POLITICAL IMPROBABILITY "
SIR,—Mr. Brogan is entitled to his own judgement in reaching constitutional and political conclusion which is the opposite of that reached by an ex-Lord Chancellor and the late British Ambassadat to Washington, although I doubt whether he has yet their politi maturity. He is, however, in error on a point of information referring to the Inter-State Commerce Commission as concern with a general control over transport. It is concerned with the rep ration of and charges on goods transported, which is a very different matter, i.e., it is precisely concerned with interstate commerce. Mr. Brogan's statement that I " appear to think the relations betweai England and Scotland are federals " is eloquent of his mood, but I shall not waste your space or my time by comment on it. For tlx rest, it is regrettable that no British statesman has yet made proposals in response as concrete or bold in the direction of recipr Anglo-American citizenship as Mr. Wendell Winkle made last Febru America waits.—I am, &c., GEORGE CATLIN. 2 Cheyne Walk, S.W. 3.