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NEWS OF THE WEEK W ITH the first three places in
The Spectatorthe Melbourne Air Race secured by Mr. Scott's Comet, the Dutch- piloted American Douglas and the American Boeing respectively, the speed-race is decided, and interest now....
The German Church Secession The German Church crisis has .
The Spectatornow reached the point of open secession, and if the German censor= ship had hot become a by-word by now it would be incredible that the German peoide should still be dependent...
OFFICES 99 Gower St, London, 11".C. 1. Tel. : MUSEErM
The Spectator1721. Entered as second-class Mail Matter at the New York, N.Y. Post Offioe, Dec. 23rd, 1806. Postal subscription 30s. per annum, to any part of the world. Postage on this issue...
The Jugoslav Cabinet The reconstruction of the Jugoslav Cabinet is
The Spectatorless fundamental than had been hoped. The Prime Minister, M. Ouzounovitch, remains, and while he has strengthened his Ministry by including General Zhivkovitch as Minister for ....
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Mr. Gandhi's Plans Whether Mr. Gandhi has or has not
The Spectatoractually retired from the Indian National Congress is still a little obscure. His views, particularly on the subject of khaddar—home- spun cloth—and the fostering of village...
M. Doumergue's Problems M. Doumergue is standing firmly by his
The Spectatorconstitutional reform proposals, but the indications are that he will have great difficulty in getting one at least of them through. As it happens that one alone—the provision...
Complications in Egypt The cause of the rather overcharged political
The Spectatoratmosphere in Egypt is the fact that King Fuad, who has established a firm tradition of palace government, is seriously ill, and that his son is a boy of fourteen. The illness...
Gold and Sterling Groups The drawing together of countries whose
The Spectatormonetary system conforms to that of Great Britain has its natural counterpart in the drawing together of the gold bloc countries. Their General Commission which has been meeting...
Birth Control in America In many respects the forces of
The Spectatorconservatism in America are far more powerful than in England. They have up to now effectually barred the way to legislation which would enable hospitals or doctors to give...
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The SpectatorMore Trade Unionists The present year marks a change in the fortunes of the trade union movement for the better. Its membership at the end of last year reached the lowest total...
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The North Lambeth By-Election The North Lambeth by-election is an
The Spectatorevent on which the Labour Party have reason to congratulate themselves. It was generally expected that their representative, Mr. Strauss, would. get in, for the strength of the...
The Case of Manchukuo The delegation despatched by the Federation
The Spectatorof 'British Industries to explore the possibilities of trade development in Manchukuo has naturally been received with open arms by a Japan reduced to the extremity of...
Justice and Force The Archbishop of York, with Canon Sheppard's
The Spectatornew peace campaign obviously in mind, made some opportune observations on Tuesday on the subject of constructive pacifism. So far from accepting the doctrine that men of peace,...
* * * The Crisis in the Herring Industry The
The Spectatorsituation of the fishermen engaged in the herring industry has become desperate, and it is about to reach a yet more critical situation with the approach of the short season in...
The Public School System The comments of Mr. Claude Elliott,
The Spectatorheadmaster Of Eton, on the new methods which are being tried at Gordonstoun School show him as one of those masters fully alive to the problems which have been raised by so many...
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LESSONS OF THE FLIGHT
The SpectatorT HE Mildenhall-Melbourne flight is memorable in the annals of more than aviation. On Tuesday at 5.84 a.m. Greenwich Mean Time the De Havilland Comet piloted by Messrs. Scott...
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THE FUNCTION OF LIBRARIES
The SpectatorT HE opening of the new Library at Cambridge University has marked, with splendour, a stage of an important section of the history of civilization. The imparting of knowledge...
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Mr. Mackenzie King, who, unless every political indication is completely
The Spectatorillusive, will be once more Prime Minister of Canada within a few months, has just left for home after a short private visit to this country. He has undertaken no public...
The deadly earnestness of sport is really getting rather disturbing.
The SpectatorAfter body-line cricket we are to have dictatorship football. The Daily Mail's Rome corre- spondent has given impressive particulars of it. An Italian eleven (for the game, it...
In his entertaining . argument with Stalin Mr. II. C. Wells
The Spectatortook leave of his host with the obSetvation, " At the present time.thete are in the world only two persons to whose opinion, to whose every word, millions are listening—you and...
