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[Washington: Government printing office, 1906.] 399, (1) pp. 4°. (59th Cong., 1st sess. H. R. 14971.)

Introduced in the House, by Mr. Moon of Pennsylvania, Feb. 15, 1906.

United States. Laws, statutes, etc. Title xvI. The judiciary. [Washington: Government printing office, 1907.] 158-342 PP. 4°.

Caption title.

Revised by the Commission to revise and codify the laws, 1897-1906, printed in connection with the work of the Joint committee on the revision of the laws.

Supreme Court. Breakfast to the justices of the Supreme court of the United States, in the American academy of music, Sept. 15, 1887, by the bar of Philadelphia. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott co., 1888. 61 pp. Portrait. 12°. (Law academy of Philadelphia.)

Same.

(In Carson, Hampton L. History of the celebration of the one hundredth anniversary of the promulgation of the Constitution of the United States, vol. 2, pp. 303–334. Philadelphia, 1889. 4°.)

Proceedings of the bench and bar of the Supreme court of the United States; in memoriam. Matthew H. Carpenter.

Washington: J. L. Pearson, printer, 1881. 29 pp. 8°.

Rules of the Supreme court of the United States, adopted January 7, 1884, and the rules of practice for the Circuit and District courts of the United States in equity and admiralty cases and orders in reference to appeals from Court of claims.

Washington: Government printing office, 1907. 101 pp. 8°.
Other editions in the Library of Congress.

Van Tyne, Claude Halstead, and Waldo Gifford Leland. Guide to the archives of the government of the United States in Washington. 2d ed. rev. and enl. by W. G. Leland. [Washington]: Carnegie institution of Washington, 1907. xiii, 327 pp. 4°. (On verso of t.-p.: Carnegie institution of Washington. Publication no. 92. Papers of the Dept. of historical research. J. F. Jameson, ed.)

Supreme Court of the United States," pp. 250-251.

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Virginia. General assembly, 1820-1821. House of delegates. Re-
port and resolutions concerning the citation of the com-
monwealth, to answer a complaint before the Supreme
court of the United States. <Printed by order of the
House of delegates.>
Richmond: Printed by T. Ritchie, printer for the common-
wealth, 1821. 24 pp. 8°.

A discussion of the relative powers of the federal and state
governments, and a denial of the right of the Supreme court
of the United States to examine and correct a judgment
rendered by the state courts of Virginia in a case arising
from an act of Congress empowering the corporation of the
city of Washington to establish lotteries for effecting the
improvement of the city, and the consequent vending and
distributing of lottery tickets within the jurisdictional limits
of Virginia, contrary to the laws of the state.

A substitute proposed by Mr. Miller, of Powhatan, for the report and resolutions concerning the citation of the commonwealth to answer a complaint before the Supreme court of the United States. <Printed by order of the House of delegates.>

Richmond: Printed by T. Ritchie, printer for the commonwealth, 1821. 12 pp. 8°.

An inquiry into the jurisdiction of the Supreme court and a protest against its right to examine and correct a judgment rendered by the state courts of Virginia in a case arising from an act of Congress empowering the corporation of the city of Washington to establish lotteries for effecting the improvement of the city, and the consequent vending and distributing of lottery tickets within the jurisdictional limits of Virginia, contrary to the laws of the state.

Webster, Daniel. Independence of the judiciary.

(In his Works, vol. 3, pp. 26-32. Boston, 1851. 8°.)

Webster, Sidney. Two treaties of Paris and the Supreme court. New York and London: Harper & bros., 1901. (4), 132, (1) pp. 12°.

Wells, J. C. A treatise on the jurisdiction of courts. In two vol

umes.

Saint Paul: West publishing company, 1880. 2 vols. 8°.

X Willoughby, Westel Woodbury. The Supreme Court of the United

States: its history and influence in our constitutional system.

Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins press, 1890. (6), 124, (2)

pp. 8°. (Johns Hopkins university studies in historical and political science. Extra vol. vii.)

