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92 92 HARVARD LAW REVIEW and its convenience of arrangement and indexing. It is believed that the stu- dent can rapidly find here a reliable translation of the important work of the Hague Conferences on any of the various topics of international law there considered. The Centennial History of the Harvard Law School, 1817-1917, written and compiled by the Faculty, published by the Harvard Law School Association. 1918. 420 pp. 55 illustrations. $1.50 post-paid. Chapter I. History of the School; II. Instruction; III. The Library; IV. Portraits and Prints; V. The Students; VI. The Harvard Law School Association; VII. The Future. The Appendix includes lives of teachers at the School, with bibliographies of their writings, of the School, and of the case system and other topics in American legal education; and a list of distinguished alvunni of the School. The book can be obtained from the Plimpton Press, Norwood, Mass., and from Amee Bros, and the Harvard Cooperative Society in Cambridge. Ar- rangements have been made to send a copy without charge to each member of the Harvard Law School Association.