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The SpectatorI am not surprised that Canon Sheppard should have had a considerable response to his appeal for the names of men who would declare for 'the complete renunciation of all war of...
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The SpectatorWithout Comment " The Tailwaggers' Club has been in touch with Mr. Hore Belisha and has been told that he is anxious to include the barking of dogs as one of the noises that...
At the same time the difference in the position accorded
The Spectatorto Mr. Henderson in both biographies is notable. For he is conspicuous in both, in Mr. Lloyd George's in connexion with his visit to Russia in 1917, the discussions about the...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorT HE virtually simultaneous appearance of the second volume of Lord Snowden and the fourth volume of Mr. Lloyd George within three days of each other has the effect of throwing...
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JAVAN AND THE WORLD-H: STRENGTH AT ANY COST
The SpectatorBy A SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT Tokyo, September. 9111E main driving force in the economic development 1 of modern Japan has been, and still is a non-economic one : the supreme...
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WHAT DOES THE CHURCH STAND FOR ?
The SpectatorBy the REV. J. S. WHALE (President of Cheshunt College, Cambridge) L AICUS IGNOTUS causes us timely embarrassment by looking for the articulus et antis vel cadentis ecclesiae...
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FORCE AS GERMANY'S GOD
The SpectatorBy T. D. RICHARDSON T HE tramp ! tramp ! tramp ! of marching feet to the tune of virile voices singing warlike songs, and the eternal drone of aeroplanes—those are the...
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DISEASE AND CIVILIZATION
The SpectatorBy ALAN MONCRIEFF T HE terms " disease " and " civilization " offer a direct challenge to the scientifically minded, who like to work from clear-cut definitions. Both terms are...
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A WORKER IN " THE WORKERS' FATHERLAND "
The SpectatorBy JOHN BROWN* I T was late when the ' Tovarisch Markina ' was made fast to the Saratov landing-stage, and midnight had struck just before I returned to the ship after a brief...
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ON GETTING WET
The SpectatorBy G. C. B. COTTERELL else. One avoids, for example, the conduct of my friend Blatherwiek who marked this summer by falling out of his sailing-dinghy in City clothes ; showing...
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DEUIL NATIONAL
The Spectator[D'UN CORRESPONDANT FRANcAIS] L A quinzaine qui vient de s'ecouler aura vu In France frappes par deux fois en plein cceur. A une semaine exactement d'intervalle, se sont...
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The Cinema "The Cat's Paw." At the Capitol HAROLD LLOYD
The Spectatoris the most reliable of Hollywood's solo comedians. Like Charlie Chaplin, he works for himself, not for a company, preferring to choose his own stories and to arrange his own...
STAGE AND SCREEN The Ballet
The SpectatorEnglish Ballet Now is the winter of ballet. We balletomanes associate summer with the dazzling visitation of the Russians. For the rest of the year we attend our native...
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Music Two Conductors and Two Programmes CRIKEY " said someone,
The Spectator" That's Szell—that was ! " And I can do no more than translate into the more leisurely and particular, if less irreverent, language customary in literary periodicals this...
Art
The SpectatorThe Crafts Delivered ONE of the many- probk•ins connected with the arts to which there appears to be no satisfactory solution is the way in which certain artists seem to work...
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COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorThe Farmer's Career An old question is being asked of me with increasing fre- quency, and doubtless more often of other people with more knowledge. Is there an opening in...
The Glass Age
The SpectatorHorticulture and husbandry are different pursuits ; but cultivation under glass begins to impinge on to open field. The value of the crops grown under glass in the Lea Valley is...
Capital Needs
The SpectatorThe farming aspirants are almost exclusively male, and it must be said at once that it is next door to impossible to succeed without a certain capital. This has always been...
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The SpectatorUnemployed Afforesters Further progress has been made with the scheme for employing 20,000 men (such is Mr. Baske Baker's ideal) in the work of afforesting our wasted acres,...
A Tree Calendar It is much to be hoped that
The Spectator" The Men of the Trees," who do quite invaluable work in cultivating a " tree sense " in the community, are not becoming infected with the quite excessive rage for conifers that...
The Heron's Enemies A battle (of which details are reported
The Spectatorin the excellent Bird Notes and News of the R.S.P.B.) has been proceeding over the heron, the biggest and most pictorial of all British birds ; and a census of its nests has...
