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IN Wednesday's debate on the coming into force of the
The SpectatorNEWS OF THE WEEK Anglo-Italian Agreement, Parliament was once again faced by the fundamental difference of opinion between Mr. Chamberlain and Mr. Eden. The Prime Minister...
M. Reynaud to the Rescue In his eagerly awaited speech
The Spectatorto the Radical Socialist Congress, M. Daladier gave little or no indication of how France's problems are to be solved. His violent attack on the Communists hardly concealed the...
After Hankow The fall of Hankow and Canton seems likely
The Spectatorto prove less disastrous for China than might have been expected. The Chinese, after their long and successful resistance, have at length withdrawn from Teian, on the...
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Anti-Semitism in Central Europe The Jews in Central Europe have
The Spectatorceased to be human beings ; they are driven like cattle from country to country and left to starve in the no-man's-lands between frontiers which have become their only...
* * * * The Axe at Geneva Rather wild
The Spectatorand comprehensive allegations of " a political purge " in the League of Nations Secretariat have in the past week gained more currency than they appear, in the light of facts,...
The Vienna Conference The conference which took place this. week
The Spectatorin between Herr von Ribbentrop, the German Foreign Mini -, and Count Ciano, the Italian, has a significance surpa, the problem of the Czechoslovak-Hungarian frontier w • h was...
German Economics The trade proposals made by Dr. Funk, Reich
The SpectatorMinister of Economics, on his recent visit to Sofia, reveal very dearly the methods by which Germany hopes to increase her Balkan trade. Germany proposes to take the whole of...
The Outlook for Palestine The Arab city of Jaffa and
The Spectatorits vicinity, one of the most important centres of disaffection in Palestine, were occupied without serious resistance by British troops this week. The Arabs have threatened...
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The new Cabinet appointments have failed to evoke much comment,
The Spectatorhostile or otherwise. It is strange, however, that, up to the time of writing, the Government's critics have had nothing to say about the selection of a peer to be First Lord of...
Wednesday's debate on the bringing into force of the Anglo-Italian
The SpectatorAgreement was an altogether livelier affair. The Prime Minister made the best of a case which was not easy to argue by representing this latest move as a part of the general...
The Christmas number of The Spectator, to be published on
The SpectatorNovember 18th (at the usual price), will consist of about I2o pages in a coloured cover, and will contain, in addition to all regular features, special articles by well-known...
Neither Mr. Attlee nor Mr. Chamberlain were at their best.
The SpectatorThe former exhibited all his old faults of delivery which detract so much from his effectiveness, although no one could complain of the content of his speech. His warning...
The Cabinet Changes The latest changes in the Cabinet will
The Spectatornot wholly satisfy public opinion. The more the Cabinet changes, the more it remains the same. Yet it is agreed by friends and opponents of the Government that what is most...
The Week in Parliament , Our Parliamentary Correspondent writes :
The SpectatorIt was yet another tactical blunder on the part of the official Opposition to postpone their vote of censure on air raid defence until Thursday. No one doubts the importance of...
The Scarcity of Nurses Two factors are considered by the
The SpectatorScottish Departmental Committee on Nursing whose report was published on Tuesday, to contribute to the scarcity of nurses: These are the competition of other careers open to...
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POST-MUNICH POLICY
The SpectatorTHE debate on international affairs in the House of Commons on Tuesday opened a new chapter in British foreign policy. Its starting-p6int is the Munich Agreement, which,...
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THE CHURCHES AND THE CRISIS
The SpectatorM ANY statements have been made in the name of the different Churches in Great Britain during and since the September crisis, but the " message to the nation " issued this week...
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A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorT HE riddle of the international situation is not to be read fully or accurately yet. No one knows what further demands, if any, Herr Hitler has to make, or on whom. Mean- while...
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PATENT MEDICINES AND THE LAW IV
The SpectatorBy LORD HORDER [In the last article in this series the stringent measures taken in countries like the United States and Nor-way, Sweden and Denmark to regulate the sale and...
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BRITISH POLICY NOW IV
The SpectatorBy THE EARL OF LYTTON, K.G. [This is the fourth of a series of articles on British Foreign Policy as it must be framed in the situation created by the Munich Agreement ; every...
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HOW THE PUBLIC THINKS—IL
The SpectatorBy S. C. LESLIE [This is the second of a series of four articles discussing the factors which make British public opinion what it is] W HILE the state of public opinion may be...
