Z
Zambalans, numbers of, and delegates to Insurgent congress, 263;
last census figures, [933], [1000].
Zambales, conditions in, under Insurgent rule, 211–212.
Zamboanga, conditions in, after retirement of Spanish, 228–229.
Zamboangueño, slave patois, [680].
Zapanta, Lieutenant, 397.
Zebus, adapted to the Philippines, [905].
Zialcita, Captain, Insurgent officer, 148;
visit to first Philippine Commission from, 315–317.
Zinn, Mr., private secretary, [618].
Zurbano, Emilio, orders issued by, authorising murder, [746]–[747].
The following pages contain advertisements of a few of the Macmillan books on kindred subjects.
The United States as a World Power
By Archibald Cary Coolidge
Harvard University
Cloth, $2.00 net
Macmillan Standard Library Edition, 50 cents
In describing the growth of the United States to the position which this country now occupies, Professor Coolidge begins with the people themselves as the controlling force in any political policy, tracing the formation of their ideals, and the conditions under which these ideals have been changed. It has become a matter of common observation that the Spanish War marked a distinct division in the life of the American people, that our horizon has broadened until this country now possesses all the advantages and all the responsibilities that this expanded attitude involves. It is to a consideration of these advantages and responsibilities, and, more particularly, the state of preparedness for them, that Professor Coolidge applies himself in this work.
The material of which the book is constructed was originally gathered for use in the lectures delivered by the author at the Sorbonne as Harvard lectures on the Hyde foundation.
“The extreme lucidity, broad generalizations, and rapid glances at long historical periods are among the chief merits and charms of the book. We know of no volume which sums up so well and in so brief a space the wide interests which have attracted public attention during the last decade, and which, incidentally, are certain, in view of our development, to loom still larger on the national horizon.”—Chicago Inter-Ocean.
“It is a valuable book, educational and suggestive.”—Pittsburgh Post.
“The author takes up in detail the relations of the United States with other great Powers, points out the differences which have arisen in the past and which are likely to arise in the future, and discusses the various problems with a sanity and a judicial fairness that cannot be too highly praised. The volume will be an invaluable text-book to every student of contemporary history and a reference manual on all the aspects of the world politics in which the United States has particular interest.”—Public Ledger, Philadelphia.
“A book of profound meaning, taking up a subject that has grown trite with too much shallow prating, and investing it with new significance.”—San Francisco Chronicle.
“Remarquable ouvrage, d’information précise, et de haute impartialité.”—La Revue du Mois.
The Macmillan Company
Publishers 64–66 Fifth Avenue New York
“The most readable book that has come from the press.”
—San Francisco Chronicle.
Theodore Roosevelt
An Autobiography
The Life of Colonel Roosevelt
The book is handsomely bound and is unusually attractive, with illustrations of portraits, facsimiles of various documents, pictures of buildings, localities and other interesting and appropriate matter
Decorated cover, gilt top Richly illustrated Octavo $2.50 net
Leading Press Opinions
“Reflects in every line that wondrous zest of living and doing which has carried his name around the world.... Intensely human.... It is a true romance of the here and the now.... The book of the strenuous life, or, as Mr. Roosevelt now prefers to call it, the ‘vigor of life.’ ... A highly individualized ‘human document.’”—New York Tribune.
“The vigor and directness for which he is justly admired show themselves in every sentence of his book.... Emphatically and unmistakably the author has stamped himself on every page of his book, and no reader desiring a better acquaintance with him will be disappointed in this ample autobiography.”—The Dial.
“Unique and interesting.... An important contribution to the historical literature of our times.... It deals with a career to which as yet there is no perspective.... The book is the personal, official statement of Rooseveltism, as a political creed and gospel. It is Mr. Roosevelt’s own account of his own proceedings, accompanied by his own commentaries. It does not explain. It does not excuse. It declares justification. Not to every man who has retired from the highest office in the land has the opportunity come while he was still in his living prime to confront his critics and strengthen the faith of his friends.”—New York World.
“The book is the crowning tribute to its author’s all-roundness and to his huge gusto of life.”—New York Sun.
“Mr. Roosevelt’s experience of life has educated him.... As here revealed, it is a significant criticism of American life.”—Chicago Evening Post.
The Macmillan Company
Publishers 64–66 Fifth Avenue New York
Important Books of Related Interest
Cuba By Irene A. Wright
Decorated cloth, Illustrated, 12mo, $2.50 net
Travel Series Edition, $1.50 net
“Gives in detail a history of Cuba from its discovery to the present time; but the work is largely devoted to the new Cuba.”—Boston Transcript.
“... contains an enormous amount of information.”—New York Herald.
Alaska: The Great Country
By Ella Higginson
Decorated cloth, Illustrated, 12mo, $2.50 net
Travel Series Edition, $1.50 net
“Mrs. Higginson has put the very soul of picturesque Alaska into her pages, and done it with a degree of truth, sympathy, and enthusiasm that will make her book a classic in its domain.”—Chicago Record-Herald.
“A spirited and interesting narration.”—Brooklyn Eagle.
Labrador: The Country and the People
By Wilfred I. Grenfell, C.M.G., M.R.C.S., M.D., and Others
New Edition. Decorated cloth, Illustrated, 8vo, $2.50 net
Travel Series Edition, $1.50 net
“Not only has Dr. Grenfell drawn a beautiful and comprehensive picture of Labrador, but he has collected all the valuable information about the country and its people that there is, and he has associated with him eight or ten explorers and scientists who have intimate knowledge of the country and have each contributed several chapters.”—Christian Work and Evangelist.
The Works of B. L. Putnam Weale
The Conflict of Color. The Threatened Upheaval Throughout the World
Cloth, gilt top, 8vo, ix + 341 pages, index. Price, $2.00 net, by mail $2.17
“A serious and weighty contribution to the study of world-politics and world-movements, the importance of which is embraced by its sobriety of statement and its marshalling of suggestive facts.”—The Argonaut.
The Coming Struggle in Eastern Asia
Illustrations, map, cloth, gilt top, 8vo, $3.50 net; carriage extra
“B. L. Putnam Weale knows the East better than any Western man who has written of it during this generation.... Mr. Weale has seen, has recorded, and is able to tell so many tangible facts regarding Eastern Asia that it is a matter of astonishment how one man can have learned it all.”—New York Times.
Manchu and Muscovite
Cloth, 8vo, 552 pages, $3.00 net; carriage extra
“This is a work of the highest importance to any student of the Far Eastern Crisis.”—Publishers’ Circular, London.
The Re-Shaping of the Far East
Two volumes 8vo, illustrations, maps, cloth, gilt tops, $6.00 net; carriage extra
“This is the strongest, most authoritative, and spicy volume that has yet been issued on Russia in the Far East, and is invaluable for those seeking enlightenment.”—The Record-Herald, Chicago.
The Truce in the East and Its Aftermath
(The Sequel to “The Re-Shaping of the Far East”)
Cloth, gilt top, illustrations, maps, 8vo, $3.50 net; by mail $3.75
“This is a really remarkable volume by a keen observer and a graphic writer. There is no book among the hundreds that followed the Russo-Japanese war which approaches this one in depicting with seeming accuracy the actual effect of the great conflict and what may be expected from the future.... It will prepare one for new history in the Northwestern Pacific in which Russia will have a share, and it will help to elucidate the great enigma of the Orient—China.”—Chicago Interior.
The Macmillan Company
Publishers 64–66 Fifth Avenue New York