324 
FOREST AND STREAM 
[Aug. 26, 1911. 
THE OU TDOOR LIBRARY 
Seasonable Books dealing with every phase of the life in the Open. 
Handbooks of Sport. Books that make “roughing it” easy. Books 
for Fisherman, Hunter, Yachtsman, Canoeist, Camper, Nature 
Lover. Books of Travel and Adventure for Young and Old. 
Book Catalogue Free on Application. 
Hunting in Many Lands. 
Contents: Hunting in East Africa, W. A. Chanler. To 
the Gulf of Cortez, George H. Gould. A Canadian 
Moose Hunt, Madison Grant. A Hunting Trip in India, 
Elliott Roosevelt. Dog Sledging in the North, D. M. 
Barringer. Wolf Hunting in Russia, Henry T. Allen. 
A Bear Hunt in the Sierras Alden Sampson. The 
Ascent of Chief Mountain, Henry L. Stimson. The 
Cougar, Casper W. Whitney. Big Game, of Mongolia 
and Tibet, W. M. Rockhill. Hunting in the Cattle 
Country, Theodore Roosevelt. Wolf Coursing, Roger D. 
Williams. Game Laws, Charles E. Whitehead. Protec¬ 
tion of the Yellowstone National Park, George S. An¬ 
derson. The Yellowstone National Park Protection Act. 
Head Measurements of the Trophies at the Madison 
Square Garden Sportsmen’s Exposition. National Park 
Protective Act. Price, $2.50. 
American Big Game Hunting. 
The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club. Theodore 
Roosevelt and George Bird Grinnell, editors. Narra¬ 
tives of white goat hunting, elk hunting, old times in 
the Black Hills, prong-buck coursing, nights with the 
grizzlies, buffalo days, blacktails in the Bad Lands, notes 
on forest reservations and game refuges. Contributors: 
Theodore Roosevelt, George Bird Grinnell, Owen Wis- 
ter, Winthrop Chanler, Col. Geo. S. Anderson, Col. 
Roger D. Williams, Archibald Rogers, F. C. Crocker, 
Dean Sage, and others. Cloth. Illustrated. Postpaid, 
$2.50. 
Trail and Camp-Fire. 
The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club. Editors: 
George Bird Grinnell and Theodore Roosevelt. Illus¬ 
trated. Like its predecessors, the present volume is de¬ 
voted chiefly to the great game and outdoor life of 
Northern America; yet it does not confine istelf to any 
one land, though it is first of all a book about America, 
its game and its people. Cloth, 353 pages. Price, $2.60. 
Hunting Without a Gun. 
And other papers. By Rowland E. Robinson. With 
illustrations from drawings by Rachael Robinson. This 
is a collection of papers on different themes contributed 
to Forest and Stream and other publications, and now 
for the first time brought together. Price, $2.00. 
My Friend the Partridge. 
S. T. Hammond. An inimitable study of the noblest 
of our game birds, following the ruffed grouse deep into 
his haunts, detailing the experiences of more than 60 
years in the field, throwing much light on the habits, 
life history and habitat of the game. A most delightful 
reminder of happy days with upland game. Cloth, 150 
pages. Postpaid, $1.00. 
Camp Life in the Woods. 
And the Tricks of Trapping and Trap Making. W. 
Hamilton Gibson. Containing hints on camp shelter and 
bait receipts of the trapper, the use of the traps, with 
instructions for the capture of all fur-bearing animals. 
Illustrated. Cloth, 360 pages. Price, $1.00. 
Jack, the Young Ranchman. 
Or a Boy’s Adventures in the Rockies. By George 
Bird Grinnell. Illustrated. Cloth, 304 pages. Price, $1.26. 
Jack Among the Indians. 
Or a Boy’s Summer on the Buffalo Plains. By George 
Bird Grinnell. Illustrated, Cloth, 301 pages. Price, $1.26. 
Jack in the Rockies. 
Or a Boy’s Adventures With a Pack Train. By George 
Bird Grinnell. Illustrated. Cloth, 272 pages. Price, $1.26. 
Jack the Young Canoeman. 
George Bird Grinnell. Illustrated. Cloth, 286 pages. 
Price, $1.25. 
Jack the Young Trapper. 
George Bird Grinnell. Illustrated, 278 pages. Price, 
$1.25. 
Manual of Taxidermy for Trappers. 
C. J. Maynard. A complete guide in collecting and 
preserving birds and animals. Illustrated. New edition. 
Price, $1.00. 
My Sixty Years on the Plains, Trapping, 
Trading and Indian Fighting. 
W. T. (Bill) Hamilton. The author was the last sur¬ 
vivor of the old race of free trappers. Bill Hamilton 
was born in 1825, and was on the plains in 1842, trapper, 
Indian fighter, sign talker, trader, scout and guide so 
long as the old West survived. This book is the simple 
unaffected story of his adventurous life, more thrilling 
and full of personal interest than any romance. Cloth. 
Illustrated, 223 pages. Postpaid, $1.50. 
Nursing vs. Dosing. 
