Jan. 20, 1887. 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



619 



Sportsman's Library. 



Wi wiU forward mp qf these Books by mail, pos^id, on receipt of price. 

 POSITIVELY NO BOOKS EXCHANGED. 



ANGI.ING. 



Adirondack Fishes, Fred Mather 35 



American Angler's Book, Norris 5 50 



Angling, Pennell 50 



Angling Tnlke, Dawson 50 



Black Bass Fishing, HenshaU 3 00 



Fish Culture, Norria 1 75 



Fish Hatching and Fish Catching, Eoose- 



velt and Grreen 1 50 



Fishing, Bottom or Float 50 



Fishing Witli the Fly, Orvis-Cheney Collect. 3 50 



Fly Fislilng and Fly Making tor Trout,Keene 1 50 



Fly Fishing in Jlaine Lakes 1 25 



Fly Fishing and Fly Making, Keene 1 50 



Fly Rods and Fly Tackle, Wells 3 50 



Frank Forester's Fish and Fishing 3 50 



Prank Forester's Fishing With Hook and 



Line 35 



Fysshe and Fysshynge 1 00 



Fregli and Salt Water Aquarium , 50 



Modern Practical Angler, a Guide to Fly 



Fishing 1 50 



Practical Trout Ciilture, by Capel 1 00 



Prime's I Go a-Fishing 3 50 



Rod and Line in Colorado W aters 1 00 



Scientific Angler 1 50 



Superior Fishing, or the Striped Bass, Ti'out, 



etc., by Roosevelt 3 00 



Trolling for Pike, Salmon and Trout 50 



The Game Fish of the Northern States and 



British Provinces, by Roosevelt 3 00 



Trout Culture, Slack 1 00 



NATUKAIi HISTOBT. 



A Naturalist's Rambles About Home, Abbott 1 50 



A..0. U. Check List of N. A. Birds 3 00 



American Bird Fancier 50 



Antelope and Deer of America, Caton 3 50 



Baird's Birds of North America 30 00 



Bird Notes 75 



Birds and Wild Animals, Wilson 1 75 



Birds Nesting, Ingersoll 1 25 



Birds of Eastern Pennsylvania 4 00 



Birds and Their Haunts 3 00 



Cage and Singing Birds, Adams 50 



Common Obiects of the Seasliore 50 



Coues' Check List of North American Birds 3 00 

 Game Water Birds of the Atlantic Coast, 



Roosevelt - 3 00 



Guide to tiie Study of Insects, Packard 5 00 



Holden's Book of Birds, pa 25 



Insect World, Figuier 1 50 



Insects Injurious to Vegetation. Harris 4 00 



Intelligence of Animals, 54 illus., Menaut. . . I 00 



Mammals of New York, paper $4; cloth — 5 00 



Manual of Taxidermy, Maynard 1 25 



Manual of Vertebrates, Jordan 3 50 



Maynard's Butterflies, colored plates 6 50 



3*Iinot's Land and Game Birds 3 00 



Native Song Birds 75 



Naturalist's Assistant, Kingsley 1 50 



Naturalists' Guide, IMayaard 3 00 



Practical Taxidermy and Home Decoration, 



Batty........ 150 



Shore Birds 15 



Taxidermy Without a Teacher, Manton 50 



Taxidenmsts' IVIanual, BrowTi 1 00 



Taxidermists' Manual, illus.. Brown 50 



.Wilson's Noctes Ambrosianse, by Prof. Wil- 

 son, J. G. Lockhardt, James Hogg and Dr. 

 Maginn, 6 vols., crown Svo., cloth, $9.00; 



haH calf 18 00 



BOATING AND YACHTING. 



Boat Building and Sailing, Nelson 3 00 



Boat Sailing and Management, Presoott. ... 50 



Boat Sailor's Manual 2 00 



Boating Trip on New England Rivers 1 25 



Book of Knots, by Tom Bowling 1 25 



Canoe and Camp Cookery, Seneca 1 00 



Canoe and Boat Building for Amateurs, W. 



