Page:A bibliography of the state of Maine from the earliest period to 1891 - Volume 1.djvu/59

Rh the style of President Appleton as chaste, luminous and polished, occasionally exhibiting passages of striking beauty and force."

"The interesting and able memoir of Prof. Packard adds much to the value of the publication." No. Am. Rev. 45: 231.

Review of his life and writings. 1837. See Stone, Thomas T.

Notice of his life and writings. 1837. See Tappan, Benjamin.

Memoir of President Appleton. Am. Q. Reg. 11: 1. (1838.) (Port.) [347

Sermons of. Clir. Mo. Spec. 5: 432. (1838.) [348

Biographical Notice of. 1842. See Bradford, Alden.

Moral and Intellectual Culture. (1842.) See New Hampshire Book.

Sketch of. N. E. Reg. 1: 329. (1847.) [349

Commemorative Notice of. 1837. See Sprague, William, B.

Appleton, John, LL. D. 1804–91. Lawyer, and chief justice Supreme Court, Bangor.

Usury Laws. Am. Jur. 6: 282. (1831.) [350

Reports of cases determined in the Supreme Judicial Court of the State of Maine. By John Appleton.

Maine Reports. Volume XIX. Hallowell: Glazier, Masters and Smith. 1842. 8vo. pp. 499, (1.) [351

Maine Reports. Volume XX. Hallowell: Glazier, Masters and Smith. 1843. 8vo. pp. viii, (5), 10–511, (1.) [352

From pp. 1 to 256, by John Appleton, Volume VI. From pp, 257 to 511, by John Shepley, Volume VII.

The same. Second edition. Portland: Dresser, McLellan and Co. 1878.

Law of Evidence. Mass. Quar. Rev. 2: 39. (1848.) [353

Review of Greenleaf's Law of Evidence.

Judicial Oaths. Mass. Quar. Rev. 3: 161. (1850.) [354

Review of " Bentham on Oaths," and "The Oath," by D. X. Junkin.

The Rules of Evidence Stated and Discussed. By John Appleton, justice of the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine. Philadelphia: T. and W. Johnson & Co., law booksellers and publishers, 525 Chestnut Street. 1860. 8vo. pp. 284. [355

Reviewed by George S. Hillard, No. Am. Rev. 92: 515. (1861.) The most remarkable thing about Chief Justice Appleton is his early adoption of the views of Jeremy Bentham and that school in regard to legal reform. He entered into this discussion with the greatest enthusiasm half a century ago, and has never ceased with tongue and pen to advocate these doctrines. When he began this labor, it required no small courage to meet the scorn, contempt and even abuse of the legal profession. Such radical doctrines the lawyers all thought were worthy of a mad-house, and they were denounced with vigor and not seldom with venom. Now all is changed. In every state of the Union, as well as in England, ancient and absurd rules of evidence have been altered, and common sense has full sway in the most important branch of jurisprudence. To no man living is the credit due more than to John Appleton. Every Other Sat., Jan. 1884.