29 AUGUST 1908

Page 1

Mulai Hafid was proclaimed Sultan at Tangier on Sunday last.

The Spectator

The notables of the town hesitated for some time after receiving the news of Abd-ul-Aziz's rout (it is a delicate matter to declare allegiance to this or that Monarch when an...

The Young Turk Committee continues successfully to cleanse the Turkish

The Spectator

stables. Sixty-four aides-de-camp have been dismissed. The Imperial racehorses have been handed over to the Minister of War. Every day money which was improperly acquired by...

The danger-spot is Macedonia, where the old racial struggles threaten

The Spectator

to break out again. A member of the Salonika. Committee has explained to the Constantinople correspondent of the Times the character of the Bulgarian demands. The Vressovists...

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

The Spectator

A T last a truly decisive event has happened in Morocco. The struggle between the two brothers for the throne is at an end ; Abd-ul-Aziz has been utterly defeated, and Mulai...

The Times of Friday publishes a message from its special

The Spectator

correspondent, who has reached Damascus on his way to the ceremonies at Medina in connexion with the Hedjaz Railway. This railway, which has been subscribed for by pious Moham-...

1, * The Editors cannot undertake to return Manuscript, in any

The Spectator

case.

Page 2

Mt. Lloyd George added that both employers alid workmen. throughout

The Spectator

Germany were satisfied with the system of con- tributory insurance, all a g reeing that it had very much. raised the letel of health and life. Already thirty-four. millions Were...

M. Yvesi Gigot contributes to the mirrent nuMber of the

The Spectator

Journal des Bconomiates an ietereeting summary of the proceedings of the International Free-Trade Congress. M. Yves (uyot, at becomes a sound Free-trader, has not failed to...

Sir Francis Oppenheimer is, of course, roundly denounced by Tariff

The Spectator

Reformers for his Cobdenite bigotry; but it is tolerably clear that he is no fanatic, for he frankly adreibe that syndication may minimise the evile incident to the continuance...

M. Jaures has been writing lately in the Hunianitg on

The Spectator

the organisation of Labour, with particular refeteirce to the General Confederation of Labour, the tyrannical body which has from time to time tried to paralyse the life of...

The return of Mr. Lloyd George to England on Wednesday

The Spectator

was followed by a perfect deluge of interviews on his tour and its objects. We do not wish to condemn this expansive attitude unreservedly, but may say that it ill consorts with...

Baron Speck von Sternburg, the German Ambassador at Washington, died

The Spectator

on Sunday last at Heidelberg. Bore at Leeds of a German father and an English mother, Baron Speck von Sternburg married an American wife, and his later diplomatic career was...

On Friday week the men of the - United States Battleship

The Spectator

Fleet landed at Sydney. In the evening a banquet was -given by the State in the Town Hall. On Monday there was a review of over thirteen thousand troops in the Centennial Park....

Sir Francis Oppenheimer, the 13ritish Consul-General at Frankfort, has written

The Spectator

a very interesting Report on the trade of his district, and the present commercial position of Germany in general. His remarks are summed up in the saying that "Protection...

Page 3

Tuesday's papers contained the news of the brutal murder in

The Spectator

the woods near Sevenoaks of Mrs. Luard, the wife of Major-General C. E. Luard, late RE., of Ightbain Knoll. General Luard had gone out with his wife for a walk after lunch on...

An important picture by Franz Hale has been bought for

The Spectator

225,000 by the Trustees of the National Gallery. It is a large family group, and comes from the collection of Lord Talbot of Malahide. It has been for many years at lifalahide,...

The Report of the Director-General of the Army Medical Department

The Spectator

on the health and sanitary conditions of the Army for 1907 was issued on Monday. Taken all round, the results are satisfactory. Not only wore the admission, death, invaliding,...

The record of his spring and summer campaign in Crete

The Spectator

contributed by Dr. Arthur Evans to Thursday's Times is of remarkable interest. The further exploration of the "Little Palace ".=-a dependency connected by a paved road, "the...

The annual Report of the Registrar-General for Ireland has been

The Spectator

published as a Blue-book, and though it shows no marked deviation from the decennial averages, presents several features of interest. The birth-rate remains practically...

The Morning Post of Friday publishes an interview with M.

The Spectator

Weiller, the head of the French Syndicate which will buy the Wright aeroplane as soon as the conditions of the contract are fulfilled,—viz., that the inventor shall make a...

Bank Hate, 21 per cent., changed from 3 per cent.

The Spectator

May 28th. Consols (21) were on Friday 861—on Friday week 86i. Bank Hate, 21 per cent., changed from 3 per cent. May 28th. Consols (21) were on Friday 861—on Friday week 86i.

Page 4

THE ANNEXATION OF THE CONGO STATE. T HE procedure of annexing

The Spectator

the Congo Free State to Belgium will present itself more clearly to the mind if it is regarded as consisting of two distinct parts : the first the sanction of the Belgian...

• TOPICS OF THE DAY.

The Spectator

THE POWERS AND MOROCCO. rr HE dramatic rout of Abd-ul-Aziz's army is one of those definite events for which Europe has long been waiting, and one which must be used to shape...

