42 HANDBOOK OF LEARNED SOCIETIES 



Publications. 



TRANSACTIONS . . . v. 1-9, Jan. 1895 July 1903. New York, [1895- 

 1904]. 8. 



Price: $10 per vol. to individuals; $5 to libraries and educational insti- 

 tutions not on mailing list. 



Distribution. Exchange with architectural and engineering societies and free 

 distribution to various colleges and educational institutions. On sale by the 

 Secretary. 



American Society of International Law. 



Address. Washington, D. C. Secietary: James B. Scott, Department 



of State. 



History. Organized at New York, Jan. 12, 1906. 

 Object. To foster the study of international law and promote the establishment 



of international relations on the basis of law and justice. For this purpose 



it will cooperate with other societies in this and other countries having the 



same object. 

 Meetings. Annually at time and place to be determined by the executive council. 



Special meetings as called. 



Membership. 425 (annual dues, $5; life composition, $100). 

 Publications. 



AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW. v. I, ist quarter, Jan. 

 1907. Baltimore. 4. q. 



Lists of public documents and articles in periodicals relating to interna- 

 tional law and chronicle of international events (with references), in 

 each issue. 



Price: $4 a year, to non-members; single numbers, $i. Half-price to 

 members. 



Supplement. Official documents. 4. 



Contains important texts of an international character, tr. into English. 

 Separately paged and sewed and will be separately indexed for separate 



binding. 



Distribution. Exchange. On sale by the managing editor, James B. Scott, above 

 address. 



American Society of Mechanical Engineers. 



Address. 12 W. 3ist Street, New York City. Secretary, F. R. Hutton. 

 History. Organized April 7, 1880, at Hoboken, N. J. ; incorporated Dec. 

 2, 1 88 1. The building of the society is occupied in common with the 

 Mechanical Engineers' Library Association, incorporated for the pur- 

 pose of conducting the free public library of engineering and the read- 

 ing room connected with the society. 



Ref.: History of the society, issued in pamphlet form, n.p., n.d. Trans- 

 actions, v. I, 2d ed., appendix. 



Object. Promotion of the arts and sciences connected with engineering and mechan- 

 ical construction. 



