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particular case it be by the use of a personal, descriptive, or geographical name, imitated labels, color of label, appearance of package, shape of package, form or peculiarities of the goods themselves, misleading advertising, oral false statements, or silent passing off. Whether any particular contrivance is calculated to result in the sale of one man's goods as those of another is a question of fact in each case." Uniformity of Laws. See Marriage and Divorce. Workmen's Compensation Acts. See Em ployers' Liability. Miscellaneous Articles of Interest to the Legal Profession Biography. Bismarck. "Cavour and Bismarck, II." By William Roscoe Thayer. Fortnightly Review, v. 85, p. 721 (Apr.). Cavour. See Bismarck. Cleveland. "Grover Cleveland; Stories by Him—Stories about Him." By Jesse Lynch Williams. American Magazine, v. 67, p. 533 (Apr.). Full of anecdotes showing the great states man's dry and lively humor. Mr. Cleveland, speaking of the fate of exPresidents, once said:— "'Now there was Harrison; he went into law. The first time he got up to argue a case in court everybody laughed; it seemed so queer. I know how it is. I went back into law myself between the two terms at Wash ington. Well, the first time I went into court, the supreme court, there on the bench sat two judges I had appointed myself. No, it doesn t do. ... So a fellow has to re main a loafer all the rest of his life simply because he happened to be President. It isn't right. It isn't fair.'" "Cleveland's Opinions of Men." By George F. Parker. McClure's, v. 32, p. 569 (Apr.). His estimates of Thomas F. Bayard, J. Pierpont Morgan, James J. Hill, George Gray, Patrick A. Collins, Joseph B. Foraker, and Theodore Roosevelt. "Cleveland as a Lawyer." By Wilson S. Bissell. McClure's, v. 32, p. 583 (Apr.). His law partner's excellent portrait of his personal traits, reprinted from a campaign document circulated in 1892. Hussein Hilmx Pacha. "The New Grand Vizier." Current Literature, v. 46, p. 389 (Apr.). Jay. "John Jay." By Clarence B. Kelland. Law Student's Helper, v. 18, p. 106 (Apr.). Knox. "How Mr. Knox became Secretary

of State." By Walter E. Clark. World's Work, v. 17, p. 11433 (Apr.). Lincoln. "Lincoln's Assassination told by an Eye-Witness." "Edwin Booth and Lin coln." "Lincoln's Interest in the Theatre." "Lincoln and Wilkes Booth as Seen on the Day of the Assassination." Century, v. 77, pp. 917, 919, 942 and 954 (Apr.). Pulitzer. "The Dramatic Intensity of Joseph Pulitzer." Current Literature, v. 46, p. 382 (Apr.). Roosevelt. "President Roosevelt's Record." By Sydney Brooks. Fortnightly Review, v. 85, p. 658 (Apr.). "What Mr. Chamberlain did fortheColonial Office and Mr. Lloyd George for the Board of Trade, Mr. Roosevelt has done for the entire government of the United States. He has graded it up; he has penetrated it with a new vitality, almost, one might say, with a new morality. . . . That the Sherman law will ultimately be repealed or amended, and that the large corporations will be granted a federal license subject to federal supervision, I take to be inevitable, and the credit for this will belong mainly to Mr. Roosevelt." Roosevelt and Taft. "The Personal Rela tions of Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Taft." Cur rent Literature, v. 46, p. 379 (Apr.). "It was not known until a few months since that in 1904 Mr. Taft, then Secretary of War, sent in a letter of resignation to President Roosevelt. ... He asserted his unwilling ness to jeopardize in any way Mr. Roosevelt s re-election, but also asserted his answering loyalty to the Philippines, and his inability to cease the advocacy of a decrease in the duties on Philippine products. . . . President Roosevelt took just two minutes to dispose of this letter of resignation. It was returned to Mr. Taft with these words inscribed across the corner:— "'Dear Bill—Fiddledeedee.—T. R.'" British Naval Policy. "The German Naval Case." Anon. Contemporary Review, v. 95, p. 395 (Apr.). An open letter from the German Michel to John Bull. "Dear Mr. Bull, let me say in conclusion that I deplore as much as any one this headlong race to ruin. But who be gan it?" "The Naval Situation," by Sir William H. White, K.C.B. "A Rude Awakening," by Col. the Earl of Erroll, K. T. "German Arma ments and the Liberal Government," by J. Ellis Barker. Nineteenth Century, v. 65, pp. 541, 565, and 570 (Apr.). China. "The New Education in China." By Paul S. Reinsch. Atlantic, v. 103, p. 515 (Apr.). "When we consider the entire educational movement in contemporary China, we are