* * Trees of the Nations These Men of the
The SpectatorTrees have also made arrangements for their great exhibition of tree.pictures at Grosvenor House from November 1st for a month. Over thirty countries are exhibiting pictures...
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[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSIR,—The main point of the article contributed by Laicus Ignotus in your issue of October 12th is contained in the following sentence : " You people claim to say something about...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSue,—Your reference to the report of the Public Libraries Committee of Westminster in your issue of October 19th suggests that library committees have a right when selecting...
WHAT DOES THE CHURCH STAND FOR ?
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Mr. T. S. Eliot, in his extremely interesting attempt in your pages to cope with the curious, not to say equivocal, question, " What does...
PUBLIC LIBRARIES AND NOVELS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—D is disconcerting to find The Spectator supporting, even though only half-heartedly, the demand of the Libraries Committee of Westminster...
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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INVESTMENT
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—I have read with great. interest the recent articles of your city editor on investment, and should much like to know what you, and he,...
[To the 'Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] Sta,—(l) Thanks to Dr.
The SpectatorMajor for le mot juste" pro- fessional immoralist." (2) His citation of Dr. Bosanquet is damaging to his own cause and not at all to the cause of his opponents. The quotation...
THE VIRGIN-EIRTH
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] Sia,—Dr. Major has such a way with him that he is quite capable of carrying on his gallant fight single handed. However, lest it should be...
THE HIDDEN FEAR
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR, I am a mental nurse, and have read the letters from Mr. Carmichael Marr and Sir Robert Armstrong-Jones. 'I think that Mr. Marr's is mostly...
IN VIEW OF A DWINDLING 'POPULATION
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] Snt.,--In Your valuable article, " In view of a dwindling' pOpulation," you say that " we cannot contemplate - a reduction of the population by...
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DEMOCRACY AND LIBERTY
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—I cannot resist writing some lines about the leading article in The Spectator, headed " Democracy and Liberty." May I point out that Mr....
" WITHOUT COMMENT " [To the Editor of TIIE SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSin,—In last week's issue of The Spectator, " Janus" quotes, without comment, a passage from a sermon delivered at Cambridge two Sundays ago, by the Bishop of Birmingham. The...
POLITICAL PRISONERS IN GERMANY [To the Editor of THF. SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSIR,—In the early days of the present regime in Germany it was realized that many thousands of Liberals, SoCialists, Communists, Pacifists and JewiSh intellectuals were being...
PACE AT THE POST OFFICE
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—So many bouquets have lately been bestowed upon the Post Office—one imagines for almost the first time in its history—that it was...
" AFTER HITLER'S FALL "
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,—In the number of October 12th of The Spectator you published an article about my new book After Hitler's Fall. Germany's Coming Reich. It...
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SMOKING IN THEATRES
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,-I was interested to see the concluding paragraph of last week's notice of Richard II at the Old Vic, where the writer gave expression to a...
A Broadcasting Calendar
The Spectator• 3.15 This and That (to Unemployed Clubs): John Hilton .. 6.3o Beethoven : Professor Tovey continues his keyboard talks N. 6.5o In Your Orden : C. H. MiddletOn N. 8.5o...
MR. WOOSTER'S AUNT AGATHA
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,-Mr. John Hayward, in his review of Right Ho, Jeeves, contends that Mr. Wodehouse has never written anything which could not be safely...
THE PSYCHOLOGY OF CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR.] SIR,-Your issue of October 19th contains an article entitled " Anxiety, a Disease of Civilization," in which the writer makes a reference to...
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Lord Snowden's Second Volume
The SpectatorBy J. A. SPENDER AFTER reading Lord Snowden's second volume I am more surprised that he got on with the Labour Party for so long and was for so many years regarded as one of...
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Mr. Lloyd George Continued
The SpectatorMa. LLOYD GEORGE'S War Memories are developing on an increasingly expansive scale. He has needed two volumes of seven hundred pages each to cover the year 1917, and it can...
Sea Power and the Future
The SpectatorSEA power still retains its old potency, in spite of the advent of the power of the air. This is the opinion of Admiral Sir Herbert Richmond, who examines its signification in...