P. Stephens 150 



Canoe Handling, C. B. Vaux 1 00 



Canoeing in Kanuckia, Norton & Halberton 50 



Canoe and Camera 150 



Canoe, Voyage of the Paper, Bishop's 1 50 



Corinthian Yachtsman, Biddle 1 50 



Cruises in Small Yachts, Speed 3 50 



Donaldson's Steam Machinery 1 50 



Foxir Months in a Sneakbox, Bishop 1 .50 



Frazar's Practical Boat Sailing 1 00 



Hints on Boat Sailing and Racing, Fitz- 

 gerald 1 00 



Model Yachts, Grosvenor 2 00 



Paddle and Portage 1 50 



Practical Boat Building, Nelson 1 00 



Practical Boat Sailing, Davies 3 00 



The America's Cup, paper 50; cloth 1 00 



The Canoe Aurora, Dr. C. A. Neide 1 00 



Vacation Cruising, Rothrick 1 50 



Yacht Architecture, Dixon Kemp 16 80 



Yacht and Boat Sailing, Kemp 10 00 



Yacht Sailor, Vanderbeck 3 00 



Yachts. Small, C. P. Kunhardt 7 00 



Yachtsman's Guide, Patterson .3 00 



Yachtsman's Manual and Handy Book, by 



Qualtrough 3 50 



CAMPING AND TRAPPING. 



Adventures in the Wilderness, Murray 1 25 



Amateur Trapper, paper 50c.; bds 75 



Camps and Tramps in the Adirondacks, 



Northrup 1 25 



Three in Noi-way, or Rifle, Rod and Gun in 



Norway 1 75 



Camps in the Rockies, Grohman 1 35 



Camping and Cruising in Florida, Henshall 1 f>0 



Canoe and Camp Cookery, by "Seneca" 1 00 



Complete Amencau Trapper, Gibson 1 00 



Hints on Camping 1 25 



How to Camp Out, Gould 75 



How to Hunt and Trap, Batty's 1 50 



Hunter and Trapper, Thrasher 75 



Woodcraft, "Nessmuk" 1 00 



GUIDE BOOKS AND MAPS. 



Adirondacks, Map of, Stoddard 1 00 



Atlas of New Jersey Coast 1 50 



Black Hills of Dakota, Ludlow, quarto, cloth 



Govei-nment report 3 50 



Farrar's Guide to Moosehead Lakejiaper ... 50 

 Farrar's Guide to Richardson and Rangeley 



Lake, paper ". 50 



Farrar's Pocket Map of Moosehead Lake. . . 50 



Farrar's Pocket Map of Rangeley Lake R'g'n 50 



Floi-ida Annual 50 



Guide Book and Map of Dead River Region 50 



Guide to Adirondack Region, Stoddard 35 



Guide to Androscoggin Region 50 



Historic;*! and Biographical Atlas of New 



Jersey Coast , 5 00 



Map of the Indian River, Floi'ida, Le Baron, 



strong linen paper, S3; plain 3 00 



Map of The Thousand Isbinds 50 



Muskoka and Northern Lakes of Canada... 1 00 



Old St, Augustine, illvis 1 50 



Our Ne\V Alaska, by Cliarles Hallock 1 50 



Southern California, by T. S. Van Dyke 1 50 



Sportemaa's Gazetteer, HaUoclj.. „ S 00 



HOBSE. 



