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The Green Bag

eastern Canada, as the following writer supposes:— "The Strength of American Enterprise in Canada.” By Arthur Hawkes. Nineteenth Century and After, v. 68, p. 78 (July). Great Britain. "The New Judiciary." By W. J. L. Ambrose. 26 Law Quarterly Review 203 (July). The bestowal of broad discretionary powers on administrative boards is viewed by this author with some misgivings; he fears that England ma be drifting toward the position of Droit ministratif in France, by the evolution of a new judiciary composed of quasi-judicial oﬂicers not amenable to the control of the regular law courts. “Political Sovereignty and a Reformed Second Chamber."

By Prof. E. C. Clark,

tions and b the establishment of a permanent court of ar itration. International Law. See under special topics, e.g., Aerial Navigation, Alien Protec tion, Blockade, Conﬂict of Laws, World Politics. Juries. “Suggestions for the Improvement of the Jury Service." By Henry M. Earle. 22 Bench and Bar 13 (July). An excellent article. Legal Education. “Correspondence In struction in the Law." By Clarence B Kelland. 18 Law Student’: Helper 200 (July). An intelligent defense of this method of instruction. The writer says :— ' “N0 honest advocate of correspondence instruction will claim that his system is the full equal of the college course, but he may

LL.D. Nineteenth Century and After, v. 68, p. 31 (July). The Regius Professor of Civil Law in the University of Cambrid e here advocates “a reconstituted House 0 Lords which, while abandoning the hereditary principle or sub ordinating it to that of personal qualiﬁcation,

with integrity claim that it is by far the superior of the law-office method. This is demonstrable. Furthermore, as to thorough ness, the correspondence method need apolo~ gize to no other method or institution, as is

conclusivel proven by the almost absolutely unbroken ine of successes by its graduates when taking bar examinations." should, on the one hand, retain the permanence and continuity of the present body, and Legal History. “Burgage Tenure in Med should, on the other, be rimarily, though not iawal England——-I." By M. de W. Hemmeon. exclusively, represe'ntative of other classes 26 Law Quarterly Review 215 (July). or interests than that of Labor." A very illuminating study of a subject “Two Chambers or One." Quarterly which has been neglected by writers on feudal Review, v. 213, no. 424, p. 234 (July). tenures, the common deﬁnition of burgage Defending a Parliament of two houses and tenure as a species of socage tenure peculiar dealing with the proposed reform of the to cities and boroughs being utterly in House of Lords in a conservative spirit. adequate. India. "British Rule in India-4." By See Government. Lord Curzon of Kedleston. North American Legal Philology. “ ‘Cestui que use’: ‘Cestui' Review, v. 192, p. 1 (July). que Trust.’" Editorial. 26 Law Quarterly Review 196 (July). Lord Curzon in this first installment states what India gives to Great Britain and the The plural form, cestuis ue trust, is pre Empire,-—not only what it does for imperial ferred. There are some in ormin passages prosperity and prestige, but for the British from a letter of the late Professor ‘l aitland on national character as well. the evolution of the old law French forms. See Conservation of Natural Resources, The subject considered in 22 Green Bag 367 Local Government, Socialism. is here conclusively treated. Immigration. See Eugenics. Local Government. “Senator Platt's Auto International Arbitration. "President's biography; 3, New York City: Its Reforms Address on Opening the North Atlantic and Reformers." McClure’s, v. 35, p. 427 (Aug.). Fisheries Arbitration at The Hague, June 1, 1910." By Henri Lammasch. 4 American This third installment gives an interesting account of the ﬁfteen-year ﬁght of the Re journal of International Law 567 (July). publican machine against Tammany, in “Two Hindrances to Peace." By President which Senator Platt indicates his dislike Emeritus Charles W. Eliot. World’: Work, for municipal non-partisanship and for the part playe by the Citizens’ Union in the v. 20, p. 13318 (Aug). years from 1896 to 1900. In this paper, read at the last Lake Mohonk “What Are You Going to Do About It? II, Peace Conference, Dr. Eliot roposes that the peril of cutting off the supp y of food and Graft as an Expert Trade in Pittsburg." By raw materials be removed by immunizing Charles Edward Russell. Cosmopolitan, v. 49, all merchant vessels, and that the danger of sudden invasion be met by the making of p. 283 (Aug). arbitration treaties which contain no excep Having treated in the previous article of