26 JULY 1828, Page 10

TO CORRESPONDENTS.

P.P.P." offers some friendly suggestions (which we will not overlook), and pro- poses that we should print the whole SPECTATOR in the small type at present used for the advertisements. " A Reader of Seventy" solicits our attention to "the care of the aged and weak-eyed," and calls upon us to "perfect" our " ele- gant and admirable plan," by using throughout the paper, the same " legible and round character" in which the "Topics of the Day" are set forth. We fear it will not be easy to satisfy both these requisitions, but we commend them both to the judicious and benevolent consideration of the Printer. For ourselves, we shall take care that the space lost in large type shall be gained in condensation of matter ; and we think we may promise for the Printer, that smallness of cha- racter shall be compensated by clearness of Impression.