29 JANUARY 1910, page 15

The Black Bread Controversy.

[To TEE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sus,—If Radical partisans have any saving sense of humour left, perhaps the following extract from Sir Walter Scott's "Old Mortality" may......

Pheasant-rearing. [to The Editor Of The " Einar/m."1 -...

seen the letter in last Saturday's Spectator signed " Squireen." Curiously enough, my chief has restored a thirteenth-century priory entirely at his own cost, although I fail to......

Indian Opinion And Sedition.

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—The letter from a " Nasik Resident" in your last issue reminded me of a conversation in a Mohammedan gentleman's house where I was......

Lord Morley On Taxation.

[TO TEE EDITOR OF TEE - " SPECTATOR."] SIR,—Tbe enclosed extract from a speech of Lord Morley's made at the People's Palace, Newcastle, in February, 1892, may be of interest in......

Bribery Old And New.

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—In early days I lived in a constituency which was con- sidered corrupt. Both sides had bribed, till at last in self- protection they......

The Poor And Education. [to The Editor Of The "srzerkros.."1

Sru,—Your article in last week's Spectator indirectly at least raises the whole question of the wisdom of educating the poorer classes of this country. The writer chides social......