CONTENTS —Continued 
CHAPTER TEN page 
Elephant Hunting Not an Occasion for Lightsome Merrymak¬ 
ing. Five Hundred Thousand Acres of Forest in Which the 
Kenia Elephant Lives, Wanders and Brings Up His Children 164 
CHAPTER ELEVEN 
Nine Days Without Seeing an Elephant. The Roosevelt 
Party Departs and We March for the Mountains on Our Big 
Elephant Hunt. The Policeman of the Plains . . . 184 
CHAPTER TWELVE 
" ’Twas the Day Before Christmas.” Photographing a Charg¬ 
ing Elephant, Cornering a Wounded Elephant in a River Jungle 
Growth. A Thrilling Charge. Hassan’s Courage . . .201 
CHAPTER THIRTEEN 
In the Swamps of the Guas Ngishu. Beating for Lions We 
Came Upon a Strange and Fascinating Wild Beast, Which 
Became Attached to Our Party. The Little Wanderobo Dog 214 
CHAPTER FOURTEEN 
Who’s Who in Jungleland. The Hartebeest and the Wilde¬ 
beest, the Amusing Giraffe and the Ubiquitous Zebra, the 
Lovely Gazelle and the Gentle Impalla.233 
CHAPTER FIFTEEN 
Some Natural History in Which it is Revealed that a Sing- 
Sing Waterbuck is Not a Singing Topi, and that a Topi is Not 
a Species of Head-dress.251 
CHAPTER SIXTEEN 
In the Tall Grass of the Mount Elgon Country. A Narrow 
Escape from a Long-Horned Rhino. A Thanksgiving Dinner 
and a Visit to a Native Village.269 
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN 
Up and Down the Mountain Side from the Ketosh Village to 
the Great Cave of Bats. A Dramatic Episode with the Find¬ 
ing of a Black Baby as a Climax.291 
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN 
Electric Lights, Motor-Cars and Fifteen Varieties of Wild 
Game. Chasing Lions Across the Country in a Carriage . 313 
