PUBLISHER'S COLUMN. Professor Frank J. Goodnow, whose portrait and life will be found in this issue, is well known to most of the students of the Law School, by reason of the fact that his lectures are of a character that appeal to all students of law. His course on Administrative Law is of the highest importance to lawyers, while his courses on Taxation and Municipal Corporations are of hardly less value. It has been a matter of regret that Professor Goodnow has not lectured this past year. He obtained a leave of absence for a year of travel and study in Europe. He was compelled however, for private reasons, to return after but a short time abroad. year the Editor in Chief of the Yale Law Journal, a magazine which holds a high place in legal literature. It would have been difficult to find a more competent man to write on the system of instruction now in use in that school than Mr. Aiken. TRADE EAM UBIQUE ExM Professor Abbott is too well known among lawyers and law students to need any extended mention in this column. As a law writer, his works are considered of the highest value. The present article will be found of great practical importance. The Hon. Clark Bell, who writes interestingly on Railway Surgery, is the Editor of the Medico-Legal Journal, the President of the Medico-Legal Society of New York, and officer in many other influential societies. He is regarded as a high authority on all medico-legal topics. Mr. William P. Aiken, who describes in this number the method of instruction in the Yale Law School, was last We Accept a Fact of Necessity, and the fact is, if men desire the most perfect stock in the city from which to select their underwear, fine neckwear, indeed everything belonging to a man's or boy's outfit-a call at the fine warerooms of the Harding Mfg. Co. 467 & 469 FULTON ST., BROOKLYN, N. Y., will relieve them from any further shopping and supply them with the latest and best fashions in their dress. |