The Page Memorial.
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—I should like to express my profound gratitude to you for having set on foot the idea of perpetuating the memory of Walter Page in the......
[to The Editor Of The Spectator.] • Sir,—may I Suggest
the addition of one little word to your admirable suggestion for an inscription to the tablet in Westminster Abbey to Mr. Page—viz., "A friend of his own country always—of ours......
Tax, But Hear Me [to The Editor Of The Spat-lux:or.]
SIR,—Every taxpayer in the country will have read your excellent article in Saturday's Spectator with extreme interest and approval, and everyone would surely support the......
"behind The Shut Door."
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sne,—Reading your comments in this week's issue I am de- sirous of bringing to your notice my own experience. In November, 1888, I got......
[to The Editor Of The Sracraron.] Have Just Read Your
most admirable article, "Mr. Page and Westminster Abbey," in the Spectator for January 6th. It appealed so immensely to my imagination that I felt compelled to read it twice......
Mr. Mcimnna's Speech.
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sra,—The speeches of the chairmen of our great banks at their annual meetings are so weighty and valuable in their wide survey of trade......
Both You And Your Readers In Its Present Position. Com-
menced in 1687, and finished about ten years later, the houses of the Square have ever since been closely associated with the historic, literary and artistic life of the times.......