Page 6

THE NEW ERA. IN MACEDONIA.

The Spectator

M EN who have displayed the patience, self-control, and far-seeing patriotism of the Young Turks can hardly have expected that the almost miraculous trans- formation of July...

Page 7

THE SECOND BALLOT.

The Spectator

T AE Proportional Representation Society has put out a very weighty pamphlet on "The Second Ballot." It is only eight pages long, and it costs but a penny. Con- sequently no one...

Page 8

NEW MAPS FOR OLD. T HE critic who remarked that the

The Spectator

chief need of the Board of A g riculture was the addition to its staff of a trained j ournalist may possibly be wonderin g whether his reflections reached official ears. He was...

Page 9

THE PLEASURES OF WASTE.

The Spectator

S OME people take a pleasure in waste. It gives them a momentary but distinct sense of happiness to waste something, and the delight of wasting figures largely in youthful...

Page 10

THE ENGLISH ORTOLAN.

The Spectator

S AUNTERING one summer afternoon along a low slope of the South Downs, my attention was attracted by a fluttering under an upturned clod of turf. I stepped to the spot, and saw...

Page 11

MILTON AND THE BRUTE CREATION.

The Spectator

W HETHER Milton was a lover of any creature of God's universe may be doubted. That he was not a lover of animals seems clear. Abstractions he could love with a passion almost...

Page 13

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.

The Spectator

AN EFFECTIVE UPPER HOUSE. [To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR:] Sin,—The conduct of the Lords on the Pension Bill is of a piece with their general conduct. What do you expect if...

CHURCH FINANCE.

The Spectator

[TO THE EDITOR OP TRH " SPROTATOR.1 SIR,—The eagerness and intelligence with which this subject has been taken i p by your correspondents are of the happiest augury for the...

[To THU EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:9 SIR,--The two statements

The Spectator

in your editorial note to Mr. Astley Cooper's letter in the Spectator of August 15th are un- doubtedly true: "The financial situation in many small rural parishes is, we fear,...

[TO THE EDITOR OP THE "Spigot/emu." J

The Spectator

SIR,—May a poor curate who only sees your valuable paper through the courtesy of a friend venture to express his view on Church finance ? Our great need is co-operation. I do...

[TO THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR."]

The Spectator

Sin,—I should be obliged if you will allow me to draw the attention of your correspondents to the "Institutions" in the diocese of Chester which have been meeting successfully...

Page 14

(To TIER EDITOR Or THR “SPEOTSTOR:1

The Spectator

Slit,—In the Report of one of the Committees of the Lambeth Conference we read as follows :—" The time has come to have an efficient pension scheme for the clergy, and no such...

THE ETHICS OF SHAKESPEARE.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR. Mi. TIM ”SPRCUTOIX•1 Sru,—The writer of the article, "Shakespeare on Johnson," which appeared in your iseue of Angnet 1st, remarks that Johnson is indignant that...

THE TERRITORIAL FQRCE.

The Spectator

[To THR EDITOR or THE " EITCTAILTO/I.1 Snir.,—In his interesting letter in your issue of August 22nd Mr. Edwin Freshfield suggests that it may be possible "to secure the assent...

Page 15

A CORRECTION.

The Spectator

LTo THE EDITOR Or Tug '5PEOTATOR.".1 Sta,—In your notice last week of the new popular edition of "Foxe's Book of Martyrs," issued by the Religious Tract Society (2s.), and...

CAN A GLASSHOUSE BE ORNAMENTAL?

The Spectator

Ito THE EDITOR Or THE 4.8reCTATOR.1 SIR,—In your issue of July 18th, speaking of Kew Gardens at Midsummer, you say, "A glasshouse cannot be ornamental," but you commend certain...

INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF THE HISTORY OF RELIGIONS.

The Spectator

[To TRH EDITOR Or TII• "SPROIVOR.."] Sin, — The present year seems to be a year of International Congresses. We have had the Peace Congress, the Historical Congress of Berlin,...

POETRY.

The Spectator

GRATtos of the quiet hem, Of June nightingales, and flowers Steeped is cool delicions aj- Of hop gardens and the rare Mist from meadows lifting slow— Guard a cottage that I...

"1 31 T-JENPA EST PASSER."

The Spectator

[To TWO EDITOR Or TUB "seserwroa. - ] do not propose to preach or to denounce the crusade against the rat and the sparrow, further than to suggest Caution R.gaiIII4 disturbing...

IN PRAISE OF THE PROVINCIAL SUBURB.

The Spectator

[TO TIM EDITOR Or THi: "SrECTATOR."] SIR, — Surely the writer of the above in your last issue writes from Rochdale, near Manchester, for one of the most delightful holidays I...

NOTICE.—When Articles or "Correspondence" are signed with the writer's name

The Spectator

or initials, or with a pseudonym, or are 'narked "Communicated," the Editor must not necessarily be held to be in agreement with the views therein expressed or with the mode of...

Page 16

BOOKS.

