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THE NW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY 146520

ASTOR, LENOX AND TILDEN FOUNDATIONS 1903

LONDON:

WERTHEIMER, LEA AND CO., PRINTERS,

CIRCUS PLACE, LONDON WALL.

INDEX.-1896-1897.

Admiralty Waste and Jobbery, 22
Advocate of Peace, 26, 102
Africa, South, 83, 163, 202, 243,
298, 327, 335

African Annexation, 34, 58, 135
African Wars, 111, 162
American Feeling towards Eng-
land, 1, 25, 119, 172
American Peace Society, 117
American School Histories, 118
Anglo-American Arbitration, 14,
24, 25, 37, 42, 56, 59, 60, 69, 70,
85, 101, 105, 113, 117, 134, 150,
157, 175, 177, 179, 190, 191, 196,
197, 198, 202, 209, 222, 226, 242,
262,274, 297, 310
Anglo-American Peace Demon-
stration, 41, 51
Anglo-Turkish War, An, 153
Anglo-Venezuelan Treaty, 193
201, 226, 259, 285, 310
Appeal to the Nations, 304
Arbitration Alliance, Annual
Meeting (1896), 57, 69, 89, 96
Arbitration Alliance, Annual
Meeting (1897), 225, 257, 267,
308
Arbitration, Appeal by Cardinals,

60
Arbitration, International, 16, 21,
36, 39, 54, 117, 179, 184, 259, 310
Arbitration, Canadian Premier
on, 48

Arbitration, Fred. Harrison on, 16
Arbitration, French Ambassador
on, 36

Arbitration, Limits of, 184
Arbitration in 1870, 56
Arbitrations:-

Alaska Boundary, 201
Behring Sea, 13, 38, 59, 86,

151, 201, 226, 259, 297, 310
Costa Rica Packet, 217
Delagoa Bay, 103, 201, 225
France and Brazil, 15
Great Britain and Belgium,

285

Great Britain and Colombia,
118,201, 259

Great Britain and Germany,

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148

Christmas Pastimes, 332
Churches, International Petition,

45, 191, 237, 257, 284, 308, 333
Clarke, M.P., Sir Edward, 16, 156
Cleveland, President, 1, 2, 9, 10, 25,
27, 61, 69, 128, 177, 190
Conference, Inter-parliamentary
(Buda-Pesth), 134, 152
Conference (Brussels), 213, 263
285, 287

Conference, Origin of, 136
Congregational Union and Peace,
52.84

Congress, Free Church, 41, 45
Congress, Buda-Pesth Peace, 44,
101, 110, 117, 124, 134, 136, 141,
143, 157
Congress, Hamburg Peace, 213,
236, 260, 273, 285, 292, 304
Conscription, 3, 20, 43, 179, 198,
211, 258, 296, 307

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Conquered, The," 334

German Battle by Tariff, 65

Consul, Incidents in Life of a, 171 German Consuls Compared, 26
Cost of Sport 131

Costa Rica Packet Arbitration,
217

Courtney, Mr., 39, 200
Cremer, Mr. W. R., 56, 246, 257
Cretan Question, 231, 234, 310
Crimean War, Origin of, 102
Crimean War, a Comparison, 158
CURRENT NOTES, 1, 13, 25, 41, 57,
69, 85, 101, 117, 133, 149, 161,
177, 189, 201, 213, 225, 241, 257,
273, 285, 297, 309, 325

Danish Peace Society, 109
Darby, Dr. W. E., Meetings and
Journeys, 5, 22, 24, 26, 29, 41,
167, 188, 209, 220, 232
Darby, Dr. W. E., Visits to Paris,
213, 225, 237

Darby, Dr. W. E., Letters of, 145
234, 243

Dardanelles, Passage of, 144
Defence, True, 331

Denmark, King of, 325
Dickens, Charles, in America, 174
Disarmament, General Effect of,

174
Doane, Bishop of, on War Folly,

25

German Emperor, 189, 203, 217,

299, 311

German Military Officers, 157
German Peace Correspondent, 47
Germans, As the, See Us, 130
Gill, John, 8, 100, 110, 160, 212,
272, 323

Gladstone, Mr. W. E., 2, 117, 141,
158,

Glasgow Peace Society, 31, 55, 132
Great Britain and the U.S.A., 58
Greco-Turkish War, 226, 227, 229,

235, 241, 298, 300
Greeks, Kindness of Ancient, 148
Guatemala in 1896, 64
Guns at Elswick, 40
Guns made of Paper, 174

