10 FEBRUARY 1933, page 6

The Last Issue Of The Sunday Times Contained A Signifi-

cantly instructive leading article. The subject was security ; the purport was warm approval of Mr. Eden's declaration at Geneva that Great Britain could undertake no further......

The League Of Nations Secretariat, With A Frenchman As...

and an Englishman as one of four or five (according as to whether Japan remains in the League or not) deputy or assistant secretaries-general, will be a new conception for this......

If Mr. Kipling Had Gone To Sleep In 1918 And

only woken up in 1933, one might understand the letter he has just written to M. Henri Bordeaux. " We have no other ally," he says, but France, " whose interests . accord with......

There Is Very Rarely Anything To Be Said For The

sup- pression of names in Court, except in the case of blackmail trials, and the procedure in an income-tax appeal case last week was so astonishing that I imagine, and hope,......

I Note With Some Melancholy, In The Account Of An

inquest on a shoeblack, that the dead man was spoken of as one of the last survivors in a disappearing industry. There is matter here for an interesting investigation into......

A Spectator's Notebook

T HE TIMES has been following so closely the various evolutions of British official policy regarding the Manchurian question that its leading article of last Monday seems to me......

I Can See No Reason For The Agitation In The

United States over the Chancellor of the Exchequer's address to the American correspondents in London the other day. I happened to be present myself as a guest, and I thought......

It Is A Striking Reflection That Count Albert Apponyi, Who

died at Geneva on Tuesday, was alive when Metter- nich fell in 1848. He was one of those great seigneurial figures of whom few survive in Europe to-day, and of those few not......