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Broom and Hadley's Commentaries, Review of,
Bump on Fraudulent Conveyances, Review of,
Burden of Proof, Concerning the,

Chitty on Pleading, New Edition, Review of,
Controversies of Modern Continental Jurists,
Cooley. Hon. Thos. M., Articles by,

Coley on Taxation, Review of,

Cooper, Hon. W. F., Portrait of,

Cooper, Hon. W. F., Biographical Sketch,

Cooper, Hon. W. F., Article by,

Curiosities of the Reporters and Text-Writers,

Current European Law, Notes on,

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Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, Review of,

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Dartmouth College Causes and the Supreme Court,

22, 247, 500, 661

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Legal Bibliography, A Chapter in (The Old Abridgments),

724

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Master and Servant-the Cases in which the Master is Liable for Injuries

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Otto's U. S. Supreme Court Reports, Vol. 1, Review of,

Otto's U. S. Supreme Court Reports, Vol. 2, Review of,

Parson's Essays on Legal Topics, Review of,
Phillip's Practice, Review of,

799

820

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207

192

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Pomeroy's Remedies and Remedial Rights, Review of,
Presumption of Survivorship, when Persons Perish by a Common Calamity,
Proffatt, John, Article by,

209,399

594

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644

Removal of Causes from State Courts to Federal Courts,
Right of Action Against Receivers of other Courts,
Robinson's Notes on Elementary Law, Review of,

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576

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207

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Von Holst's Constitutional and Political History of the United States, Re-

Washburn on Real Property, Review of,

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791

435

Wharton, Francis, LL. D., Articles by,

Wharton on Agency, Review of,

126,321
209, 418

UNITED STATES DIGEST,

FIRST SERIES.

NOW COMPLETE IN FOURTEEN VOLUMES.

A Digest of Decisions of the Various Courts within the United States, from the Earliest Period to the Year 1870.

WITH INDEX

Of Titles and Cross References, exhibiting the Classification

employed.

ROYAL 8V0. $6.00 PER VOL. Any volume sold separately.

Comprising all the American Decisions digested in Thirty-one Volumes of the United States Digest and United States Equity Digest with careful revision, and important Additions.

BY BENJAMIN VAUGHAN ABBOTT,

The Publishers take pleasure in announcing the completion of this great work, which is without rival or precedent in the annals of legal literature. Its preparation was undertaken by Mr. Benjamin Vaughan Abbott early in 1870, and the first volume was given to the public in February, 1874. It covers the period between the beginning of our judicial history and the year 1870, and represents the whole body of American Reports to that date Based on the wellknown United States Digest, it contains all that is valuable in that work, arranged in a more convenient form under one alphabet, and includes several volumes which were omitted in its predecessor.

Some other important changes add greatly to the value of the new work. The arrangement of decisions is determined by logical connection, or. where circumstances render it expedient, by logical order of subject-matter. In subjects governed by local, positive law, the decisions are arranged by States, showing at a glance what has been the course of the law.

Every topic being completely treated in one volume, the work obviates the necessity of special digests.

The vast scope of the work is indicated by the following statistics:

Total number of volumes of Reports comprised in this Digest, bringing them down to the beginning of the New Series of the Digest, Jan. 1, 1870, 1,900.

Total number of volumes omitted in the original edition of the United States Digest and Annual Digest, and included in the First Series, 106.

UNITED STATES DICEST.--New Series. Volumes I.--VI.

ROYAL 8V0. $6.00 PER VOL. Any volume sold separately.

Vol, I. (1870) contains a Digest of the Decisions embraced in 8 vols. of United States Reports; 58 vols of State Reports; Total 66 vols.

Vol. II. (1871) contains a Digest of the Decisions embraced in 10 vols. of United States Reperts: 69 vols. of State Reports: Total 79 vols.

Vol. III. (1872) contains a Digest of the Decisions embraced in 11 vols. of United States Reports; 72 vols. of State Reports; Total, 83 vols.

Vol. IV. ((1873) contains a Digest of the Decisions embraced in 10 vols. of United States Reports; 88 vols. of State Reports; Total, 93 vols.

Vol. V. (1874) contains a Digest of the Decisions embraced in 20 vols. of United States Reports. 80 vols of State Reports; Total, 100 vols.

Vol. VI. (1875) contains a Digest of the Decisions embraced in 11 vols. of United States Reports; 80 vols. of State Reports; Total 91 vols.

