The Green Bag
650
Fraudulent Oonveyancea. "The Appli— cation of the Statute Against Conveyances in Fraud of Creditors to Tort Claims." By Frank C. McKinney. 22 Bench and Bar 96 (Sept.).
,,,
--
l
Review,
v.
192,
p.
436
(Oct.).
See p. 658 infra. Egypt. “Shall Egypt Have a Constitution?" By Pelham Edgar.
and the Japanese coast of Canada. necessity. Insanity.
International Politics.
"Japan's Absorp
' url'x- ¢P'¥*"'!fl‘;1‘m{
A tort claimant is found to be within the protection of the New York statute. His exact rights are considered at len h. The discussion is mainly directed to the ew York statute, but the doctrines laid down are prevalent in many other states. Government. "The New Politics; the Issues." By William Garrott Brown. North American
nuisance in South Africa, menace on the Pacific Anti-alien legislation is a Insanity. See Criminal
tion of Korea." By William Elliot Grifi'is. North American Review, v. 192, p. 516 (Oct.). "Asia for the Japanese." By Saint Nihal
Singh. Contemporary Review, v. 98, p. 341 (Sept.). Interstate Commerce. See Rate Regula tion. Jury Trials. “Directing Verdicts." By Samuel C. Graham. 16 Virginia Law Register 401 (Oct.).
Fortnightly Review, v. 88,
"In conclusion it may be said, with the
p. 404 (Sept.). The writer believes that the administration of Egypt since the Earl of Cromer's retire
approval of the bench, and majority of the bar, that the present practice of imposing upon the jury instructions almost without limit, often irreconcilable to the lay mind, causes more mistrials and unjust results than any other element of the trial, and more reversals, and that any 1e 'timate act upon the part of courts that ' tend to remedy this should be encouraged and upheld." Juvenile Delinquency. "The Instability of the Family as a Cause of Child Dependence and Delinquency." By Prof. Charles A. Ellwood. Survey, v. 24, p. 886 (Sept. 24). Professor Ellwood here states the results of his investigation of the relation between child dependence and divorce or desertion. He does not claim scientific value for con clusions gleamed from not altogether satis factory data. By writing to a large number
ment has been too lenient, and that Sir Eldon
Gorst should be relieved of his duties and firmer measures applied. "The British in Egypt." By Max Monte sole. Fortnightly Review, v. 88, p. 412 (Sept.). This author does not advocate greater firmness, as the means of allaying political unrest in Egypt, but thinks the British administration of that country should be "firm of purpose but flexible in methods, neither over-zealous or strictly logical." India. "What Does India Want Politi cally?" By Saint Nihal Singh. Fortnightly Review, v. 88, p. 425 (Sept.). A plea for autonomous institutions in India. Ireland. “Nationalism and Nationality in Ireland—I." By Col. Henry Pilkington, C. B. Contemporary Review, v. 98, p. 300 (Sept.). “What Ireland Wants." By John E. Redmond.
Russia. The
McClure's, v. 35, p. 691 (Oct.).
“The Reaction in Russia, III,
Laws, the Courts, and the Prisons."
By George Kennan.
Century, v. 80, p. 925
(Oct.).
Treating of the deprivation of legal rights by administrative process. See Conservation of Natural Resources, Nomination Reform, Public Health, Scientific
Progress, Shipping Subsidies, Socialism. Immigration.
the Asiatic?"
"What is the Matter with
By J. Liddell Kelly.
West
minster Review‘, v. 174, p. 292 (Sept.). The writer answers the question by saying that nothing is the matter with the Asiatic races, on their own soil, but the English have commenced a blending_ process, and the Asiatic will not blend. he British battering of the walls of exclusion in Asia has led to the "yellow agony" of Australia, the Hindu
of
institutions,
however,
he
was
able
to
secure statistics which support the belief that a very substantial proportion of juvenile dependence and delinquency is due to the destruction of homes by desertion or divorce. Inquiries sent out to reformatcries, 0 han ages, and similar institutions showe the proportion of children with such antecedents to be somewhere round thirty per cent of the total number, and nearly as great as that of the children from homes broken by the death of one or both parents. He therefore thinks that a scientific investigation of the problem under the aus ices of such an agency as the Russell Sage oundation would be profitable. Labor Regulation. “Compulsory Arbitra tion in New Zealand." By James E. Le Rossignol and William D. Stewart. Quarterly journal of Economics, v. 24, p. 660 (Aug). The practical workings of com ulsory arbitration in New Zealand i'urnis the subject for an extended and minute study. “It is not easy to show that compulsory arbitration has greatly benefited the workers of the Colony." The workers are not entirely satisfied with the act, and some of them complain that it is administered with par tiality toward the employer.