THE CAMERA 



349 



The Open Mouth of a Wolf. 



BY ARTHUR INKERSLEY, OAKLAND, CAT.. 



Wave-worn rocks or crags weather- 

 ed by the frosts and storms of many 

 years often exhibit strange shapes, 

 which the fanciful resolve into portraits 

 of noted persons or into heads of lioiw 

 elephants, recumbent figures of women 

 and so on. The combination of rocks 

 along a surf-beaten shore and of break- 

 ing waves similarly produces curious 

 effects. The accompanying photo- 

 graph, made by Mr. J. K. Oliver, of 

 Monterey, California, near Point Lo- 

 bos, of a bold, rocky promontory jut- 

 ting out into the Pacific Ocean, shows 

 a remarkable resemblance to the open 

 mouth of a wolf, and is probably as 

 good a photograph of its kind as could 

 well be obtained. 



He Doesn't Like Out-of-Focus 

 Photographs. 

 Halifax, Novia Scotia. 

 To the Editor: 



At the present time fuzzy pictures 

 are nothing more or less than a fad. 

 We are taught by a special class of 



A I'.ROOK NOT FAR FROM ARCADIA. 



THE RAVENOUS "WOLF" FEEDING ON SPRAY. 



