4 



THIRTY SEASONS IN SCANDINAVIA. 



By E. B. KENNEDY. 

 Demy 8w. With numerous Illustrations. IO.T. 6d. nett. 



' No one has properly seen Norway,' says Mr. Kennedy, ' until he 

 has been up and sojourned on the roof of that grand country ;' and 

 surely Mr. Kennedy has a right to speak, for he has spent thirty seasons 

 in exploring every part, not only of its ' roof,' but of its fjords, lakes, rivers, 

 and islands, and knows perhaps as much as any living man of Scandinavia 

 from the sporting point of view. In this record of his adventures he 

 writes of every kind of sport with delightful freshness and appreciation. 

 He is a true sportsman, and as one reads one realizes the secret of his 

 keen enjoyment of his life ; for he understands men and loves animals, 

 and has that observant sympathy with Nature in all is forms which 

 many men who live in the open air either lack or are unable to express 

 in words. His pages teem with anecdotes of fishing, shooting, hunting, 

 and ski-ing, and contain incidentally many valuable hints on camping 

 and cooking. There is also much interesting information about the 

 people, their manners and customs ; nor are the lemmings, beavers, and 

 ponies forgotten. 



The book, which is illustrated with some remarkable photographs, 

 cannot fail to delight all lovers of the rod and gun. 



FRATRIBUS. 



Sermons preacbeo mainly in TJClincb ester College Cbapel. 

 By JOHN TRANT BRAMSTON, M.A. 



Crown &7.'0. $s. nett. 



Mr. Bramston has found, from an experience as a Winchester College 

 house-master extending over thirty-four years, that the preacher most 

 likely to influence a school congregation is not the professor or the 

 lecturer, or even the schoolmaster, but the man who will speak to the 

 boys as brothers, and endeavour to look at the problems of school-life 

 from their own point of view. Among the twenty-seven sermons in this 

 volume are included some specially addressed to the younger boys at 

 the outset of their career. It is believed that schoolmasters and parents 

 alike will find the collection a valuable one. 