This ANNUAL DIGEST will be re-issued hereafter in the month of May.

LITTLE, BROWN, & CO., Publishers.

254 WASHINGTON Street, BOSTON.

THE AMERICAN LAW TIMES AND REPORTS.

THE LAW TIMEs and Reports is a periodical of exceptional value to the legal profession. The object of the work is to afford the Bar that which will prove useful in every-day practice. To effect this it contains substantially nothing that has not emanated from the bench in the form of official promulgation. Discarding all affectation, the numbers are compiled upon the theory that the practice of the law is a business as well as an art, and that a timely opinion of a court is of more importance to the average lawyer than the most finished dissertation upon a point he is not likely to meet. Many legal periodicals may claim to be more philosophical, but none, is thought, to be as COMPREHENSIVELY USEFUL.

it

Each number contains not less than sixty-four large royal octavo pages divided into two independent sections, the LAW TIMES and LAW TIMES REPORTS.

The LAW TIMES section, which consists of sixteen pages, contains, each month, a

DIGEST OF ALL CASES

of value reported in contemporary American legal periodicals, during the preceding month, so arranged that it may be examined with the greatest facility. There are some sixteen weekly monthly legal periodicals which contain cases determined in the Federal or State Courts in dif ferent parts of the Union. It is impossible for the busy lawyer to take or read all of these period. icals, yet some of them may, each month, contain a decision of the greatest value to him. The LAW TIMES, by giving a Digest of these Cases, enables the lawyer to obtain promptly single numbers of any of the other periodicals that contain the cases which he requires in his practice; Thus the subscriber to the LAW TIMES AND REPORTS practically takes all the American legal journals and pays for such number or numbers of them as he needs, which are probably inval 1. able to him at the time they are purchased. The TIMES portion contains also

IMPORTANT UNITED STATES STATUTES, CASES, Etc.

In addition to the above a NEW FEATURE of pronounced utility has been added to the LAW TIMES Section. Each issue will contain rescripts of

ALL OPINIONS OF THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES, together with notes of Orders, Motions, Arguments, and other proceedings, the object being to present an outline of all that transpires in the national court of last resort. The matter is ob tained from official sources and is brought down to the latest practicable date prior to the issue of the numbers.

The REPORTS Occupy the remaining forty-eight pages of each number. These are made up of cases from the United States Supreme and Circuit Courts and courts of last resort of the States, pub ished in advance of the regular series By arrangement with Reporters, Judges, Clerks and others, the editor is enabled to give these REPORTS much in advance of regular pub. lication. Special attention is devoted to cases from the Supreme Court touching points before undetermined by that court. These are

TEST CASES,

which decide upon points that are universally applicable, and they are printed as soon as possible after the decisions are delivered. Frequently more than an entire year is gained in this way. Particular attention is devoted to adjudications that relate to the many important subjects that have grown with American civilization, and to cases that relate to new subjects, rather than to new interpretations of mooted points. Among these may be mentioned constructions affecting The Law of Common Carriers. Constructions affecting National Negligence in all its Aspects. Banks. Life Insurance.

Insanity.

Bankruptcy.

Constitutional Law.
Taxation in all its Aspects.
Mandamus, etc., etc., etc.

The AMERICAN LAW TIMES AND Reports is truly NATIONAL, in that it contains only matter that reaches and obtains in every section. There is nothing stale, no State statute law nor anything construing it, nor any State practice or pleading. It is all substantially Common Law, of the same force in Maine as in Texas It is truly PRACTICAL in that it gives only that which is authoritative in its nature, and truly USEFUL in that it gives, to all intents and purposes, everything authoritative in the whole range of American legal periodical literature, besides other matter of standard value.

TERMS: Six dollars per annum, postage free.

The work was begun in 1868. The bound volumes for 1868-1875, being volumes I., II., III., IV., V., and VI., Öld Series, and volumes I. and II., New Series, will be furnished in law sheep at $6.00 per volume.

All remittances should be by draft or P. O. order, payable to H. O. HOUGHTON & Co., Riverside Press, Cambridge, Mass.

All correspondence with the Editor should be addressed to ROWLAND Cox, 229 way, New York.

Broad

HURD AND HOUGHTON, 13 Astor Place, New York.
H. O. HOUGHTON AND COMPANY, Boston.
The Riverside Press, Cambridge.

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