Review of reviews and world's work . < cxi-humored fun if tb( more Hill as in any a notable spot in the United 5lthen i hut to-day i known . ? Ilawarden, or Kar hin thi the more Hill has l*etome the tion and I- i- nopubli hill,\!r Roosevelts, pursues him even here and now inhis retirement, and breaks in upon his tran-quillity. Of all the public men who have come toBee me once my return, Colonel Rooseveltsaid to the writer, only (Sovernor Hughes wasiallv invited. The other- all asked tocome here. This, of course, dor- not includei friends who have \ isited he Colond, a people now love t
Review of reviews and world's work . < cxi-humored fun if tb( more Hill as in any a notable spot in the United 5lthen i hut to-day i known . ? Ilawarden, or Kar hin thi the more Hill has l*etome the tion and I- i- nopubli hill,\!r Roosevelts, pursues him even here and now inhis retirement, and breaks in upon his tran-quillity. Of all the public men who have come toBee me once my return, Colonel Rooseveltsaid to the writer, only (Sovernor Hughes wasiallv invited. The other- all asked tocome here. This, of course, dor- not includei friends who have \ isited he Colond, a people now love to < all him,de mention of tin-1 olon) of i orrespondi dozen newspapers andho ha ? <? ettled in < )•rimer and ontrives iderable p< quietude upon hundred a< more Hill i. all, not a noi \ mctropoH i ? malli li. do.,. \ \i i i rid ound : I cithei ? om invitation fol tin trangCI I ttt( l\ 171 I HI. AMERICAN REVIEW OF REVIEWS. MOST OF THE FIREWOOD USED AT SAGAMORE HILL IS CHOPPEDBY MR. ROOSEVELT HIMSELF the town has acquired a new hotel and an operahouse, t>ut even these adjuncts have altered itbut little, and to this day it lie- grilling in thesun, very -till and very silent. A number ofNew York families have summer residenceslure, hut these are chiefly along the road thatlead- out from the village proper toward whati- i ailed the (love. And from this road at lightangles branches off a road that run- along thebay and leads on to Sagamore Hill and to some i i nty of those one hundred acres are cov-ered with splendid old oak and chestnut tree-,bin h. lot u-t, and hit kory. The ma—ive foliageand the abundant e of underbrush make ni thisno men- tended grove with gravel footpaths, but a. genuine pine of woodland that really bring- nature to the owners very door. Pe
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidreviewofrevi, bookyear1890