“This ‘book of memories,’ though it celebrates a particular house, will serve to stir home memories in the heart of anyone who has lived in the country. It has much to say of the house itself, the open fire, the orchards, the woods, the squirrels, the dogs, and the activities of farm life.”—Dial.


“A finely-made book, whose open print and abundant pictures will especially delight old people.” May Estelle Cook.

+Dial. 41: 389. D. 1, ’06. 120w.

“It is a sympathetic book to handle as well as to read.”

+N. Y. Times. 11: 812. D. 1, ’06. 110w.

Hutchinson, Alfred L. Limit of wealth. **$1.25. Macmillan.

7–22404.

A narrative based upon a report made in 1944 by a committee appointed by the Eurasian conference, which represented the allied powers of Europe and Asia to investigate the system of government in the United States, by which that nation had so quickly outclassed the old nations of the world. The narrative presents the findings of this committee and shows us a United States based upon Utopian laws, the most significant being that which allows the accumulation of wealth by any individual but which limits his ultimate sale of it.