Sydney Grandy Defends Wilde.

London, April 7.—Sydney Grandy, the dramatist, has written the Daily Telegraph a letter regarding the removal of Oscar Wilde’s name from the programmes of his plays. He asks: "By what principle of justice or charity is the author’s name blotted from his work? If a man is not to be credited with what he has done well, by what right is he punished for what he has done ill?"

London, April 7.- Sydney Grundy, the dramatist has written the Daily Telegraph a letter regarding the removal of Oscar Wilde’s name from the programmes of his plays. He asks, "By what principle of justice or charity is the author’s name blotted from his work? If a man is not to be credited with what he has done well, by what right is he punished for what he has done ill?"

London, April 8 — Sydney Grundy, the dramatist, has written the Daily Telegraph a letter regarding the removal of Oscar Wilde’s name from the programme of his plays. He asks: "By what Principle of justice or charity is the author’s name blotted from his work? If a man is not to be credited with what he has done well, by what right is he punished for what he has done ill?"

LONDON, April 7. — Sydney Grundy, the dramatist, has written the Daily Telegraph a letter regarding the removal of Oscar Wilde's name from the programmes of his plays. He asks "by what principle of justice or charity is the author's name blotted from his work? If a man is not to be credited with what be has done well, by what right Is he punished for what be has done ill?"

LONDON, April 7. - Sydney Grundy, the dramatist, has written the Daily Telegraph a letter regarding the removal of Oscar Wilde's name from the program of his plays. He asks: "By what principle of justice or charity is an author's name blotted from his work? If a man is not to be credited with what he has done well, by what right is he punished for what he has done ill."

Mr Sydney Grundy, the dramatist, has written the "Daily Telegraph" a letter regarding the removal of Oscar Wilde’s name from the programmes of his plays. He asks "By what principle of justice or charity is the author’s name blotted from his work?" If a man is not to be credited with what he has done well, by what right is be punished for what be has done ill?"

Sydney Grundy, the dramatist, wrote the "Daily Telegraph" a letter April 6th, regarding the removal of Wilde's name from the programme of his plays. He asks, "By what principle of justice or charity is an author's name blotted from his work? If a man is not to be credited with what he has done well, by what right is he punished for what he has done ill?"

Mr. Sydney Grundy writes to the Telegraph:—"I wonder on what principle of law, or justice, or common sense, or good manners, or Christian charity, an author's name is blotted from his work. If a man is not to be credited with what he has done well, by what right is he punished for what he has done ill?