396 FOREST AND STREAM. [Nov. s, 1894. 
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| Forest and Stream's Outdoor Scenes. % 
FROM ORIGINALS IN WATER COLOR AND OIL, PAINTED EXPRESSLY FOR THE FOREST AND STREAM. 
AS PREMIUMS. 
We have prepared as premiums a set of four beautiful 
and artistic reproductions of original paintings of realistic 
outdoor scenes. The art work is the best obtainable 
in New York; the pictures are rich in effect and are 
intended for framing. They are done in 12 colors. 
The yacht race is from an oil painting; the others from 
water colors. The scenes are shown in the small cuts 
herewith. The plates are !4jjfxiQin. The pictures 
are sent both to new subscribers and to old subscribers 
upon renewal, on the following terms: 
Forest and Stream one year and the four pictures, $5. 
Forest and Stream 6 months and any two pictures, $3. 
If subscribing for 6mos. designate by title the two 
pictures desired. Single pictures will be sold separately, 
price $1.50 each, or the set, $5. Remit by express or 
postal money or- 
der, payable to 
Forest and Stream 
Publishing Co., 
318 Broadway, 
New York. 
The pictures 
are sent by mail, 
postpaid, wrapp- 
ed in tube. 
Copies of them 
may be seen at 
this office, and 
inspection is in- 
vited. 
HE'S GOT THEM. 
BASS FISHING AT BLOCK ISLAND. 
JACKSNIPE COMING IN. 
VIGILANT AND VALKYRIE. 
ROWLAN 
Robinson's Danvis Books. 
CHRONICLES OF SPORTSMEN AND OTHER HUMAN BEINGS. 
Uncle Lisha's Shop. 
LIFE IS A COENEE OF TANKEELAtfD. 
The shop itself, the place of business of Uncle Lisha Peggs, 
bootmaker and repairer, was a sort of sportsman's exchange, 
where, as one cf the fraternity expressed it, the hunters and 
fishermen of the widely scattered neighborhood used to 
meet of evenirjgs and dull outdoor days, "to swap lies." 
The talk naturally ran much on hunting stories and wood 
lore, but although the stories told were generally good, 
their truthfulness was not always accepted without ques- 
tion, and the volume abounds as much in dialogue as in 
narrative. "Unele Lisha's Shop" is brimful of quaint 
humor and sentiment, and there is an unmistakable touch 
of human nature in Uncle Lisha himself, and his good old 
wife, Aunt Jerushy; in Sam Lovel, the hunter, and in fact 
in all the other characters introduced. 
Sam LovePs Camps. 
UNCLE LISHA'S FEIENDS UNDER BAEK AND CANVAS. 
When Uncle Lisha went West, Sam Lovel took Antoine 
as his partner, and the fortunes arid misfortuoes of the two 
as trappers are described with all the charm of our author's 
quaint style, while their friends and enemies, and ail with 
whom they are brought into contact, in the course of the 
story, step on to the stage real living flesh and blood crea- 
tures drawn with such fidelity to life that the reader never 
doubts that he would recognize any one of them from the 
description, should it ever be his good or ill fortune to run 
against him. 
Danvis Folks. 
A SEQUEL TO THE SHOP AND THE CAMPS. 
This volume is a collection into book form of the "Dauvis 
Folks" chapters published in Foeest AND Stream. It 
relates the further fortunes of Uncle Lisha, Sam Lovel, 
Granther Hill and those personages of the story whom we 
know so well. Mr. Robinson avers that his characters were 
of the old times and have passed away. That surely is a 
mistake. They are living to-day here in these three books, 
and the Vermont author has endowf d them with qualities 
which will give them long life to come. If you already 
have on your shelves the Shop and the Camps, you have a 
place there for this third volume. 
Sent postpaid, the Shop and the Camps, $1.00 each, the Danvis Folks, $1.25. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING COMPANY. 
That Soap Story 
told in our issue of Oct. 6, as an extract from Dr. Peirce's "A Man 
from Corpus Christi," was only one of the funny episodes told of in 
the book. There are scores of laughs and hundreds of chuckles 
between the covers. We would not dare to go into camp with the 
man who" could read the chapters and not chuckle over the scrapes 
and escapes of this original citizen of Corpus. 
Illustrated by no special artist; 257 pages; price a dollar and a half. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO., 
318 Broadway, New York, 
Wildfowl Shooting 
is one of the branches of shooting treated fully and well in Howland 
Gasper's "Complete Sportsman." The beginner will find Mr 
Gasper's instructions clear, readily understood, and helpful. The 
oldest gunner in the land will find them pretty close to what he 
would say himself. The "Complete Sportsman" is a book for wild 
duck and wild goose shooters. 227 pages, 17 illustrations, $2.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO., 
318 Broadway, New York. 
