OUTDOOR BOOKS. 
By RALPH HENRY BARBOUR. 
Each, I2mo, cloth. 
Captain of the Crew. 
Illustrated by C. M. Relyea. f,\.20 net; postage, 14 cents 
additional. 
Mr. Barbour has made himself a master of sport in fiction for young 
readers. His new book is one of those fresh, graphic, delightful stories of 
school life that appeal to all healthy boys and girls. He sketches skating 
and ice-boating and track athletics, as well as rowing. His glimpses of 
training and his brilliant picture of the great race will give this capital tale 
an enduring popularity. 
For the Honor of the School. 
A Story of School Life and Interscholastic Sport. Illustrated by 
C. M. Relyea. ^1.50. 
“High spirits, good fellowship, and manliness breathe from its pages.” 
— The Outlook. 
“A superior book for boys. . . . Enjoyable from cover to cover.”— 
Boston Congregationalist. 
“ A lively, spirited story, sure to interest boys, and at the same time it is 
thoroughly wholesome and full of information.”— Boston Herald. 
“ It is a wholesome book, one tingling with health and activity, endeavor 
and laudable ambition to excel in more fields than one.”— New York Mail 
and Express. 
The Half-Back. 
Illustrated by B. West Clinedinst. ^1.50. 
“ It is a stirring, healthy boys’ book.”— Philadelphia Call. 
“ A good, manly book for boys, on a good, manly Anglo-Saxon game.’' 
—New York Mail and Express. 
“It is in every sense an out-and-out boys’ book, simple and manly in 
tone, hearty and healthy in its sports, and full of that enthusiasm, life, and 
fondness for games which characterize the wide-awake, active schoolboy.”— 
Boston Herald. 
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK. 
