Factory and industrial management . nnual Report of the Park Departmentof the City of Cambridge, 1907. Size, 9 by6 in.; pp., S7- His. Cambridge, Mass.:Department of Parks. Third Annual Report of the HighwayDepartment of the State of Ohio. Size, 9by 6 in.; pp., 288. Ills. Columbus, O.: De-partment of Highways. Annual Reports of the Department of theInterior, 1906; Commissioner of Education,Vol. 2. Size, 9 by 6 in.; pp., 644-1308. , D. C.: Department of the In-terior. Proceedings of the Society for the Pro-motion of Engineering Education, Cleve-land Meeting, 1907. Size, 9 by 6 in.


Factory and industrial management . nnual Report of the Park Departmentof the City of Cambridge, 1907. Size, 9 by6 in.; pp., S7- His. Cambridge, Mass.:Department of Parks. Third Annual Report of the HighwayDepartment of the State of Ohio. Size, 9by 6 in.; pp., 288. Ills. Columbus, O.: De-partment of Highways. Annual Reports of the Department of theInterior, 1906; Commissioner of Education,Vol. 2. Size, 9 by 6 in.; pp., 644-1308. , D. C.: Department of the In-terior. Proceedings of the Society for the Pro-motion of Engineering Education, Cleve-land Meeting, 1907. Size, 9 by 6 in.; pp.,690. Ills. Brooklyn, N. Y.: Published bythe Secretary. Annual Report of the Department ofPublic Works of the City of Buffalo forthe Year Ending June 30, 1907. Size, 9 by6 in.; pp., 1053. Buffalo, N. Y.: Depart-ment of Public Works. A Study of Four Hundred SteamingTests Made at the Fuel-Testing Plant, , Mo., in 1904, 1905, and 1906. Size,9 by 6 in.; pp., 196. Ills. Washington, : United States Geological Survey. 160. I^ZINE Vol. XXXV. MAY, 1908. No. 2. JAPANS MANUFACTURE AND IMPORTATION OF IRON GOODS. By M. Kawara. Industrial interests and economic ambitions dictate modern statecraft, and it is in thesefactors that we shall find the solution to the increasingly interesting problem of Japansaims and policies, internal and international. Mr. Kawaras view, typical of well and widelyinformed Japanese opinion, is reassuring as to the future stability of his countrys relationswith the Western World; for it impjies so intimate and essential an interdependence be-tween Japanese manufacturing and European or .American mining and producing enterprises,that the closely cerriented relationships of trade and commerce should make war impossi-ble.—The Editors. IT is not necessary to dwell at length upon the importance of theFar Eastern market for American manufacturers. Informationregarding this market, however, seems to be scanty. It is for thisreason that I have undertaken


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