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1. SILVER BEFORE CONGRESS IN 1886. [1886]
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Horton, S. Dana
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Oct1886, Vol. 1 Issue 1, p45-75, 31p
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SILVER question, MONETARY policy, GOLD coins, INTERNATIONAL relations, CONSTITUTIONS, EQUALITY, CIVIL rights, and ECONOMIC policy
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In this article, the author examines the implications of the Silver Question before the U.S. Congress of 1886 to the history of monetary policy in the U.S. The Sections of the Act of February 28, 1878, calling a Monetary Conference, made the U.S. the champion and advocate in the community of nations of the restoration of civil order in dealing with money. Concurrent regulation of metallic money by a competent majority of nations, and on the basis of equality of legal right between the two metals, became by this Act a fixed object of the foreign policy. As for the time consumed and to be consumed in passing from this turning point of history to the success of the policy, it is well to mark that it is not uncommon for men to wait a long time for the attainment of a great end. The United Colonies suffered under the Confederation for many years before they adopted the Constitution. The restoration of greenbacks to par with gold was a struggle of many years. The diplomatic successes of this country have usually required a long time for their attainment; and in the rare instances when Americans had a foreign policy in the specific sense, when there was some important object to be gained through the action of several foreign powers, the lack of a continuing, organized, high-grade civil service has naturally unfitted Americans from advancing a meritorious cause with the maximum of speed.
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2. LEGAL TENDER. [1887]
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Thayer, James B.
Harvard Law Review . May1887, Vol. 1 Issue 2, p73-97. 25p.
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MONEY, LEGAL tender, FINANCE, and BANK notes
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Examines the clauses of the Constitution relating to money. Description of the specifications of the power which is given to the Congress of the United States in the Constitution relating to money; Analysis of the clauses of the Constitution about the emission of bills and making paper a legal tender; Explanation of the power of Congress in making a paper currency.
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3. DEPOSITS AS CURRENCY. [1887]
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Dunbar, Charles F.
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Jul1887, Vol. 1 Issue 4, p401-419, 19p
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BANK deposit laws, MONEY, PUBLIC opinion, and LEGAL tender
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The article presents a discussion related to the consideration of deposits as currency in the U.S. In the discussions upon the various phases of the currency question during the last twenty years, the popular dread of contraction and its consequences has seldom been appealed to in vain. The U.S. Congress has been a good index of public opinion in this respect, and in the Congress there has steadily been an element which seemed to have grasped the idea of a connection between contraction and falling prices, as the one and sufficient key to the practical questions which were to be settled. To this fact were due the weak legislation of 1874, to go back no further, and the necessity in 1875 of so framing the Resumption Act as to leave its meaning open to opposite constructions and its operation uncertain. Nothing else than a deep conviction in Congress that the people would not stand contraction can explain the fact that the act of May 31, 1878, to forbid the further retirement of legal tender notes, was carried through the House of Representatives.
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4. PROPOSED TARIFF LEGISLATION SINCE 1883. [1887]
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Perry, O. H.
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Oct1887, Vol. 2 Issue 1, p69-78, 10p
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TARIFF laws, CONFERENCES & conventions, COMMERCIAL treaties, FREE trade, and LEGISLATIVE bills
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The article focuses on proposed tariff legislation since 1883 in the U.S. During the last two U.S. congresses, several attempts have been made to secure modification and reduction of the customs duties as they were left by the act of 1883. The first session of the Forty-eighth Congress lasted from December 3, 1888 to July 7, 1884. The Democrats were in a decided majority in the House, having 198 members, against 126 Republicans and Independents. On March 21, a conference of "free trade" Democratic leaders was held, at which it was decided to call a general party caucus to decide what action should be taken on the bill. On April 15, the motion to go into Committee of the Whole, for the consideration of the tariff bill, was carried without division. At the same session of the Congress, three attempts at special tariff legislation are worthy of notice: the Converse wool bill, to restore the duties of 1867 on raw wool; Amendment to the shipping bill; A bill on reducing the duty on works of art from 20 to 10 per cent.
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Greeley, Louis M.
Harvard Law Review . Nov1887, Vol. 1 Issue 4, p159-184. 26p.
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INTERNATIONAL trade, INTERSTATE commerce laws, JUDGES, and APPELLATE courts
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Examines how laws are distinguished on principle from regulations of foreign or interstate commerce within the exclusive power of the U.S. Congress. Cause of the hesitancy of the judges to lay down general principles upon the distinction between laws affecting foreign or interstate commerce; Controversies over the commercial power of Congress; Specifications of the case of Gibbons versus Ogden wherein the U.S. Supreme Court construed the clause in the Federal Constitution conferring power upon Congress to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among several states.
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Andrews, E. Benj.
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Jan1889, Vol. 3 Issue 2, p117-152, 36p
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COMMITTEES, TRUSTS & trustees, UNITED States manufacturing industries, COMPETITION, RESTRAINT of trade, COMMERCIAL policy, and INTERNATIONAL competition
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The article reports that the U.S. House of Representatives of the Fiftieth Congress passed a resolution directing its Committee on Manufactures to inquire about associations, trusts or others like titles, alleged to exist in the country for purpose of controlling or curtailing production or supply of various products on January 25, 1888. Authority was given the committee to sit during sessions of the House, to compel the presence of persons and papers, and to swear and examine witnesses. A number of litigations involving the nature and doings of trusts, monopolies, and the like, have recently come to judgment in the courts; and the findings upon them are now of record. Profits may also be distributed as a particular means of maintaining the combination intact. It is every wise extremely confusing to class all the above-named enterprises as trusts. They have in common only the single feature of excluding more or less perfectly old-fashioned individualism of management. It will be noticed that the industries surest to have such an evolution are precisely those among which international competition now prevails. The interest hitherto centered in the tariff question will then go over to that of trusts.
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7. LIMITATIONS IMPOSED BY THE FEDERAL CONSTITUTION ON THE RIGHT OF THE STATES TO ENACT QUARANTINE LAWS. [1889]
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Lee, Blewett Harrison
Harvard Law Review . Feb1889, Vol. 2 Issue 7, p293-315. 23p.
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COMMERCIAL law, CONSTITUTIONS, LAW, QUARANTINE -- Law & legislation, and PUBLIC health laws
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Discusses the limitations imposed by the U.S. Federal Constitution on the right of the states to enact quarantine laws. Regulations of commerce permissible to the states; Power of Congress to regulate commerce; Conflict of state supplementary laws with the regulation exercised by Congress; Bases upon which the quarantine laws are to be sustained
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8. THE DIRECT TAX OF 1861. [1889]
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Dunbar, Charles F.
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Jul1889, Vol. 3 Issue 4, p436-461, 26p
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TAX laws, DIRECT taxation, INDIRECT taxation, WEALTH tax, and TAX accounting
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This article presents information on the Direct Tax of 1861, an act passed by the U.S. Congress on August 5, 1861. The direct tax laid by the act of Congress of August 5, 1861, was the fifth levy which has been made under the provisions of the Constitution, requiring that representation and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the several States, according to their respective numbers. There would be little risk in predicting that this will also be the last resort to a method of taxation which the framers of the Constitution thought important enough to hold a place in one of the difficult compromises embodied in that instrument. The distinction between direct and indirect taxation, resting upon the supposed method of incidence upon a single class of persons, is fully developed. It was a necessary result of their reasoning, became familiar in all the discussions of the school in France, and, was carried to the knowledge of readers in political science in other countries, during the short-lived pre-eminence of the physiocrats.
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Nicum, John
- Papers of the American Society of Church History (1079-9028); Jan1890, Vol. 2 Issue 1, p83-101, 19p
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During the first century of the occupation of Manhattan Island by Europeans we find there two settlements of Lutherans, the one of an earlier, the other of a later date. The earlier settlement was that of Dutch Lutherans, who came over from Holland with the first settlers, whilst some seventy-five years later German Lutherans began to arrive, at first in smaller and then in ever increasing numbers until many thousands had settled mainly along the Hudson and Mohawk rivers. It is now two hundred years ago that the first colony of German Lutherans arrived in the harbor of New York. They were the Palatinates who, in 1707, because of continued political and religious disturbances, had with their pastor, the Rev. Josua von Kocherthal, left the fatherland, and found a new home near where the city of Newburgh now stands. It goes without saying, that though most of them settled along the Hudson and Mohawk rivers, yet many of them remained on the Island of Manhattan. Whilst the immigration of Lutherans from Holland, after the middle of the eighteenth century practically ceased, that of the German Lutherans increased, and the Lutheran Church on Manhattan which at first was Dutch afterwards became German. And this first German Lutheran Church in the present city of New York had the good fortune to have among its pastors some of the most distinguished men and theologians of the eighteenth century, such as the patriarch of the Lutheran Church in this country, the Rev. Henry Melchior Muhlenberg, D.D., and his son, the Rev. Frederick Augustus Conrad Muhlenberg, a man of burning patriotism, who in time became speaker of the First and Third Congresses of the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
10. THE SILVER SITUATION. [1890]
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White, Horace
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Jul1890, Vol. 4 Issue 4, p397-407, 11p
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SILVER coins, TREASURY bills, GOVERNMENT securities, GOLD standard, CURRENCY question, and BANK deposits
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This article focuses on the silver situation in the United States. The laws of the United States authorize the U.S. Treasury Department to receive deposits of standard silver dollars and to issue certificates therefore in denominations of one dollar and upwards, and to receive gold coin and to issue certificates therefore in denominations of twenty dollars and upwards. The premium on gold or the discount on silver may be arrested, if it comes, by fresh legislation. The people who have silver dollars, silver certificates, greenbacks, and national bank-notes in their pockets or on deposit in bank, for which they have paid, in labor or property, one hundred cents per dollar gold value, may demand of Congress that their money be restored to that value. If they do so demand, in some way it will be done. The banks cannot hold the immense mass of deposits and clearings at the gold standard, when the government's legal tender notes are redeemed only in silver. The premium on their gold will be the property of their shareholders, and may be applied to an extra dividend or added to their surplus.
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- Transactions of the Philological Society; 1890, Vol. 21 Issue 1, p59-98, 40p
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12. THE POLICE POWER AND INTER-STATE COMMERCE. [1890]
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Howland, William R.
Harvard Law Review . Dec1890, Vol. 4 Issue 5, p221-233. 13p.
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POLICE power, ADMINISTRATIVE law, INTERSTATE commerce, PROHIBITION of alcohol, and LIQUORS
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The article focuses on the relation of the police power to inter-state commerce in the U.S. The majority of the Court there decided that a State law prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors, except for specified purposes, is void as to liquors imported from another State and sold by the importer in the original package. The most important power possessed by a government is the power to protect its citizens from danger, disease, and vice. This power can be called the police power, and not being delegated to Congress by the Constitution, is reserved to the States exclusively.
