7 OCTOBER 1922, page 22

Some Books Of The Week.

[Notice itt !kis column does not necessarily precluds subsequent review.] We offer the Field our hearty congratulations on the occasion of its seventieth birthday. The number in......

Down-along Talks. By "dan'l Grainger " (david F. Gass)....

Folk Series No. 6. (Somerset Folk Press, 16 liarpur Street, W.C. 1. is. 8d.)—This little collection of stories gives examples of village affairs as they go on in remote parts of......

The Rise And Progress Of Modern Football By Harms Moore.

(Bowman and Murdock. 6d. net.)—In this little pamphlet the story of Football is pleasantly and vividly told. Mr. Moore describes how football has progressed, from a......

The London Mercury.

1.r it contained nothing else of interest the fact that the London Mercury for October contains a short story by Mr. Walter de la Mare would be sufficient to make it an......

What We Want And Why. By Mrs. Philip Snowden, J.

H. Thomas, Robert Williams, Tom Mann, J. Bromley, and Noah Ablett. (W. Collins and Co. 7s. 6d. net.)—The tendeney of many excellent people who do not give much attention to the......

The National Review.

Ix this number Mr. C. Clayton Turner discusses the moral side of depreciated European currencies in an article called "The Great German Booby Trap." He compares the proud......

The Yale Review.

Tins American quarterly is admirably produced, though we sometimes find ourselves wishing that it were not so stuffy. The present number is, however, a good one. Mr. Frederick......

The Contemporary Review.

PROFESSOR ARNOLD TOYNBEE writes on "The Denouement in the Near East." His article is in effect a veiled "I told you so." Professor Toynbee spent some months in Anatolia in 1921,......

Musical Magazines.

Tux quarterly .Mwsio and Letters maintains its solitary excellence. Mr. Wright Roberta contributes an interesting appreciation of Cesar Franck, whose centenary occurs this year.......

Blackwood's Magazine.

Blackwood is, as usual, thoroughly entertaining. The author of Tales of the R.I.C. gives a long and somewhat depressing sketch of "Ulster in 1921." A first instalment of "The......