29 JULY 1922, page 13

Cattle From Overseas.

[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] Sia,—It seems to be granted that cattle suffer greatly in bad weather at sea. I, for one, know it well, for I worked for years in a cattle......

Speak-easies A Stone's Throw From Station Steps.

POLICE MUST CLEAN UP MALDEN'S LIQUOR DISTRICT BEFORE JUDGE RILEY WILL " SOAK " DRUNKS." A man can stand on the steps of the station-house of the Malden Police Department and......

Wedding Presents On Show.

[TO THE EDITOR CF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR,—I was glad to observe what I think will be a great advantage in our social customs, the absence of exhibiting the presents at a wedding......

British Museum Postcards.

[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR,—Permit me, as a constant reader of the Spectator for more than thirty years, to thank you for your delightful article entitled "A......

The Evil Eye In Modern England. [to The Editor Or

THE " SPECTATOR."] Sta,—I am angry, and in anger men are often unreasonable. But an attempt to express my wrath will probably calm me and make me more able to consider fairly......

English Boys In India.

[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR,—Would you kindly allow me to call attention to the lack of knowledge that there seems to be in England as to who the English in India......

The Humane Slaughter Of Animals. [to The Editor Of The

" SPECTATOR."] Sin, I have read the Spectator with great pleasure and prcfit for some thirty years, and I have often wondered why, with its well-known love of animals, this......