27 DECEMBER 1919, page 13

The Scottish Church Enabling Bill.

[To THE EDITOR or THE " SPECTATOR.") SIR,—An English man of letters, not unknown to you, wrote to me more than once from his quiet home, his sanctuary in Surrey, concerning......

Sun Rings.

[To THE EDITOR or THE " SPECTATOR.1 Sin,—I replied lately to a correspondent of yours on this sub. ject, and he suggests that I address you. The rings which often occur here......

A Dog Story.

[To THE EDITOR or THE " SPECTATOR."] Sitt,—The letter about the Bloomsbury grocer's cat that bought her own cat's-meat in your issue of December 6th is interest- ing, but I can......

English Words In Foreign Languages.

[To THE EDITOR or THE " SPECTLTOR."] Sea,—Referring to your correspondence on " English Words in the French Language,"I notice, in reading General Ludendorff's memoirs in......

Strange Lights.

[To THE Faeroe or TES SPECTATOR."] Set,—I well remember an experience exactly like that which Lord Walter Gordon Lennox describes. In 1885 I was in camp outside Suakin when at......

A Seventeenth-century Example. [to The Editor Of The "...

Sta, All lovers of our galleries and museums will thank you for your article in support of the National Art-Collections Fund. Might the attention of private owners be drawn to......

The Sptaatar We Suggest That There Can Be No Better

Present in Peace or War than an Annual Subscription to the Spectator. He or she who gives the Spectator as a present will give a weekly pleasure, as well as a weekly reminder......