Jul 15. 1905 [Printed text]: [in blue ink] LADIES' COLLEGE, CHELTENHAM. Dear Lady Welby Thanks for your paper, and kind offer to send your book. You were good enough to do so some time ago, and it was that which made me sure you would welcome |page 2 Dr. Stoney's paper. Would you send him me? His daughter was with us for some years. he is wonderfully clean[?] and good I have just come upon a very good book by an American Phil of Education by Norne[?] (McMillan) He dwells |page 3 much on social education. Your point of view is a very important one, [both as it?] [illegible] [home?] to the young and specially to parents who care for money and position Still I think some progress has been made. I am amazed at people operating[?] as they do |page 4 about the Views of Wakefield how that old man could wish his daughter to be married to that wretch, I cannot see. Better it had been a sham marriage + she free. The morality of Leonor + [?] Edgworth is strange and these [sights?] were [illegible] or admirable. I send a magazine with a paper by an old pupil on the subject Yours sincerely D. Beale