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THE ONLY BOOK EXCLUSIVELY DEVOTED TO AN IMPORTANT SUBJECT.

The Equitable Remedies of Creditors.

By JOHN W. SMITH, LL. D.

T

HIS work embraces "Creditors' Bills," bills in the nature of creditors' bills, supplementary proceedings, proceedings in aid of execution, and all equitable proceedings of a kindred nature where the equitable rights of creditors are affected by the fraudulent acts of debtors, by means of fraudulent conveyances of real estate, fraudulent transfers and concealment of personal property, fraudulent mortgages, fraudulent judgments and decrees, fraudulent assignments, fraudulent purchases, fraudulent trusts, fraudulent acts and misconduct of corporate officers, equitable remedies against insolvent corporations, insolvent estates, spendthri:t trusts, etc.

CHAP. I-General Scope of Equitable Rem-|CHAP. VIII-Priority among Creditors. edies.

CHAP. II-Jurisdiction.
CHAP. III-Parties to Suit.

CHAP. IV-Pleading and Practice.

CHAP. V-Judgment, Execution and Return.
CHAP. VI-Supplementary Proceedings.
CHAP. VII-Lien of Creditors' Bills.

CHAP. IX-Preferences.
CHAP. X-Trust Property.

CHAP. XI-Fraudulent Sales of Personalty.
CHAP. XII-Estates.
CHAP. XIII-Injunction.
CHAP. XIV-Receivership.
CHAP. XV-Bankruptcy.

The chapters on Receivership and Bankruptcy are especially valuable and include all reported cases down to September 1, 1899.

ONE VOLUME, FULL LAW SHEEP, $5 NET.

CALLAGHAN & COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILL.

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WILL GO ON YOUR BOND. Transacts a General Trust and Guaranty Business.

J. M. JACKSON, Jr., President.

J. B. FINLEY, Secretary and Treasurer.

V. B. ARCHER, General Counsel.

Vice-Presidents.

S. D. CAMDEN, F. S. LANDSTREET, HARRISON B. SMITH.

Directors.

J. M. Jackson, Jr., C. H. Shattuck, S. D. Camden, John T. McGraw, I. O. Reynolds, T. Moore, Jackson, David E. Johnston, Warren Miller, F. S. Landstreet, George A. Burt, Geo. F. Miller, W. P. Hubbard, Harrison B. Smith, I. C. White, J. B. Finley.

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Become sole surety on bonds of all kinds.

Make loans on collateral and real estate.

Collect incomes, rents, interests and dividends.

Furnish equipment for railways under "Car Trust" system.

Manage sinking funds for corporations and municipalities.

Manage estates, real and personal, for you or your children.

Act as trustee under mortgages, assignments and deeds of trust.

We are prepared to execute Court Bonds promptly at every county seat in the State. Apply to Local Agents.

HOME OFFICE,

PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

MARCH, 1900.

Price 100.

$1.00 a Year in Advance

THE

BAR.

"The genius and character of our institutions are peaceful, and the power to declare war was not conferred upon Congress for the purposes of aggression and aggrandizement."

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CHIEF JUSTICE Taney.

"America has turned the Anglo-Saxon energy to peaceful pursuits, which demand a higher order of courage than conquest by war. Our people advance with fearless intelligence, conquering the forces of nature and harnessing them for the service of mankind. No nation is equal in resistless power to America. Its ideas of peace and human freedom incessantly expand and conquer, not by subjugating people, but by lifting them to the higher plane of true Christian civilization which, by ennoblingthe individual man, builds nations secure in the manhood of their people."

PUBLISHED BY THE WEST VIRGINIA BAR ASSOCIATION Printed at Morgantown, West Virginia.

Text-Books

of the

practical

sort.

Published by
the

West

Publishing

Co.,

St. Paul,
Minn.

There are good text-books,

And there are poor text-books. The prov-
ince of a text-book, properly understood,
is to present the established principles of
the law in an orderly form, so as to clas-
sify the rules and clarify the whole topic.
A text-book must always be supplement-
ed by a study of the digests, in order to
get the present situation. A text-book
inevitably begins to get out of date, sé
far as relates to authorities ofted, from
the day of publication. A good text book,
therefore, keeps closely to the rules of
law, and does not attempt what only
digest can do.

We subject all text-book manuscripts
to severe tests and a critical examination
before accepting them for publication.
Unless they are good, we don't want them
at all.

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Barrows on Negligence

Send for sample pages of the Century Digest.

is the latest volume in the Hornbook Series. It covers the subject completely, meeting the everyday needs of the practitioner. Emphasis is laid on doctrine of Contributory Negligence, and the various relations of Carriers, Master and Servant, etc. $3.75 net, delivered. WEST PUBLISHING CO., ST. PAUL, MINN.

C3500

THE WEST VIRGINIA BAR.

VOL. VII.

MORGANTOWN W. VA., MARCH, 1900.

Jhe West Virginia Bar C.

PUBLISHED MONTHLY BY THE

West Virginia State Bar Association

Under the editorial charge of the Executive Council.
ADVERTISING RATES:

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No. 3

W. DILLON and E. L. Nuckolls, of Fayetteville, announce that they are compiling a "West Virginia Pocket Code."

WE

WE transfer to our columns from the New $5.00 York Outlook, a most instructive and sug3.00 2.00 gestive article entitled "The Cohesive Elements of 1.25 British Imperalism," which will repay all the read1.00 ers of THE BAR for a careful reading, although it occupies more space than we are accustomed to

25 per cent. discount from above rates for six months and 33 per cent. for one year.

Address all communications to
THE WEST VIRGINIA BAR,
Morgantown, W. Va.

Entered at the Post Office at Morgantown, as second-class mail

matter.

An Open Forum.

give a single article.

WR

WE are under obligations to the following accommodating Circuit Clerks for recent favors: T. J. Hardman, of Gilmer county; S. E. Bradley, of Boone county; J. G. St. Clair, of This journal is intended to furnish an open forum Taylor county; R. W. McWilliams, of Cabell counto every lawyer for the discussion of any policy or ty; B. C. Conrad, of Webster county; J. W. Watproposition of interest to the Profession. It in-son, of Preston county; R. E. Talbott, of Barbour vites a free interchange of views upon all such top-county; D. P. Hendrickson, of Grant county; J. H. ics whether they agree with the views of THE BAR Lorentz, of Barbour county; W. K. Pritt, of Tuckor not. er county; W. L. Hoffman, of Wirt county: and to Harry Shaw, attorney, of the Marion county bar.

THE BAR goes to every Court House in the state and is read by, probably, three-fourths of the law. yers of the State, and thus furnishes not only a ready medium of communication between members of the Profession, but of unification of the Profession on all matters of common concern, which is its prime mission.

Every clerk of a circuit court is the authorized

agent of THE BAR in his county, and has the subscription bills in his possession, and will receive and receipt for all money due on that account, or for new subscriptions, and his receipt will always be a good acquittance for money due THE BAR.

THE BAR is furnished at the nominal rate of $1 a year, which is less than the cost of publication, and we would like to have the name of every lawyer in the State on our subscription list.

A

WRITER suggests that the peace societies are wasting their time in their methods to

avert war. The way to stop war is to destroy the mule. We could not have vanquished Spain without the mule, and the English would be without hope in South Africa without the co-operation of this insubordinate hybrid. The poets love to sing of lightning chargers, and the horse which smells the battle from afar, but no canticle of mules is written. Nevertheless the Agricultural department certifies in a prosy way that the average value of horses in 1899 was $9 less than the mule.

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