Educated English Domestics For America
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] . am afraid your correspondent, Miss W. Wrench, in asking help to secure four maids for America on a two-year contract arrangement is seeking......
The Political Situation In Egypt
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIRS I have just seen, in the Spectator of February 14th, a letter, signed " Egyptian Official," which contains two mistakes of fact. (a) It is......
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......
The New Emil Jannings Film
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—You will remember that I drew the attention of your readers to the new Emil Jannings film under the title of The Last Man. Perhaps they......
Poetry
EPITAPHS IN ADVANCE GEORGE MOORE. WOMEN he praised and, after women, art. Good friends he had and used them all for copy. Had but his genius matched as great a heart, Time had......
The Law Against Traps On The Level
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Mr. Foulcher complains of the Act of Parliament which forbids trapping on the level. If Mr. Foulcher had had a dog caught in a trap, as I......
The Sugar °beet Industry
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] ST11,—I am not sure if the Spectator has declared itself as to the proposed bounty on the cultivation of sugar beet, and I do not remember to......
(to The Editor Of The Spectator.] Sin,—is Fox-hunting, As...
correspondent assumes, a cruel and degrading sport ? The fox, it is well known to the observer, has a far better and happier time where hunted than elsewhere. Indeed, his best......