IBoohQ on If^untino* 



HUNTING TRIPS OF A RANCHMAN. 



Sketches of Sport on the Northern Cattle Plains. By Theodore Roosevelt. 

 With 27 full-page wood engravings and 8 smaller engravings, from designs by 

 A. B. Fro-,t, R. Su^ain Gifford, J. C. Beard, Fannie E. Gifford, and Henrj' 

 Sandhani. Bevelled boards, 8° . . . . , . . . $3.00 



" One of those distinctively American books which ought to be welcomed as contributing 

 distinctly to raise the literary prestige of the country all overthe world."— jV. V. Tribune. 



" One of the rare books which sportsmen will be glad to add to their libraries. . , . Mr. 

 Roosevelt may rank with Scrope, Lloyd, Harris, St. John, and half a dozen others, whose books 

 will always be among the sporting classics." — London Saturday Review. 



"... He must be a hopeless reader who does not rise from this book with a new and vivid 

 sense of ' the fascination of the vastness, loneliness and monotony of the prairies,' and of ' the sad 

 and everlasting unrest of the wilderness,' of the Big Horn Mountains, in addition to pleasant 

 familiarity with their flora and fauna. ... As already said, the charm about this ranchman 

 as author is that he is every inch a gentleman-sportsman. ... A careful observer of the 

 characters and individualities of animals." — London Spectator. 



THE WILDERNESS HUNTER. 



With an Account of the Big Game of the United States, and its Chase with Horse, 

 Hound, and Rifle. By Theodore Roosevelt. With illustrations by 

 Remington, Frost, Sandham, Eaton, Beard and others. 8° . . $3.50 



" A book which breathes the spirit of the wilderness and presents a vivid picture of a phase of 

 American life which is rapidly passing away, with clear, incisive force." — Neiu Vork Literary 

 News. 



" For one who intends to go a-hunting in the West this book is invaluable. One may rely 

 upon its information. But it has better qualities. It is good reading for anybody, and people who 

 never hunt and never will are sure to derive pleasure from its account of that part of the United 

 States, relatively small, which is still a wilderness." — Netv }'ork Times. 



SHORT STALKS ; OR, HUNTING CAMPS. NORTH, SOUTH, 

 EAST, AND WEST. 



By Edward North Buxton. With numerous fine illustrations by Whymper, 

 Lodge, Wolf, etc. 8° $6.00 



" It is sometime since we have come across so pleasant and attractive a record of sport, travel, 

 and adventure as this. To the general public Mr. Buxton is well known as an active public man, 

 who has been Chairman of the London School Board, High Sheriff of his county, and Member of 

 Parliament for one of its divisions. He here appears not in any of these capacities, but as a keen 

 sportsman and traveller, who has employed his rare and brief holidays, as Englishmen love to 

 employ them, in rapid travel and the pursuit of wild game in the remoter districts of the two 

 hemispheres. — London Times. 



THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF SPORT. 



Edited by the Earl of Suffolk and Berkshire, Hedley Peek, and F. G. Aflalo. 

 The first volume of this important work is now ready. Royal 8vo, about 

 600 pages, with many hundred illustrations in the text, and 20 full-page 

 photogravure plates. Cloth, f lo.oo net ; half levant, $15,00 net, 



" In the ' Encyclopedia of Sport ' sportsmen have in a concrete form a veritable alphabet of 

 sport worthy of the subject and invaluable as a book of constant reference — it is specially clear 

 concise, and full." — Outing. 



G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, New York and London. 



