_^ 119, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON, W.C. 11 



DECREES.— Seton.— ric^e " Equity." 



DIARY.— Lawyer's Companion (The), Did^y, and Law 

 Directory for 1880.— For the use of the Legal Profession 

 Public Companies, Justices, Merchants, Estate Agents, Auctioneers' 

 &c., &c. Edited by JOHN THOMPSON, of the Inner Temple' 

 Esq., Barrister-at-Law; and contains a Digest of Kecent Cases on 

 Costs ; Monthly Diary of County, Local Government, and Parish 

 Business; Oaths in Supreme Court; Summary of Legislation of 

 1878; Alphabetical Index to the Practical Statutes; a Copious 

 Table of Stamp Duties; Legal Time, Interest, Discount, Income 

 Wages and other Tables; Probf.te, Legacy and Succession Duties ; 

 and a variety of matters of practical utility. Published Annually' 

 Thirty-fom-th Issue. ( ,Vojy ready') 



The work also contains the most complete List published of Town and 



Country Solicitors, with date of admission and appointments, and is issued 



in the following forms, octavo size, strongly bound in cloth : s. d. 



1. Two days on a page, plain 5 



2. The above, interleaved for Attendances . . .' 7 



3. Two days on a page, ruled, with or without money col'umn.s 5 6 



4. The above, interleaved for ATTEND^iNCES . . . .80 



5. Whole page for each day, plain ! 7 6 



6. The above, interleaved for Attendances . . ! 9 6 



7. Whole page for each day, ruled, with or without money 



columns ........ 86 



8. The above, interleaved for Attendances . . ! 10 6 



9. Three days on a page, ruled blue lines, \vithout money 



columns . . 5 



The Diarij contains memoranda of Legal Business throughout the Year. 



" An excellent work." — Tlie Times. 



" A publication which has long ago secured to itself the favour of the profession and 

 which, as heretofore, justifies by its contents the title assumed by it "—Laio Jouiilal 

 _ " Contains all the information whicli could be looked lor in such a work and eives it 

 in a Eiost convenient forni and very completely. We may unhesitatingly recommend the 

 wort to our readers. '—Solicitors Journal. 



•' The ' Lawyer's Companion and Diary ' is a book that ought to be in the possession of 

 every lawyer, and of every man of business." ci,oiuu ui 



"The' Lawyer's Corapauion' is, indeed, what it is called, for it combines everything 

 required for reference m the lawyer s oSi(ie."—Law Times. ^ 



" It is a book without which no lawyer's library or office can be complete "—Iru'h 

 LoM Times. ' 



"This work has attained to a completeness which is beyond uU ivMsc."—Morm7ig 



DICTIONARY.— Wharton's Law Lexicon.— A Dictionary of 



Jurisprudence, explaining the Teehnical Words and Phrases employed 



in the several Departments of English Law ; including the various 



Legal Terms u.sed in Commercial Transactions. Together with an 



Explanatory as well as Literal Translation of the Latin Maxima 



contained in the Writings of the Ancient and Modern Commentators, 



Sixth Edition. Enlarged and revised in accordance with the 



Judicature Acts, by J. SHIEESS WILL, of the Middle Temple 



Esq. , Barrister-at-Law. Super royal 8vo. 1876. 2/. 2s'. 



"As a work of reference for (he library, the handsome and elaborate edition of 



• \\ harton s law Lexicon ' which Mr. Shiress Will has producKd, must supersede all Jurmer 



issues ot that well-known work."— iaic Magazine, and Review. 



"No law library is complete without a "law dictionary or law lexicon. To the practi- 

 tioner It IS always useful to have at hand a book where, in a small compass he can find 

 an explanation of terns of intrequenf occurrence, or obtain a reference to statutes on 

 most subjects, or to books wherein particular subjects are treated of at full leneth To the 

 student it is almost indispensable."— iaw Timu. 



*»* All Standard Law Works are Jeep I in Stock, in law calf and other bindings. 



A i 