S. T. Hammond. A most practical book for the dog 
fancier, based largely on Mr. Hammond’s observation 
that dogs, and particularly house dogs, suffer from too 
much medicine. Contents: Nursing, Cleanliness, Diet, 
Other Foods, Kennel and Exercise, Common Ailments, 
Diarrhea, Convulsions, Epilepsy, Distemper, Eczema, 
Need of Proper Care, Stomach, Vermin, Canker of the 
Ear, Mange, Nervous System, Colic, Worms. Cloth. Il¬ 
lustrated, 161 pages. Postpaid, $1.00. 
Rhymes of the Stream and Forest. 
Frank Merton Buckland. A charming collection of 
verse by an author who knows and loves nature well. 
A particularly pleasing gift for fishermen, closely simu¬ 
lating in form and ornamentation the standard fly-book. 
Cloth. Heavy laid paper. Sumptuously bound. Post¬ 
paid, $1.25. 
Uncle Lisha’s Shop. 
By Rowland E. Robinson. Life in a Corner of Yankee- 
land. The shop itself, the place of business of Uncle 
Lisha Peggs, bootmaker and repairer, was a sort of 
sportsman’s exchange, where, as one of the fraternity 
expressed it, the hunters and fishermen of the widely 
scattered neighborhood used to meet of evenings and 
dull outdoor days “to swap lies.” Cloth, 187 pages. 
Price, $1.25. 
The Still-Hunter. 
Theo. S. Van Dyke. A Practical Treatise on Deer- 
Stalking. Extra cloth, beveled, 350 pages. Price, $1.75. 
The Angler’s Workshop. Rod Making for 
Beginners. 
Perry D. Frazer. A complete, simple and thoroughly 
up-to-date work for the guidance of the amateur rod 
maker, carrying him from first principles through all 
phases of successful rod making. There is no theorizing 
or speculation. All terms are simple, and all kinds of 
rods and woods are treated of. Cloth, 180 pages. Four 
full-page illustrations, 60 working drawings. Postpaid, $1.00. 
The Book of the Black Bass. 
James A. Henshall. The standard work on the black 
bass, comprising a complete scientific and life history 
of the black bass, together with a practical treatise on 
angling and fly-fishing, a full description of tackle and 
implements, and general observations. Cloth. Illustrated, 
470 pages. Postpaid, $3.00. 
Men I Have Fished With. 
Fred Mather. Sketches of character and incident with 
rod and gun from childhood to manhood; from the kill¬ 
ing of little fishes and birds to a buffalo hunt. Illus¬ 
trated. Price, $1.60. 
My Angling Friends. 
Fred Mather. A second series of "Men I Have Fished 
With.” Cloth, 369 pages, with 13 illustrations. Price, $1.50. 
Training vs. Breaking 
Practical Dog Training; or, Training vs. Breaking. 
By S. T. Hammond. To which is added a chapter on 
training pet dogs, by an amateur. Cloth, 165 pages. 
Price, $1.00. 
How to Build a Skipjack. 
Complete plans and instructions for building a light 
draft sloop. Plans and directions easily followed. Cloth. 
Illustrated. Postpaid, $1.00. 
How to Build a Knockabout. 
A wholesome boat for all-around cruising and racing; 
23ft. O. W., 10ft. beam, 26in. draft. Full working plans 
and drawings, with instructions for building. Cloth. 
Illustrated. Postpaid, $1.00. 
OLD MAID’S KNEE 
is the term applied to Cow Hunters by the 
real guides in the big-game territories. 
A “cow hunter” is a guide who “finds 
you lots of moose,” but they are always 
cows, protected by law against your bul¬ 
lets. He then wastes your time speculat¬ 
ing on the disappearance of game from 
the particular spot in which you happen 
to be, knowing, the while, that there 
wasn’t one chance in a thousand that there 
would be “a shot” there. 
Don’t Waste Your Trip. 
by employing a “cow hunter” or an in¬ 
experienced guide. 
The charge for a real game-finding 
guide may be a bit more, but he gives you 
a chance to get what you came for. 
I have the names and addresses of 
reliable guides in almost every part of 
the world, and, if I haven’t a man in the 
territory you purpose visiting, give me 
advance notice, and I will find him for 
you. 
You may not realize what an intimate 
relationship exists between our editors 
and our subscribers. They have known 
each other for years. 
Many of the famous big-game hunters 
have read “Forest and Stream” for more 
than thirty-five years. 
They have collaborated with our editors 
on books on big-game shooting; they 
have written letters from all parts of the 
world, describing big-game conditions, 
and telling of the good and poor guides, 
abundantly strewn about the woods. 
After each hunt we get their records and 
experiences. 
Don’t you realize how valuable this 
intimate shooting knowledge would be to 
you? 
Nowhere else in the world can such a 
fund of genuine hunting information be 
found as through the channels open to 
our Information Department and through 
it to you. 
Ask for it. It’s yours absolutely with¬ 
out obligation. 
MANAGER, Information Dept. 
FOREST AND STREAM 
127 Franklin Street New York 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO.. 127 Franklin St., New York 