Hamilton, Lord George, M.P., 133
Harrison, Frederick, 16
Hawaii, Annexation of, 260
Hay, Col. John, 214
Hazell, Mr. W., M.P., 47
HERALD OF PEACE, 101, 161, 178

India, An Example, 215
India and the Soudan, 101

Drummond Castle, Wreck of, 86, Indian Policy, 303, 305
Droz, Numa, 259

95

Dufferin, Marquis of, 85
Dutch Peace Society, 38
Duels, Curious, 128
Dukhobortsi, The, 282

Durham, Bishop of, 13, 215, 235

Eastern Crisis, 225, 228

International Law Congress, 147
Ireland, Recent Statistics, 132
Italian War Misery, 127

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Ecclesiastical Patronage of Mili- Johannesburg, Plea from, 244, 254

tarism, 26
Edwards, Mr. Passmore, 178
Egypt, 43, 162, 178
England and India, 305
European Concert, 226, 227, 228,
326, 327

Evolution and War, 277

Faure, President, 187, 207, 225,

237, 286, 298
Fire Brigade of Women, A, 148
Fleet, Cost of the, 281
Foreign Labour Competition, 23
FOREIGN NOTES, 7, 19, 33, 49,
93, 109, 125, 142, 155, 169, 183,
195, 207, 219, 233, 265, 279,
303, 317, 331

France and England, Trade be-
tween, 71
French Invasion of 1797, 333
French Peace Society, 68

Journalists, Pacific, 14

Jubilee Celebration, 258, 281
Jubilee of the L. & N. W. R., 116

Kafirs, The, 56, 215
Kruger, President, 85

Labouchere, Mr., M.P., 21, 27, 45,
57, 59, 98, 133, 161, 162
Labour Disputes, Earl Grey on, 15

LEADING ARTICLES.

The Monroe Doctrine and Vene-
zuela, 6

The Press and Patriotism, 18
National Defence by Moral
Force, 32

Italian and British Jingoism, 48
The Chorus for Arbitration, 62

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Partisanship, 214

Passive Resistance (Dr. A.Wallace),
135, 286

Pax Britannica, 286

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The War Spirit, 116
A Kindly Word, 132
Peace, not a Sword, 198
To England and America!
Greeting! 199

All men are equal, 231
If! 306

Political Asylum, British, 287
Pope, Letter to Daily Chronicle,

61

Port Royal Pastor, 307
Portugal in Africa, 61
Primitive Methodists, 35
Prince of Wales, 2, 103

"Peace and the Peace Society," Professional Alarmists, 162

221

Peace with Honour, 266
Peace Brigades, 68
Peace Day, 197, 203
Peace Essay for Schools, 112
Peace, Jingoes, 162
Peace Presentations, 258, 274, 310,

325

Peace Society, Address to German
People, 280

PEACE SOCIETY, Annual Meeting,
(1896), 57, 69

PEACE SOCIETY, Annual Mem-
bers' Meeting (1896), 71
PEACE SOCIETY. Annual Public
Meeting (1896), 77
PEACE SOCIETY, ANNUAL REPORT
(1896), 72, 81

PEACE SOCIETY, Annual Meeting
(1897), 225, 241
PEACE SOCIETY, Annual Mem-
bers' Meeting (1897), 244
PEACE SOCIETY, Annual Public
Meeting (1897), 245
PEACE SOCIETY, ANNUAL REPORT
(1897), 249

PEACE SOCIETY, Autumnal Meet-
ing (1896), 136, 161, 163
PEACE SOCIETY, Autumnal Meet-
ing, 1897, 297, 309, 312, 318
PEACE SOCIETY, 2, 3, 7, 24, 26, 41,
145, 309, 325

Morley, Mr. John, M.P., 27, 84, 98, PEACE SOCIETIES, English and

127

Moscheles, Mr. F., 54, 197

National Debt, Reduction of, 53,

58, 135, 159

National Union of Teachers, 59
Navies of the Great Powers (1896),
113
Navy League, 309

American, 160, 163

PEACE SUNDAY, 3, 14, 17, 144, 149,
162, 170, 177, 179, 189, 199, 309,

325

Peace Treaty, Text of, 300
Peace Union, Ladies', 46, 69, 94,

118

Pease, Sir J. W., Bart., M.P., 14.
43, 66, 258

Pease, Mr. Arthur, M.P. 257
Pease, Mr. A. E., M.P., 201, 241

Pulitzer, Deputation to Mr., 85, 87

Quarrelsome Neighbour, How to
deal with a, 188

Queen, Friends' Address to the,

273

Queen chosen Arbitrator, 27
Queen, Gift to the, 273
Queen, Letter to the, 263
Queen and President Steyn, 286
Queen's Permission, 297
Queen's Speech, 25, 191, 197, 286

