15 MARCH 1913, page 15

The Omens Of Germanicus.

[To THE EDITOR Of THE "SPECTATOR. "] Sin,—I think the best comment upon the uncanny portents of our time would not be your Latin tag, but the following quotation from......

Negro And The Negro To Have Been Captured. Would He

choose to kill the negro or to have a legal trial at which his wife or daughter would be forced to go over the details of the crime in open court to the cross-examination of a......

[to Tue Editor Of The "spectator."]

SIR,—In like case with " Germanicus " I find "it is too tempting for me not to draw your attention to the latest ominous occurrence, which will, no doubt, be taken as a shadow......

The Foreign Office And Portuguese Slavery.

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—Allow me to thank you very warmly for your most excel- lent article on the Foreign Office and Portuguese Slavery. It is, as you say,......

The Missing Weapon Of Sober-minded Men In Politics. [to The

EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] Sin.,—Yon were good enough on a former occasion to publish a letter from myself relative to a matter the importance of which, at the present time,......

The Royalist Prisoners In Portugal. [to The Editor Of The

"SPECTATOR."] Sin,—Reading in your paper of March 8th a letter headed "The Royalist Prisoners in Portugal," in which Mr. Bell refers to the imprisonment of Dona Constanca Telles......

[to The Editor Of The "spectltor."]

Silt,—In the article entitled "The Foreign Office and Portu- guese Slavery," in your issue of Saturday, March 8th, there occurs the following passage, viz.: " The true answer to......