| + − | Arena. 38: 217. Ag. ’07. 150w. |
“A reader may protest, may resent the undue strain upon his sense of probability, but he will be tolerably sure to follow the story to its end.”
| + − | N. Y. Times. 12: 229. Ap. 6, ’07. 190w. | |
| N. Y. Times. 12: 386. Je. 15, ’07. 280w. |
Vanderlip, Frank Arthur. Business and education. **$1.50. Duffield.
7–17640.
A collection of Mr. Vanderlip’s addresses and speeches dealing authoritatively with financial, industrial and educational questions. The author is vice-president of the National city bank, New York, and writes out of the fulness of a long commercial experience, made valuable by a broad knowledge of his fellow-man and a soundness of business judgment.
Reviewed by J. C.
| J. Pol. Econ. 15: 440. Jl. ’07. 470w. |
“We would not gainsay the right of successful business men to their literary diversions, but will venture the delicate suggestion that not every article contributed to popular magazines needs to be reproduced in more permanent form.”