258 
FOREST AND STREAM 
Aug. 30, 1913. 
Scribner's Magazine 
Important Announcement for JVejct year 
T HEODORE ROOSEVELT will contribute to Scribner’s Magazine 
the account of the trip which he will take in the early months of 1914 
into the Paraguayan and Brazilian interior, where he expects to travel by 
canoe and on foot through the great South American tropical forest. His experi¬ 
ences, observations of the country, the people, and the animal life will appear 
solely in Scribner’s Magazine. 
In September 
will appear the first of 
Four Articles by Theodore Roosevelt 
The Life 
History of the 
Fully Illustrated 
African Lion 
followed by other articles on the Life Histories of the Great African Animals 
—The Elephant, The Rhino and the Hippo, The Buffalo and Giant Eland. 
Of these articles he says: “ This and the following articles are in no sense hunting articles. I have elsewhere described 
the chase of the big game. Far more interesting than the chase itself is the observation, the study of the life histories of 
the strange and wonderful creatures of the wilderness. These articles represent an attempt to present the life histories of 
the most interesting among the beasts of the African jungles; they are based mainly on first-hand observation, but are also 
in part based on the cumulative observations of many other men.” 
Daybreak in the Grand Canyon — A Poem by Henry van Dyke, Minister to the Netherlands. 
The Romantic Founding of Washington, by Thomas Nelson Page, Ambassador to Italy. 
The little known and eventful story of how the National Capital came to be built on the shores of the Potomac. 
A Gallic Victory, by Maarten Maartens. 
A highly romantic story of the Franco-German War with a remarkable series of illustrations by Castaigne. 
Stories — Anna Ltpmsky’s Star Flag, a patriotic story, by Barry Benefield; a humorous sea-story, The 
Battle-Cruise of the Svend Foyn, by James B. Connelly. Illustrated. 
Mural Painting in America, by E. H. Blashfield. 
Iilustrations from photographs and sketches of 
the author’s work. 
The Progressive Ideal in School Management, 
by Francis E. Leupp. 
The Modern Girls’ School and Its Methods. 
$3.00 a year; 25 cents a number 
CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS, Fifth Avenue at 48th Street, NEW YORK 
