Litter
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Would it not be in the interest of economy to bring to the attention of the town and rural county councillors the possibilities of saving......
A Raven And A Boy
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—My brother-in-law in Devonshire has a raven, brought up from a nestling, and now some years old. It flies about loose in the garden. The......
Poetry
ADAM AND EVE EVE : What should we do, love, if the sun should fail, (There have been times when he grew wan and pale) If he his daily task should not complete, Nor give his......
The Names Of Flowers [to The Editor Of The Spectator.]
Sre,—Writing for the Spectator of all papers, correspondents should be sure of their facts, and rose growers cannot con- gratulate Mr. Geoffrey Dearmer on his statement in the......
Tiie Right Use Of Emigration [to The Editor Of The
SPECTATOR.] Sur,—Mr. R. M. Bradley says in his useful letter that if emigrants are drawn gradually from an area of congestion the power of multiplication which has created......
The Victoria Park Hospital [to The Editor Of The Spectator.]
SIR, —I write as Chairman of the City of London Hospital: for Diseases of the Heart and Lungs (" Victoria Park Hos- pital " to use its more familiar title) to say that I shall......
Completion Of The Memorial To The 29th Division...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—S0 many of your readers are interested in the records of the " Incomparable Twenty-Ninth " that I shall be grateful if you will allow me......