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VOL. XVII.]

*

Law Notes

Entered at the Post-office at Northport, N. Y., as second-class matter. Copyright, 1913, by Edward Thompson Co.

Subscription $1.00 per year.

NORTHPORT, NEW YORK, OCTOBER, 1913.

New!

New!

[No. 7. Issued Monthly.

New!

The very latest, most practical and exhaustive treatise in the English Language on the Law of Evidence in Civil Cases.

JONES

Commentaries on Evidence

5 Vols.

1913 Over 1200 pages each

The "Blue-Book" of Evidence

Printed on Holland Bible Paper of a thin and very high grade, especially imported for this great work. The use of this delightful paper reduces the Bulk of the Books from almost 4 inches in thickness per volume to 1 inches per volume, bringing the entire set of 5 volumes within a space of 6 inches instead of 20 inches necessary to accommodate the ordinary book paper.

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EDWARD THOMPSON COMPANY

NORTHPORT, LONG ISLAND, N. Y.

A NEW EDITION OF A LEGAL MASTERPIECE

THOMPSON ON TRIALS

(CIVIL AND CRIMINAL)

INCLUDING INSTRUCTIONS TO JURIES

By Judge SEYMOUR D. THOMPSON

Rewritten, rearranged and brought up to date. An exhaustive treatise on the Law of Trials in all the successive steps from impaneling the jury until the case is finally determined on appeal,

with full precedents of Instructions to Juries.

By MARION C. EARLY

A

MONG the thousands of American lawyers who have used it constantly the work is recognized as the one great final authority on the Law of Trials. When the book is cited, the mere mention of the name commands the attention of the court, and the standing of the authority is not questioned; it is instantly recognized.

Every section and every line has been gone over carefully with the result that numberless changes and additions have been made and new matter added, making the text matter almost double that contained in the first edition.

The work abounds in illustrative matter. In almost every step of the discussion the author has explained the rules by illustrations drawn from the cases where a rule was applied and where refused. Every subject in the Law of Trials is taken up in its logical order, and it is there completely treated in one place so that the law is easily found.

In the preparation of the new edition nearly 30,000 late and important cases have been examined and are cited.

The subject of Instructions to Juries has received special consideration. To this subject an entire new volume has been devoted which contains about 4,000 Approved Forms including those forms relating to the very latest developments of the law, namely automobile accidents, employer's liability acts and many subjects which attract particular attention at the present time, making it the most accurate and exhaustive collection of Forms of Instructions ever published.

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VOL. XVII.]

Entered at the Post-office at Northport, N. Y., as second-class matter. Copyright, 1913, by Edward Thompson Co.

Subscription $1.00 per year.

NORTHPORT, NEW YORK, OCTOBER, 1913.

[No. 7.

Issued Monthly.

New!

New!

New!

The very latest, most practical and exhaustive treatise in the English Language on the Law of Evidence in Civil Cases.

JONES

Commentaries on Evidence

5 Vols.

1913 Over 1200

Over 1200 pages each

The "Blue-Book" of Evidence

Printed on Holland Bible Paper of a thin and very high grade, especially imported for this great work. The use of this delightful paper reduces the Bulk of the Books from almost 4 inches in thickness per volume to 1 inches per volume, bringing the entire set of 5 volumes within a space of 6 inches instead of 20 inches necessary to accommodate the ordinary book paper.

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EDWARD THOMPSON COMPANY

NORTHPORT, LONG ISLAND, N. Y.

A Necessary Equipment

E

VERY lawyer whose practice ranges wide enough to be called general and active should have on his office shelves the statutes of the United States. The federal government has for years been expanding its activities, and the importance of its legislation cannot be overestimated.

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Above all, these statutes should be annotated by setting forth what the courts have ruled and said concerning them, because it is impossible to understand a statute unless you know what the courts have said concerning it. These notes should refer to every case which construes an act of Congress.

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EDWARD THOMPSON COMPANY, Publishers

NORTHPORT, LONG ISLAND, NEW YORK

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