Page:The Presidents of the United States, 1789-1914, v. IV.djvu/185

 THEODORE ROOSEVELT 149 ous Life&quot; (1901); &quot;The Deer Family&quot; ( &quot;Outdoor Pastimes of an American Hunter&quot; (1906); &quot;European and African Addresses&quot; (1910); &quot;African Game Trails&quot; (1910); &quot;The New Nationalism&quot; (1910); &quot;History as Litera ture&quot; (1913); &quot;Theodore Roosevelt: An Auto biography&quot; (1913); &quot;Life Histories of African Game Animals&quot; (1914) (with Edmund Heller). Besides these volumes are numerous occasional articles contributed to other volumes, or to periodi cals. These deal with matters of citizenship, of history, of literature, and of zoology. Among the biographical books about Mr. Roosevelt the most important are &quot;A Week in the White House with Theodore Roosevelt&quot; (1898), by William Bayard Hale, &quot;Theodore Roosevelt, the Citizen,&quot; by Jacob A. Riis (1904), and &quot;The Man Roosevelt&quot; (1904), by Francis E. Leupp, It is not the least remarkable trait of Mr. Roosevelt that in many matters of natural history he keeps almost as mi nutely informed of the latest thought concerning them as if he were himself a specialist. In 1881 Mr. Roosevelt married Miss Alice Lee, of Boston. After being a widower for several years he married Miss Edith Kermit Carow. He is the father of six children Alice, Theodore, Jr., Ethel, Quentin, Kermit, and Archibald. Both the daughters are married.