132 



Sierra Club Bulletin 



Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. The price is 

 one dollar a copy or four dollars for the set. F. P. F. 



"Trail AND The Colorado Mountain Club is to be congratulated on 

 Timberline"* this very original and beautiful first number of its "Re- 

 view in Picture." Except for a short paragraph describ- 

 ing each picture printed on the opposite page, and for an organization 

 page giving the officers and committees of the club, the entire review is 

 given over to splendid photographic reproductions. The good taste 

 shown in their selection and their placing on the wide-margined pages 

 cannot be too highly praised. Among so many fine pictures it is difficult 

 to distinguish, but the very unusual "Inside a Glacial Crevasse" by Geo. 

 C. Barnard, and "The Tree Frontier" by Albert H. Haanstad may be 

 mentioned as making the strongest personal appeal. M. R. P. 



"Pacific Our members will be interested in the new monthly maga- 

 OuTD0ORs"t zine, PaciHc Outdoors, whose initial number was issued 

 December, 1915. It is an attractively illustrated number 

 with articles of interest alike to sportsmen and mountaineers. The local 

 walks of the Sierra Club are to be announced monthly in its columns. 

 The following quotation from the leading editorial defines the purpose 

 and scope of the magazine : 



"We are going to stand for conservation of wild life; for the proper 

 enforcement of those laws for its better protection; for new laws that 

 will still better protect such life ; for the pleasures to be had in outdoor 

 life in fishing, hunting, camping, hiking, fly-casting, trap-shooting, yacht- 

 ing, motoring, both on land and sea, and for all clean sports that tend to 

 bring out the best in us, to the end that we may improve our physical 

 and mental sides and be better for it." M. R. P. 



The January, 1916, issue of American Forestry contains several arti- 

 cles of unusual interest to mountaineers. In particular we would mention 

 National Parks as an Asset, by the Honorable Franklin K. Lane; The 

 Sequoia National Park, a splendidly illustrated story by Mark Daniels, 

 and The Forests of Alaska, by Henry S. Graves. 



* Trail and Timberline. An annual mountaineering review in picture. The Color- 

 ado Mountain Club, 1915. George H. Harvey, Jr., secretary, 3120 W. 23rd Ave., 

 Denver, Colorado. 



t Pacific Outdoors. Geo. A. Wentworth, editor. Pacific Outdoors Publishing 

 Company, 35 Montgomery Street, San Francisco. Issued monthly. Yearly subscrip- 

 tion, $1.50; single copy, 15 cents. 



