Page:The Green Bag (1889–1914), Volume 22.pdf/142

 The Green Bag

130 D. Russia.

"The Story of Eugene Azeﬁ."

By David Soskice.

McClure's, v. 34, p. 282

(]an.).‘ An absorbing sketch of the spy. "He was, so to say, born a traitor, ready furnished with the most precious and essen tial qualiﬁcations of a traitor." Socialism. "My Business Life, II; A Factory without StrifkA Town without Crime—A Business that Pays Dividends to Stockholders, Workers, and Customers."

By N. 0. Nelson. 12504 (Jan).

World's Work, v. 19, p.

Southern States. “The New South." Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, v. 35, No. 1 (Jam).

This number contains articles by specially informed writers on present economic, po litical, and social conditions in the South. The contributors include: Harvie Jordan, Alfred Holt Stone, Hen lUlrich S. Reed, George T. Surface, Professor B. Phillips, Clarence H. Poe, S. M. Tracy, G. Grosvenor Dawe, John H. Finne, Sledge Tatum, Frank

S. Washburn, W. . Finley, l5Ioseph Hyde Pratt, F. Ellison, Thomas urse, Booker T. Was ‘ngton, Holland Thompson, Professor

"Leclaire is fully established, because all

Enoch Marvin Banks, David Y. Thomas, Ph.D., A. J. McKelway, Professor William G.

the people in it want it. They would resist as treason any attempt to change it. . . . And its history and its present life prove that a business run under a co-operative system can support in peace, plenty, and comfort its em loyee-owners in competition with the capi stic world around it. '

Glasson, and Professor James W. Garner. Stoinheil (Jase. “Paris and Mme. Stein heil." By John F. Macdonald. Fort nightly Review, v. 86, p. 1103 (Dec.). A vivid and animated account of what happened at the celebrated trial.

James Barr Amcs "The good Dean," beloved of all his students, sound in heart and in learn ing; virile, gentle, honorable; called by err-President Eliot a "profound student and masterly teacher of court-made law"; historian of the common law whose writings will have enduring farne; ﬁrst to achieve success for the method of legal education which Langdell founded; a maker not only of good lawyers but of good teachers of law; an inspiration to the legal pro

fession in Anglo-Saxon lands.

[Dean Ames was born in Boston, June 22, 1846; was graduated from Harvard College in 1868, having been captain of one of the earliest Harvard baseball teams; graduated from Harvard Law School, 1872; tutor in French and German at Harvard, 1871-2; instructor in history. 1872-3; admitted to Massachusetts bar, 1873; Assistant Professor of Law in Harvard Law School, 1873-1877; Professor of Law, 1877-1910; Dean of Harvard Law School, 1895-1910; helped to organize Associa tion of American Law Schools and the Commissioners on Uniform State Laws; died at Wilton, N. H., Jan. 8, 1910.]