ABITUAL Criminals and Preven- tion of Crime Act, 241-250 Haldane (Mr.) and the Army, facts and figures, 11-15; Territorial Army and Home Defence, 940-945 Hale (Colonel Lonsdale), Forewarned but not Forearmed: a Warning from 1870-71, 936-945
Halil Halid Bey, The Origin of the Revolt in Turkey, 755-760 Hamilton (Sir William Baillie), Forty- four Years at the Colonial Office, 599-613
Harrison (Alfred H.), Sledging as a
Method of Exploring the Arctic Ocean, 690-698
House of Lords, Reform of the, 34–47 Hurd (Archibald S.), The Balance of Naval Power and the Triple Alli ance, 1068-1082
INDIA, A Railway to, 163-169
India, Decentralisation of Gov- ernment in, 810-825
India Revisited, 375-385
Indian Politics, A Prospect in: Quo Vadis? 711-724
Indian Reforms: a Hindu View, 170-176
Infant Life, The Waste of, 48–64 Inheritance and Sociology, 74-90 'Insurance against Unemployment' Scheme, An, 272-282
International Copyright Law Reform and the Berlin Convention, 1056- 1067
Invasion, Is it possible? 1-10 Invasion, Possibilities of, and our unreadiness, 925-935
Ireland and the Budget, 855-861 Ireland' in Extremis,' 535-540 Irish History, Tradition versus En- quiry in, 480-494
Irish Land Bill, Mr. Birrell's, 946– 964
Italy as a Naval Power, 1078
Harrison (Austin), What every German LABOUR and Capital, Karl Marx,
Hearn (Lafcadio), The Real, 258-271 Henry VIII and the Religious Houses of London, 1026-1037
Henson (Canon Hensley), The Lam- beth Ideal of Reunion, 761-774 Heredity and feeble-mindedness, 74- 90
Hindus and Mohammedans, repre- sentation on the Councils of India, 177-190
Home defence, Our unpreparedness for, 1-10, 11-15; a lesson from Prussia and France, 936-945 Hood (Hon. Alexander Nelson), Some Personal Experiences of the Great Earthquake, 663 674
Ruskin, and Economic Science, 435-452
Lambeth Ideal of Reunion, The, 761-774
Land Values, Taxation of, 191–205; a Reply to, 699-710 Lane-Claypon (Janet E.), The Waste of Infant Life, 48-64 Lansdowne (Lord) and the Licensing Bill, 25-33
Lathbury (D. C.), Prayer-Book Re- vision and the Ornaments Rubric, 775-782
Legend, The End of a, 826-837 Legislative Council of India, Native
representation on the, 177–190 Licensing Bill, The Lords and the,
Lilly (W. S.), The End of a Legend, 826-837
Lodge (Sir Oliver), The Attitude of Science to the Unusual: a Reply to Professor Newcomb, 206-222 London monasteries under Henry VIII, 1026-1037
Lord (Walter Frewen), The Lost Em- pire of England (?), 230-240 Lord Chamberlain, The, and the cen- sorship of plays, 504-520 Lords, The, and the Licensing Bill, 25-33
Lords' veto, The, finance legislation, and the policy of the Government, 223-229
Lyrical poetry, Swinburne and Mere- dith, 965-979
MAGEE (Archbishop) and Modern
Radicalism, 230-240
Maggie: a Sketch from Life, 321-336 OMAR Khayyam and Edward Fitz-
Making or Marring of Things Mili- tary, The, 397-410
Malcolm (Ian), Ireland' in Extremis,' 535-540
Mallock (W. H.), The Missing Essen-
tials in Economic Science, 435-452; 838-854
Marriott (J. A. R.), Reform of the House of Lords, 34-47; The Great Inquest, 614-629
Marx (Karl), Socialism, and Econo- mics, 435-452
Massy (Lieut.-Colonel C. F.), India Revisited, 373-385
O'Neill (Eneas), Six German Opinions
on the Naval Situation, 725-743 Ornaments Rubric, Prayer-Book Re- vision and the, 775-782
Orr (John), The Taxation of Land Values: a Reply to Mr. Harold Cox, 699-710
Ottoman Empire, The, under constitu- tional rule, 755-760
Ottomans and Christians under the new régime in Turkey, 16-24 Oxford and the Working Classes, 521-534
Maxwell (Sir Herbert), National PAGET (Lady), Court and Society
Afforestation, 648-662
Melville (Lewis), The Centenary of Edgar Allan Poe, 140-152; William Beckford's Adventure in Diplomacy: an Unpublished Correspondence, 783-799
Mendel (Abbot G. J.), his experiments in hybridisation, 74-90 Mendelssohn-Bartholdy (Felix), 837-
Meredith (George) and his friend Swinburne, 965-979
Messina Earthquake, The, 312–320 Military training and home defence, 1-10
Military Weakness, Our, 11-15 Milton, 65-73
Mitra (S. M.), Indian Reforms: a Hindu View, 170–176
Modern Occultism, 126-139; reply to, 206-222
