26 FEBRUARY 1927, page 15

World-wide Publicity For The League Of Nations

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—It has been suggested that a large sum of money should be spent in advertising the League of Nations, but surely the Press does not......

The Number Seven

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—With regard to the sacredness of the number 7. there can be no doubt that the idea goes back to the Babylonians, the precursors of the......

National Camps

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] ltt,—In your columns lately several well-known headmasters • e reaffirmed their desire for a closer contact between the ublie Schools and the......

[to The Editor Of The Spectator.]

Without endorsing extreme statements, often supported v inapt human analogies, about the misery of caged wild irds. I wish to point out that perhaps the most damning idenec of......

[to The Editor Of The Spectator.] Sia,—it Is Truly Said

that a " Temperance Meeting " contains nobody but total abstainers. Similarly, " The Cage Bird Cult," by Hamish Maclaren, will only be read by educated people of his way of......