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13. THE TOBACCO TAX. [1891]
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Olmsted, Frank L.
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Jan1891, Vol. 5 Issue 2, p193-219, 27p
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TOBACCO taxes, TAX laws, INTERNAL revenue law, and CIVIL war
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This article focuses on taxation of tobacco in 1891. New systems of taxation and the extension of old ones are the invariable accompaniments of great wars. By the Civil War in the U.S. an enormous strain was put on a fiscal system that for nearly half a century had been on a peace footing. The tariff was quickly increased, but a disturbed foreign trade proved to be a poor source from which to draw the sinews of war. Early in 1862, the U.S. Congress entered upon the subject of laying internal taxes, but found itself in dangerous and unknown fields. Such taxes had always been unpopular. Thus there were no guides to the problem, what taxes were best adapted to American conditions of scattered population and aversion to restrictions, or what were most likely to meet public favor. The internal revenue act of July 1, 1862, was distinctly a war measure, drafted under the pressure of needs almost overwhelming. In European governments, tobacco was already among the chief sources of revenue, being taxed both in the leaf and in the manufactured forms.
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14. RECENT PUBLICATIONS UPON ECONOMICS. [1892]
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Oct1892, Vol. 7 Issue 1, p107-114, 8p
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PUBLICATIONS, BOOKS, PERIODICALS, MONETARY policy, and FINANCIAL management
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The article presents a lists of books and periodicals on different topics of economics. Some of the books listed here are "On the Principle of Wealth Creation: Its Nature, Origin, Evolution, and Corollaries"; "Mathematical Investigations in the Theory of Value and Prices"; and "Dictionary of Political Economy." Some other publications are "Economic Causes of Moral Progress"; "Methods of Industrial Peace"; "Capital and Labor: Their relative Strength"; "General Booth's Social Work"; "Taxation and Work: A Series of Treatises on the Tariff and the Currency"; "The Tariff: What it Is, and What it Does"; "The Economy of High Wages. An Inquiry into the Comparative Methods and Cost of Production of Competing Industries in the United States and Europe"; "The Case against Bimetallism"; "The Monetary Question in 1892"; "The World's Exchanges of Standard Metals"; "A New Standard of Value"; "Fancy Monetary Standards"; "Influence on Business of the Independent Treasury" and "History of Banking Under the Continental Congress and Federal Constitution."
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Russell, Alfred
Harvard Law Review . Apr1893, Vol. 7 Issue 1, p16-23. 8p.
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GOVERNMENT corporations, JURISDICTION, CIRCUIT courts, CONSTITUTIONAL law, GOVERNMENT business enterprises, and REPEAL of legislation
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Argues that the United States Congress should abrogate federal jurisdiction over state corporations provided for in the Judiciary Act of Congress of March 3, 1887. Circuit Court cognizance of suits in favor of assignees, against corporations as parties, upon their obligations passing by delivery; Background on how the word corporation appeared in the Judiciary Act; Scope of the word citizen in a relevant clause of the Constitution; Opinion of Judge Joseph P. Bradley.
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16. THE DUTIES ON WOOL AND WOOLLENS. [1893]
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Taussig, F.W.
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Oct1893, Vol. 8 Issue 1, p1-39, 39p
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WOOL textiles, TARIFF, COMMERCIAL policy, EXPORT subsidies, and IMPORTERS
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The article discusses the effects of the policy related to duties on wool and woolens in the U.S. followed during the last twenty-five years and the probable effects of the policy which is to come. In the quarter of a century which has now elapsed since the passage of the wool and woolens tariff act of 1867, the system of duties then established, and since maintained in its essential features, has gradually come to be the crucial part of the protective policy. The bill presented in 1877-1878 session proposed to put wool on the free list and to reduce correspondingly the duties on woolens. Whatever uncertainty there may be as to the disposition of other parts of the protective system at the hands of the present Congress, it may be assumed as settled that the wool duty will go, and that the system of 1867 will be replaced by a fundamentally different regime. The questions to be asked in considering the effects of a given duty are as to the domestic production and the imports, and the relative importance of these two sources of supply.
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17. RECENT CASES. [1893]
Harvard Law Review . Oct1893, Vol. 7 Issue 3, p183-188. 6p.
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ACTIONS & defenses (Law), COURTS, BROKERS, AMERICAN law, and LABOR unions
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The article presents information on recent court cases. In one of the case, a customer and a broker buying and selling stocks upon margins stand in the relation of pledger and pledgee and the fact that the broker has an implied right of repledging stocks does not change the relation. An Act of Congress, after continuing the laws then in force for the exclusion of Chinese from the United States, provides for the removal of Chinese not lawfully within this country, requiring that all Chinese laborers entitled to remain in the United States shall obtain certificates of residence from persons authorized by the act to give them, under penalty of removal on failure to do so within one year. In another case a plaintiff was a non-union man working for a clothing house under a contract by which he could be discharged at the end of any week, but he was told that he would be permanently employed. The local union labor organization informed his employers that unless plaintiff were discharged they would have to inform all labor organizations of the city that the house was a non-union one.
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18. Memorial to the United States Congress. [1894]
- Transactions of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers; 1894, Vol. 11, p639-639, 1p
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19. "MONOPOLY" UNDER THE NATIONAL ANTITRUST ACT. [1894]
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Dana, William F.
Harvard Law Review . Jan1894, Vol. 7 Issue 6, p338-355. 18p.
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ANTITRUST law, COMMERCIAL crimes, COMMERCIAL trusts, TRADE regulation, UNFAIR competition, and MONOPOLIES
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Examines the notion of monopoly under the Anti-Trust Act, passed by the United States Congress on July 2, 1890. Interpretation of the statute in the light of the common law; Definition of a monopoly; Engrossing; Results of leading decisions regarding monopoly; Indefinite increase of business; Fixing of arbitrary prices; Agreement not to trade with any one who trades with others than the convenantors.
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20. NOTES. [1894]
Harvard Law Review . Mar1894, Vol. 7 Issue 8, p484-493. 10p.
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AMERICAN law, LAW schools, TRUSTS & trustees, REFERENDUM, LAWYERS, COURTS, NUISANCES, and LIBEL & slander
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Presents some notes on legal issues in the United States. Law school; Counsel and court; Referendum; Commercial power of Congress; Liquor saloon as a nuisance; Power to regulate commerce; Discretionary trust; Libel; Privacy.
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Andrews, E. Benj.
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Apr1894, Vol. 8 Issue 3, p319-327, 9p
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BIMETALLISM, COINAGE, COMMITTEES, and WORKS councils
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The article focuses on the bimetallist committee of Boston, Massachusetts and New England. The Committee is formed for the purpose of promoting the establishment of international bimetallism upon the general plan of the Latin Union, but with a broader basis. Those concerned in the movement, while earnestly opposed to the free coinage or to any increased use of sliver by this country independently of international action and agreement. A number of associate members have been admitted from other portions of the country, and it is likely that co-operating committees will be created in several cities. The Committee does not propose to make use of any political agency, or to attempt to influence, otherwise than through public opinion, the action of the administration or of Congress. Its work is to be educational. It will endeavor to instruct the community in what it considers the only sound theory of hard money, that of international bimetallism, preparing the public sentiment of the country for the adoption of this so soon as Great Britain's concurrence can be secured. For this the committee does not think that the United States ought to sue.
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22. NOTES. [1894]
Harvard Law Review . May1894, Vol. 8 Issue 2, p111-116. 6p.
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LAW, STATUTES, COMMERCIAL law, and CONSTITUTIONAL law
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Presents facts on several law issues in the U.S. and Great Britain. Acceptability of the provision of the Statute of Frauds in the English Sale of Goods Act of 1894; Doctrine of a case involving malicious interference with contract; Legality concerning the approval of a bill by a U.S. president after the adjournment of Congress.
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23. THE CIVIL WAR INCOME TAX. [1894]
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Hill, Joseph A.
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Jul1894, Vol. 8 Issue 4, p416-452, 37p
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CIVIL war, REVENUE, TAXATION, LEGISLATIVE bills, DIRECT taxation, and INTERNAL revenue law
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The article examines the impact of the Civil War on financial legislation in the U.S. There were measures which the boldest innovator would hardly have dared propose in time of peace; but under the stress of war they were enacted, sometimes with little opposition and little discussion. The income tax was the first of these innovations to be adopted and was among the first to disappear. Such taxes, however, were familiar enough in England and other European countries; and it is not strange that Congress should have thought of taxing incomes at a period when its policy was to tax everything taxable. The House Committee of Ways and Means followed out the recommendations of the Secretary. They prepared two bills, one of which dealt with the proposed tariff changes, imposing duties on tea, coffee and sugar. The other was the internal revenue measure. It imposed license taxes and taxes on whiskey, beer, porter, carriages, promissory notes, and bank bills. But Congress could not take it for granted that the States would all assume the tax; and, where they did not, it was to be collected by federal machinery and assessed on real estate.
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24. Recent Publications Upon Economics. [1896]
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Jan1896, Vol. 10 Issue 2, p233-239, 7p
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BOOKS, ECONOMICS, and LABOR
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The article presents a list of recently published books on economics. Some such books are: "Contributions of the United States Government to Social Science," by C.D. Wright; "Political Economy for High Schools and Beginners," by R.E. Thompson; "Buckle and his Critics: A Study in Sociology," by J.M Robertson; "Practical Christian Sociology," by W.F. Crafts; "Our Industrial Utopia and its Unhappy Citizens," by D.H. Wheller; "The Social Question in the Catholic Congresses," by J.G. Brooks; "The General Election, and the Prospects of Social Legislation," by W. Cunningham; "The Referendum and Initiative: Their Relation to the Interests of Labor in Switzerland and in America," by A.L. Lowell; "The Present Position of Adult Male Labor in New Zealand," by E. Reeves; "The Evolution of Agricultural Science," by R.M. Garnier; "The Probability of a Cessation of the Growth of Population in England and Wales During the Next Century," by E. Cannan; "Decrease in Interstate Migration," by W.F. Willcox; "An Interoceanic Canal in the Light of Precedent," by T.D. Woolsey; and so on.
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25. NOTES AND MEMORANDA. [1897]
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Hadley, Twining
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Apr1897, Vol. 11 Issue 3, p310-326, 17p
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ECONOMICS, COST, TAXATION, BUSINESS insurance, and DIRECT taxation
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The article focuses on various topics related to economics such as industrial costs, taxation, business insurance etc. The word "cost," as is well known, has at least four different senses: expense, waste, pain, and loss of opportunity. Wealth may be regarded either in its public or private aspect. In the former it is an aggregate of things, goods, or services. In the latter it consists of titles or rights to some of those things. Furthermore, wealth, whether public or private, may be measured in two ways--as a flow or as a fund. In the one case it takes the form of a rate, and is measured as income: in the other case it takes the form of a quantity, and is measured as capital. The payment of the direct tax in 1861 was effected in California under unusual conditions and by an irregular and curious process; and some account of the episode may be of interest to students of financial history. It will be remembered that Congress had allowed any State to assume its quota of the direct tax, and that California, like almost all the loyal States, took advantage of this option; though, unlike other States, which satisfied their quotas by an offset of their claims against the United States, California levied and collected her tax, and paid it in cash to the federal treasury.
