Feb. 20, 1909.] 
FOREST AND STREAM 
283 
Fly and Bait 
Rods, and all 
i 
kinds of Fishing 
Tackle are sold 
at the right prices 
Of 
Philadelphia’s 
Sporting Goods 
IR 
Headquarters 
Write for Catalogue A. 
Shannon 
Slfi'Chestnut Street, Phila,.delphiaL 
Cold Proof Clothing 
for Hunters 
The famous Mackinaw 
garments for rough use and 
cold weather. The right 
thing for any out-of-door 
use, the only thing for 
still hunting. Made of a 
rough finished, soft, wooly 
cloth that's proof against 
any cold, and is woven 
like heavy blanketing so 
no w'ind can penetrate. 
Light in weight. 
COATS are made with roll collar and three large 
pockets as per cut, all sizes. Price, each . $5.00 
TROUSERS have two front and watch pock¬ 
ets, two tear pockets, with buckle adjusting 
teat strap, all sizes. Price per pair . . 4 50 
Write for full description and 8-page bargain sheet 
CHARLES J. GODFREY COMPANY 
Dept. M 3, 10 Warren St., New York 
■nHmraaaH^ninnnKnBBnBnnnaiH 
DUXBAK 
camping, boating, climbing 
BIRD. JONES <Bl 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) 
Ny Life As Aiv 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- 
I tiful Indian girl, who became the author’s wife. 
Price, $i.6s postpaid. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO. 
J 27 Franklin Street, New YorkJ 
TRAINING vs. BREAKING. 
Practical Dog Training; or, Training vs. Breaking. 
Hammond, To which is added a chapter on 
gaming pet dogs, by an amateur. Cloth, 166 pages. 
Price, $1. 
FOREST AND STREAM P^TBLISHING CO. 
Clyde Line 
to 
FLORIDA 
Training the Hunting Dog. 
For the Field and Field Trials. By B. Waters, author 
of “Modern Training,” “Fetch and Carry,” etc. 
Price, $1.M. 
This is a complete manual by the highest authority 
in this country, and will be found an adequate guide for 
amateurs and professionals. 
Contents: General Principles. Instinct, Reason and 
Natural Development. Natural Qualities and Character¬ 
istics. Punishment and Bad Methods. The Best Les¬ 
sons of Puppyhood. Yard Breaking. “Heel.” Pointing. 
Backing. Reading and Drawing. Ranging. Drop;)ing 
to Shot and Wing. Breaking Shot, Breaking in, Chasing. 
Retrieving. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Uncle Lisha^s Outing. 
A sequel to “Danvis Folks.” By Rowland E. Robin¬ 
son. Cloth. Price, $1.26. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
A Danvis Pioneei. 
A story of one of Ethan Allen’s Green Moun¬ 
tain Boys. By Rowland E. Robinson. Doth, 
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 Smooth-Bore. The Patriarch of Danvis. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
