~ QUARTERLY ADVERTISER. 
; Works roel mantiey ie 
‘COMMENTARIES ON THE CONFLICT OF LAWS, da Domestic, 
regard to MARRIAGES, DIVORCES, WILLS, SUCCESSIONS, and JUDG- 
MENTS. By Joserx Srory, L. L. D., Dane Professor of Law in Harvard 
University. P r 
Seconp Eprrion. Revised, corrected, and greatly enlarged. pp. 1104. 
The following notice of this edition of the ig work, from an eminent jurist, 
has been received by the publishers 
is i Serer to call the attention of the wis to ‘this remarkable work,’ as 
it is styled by the French reviewers, who justly predicted that it —_ excite the most 
lively saat A in both hemi spheres. he learned author is the first in our day who has 
in i sense, employed hi self, oft n Sisceamsienet Law ; producing a 
work, styled, r. Justice Fergusson, of S , ‘the most comp can- 
language, relating to that department of the law.’ Its republication in Engla 
n the Continent, in se guages, is t st testimonial of the sense entertain- 
ed of its merits, by foreign jurists; as the rapid sale of the first edition is of its estima- 
tion by the pprofeesion at h is second edition, the learned author has added 
early as much matter as was con in the first; availing himself, with felicitous 
sires and Sitrinent, of all the sources of International Jurisprudence which the dis- 
cussions, occasioned by the appearance of his work, have subsequently discovered ; and 
leaving nothing to be desired on this subject, either by the practitioner or the statesman. 
separate in its laws and jurisdiction, 
it, particularly those relating to contracts, Ractice, administrations, an s of 
perience e and succession, are 0 aily nase and 39 merican ewyer ought to 
ing.’ 
—_— 
REPORTS OF CASES ARGUED AND DETERMINED IN THE CIRCUIT 
COURT OF THE UNITED STATES, FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT. By 
Cuartes Sumner, Esq. Vol. 3. Embracing the Decisions of Mr. Justice 
Story, from October Term 1837 to October Term 18 
- aid S LIFE. By James ‘Possius Lowe. 1 vol. 16mo. j 
<W. eat eens) in calling 793 ge a of our readers to et is volume of poems. 
It pla ie ete of re oetical power and of a highly cultivated power of composi- 
tion. It isa real pellet in the midst of "the forced ata ackney specimens of what is 
t wh 
inspiration is nature and truth. One reading does not satisfy ; we are delighted by another 
and another perusal, and cannot but take “the mood of the author and go hand in hand 
with him,””—Boston Daily Advertiser. 
LETTERS OF MRS. ADAMS, THE WIFE OF JOHN ADAMS, WITH 
AN INTRODUCTORY MEMOIR. By her grandson, Caartes Francis 
Apams. 2 vols. 16mo. 2d edition. 
« We cannot undertake to indicate the most attractive portions of what is throughout 
highly ente Poms or instructive, or both. Now great people and events of the day are 
brou ught before the view, and now modes of dress and ceremony are sketched with a 
ae rhe of which only the female hand is capable. 
North American Review — October 1840. 
be fr ll ~ snteirend wed <taapiresom and so in fact it will a found to be by every reader,” 
New York Review ri January 141. 
in Regard to CONTRACTS, RIGHTS, and REMED DIES, nd especially in || 
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