Boots and Saddles, Mrs. Custer 1 50 



Bruce's Stud Book, 3 vols 30 00 



Dadd's American Reformed Horse Book, 8vo 2 50 



Dadd's Modern Horse Doctor. 13mo 1 50 



Horse and Ho\mds, iUus 75 



Horses, Famous American Race 75 



Horses, Famous American Trotting 75 



Horses, Famous, of Amei-ica 1 50 



How to Handle and Educate Vicious Horses, 



Gleason 1 00 



Jenning's Horse Training 1 35 



Mayhew's Horse Doctor, 400 Ulus 3 00 



Mayhew's Horse Management 3 00 



McClure's Stable Guide 1 00 



Riding and Driving 30 



Riding Recollections, Whyte Melville's 3 00 



Stonehenge on the Horse, English edit'n, 8va 3 50 



Stonehenge on the Horse, Amer. ed., 12mo. . 2 00 



Tlie Book of the Horse 8 00 



The Saddle Horse, Guide to Riding and 



Training, illus ... 1 00 



Veterinary Dictionary, Going 2 00 



AVallaee's American Stud Book 10 00 



Wallace's American Trotting Register, 3 vols 30 00 



Woodruff's Trotting Horses of America — 3 50 



Youatt and Spooner oh the Horae, illus 1 50 



HUNTING— SHOOTING. 

 Adventures on the Great Hunting Ground.s 



of the World, 23 illus ] 00 



American Sportsman, The, Lewis 3 50 



Antelope and Deer of America, Caton 2 50 



Bear Hunting, Bowman 1 00 



Qrack Shot (The Rifle) "Barber." iUus 135 



Dead Shot (The Gun), or Sportsman's Guide 1 25 



Down the West Branch, by Capt. Farrar 1 25 



Field, Cover and Trap Shooting, Bogardus. . 2 00 

 Frank Forester's Sporting Scenes and Char- 

 acter.?, 3 vol., cloth 4 00 



Frank Forester's Manual for Young Spoi-ts- 



men 3 00 



Gunsmiths' Manual, illus., 376 pp 3 00 



How I Became a Crack Shot, B arrow. 1 00 



How I Became a Sportsman, Avon 3 40 



How to Hunt and Trap, Batty 1 50 



Horse and Hounds, illus 75 



Hunter and Trapper, Thrasher 75 



Hunting Trips of a Ranchman, Roosevelt. . 3 50 



Hurlingham Gun Club Rules 35 



Instructions in Rifle Firing, by Capt. Blunt. 2 00 



Modern Breech-Loader, Greener 3 50 



Nimrod in the North, Schwatka 3 50 



Poems of the Rod and Gun, McLellan 3 00 



Rifle Practice, Wingate 1 56 



Rod and Gun in Cahfornia, Van Dyke 1 50 



Shooting, Blakey 50 



Shooting on the Wing 75 



Sport with Gun and Rod, cloth 10 00 



Sport with Gun and Rod, new, plain edition. 5 00 



Embossed leather 15 00 



Sporting Adventures in the Far West 1 50 



StiU-Hunter, Van Dyke 3 00 



Stephens' Fox Hunting 1 25 



Stephens' Young Moose Hunters 1 50 



The Gun and Its Development, Greener 2 50 



The Pistol 50 



Three in Norway, or Rifle, Rod and Gun in 



Norway i^. 1 75 



Trajectory Test 50 



Wing and Glass Ball Shooting with a Rifle, 



by H. C. Bliss 50 



KENNEL. 



American Kennel, Bnrges 3 00 



Breeders' Kennel Record and Acc't Book.. . 3 (X) 