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Guthrie, William D.
Harvard Law Review . May1897, Vol. 11 Issue 2, p80-94. 15p.
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ANTITRUST law, LEGAL judgments, UNFAIR competition, TRADE regulation, and COMMERCIAL crimes
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The article reports on the constitutionality of the Sherman anti-trust act of 1890. The decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of the Trans-Missouri Traffic Association for the first time authoritatively declares the intended scope of the provisions of the so called Anti-Trust Act of 1890. In view of such interpretation of the statute, it is now the legal presumption that it was the intention of Congress to prohibit and render criminal every contract in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States or with foreign nations.
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27. THE TARIFF ACT OF 1897. [1897]
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Taussig, F.W.
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Oct1897, Vol. 12 Issue 1, p42-69, 28p
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TARIFF laws, MCKINLEY tariff, PROTECTIONISM, TARIFF on cotton, TARIFF on textiles, and UNITED States economy
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The article discusses the Tariff Act which was passed by the U.S. Congress in 1897. The reasons for the enactment of the law have been highlighted. The Act was against the protectionist policies which saw a great reversal in the U.S. presidential election of 1896. The efforts of U.S. President William McKinley were instrumental in devising the Act. The provisions of the Act entailed revised rates on wool, cotton and textiles. The free admission of wool and the remodeling of the duties on woolen goods were resultants of the Act. The effects of the Act on the U.S. economy are also discussed.
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28. ECCENTRIC OFFICIAL STATISTICS. III. [1897]
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Bliss, H. L.
- American Journal of Sociology; Nov1897, Vol. 3 Issue 3, p355-377, 23p
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STATISTICS, WOMEN'S employment, CHILD labor, and EMPLOYMENT
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The article presents an statistics of the employment of women and children and the effect of such employment upon that of men. It also tries to answer the question that by the employment of these classes whether there is any effect on the head of the family and are these classes taking the place of men in industrial pursuits. In the first of these papers, a discussion to the employment of women and children is presented. Similar comparison of the percentage of children was made showing a most remarkable decrease in the percentage of children. It also presents a statistics conducted by Colonel Wright, as Chief of the Massachusetts Bureau of Labor Statistics. According to Colonel Wright's report of this investigation made in pursuance of a joint resolution of the LIII Congress, complete information was obtained for 931 establishments in two periods designated as the former and the present periods. Observation seems to indicate that establishments, particularly in trade, in which females and children form the larger proportion of employees have increased more rapidly in numbers than other establishments.
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29. NOTES. [1898]
Harvard Law Review . Mar1898, Vol. 11 Issue 8, p539-549. 11p.
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TRIALS (Law), ACTIONS & defenses (Law), TRIAL practice, LIFE sentences, and PRISON sentences
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This article presents information on several trials. It is informed that in the year 1894, Alfred Dreyfus, a captain in the French Artillery and attached to the general staff, was found guilty by a court-martial of furnishing secret information concerning French military affairs to a foreign power. In consequence he was degraded before the army and sent to a life imprisonment. It is further reported that the line between the permissible and the impermissible in State legislation affecting interstate commerce becomes at times vague and indistinct. The fundamental reason for this uncertainty lies in the difference of opinion among authorities as to the interpretation of that clause in the U.S. Constitution which gives to Congress the power to regulate commerce between States.
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Wright, Carroll D.
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Jan1899, Vol. 13 Issue 2, p221-235, 15p
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UNITED States economic policy, LEGISLATIVE bodies, PUBLIC administration, FEDERAL government, ECONOMIC policy, and ECONOMICS
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The article reports on the establishment of a commission, under an act of Congress, for the purpose of studying problems relating to industry with a view to formulating remedial legislation. The federal government has undertaken to follow the example of England, France, and Belgium. The commission consists of five members each from the Senate and House of Representatives, and nine other persons, who shall fairly represent the different industries and employments, appointed by the President. The five sub-commission that have been created are enumerated, including the Agriculture and Agricultural Labor with Andrew Harris as chairman.
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Baldwin, Simeon E.
Harvard Law Review . Jan1899, Vol. 12 Issue 6, p393-416. 24p.
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CONSTITUTIONS, ACQUISITION of territory, POLITICAL systems, CONSTITUTIONAL history, and UNITED States politics & government
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This article discusses the constitutional questions related to the acquisition of island territory by, and power of government in, the U.S. One of the most important questions with which the convention that framed the constitution of the U.S. had to deal was that as to the disposition and government of the Western lands, with which the new nation was to be endowed. The Congress of the Confederation had undertaken to determine it for all time in 1784 and again in 1787. The article author views that the U.S. constitution has been made by civilized and educated people. It provides guaranties of personal security which seem ill adapted to the conditions of society that prevail in many parts of new possessions of the U.S.
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32. NOTES AND MEMORANDA. [1899]
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Dixon, Frank Haigh, Wright, Carroll D., and Fairlie, John Archibald
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Apr1899, Vol. 13 Issue 3, p336-353, 18p
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UNITED States politics & government, 1897-1901, UNITED States railroad law, MUNICIPAL reports, CITIES & towns, MUNICIPAL government, LEGISLATIVE bills, and CENSUS
- Abstract
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The article presents information on the activities of the United States government. New railway legislation has been enacted in Kansas, that eradicates the Board of Railroad Commissioners substituting it with a Court of Visitation consisting three judges. The U.S. Department of Labor has been authorized by the Fifty fifth U.S. Congress to prepare an annual report of the official statistics of all the cities of the U.S. Previous attempt on municipal statistic in the U.S. encircled wealth, debt, taxation, and social statistic of cities.
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33. RECENT CASES. [1899]
Harvard Law Review . Dec1899, Vol. 13 Issue 4, p303-310. 8p.
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JURISDICTION, COURTS, COLLATERAL security, COMMERCIAL law, and CONSTITUTIONAL law
- Abstract
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The article discusses some new legal cases of the United States. In a suit to enforce a lien given by a State statute, for repairs to a vessel, held, that the transaction is maritime in its nature and the State courts have not jurisdiction. The Constitution of the United States, article 3, section 2, declares that " the judicial power shall extend to all cases in admiralty and maritime jurisdiction." An act of Congress provides that the district courts of the United States shall have-exclusive jurisdiction of such causes. Accordingly, the Supreme Court has since held that although the State legislatures may regulate the rights of material-men furnishing necessaries to vessels, so long as Congress does not interpose to regulate the subject, yet State law cannot take the contract out of the exclusive domain of admiralty jurisdiction.
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34. THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE. [1900]
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Dana, William F.
Harvard Law Review . Jan1900, Vol. 13 Issue 5, p319-343. 25p.
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POLITICAL autonomy and PRESIDENTS
- Abstract
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The article focuses on the Doctrine of Declaration of Independence in the U.S. It says that the Declaration of Independence, rightly or not, has often been criticized as lacking in originality. The article author views that the two declarations, the one on bill of rights and the other of violations, which are printed in the Journals of Congress for 1774, were two years afterwards recapitulated in the Declaration of Independence, on the Fourth of July, 1776. The article author further says that except as a matter of historical, or biographical interest, it makes no difference whether the Declaration was a copy. He refers to a letter by U.S. President Thomas Jefferson to President James Madison saying that nothing can be more absurd than the cavil that the declaration contains known, and not new truths. The object was to assert, not to discover, truths, and to make them the basis of the Revolutionary act. The article also refers to Virginia Bill of Rights and its comparison with the Declaration of Independence.
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Larremore, Wilbu&rdot;
Harvard Law Review . Apr1900, Vol. 13 Issue 8, p615-626. 12p.
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CONSTITUTIONAL law, CONTEMPT of court, CONDUCT of court proceedings, LEGAL etiquette, and COURTS
- Abstract
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The article focuses on the constitutional regulation of contempt of court. The courts of several states have realized that self-preservation demands the resistance of every legislative encroachment upon the historical judicial prerogative of inflicting penalties for contempt. The Constitution of the U.S. provides that the judicial power of the U.S. shall be vested in one Supreme Court and in such inferior courts as the U.S. Congress may from time to time establish. The inherent power of courts to punish for contempt has been recognized by the Supreme Court.
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36. A HUNDRED YEARS OF AMERICAN DIPLOMACY. [1900]
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Moore, John Bassett
Harvard Law Review . Nov1900, Vol. 14 Issue 3, p165-183. 19p.
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INTERNATIONAL relations, TREATIES, DIPLOMACY, and UNITED States history
- Abstract
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Looks into the history of American diplomacy. Principles on which the U.S. government was founded; Aims of the first treaty adopted by the U.S. Congress after the declaration of independence; Stipulations of various treaties entered by the U.S. prior to 1789.
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Harvard Law Review . Jun1901, Vol. 15 Issue 2, p164-168. 5p.
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CONSTITUTIONAL law, USURY laws, COMMERCIAL policy, CUSTOMS unions, and INDIRECT taxation
- Abstract
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The article presents information on some of the insular tariff cases in the supreme court. It is fortunate for the country and for the future of our system of constitutional law that the Supreme Court has recognized the essentially political nature of the questions with which the General Government has had to deal in legislating for our new possessions. The United States may acquire territory as the result of war and treaties, without any qualification as to kind or quantity, or as to the character of its population. It may be Canada, or a cannibal island, or an island of slaves and slave owners. The mere acquisition or cession of a region does not incorporate it into the United States so as to subject it generally to those clauses of the Constitution which restrain and prohibit certain action by the Congress of the United States but such regions may be temporarily governed, in some respects, at least, as seems most suitable for their own interests and those of the United States.
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38. THE INSULAR CASES. [1901]
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Henderson, J. B.
Harvard Law Review . Dec1901, Vol. 15 Issue 4, p281-301. 21p.
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ACTIONS & defenses (Law), CONSTITUTIONS, LEGAL procedure, and LAW
- Abstract
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This article focuses on various lawsuits. The most glaring case of misconception is in connection with the Dred Scott case. Chief Justice Taney held that the Constitution recognized property in a slave, and protected that property against adverse legislation. The counsel for Dred Scott made this admission in his argument that he admits that whether the power of the U.S. Congress to legislate be given expressly or by implication, it is given with the limitation that it shall be exercised in subordination to the Constitution, and that if it be exercised in violation of any provisions of the Constitution the act would be void.