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On Liberty
The SpectatorFreedom and Organisation, 1814-1914. By Bertrand Russell. (Allen and 15s.) THESE two books are examples of the " new way," or of a return to an old way, of historical...
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Other People's Lives
The SpectatorThings To Live For. By Francis Stuart. (Cape. 7s. 6d.) EACH of these books is an autobiography, but none of them has much in common with any other beyond that circumstance. l'U...
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Gladstone's Turning Point
The SpectatorTHIS is an interesting and valuable study of an all important phase in Gladstone's career. .In the years of which Mr. Williams treats he moved decisively and 'finally to the...
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French Dictionaries
The SpectatorHarrap's Standard French and English Dictionary. Edited by J. E. Mansion. (Harrap. Vol. I. 42s.) The Concise Oxford French Dictionary. Compiled by A, and M. Chevalley. (Oxford....
A Study of Von Hugel
The SpectatorThE steady growth of Baron von Hfigel's influence—especially outside the Roman communion—together with the difficulty and individuality of his literary style,,made it inevitable...
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Fiction
The SpectatorBy WILLIAM PLOMER NoTILING in fiction is more essential than the creation of character, but it is rarely perfected. A novel may be badly constructed, sentimental, sketchy, or...
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Motoring Historic Names at the Show Is spite of the
The Spectatorexchange-rate, old-timers did not fail to make many sentimental visits to the - stands which showed the world's most famous Continental and American cars. To the newcomer to...
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Banking in South America
The SpectatorTHERE must be few banking institutions throughout the world, which have not in varying degree felt the strain and handicap resulting froM world-wide depression, the fall in...
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The Banks and the Public
The SpectatorTins article is, confessedly, written in praise both of our banking system and of the general conduct of our banking operations. Making all allowances for minor imperfections in...
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The Future of the Discount Market
The SpectatorON the occasion of the recent annual Banquet given by the Lord Mayor to the merchants and bankers of the City of London, the Governor of the Bank of England, in the course of a...
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Annuities and Life Policies
The SpectatorEffect of Lower Interest Rates — Enhanced Investment Merits WHILE considerable prominence has been accorded to the adverse effect on the life offices, as regards their bonus-...
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The Money Box
The SpectatorA POPULAR toy among children is the money box. It delights them to insert in its ever-open mouth all the spare coins that come their way. In this they are pro- bably following a...
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krintcd„ in Great Britain by W. Sr.cAtcui AID SONS, LTD.,
The Spectator98 and 99 Fetter Lane, London. E.C. 4, and published by TUE SPECTATOR, LID., at their o ffi c, No. 99 Gower Street, London, W.C. 1=Friday, October 26, 1934.
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Financial Notes
The SpectatorBRITISH FUNDS FIRM. Duruxo the past week general business in the Stoek.Markets has again been of a somewhat restricted character, so far, at all events, as the speculative and...
Finance
The SpectatorNationalism or Co-operation - THERE have been two import ant events during the past week which conceivably may exert a c onsiderable influence upon developments in this country...
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* * * *
The SpectatorMR. RUNCIMAN AND THE 13:kNIES. In an article which appears to-day in the Financial Supplement I have dealt with the relations between the banks and the public, with special...
CENTRAL .ELECTRICITY ISSUE.
The SpectatorQuite the outstanding feature of recent capital flotations has been the great success which attended the issue of Central Electricity Board Stock. The verylarge amount of...
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The SpectatorNEW CAPITAL ACTIVITY. It is probable, indeed, that the attraction of possible premiums on new issues of capital has played its part in diverting speculative activity in...
UNITED DAIRIES.
The SpectatorAn excellent report has just been published by United Dairies, Limited. Last year there was a slight decline in the net profit, but for the year ended June 30th last the net...
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SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD NO. 108
The Spectator7 77 711Trer1177 01 S I El 1-1.-1041 I I CI AI Pi TI Al RI.M1.1 VG IN/ El ICI E Of RIR 13 I IMBIR1 Al T /:. RI A! R 'rTI - 7' T1 SI El I MIT IICIAVTIIIHIO1C ClUllR, Fl I...
"The Spectator" Crossword No. 109
The SpectatorBY ZEND [A prize of one guinea will be given to the sender of fire correct solution of this week's crossword puzzle to be open e d Envelopes should be marked " Crossword...