25 OCTOBER 1913, page 16

Poetry.

THE WATCHERS. PATIENT, with weary faces, Behind the dimity shade, Making delicate laces They sit, no longer afraid. They are so tired of waiting Behind the window-glass; Tired......

711.b. Bernard Wilson Memorial Fund.

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—May I ask the use of your columns to thank Old Sedberghians and other friends of Sedbergh for the generous response they have, made to......

The Higher Education Of Girls— An Appeal.

[To THE EDITOR or THE "SPECTATOR " ] Srit,—We hope that you will allow us to call the attention of readers of the Spectator to the appeal which is now being made for......

Scholarships In Secondary Schools.

[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR, — A letter in the Spectator of September 27th from the vicar of Plumstead revived my contention of July 26th in your columns that to......

M U Sic.

THE LATE MR. PELISSIER. Ma. PELIssIEs, whose untimely end all lovers of mirth deplore, was, like Mr. Albert Chevalier, a striking example of the advantages of a mixed strain in......

High Pheasants.

[To ma EDITOR ox THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR, — Re Mr. Fortune's letter in your last week's issue, surely it is well known that the apparent increase in the size of both the sun and......

"communicated," The Editor Must Not Necessarily Be Held...

in agreement with the views therein esepreseed or with the mode of expression. In such instances, or in the case of "Letters to the Editor," insertion only means that the matter......