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39. POOR RELIEF IN THE UNITED STATES. [1902]
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Munsterberg, E.
- American Journal of Sociology; Jan1902, Vol. 7 Issue 4, p501-538, 38p
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PUBLIC welfare, POOR people, CHARITY laws & legislation, FEDERAL government, and SOCIOLOGY
- Abstract
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The article discusses system of relief for poor in the U.S. The U.S. system of poor relief resembles that of Switzerland in the lack of unity of character. There is no national American poor law. The federal government regulates poor relief in the District of Columbia, which occupies an exceptional position. In times of extraordinary necessity U.S. Congress may give aid. The statistical offices of the union gather information relating to public relief and private charity in all the states. In general, poor relief is an affair of the forty-five states, which they administer either directly or through the local authorities of counties or townships. In order to understand the development of the poor-relief system, one must properly estimate the manifold conditions which have been developed in history along different economic lines. Quite as various as these conditions are the forms of public and private care of the poor; in the western states they are frequently in the first stages of evolution.
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40. RECENT CASES. [1902]
Harvard Law Review . Jan1902, Vol. 15 Issue 5, p406-416. 11p.
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BREACH of contract, OBLIGATIONS (Law), CONFLICT of laws, BANKRUPTCY, and LEGAL status of indigenous peoples of the Americas
- Abstract
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Presents a summary of cases decided in the United States in 1902. Negligence of pilot in a collision between two boats; Intentional act of servant; Surrender of preference in a bankruptcy case; Damages for breach of contract; Petition of creditors in a bankruptcy case; Control of Congress over the Indians; Conflict of laws in jurisdiction in tort.
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Barrett, Don C.
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; May1902, Vol. 16 Issue 3, p323, 32p
- Subjects
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LEGAL tender, AMERICAN Civil War, 1861-1865, and ECONOMICS
- Abstract
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Focuses on the supposed necessity of the issue of legal tender notes during the U.S. civil war of 1861-1865. Views of member of Ways and Means Committee of the U.S. Samuel Hooper on the issue of legal tender notes; Passage of the Legal Tender Act in the U.S. Congress in February 1862; Arguments in favor of Legal Tender Act over the plan offered by the minority of the U.S. Ways and Means ommittee.
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42. THE OUTLOOK FOR CURRENCY LEGISLATION. [1903]
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Purves, Alexander
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Nov1903, Vol. 18 Issue 1, p114-129, 16p
- Subjects
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MONEY laws, MONEY supply, SUPPLY & demand, ELASTICITY (Economics), BANK notes, GOVERNMENT securities, and LEGISLATIVE bills
- Abstract
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The article provides an outlook for currency legislation in the United States as of 1903. Money-changers made some demands and proposals regarding current legislation including the introduction of the factor elasticity into the currency to expand volume and respond to the varying demands of trade, for the government to give some form of security for bank note issue other than the government bonds and for the receipts from customs to be deposited with the national banks to prevent periodical contractions. Based on these proposals, nine currency bills have been introduced in the House and two others in the Senate which all aimed to secure an expansion of the bank-note currency.
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Humes, Augustine L.
Harvard Law Review . Dec1903, Vol. 17 Issue 2, p83-103. 21p.
- Subjects
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RESTRAINT of trade, COMMERCIAL crimes, UNFAIR competition, and ANTITRUST law
- Abstract
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The article focuses on the rights of the legislatures of the several states and the Congress of the United States in the regulation of contracts, combinations, conspiracies, and monopolies in restraint of trade and commerce. It has been affirmed that an amendment to the Constitution of the United States is necessary in order to vest in the U.S. Congress the requisite power to enable it to deal with the subject. The article demonstrate that there is already existing in Congress a large and extensive power, which it is believed is sufficient without the amendment proposed, and, further, to define the extent of that power.
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44. FEDERAL INCORPORATION OF "TRUSTS" [1903]
Harvard Law Review . Dec1903, Vol. 17 Issue 2, p146-147. 2p.
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CORPORATION law, INTERSTATE commerce, FEDERAL regulation, GOVERNMENT corporations, and TRADE regulation
- Abstract
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The article focuses on federal control of corporations in the United States. Upon the authority of the case of McCulloch v. Maryland, it is concluded that the U.S. Congress has the power to incorporate any company engaged in interstate commerce. The Supreme Court has extended the protection afforded by the interstate commerce clause well back into the process of manufacture. So far as this power exists Congress could exercise it exclusively--prohibit corporations from engaging in interstate commerce except under charters granted by federal law, or accomplish the same result by taxing out of existence corporations owing their existence solely to state law.
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45. THE HAWAIIAN CASE. [1904]
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McClain, Emlin
Harvard Law Review . Apr1904, Vol. 17 Issue 6, p386-399. 14p.
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AMERICAN law, ISLANDS, and INDICTMENTS
- Abstract
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The Hawaiian case involved the question whether the provisions of the Fifth and Sixth Amendments to the Federal Constitution, so far as they guarantee to a person accused of an infamous crime the right to be tried only on an indictment by a grand jury and the verdict of a common-law jury, rendering a unanimous verdict, were applicable to a criminal proceeding under the laws of the territory of Hawaii as they existed between the time of the annexation of the islands to the United States, in 1898, and the time when by act of the U.S. Congress of April 30,1900, the constitution of the United States was formally extended to those islands and provision was made for the indictment and trial of those accused of crime in accordance with the ordinary common-law methods.
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46. THE MERGER CASE. [1904]
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T. C. G.
Harvard Law Review . May1904, Vol. 17 Issue 7, p474-478. 5p.
- Subjects
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MERGERS & acquisitions, INTERSTATE commerce, TRADE regulation, RESTRAINT of trade, and ACTIONS & defenses (Law)
- Abstract
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The article focuses on the stand of U.S. Congress and laws on mergers concerning inter-state business. Congress cannot interfere with manufactures or agriculture on the ground that their products will be the subjects of interstate commerce. It discusses in detail 26 U.S. St. 209 (1890), an Act entitled "An Act to protect trade and commerce against unlawful restraint and monopolies." It discusses the case of the merger of Great Northern Railway Company and the Northern Pacific Railway Co. If the two companies had combined to keep another railroad out of the territory which they served, that would have been a monopoly.
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47. THE PRESIDENTIAL SUCCESSION ACT OF 1886. [1905]
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Hamlin, Charles S.
Harvard Law Review . Jan1905, Vol. 18 Issue 3, p182-195. 14p.
- Subjects
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PRESIDENTS of the United States, PRESIDENTS, HEADS of state, CABINET officers, and AMERICAN law
- Abstract
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The article focuses on the Act of U.S. Congress of March 1, 1792 which provided that the vacancy in the office of President, when there is no Vice-President, should be filled by the President pro tempore of the Senate, or, if none, by the Speaker of the House, until the election of a President by special election prescribed by the Act. The Act of January 19, 1886 or that part which part which is material to this inquiry, substitutes for the President pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House, the Secretary of State and after him the other Cabinet officers respectively, as successors to the office of President, and abolishes the special election of President prescribed by the Act of 1792.
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48. LEADING LEGAL ARTICLES. [1905]
Harvard Law Review . Jan1905, Vol. 18 Issue 3, p235-238. 4p.
- Subjects
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CORPORATION law, STATE courts, U.S. states, CORPORATIONS, and JURISDICTION
- Abstract
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The article reports that the old English rule that a receiver could not be sued without the leave of the court appointing him caused much injustice, when courts, usually federal, began to use such officials in this country to take charge of large corporations. Small claimants were practically without legal redress against corporations so managed. To remedy this, the U.S. Congress, in March 1887, enacted that receivers appointed by any United States court may be sued in respect of anything done in carrying on the business, without the previous leave of the appointing court; provided, however, that such suit shall be subject to the general equity jurisdiction of the appointing court, so far as the same may-be necessary to the ends of justice.
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49. CORPORATIONS IN THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. [1905]
Harvard Law Review . Feb1905, Vol. 18 Issue 4, p319-320. 2p.
- Subjects
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LEGISLATIVE bodies, CONSTITUTIONAL law, LAW, CORPORATIONS, GOVERNMENT policy, and LEGISLATION
- Abstract
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This article focuses on a case related to corporations in the district of Columbia. As between individuals one of whom is a citizen of the District of Columbia this right of removal to a federal court on the ground of diversity of citizenship does not exist. Congress in exercising its constitutional legislative authority over the District of Columbia acts, not in a separate capacity as a local legislature, but as the legislative body of the U.S., its enactments being limited in application to the territory established as the seat of government.
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50. BOOKS AND PERIODICALS. [1905]
Harvard Law Review . Apr1905, Vol. 18 Issue 6, p476-477. 2p.
- Subjects
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ACTIONS & defenses (Law), INTERNATIONAL law, and EXTRAORDINARY remedies
- Abstract
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The article discusses a paper and various books related to the lawsuits in the U.S. The paper discussed is "The Legal Nature of International Law," by George B. Scott. In this paper, the writer maintains two propositions: first, that the quality of enforceability and the existence of a sanction are not essential to the definition of law; secondly, that assuming a sanction to be requisite, one is present in the realm of international law. Some of the books discussed are "The Abuse of New Trials," by Everett P. Wheeler, "The Act of Congress Permitting Suits Against Federal Receivers: Injunctions From State Courts," by W.A. Coutts and "Dissenting Opinions," by V.H. Roberts.
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Prentice, E. Parmalee
Harvard Law Review . Jan1906, Vol. 19 Issue 3, p168-199. 32p.
- Subjects
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CORPORATION law, COMMERCIAL law, ANTITRUST law, and BUSINESS enterprises -- Law & legislation
- Abstract
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Discusses the powers given by the Constitution to Congress in the regulation of corporations and trade in the U.S. Principal evils of corporate management which is said to demand federal legislation; Nature and extent of the Federal Power; Limitations given by the Constitution to Congress including the liberty to engage in commerce and the taxation of imports and exports; Purpose of Constitutional construction.
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52. RAILWAY RATE REGULATION. [1906]
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Moot, Adelbert
Harvard Law Review . May1906, Vol. 19 Issue 7, p1-24. 24p.
- Subjects
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LEGISLATIVE bills, RAIL freight rates, LEGISLATIVE bodies, and RETROACTIVE laws
- Abstract
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The article focuses on a debate on railway rate regulation in the U.S. Senate. The debate is largely confined to legal questions, chief of which is whether or not Congress can give a commission the power to make railroad rates without giving interested parties a day in court to determine whether such rates are legal and binding. Senators John C. Spooner, Philander C. Knox, Joseph Weldon Bailey and Benson Foraker all agree that the Hepburn Bill must be amended to give the courts an opportunity to review the rates made by the commission, or there is great danger that any legislation may be declared unconstitutional, on the ground that it provides for taking from an owner the income of his property by the mere fiat of a commission, without giving him any day in court, any due process of law, within the Constitution.
