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WEST PUBLISHING CO., St. Paul, Minn.

(The Hornbook Series.)

A Handbook of
Criminal Procedure.

By Wm. E. Clark, Jr.,

Author of a "Handbook of Criminal Law,” and a
"Handbook of Contracts.”

Chapter I.

TABLE OF CONTENTS.

Chapter VIII.

JURISDICTION: Covering courts of criminal ju- PLEADING-THE ACCUSATION (Continued): risdiction and venue.

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Covering indictments on statutes.

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I VOL. 658 PACES. $3.75, DELIVERED.

WEST PUBLISHING CO., St. Paul, Minn.

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Handbook of the Law of Sales

By Francis B. Tiffany, A. B., ££. B. (Harvard).

Author of "Tiffany on Death by Wrongful Act."

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1 Volume. 356 Pages. $3.75, Delivered.

WEST PUBLISHING CO., St. Paul, Minn.

a

(Hornbook Series.)

A Handbook of International Law,

By Capt. Edwin F. Glenn, Acting Judge Advocate,

INTRODUCTION.

TABLE OF CONTENTS.

Army.

Chapter XIII.

Covering the definition, source, and nature of In- EFFECTS OF WAR-AS TO PROPERTY: ternational Law.

Chapter I.

PERSONS IN INTERNATIONAL LAW: Covering states, their loss of identity, various unions of states, de facto states, belligerency and recognition thereof, and equality of states.

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TREATIES: Covering the subject generally.
Chapter X.

AMICABLE SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES:
Covering mediation, arbitration, retorsion, re-
prisals, embargo, pacific blockade, etc.

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Covering contributions, requisitions, foraging,
booty, ransom, and other questions in regard
to property.

POSTLIMINIUM: The right and its limitations
Chapter XIV.
defined and explained.

Chapter XV.

MILITARY OCCUPATION: Covering the definition, extent, and effect of occupation, and the duties of an occupant.

Chapter XVI.

MEANS OF CARRYING ON HOSTILITIES: Covering the instruments and means of war, spies, etc.

Chapter XVII.

ENEMY CHARACTER: Covering enemies gen-
erally, domicile, houses of trade, property and
transfer thereof, etc.

NON-HOSTILE RELATIONS: Covering com-
Chapter XVIII.
mercia belli, flags of truce, passports, safe-con-
ducts, truces or armistices, carteis, etc.

Chapter XIX.

TERMINATION OF WAR: Covering the methods of termination, uti possidetis, treaties of peace, conquest, etc.

Chapter XX.

OF NEUTRALITY IN GENERAL: Neutrality defined and explained.

Chapter XXI.

THE LAW OF NEUTRALITY BETWEEN BEL-
LIGERENT AND NEUTRAL STATES: Cov
ering the rights, duties, and liabilities of neutral
states.

Chapter XXII.
CONTRABAND: Covering the subject generally.
Chapter XXIII.
BLOCKADE: Covering the subject generally.

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Giving in full, as in no other single work, the Instructions for the Government of Armies of the United States in the Field (Lieber); Papers Carried, or that Ought to be Carried, by Vessels in Evidence of their Nationality; The Declaration of Paris; The Declaration of St. Petersburg; The Geneva Convention for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Sick and Wounded of Armies in the Field; The Laws of War on Land, (Recommended for Adoption by the Institute of International Law at Oxford, Sept. 9, 1880); and The Brussels Conference.

1 VOLUME. 500 PAGES. $3.75, DELIVERED.

WEST PUBLISHING CO., ST. PAUL, MINN.

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Endorsed by the Professors.

Morton on Bills and Notes.

Students in the law of negotiable paper are recommended to use this volume in connection with their text-books as a means of review. The two hundred and seven general propositions or summaries of the law, in heavy-faced type, scattered through the volume, are far preferable for this purpose to any of the so-called abridgements or quiz books.-Prof. AUSTIN ABBOTT, on the bulletin board of the N. Y. University Law School.

Clark on Criminal Law.

I have used Clark's Criminal Law for class work during the past year, and find it very well adapted for the purpose. For an elementary book it is sufficiently extensive, its statements are clear, and its mode of arrangement and printing render it easy to use both by the pupil and the instructor. My class have seemed much pleased with the book, and their success in its study has been very gratifying to me, and constitutes one of the best recommendations which the work of the author and publisher could receive.-Prof. WILLIAM C. ROBINSON, Law Dept., Yale University.

Clark on Contracts.

It is the most admirably arranged work on Contracts that has yet appeared. It will be of great service in the lecture room.-Prof. W. P. WILLEY, West Virginia University.

Shipman on Common Law Pleading.

Mr. Shipman's treatment and head-note arrangement meet my idea exactly.Prof. E. F. JOHNSON, University of Michigan Law Dept.

Black on Constitutional Law.

A very hasty examination indicates that the book covers the ground in such a way as to be of value to students, and I shall recommend it among others to my class.-Prof. EMLIN MCCLAIN, Iowa State University.

Fetter on Equity.

I have examined Fetter on Equity, and can state unreservedly that it more than realizes my expectations. It is a work of real merit. It sets forth the fundamental principles of Equity Jurisprudence in a manner so logical in arrangement, perspicuous in statement and accurate in treatment as to deserve special recognition and appreciative comment -Prof. Wм. HOYNES, University of Notre Dame.

Clark on Criminal Procedure.

I cordially and earnestly commend the work as one of unquestionable excellence and as a book which should not only be in the hands of every student, but also at the elbow of every practitioner.-C. O. BISHOP, Lecturer on Criminal Law, St. Louis Law School.

Tiffany on Sales.

I have just completed an examination of "Tiffany on Sales" and find it to be an excellent and useful book well adapted to the use of students wherever a textbook forms the basis of instruction. The statements of law are made with unusual clearness and accuracy.-BLEWETT LEE, Prof. of Law, Northwestern University.

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