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Woodburn, James Albert. The American republic and its government, an analysis of the government of the United States, with a consideration of its fundamental principles and of its relations to the states and territories.

New York and London: G. P. Putnam's sons, 1903. v. ·(1), 410 pp. 8°. (American politics.)

The judiciary, pp. 317-341.

The making of the Constitution, a syllabus of "Madison's Journal of the Constitutional Convention," together with a few outlines based on "The Federalist."

Chicago: Scott, Foresman & co., 1908. (2), vii, 3–40 (2) pp. 8°.

THE SUPREME COURT: ARTICLES IN PERIODICALS

1830. The tribunal of dernier resort.

Southern review, vol. 6 (Nov., 1830): 421–513.

1838. Supreme Court of the United States.

New York review, vol. 2 (Apr., 1838): 372–404.

1850. Supreme Court of the United States.

Living age, vol. 24 (Mar. 23, 1850): 550–552.

1854. The Supreme Court of the United States in 1853-4. American law register, vol. 2 (Oct., 1854): 705-712.

1868. The Supreme Court bills. E. L. Godkin. Nation, vol. 6 (Jan. 30, 1868): 85–86.

1868. The use of the Supreme Court to the Union. J. N. Pomeroy. Nation, vol. 6 (Feb. 20, 1868): 146–147.

1868. Congress and the Supreme Court. George B. Butler. Harper's new monthly magazine, vol. 36 (Apr., 1868): 657– 662.

1869. The new United States judges. A. G. Sedgwick. Nation, vol. 9 (Dec. 2, 1869): 477–479.

1870. The Supreme Court of the United States. Irish law times, vol. 4 (Jan. 1, 1870): 2-3.

1870. The Supreme Court of the United States.

Albany law journal, vol. 1 (Mar. 12, 1870): 188–189.

1870. The Supreme Court of the United States.

Penn monthly, vol. 1 (May, 1870): 161-172.

1871. The Supreme Court and its theory of nationality. J. N. Pomeroy.

Nation, vol. 12 (June 29, 1871): 445–446.

1874. How will the United States Supreme Court decide the Granger railroad case? David A. Wells.

Nation, vol. 19 (Oct. 29, 1874): 282–284.

1875. The Supreme Court of the United States.

Central law journal, vol. 2 (Jan. 22, 1875): 55–56.
Arguments against increasing the number of judges.

1875. The Supreme Court.

American law review, vol. 9 (July, 1875): 668–683.

1875. The delay of business in the Supreme Court of the United States. J. M. McCorkle.

Central law journal, vol. 2 (Aug. 6, 1875): 512–513.

1875. Delay of business in the Supreme Court of the United States— another suggestion. W. L. Nugent.

Central law journal, vol. 2 (Aug. 20, 1875): 545.

1875. The Supreme Court as a stepping-stone to something else. E. L. Godkin.

Nation, vol. 21 (Dec. 2, 1875): 352.

1876. Supreme Court of the United States.

Central law journal, vol. 3 (Mar. 31, 1876): 216.

Abstract of a paper by Job E. Stevenson, published in American Law Record.

1876. United States Supreme Court-when causes will be taken up out of their order.

Central law journal, vol. 3 (Nov. 17, 1876): 732.

1881. Partisanship in the Supreme Court. John T. Morgan. North American review, vol. 132 (Feb., 1881): 176–186.

1881.

"The needs of the Supreme Court."

Washington law reporter, vol. 9 (Apr. 20, 1881): 241–242.

1881. The needs of the Supreme Court. William Strong. North American review, vol. 132 (May, 1881): 437–450.

1882. The Supreme Court.

Pacific coast law journal, vol. 8 (Jan. 28, 1882): 923–927.

1882. Relief of the Supreme Court.

Albany law journal, vol. 25 (May 13, 1882): 370–372.

Extract from the Minority report of the Committee of the
Amer. bar association.

1882. The plans for the relief of the Supreme Court. A. G. Sedgwick.

Nation, vol. 34 (May 18, 1882): 418–419.

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