and Outdoor Life 



In addition to the delight which 

 outdoor recreations afford to those in- 

 stinctively in harmony with their en- 

 joyment, and after a recognition of 

 the fact that a knowledge of their 

 nerve- and muscle-saving ministra- 

 tions may be sensibly cultivated, there 

 still remains another large item that 

 should be placed to their credit. 

 Every individual, as a unit in the 

 scheme of civilized social life, owes 

 to every man, woman and child within 

 such relationship an uninterrupted 

 contribution to the fund of enlivening 

 and pleasurable social intercourse. 

 None of us can deny this obligation; 

 and none of us can discharge it as 

 we ought, if our contributions are 

 made in the questionable coin of sor- 

 didness and nature's perversion. Our 



