1 JUNE 1929, page 18

The Litter Of London [to The Editor Of The Spectator.]

SIR,--Passing your new offices in Gower Street, looking so fresh in their livery of spring, I noticed beside them a drab and dirty street-cleaning van. Right under my nose, and......

Stag Hunting [to The Editor Of The Spectator.] Sir,—with...

to the suggestion that Exmoor could be turned into a National Park, may I point out that the area in which the deer are at present hunted and preserved includes far more than......

The Presence Of Flowers [to The Editor Of The Spectator.]

Sni,—May I, from present experience, emphasize the refreshing and enlivening influence of flowers in the daily life of cities so eloquently set forth in your article of May 1......

Disarmament [to The Editor Of The Spectator.] Sra,—in...

of May 25th we read, "No one who prides himself on common sense will dispute the contention that the Direct or Technical niethod 'of disarmament—in isolation:-:-must lead, as it......

[to The Editor Of The Spectator.]

Sin,—Knowing your impartiality on this subject, may. I be allowed to give a short reply to Major F. G. B. Lethbridge's letter in your issue of the 25th. Major Lethbridge asserts......