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THE OUTLOOK IN FRANCE
The SpectatorBy D. R. GILLIE A MONTH after the Munich Agreement France is neither cheerful, nor strongly united, nor sure where she is going. All this may change when M. Daladier's decrees...
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THE VALUES OF LIFE : I. QUASI CURSORES
The SpectatorBy ERNEST BARKER [The general subject of Dr: Barker's second article is " My Duty to My Neighbour "] T HE line of Lucretius is famous. Quasi Cursores—like runners in a relay...
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HOUSING : AN AMERICAN UTOPIA
The SpectatorBy PETER NEUMANN O NE warm day in Washington, D.C., President Roos,- decided that by winter all too many of the nation's population would have no place to lay their heads. He...
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AFTER SUPPER
The SpectatorBy E. M. BELL T HE round-shouldered probationer collected the last of the supper cups on to her trolley and rattled and clanked her way through the door. The swing doors...
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THE POLISH GENERAL ELECTION
The SpectatorCommonwealth and Foreign B y W. J.' ROSE understanding. The first is this : political campaign is to be expected ? Further, since many hold the view that the present Cabinet of...
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MUSIC
The SpectatorSTAGE AND SCREEN The Sibelius Festival Stamus belongs to the generation of Elgar, Mahler and Richard Strauss. To have named those contemporaries is to give at once the measure...
THE CINEMA
The SpectatorKatia." At the Academy—"Sixty Glorious Years." At the Odeon "Old Iron." At the London Pavilion PERHAPS it is as well that Mlle. Darrieux has gone to Hollywood to be groomed for...
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SUR LE SABLE
The Spectator[D'un correspondent parisien] C'ETAIT Chansonniers et caricaturistes n'ont oublie la distribution de sable que firent les autorites au mom, of la guerre semblait proche. 11...
SCULPTURE
The SpectatorDora Gordine DORA GORDINE'S exhibition at the Leicester Galleries shows her genius in its full range of achievement. Her profound sense of pure form in sculpture, heedless...
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COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorNovember Gifts The hunt is up ; the close season over in practice as in law ; a ground frost or two has shrivelled the gourds, beans, and nasturtiums ; and the leaves fall....
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DID MR. CHAMBERLAIN SAVE US FROM WAR ?
The SpectatorLETTERS TO THE EDITOR [Correspondents are requested to keep their letters as brief as is reasonably possible. Signed letters are given a preference over those bearing a...
BRITISH POLICY NOW [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR]
The SpectatorStR,—Sir Arnold Wilson's article in your last week's issue invites many questions. As a Liberal I wish to confine myself to two, which I hope that he will answer. Referring to...
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[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR]
The SpectatorSIR,—In the discussions of foreign policy in your columns room has been found for the extreme both of pessimism and optimism. The former has been represented by Mr. R. C. K....
[To the Editor of THE SPEcratoa] • ground of an
The Spectatorinaccuracy regarding the Far East, and I would refrain from doing so if the inaccuracy did not disclose a serious misconception about recent events there. He says " we abandoned...
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THE CONSEQUENCES OF VERSAILLES
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—Does it matter two straws whether Versailles was a just peace rightfully imposed upon Germany as a penalty for numerous high crimes and...
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR, —Mr. Winston Churchill told
The Spectatorthe House of Commons in November; 1932, that the best way to preserve the peace was by the removal of the just grievances of the vanquished while the victors were still strong....
[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] should like to express
The Spectatormy profound gratitude. and support for the line which The Spectator has taken in these last weeks on the subject of the European crisis. The time for recrimination is past ; it...
PEACE WITH JUSTICE
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] am deeply grateful to you for your attitude durin' g the recent crisis. There is, however, one major point which I would ask you to reconsider....
THE CESSION OF CZECH TERRITORY
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sta,—In your last issue I notice that Mr. J. R. P. Moon in his letter states that nobody except apparently von Ribbentrop knew that we were...
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CAN CZECHOSLOVAKIA LIVE ?
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—Mr. Ralph Parker, in his letter published in The Spectator of October 28th and dealing with my article " Can Czecho- slovakia Live ? "...
TRAFFIC IN MEN
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIRS If " colonies " consisted of cattle and coffee and mineral deposits, we might with an easy conscience bargain with them for peace with...
