5^4 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[April io, 1909. 
KENNEL BOOKS 
We have just secured at a bargain certain volumes of great interest to dog 
lovers and breeders and can thus offer our readers an unusual opportunity to 
secure these books at a low price. They are: 
English Kennel Club Stud Book, 1869 to 1886, 13 volumes. 
The interesting item in this set is the first thick volume which includes 
the years 1869-74. It is long out of print, scarce and valuable. 
National American K. C. S. B., Vol. I. (Printed in St. Louis and long out of 
print and scarce). 
A. K. C. S. B., Vols. V.-X., 1888 to 1893. 
A. K. R., Vols. I.-IV. (all published). 
An opportunity to procure a complete set of the English Kennel Club Stud 
Book to 1886 occurs but seldom. This set and the others can be secured at a 
bargain. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO. 
127 Franklin St., New York. 
. . . . . — . .. 
The “Game Laws in Brief” gives al 
the fish and game laws of the United 
States and Canada. It is complete 
and so accurate that the editor can 
afford to pay a reward for an error 
found in it. “If the Brief says so, you 
may depend on it.” Sold by all 
dealers. Price, twenty-five cents. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
127 Franklin Street, New York. 
HIS BEST BOOK 
My Friend The Partridge 
By S. T. HAMMOND 
T his delightful presentment of the glories of Autumn days with gun and dog in the 
crisp New England woods in search of the noblest of native game birds, which 
has already delighted thousands of readers of FOREST AND STREAM, is now 
ready for delivery in book form. 
Mr. Hammond knows his upland coverts as no other writer of the day. He makes 
ho empty boast when he calls the partridge his friend, and, moreover, makes his every 
reader a friend of this splendid bird. He succeeds in a rare degree, not only in describing 
the ruffed grouse, its habits and habitat, and the pleasures of its pursuit, but in surrounding 
his reader with the very atmosphere of the leaf-scented Autumn woods. Mr. Hammond’s 
book is a welcome addition to the library of sport. 
Cloth. 150 pages. Illustrated. Postpaid,’$1.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO., 127 Franklin St., New York City 
Ny Life As Ai\ 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 occupa¬ 
tions 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 PUB. CO., 
J27 Franklin Street, New York 
FETCH AND CARRY, 
A Treatise on Retrieving. By B. Waters. 124 pages. 
Illustrated. Price, $1.00. 
Treats minutely of the methods by which a dog, old or 
young, willing or unwilling, may be taught to retrieve, 
either by the force system or the “natural method.” 
Both the theory and practice of training are exhaus¬ 
tively explained, and the manner of teaching many 
related accomplishments of the pointer and setter in their 
work to the gun is treated according to the modem 
manner of dog training. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Hunting Without a Gun, 
And other papers. By Rowland E. Robinson. With 
illustrations from drawings by Rachel Robinson. 
Price, $2.00. 
This is a collection of papers on different themes con¬ 
tributed to Forest and Stream and other publications, 
and now for the first time brought together. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