Red Man in America, 287
Religious Tract Society, 43
Resolutions, Various, 15, 35, 37,
38, 41, 76, 113, 126
Reviews and Notices of Books, 5,
236, 308, 324
Rosebery, Lord, 11, 136, 149
Rowntree, Mr. Joshua, 186
Ruskin Family, The, 221
Russell, Mr., 212, 240, 308

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Salisbury, Lord, 43, 99, 104, 117, War, More Deadly, 209
198, 241, 325, 326
Schreiner, Olive, 202

Senate, Vote in American, 242
Sermon Notes, 151
Sherman, Senator, 202
SHORT ARTICLES, 20, 46, 47, 59,
66, 67, 99, 103, 112, 129, 133, 146,
147, 148, 160, 167, 168, 172, 173,
174, 175, 176, 188, 217, 227, 239,
279, 287, 291, 295, 296, 308, 335
Siam, England and France, 39
Sinclair, Archdeacon, on Peace,
214

War, Privateering and Contra-
band, 53

War, The Dogs of, 283
War, The Drain of, 261
War, What It Means, 237
Wars, Cost of U. S. Indian, 40
Wars in Victoria's Reign, 136
Watson, Dr. Spence, 178
Welsh Peace Meeting, 211
Westlake, Professor, 27
Wisbech L. P. Association, 187
Wolseley, General Lord, 27, 43, 70,
102, 213, 306

AND

THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY

INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION. 146520

ASTOR, LENOX AND TILBEN FOUNDATIONS.

1000.

"Put up thy sword into his place for all they who take the sword shall perish with the sword."-MATT. xxvi. 52. "They shall beat their swords into ploughshares and their spears into pruning-hooks: nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more."-ISAIAH ii. 4.

No. 557.

NEW SERIES.

JANUARY 1st, 1896.

[PRICE 1d.

CURRENT NOTES.

PRESIDENT CLEVELAND'S MESSAGE.

Universal surprise and regret have been felt in this country, at the nature and tone of President Cleveland's message to the American Senate, in reference to the Venezuela dispute. Hitherto Mr. Cleveland has been regarded as one of the wisest and most pacific of American statesmen. But in this instance he appears to have been strangely led astray; for he not only manifests ignorance of the actual circumstances of the dispute between England and Venezuela, but his message is lamentably lacking in that calm and conciliatory spirit which characterises Lord Salisbury's despatches to the American Government on Venezuela question.

the

AMERICAN FEELING TOWARDS ENGLAND. Notwithstanding the unfortunate circumstance that President Cleveland's defiant message was received with loud applause and clapping of hands by both parties in the American Senate, and that it elicited wild expressions of delight on the part of the Jingo and Irish sections of the population of the United States, there are, happily, many indications that the more thoughtful and intelligent portion of the people are profoundly averse to the idea of a war with Great Britain. war would be one of the most frightful conflicts in history, and especially wicked and criminal if permitted to arise out of such a petty ground of dispute as that furnished by the difficulties in Venezuela.

BRITISH FEELING TOWARD AMERICA.

Such a

It has been very gratifying to observe, in the journals of every party in Great Britain, an absence of hasty anger at the American threats of war, and a sense of deep sorrow that the Government of a sister nation, one so closely connected with ourselves by the ties of lineage and race, should have so easily forgotten the claims of those relations, to say nothing of national dignity and Christian responsibility. Englishmen generally are astounded at President Cleveland's bellicose threats, and can scarcely believe that he was not actuated by electoral and private influences in this matter.

THE FRIENDS OF PEACE.

The friends of Peace, on both sides of the Atlantic, will heartily unite their efforts and their prayers in behalf of amicable relations between Great Britain and the United States. In former years, when there was some danger of war, most valuable assistance in the direction of Peace was rendered by the collateral action of many good men and women in each of the two countries concerned. And during the next few months, there may be much need for similar fraternal efforts towards a common object.

THE BLIND CHAPLAIN OF U.S. SENATE.

