Wholemeal' - Bread .[to The Editor Of Tuc " Spectator.]
Sne,—It would, I think, help your readers and correspOndents to understand more clearly the principles underlying the interesting discussion in your columns on the wholemeal......
Sport And Cruelty [to The Editor Of The Spectator.] Sir,-i
must either have expressed myself very badly on the " Sport and Cruelty " question, or your correspondent, Mr. Stephen Coleridge, has mistaken my meaning. I take exception to......
Polished Rice [to The Editor Of The Spectator.] Sir,—i Trust
you will permit me to endorse your comments upon the letter of Mr. Harold Roberts which, I think, com- pletely disposes of his remarks which, from my point of view, can only be......
An Appeal For Sunlight [to The Editor Of The Spectator.]
SIR, —For the sake of the nation's light-starved children I pray you let me appeal to your readers for their help, now that the blessed sun is coming again, with health and......
The Epilogue To "st. Joan" [to The Editor Of The
SPECTATOR.] SIR,-If my complaint—to use Mr. Bernard Shaw's term— about his epilogue to " St. Joan " reached him late in Madeira, his—what shall I say ?—graceful but unconvincing......