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The Only Completely Annotated Reports Published

Northeastern Reporter. Established 1885. Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois

Northwestern Reporter. Established 1879. Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota Pacific Reporter. Established 1883. California, Oregon, Kansas, Colorado, Nevada, Montana, Wyoming, Washington, Idaho, Arizona, Utah, New Mexico, and Oklahoma

Atlantic Reporter. Established 1885. Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Maryland

Southwestern Reporter. Established 1886. Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, Missouri, and Texas

Southeastern Reporter. Established 1887. Virginia, West Vir ginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia

Southern Reporter. Established 1887. Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana

Federal Reporter. Established 1880. All the U. S. Circuit Courts of Appeals, and the Circuit and District Courts Supreme Court Reporter. Established 1882. The Supreme

Court of the United States

New York Supplement. All the decisions of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court (all departments); also decisions of the Trial and Special Terms, Surrogates' Courts, City Court of New York, County Courts, etc.

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West Publishing Co., St. Paul, Minn.

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"I am pleased to state that your work in
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C7838-9

"I have never yet discovered any error or

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The

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of the decisions upon any given point is to be found in the American Digest System

Text-books, notes, encyclopedias show the law as it appears to the editor or author

The digests collect ALL the decisions, arrange them systematically, and lay them before you in form for your use

That's why the American Digest System is the reliance of the Bench as well as the Bar

West Publishing Co.

St. Paul, Minn.

C7838a-10

(229)

Units which cover the law of the entire country

Century Digest 1658-1896

From the earliest times to the time of the Decennial Digest

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25 volumes, including Table of American Cases 1658-1906 $150 delivered

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Hon. Horace E. Deemer, of the Supreme Court of Iowa, 'says:

"Brief making is an art in which there are few masters. I have been amazed at the helplessness of law students, and even of lawyers when they go into a library to search for authorities. A good lawyer is one who knows where to look for the law; and after he has found it knows what to do with it. Law schools should teach their students how to do these things."

Hon. John H. Stiness, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Rhode Island, says:

"One who does not know where and how to find the law will not know the law. One who cannot state his points in a clear and orderly way will fail to make an impression and to give the aid he desires. Brief making, therefore, is a most essential and practical accomplishment for a lawyer. Special instruction in brief making is both desirable and important."

The need of a text-book serving as a guide to students and young lawyers in the investigation of authorities, showing the proper way of using the decisions and statutes, explaining the purpose, relative value, and utility of the different classes of law books, the best way to search out what may be wanted from the bewildering mass of legal publications, and how to use the matter at hand properly and effectively in preparing brief or argument, has been apparent for years.

By the co-operation of a number of the best writers that could be secured, each experienced in his particular branch of the work, it became possible to publish a book of this kind that would be of practical use for law students and law school instruction.

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