Professional Documents
Culture Documents
PDF The Black Box of Orthodontic Research 1st Edition Raed H. Alrbata All Chapter
PDF The Black Box of Orthodontic Research 1st Edition Raed H. Alrbata All Chapter
https://textbookfull.com/product/synergy-value-and-strategic-
management-inside-the-black-box-of-mergers-and-acquisitions-1st-
edition-stefano-garzella/
https://textbookfull.com/product/managing-a-government-think-
tank-inside-the-black-box-15th-edition-jessica-mackenzie/
https://textbookfull.com/product/the-complete-detective-stephen-
greco-box-set-books-1-4-helen-h-durrant/
https://textbookfull.com/product/clinical-management-of-
orthodontic-root-resorption-glenn-t-sameshima/
Catch Fire The Baymont Bombers 2 1st Edition Mckayla
Box Box Mckayla
https://textbookfull.com/product/catch-fire-the-baymont-
bombers-2-1st-edition-mckayla-box-box-mckayla/
https://textbookfull.com/product/orthodontic-management-of-the-
developing-dentition-an-evidence-based-guide-martyn-t-cobourne/
https://textbookfull.com/product/heart-of-the-vampire-
episode-1-1st-edition-tasha-black-black/
https://textbookfull.com/product/secondary-findings-in-genomic-
research-1st-edition-martin-h-langanke-editor/
https://textbookfull.com/product/basic-guide-to-orthodontic-
dental-nursing-2nd-edition-fiona-grist/
Another random document with
no related content on Scribd:
Buffalo Bill; in collaboration with Courtney Ryley
Cooper. il *$2.50 (3½c) Appleton
20–2278
From the time he first courted her, to his death, Mrs Cody records
the career of her husband, one of the most picturesque and
adventuresome of human careers. Adventure was thrust upon him
when a mere child it became a part of his environment and was later
sought with the keen relish of the actor in him. “One thing had been
borne to him, through the never failing worship of youthful America,
that he was an idol who never could be replaced, that as long as there
were boys, and as long as those boys had red blood in their veins,
they would thrill at the sight of him they loved, and cheer the
sounding reverberation of his great booming voice as he whirled into
the arena on his great, white horse, came to a swinging stop before
the grandstand, and raised his hand for the famous salute from the
saddle.” (Chapter 15)
“It may be that the closeness of the author to the scenes of which
she writes has marred the perspective. In any case, the present
volume very largely fails both in color and adequacy.... By way of
compensation, the concluding chapters exhibit a good deal of
dramatic power. Indeed, we have seldom read a story more pitifully
fascinating than that of the massacre at Wounded Knee, as told by
the aged Short Bull in his tepee on the blizzard-swept prairie near
Pine Ridge. It is worth knowing, for it is history.”
20–7661
In this story of his life Colonel Cody touches upon his life as a
showman only as the final rounding out of his career after the great
wild west, of which he had been so integral a part, had become a
thing of the past. But in its pages live again and go down to history
the thrilling last days of Indian warfare, buffalo hunting and stage-
coaching. The book is illustrated by N. C. Wyeth.
“Buffalo Bill’s own story does not rank with ‘Treasure Island,’ but
it is the boys’ own book, for it holds all that can live of the life its hero
led on the plains and afterwards preserved under canvas; and it was
written by a boy who actually did the thing every boy resolves to do,
stayed a boy in defiance of time and fate for more than seventy
years.”
+ Review 3:71 Jl 21 ’20 1250w
20–6208
The author does not hold that the fragmentary sayings of Jesus can
be pieced together to form a basis for a new industrial order. What he
believes is that the spirit of Jesus furnishes a guide for conduct in
any given situation and his purpose here is to ask “what the spirit of
Jesus would create out of the existing social system in order that we
may be led into a more Christian industrial order.” Contents: The
Christian as producer; The Christian as consumer; The Christian as
owner; The Christian as investor; The Christian as employer and
employee; Conclusion—democracy and faith. The author is minister
in the Madison avenue Presbyterian church, New York city, and
associate professor in Union theological seminary.
20–16928
20–2646
(Eng ed 20–76275)
The average man, says the author, becomes conscious of our
industrial and economic system only when something has gone
wrong. He goes through three stages: apathy, prejudice, knowledge.
The object of the book is to serve the third stage and to find out what
is really wrong. After reviewing the status of the various industries he
arrives at the conclusion that the cleavage in society today is between
the workers by hand and by brain on the one side and the rentiers
and financiers on the other and that the function of industrial
reconstruction consists in devising a policy by which the former can
exercise their functions not on behalf of the latter but on behalf of
the whole community. Contents: The cause of strikes; Motives in
industry; The reconstruction of profiteering; The guild solution;
Coal; Railways; “Encroaching control” versus “industrial peace”;
Engineering and shipbuilding; Cotton and building; Distribution and
the consumer; The finance of industry; The real class struggle;
Appendices and index.
“Mr Cole’s system may not inspire confident belief in those whose
approach to economic study has been through the classical formulae.
But no one can afford to dismiss it as a tissue of fallacies, an
impossible Utopia.” Alvin Johnson
“The degeneracy of its tone hangs like a miasma over every page.
The whole book is a gospel of greed, a hymn of hate.”
(Eng ed 19–2251)
Reviewed by H. W. Laidler
19–3307
“By the test of fact Professor Cole is in places inadequate. But his
book is spirited, and the drift of his argument is sound. It is,
furthermore, entertaining—which alone would justify it. It is finally a
key to the state of mind of many of that younger generation to whom
it is principally addressed.” W: L. Chenery
20–7572
“On the whole candor compels the report that the author has
brewed a few familiar concepts and some scattered observation into
a turgidity against which adequate familiarity with the sociological
analyses of the past two decades and a consistently observed purpose
might have been a protection.” A. W. Small
“Very able and pregnant little book. His book must be taken very
seriously, not only by teachers, but by politicians and reformers. It
will rouse keen discussion and hot dissent. Mr Cole will welcome
both. For though his manner is dogmatic, his method is tentative and
moulds itself on facts. His French logic has been grafted on an
English mind.” G. L. Dickinson
“Mr Cole has intellectual power of high order. He knows well what
he is aiming at and where he wants to stand. One of the most
commendable traits of his book is its candor in confessing that it is
prompted by a preference.” T: R. Powell
“Mr Cole’s book is worthy of and will receive study. While it will
not pass unchallenged upon its constructive side, its criticism of old
conceptions is surely trenchant and significant.”
+ − Springf’d Republican p9a Ag 29 ’20
840w
20–5660
“The author has had the good fortune to use for the first time the
family papers, including the banker’s correspondence, which relates
to affairs of the heart as well as to Mammon and to politics. Thus the
book gives an intimate portrait of a successful man of business and
throws new light on the history of his times.”
[2]
COLERIDGE, STEPHEN. Idolatry of science.
*$1.25 Lane 501
20–16351