Page:Legal Bibliography, Numbers 1 to 12, 1881 to 1890.djvu/53

 SOULE'S LEGAL BIBLIOGRAPHY. 3 PUBLICATIONS OF CHARLES C. SOULE, LAW BOOKSELLER, 26 PEMBERTON SQUARE, BOSTON, MASS. ABBOTT'S ADDISOX OX CONTRACTS. 3 vols. 512.00 net. This work is a reprint, in full, of the eighth English edition (published in 1883), which contains about forty per cent more matter than previous editions ; and is further enlarged by copious American Notes by Benjamin Vaughan Abbott. The original work has an unexcelled reputation. It covers a vast field. It cites a great number of EngUsh and Ant^rican cases. This edition has all the indexes and tables of cases which former editions lack. The American Notes of Mr-. Abbott cover admirably points on which our law differs from the EngUsh, or those which Addison fails to cover, such as Contracts by Telegraph. In the words of the " Law Times," " It is thoroughlif practical, and is by far the best book on the Law of Contracts." BAR'S IXTERXATIONAL LAW, PRIVATE AXD CRIMINAL. Transliiteil into English by Gillespie. 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Cloth, §1.50 nd; half calf, .83.00 In this volume Mr. Irving Browne (editor of the "Albany Law Journal") has collected a series of readable extracts from the best authors, showing how lawyers have been regarded in standard Uterature. CHITTY'S EQUITY DIGEST. New Edition. Vol. II. now ready. Sheep or half calf, 88.00 net. There has been no digest of the English Equity Reports since the third edition of Chitty in 1853, so that this Fourth Edition, rearranged and greatly enlarged, is espe- ciaUy v/elcome. Fisher's Digest (or Jacob's Fisher's Digest) does not cover the Equity Cases, and whoever owns it should therefore have Chitty also. There wUl be six volumes, issued at short intervals. COHEX'S ADMIRALTY LAW. S5.00 ne<. A new discussion of Admiralty Law, Jurisdiction, and Practice, by Hon. M. M. Cohen, of New Orleans. EWELL'S ESSEXTIALS OF THE LAW, 2 vols. Leatherette, 84.00 net ; sheep, or half law calf, 85.00 net. Vol. I. Blackstone's Commentaries. Sold separately, in leatherette, for S2..30; in law slieep, or half law calf, for 83.00, both nel. Professor EweU, by excluding matter undoubtedly obsolete, and placing in smaller type the comparatively unimportant passages, has compressed the whole of Black- stone into this one pocket volume. Different kinds of type have been used to direct the student and aid the memory. The edition is so far superior to any previous one that it has been adopted in several law schools, and is coming into general use among students and lawyers. Vol. 2. Pleading — Contracts — Eqnity. Sold separately, in leath- erette, for 82.00 ; in law sheep, or half law calf, for 82.50 net. In this volume, Professor EweU has given the substance of Stephen on Pleading, .Smith on Contracts, and Adams on Equity, in the form and type best suited for students, either for introduction or review. GRAYS RESTRAIXTS OX ALIEXATIOX. Cloth, §2.50 net: sheep, §3.00 net. Prof. John C. 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This work is intended to help a judge, lawyer, or student in using law books, in hunting up authorities, and in tracing out blind citations. It comprises the following divisions. — American Reports, State and Federal, with notes in regard to their editions and peculiarities. 64 pages. English Reports, from the earliest times, with condensed notes as to editions, reprints, &c. 64 pages. Irish, Scotch, and British Colonial Reports, with notes. 36 pages. Index of Authors (Text-Books and Reports). 136 pages. Index of Subjects (Te.xt-Books, English and American). 44 pages. Alphabetical Key to Abbreviations (Reports and Text-Books to- gether, old or new, American or EngUsh), in one Alphabetical List. 156 pages. " Invaluable " and " Indispensable " it is caUed by those who have bought and used it. Prof Theodore W. Dwight writes, " I have seen no book for years which I deem more valuable to the legal profession." A practical testimony to its value lies in the fact that the Supreme Courts of Rhode Island, Ohio, Kentucky, and Missouri have ordered one copy for the table of each judge. MEWS' COMMOX-LAW DIGEST. 