December, 1920 
FOREST AND STREAM 
651 
Among the Christmas Gifts 
For the boy or girl in high school — -the No. 1 Kodak 
Junior. There’s always room for it in the pocket, and the 
Kodak story of the school days is one that not only gives 
fun in the making but in its album form becomes a permanent 
delight to the whole family. The price of the No. 1 Auto- 
graphic Kodak Junior is $16.67, including the excise war tax. 
For the little folks — a No. 0 Brownie. These little cameras have 
good lenses and shutters and finders, and use the same film and 
make the same size pictures as the Vest Pocket Kodak. You will 
be astonished by the good work they do; you will be even more 
astonished at the intelligent way in which a youngster of seven or 
eight will go about picture-making with a No. 0 Brownie. The 
price, including war tax, is $2.86.- 
For the grown-ups or the nearly grown-ups, a Kodak 
for pictures of the post card size, 2>V\ x 5^2 inches. It is 
familiarly known to hundreds of thousands of enthusiasts 
as the “3£”. It makes the largest picture available in 
“pocket photography’’. The 3T will really go into the 
side pocket of almost any coat. Frankly, however, it is 
more conveniently carried in an overcoat pocket — or 
slung over the shoulder in a case. Excise war tax and 
all, the Junior model, with a fine Rapid Rectilinear lens, 
sells at $24.64 — and with the Kodak Anastigmat /. 7. 7 
lens, at $30.62. There are. other more expensive models 
— all have the Kodak simplicity — and they all make 
good pictures. 
A gift for the one who already has a larger Kodak— the Vest 
Pocket. You don’t carry a Vest Pocket Kodak — you wear it, like 
a watch. It is always ready to picture the unexpected and the 
unusuai. The price, including the excise war tax, is $9.49. 
This page gives only a hint of the Kodak and Brownie line — there are Brownies for pictures of 
every size that Kodaks make, and there are Kodaks with high speed shutters and rapid lenses — there 
are folding Brownies as well as box Brownies — but they all have one common characteristic — they 
make good pictures. And all Kodaks (except Stereo and Panoram) and all folding Brownies have 
something else in common — they are Autographic, and when used with Autographic film provide 
for thednstant titling of every negative at the time it is made. And the Autographic costs no more 
than other film. 
EASTMAN KODAK COMPANY, Rochester, N.Y., The Kodak City. 
In Writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. It will identify you. 
