handling of estates and the protection of investments. In 1911 he opened his own office, which he continued until his death. Mr. Redmond never sought political office. He was appointed Police Commissioner in Denver in 1913. He accepted this, only, after the earnest solicitation of friends. He devoted himself unsparingly to the office and to the public good to the temporary neglect of his law practice. Mr. Redmond's practice was largely devoted to the handling of property interests. He was a master of details. Every possibility in a given transaction received its due consideration. His legal documents of whatever character were always thoroughly prepared, and never took their final form without receiving the most painstaking and detailed study. His clients became his most intimate friends. He was always ready to sacrifice himself for them. He became the center of an extensive inter-related friendship, and which revolved about him as a common focal point. This was a beautiful side of his life which all who knew him intimately could not help but observe. His kindly feeling for his friends never was broken or disturbed by anger or his interest in them diminished by their reverses. Mr. Redmond was scrupulously straightforward in his dealings. Particularly was this true of his fellow members of the Bar, and nothing angered him so much as an attempt to take advantage by any unfair means. When anyone once aroused his distrust he seldom again placed in him any confidence. Mr. Redmond had no children. His wife predeceased him by about two years. He left surviving him a brother and two sisters. He was a member of the Denver Lodge of Elks, of the Masonic Order, of the Denver, the Colorado and the American Bar Associations, and of the Lakewood Country Club. The last two years of his life he was in poor health and he seemed to be sad and lonesome. His grip on affairs seemed to loosen, but with it all he never complained, and no one not closely associated with him would have observed it. By his death the Denver and the Colorado Bar have lost a valued member, a lawyer, honest and able, and his clients an untiring helper and friend. WILLIAM TRAVERS JEROME.. 1903 SMITH MCPHERSON....... 1904 JOHN F. PHILIPS.. GEORGE R. PECK. 1905 1906 CHESTER I. LONG.... 1907 F. CHARLES HUME.. 1908 WILBUR F. STONE. Subject. The Lawyer-What of His Future? Has the United States Outgrown the The Case Between Jefferson and Mar- . Forward and Not Backward. The Ideals of the American Lawyer. .Governmental Regulations of Railway Rates. . Congress and Interstate Commerce. The Southern Lawyer; the Agony of the States; the Supreme Court. . Pioneer Bench and Bar of Colorado. Lecture, Life in the Temple. .. The Vocation and Training of the Lawyer. 1911 FREDERICK N. JUDSON...... The Progress of the Law in the 1912 HARRY OLSON.... CHARLES NAGEL. 1916 JOSEPH H. BEALE... 1917 HAMPTON L. CARSON. 1918 HERBERT S. HADLEY.. 1919 1920 HENRY J. ALLEN..... United States. .The Municipal Court of Chicago. .The Growth of Our Law. Equity Jurisdiction and Procedure in The Diversity of Laws. .The Phases of Our Constitutional WENDELL P. STAFFORD..... ..Imagination in the Law. .The Kansas Industrial Court. 1921 S. HUSTON THOMPSON...... The Public Welfare- Its Present 1923 JOHN H. ATWOOD. 1924 JAMES M. BECK. Trend, As Seen By the Federal America and the World Court. The Supreme Court, Today and To morrow. Year. Name. ADDRESSES AND PAPERS Subject. 1898 W. H. GABBERT. 1898 DAVID J. BREWER. 1898 CHARLES E. GAST. 1899 HARRY N. HAYNES... 1899 WILLIAM L. MURFREE. 1899 EDWARD L. JOHNSON. 1899 MOSES HALLETT... 1900 R. S. MORRISON.. 1900 K. R. BABBITT.. 1900 HENRY F. MAY... 1901 CHARLES N. POTTER.. 1901 JULIUS C. GUNTER. 1901 SYLVESTER S. DOWNER.. . Relations and Duties of Bench and .Growth of the Judicial Function. .The Superintending Control of the Two Problems in Legal Education. .The Law Side of the Puerto Rican The Office of Attorney at Law. .The Judicial and Other Public Serv- The Manner of the Romans. The Torrens System of Registering The Australasian Tax Amendment. Is a Legal Conflict Imminent Between the Federal and State Government By Reason of the Construction of the Gunnison Tunnel? .Legal Education. . Does the Power of the Federal Government to Regulate Navigation Justify Any Interference with Irrigation in Colorado? The New Probate Law. . Some Questions of International Law Arising Out of the Russo-Japanese War. 1904 JOHN A. EWING. 1904 HORACE G. LUNT.... Subject. . Should Our Mining Laws Be So Modi- .How Can the Progress of Civil Causes 1904 HENRY MCALLISTER, JR..... What Can Be Done to Stop Lynching? 1905 JOHN A. EWING... 1905 JAMES W. MCCREERY.. 1905 JAMES H. PERSHING.. 1905 THOMAS H. DEVINE... 1906 THOMAS H. HARDCASTLE.. 1906 CARLTON M. BLISS... 1906 HENRY J. HERSEY.. 1906 EDWARD P. COSTIGAN.. 1907 W. B. MORGAN... 1907 LUCIUS W. HOYT.... 1907 FRANK E. GOVE.... The Law, As Read Between the Lines. . Patrick Henry and His Contribution to the Constitution. . Section 34, Insurance Laws of 1907, As to Removal of Causes to Federal Courts. 1907 CHARLES J. HUGHES, JR..... An Independent and Fearless Judici WILLIAM H. BRYANT. 1913 HARRY B. TEDROW... 1913 IRVING W. STANTON.. 1913 JESSE G. NORTHCUTT. 1913 THOMAS H. HOOD... 1914 W. N. SEARCY. 1914 WILLIAM V. HODGES.. 1914 JOHN D. FLEMING.. 1914 L. WARD BANNISTER.. 1914 FRED D. STANLEY. 1915 FRANK J. ANNIS.. .... ...Civil Procedure. Water Procedure. .Initiative and Referendum in Oregon. The Referendum. Reminiscences of the Bench and Bar ..Colorado's New Practice and Proced- The Fourth Department of State Government. .. Proceeds of Mining Operations-Capital or Income. . Common Law and Code. .The Question of the Federal Disposition of State Waters in Priority States. .Potential Colorado. . Limitations and Qualifications of Statutory and Equitable Water Right Decrees. 1915 ERWIN L. REGENNITTER.... The Court Rules Act of 1913 and the Supreme Court Rules of 1914. 1915 JOHN S. MACBETH......... .The Law of Contraband. 1916 EDWARD P. COSTIGAN.. .Compulsory Investigation of Labor |