LIFE AND SAYINGS OF
Theodore Roosevelt
By THOMAS W. HANDFORD
Introduction by Charles Walter Brown, A. M.
Author of “Ethan Allen,” “John Paul Jones,” “Nathan Hale,” “Lafayette,” “Pulaski,” “Washington,” “Abraham Lincoln,” “Sherman,” etc.
There are lessons in the lives of men much more potent than all the teaching of the best books and the wisest teachers. President Roosevelt is one of the brightest and brainiest men of his generation. A man in whom all the qualities of true manliness are linked with indomitable perseverance and crowned with a royal sincerity. Because of this he is worthy to be an object lesson to the young men of America, and is proving an inspiration to the noble ideal of American citizenship. This great book should be in every home and in every public school library in the United States.
It is a most creditable work.
—Indianapolis Sentinel.
I have read it with great interest and pleasure.
—John Hay, Secretary of State.