+ —Ind. 59: 214. Jl. 27, ‘05. 160w.

“Mr. Rogers is fair-minded in that he does not scruple to lay bare the weaknesses as well as the strength of his hero. Nor has he any race or sectional prejudices to air. Lack of a sense of proportion, a feeble grasp of the subject as a whole, constitute, indeed, his chief faults. The man Clay he sees and comprehends. Of positive errors there are, so far as we have noticed, comparatively few.”

+ —Nation. 80: 235. Mr. 23, ‘05. 280w.

“Presenting a work markedly deficient in point of literary quality, gives an account of the great Kentuckian that is vivid, impartial, and philosophic, and that assists us to place him correctly among the founders of the United States of the twentieth century.”

+ + —Outlook. 79: 241. Ja. 28, ‘05. 1090w.

“By all odds, the most entertaining and intimate sketch of Clay that has yet appeared.”

+ +R. of Rs. 31: 126. Ja. ‘05. 190w.

Rohlfs, Mrs. Charles. See Green, Anna Katharine.

Rolfe, William James. Satchel guide for the vacation tourist in Europe; a compact itinerary of the British isles, Belgium and Holland, Germany and the Rhine, Switzerland, France, Austria, and Italy. [*]$1.50. Houghton.

In this first edition of 1905, the list of hotels has been revised, corrections have been made in routes, fares, etc., and local changes in London and Paris have been noted. Pockets in the covers contain a plan of London and a railway map of the British isles.