which do not seem to me to affect the thesis which I put forward, namely, that...

THE VOICE OF UNDER THIRTY [To the Editor of THE

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SPECTATOR.] SIR, --AS one who also sits at a desk in an engineering works well known throughout the world and whose age and origins are very similar to those of the author of...

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MR. ALDINGTON AND THE CATECHISM [To the Editor of THE

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SPECTATOR.] SIR, —Mr. Richard Aldington in his little dialogue " Archie's Dilemma " misquotes the Catechism by substituting the past for the future tense in the clause which...

ITALY AGAINST THE WORLD [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.]

The Spectator

SIR,—I was interested to learn through Mr. Wilson Harris of Mr. Eden's denial of my ttatement regarding his alleged change of front at the 1936 Assembly. I had, of course,...

A LONDON BEE [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.]

The Spectator

SIR,—In answer to Sir William Beach Thomas's query " Where is the nearest hive to Charing Cross ? " I should hazard a guess that they are the two hives situated on the roof of...

A PROPOS D'ORGANISATION

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[D'un correspondant parlslen.] Nous avons eu recemment la visite de lord Leverhulme, venu a la tete d'un comite qui prepare le septieme congres de scientific management pour ran...

MRS. ELIZABETH - CARTER [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.]

The Spectator

Sra,—Mr. A. G. Bradley's article was most welcome. There is perhaps more in London to remind us of Mrs. Carter than he suggests. She was interred (1806) in the burial ground of...

Page 21

BOOKS OF THE DAY

The Spectator

Haldane, 1856-1915 (The Marquess of Crewe) .. .. Civitas Dei (Wilson Harris) 689 Mr. Leacock Discovers the West (H. V. Hodson) .. 692 Present Dikontents (Honor Croome) 69z...

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GOD AND THE COMMONWEALTH

The Spectator

Civitas Del. By Lionel Curtis. - Vol. III. (Macmillan. 5s.) Wins a brief, stimulating, provocative and occasionally irritating volume Mr. Lionel Curtis brings to an end his...

Page 24

MR. LEACOCK DISCOVERS THE WEST

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PROFESSOR STEPHEN LEACOCK, for many years head of the department of Political Economy in McGill University, at the age of sixty-six had never visited the four western provinces...

PRESENT DISCONTENTS

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The Way Out. By Sir George Paish. (Nicholson and Watson. 6s.) IF—if—if. If there had been no Great War ; if the Treaty of Versailles had not been made to serve the ends of...

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COMPOSER MILITANT

The Spectator

Gustav Mahler. By BrunoValter. Translated from the German by James Galston. (Keganyaul, ts.) • .... , COMPOSERS, more than other kinds of artist, tend to be of retir-...

JEFFREYS, C.J.

The Spectator

Soho months ago.there was published an interesting pamphlet on Charles James Fox's connexions with the town of Bridge- water. In a letter quoted therein, Fox asks a local friend...

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FAITH IN ACTION

The Spectator

THERE still must be many of us whose childhood was fascinated, if- not fashioned, by a strip of vivid portraiture called : The Child — What Will He Become ? The modern palate,...

Page 30

MARIA EDGEWORTH - . •

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A Bibliographical Tribute. By Bertha Coolidge -Slade. (Con- stable. 42s.) MARIA EDGEWORTH, then twenty-eight, began het writing with Letters for Literary Ladies in 1795 ; she...

Page 32

FICTION ,

The Spectator

O'BitIEN The Antagonists. By Paul Hervey Fox. (Michael Joseph. 7s. 6d.) •• The Man Who Started Clean. By T. 0. Beachcroft. (Boriswood.' 7s. 6d.) " He would not listen to me...

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THE BIBLE COMES ALIVE By Sir Charles Marston

The Spectator

Skilled diggers since the War have added much to our knowledge of early Palestine and Syria and confirmed in many details the historical narratives • of the Old Testament: Sir...

CURRENT LITERATURE

The Spectator

THE PASSING OF THE STEWARTS By Agnes Mure Mackenzie Dr. Mackenzie's able sketch of Scot- tish history from the Covenant to Culloden (Maclehose, I2S. 6d.) will have a novelty...

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ST. PETER By Francis Underhill, D.D.

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The Bishop-designate of Bath and Wells has produced in , Sr. Peter (Cen- tenary Press, 7s. 6d.) a very full and readable study of one of the most significant of Christian...

AN EXPERIMENT IN LEISURE By Joanna Field

The Spectator

In this book (Chatto and Windus, 7s. 6d.) the author continues the experi- ments in self-examination which she began in A Life of One's Own. The aim of her investigations is to...

AFRICAN ADVENTURE By Lord Baden-Powell

The Spectator

The Chief Scout here records incidents and impressions of his recent trip round Africa. He is writing for Scouts and other " young creatures " in the hope that they will be...