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53. LEADING LEGAL ARTICLES. [1906]
Harvard Law Review . May1906, Vol. 19 Issue 7, p60-64. 5p.
- Subjects
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COMMON law, LEGAL procedure, LEGAL costs, and LAW
- Abstract
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The article presents information about papers related to the U.S. law published in various journals. The provisions of the Fifth and Sixth Amendments to the Federal Constitution guaranteeing common law procedure, including the right of indictment and trial by jury do not extend to the inhabitants of our insular possessions. It would seem that this applies equally to all the territories of the United States. It is suggested, there can be no distinction between the organized and the unorganized territories. The privileges guaranteed by the Bill of Rights in fact extend to the former only by virtue of an Act of Congress or a treaty provision.
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Hackett, Frank W.
Harvard Law Review . Dec1906, Vol. 20 Issue 2, p37-43. 7p.
- Subjects
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RAIL freight rates, INTERSTATE commerce laws, COMMERCIAL law, RAILROAD law, and LAW
- Abstract
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Examines the clause providing that the United States Interstate Commerce Commission may determine and prescribe just and reasonable rates to be observed as the maximum to be charged, which the railroad company shall not exceed. Commerce clause of the Constitution which gives the Congress the power to regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several states and with the Indian tribes; Power of the Congress to take measures to guard against any and all practices that deprive shippers of their right to commercial intercourse between the same points upon equal terms with every other shipper.
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55. LEADING LEGAL ARTICLES. [1906]
Harvard Law Review . Dec1906, Vol. 20 Issue 2, p67-72. 6p.
- Subjects
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LEGAL literature, FRAUD, ELECTION law, NEGOTIABLE instruments, EMPLOYERS' liability, and LANDLORD-tenant relations
- Abstract
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Presents leading legal articles published in the United States. Power to equity to restrain fraudulent election officials; Unauthorized agents' liability on negotiable instruments; Act of Congress known as the Employers' Liability Act affecting common carriers; Landlord's right to recover for injury to use and occupation by temporary nuisance.
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56. THE INCOME TAX AND THE CONSTITUTION. [1907]
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Whitney, Edward N.
Harvard Law Review . Feb1907, Vol. 20 Issue 4, p280-296. 17p.
- Subjects
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INCOME tax, CONSTITUTIONS, DIRECT taxation, and TAX laws
- Abstract
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Focuses on the income tax and the constitution in the United States. Three kinds of taxation recognized by the committee of style of the constitutional convention of 1787; Debate over direct taxation; Annual duties and rates imposed by Congress in 1794; Argument that direct and indirect taxation had no settled legal meanings; Attempt to determine if the direct tax question is an open one; Determination if it is desirable to end the controversy by constitutional amendment.
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57. THE READJUSTMENT OF SAN DOMINGO'S FINANCES. [1907]
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Hollander, Jacob H.
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; May07, Vol. 21 Issue 3, p405-426, 22p
- Subjects
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TREATIES and ECONOMIC development
- Abstract
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Focuses on history associated with the disturbed Dominican Republic and the role played by U.S. in providing financial readjustment, economic regeneration and political stability to the island republic. Social and political factors contributing to the indebtedness of the republic; Factors that led to the drafting and ratification of a convention between the U.S. and the republic by the U.S. Senate on February 25, 1907.
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Henderson, Charles Richmond
- American Journal of Sociology; Jul1907, Vol. 13 Issue 1, p34-47, 14p
- Subjects
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SOCIETIES, INSURANCE, WORKING class, PARTICIPATION, FRATERNAL organizations, and LEGISLATIVE bills
- Abstract
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The article focuses on the insurance policies of the fraternal societies. These societies of the United States are similar in many respects to the Friendly Societies of Great Britain, but they are not confined, as in the mother country with its established social distinctions, to the so-called working classes. Indeed there is a strong inducement for professional persons, especially those who seek clients or votes, to belong to one or more strong fraternal associations for the acquaintance and influence which membership gives. National organizations. The fraternal societies have federated themselves in two large groups called the National Fraternal Congress and the Associated Fraternities of America. The purpose of these federations is to discuss the common interests of the lodges, to explain the technical problems of insurance, and to influence legislation. The Catholic Fraternal Benefit Societies follow the same economic principles as the others, as explained above, and their statistics are included with those of other similar organizations.
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59. IS SECTIONALISM IN AMERICA DYING AWAY? [1908]
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Turner, Frederick J.
- American Journal of Sociology; Mar1908, Vol. 13 Issue 5, p661-675, 23p
- Subjects
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SECTIONALISM (U.S.), CIVIL war, SLAVERY, PUBLIC opinion, and PRESIDENTIAL elections
- Abstract
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The article discusses whether sectionalism in America is dying away. The student of American history since the civil war, and especially in the last decade, seeing the sweep and power of the nationalizing movement, may readily agree with the historian Secretary Root that "our whole life has swung away from old state centers, and is crystallizing about national centers." From this it might also be assumed that sectionalism is passing away with the decline of the state. There are degrees of sectionalism, varying from that exhibited in the struggle of North against South over the slavery issue, culminating in war between the sections, to the lesser manifestations of resistance to national homogeneity and to the power of a national majority. The author recognizes as tests of sectionalism all of those methods by which a given area resists national uniformity, whether by mere opposition in public opinion on the part of a considerable area, or by formal protest, or by combining its votes in the U.S. Congress and in presidential elections; and also those manifestations of economic and social separateness involved in the existence in a given region of a set of fundamental assumptions, a mental and emotional attitude which segregates the section from other sections, or from the nation as a whole.
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60. I. LEADING LEGAL ARTICLES. [1908]
Harvard Law Review . Apr1908, Vol. 21 Issue 6, p453-456. 4p.
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LAW, JURISPRUDENCE, LEGAL research, PERIODICALS, and SERIAL publications
- Abstract
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Presents articles regarding legal issues in the United States published in various periodicals, compiled for April 1908. Study about the service of process on corporations; Power of congress to levy taxes for the purpose of regulation; Highlights of the research outcomes.
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Lewis, Draper
Harvard Law Review . Jun1908, Vol. 21 Issue 8, p595-616. 22p.
- Subjects
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AMERICAN law, COMMERCE, INTERNATIONAL trade, and TRIBES
- Abstract
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The article informs that constitutional questions involved in the commodity clause of the U.S. Hepburn act. The third paragraph of the eighth section of the first article of the U.S. federal Constitution gives to Congress the power "to regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several states, and with the Indian tribes." The soundness of this conclusion has never been doubted by any subsequent member of the court. A difference of opinion, however, has always existed in regard to the correct meaning of the word "commerce." Without violating the habits of English speech, the phrase commerce among the states may be understood as including every form of lawful intercourse between the peoples of the states.
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62. FEDERAL TAXATION OF INTERSTATE COMMERCE. [1908]
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Baldwin, Simeon E.
Harvard Law Review . Nov1908, Vol. 22 Issue 1, p27-37. 11p.
- Subjects
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INTERSTATE commerce, TAXATION, TAXING power, and COMMERCIAL policy
- Abstract
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Suggests taxation, rather than federal license, as a way of regulating interstate commerce in the United States. U.S. Congress policy of promoting free trade; Power of Congress to lay taxes, duties, imposts and excises; Historical review of the use of the terms "exports" and "imports" prior to the adoption of the Constitution.
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Hackett, Frank Warren
Harvard Law Review . Nov1908, Vol. 22 Issue 1, p38-47. 10p.
- Subjects
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EMPLOYERS' liability, LEGISLATION, CONSTITUTIONAL law, INTERSTATE commerce, and GOVERNMENT ownership of railroads
- Abstract
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Discusses the constitutionality of the Federal Employers' Liability Act of 1908. Bill working a radical change in the common law liability of railroad corporations for injuries done to their employees; Question as to whether Congress has the power under the interstate commerce law of the Constitution to enact an employer's liability statute for interstate common carriers; Inquiry into the true meaning of the term "to regulate commerce among the several states."
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64. NOTES AND NOTICES. [1909]
- Sociological Review (1908-1952); Apr09, Vol. 2 Issue 2, p216-216, 1p
- Subjects
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SOCIOLOGY, CONFERENCES & conventions, SOCIETIES, UNIVERSITIES & colleges, and SOCIAL surveys
- Abstract
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The article reports on news and developments concerning the field of sociology. The Sociological Society plans to establish a connection with the Birmingham University. The Society has held its first meeting on February 16, 1909 with a lecture delivered by lecturer A.E. Zimmern on sociology while the next meeting is on May 4, 1909 in the form of a symposium on sweating. The German Sociological Society, Berlin, Germany, conducted its opening meeting on March 7, 1909 and further hopes to establish an Institute of Sociology and to organise a Central Bureau of Information for sociological inquirers. The survey of Pittsburgh conducted by Charities and the Commons in cooperation with the Russell Sage Foundation is discussed. The International Institute of Sociology announces to hold the seventh Congress at the Berne University on July 20, 1909.
65. SHOULD THE ANTI-TRUST ACT BE AMENDED? [1909]
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Morawetz, Victor
Harvard Law Review . May1909, Vol. 22 Issue 7, p492-500. 9p.
- Subjects
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ANTITRUST law, COMMERCIAL law, TRADE regulation, COMMERCIAL crimes, and LAW
- Abstract
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Provides information on the Act of the U.S. Congress of July 2, 1890, entitled "An Act to Protect Trade and Commerce against Unlawful Restraints and Monopolies. Prohibitions of the Act; Classification of the cases arising under the law; Provisions of the Act on the monopolizing of the manufacture or of the ownership of articles of trade or commerce.
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66. THE OUTLOOK FOR AMERICAN STATISTICS. [1910]
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Willcox, Walter F.
- American Journal of Sociology; Mar1910, Vol. 15 Issue 5, p633-640, 8p
- Subjects
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POPULATION statistics, MANNERS & customs, VITAL records (Births, deaths, etc.), DEATH rate, MARRIAGE records, and DIVORCE records
- Abstract
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This article focuses on the outlook for gathering American statistics to study diverse aspects of man's social life. In 1880 records of deaths based on an effective system were obtained from about one-sixth of the population; in 1909 they were obtained from fully five-ninths. If the extension during the next generation shall be equally rapid, the first half of the twentieth century will see an effective system established in every state. The registration of births is not yet on a satisfactory footing and, until the system of recording deaths had been developed in many cities and states, the federal government delayed to act under the discretionary power given it by the U.S. Congress and begin a campaign for the registration of births. Regarding the statistics of marriages we have fuller and more conclusive evidence. The federal government has made two inquiries into this subject. In 1889 when the first report was published less than one-half of the states had any provision for state registration of marriages and in many of these the records were most unsatisfactory. The most imperative need is for the recognition of statistics as a career or profession and for facilities whereby it may be adequately taught and effectively acquired. Notwithstanding this reservation, the outlook for American statistics is bright and encouraging.
