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Index l0 Periodicals already denounced by certain Scottish pro fessional bodies. whereb London solicitors are wont to divide their ees with their corre spondents in Scotland without the knowledge of the client-an evil which has become "apparently the rule and not the cane tion in the conduct of litigation in the upreme Court." Procedure. "‘Theory of the Case'— Wrecker of

D'Arcy.

Law,

III,

IV."

By Edward

70 Central Lav/journal 402 (June 3),

455 (June 24). Continuing the two articles noticed in 22 Green Bag, p. 346. See p. 475 supra. “Technicalities in Procedure, Civil and Criminal." By John Davison Lawson. 1 Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, no. 1, p. 63 (May). See p. 473 supra. Procedure. "Congestion of the Appellate Court Docket—How Can It Be Relieved?" By Jesse Holdom, Presiding Justice of Illinois Appellate Court, ﬁrst district. 5 Illinois Law Review 65 (June).

Read before the Chicago Bar Association last March. Favorin certain reforms in Illi nois procedure, inclu ing those set out in the bill roposed by Mr. Gilbert, and including legis ation limiting every case to one review, with rare exceptions, and allowing sufficiently important cases to go to the Supreme Court direct. See Accidents, Criminology, Marriage and Divorce. rrolouionll Ethics. See Practice of Law. Public Service Corporations. “Illegality as an Excuse for Refusal of Public Service." By Bruce Wyman. 23 Harvard Law Review

577 (June). Showing how the doctrine of public service 00 rations being excused from the duty to urm'sh service by public policy is being worked out. Many illustrative cases are dis See Waters. Quasi-Contracts. See Measure of Damages. Railways. “Rights and Remedies of Gen eral Creditors of Mortgaged Railways." By Dean Henry H. Ingersoll. 19 Yale Law journal 622 (June): Discussing general features of modern rail way mortgages, rights of creditors before and after appointment of a receiver, and the remedies of eneral creditors. The paper is based upon t e rinciples of the common law and doctrines ofequity as applicable in ordi

nary cases. “Cassatt and His Vision."

. By C. M. Keys.

World's Work, v. 20, p. 13187 (July). Telling how the trio consisting of Cassatt,

Rea and Jacobs brought the Pennsylvania into Manhattan. Real Property. ‘Computation of the Period of Suspension Under an Instrument in Execu tion of a Power." By Stewart Chaplin. 10 Columbia Law Review 495 (June).

Construing section 178 of the New York Real Property Law, in the light of New York decisions. "The Legal Estate in English Property Law.“ By J. Edward Hogg. 2:2 juridical Review 55 (May). This writer considers that the legal estate doctrine, in English law, furnishes a test for determining whether a in: in rem has been created, corresponding to the test supplied by the. Scottish and Roman-Dutch systems of registration of conveyances. lode-l Betterment. “Philanthropy and

Sociology."

By Prof. Charles A. Ellwood of

the University of Missouri. Survey, v. 24, p. 397 (June 4). Dealing with the methods of scientiﬁc philanthropy, as an applied science. 'l‘erlﬂ. "The Tariﬁ Law of August 5, 1909." By Hon. Sereno E. Payne. Editorial Review, v. 2, p. 574 (June). A summin up of the attitude of those who framed the

drich-Payne tariﬁ law, by the

chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means of the national House of Representa tives. He declares it "a tariﬁ law that fulﬁlls the ledges of the platform, . . . stops no whee of industry, and deprives no man of his daily wage." Trade Marks. See Unfair Trade. Uniformity of Laws. See Marriage and Divorce, Negotiable Instruments. Unfair Trade. “The Unwary Purchaser: A Study in the Psychology of Trade Mark Infringement." By Edward S. Rogers. 8 Michigan Law Review 613 (June). The courts commonly reserve for their own determination the question of the likelihood of deception of the “unwary purchaser," or the normal, everyday purchaser, by labels and trademarks 'key to be mistaken for those of a dealer whose rights may be infringed. The author thinks that experimental psy chology should furnish data regzrding the likelihood of the average person ing so de ceived, and anticipates early progress in this investigation, and a diminution of the con

ﬂict between irreconcilable decisions. wmn. "Public Control of Irrigation." By Samuel C. Wiel. 10 Columbia Law Review 506 (June). The author believes that contract regu lation, so soon as the experimental stage of

development of a given region is passed, results in great evils. In seeking to avoid