776 
FOREST AND STREAM 
TELLS HOW FAR YOU WALK 
THE AMERICAN PEDOMETER 
Regulates to Step and Registers Exact 
Distances; Simple, Accurate, Durable 
Indispensable to every 
lover of outdoor sport, and 
especially to those who 
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SPORTSMEN. It furnishes 
the true solution of many 
a disputed question of how 
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it is a wonderful 
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Sold by All Dealers or Direct 
AMERICAN PEDOMETER COMPANY 
902 Chapel St., NEW HAVEN, CONN. 
LET US TAN YOUR HIDE 
Or mount any game head 
you may have. 
Or sell you an elegant 
mounted head, any kind, 
none better. 
Get our Illustrated Catalogue, mention¬ 
ing what you are interested in. 
THE CROSBY FRISIAN FUR CO., Rochester, N. Y. 
By CHARLES BRADFORD 
The Determined Angler 
“The most pleasantly written, 
t the most sensible and practical 
I and instructive volume I have 
I ever seen of its kind.”—Grover 
Cleveland. 
“Fully deserves this endorse¬ 
ment.”—New York Herald. 
“Rare sympathy and genuine 
knowledge.’ N. Y. Evening 
Telegram. 
“Charming illustrations of fish 
and scenery.”—N. Y. Sun. 
“Full of wisdom and instruction; 
full of wise counsel.”—N. Y. Even¬ 
ing Sun. 
“Depicts a trout paradise; divulges fishing secrets.” 
—Home Journal. 
“A standard-of value to both tyro and expert.” 
—Frederick Mather. 
“Wise and wholesome thoughts in graceful, win¬ 
ning language.”—Newark (N. J.) News. 
Illustrated. Cloth, 60c. Postage 5c. 
“Material to make the heart 
of the fisherman leap for joy.”— 
Boston Transcript. 
“An angling and ichthyological 
encyclopedia. What the author 
has to tell of the secrets known 
only to the fish, himself and a 
few others is marvelous.”—Mon¬ 
treal Gazette. 
“A valuable volume of refer¬ 
ence for the angler.”—Dr. 
James A. Henshall. 
“The result of much experi¬ 
ence.”—Brooklyn Eagle. 
“Practical and sensible.”— 
Philadelphia Public Ledger. 
200 Pages. 120 Illustrations. 
Histories and Technical Portraits of All the Fishes. 
Cloth 75c. Postage 5c. 
The Angler’s Secret 
THE angler: 
GUIDE 
3 
“A modern ‘Compleat An¬ 
gler.’ ”—N. Y. Times. 
“Practical advice.”—N. Y. Sun. 
“A most stimulating book.”- 
N. Y. Evening Telegram. 
“Much good advice and very 1 
pleasant entertainment for any ' 
gentle reader.’ ’—N. Y. . 
Observer. )/ 
“Breathes the very essence of 
philosophy.”—Brooklyn Eagle. 
“Pervaded by the spirit of Izaak Walton.”—The 
Outlook. 
“Sensible advice and timely hints.”—Dr. Jas. A. 
Henshall. 
“Appeals to those who fish fair.”—N. Y. Press. 
“Pleasant reading, whether by the winter fire 
side or the shaded banks of summer.’ ’—N. Y. 
Evening Post. 
Two hundred pages. Cloth. Illustrated. Price, $1.00. Postage, 10c. 
The Wildfowlers; or Sporting Scenes 
and Characters 
§|= “The author knows his subject down to 
the minutest detail.”—Putnam’s Magazine. 
“A classic.”—N. Y. World. 
“The mantle of Henry William Herbert [‘Frank 
Forester’] has fallen upon the author of ‘The Wild¬ 
fowlers,’ whoever he may be.”—Frederick Mather. 
“I cannot too highly recommend this admirable 
volume.”—Thomas C. Abbott [“Recapper.”] 
Cloth. Illustrated. 17s Pages. $1.00. Postage, 10c. 
The COMPLEAT ANGLER. By Izaak Walton 
The finest, reasonable price Walton ever published. 
Cloth binding. Heavy text paper. Large 
type, 354 pages. The complete narrative, and 
a 34-page Life of Walton, by John Major, 
The Author’s Original Dedication and Address , 
to his Readers, Original and Selected Notes < 
to Biographical and Historical Information* 
concerning Walton and Cotton and their Works. 
Illustrated. Price, 75 cents. By mail, 85 cents. 
THE NASSAU PRESS, RICHMOND HILL, L. I., N. Y. 
TUNA CLUB PROPERTY DESTROYED BY 
FIRE. 
Of the death of Dr. Charles Frederick Holder, 
it well might be said that the Tuna Club of 
which he was founder formed his funeral pyre; 
for on the morning of November 29, the club 
house of that world-famous angling organization 
burned to the ground in a fiercely destructive 
fire which wiped out the pretty little island city 
of Avalon. Nothing is left behind; the priceless 
medals, mounted record fish, all records, are 
gone. The club house probably will be re-built 
eventually, but it never can be the same with 
these old, familiar friends gone. The cottages 
of C. G. Conn, the Dorans, Tom Potter, in fact, 
everyone connected with the club, went with it; 
all the larger hotels. The scene to-day is that of 
complete devastation. Of frame construction, 
the ramshackle buildings fairly leaped into air in 
at least, a spectacular fire. The aquarium was 
saved, and wharves, freight sheds and a few 
water-front structures, owing to hard work by 
the Banning boats. 
The Tuna Club was celebrated wherever 
anglers gather; its club house was a show-place, 
and its steadily increasing collection of record 
fish attracted a lively interest even among those 
not addicted to angling. It is hard indeed to 
see how this loss to the sport of scientific angling 
can be replaced even by a newer and better club 
house. 
Phil. H. Graf, 
Canton, Ohio. 
AGENTS WANTED-SplendidOpportunity 
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THE CANTON CUTLERY CO. 
Dept. 81 CANTON, OHIO 
PETERS’ VICTORIES. 
High General Average at Muncie, Ind., Nov. 
17, was won by Mr. C. A. Young, using Peters 
shells, score 144 ex 150. 
At the Lincoln Park Gun Club, Chicago, Nov. 
20, on the occasion of the Du Pont Base Ball 
Players’ visit, High General Average was won 
by Mr. J. R. Graham, who scored 97 ex 100 with 
Peters shells. On the following day when the 
famous base ball squad visited the Chicago Gun 
Club, Mr. H. W. Cadwallader was high over 
all contestants, 99 ex 100, also shooting Peters 
shells. 
High Amateur and High General Averages at 
Lincoln, Ill., Nov. 23-24, were won by Mr. A. 
C. Buckles of Lake Fork, Ill., score 221 ex 250, 
with Mr. Roy Gayle a close second, 220 ex 250, 
both gentlemen using Peters shells. 
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50c bottles, and self-sealing Handy 
Oil Cans, 25c. Avoid substitutes. 
pie and Use Dictionary 
I 3-ia-Oo. Oil C»„ 112 New St., N. Y. 
