A Treatise on the Anti-trust Laws of the United States: And Including All Related Trade Regulatory Laws, Volume 2W.H. Anderson Company, 1949 |
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Page 79
... protecting the good will of the defendant with its cus- tomers and the trade . The protection of good will of the ... protect its good will , without the creation of monop- oly or resort to the suppression of competi- tion . we can ...
... protecting the good will of the defendant with its cus- tomers and the trade . The protection of good will of the ... protect its good will , without the creation of monop- oly or resort to the suppression of competi- tion . we can ...
Page 409
... protect a strong mark than a weak one.16 Before adopting a mark , the business man should have his trade - mark counsel make a search to ascertain that the mark is not in use and that it is not confusingly similar to another mark . As ...
... protect a strong mark than a weak one.16 Before adopting a mark , the business man should have his trade - mark counsel make a search to ascertain that the mark is not in use and that it is not confusingly similar to another mark . As ...
Page 419
... protection to their marks to which they are entitled . Al- though it has solemnly pledged at inter - American conventions to do so , the United States has failed adequately to protect owners of trade - marks in the other American ...
... protection to their marks to which they are entitled . Al- though it has solemnly pledged at inter - American conventions to do so , the United States has failed adequately to protect owners of trade - marks in the other American ...
Contents
CLAYTON ACTAS AMENDED BY ROBINSON | 1 |
ROBINSONPATMAN | 7 |
CHAPTER | 12 |
Copyright | |
40 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
2d sess action advertising affirmed agent agreement allowance amendment American anti-trust laws apply association authority bill cause CHAPTER charged citing Clayton Act Committee commodities Company competition competitors concerned Congress constitute contained contract Corp corporation cost court customers damages deal defendant direct discrimination district effect engaged evidence existing F.Supp fact Federal Trade Comm Federal Trade Commission granted held House injury intended interstate commerce issue judgment jurisdiction L.Ed labor lease legislation lessen limited machine manufacturer means methods monopoly operation original party patent person plaintiff practice prevent proceeding prohibited protect purchasers quantity reason refuse Report respect restraint restrict result Robinson-Patman Act rule S.Ct sell seller Senate Sherman Act showing sold Standard statute substantially suit Supreme Court tion trade-mark transaction unfair Union United unlawful violation