The Spectator

HERODOTUS.* IN the days of Herodotus the Muse of History was happily in her teens. Now she is an austere dame, wears a learned air, and walks sedately in the company of...

Page 17

THE OFFICIAL HISTORY OF THE WAR IN SOUTH AFRICA.*

The Spectator

THE preparation of the Official History of the War in South Africa has been dogged by misfortune throughout. At the outset there was the untimely death of the lamented Colonel...

Page 18

THE SHAKESPEARE APOCRYPHA.* Tlitis book contains, in a compact and

The Spectator

inexpensive form, a quantity of material deeply interesting to the ordinary reader no less than to the professed Elizabethan ;scholar, and it Will be all the more welcome since...

Page 19

MR. JOHN RURNS.0

The Spectator

THE chief illustration of the rule that biographies written during the life of the subject are undesimble is perhaps the fuck that they are seldom well done. Competent...

Page 20

THE BRITAINS BEYOND THE SEAS.*

The Spectator

MR. WYATT TILBY has set himself an ambitious task, in the prosecution of which he should receive sympathy and encouragement. The famous advice to think Imperially needs to be...

Page 21

FROM A HERTFORDSHIRE COTTAGE.*

The Spectator

WHEN a book opens at random at an essay on "The Ways of Wasps," and the author states that you may put your face within a foot of the entrance to a neat, and the wasps flying...

NOVELS.

The Spectator

SPANISH GOLD.* IN more ways than one Spanish Gold marks a new development in the literary career of Mr. Birmingham. Hitherto his best work, though enlivened by humorous...

Page 22

Reports of the Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to Torres Straits. (Cambridge

The Spectator

University Press. 21s. net.)--This volume is, in respect of subject, the sixth in the series. The matters with which it deals are sociology, magic, and religion, and the region...

Selections from Travels and Journals Preserved in the Bombay Secretariat.

The Spectator

Edited by George W. Forrest. (E. A. Arnold, and others. 103. 6d.) — Mr. Forrest, who was formerly Director of Records to the Indian Government, has put together in this volume a...

pomil l y's Dollars. By B. P. Neuman. (John Murray. (is.) — In

The Spectator

this volume Mr. Neuman gives us another study of the money- malrer. David Dominy, to call him by the surname which he assumes, is a Jew orphan living in the Jewish quarter of...

Pastor in Ecclesia. By the Rev. Gilbert Monks. (Elliot Stock.

The Spectator

5s.)—Mr. Monks describes his book as " a practical study in the art of money-raising." The Dean of Durham explains in the preface which he has furnished that this rosily means a...

Redemption. By Rene Basin. With a Preface by Dr. A.

The Spectator

S. Rappoport. (Sisley's. 6s.) —The translation of this book, though marred by one or two blemishes, is sufficiently flowing for the reader's enjoyment of the story. At the same...

ItsAnents No s.—The Council of Justice. By Edgar Wallace. (w ar d,

The Spectator

Lock, and Co. 6s.)---This is a very spirited story about the Nihilist movement. Readers who wore pleased by the "Emir Just men" will find it much to their minds.—Love and the...

SOXE BOOKS OF nig NuEN.

The Spectator

(Under this Twilling we notice such Books of Pe week as have not been reserved for review in other forms.] In the "Handbooks of Church Extension," Edited by W. 'U. Dodson, MA.,...

Page 23

Sir James Douglas. By Robert Hamilton Coats and R. E.

The Spectator

Goenell. (T. C. and E. C. Jack. 21s. net.)—This volume belongs to the series of "Makers of Canada." Most of these distinguished persons have to do with Eastern Canada. Here we...

The Trout-Waters of England. By Walter M. Gallichan. (T. N.

The Spectator

Foulis. 25. 6d. net.)—" The waters that I shall describe in these pages," writes Mr. Gallichan in his preface, "are 'open'—that is to say, the holiday angler can enjoy his...

New EDITIONS. — We have received the first six volumes of "The

The Spectator

Oxford Thackeray " (H. Frowde, 2s. net per vol.) The arrangement is, as far as possible, chronological. The first volume contains Thackeray's earliest writings—the first of all...

We have received Vol. III. of The Works of James

The Spectator

Buchanan, Collected and Edited by James Bassett Moore (J. B. Lippincott Company ; sold only in sets of 12 vols., 212 12s. net). James Buchanan was President of the United States...

Report on the Teaching of English in the U.S.A. By

The Spectator

M. Atkinson Williams. (Swan Sonnerischein and Co. 2s. net.)— Miss Williams explains that this volume represents the work done by her as the holder of a Gilchrist Travelling...

The Empire of the East. By H. B. Montgomery. (Methuen

The Spectator

and Co. 7s. 6d. net.)—This "Empire" is Japan, and it is Japan which our author seeks "to depict as it really is, not the Japan seen through glasses of various colours." Very...

Memories of Gardens. By Alexander Lanes Shand. With Memoir by

The Spectator

Sir Rowland Blennerhassett, Bart. (West Strand Pub- lishing Company. 10s. 6d. net.)—In this volume we have a reprint of fifteen papers recently—i.e., within the last ten years—...