892 
FOREST AND STREAM 
[Dec. 8, 1906. 
Sportsmen’s Clothing 
Sheds Water like a Duck’s Back 
Combines the advantage of perfect tailoring 
with perfect protection against rain. Water¬ 
proofed by a patent process, permitting thorough 
ventilation. Cloth as solt as chamois, yet rain 
cannot penetrate it, whether in driving down¬ 
pour or dreary all-day drizzle. Equally appro¬ 
priate to fair or rainy weather, l it, finish and 
waterproof qualities guaianteed. Sightly and 
durable. 
Coat double stitched and lined throughout 
with same material. Reinforced shoulder cap. 
Patent bellows under arm gives extra ventila¬ 
tion, and freedom of movement with paddle, rod 
or gun. Pockets everywhere. 
Trousers reinforced from hip to knee. Double 
seat. 
Give snug breast measure, height, and length 
of arm from center of hack. Waist and leg for 
trousers. 
Light, tan or dead grass green. 
Coat, $5 ; trousers, $3; hat, §1. Express prepaid. 
FOR LADIES’ WEAR 
Neatly tailored coat and skirt. Gives absolute 
protection on any outing trip. Suitable for gun¬ 
ning, fishing, tramping, boating, climbing. 
Coat, $5.00; skirt, $4.00. Express prepaid. 
Booklet, with samples of material and directions 
for self-measurement sent free. 
BIRD, JONES & KENYON, 
3 Blandina St. Utica, N. Y. 
ANDERSCH BROS. 
v 
$10,000 BOOK FOR $2 
Second, revised, enlarged edition of our Hunters’ and Trappers’ 
Quide, 350 pages, durably bound in leather and gold, 250 pictures illus¬ 
trating: all fur-bearing: animals, modern and ancient traps. Reveals 
hunters’ and trappers’ secrets. How and where to hunt and trap profit¬ 
ably. This encylopedia of hunting and trapping: is highly indorsed by 
sportsmen of national reputation. Price, $2.00. To our shippers, $1.25. 
We pay IO to 50 per cent morefor Fu rs a nd Hides thanyou 
can get at home. Write for market reports, pricelist and shipping tags. 
ANDERSCH BROS., Dept. 56, Minneapolis, Minn. 
THE BLACKFEET INDIANS. 
// The winter 
JL 9T months afford the finest^SSJl 
/ hunting of the year —the 
Wf keenest sport in the keenest ^ 
W air. Snow shoes or skies, and Y 
f scientific “out-door clothing” are ’ 
three very essential features of this 
season. These with sledges, packhar- 
ne j S ’ ? nc * a variet y °f hunting boots 
and shoes are only special features of 
the line which fills our 300 -page cata¬ 
logue F, and which will offer hundreds 
of suggestions for holiday gifts to 
sportsmen. Send for one. Our large 
tackle department can supply you 
with everything necessary for fishing 
through the ice. 
L ABERCROMBIE &. FITCH CO. 
\ Complete Outfits for Explorers, A 
k \Campers,Prospectors&Hunters 
V \ No. 57 Reade Street y ^ 
ILl- \i door from Broadway ,dmh 
W. NEW YORK .rfKPP 
ESTABLISHED 
1831 
THE 
COUNTRY 
GENTLEMAN 
The ONLY Agricultural NEWSpaper, 
AND ADMITTEDLY THE 
Leading Agricultural Journal of the World. 
Every department written by specialists, the highest 
authorities in their respective lines. 
No other paper pretends to compare with it in quali¬ 
fications of editorial staff. 
Gives the agricultural NEWS with a degree of com¬ 
pleteness not even attempted by others. 
INDISPENSABLE TO 
ALL COUNTRY RESIDENTS 
WHO WISH TO 
KEEP UP WITH THE TIMES. 
Persons whose interest in Walter B. Anderson’s story “ In the Lodges of the Blackfeet” is 
sufficient to make them wish to know more about this interesting people, should read 
A radically new feature this year is a Series of Read¬ 
ing Courses on the Fundamentals of Farming, something 
never before attempted by any journal. 
Blackfoot Lodge Tales 
BY GEORGE BIRD GRINNELL. 
This volume, of more than 300 pages, gives a full history of the Blackfoot nation from 
primitive times down to the present day. It deals very fully with their legendary history 
and their mythic and religious stories; tells how they used to live, to hunt, to go to war, 
describes their social organization, and from cover to cover is a complete history of one of 
the bravest and most warlike of the Western Indian tribes. Price, $ 1 . 75 . 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO., 346 Broadway, New York 
Weekly. $1.50 per annum. Rest of this year free to 
new subscribers for 1907. 
SPECIMEN COPIES 
free on request. It will pay anybody interested in any 
way in country life to send for them. Address the 
publishers, 
LUTHER TUCKER & SON, 
Albany, N. Y. 
REMINISCENCES OF A 
SPORTSMAN. 
Ca.iYoe and Boat Building. 
A Complete Manual for Amateurs. Containing plain 
and comprehensive directions for the construction of 
Canoes, Rowing and Sailing Boats and Hunting Craft. 
By W. P. Stephens. Cloth. Seventh and enlarged edi¬ 
tion. 264 pages. Numerous illustrations, and fifty plates 
in envelope. Price, $2.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Canoe and Camp Cookery. 
A practical cook book for canoeists, Corinthian sailors 
and outers. By “Seneca.” Cloth, 96 pages. Price $1.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
WM. LYMAN'S 
RAPID FIRING TARGETS 
FOR RIFLES. 
25 Yards, price, 15c. per dozen. 
50 Yards, price, 25c. per dozen. 
Cano* Ridgi, Pa. 
The Lyman Targets received. They are the best I ever 
saw. Chakles King, Gunsmith. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CD., 346 Broadway, Now York. 
BY J. PARKER WHITNEY. 
This is a volume of extraordinary interest. 
The author, who 1 is a well known man of affairs, 
and conspicuously successful in large business 
interests, has drawn from his life-long partici¬ 
pation in field-sports a thousand and one inci¬ 
dents worth the telling. The book is compelling 
in its hold on the reader; once begun it will not 
be put aside until finished. 468 pages. Price, 
$3.00, (postage, 25 cents). 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