7 vols. Half calf, §56.00 net. This latest digest of EngUsh Common-Law Cases (founded on Fisher's Digest, and covering the decisions down to 1884) is by far the best EngUsh digest ever published. It is superior to Harrison, Fisher, and Jacob's Fisher, because it has — 1. A new and better division into topics and sub-topics 2. A more logical arrangement of cases under each topic. 3. A concise statement of facts, and a clear synopsis of the decision in each case. 4. A much more complete system of cross-references. 5. One alphabetical arrangement down to 1884. This digest is so fuU, that owning it is almost equal to having on one's shelves a complete collection of the EnijUsh Common Laur Reports. A digest is chiefly useful in saving labor and time m hunting up cases and exam- ining the law. The later and better a digest is the more labor it saves ; so that those lawyers who believe in having the best books in theU libraries are buying Mews' Digest, even where they already own previous editions. MEWS' DIGEST OF CRI3UXAL CASES. Half calf, 85.00 net. A Digest of aU the EngUsh Criminal Cases to 1884. SCHOULER ON EXECUTORS AXD ADMINISTRATORS. Sb.Wnet. This is the only American treatise on a topic which comes into the every-day practice of aU lawyers. It is recent, accurate, and thorough, and has already gained a wide and soUd reputation. It presents, historicaUy and logicaUy, the whole EngUsh and American law of Executors and Administrators, with a due regard for the modern practical needs of such fiduciaries and their legal advisers, separating the main subject from those more abstruse topics which pertain to "Wills and Testamentary Trusts. It gives to the exceUent points of our American probate practice the prominence they justly desei-ve, but do not get in English treatises. The author is weU known from his previous excellent treatises on Bailments and on Personal Property. SHELDOX OX SUBROGATIOX. 83.50 net. The only recent work on an intricate subject. SHIRLEY'S LEADIXG CASES. Cloth, S2.50 nel : sheep, 83.00 net. This is a Second Edition of Leading Cases Made Easy, in which Mr. Shirley founded a new school of legal literature, by combining humor and brevity in his condensation of cases. SOULE'S SYXOXYMES. Cloth, 82.00 ; half morocco, -82.50., By far the best book of synonymes for ready and constant use. STIMSOVS AMERICAN STATUTE LAW. (In press.) WALLACE'S REPORTERS. Fourth Edition, greatly enlarged. §5.50 net. The veteran reporter of the U. S. Supreme Court Reports, in this valuable and entertaining work (now come to a fourth edition), has sketched the older English reports and reporters. In a happy mixture of bibUography, biography, history, gossip, and shrewd criticism, he has portrayed the legal Uterature to which much of our law is traced back. This edition was prepared for the press by the author and F. F. Heard. WILLIAMS' TARIFF LAWS OF THE UNITED STATES. Cloth, 81.50 net. WOOD OX THE LIMITATION OF ACTIONS. 8fi 50 n^f. This recent treatise, by a well-known legal author of high reputation, covers, in one large volume (of nearly one thousand closely printed pages), the princip^s of statutory limitations, citing all the cases which are authoritative and involve difficult ^^^ThTcases are so fnUy (though terselv) abstracted, that the reader comprehends at once their exact and entire application, and is saved much waste of time m hunting up citations in the reports. This is a merit which wiU be appreciated by the over- worked lawyer. . ., .._ , c.. ■The Appendix gives in full the Statutes of Limitations of the different States, as now in force. WOOD ON RAILWAY LAW. 3 vols. §15.00 net. There are so many legal questions involved under this title, and it is so difficult to discuss them adequately, or to present the cases clearly enough for a lawyer prac- tising at a distance from large Ubraries, in a small compass, that this treatise, intended to occupy only two volumes, has grown in the author's hands intc three, which embody about thirty thousand citations, and exhaust the whole subject, from the point of view both of the railroads and of those who litigate against them. Whoever has used any of Mr. Wood's law books must have noted their character- istics of thoroughness, clearness, and practical usefulness, — m all of which this book No lawyer who ever has or hopes to get a case either for or against a railroad can afford to do without Wood on RaUroads, even if he has other works on the subject already on his shelves.