Book Reviews 



267 



horses under them and the fear of God in their hearts, and bacon and 

 many other things, including beans, in their stomachs. . . . He is a 

 hunter, a sportsman, and a splendid gentleman." Such was the guide 

 who conducted the party of whom Mrs. Rinehart was one. It surely is 

 a privilege to make a tour of Glacier Park with such a man. 



Mrs. Rinehart does the tour justice; she enjoyed every minute of the 

 three-hundred-mile trip, and she makes it enjoyable for others to read 

 about. The book can be bought for a small price and read in a short 

 time, and the return in enjoyment for the time and money invested in it 

 will be just about one thousand per cent. A. H. A. 



"Alaskan The National Geographic Society published in 1914 the re- 

 Glacier suits of its explorations of glaciers in the Yakutat Bay, 

 Studies"* Prince William Sound, and Lower Copper River regions of 

 Alaska. The field-work was done in 1909, 1910, 191 1, and 

 1913, and the report is by Professor R. S. Tarr, formerly of Cornell 

 University, and Professor Lawrence Martin, of the University of Wis- 

 consin. It would be impossible to give an adequate account of this ex- 

 haustive report in the space available for this belated notice, nor would a 

 thorough analysis of it be appropriate, perhaps, in this Bulletin. Each 

 glacier in the region named is studied in detail over a period of years, 

 its activities measured and recorded, and fully described. The report is 

 lavishly illustrated with half-tones and drawings, and with a set of nine 

 excellent colored maps. A. H. A. 



The Journal of Agriculture of the University of California has issued a 

 special Forestry number which is extremely attractive and interesting. 

 It contains seventeen excellent contributed articles from officials high in 

 rank in the Federal service, from private lumbermen, from educators 

 and others. It also contains some interesting notes of the Agricultural 

 Department of the University of California. 



A book of Songs of the Sierra Club has been published, and is on sale 

 at the club-room — price, ten cents, or, with postage, twelve cents. Our 

 outing members will find in it many songs to recall camp-fire days. 



* Alaskan Glacier Studies of the National Geographic Society. . . . By Ralph 

 Stockman Tarr and Lawrence Martin. The National Geographic Society, Wash- 

 ington. 1914. Illustrated. 



