7 AUGUST 1920, page 16

America's War Sacrifices.

[To THE EDITOR Of THE " SPECTATOR."] Stu,—To the deep delight, I feel sure, of all your English readers, the Spectator is so seriously interested in every sign of a good......

Disraeli And Gladstone.

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—You must not be too hard on Mrs. Elizabeth Humfrey and her not yet wholly defunct class of scissors-and-paste people. Exempli gratia—one......

[to The Editor Of The 'spectator.")

Sia,—The amusing Parliamentary incident regarding Mr. Eradstone and Disraeli recorded by Lady Frederick Cavendish is told in Modern Parliamentary Eloquence, being the Reid......

The Late Sir Edmund Elton.

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIE, — Sir Edmund Harry Elton, Bart., died at his beautiful home, Clevedon Court, Somerset, on the 17th ult., in his seventy-fifth year after......

The Shortage Of Paper.

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sps,—The question of the utilization of the bracken in the manufacture of paper raised by a correspondent in your issue of July 31st is a......

[to Tie Editor Or Tile " Spectator.")

SIR,—Mr. Dovrnham has made the confession which no doubt the Hon. Secretary of the Plumage Bill Group desired. In regard to the proportion between moulted and "shot" plumes from......

The Glastonbury Festival School.

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sia,—The visit of the Glastonbury Festival School to London has created two dominant impressions—firstly, that the Glaston- bury movement......