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67. THE FEDERAL ANTI-TRUST ACT. [1910]
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Raymond, Robert L.
Harvard Law Review . Mar1910, Vol. 23 Issue 5, p33-59. 27p.
- Subjects
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ANTITRUST law, CORPORATIONS, IRON pipe, INTERSTATE commerce, and LEGISLATION
- Abstract
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Discusses the legal meaning of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act as laid down by the U.S. Supreme Court. Attempt to secure a reversal of the Trans-Missouri case represented in the Joint Traffic Association Case; Engagement of the six defendant corporations in the Addyston Case in the manufacture and sale of iron pipe; Claim that the power of Congress to regulate interstate commerce was not limited to protecting such commerce from the interference of state legislation.
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Sheppard Jr., John S.
Harvard Law Review . Mar1910, Vol. 23 Issue 5, p60-67. 8p.
- Subjects
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CORPORATE taxes, SOVEREIGNTY, RETAIL franchises, INHERITANCE & transfer tax, and GOVERNMENT securities
- Abstract
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Focuses on the suggestion that the Federal Corporation Tax is an invasion of the sovereignty of the states in the U.S. Claim that a tax imposed by Congress upon the exercise of the corporate franchise is an interference with the sovereignty of the state granting the franchise; Stand of the Supreme Court that the state's inheritance tax in respect of a decedent's estate consisting in part of U.S. bonds was not a tax on the bonds but one on the right of succession; Difference of the franchise to construct and operate a railroad with the franchise to be a corporation.
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69. STATE AND FEDERAL CONTROL OF CORPORATIONS. [1910]
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Cooke, Frederick H.
Harvard Law Review . Apr1910, Vol. 23 Issue 6, p456-464. 9p.
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CORPORATIONS, AMERICAN business enterprises, CORPORATION law, COMMERCIAL law, GOVERNMENT corporations, and STATE governments
- Abstract
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Examines whether there is a conflict between the power of the United States Congress and the states in the control of corporations engaged in commerce or transportation. Power of Congress over federal corporations; Power of states over federal corporations; Power of Congress over state corporations; Power of the states over domestic and foreign state corporations; Comparative advantages of state and federal incorporation.
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Bird, Francis W.
Harvard Law Review . Nov1910, Vol. 24 Issue 1, p31-46. 16p.
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CORPORATE taxes, INCOME tax, DIRECT taxation, TAXATION, and INTERNAL revenue
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Examines the constitutional aspects of the federal corporation income tax which was inserted in the Tariff Act by Congress at the instance of President Taft. Provisions in Article I of the United States Constitution relating to taxation; Case of "Pollock v. Farmers' Loan and Trust Co."; Issue on the exact meaning of the phrase "direct tax"; Grounds for the rulings in the Pollock case; Other cases such as "Nicol v. Ames" and "Spreckels Sugar Refining Co. v. McClain".
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71. Notes. [1910]
Harvard Law Review . Nov1910, Vol. 24 Issue 1, p47-57. 11p.
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AMERICAN law, UNITED States legislators, INSURANCE, LAW schools, LEGISLATION, VOTING trusts, and LIFE insurance policies
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Presents a number of developments related to the Harvard Law School and matters of law in the United States. Deans and professors; Fourth-year course; Changes in the curriculum; Judicial control over rules of legislative procedure; Devices for securing in substance direct election of United States senators; Legality of voting trusts; Fraud and incontestability clauses in life insurance policies.
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72. POWERS OF REGULATION VESTED IN CONGRESS. [1910]
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Pam, Max
Harvard Law Review . Dec1910, Vol. 24 Issue 2, p77-104. 28p.
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LEGISLATIVE bodies, CONSTITUTIONAL law, ADMINISTRATIVE law, CONSTITUTIONS, and PUBLIC law
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Explains the importance of the United States Congress in regulating the relative legislative powers of state and nation. Powers of regulation which are not limited to any specific form but have application to various situations, to which changed conditions have given rise; Analysis of the articles of confederation and the constitution; Discussion of the general powers of Congress.
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Smith Jr., Fitz-Henry
Harvard Law Review . Jan1911, Vol. 24 Issue 3, p182-204. 23p.
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MARITIME liens, LIENS, PERSONAL property, MARITIME law, AMERICAN law, COMMERCIAL law, MARITIME shipping, and SHIPOWNERS
- Abstract
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Examines the law related to liens on vessels for repairs, supplies, or other necessaries, passed by the United States Congress which is of great importance to the ship-furnishing and ship-owning interests of the country. Efforts of the Maritime Law Association of the United States to introduce the bill which was later endorsed by the American Bar Association; Goal of simplifying the law and making it uniform throughout the country.
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74. HOW TARIFFS SHOULD NOT BE MADE. [1911]
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Taussig, F. W.
- American Economic Review; Mar1911, Vol. 1 Issue 1, p20, 13p
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TARIFF laws, COMMERCIAL policy, ADMINISTRATIVE acts, and TARIFF
- Abstract
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In the course of inquiries on the legislative history of the Tariff Act of 1909, the author has encountered some episodes characteristic of the tariff-making methods which have long been followed in the U.S. The changes in duty which resulted are not of great consequence. Most of them affect articles that are petty in comparison with the important and much debated articles. But the cases are typical and instructive. Concrete examples show better than any general statement what has been the practice in the past, and what are the reasons for substituting a procedure more open, more deliberate, more closely scanned. The House committee, which had much more time for preparation, was almost swamped by its hearings. The Senate committee, which of necessity had less time, naturally felt that it would be swamped once for all. But this situation, perhaps making star chamber procedure inevitable gives opportunity for covert changes, for concealed pressure from private interests, for irresponsible legislation. Hence the demand for some permanent body, equipped to make investigation, and to make a judicial report as to the significance of proposed changes. Such cases as have been considered in the preceding pages show how tariffs should not be made.
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75. NOTES. [1911]
- American Economic Review; Jun11, Vol. 1 Issue 2, p452, 10p
- Subjects
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CONFERENCES & conventions, PRESIDENTS of the United States, and PUBLIC health
- Abstract
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The article presents information related to economics that appeared in the 1911 issue of the journal "American Economic Review." An explanation of the change in type on the cover page of the current issue is due to the readers of the journal. The general title of the publications of the Associations is "Bulletin of the American Economic Association," and the Bulletin will carry a serial number. The Bulletin includes the journal, which appears four times a year, the papers read at the annual meeting, and the Handbook. As the Bulletin is the inclusive title of all the publications, it must, in accordance with postal regulations, appear in a type appropriate to such preeminence. The International Congress of Hygiene and Demography had been invited by the Congress of the United States to hold its Fifteenth Session in this country and will convene at Washington under the honorary presidency of U.S. President William Howard Taft September 28, 1912. More than a score of foreign countries have already accepted the invitation of the United States to be represented at the Congress. The Congress will be divided into nine sections, among which are to be noted the sections on industrial and Occupational Hygiene, Hygiene of Traffic and Transportation, and Demography. In connection with the Congress there will be an exhibition of state, municipal and volunteer work in public health and vital statistics. This exhibition will be under the charge of Dr. J.W. Schereschewsky of the United States Public Health Service.
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Cooke, Frederick H.
Harvard Law Review . Jun1911, Vol. 24 Issue 8, p635-646. 12p.
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INTERSTATE commerce, COMMERCE, INTRASTATE commerce, DOMESTIC markets, and INTERSTATE commerce laws
- Abstract
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Examines the role of the United States federal Constitution Congress to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among several states within the country. Explanation of why the word "commerce" stipulated by congress is substantially synonymous with "transportation"; Source of authority to engage in interstate transportation under conditions of special privilege; Doctrine of the exclusiveness of the power of congress under the Commerce clause suggestive of the conclusion that such authority may not be derived from the states.
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77. Trade, Commerce, and Commercial Crises. [1911]
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Hillyer, C. R.
- American Economic Review; Sep11, Vol. 1 Issue 3, p577-579, 3p
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COMMERCE, FEDERAL regulation, FEDERAL government, CORPORATION law, VALUATION, and ECONOMIC sanctions
- Abstract
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The energetic activities of the Roosevelt administration inspired deep research of the authorities side precedents involving the ultimate powers of the federal government. While each side of the controversy thus precipitated claims a measure of satisfaction in the results, the country has benefited by the flood of light thus turned upon these problems so vital to the success or failure of institutions. The volume under consideration deals with the federal power to regulate commerce delegated to Congress by the Constitution. It is an historical argument for a broad interpretation of the grant of power, and employs with telling effect examples of the exercise of that power. The non-importation and embargo and of the early years of the Constitution, the construction of high ways of interstate commerce, the laying of protective duties and the incorporation of the United States bank axe fully developed as functions of the commercial power. The author argues that the compelling force which brought about the Constitution was the fear of anarchy and the destruction of property values on the part of the great proprietors and capitalistic leaders of that time.
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78. NOTES. [1911]
- American Economic Review; Sep11, Vol. 1 Issue 3, p685, 5p
- Subjects
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MEMBERSHIP in associations, institutions, etc., BOARDS of trade, CONFERENCES & conventions, and RECIPROCITY (Commerce)
- Abstract
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The total membership of American Economic Association is 2,160 as of July 20, 1911. The Chamber of Commerce of New York has appointed a special committee on commercial education. One of the members of this committee is Mr. George Brett, President of the Macmillan Company. The Sixth Dry Farming Congress will be held at Colorado Springs, Colorado from October 6-20, 1911. A conference on Canadian reciprocity was held by the Western Economic Society on June 3, 1911. The American Academy of Political and Social Science announces the publication of the following volumes, "Risks in Modern Industry," in July and "Stock and Produce Exchanges," in September. The Macmillan Company will shortly publish a work on insurance, by Dr. W.F. Gephart of the Ohio State University. The volume will treat of the theory, principles, and practices of insurance, including the actuarial, economic, and social aspects of the subject. It will be comprehensive in scope, including treatment of life, industrial, accident, and health insurance, as well as employers' liability.
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79. INTER-RACIAL PROBLEMS. [1911]
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A. CALDECOTT
- Sociological Review (1908-1952); Oct11, Vol. 4 Issue 4, p314-318, 5p
- Subjects
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CONFERENCES & conventions, RACE, SOCIAL interaction, RELIGION, HUMANITY, and TREATIES
- Abstract
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The article presents information about the meetings of the First Universal Races Congress in the University of London buildings which were held in July 1910. Some hundreds of members of many races, great and small, met for the better part of a week in formal discussion and in social interaction, attending with marked regularity and with an interest that was sustained to the close. There was an entire absence of active participation by Governments, and even the great missionary societies took no particular interest, for reasons best known to themselves. The papers discussed what race means, or should mean, to particular difficulties arising from the situation of individual races or nationalities; from the consideration of the function of religion or morals or language to the wide ranging problem of the Negro or the narrowly defined problem of the half-castes of Brazil. There are some papers dealing with various methods now in operation for the organization of humanity: Treaties, Peace Conferences, the Hague Tribunal, the Press. A new project was launched by the Congress deciding to set up a small permanent Committee to arrange for a second Congress, which will probably be held in the U.S. in about three years' time.
