We observe that the energetic and useful society for aiding
the promotion of Working Men's Clubs, called "The Working Men's Club and Institute Union," has just founded a journal as the most efficient means of enabling all these clubs to know what the rest of them are doing that may be worth copying, and what "experiences in success or failure" any one of them has had by which the others may profit. The Committee, by whose unremitting and disinterested labour the Union has been kept alive and useful, state that this new journal, which is a penny one and appears weekly, can only succeed by securing a wide circu- lation,—which circulation will not be secured without a certain amount of effort. We heartily recommend the Working Men's Club journal (which appears to be a thoroughly practical one, and yet not a merely practical one, and is published at the office of the Union, 150 Strand) to all who are interested in the great object of the parent Union itself.