and The Judiciary COMPRISING COMPLETE TITLE 28 OF THE NEW UNITED STATES CODE WITH AMENDMENTS BY THE FIRST SESSION OF THE 69TH CONGRESS WITH Introduction and Annotations OF THE BAR OF THE UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT, THIRD EDITION CINCINNATI THE W. H. ANDERSON COMPANY 1926 Copyright, 1911, by CALLAGHAN AND COMPANY. Copyright, 1925, THE W. H. ANDERSON COMPANY. Copyright, 1926, THE W. H. ANDERSON COMPANY. 345125 NOTE TO THE THIRD EDITION The occasion for a new edition of this hand-book is the passage of the Act of June 30, 1926, which includes the Judicial Code as it stood on December 7, 1925, in a "compilation of all laws of the United States, general and permanent in their nature," which compilation is to be cited as "U. S. C." or "United States Code." In that "United States Code," however, the chapters containing the Judicial Code also have interpolated various statutes relating to the judiciary which have thereby become for the first time parts of the Judicial Code and are therefore embodied in our text herein. Hence it will be found that the sections of the Judicial Code existent on December 7, 1925, are identified in this book by two section numbers respectively-their original numbering being that ascribed to them in the Judicial Code, which numbering is followed by the corresponding “U. S. C." section number. Such sections as have only "U. S. C.” numbering have been injected into the Judicial Code for the first time by the new "United States Code." We also include the amendments to the Judicial Code enacted during the period commencing December 7, 1925, and ending with the adjournment of the 69th Congress, First Session, on July 3, 1926, as well as Part II of Title 28, U. S. Code "The Judiciary," thus presenting Title 28 in its entirety. Extensive annotations have been added to those of the second edition. This new edition is believed to be an indispensable aid for practice in the Federal Courts. Chemical Building, St. Louis, October 1, 1926. JAMES LOVE HOPKINS. |