80. THE FEDERAL CORPORATION TAX. [1911]
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Robinson, Maurice H.
- American Economic Review; Dec11, Vol. 1 Issue 4, p691-723, 33p
- Subjects
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TAX laws, CORPORATE taxes, CORPORATE finance, and INCOME
- Abstract
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This article discusses the origin of the U.S. federal corporation tax. The act imposes a tax of one per cent upon the entire net income over and above $5,000, received by it each of the several corporations subject to the tax from all sources during each year, exclusive of amounts received as dividends from other corporations. The tax is thus imposed upon the net corporate income. If Congress had not attempted to define net income, an opportunity would have been presented calling for the determination in an authoritative way of the scientific meaning of this controverted term. But the framers of the bill and those responsible for its phraseology during its consideration by Congress had ideas of their own upon this subject, and as a result the Federal Congress attempted to lay down for the business world hard and fast definitions of the terms used. The act states that net income shall be ascertained by taking from the gross amount of the income received during the year. Accountants asserted that the bill's provisions violated all the principles of sound accounting, and stated that in their opinion the proper deductions should be expenses actually incurred, losses actually ascertained, and interest actually accrued.
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81. DOCUMENTS, REPORTS AND LEGISLATION: Labor. [1911]
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Doten, Carroll W.
- American Economic Review; Dec11, Vol. 1 Issue 4, p896-904, 9p
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INDUSTRIAL laws & legislation, STEEL industry, LABOR, STRIKES & lockouts, and LABOR unions
- Abstract
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The article provides information on labor issues and conditions in industries in the U.S. Shortly before the adjournment of Congress authority was given for the publication of the first part of the report of the Federal Bureau of Labor on labor conditions in the iron and steel industry in the U.S. The Hearings on H. B. 179, Authorising Committee on Labor to Investigate Conditions Existing in Westmoreland Coal Fields of Pennsylvania, held May 31, 1911, by the House Rules Committee have been printed in pamphlet form. In the Tenth Annual Report of the Commission of Labor of New York is an interesting chart, showing the relation of the several branches of administrative activity in this department. Recent development is in the collection of accident statistics, which has now been extended to the building and engineering trades. In the Seventh Biennial Report of the Indiana Labor Commission, 1909-1910 considerable space is given to the strike on the Great Lakes in 1909. An interesting development of this dispute was the effort of labor commissions in six states to secure settlement through joint action. The Board of Trade (London) has recently issued a report on rules and expenditures of trade unions in respect of unemployed benefits.
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82. NOTES. [1911]
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Clark, John Bates, Seager, Henry R., and W.B.B.
- American Economic Review; Dec11, Vol. 1 Issue 4, p970-981, 12p
- Subjects
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CONFERENCES & conventions, INDUSTRIAL laws & legislation, INDUSTRIAL hygiene, OCCUPATIONAL diseases, and SOCIAL legislation
- Abstract
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The article presents notes and information on several conventions. The annual meeting of the American Economic Association will be held in Washington from December 27 to 30, 1911. The headquarters of the association will be at the Hotel Raleigh. Among the subjects on the program are: Economic investigation as a basis for tariff legislation; The selection of population by migration; Rural conditions in the South; The decline of the rural population; The federal budget. A conference of economists and publicists met at the Bern Conference in August 1911 by invitation of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. The conference at Bern was called to carry out the work of the second division, which is charged with making a scientific investigation of the causes and effects of war. It was not a Peace Congress, in the ordinary sense, and its members were selected with little or no reference to their view as to the broad question of peace and war. The function entrusted to them was one of research, and their immediate work was the determining of the lines in which the research, during a period of two or more years, shall be carried on under their direction. On September 15 and 16, 1911 the American Association for Labor Legislation held, in Chicago, Illinois a conference on methods of accident prevention, the administration of labor laws by commissions, and the uniform reporting of industrial accidents and occupational diseases. The conference was notable from the fact that more than fifty of the two hundred persons in attendance were officials connected with state commissions or departments of labor in the U.S. and Canada. The annual meeting of the Massachusetts Association for Labor Legislation was held on October 26. The Association voted that the executive committee be empowered to promote legislation for the more effective enforcement of existing labor legislation.
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Taussig, F. W.
- American Economic Review; Jun12, Vol. 2 Issue 2, p257, 12p
- Subjects
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WOOL textiles, COMMERCIAL policy, INDIRECT taxation, and TARIFF
- Abstract
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This article focuses on the Tariff Board Report on Wool and Woolens which fills four volumes, 1200 pages in all. In the report on wool, as in all of the inquiries of the Tariff Board, costs of production in the United States and in foreign countries figure largely. The theory on which the Board was set to work has been that "scientific" tariff revision should rest upon ascertained differences between cost in the United States and in foreign countries. The matter of the report divides itself into two parts, one on wool, the other on the manufactures of wool. The former of these is distinctly more satisfactory than the latter. The passages on wool are well arranged, well put together, well indexed, well summarized. Those on woolens have much more the appearance of being thrown together with some haste, and it is not easy to make out what the results finally come to. The less satisfactory character of the report as regards woolens is probably due to haste in preparation. It was long obvious that the Administration desired to present to Congress a specimen of the kind of work which the Tariff Board was doing. There was pressure to have at least one important report ready early in the session of Congress, and the Tariff Board doubtless was called upon to show its hand before it was ready.
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84. DOCUMENTS, REPORTS, AND LEGISLATION. [1912]
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Wells, Emilie Louise
- American Economic Review; Jun12, Vol. 2 Issue 2, p421, 36p
- Subjects
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ARCHIVES, LEGISLATION, CORPORATIONS, IRRIGATION laws, and CONFERENCES & conventions
- Abstract
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This article focuses on various documents, reports and legislation related to industries and commerce in the U.S. The Official Proceedings of the Nineteenth National Irrigation Congress, held at Chicago, from December 5 to 9, 1911, includes the addresses delivered at the convention. Among the topics discussed were "The Uses of the Great Lakes;" and "Principles Underlying Water Rights." The "Crop Reporter" for April, 1912, contains an article on High Prices and Crop Production in which from statistical data it is shown that the production of staple food products in the past few years has increased more rapidly than population. According to the "Report of the Governor of the District of Alaska for 1911," Alaska is not likely to develop until there is a more liberal policy in behalf of capitalized interests. The Library of Congress has added to its list of useful bibliographies a compilation of references on "Parcels Post." Books and articles in periodicals extending from 1859 to 1911 are listed. The Bureau of Corporations has issued Part II of The Steel Industry: Cost of Production, Preliminary Report. The report is based on the actual records of companies producing two thirds of the products from 1902-1906 as well as more restricted returns for later years.
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Swayne, Francis J.
Harvard Law Review . Nov1912, Vol. 26 Issue 1, p1-41. 41p.
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CONSTITUTIONAL law, DUE process of law, CIVIL rights, JUSTICE administration, and PERSONAL property
- Abstract
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Discusses the judicial definition of the language of the Fourteenth Amendment in the U.S. Protection of the privileges and immunities of citizens; Restriction of depriving an individual of his property without due process of law; Limitation of the legislative power of Congress for the enforcement of the Fourteenth Amendment to carrying out the prohibitions against state action.
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86. THE LATEST PHASE OF NEGRO DISFRANCHISEMENT. [1912]
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Monnet, Julien C.
Harvard Law Review . Nov1912, Vol. 26 Issue 1, p42-63. 22p.
- Subjects
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BLACK people, LEGISLATIVE bills, STATE governments, SUFFRAGE, and ELECTIONS
- Abstract
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Focuses on the latest phase of disfranchisement of the black people by the majority of the southern states in the U.S. Passage of statutes that exclude the Negro race from right of suffrage; Inability of the Congress to deal with unofficial individuals who interfere with the franchise in state elections; Provisions of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments; Filing of lawsuit testing the validity of the legislation.
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87. THE COMMERCE COURT QUESTION. [1913]
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Dunn, Samuel O.
- American Economic Review; Mar1913, Vol. 3 Issue 1, p20, 23p
- Subjects
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DISTRICT courts, GOVERNMENT ownership of railroads, PRESIDENTS of the United States, and LEGISLATIVE bills
- Abstract
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The question whether the Commerce Court shall be retained as a part of the federal machinery for regulating railways was left unsettled by Congress at its last session. Provisions for abolishing it and transferring its duties to the various United States district courts were passed as a "rider" to the Legislative, Judicial and Executive Appropriation bill. U.S. President William Howard vetoed the bill in this form. As finally enacted it provided funds for the maintenance of the court, but only until March 4, 1913. Doubtless, in determining whether funds shall be provided for it beyond that date Congress will settle whether it is to be retained as a part of the judicial machinery. The question presented is important. But it has not heretofore been discussed and dealt with on its merits. But when President recommended the creation of a "United States Court of Commerce" in a message on January 7, 1910, the plan aroused much opposition in Congress. It was vigorously attacked by its foes, and but lukewarmly defended by its friends, in that body. Its adoption was almost entirety due to the persevering support of the President and his administration.
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88. THE TARIFF BOARD AND WOOL LEGISLATION. [1913]
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Culbertson, William S.
- American Economic Review; Mar1913, Vol. 3 Issue 1, p59, 26p
- Subjects
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TARIFF laws, TARIFF on wool, LEGISLATIVE bills, and WOOLEN & worsted manufacture
- Abstract
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During the second session of the Sixty-second U.S. Congress no less than six different bills were offered in the Senate and House as revisions of the tariff schedule levying duties on wool and manufactures of wool. All of these bills, although differing widely from each other, were claimed by their framers to be based upon, or at least not at variance with, the findings of the Tariff Board in its report on Schedule K. Public men and economists have not sufficiently appreciated the services of the Tariff Board. These services were obscured by political animosities, aggravated by attacks made upon the board for personal and party reasons. He who wishes to pick flaws in the Tariff Board's report on Schedule K can do so with ease. Viewing its work constructively, however, it may be fairly said that the board did more for an honest, scientific revision than all the committee hearings and investigations which preceded it. However unsatisfactory its work may be in the eyes of some of its critics, the fact remains that its work is infinitely more satisfactory to the impartial observer than the work of the committees of Congress. Its faults are chiefly those of omission.
