:March 4, 1938 The Commonweal 51I who tried to explain all crime on the basis of deficient eyesight. His theory was this: Going about with faulty vision sets up a condition in the optic nerve that...
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THE CHALLENGE OF THE CONGRESS By C. C. MARTINDALE NEXT October, the Thirty-second International Eucharistic Congress is to be held, God willing, at Buenos Aires. There is always a danger of the...
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402 THE COMMONWEAL August 25, 1933 The plan permits a free supply and demand price man factor heads...
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WON THROUGH By C. C. MARTINDALE WHY AM I glad that The Commonweal has won through? (For we may trust that it has done so.) Because I think it is true to its name, which implies, that it seeks...
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38o THE COMMONWEAL August I4, I9~-9 MR. BARING'S NOVELS By C. C. MARTINDALE T SEEMS a pity that Mr. Baring s work is better appreciated in France than m England. Perhaps it is...
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'(The following is the second of two papers written for The Commonweal by the Reverend C. C. Martindale, S. J. Father MartindaUj an Englishman, is one of the foremost Catholic apologists writing...
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(The following is the first of two papers written for The Commonweal by the Reverend C. C. Martindale, S. J. Father Martindale, an Enfflishman, is one of the foremost Catholic apologists writing...
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~oo T H E C O M M O N W E AL February 16, I927 MUSING ON THE MARLBOROUGHS
By C. C. MARTINDALE T HE smoke-screens having by now been dissi-pated, the sea can be discerned as calm, though...
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November 18, 1925 THE COMMONWEAL 43 deliberately extinguishing the Magyar language and culture which largely go hand in hand with the Catholic faith, and finally that Serbian Orthodoxy makes...
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