Y ou Can 
SMILE AT THE SCHEMES OF THE AMATEUR SMUGGLER 
as divulged by Garnet Warren on the New York pier where the steamer 
lands. Here you are merely an observer—your trunk is immune from 
official examination—and you see both sides of the curtain at once. Some 
of the wealthy smugglers lately caught and punished should have known 
what Mr. Warren tells us here. 
PONDER ON THE GRAND CANON'S BRINK , and with A. W. 
Dimock explore its depth. You will get a tiny insight into its grandeur, 
its sublimity and its mystery—the greatest of us cannot penetrate them far. 
Mr. Dimock calls it the Pantheon of the Gods, and the name is one of the 
most fitting that has ever been given it. 
MOTOR DOWN THE RIVIERA with 
C. N. Williamson, joint author of the “Light¬ 
ning Conductor,” who is right up to the speed 
limit all the time. He points out the inter¬ 
esting sights of Southern France, with its 
picturesque old towns and marvelous roads, 
and opens your eyes to the glories of this 
romantic region. 
VISIT GENOA, VENICE AND PISA, the three his¬ 
toric maritime ports of Italy, with so entertaining and 
well-informed a guide as Arthur Stanley Riggs. Each 
city in its turn was mistress of the sea, and to this day 
each holds its own powerful charm. 
LOOK IN ON RAGUSA, that old-time Balkan town, 
and in company with Blair Jaekel—who wields camera 
and pen with equal facility—ramble amid the scenes 
and people you have never before met anywhere out¬ 
side of story books. This will prove a delightful visit. 
WALK AROUND THE TOWN OF GIBRALTAR, and listen to what 
M. LandonReed has to say, (or it's worth hearing. Nearly everybody 
knows something about the Rock of Gibraltar, but the town behind it, 
which in its own way is quite as fascinating, is unknown ground even to 
most well-read people. 
CROSS THE SEA TO MOROCCO and delve into the bazaars and pal¬ 
aces ot Tangier, where East meets West and the white burnous of the 
i side by side with the clothes of Europe; 
icd by 3. I .\ War 
OVER DAR1MOOR the company of Herman Scheffauer 
who will tell you of this desert place in England, and its remains of the 
Stone Age and ancient Druid rites. The allurement and very charm of 
this lonely waste makes a visit to the great moor seem like an adventure. 
WHERE CAN YOU TAKE A 
TRIP LIKE THIS FOR 
15 CTS? — IN 
TraQP 
For November 
Or, why not take a year’s tour around the world for $1.50? 
SIGN UP FOR THE ROUND TRIP TICKET HERE 
jv McBRIDE, WINSTON & COMPANY, Publishers ^ 
pi 449 Fourth Avenue, .... NEW YORK hi 
I 
o McBRIDE, WINSTON & CO. 
449 Fourth Avenue. New York 
Please enter me for a year of Travel, beginning Novem- 
| ber, for which I enclose $1.50. 
g Name _ ___ 
J Address 