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- American Economic Review; Mar1913, Vol. 3 Issue 1, p185, 2p
- Subjects
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INDUSTRIAL laws & legislation, INDUSTRIAL policy, CORPORATION reports, CONFERENCES & conventions, DRY farming, and WATER power
- Abstract
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Of the eleven volumes of reports of the thirteenth census, vol. 9, dealing with manufactures by states and cities, is the first to be published. This is simply a combination of the several state bulletins already published. Special emphasis is laid in the Report of the Secretary of the Interior, 1912, on the need of a definite and comprehensive water-power policy. This document also contains a review of the decade of national irrigation work under the Newlands act of 1902. The Report of the Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress of Dry Farming, held at Lethbridge, Alberta, October 91-25, 1912, may be had upon application to Mr. John T. Burns, executive secretary-treasurer, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Circular No. 163, issued by the Agricultural Experiment Station of Illinois, is devoted to a brief statistical study of the relation of the United States to the world's beef supply. A pamphlet on Bolivia, prepared by the Bolivian Legation, may be bad of the Pan American Union. The International Institute of Agriculture (Rome) has published its first year book, Annuaire Nationale der Statistique Agricole, 1910.
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90. DOCUMENTS, REPORTS, AND LEGISLATION: Labor. [1913]
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Lowell, James A., Foerster, Robert F., and Parkinson, Thomas I.
- American Economic Review; Mar1913, Vol. 3 Issue 1, p188, 9p
- Subjects
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WORKERS' compensation -- Law & legislation, COMPENSATION (Law), LABOR laws, and EMPLOYMENT
- Abstract
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The workmen's compensation law affecting certain employees of the United States government has been in operation for several years, but despite the great public interest in the general subject very little attention has been directed toward it. The Opinions of the Solicitor for the Department of Commerce and Labor dealing with Workmen's Compensation will be of great assistance to those engaged in administering similar acts in the various states. The volume also contains the opinions of the Attorney General and the decisions of the Comptroller of the Treasury. The report covers a period of four years ending August first, 1912. The laws now in force in many states are all more liberal than the Act of Congress, but many questions similar to those which will arise under them have been considered by the Solicitor in construing the United States law. The limits of this review will allow us to consider only one feature of the law. The United States law covers all injuries received "in the course of" the employment The Solicitor points out that the United States law is broader than the English law and covers injuries received while at work though they may not be due to the prosecution of that work.
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91. BIBLIOGRAPHY. [1913]
- American Journal of Sociology; Mar1913, Vol. 18 Issue 5, p726-736, 11p
- Subjects
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SOCIAL sciences, POLITICAL doctrines, RURAL industries, HEALTH education, and ECONOMIC policy
- Abstract
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The article presents list of several books related to sociology. Some of the books are "Marriage; Its Ethics and Religion," "A Study of Iowa Population as Related to Industrial Conditions," "The Right of the Child to be Well Born," "U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. Supply of Farm Labor," and "U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. Wages of Farm Labor, Nineteenth Investigation." Some other books mentioned in the list are "The Teacher's Health, a Study in Hygiene of an Occupation," "The Changing Order: A Study in Democracy," and "U.S. Congress."
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92. Has the President of the United States the Power to Suspend the Operation of an Act of Congress? [1913]
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Weil, A. L.
California Law Review . Mar1913, Vol. 1 Issue 3, p230. 21p.
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Morawetz, Victor
Harvard Law Review . Jun1913, Vol. 26 Issue 8, p667-683. 17p.
- Subjects
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CORPORATION law, CONSTITUTIONAL law, CORPORATIONS, and POLITICAL science
- Abstract
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The article focuses on the power of the United States Congress to enact incorporation laws in order to regulate corporations. The formation of corporations is not a primary purpose or of the national government. Corporations are not mentioned in the Constitution. Congress has power to enact laws to execute any of the purposes or powers entrusted by the Constitution to the national government. The Congress can pass an act of incorporation, or an act regulating corporations, if such an act is merely a means of executing some constitutional purpose or power.
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94. NOTES. [1913]
Harvard Law Review . Jun1913, Vol. 26 Issue 8, p738-750. 13p.
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ACTIONS & defenses (Law), CONSTITUTIONAL amendments, CONTRACTS, LEGAL judgments, LEGAL liability, and APPELLATE courts
- Abstract
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The article presents information related to various legal issues prevalent in the United States. The Supreme Court of the United States has held in a recent decision that the Seventh Amendment prevents Congress from authorizing an appellate court to enter judgment when the trial judge has erred in failing to direct a verdict. Principles governing recovery by parties to illegal contracts have been outlined. A novel situation in a recent Massachusetts case presents in an interesting way the effect of bad motive in the law of torts. It is generally admitted that in the absence of special circumstances a contract exempting one from liability for negligence is valid.
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95. THE INCOME TAX OF 1913. [1913]
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Hill, Joseph A.
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Nov13, Vol. 28 Issue 1, p46-68, 23p
- Subjects
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INCOME tax, TAX laws, TAX collection, DOUBLE taxation, and TARIFF
- Abstract
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The article focuses on the flow of income tax during the year 1913 in the U.S. Among the notable events of the year 1913, one of the most important in its influence upon the national finances and constitutional development of the United States is the adoption of an amendment to the Federal Constitution giving Congress the power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several states and without regard to any census or enumeration. This program included the reduction of protective tariff duties and the direct taxation of incomes. The law provides that incomes shall be subject to a tax of one per cent on the amount by which they exceed the prescribed minimum limit of exemption. It is perhaps a question whether under these conditions income, which consists of dividends should be considered as subject to the normal tax or as exempt. In the levy of the normal income tax there is to be a limited application of the method of assessment and collection at the source of the income. Regarding the assessment of the additional tax not much need be said in the way of explanation.
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Powell, Fred Wilbur
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Nov13, Vol. 28 Issue 1, p191-208, 18p
- Subjects
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BOUNTIES (Subsidies), COMMERCIAL policy, INDUSTRIAL laws & legislation, RAILROADS, and SERICULTURE
- Abstract
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The article focuses on the industrial bounties of the American states. The infant Industry, have been constantly presented before the U.S. Congress and also before our state legislative bodies, but with results which have received too little comprehensive attention from the student of public affairs. From earliest colonial times until late in the last century, attempts were made to introduce silk culture in the U.S. The Connecticut bounty had little effect except in the vicinity of Mansfield, where considerable sewing silk was produced. Connecticut responded in 1832, with an act, which offered bounties of fifty cents a pound on reeled silk and one dollar for every hundred mulberry trees. This act was repealed in 1839. The decade of the thirties is remembered as a period of excessive speculation in lands and in railroads, and it was only natural that the widespread movement for the introduction of silk culture should have attracted those who cared for nothing except immediate profits. While silk was the favorite subject for encouragement by means of bounties, other textile materials were also aided in this manner.
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97. NOTES. [1913]
- American Economic Review; Dec13, Vol. 3 Issue 4, p1061, 18p
- Subjects
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CONFERENCES & conventions, UNITED States economy, TAXATION, CORPORATE finance, and FORESTS & forestry
- Abstract
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The article presents information about several congresses and conferences as well as associations related to the economic conditions of the U.S. The twenty-sixth annual meeting of the American Economic Association will be held at Minneapolis, from December 27-30,1913. The executive committee meeting will be held on December 27 followed by a business meeting of the association with reports of committees, etc. The first session of the association will be held on December 27, 1913. The subject for discussion will be on the Control of Public Service Corporations. The Seventh National Conference on State and Local Taxation was held under the auspices of the National Tax Association at Buffalo, New York State, on October 23-25. 245 delegates were representing 18 colleges and universities including 33 states, Canada, and Porto Rico. For the most part, the discussions followed those of last year, the chief topics being centralization of administration, classification of property, and the taxation of corporations, forests, and mines.
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98. THE TRUST LEGISLATION OF 1914. [1914]
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Durand, E. Dana
- Quarterly Journal of Economics; Nov14, Vol. 29 Issue 1, p72-97, 26p
- Subjects
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LEGISLATION, ANTITRUST law, COMMERCIAL law, TRADE regulation, COMMERCIAL trusts, INTERSTATE commerce, INTERNATIONAL trade, and ECONOMICS
- Abstract
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The article presents the provisions of the anti-trust act and the trade-commission act adopted by the U.S. Congress in 1914. These acts are tagged as administration measures. Both are limited to fields over which the federal government has jurisdiction. Except for certain provisions on national banks, these laws deal exclusively with interstate and foreign commerce. And three main points are presented in which the new prohibitions and definitions of unlawful practices in the two acts are classified.
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99. OBJECTIONS TO A COMPENSATED DOLLAR ANSWERED. [1914]
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fisher, Irving
- American Economic Review; Dec14, Vol. 4 Issue 4, p818-839, 22p
- Subjects
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PRICING, PURCHASING power, QUANTITY theory of money, REAL wages, COST of living, and CONFERENCES & conventions
- Abstract
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The author defends his economic plan for controlling the price level on standardizing the purchasing power of monetary units titled "The Purchasing Power of Money," presented before the International Congress of Chambers of Commerce on September 1912 in Boston, Massachusetts. The details were also published in the February issue of the Quarterly Journal of Economics. Critics asserts that the author have assumed the truth of the quantity theory of money. The author says that the impression that the plan is dependent on the truth of the quantity theory of money is presumably due to the fact that he have defended that theory in a modified form in his plan. Moreover, there is nothing whatever in the plan itself which could not be accepted by those who reject the quantity theory altogether. On the contrary, the plan will seem simpler, to those who believe a direct relationship exists between the purchasing power of the dollar and the bullion from which it is made without any intermediation of the quantity of money-than it will seem to quantity theorists.
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100. THE TRADE COMMISSION ACT. [1914]
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Stevens, W. H. S.
- American Economic Review; Dec14, Vol. 4 Issue 4, p840-855, 16p
- Subjects
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INTERSTATE commerce laws, EXECUTIVE advisory bodies, LEGISLATIVE bills, and PRESIDENTS of the United States
- Abstract
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The article focuses on the trust legislation passed by the U.S. Congress on January 20, 1914. The drafts of five tentative bills designed to effect the reforms suggested by the U.S. President Woodrow Wilson were made public almost immediately afterwards. These bills provides for the creation of an Interstate Trade Commission of five members with investigatory powers into the organization and operation of corporations engaged in interstate commerce, excepting carriers. The commission was also empowered to act as an advisory board to the Attorney General, in terminating by agreement or by suit unlawful conduct or conditions and to the courts, when these at discretion referred to it any aspect of litigation or any proposed decree. The addition it was given the function of assisting the government in preventing violations of the Sherman act by submitting information in regard thereto to the Attorney General and for the prohibition of interlocking directorates in interstate corporations, railroads and banks and trust companies which are members of a reserve bank.
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