FOREST AND STREAM 
1055 
IMPRESSIONS AND EXPERIENCES OF A FRENCH 
TROOPER. By Christian Mallet, New York. E. P. 
Dutton & Co., $1.00 net. 
The retreat from Belgium, the Battle of the Marne 
and the great Attack at Loos, as seen by a French pri¬ 
vate soldier who fought his way up to the rank of 
Lieutenant. It is an astonishing piece of work—simple, 
poignant and heroic. 
****** 
WARPATH AND HUNTING TRAIL. By Elmer 
E. Gregor. Harper and Brothers, 60 cents net. 
Mr. Gregor is well-known as an author of outdoor 
books, and as a distinguished contributor to Forest and 
Stream. He has written a book for boys, old as well 
as young, thrilling stories of Indian boys, of adventures 
and hair-breadth escapes from their enemies, and their 
hardships and achievements as hunters. Mr. Gregor, 
who knows the ways of the red men, has told in this 
book stories of boys of many different tribes of the 
East and West—Iroquois, Mohawks, Delawares, Sioux, 
Blackfeet and Pawnees. 
****** 
THE TRAIL OF THE INDOOR OUTER. By Ray¬ 
mond E. Manchester. George Banta Publishing Co., 
Menasha, Wis. 
A little booklet of about 50 pages, with a series of 
essays, based .on subjects that form the substance of 
angler’s dreams in winter, and very well done, by 
the way. 
****** 
TREASURE ISLAND. Harper’s, New York. Price $1.50. 
Illustrated by Louis Rhead, whose cover designs, and 
contributions to Forest and Stream make him one of 
“our own family.” 
A perfect edition of a perfect book at a popular price. 
There are more than one hundred illustrations and 
decorations. 
****** 
IN PASTURES GREEN. By Peter McArthur, New 
York. E. P. Dutton & Co. Price $1.75 net. 
This book is an account of Mr. McArthur’s life on a 
Canadian farm, told in a style that is instructive, 
illuminating and humorous. It is in the form of short 
delightful essays, each essay dealing with a different 
phase of farm life, e.g., the opening of an apple pit, 
summer wood, agricultural education, hunting, etc., etc. 
A book that may without impropriety find a place 
on the library shelf beside the well beloved John 
Burroughs. 
****** 
THE DETERMINED ANGLER. By Charles Brad- 
ford-G. P. Putnam’s Sons, New York. Price $1.00 net. 
This is a new and enlarged edition of a very popular 
book—one that no less an authority than Grover Cleve¬ 
land declares to be the most sensible and practical 
volume of its kind he had ever read. The author needs 
no introduction to readers of this paper, as he has been 
numbered for many years as one of its most valuable 
contributors. In fact, among the new chapters of the 
book Mr. Bradford has amplified some of the charming 
little essays that he published during the last year in 
Forest and Stream. No angler’s library can be deemed 
complete without this important and instructive work. 
THE CANADIAN COMMON WEALTH— Everybody who 
has read her fascinating books or her brilliant articles 
about Canadian History and Wilderness Life knows 
that Agnes Laut speaks with interest and authority 
about our neighbor to northward. 
Now she has written a compelling, thought-provoking 
book about this great growing Empire—a picturesque 
interpretation of the people of Canada; their char¬ 
acter, ideals and temper; their problems of trade, 
labor, immigration, government and defense; their 
relations to England. America and Japan; their de¬ 
velopment in the past, their expansion in the present, 
and their future big with opportunity. 
The intense conviction, the glowing expression, the 
command of facts, large and small, up-to-date and 
often new; the mass of vivid details to be gained 
only by an eye-witness; the range of comparison; 
enlist enthusiastic interest and repay the reader. 
The book is beyond doubt the most notable interpreta- 
tion of the great Dominion ever published. (Bobbs 
Merrill, $1.50.) 
Forest and Stream Publishing Company 
■will supply at regular publisher’s rates any 
outdoor book mentioned above or any other 
outdoor book that our subscribers may de¬ 
sire. Address Book Department, Forest 
and Stream Publishing Company, 128 
Broadway, New York. 
& 
WO-THIRDS of all 
the new cars being 
equipped by the makers 
with cord tires are going 
out on Goodyear Cord 
Tires. But a growth 
even more striking than that is taking 
place. 
Goodyear Cord Tires are standard 
equipment on the Franklin,the Packard 
Twin Six, the Locomobile, the Peerless, 
the White and the Haynes Twelve. 
But you will also see them widely 
used now on cars like the Hudson, 
Stutz, Velie, Buick, Hupmobile, 
Chevrolet, Apperson, Dodge Brothers, 
Kissel, Oakland, Jackson, Oldsmo- 
bile, Chandler, Paige, and so on. 
Simply because owners have learned 
that any good cargainsinlooks, in power¬ 
saving and gas-mileage, and in smooth 
riding, through Goodyear Cords. 
Oversize, flexibility, and resiliency 
combine in these tires to produce real 
riding luxury by absorbing most of the 
jolt and jar of travel; to give unusual 
freedom from tire trouble; and to work 
economies by giving long service, and 
by saving power and fuel. 
Their flexibility and resilience en¬ 
able them to absorb road shocks with¬ 
out danger of stone-bruise and blow-out; 
add miles per gallon; assist in a quicker 
get-away; and make the car coast farther 
when power is shut off. 
The oversize is very marked, and 
provides an increased cushion of air, 
v?hich serves to emphasize the easy- 
riding and the other good qualities 
built into Goodyear Cord Tires. 
The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company 
Akron, Ohio 
yy Makes An Expert of the Amateur 
W While gritting your teeth over a back-lash snarl, you have had to pause 
* and exclaim in admiration of the ease and accuracy with which the expert beside 
you—the old greybeard of many summers’ casting experience—gets his bait out, 
with nary a hitch or snarl or catch. 
Ten, fifteen, twenty years of fishing experience will give you that same deftness 
and skill.—But why wait those weary years when inventive genius has placed within 
your reach a reel with which you can cast, with all the expert's ease, this season, 
on your very next trip—NOW! 
The “Pflueger-Redifor ” Anti-Back-Lash Casting Reel 
makes casting a real pleasure, for beginners as well as experts. 
Automatic thumbers, attached to the flange of the spool enclosed 
within the reel, free from all dirt and chance of harm, thumb me¬ 
chanically, retarding the spool as the bait slows down. 
Will hold from 60 to 100 yards, according to size line used. 
Price, $7.50. (Fully guaranteed against defects of all kinds, FOR ALL TIME.) 
If your dealer cannot supply you, we will send it, postage prepaid, on receipt 
of price. 
The Enterprise Manufacturing Co. Dept. No. 2 1 Akron, O. 
NOTICE—Write for free copy “Tips on Tackle’* containing much information of interest to anglers. 
