A BOOK FOR THE MOMENT. 



THE REBUILDING OP BRITAIN 



Causes and Effects of the Great War. 



By an inspector OF SCHOOLS. 



/JO pages, Crown 8vo, -with j^ Photo Illustrations^ hound in stij^ 

 beards, 2/6 net. Post free 2/9. 



Extract from Prejace. — " This little book has been prompted by the 

 imperative need for the statement of the simple facts of Britain's post-war 

 position to every section of the community, and not least to the young. It is 

 a small contribution to the volume of effort needed to ensure that the rising 

 generation shall not grow to manhood and womanhood ignorant of the truth, 

 and of the peril we still have to face, or with warped ideas due to partial know- 

 ledge or misinterpretation of fact. 



The young people now at school will, in a few years' time, be electors ; 

 in"due course the destinies of the British Empire will lie in their hands. It 

 is essential that they shall then be able to wield power with judgment bom of 

 knowledge. 



London : A. BROWN & SONS, Ltd., 5 Farringdon Avenue, E.G. 4. 



AND AT HULL AND YORK. 



SCIENCE PROGRESS 



A Quarterly Review of Scientific Thought, 

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Editor - COLONEL SIR RONALD ROSS, K.G.B., F.R.S. 



This Quarterly is now in its fourteenth year of publication. Its 

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 a knowledge of the numerous advances which are being continually 

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 Articles, Popular Science, Essay-Reviews, Correspondence, Notes, 

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 quarter by John Murray, 50a Albemarle Street, London, W. Annual 

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" Science Progress, which has now reached its thirty-ninth 

 number, not only covers a remarkable wide field with great 

 ability, but has had impressed upon it, by the energetic and 

 humane spirit of its editor, a certain dynamic quality which 

 makes it a force as well as a source of light." — The Times, 



