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Index to Periodicals I and the Swiss cantons contains a permanent arbitration clause to be binding on the subjects of both high contracting parties "The notion of private war was the outcome of false conceptions. The notion of public war, or of war, to employ the term which is always used, rests likewise on a false foundation. It must be driven out by the aid of reason." "Russia's Liability in Tort for Persia's Breach of Contract." By Clement L. Bouve. Ameri can Journal of International Law, v. 6, p. 389 (Apr.). "Is Hudson Bay a Closed or an Open Sea?" By Thomas Willing Balch. American Journal of International Law, v. 6, p. 409 (Apr.). "International Law and Subject Races." By Sir John Macdonell. Journal of Compara tive Legislation, N. S. no. 26, p. 280 (May). "Closely connected with, if not a part of, international law is a group of duties on the part of dominant races to those under their control or influence. These duties, now imperfectly recognized, may be made clearer; they may be enlarged; the observance of them may be made stricter by wise co-operation." "The French Spoliation Claims." By George A. King. American Journal of International Law, v. 6, p. 359 (Apr.). See Aerial Law, Maritime Law, Pufendorf. Juvenile Delinquency. See Criminology. Labor Disputes. "The Living Wage in the Australian Arbitration Court." By Prof. Harri son Moore. Journal of Comparative Legislation, N. S. no. 28, p. 202 (May). "Mediaeval Industrial Courts." By Kenelm C. Cotes. 37 Law Magazine and Review 286 (May). "Haywood and Haywoodism." By Carl Hovey. Metropolitan'v. 36, p. 17 (June). "Haywood is a mass leader of demonstrated ability, and Haywoodism is a mass movement, little intellectualized, with a vague and transcendently ideal scheme as its ultimate goal. Its methods are those of Syndicalism." Legal Education. "Conditions of Admis sion to the Legal Profession Throughout the British Empire." By C. E. A. Bedwell. Jour nal of Compratim Legislation, N. S. no. 26, p. 209 (May). Legal History. "The Genius of the Common Law III." By Sir Frederick Pollock. 12 Co lumbia Law Review 387 (May). See 24 Green Bag 265. See Labor Disputes. Maritime Law. "The International Regu lation of Ocean Travel." By Everett P. Wheeler. 19 Case and Comment 15 (June).

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"The Present Federal Law of Damages for Death by Negligence at Sea." By George Whitlock. 19 Case and Comment 18 (June). See Survivorship. Minimum Wage. See Labor Disputes. Monopolies. "The Enforcement Provisions of the Sherman Law." By Prof. Ernest Freund. Journal of Political Economy, v. 20, p. 462 (May). "We are reminded of the history of railroad rate regulation. After the courts had pro claimed the principle of reasonableness, they attempted to apply it; but they were not equal to the task, and eventually it had to be committed to an administrative commission. And so, in the matter of trusts, judicial regulation will merely point and open the way for regulative legislation, to be administered by way of guid ance and prevention. When the historian of the future comes to survey the evolution of the anti-trust legislation in the United States, he will record the futility and failure of the attempt to deal with difficult economic problems through criminal punishment; but he will also see therein another illustration of the astonishing flexibility of equitable jurisdiction, which here as so often before has anticipated statutory reform, and which has enabled the United States to cope with certain powerful organizations at a time when all other nations stood helpless before trusts and syndicates. And he will conclude that the framers of the Sherman act builded better than they knew." •"The Powder Trust, 1872-1912." By Wil liam S. Stevens. 26 Quarterly Journal of Eco nomics 444 (May). The history of the powder trust is set forth in detail. Its policy in dissolving over sixty of its subsidiary corporations and purchasing their properties places it in a different position from other monopolies prosecuted under the Sher man act. No decree can attempt to restore the previous conditions in the explosives trade. See Commerce. Negligence. "The Humanitarian Doctrine." By M. E. Otis. 46 American Law Review 381 (May-June). "In general terms, the Humanitarian Doc trine [in the courts of Missouri] called more fre quently the Doctrine of the Last Clear Chance, is the rule in torts 'that notwithstanding the previous negligence of a plaintiff, suing to re cover for injuries to his property or person, the defendant will be liable, if at the time the injury was done, it might have been avoided by the exercise of reasonable care.'" See Maritime Law. Patents. "Patents and the Public." By Seth K. Humphrey. Atlantic, v. 109, p. 734 (June). "Under our present system, the most for tunate inventors are those who succeed in estab lishing their patents on a royalty basis. The