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The Latest, Most Exhaustive and Modern Treatise on this Subject, covering every phase of Municipal Corporation Law.

EQUILLA

MUNICIPAL

CORPORATIONS

By HON. EUGENE MCQUILLIN, of the St. Louis Bar, Judge of the Eighth Judicial Circuit, and Author Municipal Ordinances, etc.

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This great, this monumental treatise is more exhaustive, complete, accurate and better arranged than any other work on the subject. It is the latest and final authority on the Law of Municipal Corporations. Six large volumes. 200,000 citations.

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EDWARD THOMPSON COMPANY,

NORTHPORT, LONG ISLAND, N. Y.

U.S.E. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF UNITED STATES

SUPREME COURT REPORTS

ELEVEN VOLUMES, BUCKRAM BINDING, $66.00 DELIVERED

Incomparably the most exhaustive digest of the United States Reports.
Used as an encyclopedia for quick reference, it is the best.

The logical and analytical treatment adds greatly to its superiority.

The most authoritative encyclopedia of law.

The first work to consult after the State Digest.

A satisfactory substitute for the United States Reports.

No other work can be compared with this encyclopedia as a comprehen-
sive treatment of the practice in the United States Courts.

OF GREAT VALUE TO LAWYERS PRACTICING IN STATE COURTS
It has sometimes been urged by lawyers unacquainted with its scope that, as they have no practice in the Federal
Courts, they have no use for the Encyclopedia of United States Supreme Court Reports. Nothing could be more
fallacious than this argument. There are few points of law that have not at one time or another been considered
by the Supreme Court; and when the Supreme Court has determined a point, what higher authority can be obtained
on that point? Take, for example, the articles in the first volume of U. S. E. There are only two that can be said
to be devoted to practice in the United States Courts-viz., Admiralty, 85 pages, and Ambassadors and Consuls,
15-100 out of 1064 pages. The other 964 pages treat of matters which arise daily in any lawyer's practice, such as
Abatement, Revival and Survival; Accession, Accretion and Reliction; Accident Insurance; Accomplices and Accesso-
ries; Accord and Satisfaction; Accounts and Accounting; Acknowledgments; Alteration of Instruments; Amendments;
Animals; Appeal and Error; etc.

THE MICHIE COMPANY, LAW PUBLISHERS, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA.

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"One of the few masterpieces of our legal literature." Harvard Law Review.

Lawyers in Code States need
POMEROY'S EQUITY

The distinction between the forms of action at law and Suits in Equity is abolished by the reformed procedure, but the principles of law and equity are not thereby so blended as to form a single judicial system. This is a truth often overlooked.

"The distinction between the principles of law and equity which has been established and defined by the judicial wisdom of centuries is inherent and must continue to be recognized in the very nature of things. It has been well said that its abolition is beyond the power of legislative enactment," says an eminent writer.

"A Court of Equity may do great things," said Baron Powel more than two hundred years ago. The lawyer who does great things is firmly grounded in the principles of Equity, and in both common law and code states finds POMEROY'S EQUITY indispensable.

This great work is now in its third edition and is published in six volumes, four of which are devoted to equity jurisprudence and two to equitable remedies.

SIX VOLUMES-Price $36.00, Delivered

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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, JULY, 1913.

[No. 4. Issued Monthly.

University

JUL

9 1913

Library

Notes to appear in Ann. Cas. 1913C

TAXPAYERS' ACTIONS

The financial interest of the taxpayer in the municipality is a subject which in late years has commanded an increasing amount of attention. The men who foot the bills for the consequences of municipal extravagance and wrongdoing are more and more availing themselves of the right to apply to the courts for relief. To forbid a proposed wrongful act or to command the performance of a plain duty, the law gives what is popularly known as the taxpayers' action," a topic which is made the subject of an exhaustive note reviewing many hundred decisions and laying down the rules of law and procedure.

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RECEIVERS' CERTIFICATES

There may or there may not be a large crop of receiverships for railroads and corporations in the near future, as some of the glooms go about predicting, but when the receiver does step in he must have funds to run the machine. These the courts kindly provide by that useful contrivance called receivers' certificates. They are comparatively of recent origin, but have been fruitful of litigation. The law is laid down in some thousand or more decisions, and they are all learnedly discussed in this exhaustive annotation. It is the latest and by all odds the fullest exposition of the subject.

THE AMERICAN AND ENGLISH ANNOTATED CASES gives in each
volume more than two hundred briefs prepared by expert law writers. It has
been well called the greatest time and labor saver ever offered to the pro-
fession. Twenty-seven volumes are now ready. Vol. 28 (Ann. Cas. 1913C)
will be delivered to subscribers about August 1. Price five dollars per volume,
delivered. Valuable sample annotations will be sent on application.

EDWARD THOMPSON COMPANY, Publishers
Northport, Long Island, New York

The Work Colossal-New 1913

Labatt on Master and Servant

IN

IN EIGHT LARGE VOLUMES

N this work Mr. Labatt has produced the most exhaustive treatise of a legal subject ever produced in this or any language. He has worked upon it almost continuously since 1896.

He has had the assistance of a notable corps of editors: Mr. Rich, Mr. Farnham, Mr. Parmele, Mr. Spurr, Mr. Glass, Mr. Oakes, and others.

He has built for himself a monument that will place his name along with Wharton, Pomeroy, Storey, and the handful of other law writers who have left an indelible impression upon our jurisprudence.

The magnitude of the work is not easily conceivable. The original two volumes, covering Employers' Liability, has now been expanded to three; and in order to bring this one branch of the subject down to date it has been necessary to examine upwards of twenty-six thousand digest proposi

tions.

To this phase of the subject have now been added five more volumes treating, in like thorough manner, every branch of the law as it relates to the rights and duties of Master and Servant.

Truly a work of gigantic proportions.

No work could be more timely. No work could be more completely satisfying. No limit has been put on the expense of editorial preparation.

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