74 REFORMER AND PEACEMAKER 



Theodore, Kermit, Ethel, Archibald and Quentin, with all of whom 

 he has held years of companionship, his home life is a delightful owe. 



Here are an abundance of the books that he loves and to which 

 he has found time to add a goodly number of his own writing, descrip- 

 tions of outdoor and hunting life, biographies and histories, especially 

 his "Winning the West," his most ambitious work, devoted to the 

 history of that great section of our land. 



Such is the home and home life of that great-souled, clean-lived, 

 impulsive, energetic, enthusiastic lover of his kind — the honest and 

 straightforward kind — the man who for years has battled fraud and 

 corruption, with none of their mire clinging to him, the man of such 

 broad aspirations and success-compelling genius that he has won the 

 admiration, not only of his country, but of the world. 



We have already stated how, at the end of his first term of elective 

 Presidency, he refused a renomination, not for rest, for the chief object 

 he then had in view was to seek the wilds of Africa, and take his part 

 in the hunting of big game such as America has none to match. 



