12 SEPTEMBER 1925, page 18

The Fourth Duke Of Infantado

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sra,—I would ask you to be so very good as to insert this letter for a troubled author who wants to know if any of your readers will tell him......

Science And Life

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—In your interesting article on the above subject you seem to imply that science has thrown no light on religion— that though the......

Nature Notes

Tun primrose on the river's brim Was one and six a line to him. And though he grumbled, begged and swore, (believe me I) it was nothing more. HIT3IBOAT WoLre,......

The Humane Slaughter Of Animals [to The Editor Of The

SPECTATOR.] . Sin,—The letter in your issue of August 8th is so entirely at variance with my own experience of fifty years in slaughter- houses (during nearly thirty of which I......

Poetry

THE BRITISH JOURNALIST You cannot hope to bribe or twist (Thank God !) the British journalist. But seeing what the man will do unbribed, there's no occasion to.......

The Birmingham Settlement

[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin,—The Committee of tbe Birmingham Settlement believe that there may be some among your readers who will be inte- rested in the openings for......

A Correspondence Club

[To the _Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—Some weeks ago I conceived the idea of organizing an informal correspondence club among readers of the American Nation, to enable......

£100 Prize For An Essay On Unemployment

AN American reader of the Spectator, Mr. Gabriel Wells, • has generously offered a prize of £100 for an essay on "Unemployment : Its Cause and Remedy." The maximum length of an......