Page:Statesman's Year-Book 1871.djvu/810

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774 Advertising Sheet.

THE SPBCTATOE,

INDEPENDENT LIBERAL NEWSPAPER. EVERY SATURDAY, Price 6d. ; by Post, 6Ad.

fpHE Proprietors, who in 1861 purchased the Spectator, have since that date J- conducted it themselves. They are therefore exempted from many infiu- i uces which press severely on the independence of journalism, and have from the first made it their chief object to say out what they believe to be truth in t heology, politics, and social questions, irrespective not only of opposition from without, but of the opinion of their own supporters. Their object is to reflect the opinion of cultivated liberals, but in the matter of the American War they fought against the mass of the very class they are trying to represent, and were finally acknowledged by them to have been in the right. In politics the object of the Spectator is to maintain liberal institutions everywhere, that is, the right of free thought, free speech, and free action, within the limits of law, under every form of Government ; in theology, to maintain the views usually known as those of the Broad Church ; in ecclesiastical affairs, to defend the inclusion within the Established Church of every variety of opinion consistent with belief in the divinity of Christ, and the right of the State to control the Church ; and in social questions, to urge the faith that God made the world for the people in it, and not for any race, class, colour, creed, or section, with all the consequences to which that principle leads.

The journal commands the best sources of information, and has repeatedly during this year been the first to make the true bearing of events apparent to its readers. Its object, however, is not so much to supply news as to express the feeling of the educated classes on the news, and correct that vagueness and bewilderment of thought which the constant receipt of news in little morsels has such a tendency to produce.

Original papers supply comments critical and explanatory on Public Events, Political Appointments, Law Amendment, Commercial Affairs, Personal Inci- dents,'and Theological Controversies.

The News of the current week is compressed into an animated narrative, which tho laziest or busiest may read, without missing the life or import of the events.

li Every important work is noticed as it appears, with a full and critical account, so as to let the Reader know what the book is, what it tells, and what is its place among other books. Of nearly every work some report is given. Notice is also taken of the general course of Literature, its progress, rights, tendencies, personal events, &c.

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And hy Order of all Booksellers and Xewsvcndors.