Among Other Issues in the Two Series of 



m AMERICAN SPORTSMAN'S LIBRARY 



EDITED BY CASPAR WHITNEY 



" JV» books have ever come before us that so completely Jill the want of Sportsmen and 

 delight the general reader as the volumes in the American Sportsman' s Library." 



— Shooting and Fishing 



THE DEER FAMILY 



By the Hon. THEODORE ROOSEVELT, T. E. VAN DYKE, D. G. ELLIOTT 



and A J. STONE 

 Illustrated by Carl Rungius and others. With Maps by Dr. C. Hart Merriam 



SALMON AND TROUT 



By DEAN SAGE. W. C. HARRIS, H. M. SMITH and C. H. TOWNSEND 

 Illustrated by A. B. Frost, Tappan Adney, Martin Justice and others 



UPLAND GAME BIRDS 



By EDWYN SANDYS and T. S. VAN DYKE 



Illustrated by Louis Agassiz Fuertes, A B. Frost, J. O. Nugent and C. L. Bull 



THE WATER -FOWL FAMILY 



By L. C. SANFORD, L. B. BISHOP and T. S. VAN DYKE 

 Illustrated by L A. Fuertes, A. B. Frost and C. L. Bull 



BASS, PIKE, PERCH, AND OTHERS 



By JAMES A. HENSHALL, M.D. 



Illustrated by Martin Justice and Charles F. W. Mielatz 



THE BIG GAME FISHES OF THE UNITED STATES 



By CHARLES F. HOLDER 



Illustrated by Charles F. W. Mielatz and others 



MUSK-OX, BISON, SHEEP AND GOAT 



By CASPAR WHITNEY. GEORGE BIRD GRINNELL and OWEN WISTER 

 Illustrated by Carl Rungius and others 



GUNS. AMMUNITION AND TACKLE 



THE SHOTGUN, by CAPTAIN A. W. MONEY ; THE HUNTING RIFLE, 

 by HORACE KEPHART ; THE THEORY OF RIFLE SHOOTING, 

 by W. E. CARLIN; THE PISTOL AND REVOLVER, by A. L. A. HIM- 

 MELWRIGHT, and THE ARTIFICIAL FLY, by JOHN HARRING- 

 TON KEENE 



THE SPORTING DOG 



By JOSEPH A. GRAHAM. Fully illustrated 



PHOTOGRAPHY FOR THE SPORTSMAN NATURALIST 



By L. W. BROWNELL. Fully illustrated from photographs by the author 



Cloth- cr. 8vo, gilt top and cover design. Each, $2 net. Postage, 15c. 



The Boston Transcript lists these "accurate and readable illustrated volumes" as par- 

 ticularly desirable when "with the coming of spring the blood of the sportsman begins to 

 tingle, and in the period between the breaking up of the actual winter and the season 

 afield he turns to the books of sport wherefrom he may gain some hints for the coming 

 season's campaign." "Each volume," says another critic, "was written under the di- 

 rect supervision of Mr. Caspar Whitney, whose qualifications for this undertaking no 

 one can doubt, and gives in a clear, untechnical, and interesting style, by writers whose 

 eminence in their respective branches enables them to speak with authority and adequacy, 

 every pertinent detail, . ■ . and with much entertainment and instruction for the 

 general reader." 



THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, Publishers, New York 



