The Days of a Man 1905 



war, however painful, is necessary and will be salu- 

 tary, a traditional notion hardly to be eradicated 

 from his closed mind. Concluding, I asserted that the 

 success of democratic institutions in America is the 

 greatest single asset of the peace movement, for our 

 colossal nation has developed along lines of popular 

 government and federation. 



sleepless The second article had to do with international 



watchdogs r i va l r i es- l n it I pictured the military watchdogs of 



each nation as baying at the moon and at each other. 



Unfortunately, however, my claim that the bark of 



all was worse than their bite, and their upkeep more 



costly than either, proved but half true! 



Passing of The third essay treated of the Mexican Revolution 



Don LUIS anc j tne f ate o f ) ori L U J S Xerrazas, the greatest 



landholder in Mexico, the downfall of the cientificos, 

 and the reasons why the United States should not 

 interfere by force of arms matters later discussed 

 in their proper place. 1 



For Holt I edited 2 (1910) a volume entitled "Lead- 

 ing American Men of Science." This consists of 

 seventeen short biographies by competent persons of 

 men no longer living: 



From Benjamin Thompson (Count Rumford), Alexander Wilson, 



Franklin John James Audubon, Benjamin Silhman, Joseph Henry, Louis 



to Brooks Agassiz, Jeffries Wyman, Asa Gray, James Dwight Dana, 



Spencer Fullerton Baird, Othniel Charles Marsh, Edward 



Drinker Cope, Josiah Willard Gibbs, Simon Newcomb, George 



Brown Goode, Henry Augustus Rowland, and William Keith 



Brooks. 3 



Chapter LII, pages 690-703. 



2 With the able help of Dr. Edwin E. Slosson, formerly professor of Chemis- 

 try, then on the editorial staff of The Independent. 



3 A life of Benjamin Franklin having been printed in another volume of 

 Holt's "Biographies of Leading Americans," he was not included in this group. 



C 1 66 3 



