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 Index to Periodicals basis of the Synoptic accounts. He properly observes, however, that "the great literary merits of the sayings and speeches of Jesus are not fully apparent in the four Gospels, because many of his shorter sayings are scattered among many miscellaneous statements of the writers of the Gospels themselves, and because no one of the Gospels contains the whole of any of his longer and more elaborate speeches." The book will be prized by many for its grouping of these disconnected sayings, so that they can be read in logical order, and as the author is content to take the text of the Revised Version without adding anything of his own, readers will have no occasion for experiencing any sense of loss by substitution. BOOKS RECEIVED The Law of the Employment of Labor. By I, milley D. Clark, LL.M. Macmillan Company, New York. Pp. 340+33. ($1.60 net.) The Law of Contracts. By Clarence D. Ashley, Professor of Law and Dean of the Faculty of Law in New York University. Little, Brown & Co., Boston. Pp. 292+ 18 (index). ($3 net.) (^Control of the Market; a legal solution of the trust problem. By Bruce Wyman, A.M., LL.B., Professor of Law in Harvard University and Lec turer in the Department of Economics. Moffat,

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Yard & Co., New York. Pp. 277+6 (table of cases discussed). ($1.50 net.) The Corporate Nature of English Sovereignty; a dissertation. By W. W. Lucas, B.A., of Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and of the Inner Temple. Barrister-at-Law. Submitted to and accepted by the University of Cambridge as a work of original re search for the degree of Bachelor of Arts. Jordan & Sons. Ltd., London, W.C. (2s. 6d. net.) Pp. 91. Social Reform and the Constitution. The Ken nedy Lectures for 1911, in the School of Philan thropy, conducted by the Charity Organization of the City of New York and affiliated with Columbia University. By Frank J. Goodnow, LL.D., Eaton Professor of Administrative Law at Columbia University. American Social Progress Series. Macmillan Company, New York. Pp. 359 + 6 (index). ($1.50 nrt.) Commentary on the Science of Organization and Business Development; a treatise on the law and science of the promotion, organization, reorganiza tion, and management of business corporations, with special reference to approved plans and procedure for the financing of modern business enter prises. By Robert J. Frank, LL.B., of the Chicago bar. Third edition. Chicago Commercial Publish ing Co., Chicago. Pp. 184 + appendix 81 and index 16. A Treatise on the Federal Corporation Tax Law, including therein a commentary on the tax itself, an appendix containing the text of the Act, all rules and regulations of the Treasury Department relating in any way to the Act; text of all laws re lating to the collection, remission, and refund of internal revenue; text applicable to the adminis tration of the federal Corporation Tax Law, and Opinions of the Attorney-General bearing upon the meaning of the Act. By Thomas Gold Frost, LL.D., Ph.D., of the New York City bar, author of "Gen eral Treatise on the Law of Guaranty Insurance," "The Incorporation and Organization of Corpora tions," etc. Matthew Bender & Co., Albany. Pp. xvii, 174 + 147 (appendices and index). ($4.)

Index to Periodicals Article* on Topics of Legal Science and Related Subjects Agency. "The Real Estate Broker and His Commissions." By Floyd R. Mechem. 6 Illi nois Law Review 238 (Nov.). Continuation of article noticed in 23 Green Sag 644. Aliens. "The Treatment of Aliens in the Criminal Courts." By Grace Abbott. 2 Jour nal of Criminal Law and Criminology 554 (Nov.). A helpful first-hand investigation of conditions in Chicago. "Even when the judge is honest and intelligent, there is often an atmosphere of offhandedness and apparent disregard of the main issues. The inarticulate administration of the

oath, the aimless going to and fro; the close, un pleasant odor, the noise and confusion, now lulled, now increased by the pounding of the gavel, these things leave with those who are having their first experience with our judicial system a scattered and distracted impression. Very often one encounters among the foreignborn of Chicago the very definite conviction that an innocent man has no better chance of release when brought before the Municipal Court than a guilty one._ This seems to be due not so much to actual misjudgment of facts presented, but to the general haste which makes a man timid about presenting his case and convinces him that the judge has no time to hear his story of how it all happened. This varies very much, however, with the individual judge." See Immigration.