Dog, Diseases of , Dalziel 80 



Dog, Diseases of, HUl 2 00 



Dog Breaking, Floyd 50 



Dog Breaking, Hutchinson 3 00 



Dog, the Dinks, Mayhew and Hutchinson. .. 3 00 



Dog Training vs. Breaking, Hammond 1 00 



Dog Training, First Lessons and Points of 



Judging 35 



Dogs and Their Doings, Morris 1 75 



Dogs of British Islands Stonehenge 6 00 



Dogs, Management of, Mayhew, 16mo 75 



Dogs, Points of Judging 35 



Dogs, Richardson, pa. 30c.; cloth. 60 



Dogs and the Public 7-5 



Dogs, Their Management and Treatment in 



Disease, by Ashmont 3 00 



Euglishe Dogges, Reprint of 1576 50 



English K. C. S. book. Vol I 5 00 



English K. C. S. Book, Vols. III. to IX., each 4 50 



English K. C. S. Book, Vols. XI. to XIII., each 4 50 



Glover's Album. Treatise on Canine Di seases 50 



Our Fi-iend the Dog, Stables 3 60 



Points of Judging and First Lessons 35 



Practical Kennel Guide, Stables 1 50 



Setter Dog, the, Laverack 3 00 



The Dog, by Idstone 1 35 



The Mastiff, the History of, M. B. Wynn .... 3 50 



Training Trick Dogs, illus 35 



Vero Shaw's Book on the Dog, cloth, $8.00; 



half morocco 13 OO 



Youatt on the Dog 3 50 



SPOKTS AND GAMES. 



American Boy's Own Book Sports and Games 3 00 



Athletic Sports for Boys, Stonehenge 1 00 



Boy's Book of Sports and Pastimes 3 50 



Boy's Treasury of Sports and Pastimes, etc . 3 00 



Cassell's Book of Sports and Pastimes 3 00 



Croquet 30 



EasyWliist 50 



Encvclopedia of Rural Sports, Stonehenge. 4 50 



Hands at Whist 50 



Instruction in the Indian Club Exercise 35 



Skating 25 



\NTiist for Beginners 50 



MISCELI.ANEOUS. 



Antelope and Deer of America, Caton 3 50 



Adventures on the Great Hunting Grounds 



of the World, 23 illus 1 00 



Atlas of New Jersey Coast 1 50 



Black HOls of Dakota, Ludlow, quarto, cloth 



Government report 3 50 



Complete Poultry Manual 25 



Eastward Hoi 1 25 



Fire Acres Too Much 1 50 



Forest and Stream Fables 10 



Hand Book of Tree Planting, Eglefton 75 



Historical and Biographical Atlas u .'New 



Jersey Coast 5 00 



Keeping One Cow 100 



Life and Writings of Frank Forester, 3 vols, 



per vol 1 50 



Old St. Augustine, Fla., iUus 1 50 



Our Arctic Province, Alaska, Elliott 4 .50 



Practical Forestry, by Fuller 1 50 



Practical Pigeon Keeping, Wright 1 50 



Practical Taxidermv and Home Decoration, 



Batty 1 ,50 



Profitable Poultry Keeping, Beale 2 00 



Southern California, Van Dyke 1 50 



Sportsman's Gazetteer, Hallock 3 00 



The Forest Waters the Farm, 50 cts. paper; 



cloth 75 



Wild Woods Life, Farrar 1 25 



Wonders of the Yellowstone, Riclxajdson. . . 1 50 



Woodcraft, by Nessmuk. , 1 00 



Woods and Lakes of Maine. *,,,>.,,. 3 00 



A WORD IN SEASON. 



Readers old and new of the Forest and Streaji may be pleased to know that the 

 paper is now at the close of 1886 enjoying the support of a wider circle of friends than a 

 any former period in its history. This is an interesting fact, for it proves, witli the bea 

 pos.sible demonstration of success, the sound sense of the theory long ago adopted by 

 editors and publishers, and steadfastly adhered to, that there is room in this country for a 

 journal treating the subjects embraced by our departments, and depending for its suppor 

 wholly upon what have been accepted by the conductors of the Forest and Stream as 

 legitimate journalistic methods. In other words, we have kept faith with subscribers by 

 devoting our reading columns exclusively to honest reading matter, and have not given up 

 our pages to extended paid puffs of railroad routes clumsily disguised as accounts of sports- 

 men's travel, nor alluring descriptions of wonderful agricultural regions, all paid by the 

 column. The conviction that a sportsman's journal for sportsmen could be conducted 

 without resorting to such questionable makeshift expedients have proved quite correct. 



The tone and high character of the journal, as one fit for sportsmen to receive into their 

 homes, will be jealously maintained. As there is nothing in the recreations of field and 

 stream inconsistent with the highest type of manhood, so, the editors are convinced, there 

 should be in a journal like the Forest akd Stream nothing to offend good taste. 



