SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
[Notice in this column does Ina necessarily preclude subsequent review.) The League of Nations Union at 15 Grosvenor Crescent is increasing its efforts to make the objects of the League better known and thus to assist the work done at Geneva and The Hague. It is issuing a " Rainbow " series of well-written pamphlets, in paper covers of different hues, and these, it is said, have helped to increase the membership of the Union to 168,000, in 770 branches. Among the pamphlets we may mention An Insurance Against War (6d. net), Geneva, 1921, by H. Wilson Harris (6d. net), and The League of Nations and the Schools, by Dr. Maxwell Garnett (3d. net),