IN SEARCH OF THE MAHATMAS 'OF TIBET w - -

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By Edin G. Schary . Mr. Schary is a young Californian who became convinced that the truth about life was to be learnt from the holy men of Tibet. He was not sure who these wise...

NO OTHER WHITE MEN By Julia Davis

The Spectator

In 1804 Jefferson decided that it was time he knew the sort of country there was in the unknown North-West. He sent an expedition to follow the Missouri to its source and if...

TOWARDS ANGKOR By G. Quaritch Wales

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Dr. Wales is Field Director of the Greater-India Research Committee, and in the course of his official duties he has travelled extensively in particularly remote and unexplored...

THIRTY THOUSAND MILES FOR THE FILMS . By Natalie Barkas

The Spectator

Mrs. Barkas was a member of the Gaumont-British unit which made the Indian scenes for Soldiers Three and the- African scenes for Rhodes of Africa. In this book (Blackie, rots....

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The Motor Show

The Spectator

SECOND REVIEW BETTER - CARS FOR 1938 ALTHOUGH this year there are even fewer novelties in design or construction at the Motor Show, there is no doubt that the general average of...

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THE SPECTATOR

The Spectator

Financial Supplement No. 5,704] FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1937

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The, Banking and

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, - Financial Outlook IF I were to take as a basis for consideration of the general banking and financial outlook the line pursued by the Chancellor of the Exchequer at the...

Page 40

The Financial and Economic Position of China

The Spectator

OF recent years China has been passing through social, economic, and political readjustment without parallel in history. For centuries she had clung characteristically to...

Page 43

Some Features of Japan's Economic Position

The Spectator

As the-Financial and Economic situation of Japan is somewhat obscure to many Westerners who are not acquainted with the Far East, it is perhaps useful for me to indicate a...

Page 45

Banking and Monetary Policy in the Baltic

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PERHAPS one of the most important effects of the world crisis was that it compelled each country to choose between two fundamentally different economic policies. On the one hand...

Page 49

Instarmeitt -

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Policies Tax-Free Income Benefits THE combination of difficult investment conditions and high rates of income tax has resulted in the formulation of a type of policy designed...

Page 51

Death Duties and the Slump THE slump of the last

The Spectator

few months on the Stock Exchanges of the world has emphasised afresh the great value of life assurance as a means of meeting the onerous death duties. For the purpose of...

Page 52

Unit Trusts and Depression— A Fallacy Refuted IT is now

The Spectator

some six years since " Unit Trusts " came into being in the form of " Fixed Trusts," a principle from which experience has dictated some departure to the advantage of the...

Page 55

WISE INVESTMENT

The Spectator

ARE London stock markets over the worst, or is it safer to assuine that fresh storms are gathering ? Frankly, nobody who is honest will pretend to give a confident answer while...

GOOD PREFERENCE SHARES

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Fixed interest securities are holding their ground well in face of the political risks, many investors having doubtless decided that while the weather is too stormy to justify...

* * * *

The Spectator

UNIT TRUST STRENGTH Stockbrokers should take off their hats to investors in the unit trusts. In the search for whipping posts Throgmorton Street has been far too ready to name...

A.W. DEBENTURES

The Spectator

Investors who took my 'advice in June to buy the income debentures of the A.W. Second Stock Trust will be pleased to see matters working out according to plan. It will be...

Venturers' Corner

The Spectator

Cinema shares are out of favour with investors, and balance- sheets like that of Gaumont-British do not help. There is still a chance, however, that the industry will get on to...

Page 56

FINANCE

The Spectator

EMPIRE EXCHANGES AND PRICE LEVELS EXCHANGE rates between London and the principal British Dominions drew much attention to themselves during the earlier post-War years by a...

Page 58

GAUMONT-BRITISH OUTLOOK.

The Spectator

Shareholders of the Gaumont-British Picture Corporation gave unmistakable evidence at last week's meeting of their strong support for the directors. Mr. Isidore Ostrer, who...

FINANCIAL NOTES

The Spectator

INDUSTRIALS AND AMERICA. PRICE movements in the industrial share market during the past week or so have revived questions whether the prolonged decline in quotations has at...

COMPANY MEETING GAU MONT-BRITISH PICTURE CORPORATION, LIMITED BETTER PROSPECTS FOR

The Spectator

CURRENT YEAR THE annual general meeting of the Gaumont-British Picture Corpora- tion, Ltd., was held on October 15th at the New Gallery Kinema, Regent Street, W. Mr. Isidore...

Page 59

SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD NO. 264 SOLUTION NEXT WEEK

The Spectator

The winner of Crossword No. 264 is Dr. H. J. Paterson, The Whins, Gravel Path, Berkhamsted.

" THE SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD No. 265

The Spectator

BY 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...