FOREST AND STREAM. 
43 
Jan. 9 , 1909 ] 
Xut 
All makes of 
guns and ammu¬ 
nition for same 
are sold at the 
B ‘f{ (d... .4)1 
right prices at 
Philadelphia’s 
Sporting Goods 
Headquarters 
Write for Catalogue B; also list 
of second-hand guns. 
Shannon 
fl^Mm 
816 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. 
A $7 Sweater 
For g 00 
I T’S an ill wind that blows no good. The recent condition 
of over production made it possible for us to secure a stock 
of high grade Sweaters at a low price. We offer you the 
saving. Speaking of winds, no wind blows good enough to 
chill the man wearing one of these Fleece Wool Sweater 
Jackets. Knitted almost as solidly as woven cloth, yet soft 
and pliable. Made with sleeves, V neck, strong, shaped 
pockets. Knitted to fit, not stretched into shape. 
SENT C. O. D. 
on a deposit of $1.00. If on its receipt you think it worth 
$6.00 more, send us only $4.00 and it’s yours. Write to-day 
while the assortment of sizes is complete. Be sure to give 
chest measure. 
C. J. GODFREY COMPANY 
Everything lor the Sportsman 
Dept. L-3,10 Warren St., New York 
DUXBAK 
camping-, boating, climbing. 
BIRD, JONES KENYON, 
SPORTSMEN’S CLOTHING 
Just the thing for gunning, fishing. 
Booklet -with samples of material free. 
3 Blandina St., Utica, N. Y. 
The 
R^o 
LAMP. 
hold use. 
Safest and best lamp for house- 
At your dealer’s. 
STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW YORK. 
(Incorporated) 
MY SIXTY YEARS ON 
THE PLAINS 
True Pictures of a Vanished Life 
"BILL” HAMILTON 
Appropriately enough W. T. Hamilton, the 
last survivor of the old race of free trappers, 
became the author of one of the best pen pic¬ 
tures of the old life of the plains and moun¬ 
tains ever written. 
No work of fiction offers more adventure, 
more thrills of desperate bravery, heroic endur¬ 
ance and hair breadth escape than this un¬ 
adorned narrative of the life of the old trap¬ 
per and plainsman, the companion of Bill 
Williams, Jim Baker, Carson, Bridges and the 
rest whose names are household words. 
“Sixty Years on the Plains” is all that the 
name signifies and more. It depicts every phase 
of frontier life, hunting, trapping, Indian fight¬ 
ing, the beginnings of Empire building. From 
the store house of sixty years of wonderfully 
full experience, Mr. Hamilton drew the ma¬ 
terial for a book of splendid interest and real 
value. Cloth, Illustrated. 
Postpaid, $1.50 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
A CLASSIC FOR SPORTSMEN. 
American Big Game in Its Haunts 
Boone and Crockett Club Series. 
Edited by OEORGE BIRD GRINNELL. 
An invaluable work not alone for the sportsman, but for the student 
and lover of wild life. Treats of big game preservation and protection in 
the broader sense; tells of the habits, habitat and life history of the larger 
wild animals; touches upon the problem of the public forest domain, and 
is rounded out by interesting hunting reminiscences by such leaders in 
the fraternity of big game hunters as Madison Grant, Paul J. Dashiell, 
George Bird Grinnell, Jas. H. Kidder and W. Lord Smith. Bound in 
cloth, library edition^ heavy paper, richly illustrated, 497 pages. 
Postpaid, $2.50. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO., NEW YORK CITY 
CORRESPONDENCE. 
The Forest and Stream is the recognized medium of 
entertainment, instruction and information between Amer¬ 
ican sportsmen. The editors invite communications on 
the subjects to which its pages are devoted. Anonymous 
communications will not be regarded. The editors are 
not responsible for the views of correspondents. 
SUBSCRIPTIONS. 
Subscriptions may begin at any time. Terms; For 
single copies, |3 per year, $1.50 for six months. Rates 
for clubs of annual subscribers: 
Three Copies, $7.50, Five Copies, $12, 
Remit by express money-order, registered letter, money- 
order or draft, payable to the Forest and Stream Publish¬ 
ing Company. The paper may be obtained of news¬ 
dealers throughout the United States, Canada and Great 
Britain. Canadian subscriptions, $4.0O a year, $2.00 for 
six months. 
Foreign Subscriptions and Sales Agents—London: 
Davies & Co., 1 Finch Lane; Sampson, Low & Co. 
Paris: Brentano’s. Foreign terms: $4.50 per year; $2.25 
for six months. 
ADVERTISEMENTS. 
Inside pages, 20 cents per agate line. Special rates for 
three, six and twelve months. Eight words to the line, 
fourteen lines to one inch. Advertisements should be 
received by Saturday previous to issue in which they 
are to be inserted. Transient advertisements must in¬ 
variably be accompanied by the money, or they will not 
be inserted. Reading notices, seventy-five cents per line. 
Only advertisements of an approved character inserted. 
Display Classified Advertising. 
Hotels, Summer and Winter Resorts, Instruction. 
Schools, Colleges, etc. Railroad and Steamship Time 
Tables. Real Estate For Sale and To Let. Seeds and 
Shrubs. Taxidermists. The Kennel. Dogs, etc. Wants 
and Exchanges. Per agate line, per insertion, 15 cents. 
Three months, 13 times, 10 cents per line. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB, CO. 
127 Franklin Street, New York, 
My Life As An Indian 
All That the Title Implies and More 
Probably the most faithful picture of Indian 
life ever drawn from the pen of a man who 
spent years among the Blackfeet, marrying into 
the tribe and becoming to all practical intents 
an Indian, 
Mr. Schultz tells of the life of the plains In¬ 
dian, when war and hunting were the occupations 
of every man, when the buffalo still covered the 
prairie, and the Indian was as yet little touched 
by contact with civilization. He describes as one 
who has lived the life, the daily routine of the 
great camp, the lives of the men and women, 
the gambling, the quarreling, the love making, 
the wars, the trading of the Indians. 
The narrative is full of intense human in¬ 
terest, and the requisite touch of romance is 
supplied in the character of Nat-ah-ki, the beau¬ 
tiful Indian girl, who became the author’s wife. 
Price, $1.65 postpaid. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
A Danvis Pioneer. 
A story of one of Ethan Allen’s Green Moun¬ 
tain Boys. By Rowland E. Robinson. Goth, 
214 pages. Price, $1.25. 
Mr. Robinson’s Forest and Stream serial “In Pioneer 
Days” has been published in a volume uniform in style 
with “Danvis Folks,” and those readers who are so 
fortunate as to possess Mr. Robinson’s other books will 
be glad to add this to the series. 
Contents: _At the Deer’s Head. The Wilderness. 
Hermit Life in the Woods. Visitors. Ticonderoga. La 
Canadienne. Dalrymple, the Scout. Scouting on Cham¬ 
plain. Hubbardton. Ruby. A Curious Bit of History. 
The Smoot'n-Bore. The Patriarch of Danvis. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
