+ + −Dial. 43: 86. Ag. 16, ’07. 1200w.

“His statements were based on sound scholarship, and were made with unusual caution, so that he could publish them in book form with the addition here and there of footnotes embodying certain modern discussions.”

+ +Nation. 84: 521. Je. 6, ’07. 1510w.

“It has the buoyancy and freshness of a spring day, a frank love of beauty, an invincible conviction that the generous and fine is the real and important side of human nature.” Hildegarde Hawthorne.

+ +N. Y. Times. 12: 201. Ap. 6, ’07. 1550w.

“For the most part, his work is rather a series of suggestive essays on comparatively well-known facts than a fresh contribution to knowledge. As such, however, it has great value, and the author exhibits exactly the learning, insight, and judgment which we need for the full investigation of a difficult but fascinating subject.”

+ +Spec. 98: 500. Mr. 30, ’07. 1750w.

Dos Passos, John R. American lawyer as he was—as he is—as he can be. *$1.75. Banks.

7–2440.

“In this work Mr. Dos Passos discusses in broad outline what he conceives to be the real mission of the lawyer in society, his relation to the government of which he is a citizen, and his clearly defined duties in that relation.”—R. of Rs.