Monks and friars and the dissolution of religious houses, 1026-1037 Morley's (Lord) Indian Reforms, 177-190; Hindu criticism of, 170- 176
at Berlin in the 'Fifties: a Reminiscence, 91-108
Paul (Herbert), Milton, 65–73 Peace or a Sword? Some Reflections of an Extremist, 117-125 Peace (Sir Walter), The Unification of South Africa, 904-908 Pictures of the year, the Roval Academy and the Salon, 1005-1017 Pitt (Mr.), William Beckford, and the French war of 1797, 783-799 Pitt's (Mr.) war policy and Henry Dundas, 931-933
Plunkett (Sir Horace), Mr. Birrell's Irish Land Bill, 946-964
Poe, Edgar Allan, The Centenary of, 140-152
Pollock (Lieut.-Colonel Alsager), The Making or Marring of Things Military, 397-410
Polar exploration by sledges instead of ships, 690-698
Poor Law administration, Royal Com- mission's Report, 614-629
Poor Relief in the Days to come,
UO Vadis? a Prospect in Indian Politics, 711-724
ADICAL policy and Britain's peril, 230-240
Railway to India, A, 163-169 Rath (Herr Legationsrath vom) on Anglo-German entente, 740-743 Reform of the House of Lords, 34-47
Reforms in India, effects on land- owners and cultivators, 711-724 Religious education, State interference in, 453-460
Religious Houses of London, Henry VIII and the, 1026-1037 Representative Church Council, The, and the Education Bill, 91-108, 109-116
Reunion of the Churches, ideals and hindrances, 761-774
Reventlow (Count Ernst zu) on Ger- man-English rapprochement, 731-
Rhys (Ernest), A Tribute to Swin- burne, 965-979
Ribblesdale (Lord), The Lords and the Licensing Bill, 25–33
Roman galleys in an Italian lake, 495– 503
Roosevelt (Mr. Theodore) on naval power, 1071-1072
Rosebery's (Lord) Committee on Re- form of the House of Lords, 34-47 Royal Academy, The, and the Salon, 1005-1017
Samassa (Professor) on German naval expansion, 735-737 Schulze-Gaevernitz (Dr. G. von) on British Imperialism and German expansion, 346-360
Science, The Attitude of, to the Un- usual: a Reply to Professor New- comb, 206-222
Scottish Orders and Catholic Re- union, 386-396
Second Chamber, Advantages of a, and Reform of the House of Lords, 34-47
Sellers (Miss Edith), An Insurance against Unemployment' Scheme, 272-282; Poor Relief in the Days to come, 875-890
Separation orders and the law of divorce, 299-311
Shakespeare, The Defamers of, 419- 434; 630-647
Shakespeare, The Vindicators of: a Reply to Sir Edward Sullivan, 1038-1055
Sicilian earthquake, The, 312-320, 663-674
Silver, Price of, its influence on our trade with the East, 675-689 Sledging as a Method of Exploring the Arctic Ocean, 690-698 Social Africa, The Unification' of, 904-908
Sociology, Inheritance and, 74-90 Spender (Harold), What should the Government do? 223-229 Spiritualism and modern psychical research, 126-139
Stanley of Alderley (Lord), The Edu- cational Problem, 109–116 State-aided insurance against un- employment, 272-282
State Feeding of School Children in London, 862-874 Statham (Heathcote),
The Royal Academy and the Salon, 1005-1017 Suess' (Professor) theory of origin of earthquakes, 319-320
Sullivan (Sir Edward), The Defamers of Shakespeare, 419-434; 680-647; a Reply to, 1038-1055
Swedish Experience in Education, A, 1018-1025
Swinburne, A Tribute to, 965–979
TAXATION of Land Values, The,
191-205; a Reply to, 699-710 Technical training for school children, in England and in Sweden, 1019-25 Telepathy and unexplained physical phenomena, 206-222
Theatrical censorship, its origin, 504-
'Tied houses' and reform of the public-house, 994-1004
Tozer (Basil), Divorce versus Com- pulsory Celibacy, 299-811 Trade rivalries of England, Germany, and United States, 346-360 Tree-planting and unemployment, 648-662
Triple Alliance, The Balance of Naval Power and the, 1068-1082 Tulloch (Captain T. G.), The Aërial Peril, 800-809
Turkey, Constitutional, The Future of, 361-874
Turkey, The Origin of the Revolt in, 755-760
Turkey under constitutional govern- ment, 16-24, 755-760
Turkish Court, The, from Abdul Medjid to Abdul Hamid, 980-993 Turkish railway enterprise, 1083–1094
UNEMPLOYED, The, and tree-
plantation, 648-662
Unemployment from the 'Unem- ployed' Point of View, 153–162
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