CONSTABLE SMYTHE, N.W.M.P. Illus. by Alexander Popini. Ralph D. Keefer......... CUPID-A THREE-POUNDER. Illus. by Howard Heath. Fritz Graves.... FISHERMAN'S LUCK. Hansell Crenshaw.. HARLAN'S FINISH. Illus. by John E. Jackson. Clarence E. Mulford.. LORD OF LACKAWAXEN CREEK, THE. Illus. with photographs. Zane Grey.. TEST OF A CODE, A. Illus. by Clarence Rowe. James Oliver Curwood.. THEIR HOUSEBOAT VACATION. Illus. by Horace Taylor. George Ethelbert Walsh. UNCLE EZRA'S LION HUNT. Illus. by Roy Martell Mason. Norman H. Crowell... 31 407 ACROSS JAPAN IN A MOTOR CAR. Illus. with photos. George MacAdam. AFLOAT ON THE PACIFIC. John R. Spears... ATHLETIC WALL STREET. Illus. with photos. George Jean Nathan. Baseball as the Bleachers LikE IT. Illus. with photos. C. E. Van Loan............ 575 744 331 643 180 BEYOND THE MEXICAN SIERRAS. Illus. with photos. Dillon Wallace: II. THE PEON and the Land... III. THE CAPITAL CITY OF TEPIC.. IV. MEXCALtatan and the Lagunas. V. ON THE Edge of a BOOM IN SINALOA.. PAGE 18 163 387 702 352 M. Lewis Crosby.. 259 BIRD CASTLES IN THE ROCKS. Illus with photos. Herbert K. Job... Illus. with photos and drawings Illus. with photos. Isaac N. Ford.. by Louis Agassiz Fuertes. David T. Wells............ Part II. Part III. 3 418 412 565 71 44 Illus. with photos. Edward Hungerford..... 267 195 341 427 527 GATEWAYS OF AMERICAN CITIES. Illus. with photos. Edward Hungerford.... 718 LAWMAKER AND The Automobile, THE. T. O. Abbott.... 613 LEARNING FROM THE PROFESSIONAL. Editorial.......... 762 LEAST OF THESE, THE. Illus. with photos. Lewis Edwin Theiss. 538 620 MALARIA. Woods Hutchinson, A.M., M.D. 150 MECHANICAL Department of the RAILROAD, THE. Illus. with photos. Edward Hungerford.. 451 FOREST FIRES. Illus. with photos. James S. Whipple... MEN WHO OPERATe the Railroad, THE. Illus. with photos. Edward Hungerford. 206 THE DANGER CONFRONTING OUR RESOURCES-AND THE REMEDY. POLITICS AND CONSERVATION. Pres. Mell of Clemson College... WILL THE GOVernment or Individuals Preserve ForestS? U. S. Forester . LOUIS A. FUERTES, the BIRD Artist, on the Bird, the Cat, and the Hat Illus. with photos. George Jean Nathan. Illus. with photos. Percy M. Cushing.... SEPTEMBER, THE MONTH OF RIPENESS. E. P. Powell.. SHIP-DWELLERS, THE. Illus. by Thomas Fogarty. Albert Bigelow Paine: Part II. MADEira, A Land of Heart's Desire.. SOME MEN AND THEIR WAYS: A HERMIT, A “Pagan," and a Poet. HUGH JENNINGS.. THE PROFESSOR AS AN INDUSTRIAL SCOUT. PENNILESS AROUND THE World.... EDWARD D. DURAND.... SPORT OF FLYING, THE. Illus. with photos. Maximilian Foster... STRAWBERRIES AND CHERRIES. E. P. Powell... SUMMING IT UP. E. P. Powell..... Three Hundred Years on the HUDSON. Illus. with photos. Arthur B. Reeve.. PRACTICAL ARTICLES ANGLER'S HALCYON DAYS, THE. Louis Rhead.......... CAMPING SUGGESTIONS FOR THE NOVICE. Dillon Wallace.... COMFORT AND Your Summer CLOTHING. W. R. C. Latson, M.D.. PAGE 515 672 558 559 560 562 563 129 282 592 653 84 38 369 377 505 499 GETTING OVER YOUR VACATION. W. R. C. Latson, M.D.... PRACTICAL PATCHING. Illus. by the author. Dan Beard... 119 REEL AND ITS HANDLING, THE. Samuel G. Camp..... 127 RETURN OF WEAKFISH, TAUTOG, FLUKE, AND OTHER MIGRATORY FISHES. Louis 246 SEPTEMBER SPORT WITH ROD AND REEL. Louis Rhead. 758 SOME COMMON CAMP NECESSITIES. Illus. by the author. Dan Beard.. 624 TRAIL CACHES AND CAMP HIDING PLACES. Dan Beard... GREAT SPORTS OF FOUR GREAT NATIONS. Drawings by C. F. Peters. MR. CASSIDY Ran Back to thE DOOR. 663 129 258 Schuyler....... 