THE SOVIET ARMY
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,—Mr. J. Baker White's lists of executions are effective as propaganda, because like lists of atrocities they stimulate emotion at the...
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DANGERS TO DEMOCRACY [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR]
The SpectatorSlit,—In your " News of the Week " paragraph in your issue of October zist on the Oxford election, the following sentence occurs : " Democracy needs defending not only against...
THE SITUATION IN SPAIN [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR]
The SpectatorStR, — Now that the Western Democracies have finally reduced themselves to a position where the narrowest measures of self-defence are inevitable, is it not time that they...
HELP FOR THE UNEMPLOYED.
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Snt,—Last year you were good enough to publish in The Spectator two letters from me, appealing to your readers to " adopt " the families of...
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GLADSTONE AND IRELAND
The SpectatorBOOKS OF THE DAY By H. A. L. FISHER IN the disastrous eclipse of liberty now darkening the continent of Europe the name of Gladstone recovers some- thing of its original...
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THE AGE OF REFORM
The SpectatorOF the great importance of textbooks there can be no doubt. Their value has perhaps been exaggerated by H. G. Wells and others, but those which become popular exercise great...
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CHARLES CONDER
The SpectatorMR. ROTHENSTEIN continues happily his double work of Gallery Director and writer, now he is installed at Millbank, by services to the memory of a painter who has fallen too much...
A FINANCIAL THERMOSTAT
The SpectatorBASED on the statistical studies undertaken in preparation for three Alfred Marshall Lectures delivered at Cambridge last year, Mr. Hawtrey's latest book suffers from the...
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PERFIDY OR. CORDIALITY?
The SpectatorTHE well-known French journalist Madame Tabouis has written a rather light-weight book on a subject that deserved more serious treatment. What are the causes, historical,...
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MR. SHANE LESLIE REMEMBERS
The SpectatorThe Film of Memory. By Shane Leslie. (Michael Joseph. xis.) THE familiar legend of the drowning man's vision of his past life finds a striking parallel in the film of Mr. Shane...
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THE SARATOGA TRUNK
The SpectatorPilgrimage. By Dorothy M. Richardson. Four vols. (Dent and Cresset Press. 3os.) Tim long trainload draws by our platform, passes us with an inimical flash of female eyes, and...
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FICTION
The SpectatorBy KATE O'BRIEN The Professor. By Rex Warner. (Boriswood. 7s. 6d.) The Bridegroom Cometh. By Waldo Frank. (Gollancz. cos. 6d.) Already Walks Tomorrow. By A. G. Street. (Faber...
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JAMES I OF ENGLAND By Clara and Hardy Steeholm
The SpectatorThose who like what is called romantic biography—a mixture of fact and fiction—will find Mr. and Mrs. Steeholm's book on James I (Michael Joseph, 15s.) a creditable example of...
THE NOVEMBER MAGAZINES
The SpectatorThe Contemporary Review gives first place to " Munich-- Before and After," by Mr. J. A. Spender, who stoutly defends Mr. Chamberlain's action in " making the best of a bad job."...
THE VICTORIA HISTORY OF CAMBRIDGESHIRE
The SpectatorCURRENT LITERATURE • Now that the University of London Institute of Historical Research is responsible for the Victoria County History, with Mr. L. F. Salzmann as editor, the...
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MOTORING
The SpectatorMotor Ways Generally speaking the speeches of Cabinet Ministers at the annual banquet given by the Society of Motor Manufac- turers and Traders are distinguished by a lightness...
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FINANCIAL NOTES
The SpectatorCOPPER OUTLOOK THE speech of Sir Auckland Geddes to the shareholders of Rhokana Corporation last week established two essential features of the copper situation : that the trend...
FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorWALL STREET has done its best, in face of some fairly stiff obstacles, to preserve the new atmosphere of hopefulness in markets, but London is not finding it easy to follow Wall...
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SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 318
The SpectatorSOLUTION NEXT WEEK The winner of Crossword No. 318 is Miss Sally Bayfield, 263 Selly Oak Road, Kings Norton, Birmingham, 3o.
" THE SPECTATOR" CROSSWORD No. 319
The SpectatorBY ZENO [A prize of a Book Token for one guinea will be given to the sender o f the first correct solution of this week's crossword puzzle to be openei. Envelopes should be...