“This ingenuous bit of biography, like the author’s earlier books, will be read not because it is so well done but because it pictures a passing phase of American life.”
| + − | A. L. A. Bkl. 3: 175. O. ’07. | |
| + | Ath. 1907, 1: 790. Je. 29. 240w. |
“In reading these pages, which bear the stamp of downright honesty, the reader feels that he is in contact with the actual history of an important formative period of national industry—a period which, tho outside of the beaten track of history, is not without significance.”
| + | Lit. D. 35: 25. Jl. 6, ’07. 230w. |
“The pleasant thing about the narrative is its ingenuousness.”
| + | Nation. 84: 16. Jl. 4, ’07. 400w. | |
| + | N. Y. Times. 12: 291. My. 4, ’07. 250w. |
“In spite of the sameness due to the likeness of one year of the cattle business to any other year, the book is interesting with the interest which belongs somehow and anyhow to all that is genuine.”
| + − | N. Y. Times. 12: 315. My. 18, ’07. 820w. | |
| N. Y. Times. 12: 375. Je. 15, ’07. 60w. |
Adams, Charles Francis, jr. Three Phi beta kappa addresses. **$1. Houghton.
7–17400.