386 SOME DAY WE WILL MEET AGAIN. Illus. "The Test of a Code." Clarence Rowe. 514 PUBLISHER'S SHOTS AT RANDOM ILLON WALLACE might have surprised us the other day, if we could ever be feazed by any tangent on which he goes shooting off, when he walked in on us and coolly announced that he was on his way to the dock to depart for parts practically unknown, seldom visited, and totally undescribed. To our gasping question "Where?", for we wondered what undiscovered region had escaped our microscopic scan, he stirred our bewilderment still more when he answered, "To the Isthmus of Panama." We supposed we knew the territory from the Gatun Dam to the scene of the latest Colombian revolution, but Mr. Wallaceand he ought to know-put us wise to the fact that there remains an unwritten-about district down below the Canal Zone which he proposes to open to view. The San Blas Indians inhabit it, and it is reputed to be a decidedly interesting, if rather breakneck, combination of swamp and mountain, with a generous allowance of jungle, morass, and miasma thrown in for good measure. Not entirely delectable for the ordinary traveler, but the term "ordinary" never fits Dillon Wallace, either in his journeyings or writings. Anyway, he was going and would we care for accounts of his journey. Would we? Well, we made arrangements with him, then and there, for any account or all the accounts he would give us of this latent land. December or January should see this story ready for your reading as a fitting climax to his present series, "Beyond the Mexican Sierras." A ND that reminds us! Speaking of trips-Oliver Kemp intends to take one, and incidentally (of course) to sketch. It is an inimitable camp scene of his, by the way, that we are using as the frontispiece of our October number. Mr. Kemp calls this autumn's jaunt his annual tour," and he is going to maneuver in the Rocky Mountain country. He'll come back from his flitting with his portfolio loaded, as it always is, with rugged, virile studies well outside the usual. Paths await him as difficult as those of the hunter or explorer, and ofttimes far more strenuous. To find the models for his drawings an outdoor artist must travel many weary miles and wait hour in and hour out until his patience is rewarded or exhausted-though the latter never happens to Oliver Kemp. It never gives out, even in the face of constant peril that the charge of naturefaking may be laid against him by students of wild life-as it is in zoölogical gardens; for truth and a marvelous interpretation of nature amply characterize every painting he has ever made. Mr. Kemp's summers are spent, we would add in passing for many anxious inquirers, in a remote fastness of Maine. A RRANGEMENTS have been conIcluded with Walter Camp, Director of Athletics at Yale University, to furnish THE OUTING MAGAZINE with a series of six articles on important phases of amateur athletics. The first, "Heroes of the Gridiron," will be published in the November number. It rings with college life and action. Every member of every college team in the country is a hero, actual or potential, to all who are now, expect to be, or ever have been in college, of whatever age, sex, or previous or future condition, together with all relatives and sweethearts of the same to the remotest degree You can readily see by and generation. what a land-wide clientele this Iliad of football will be read and reread. For two years Mr. Camp has been collecting matter for the article, as well as for the one which is to follow in December on "Great Teams of the Past." |