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Adjudicated Patents.

No. 805,153. Pope. For a transfer-ticket. Held valid and infringed. 210

F. R., 443.

No. 852,450. Plym. For an improved store-front construction. Held valid and infringed on motion for a preliminary injunction. 210 F. R., 459.

No. 878,995. Palmer.

For apparatus for inverting tubular fabrics.

An

order denying a preliminary injunction against infringement. 210 F. R., 452. No. 1,002,488. Beeman. For a method of making garment-stays. Held void

for anticipation. 210 F. R., 453.

No. 13,033.

(Reissue.) Smith. Original No. 759,637. For improvement in

gas-lamps. Held not infringed. 210 F. R., 450.

No. 622,834. Work and Haskell. For a golf-ball. Held valid and infringed. 210 F. R., 624.

No. 701,839. Callahan. For an envelope. Held void for lack of invention, 210 F. R., 630.

No. 566,969. Curtis. For an elastic-fluid turbine. Held valid and infringed, 211 F. R., 124.

No. 595,435.

Curtis. For an elastic fluid turbine. Claims I to 4 inclusive, Held invalid in view of the prior art. 211 F. R., 124.

No. 1,000,330. Dodge. For improvements in storage batteries. Held valid and infringed. 211 F. R., 154.

No. 899,196. Aiken. For a sanitary protector. He'd not infringed. 211 F. R., 349.

Canadian Patent Law and Practice

By

HAROLD FISHER, B.A., LL.B., of the Ottawa Bar

and

RUSSELL S. SMART, B.A., M.E.,

Advocate of the Quebec Bar

with which is included

Canadian Patent Office Practice

(Second Edition Revised)
By

W. J. LYNCH, I.S.O., Chief of the Canadian Patent Office

The Latest and Best Work on the Subject
Indispensable to Patent Attorneys and Practitioners

Law 8vo; 482 pages; handsomely bound in half calf;
Price $8.50

CROMARTY LAW BOOK COMPANY, Law Publishers
PHILADELPHIA, Pa.

1112 Chestnut Street

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AND

TRADEMARK
REVIEW

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Australian Commonwealth. Trade-Marks. Provisional Regulation. Effective Jan. 20, 1914. (Text)

Australian Commonwealth. Trade-Marks. Regulation No. 339 of 1913.

352

327

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Hungary and Austria. Patents. Taxes. Proposed Moratorium
International Union. Official Journals. Contents for July
Japan. Trade-Marks. Infringement. Decision

352

349

325

Mexico. Trade-Marks. Requirements. Marking

329

New Zealand. Copyright. Order in Council. Effective March 27, 1914. (Text)

326

New Zealand. Trade-Marks. "Red Cross." Order. Effective Oct. 20, 1913. (Notice)

326

Nigeria. Patents. Trade-Marks. Status

352

Pan-American Convention. Copyright. Proclamation. United States.
July 13, 1914. (Text)

328

Portugal. Trade-Marks. Industrial and Commercial Names. Rules
(Decree No. 269) of March 16, 1914. (Translation)

Sweden. Patents. Trade-Marks. Taxes. Renewals. Moratorium
Venezuela. Patents. Concessions. License. Repeal of Decree of June
10, 1913. Decree of June 27, 1914. (Translation)
United States. Adjudicated Patents

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July 13, 1914. (Text)

328

United States. Patents. Designs. Trade-Marks. Statistics. 1913
United States. Industrial Property. Branch Patent Office. Panama-

348

Pacific Exposition. Order. (Text)

348

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Entered as second-class matter, October 17, 1912, at the Postoffice at New York, N. Y., under the Act of March 3, 1879.

Patent and Trade Mark Review

Copyright, 1914, by Wm. Wallace White

A monthly journal for the publication of new
laws and regulations, court decisions,
and information with regard to pat-
ents, trade marks and other
related subject-matter.

Edited and Published by
WM. WALLACE WHITE,
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Patents and Trade-Marks,
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Austria.

Patent Office.

The Imperial-Royal Patent Office of Austria was established at Vienna on the 1st of January, 1899. Ever since its establishment its President has been His Excellency, Dr. Paul Freiherr Beck von Mannagetta und Lerchenau, the foremost authority of his country as to the protection of industrial property and author of the present patent law of Austria.

The Office is situated in the Seventh District, one of the most important industrially, of Vienna, the Capital. Besides the handsome four-story edifice shown herewith, the quarters of the administrative heads, four other buildings in the immediate neighborhood serve also to house the various subsections. It is the intention, however, to eventually have constructed a larger building worthy of the importance now attained by industrial property rights in Austria.

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HIS EXCELLENCY, DR. PAUL FREIHERR BECK VON MANNAGETTA UND
LERCHENAU, PRESIDENT OF THE IMPERIAL-ROYAL PATENT
OFFICE OF AUSTRIA.

The main building contains the library, the auditorium, a spacious conference chamber, as well as a number of individual offices.

The library of the Patent Office contains upwards of 60,000 volumes, among which are numbered the complete series of reports of the Offices of the leading industrial countries, as well as exhaustive collections of home and foreign technical and legal literature.

There are ten application divisions in the Office, for the preliminary examina

tion of patent applications received and for deciding on oppositions that may be lodged against them; two appellate divisions whose duty it is to decide on appeals filed from decisions of the said application divisions; and one nullification division for deciding on actions for the annulment of patents already granted. Particular attention is given to the special divisions having to do with the records of patents allowed, and the rights conferred by such allowance, the

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IMPERIAL-ROYAL PATENT OFFICE, VIENNA, AUSTRIA.

availibility of the information contained in the Archives facilitating to the highest degree the practice of the Office and the understanding of the public.

In order to comprehend the growth of the administration of the Austrian Office, it suffices to state that during the first year of its existence the number of patent applications totalled 6,491, while during the year 1912 the number was 10,770. In the year 1899 the official staff of the Office numbered fifty-three tech

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