ON THE LAW OF TRADE-MARKS AND ANALOGOUS SUBJECTS, (FIRM-NAMES, BUSINESS-SIGNS, GOOD-WILL, LABELS, &c.) BY WILLIAM HENRY BROWNE, OF THE BAR OF THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES. Copyright, 1885, BY WILLIAM HENRY BROWNE. All rights reserved. UNIVERSITY PRESS: PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. THE first edition of this book sprang from the author's desire to bring order out of chaos. There was need for a collation of authorities on the Law of Trade-Marks and kindred matters; and that need was felt, not only by owners of applied symbols of manufacture and commerce, but also by bench and bar alike. No comprehensive treatise on those matters could be found in any tongue. Judicial rulings of many countries had to be consulted, and general principles of world-wide interest to be deduced therefrom. Wonder not, therefore, that much of the matter was crude, and sometimes merely theoretical. It is probable that no other branch of legal science has had a more rapid growth during the twelve years since the first edition appeared. For that reason, this book had, for the greater part, to be rewritten. Within that time, nearly all civilized nations have shown a due appreciation of the importance of the subject. Their interest has been manifested by scores of treaties and numerous acts of legislation. A single fact speaks a volume. In 1883, at Paris, more than twenty governments, including that of our own nation, were in conference to form a union for the protection of industrial property, including rights in trade-marks. The result |