The Forest and Stream will be, in the future as in the past, thoroughly representa- 

 tive of the best field aportsmanship of America. It will mainlain its position as the chosen 

 exponent of those who seek recreation with gun or rod, rifle, canoe or yacht. Its character 

 will be scrupulously preserved, and readers in 1887 may expect a rich fund of sporting 

 sketches and stories, suggestions, bright sayings, prompt, reliable news, and interesting 

 discussions. Angler, shooter, dog breeder, canoeist and yachtsman, may be assured that 

 whatever is of interest in these respective fields in 1887 will find its way into the columns of 

 the Forest and Stream. 



The Sportsman Tourist 



columns are filled with bright sketches of travel, camp life and adventure, the reflected ex- 

 perience of a host of outers. 



Natural History. 



Papers descriptive of bird life, chapters of animal biography, notes on the ways of field, 

 forest and water creatures as observed by sportmen, anglers and naturalists, make up these 

 pages. The special work of the past year has been the establishment of the Audubon 

 Society for the Protection of Birds, begun in February, and having now a membership 

 approaching 30,000. 



Angling and Shooting. 



Time was when a single journal sufliced in this country for adequate discussion of all the 

 heterogenous pastimes and practices dubbed sport. That time has long since passed away. 

 Some of the sports have been outgrown or put under a ban, others have developed to such a 

 degree that each class requires a special organ. The particular fields chosen by the Forest 

 AND Stream are those of angling and shooting. The pages given up to these topics are 

 rich with the freshest, brightest, most wholesome, entertaining and valuable open air litera- 

 ture of the day. They have the sunlight and woodsy odor of the haunts of game and fish; 

 they picture nature as seen by sportsman and angler. One has not long to read the Forest 

 AND Stream before learning its attitude with respect to game and fish protection. The 

 editors believe in conserving, by aU legitimate methods, the game of fields and woods, and 

 the fish of brook, river and lake, not for the exclusive benefit of any class or classes, but for 

 the public. They are earnest, consistent and determined advocates of strict protection in 

 the legal close season, and in restricting the taking of game both as to season and methods, 

 so that the benefits of these natural resources may be evenly distributed. 



The Kennel. 



This department has kept even pace with the growth of the interest of breeding field 

 and pet dogs. Reports of trials and shows are usuall}'' given in the Forest and Stream 

 in advance of other publications, and being prepared by competent writers their intelligent 

 criticisms are of practical utility. This journal is not hampered by personal animosities. 

 It has no judges to "kill." It does not decide a dog's merit by asking who the owner is. It 

 treats all kennel subjects without fear, favor or ulterior motives, and in consequence enjoys 

 a degree of public confidence and esteem denied to such as stagger beneath the incubus of 

 malice and floimder in the bogs of ignorance. 



Rifle and Trap Shooting 



records scores of meetings and matches, discussions of topics pertaining to the butt, gallery 

 and trap. Secretaries of gun and rifle clubs are invited to send their scores for publication. 



Canoeing. 



This country is a land of magnificent water courses, and Americans are just beginning 

 to appreciate the canoe as a means of enjoying the delectable charms of river and lake, and 

 bay and canal. The men who are making fortunes by making canoes know best how 

 rapidly the ranks of canoeists are multiplying. ISTovices and old hands will find in the 

 Forest and Stream canoeing columns, in charge of a practical canoeist, accounts of 

 cruises, lines of new craft, and hints and helps and suggestions without number. Closely 

 allied is 



Yachting, 



in which the Forest aisd Stream is the only competent, all-the-year-round, intelligent 

 exponent. Our reports of races are full, prompt and accurate. The numerous illustrations 

 of lines of new yachts make an invaluable record of the development of yacht building. 

 Weekly, $4 per year; $3 for six months. 



Forest and Stream Pub. Co., 39 Park Bow, 