Just after the issue of President Cleveland's message, the Rev. William Melburn, the blind chaplain of the Senate, in opening the proceedings of that House, referred to the horrors of war, and made an invocation against the shedding of blood by the two great English-speaking peoples. His prayer, which was received with the deepest attention, continued as follows:-"Grant, we beseech Thee, that we may be saved from imbruing our hands in each others' blood. Let the spirit of justice and magnanimity prevail among the rulers of both nations and among the kindred people of the two lands." On the motion of Mr. Mitchell, the Senate directed that the invocation be inscribed in full on the record-an unusual mark of

respect. The chaplain received the congratulations and thanks of many of the Senators. The excellent example thus set cannot but have influenced, in the direction of peace, very many other Ministers of the Gospel on both sides of the Atlantic.

OPINIONS OF UNITED STATES JURISTS.

The opinions of legal authorities, on the Continent of Europe and even in the United States, are mostly adverse to the President's view. Professor Beale, of the Harvard Law School, Instructor in International Law, declares that in no sense can the Monroe doctrine be held part of international law. Professor Thayer, of the same school, is surprised by the President's allusion to war, and thinks that the Message will give aid and comfort to the Jingoes. The Evening Post has collected a number of interesting opinions from eminent authorities, including Professor Hyde, of Bowdoin College, and Professor Woolsey, who holds the Chair of International Law in the Yale Law School. Both oppose the

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The New York World received the following cablegram from Mr. Gladstone in reply to a request for a statement by him on the situation created by President Cleveland's Message :-"Hawarden.-I dare not interfere. Only common sense is required. I cannot say more with advantage.-GLADSTONE." The Times New York correspondent states that this cablegram has completed the conversion of Mr. Chauncey Depew, and, as the number of Mr. Gladstone's American admirers has always been large, it may be expected to convert many others who were not, like Mr. Depew, slightly uncertain which way things were going, but rampant Jingoes.

CAUSES OF U.S. JINGOISM.

The New York correspondent of the Pall Mall Gazette remarks :-" What our Southern folk call the 'blood-thirst' has shown marked signs of a vigorous revival, to a degree not noticeable since 1861-1865. The word Jingo' has been transplanted, and applied to a new party composed of a number of men in both the old parties, and to a great body of influential newspapers. These men and newspapers have been carrying a drawn sword on their shoulders and hunting for a fight, more and more plainly. For two years, Napoleonic reminiscence, in the magazines, has given place to a revival of interest in George Washington. The national flag is now ordered to be displayed on all school-houses; tales

of American heroism are in demand, and patriotism, which we used to say was missing, has bounded into strength and activity, in proportion as our new navy has been swelled by more vessels, and vessels of more and more formidable types."

CONTINENTAL OPINION.

The chief journals of the Continent, like those of Great Britain, express their astonishment at the extraordinary message of President Cleveland, who, hitherto, had enjoyed a European reputation for administrative wisdom.

THE MONROE DOCTRINE.

In another column will be found some remarks on the Monroe Doctrine, in connection with existing political relations.

A PRACTICAL PROPOSAL.

Mr. J. Wrigley, of Kensington, makes the following proposal in reference to the American demands upon England :-" Before angry words are uttered and written, let an offer be made by this country to the United States to refer to Arbitration the question whether the demands in Mr. Olney's despatch are, or are not, in accordance with International Law. It might also be conceded that if the decision be against us, no objection shall be raised to the whole Venezuelan boundary question being referred to Arbitration. In the event of its being in our favour, a settlement with Venezuela would probably, without much difficulty, be made. With the known and declared views of the United States Government on Arbitration, this offer should be cordially accepted."

"FIN DE SIÈCLE IDIOTS."

The Austrian journal, Neue Freie Presse, of Vienna, says that a war betwen England and the United States would be a piece of hostile folly, and the combatants would be fin de siècle idiots.

ARMENIA.-CHEAP CRUSADERS.

The Chancellor of the Exchequer, alluding to the reverend and other gentlemen who want to send out other men to die in fighting with the Turks for Armenia, remarks:-"There is a kind of crusading spirit abroad, to some extent, at the present moment-a spirit in which there is a good deal that is noble, at least when those who preach it are willing to go to the crusade themselves. In this matter we must be guided by the dictates of reason and common-sense. We must consider what it is possible for this country to do. We must have regard to those risks in the situation which any one who reads the newspapers can see. When the path of duty is clear to us, we will not fear to tread it, but we must tread it by the light and guidance of common-sense, or the remedy applied will be worse than the disease.

THE "TIMES" AND THE PEACE SOCIETY.

In another column will be found a letter from Dr. Darby, which recently appeared in the Times, in reference to the Peace Society and the Armenians.

SUBSTITUTING ONE MASSACRE FOR ANOTHER. Perhaps the best and briefest condemnation of the bellicose pro-Armenian agitation which has lately been.

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