FOREST AND STREAM. 
43 
Jan. 8, 1910.] 
You can outfit 
for a day’s rab¬ 
bit shooting or 
for a trip to the 
wilds of Africa 
at 
Philadelphia’s 
Sporting Goods 
Headquarters 
li'rite for Catalog “C” and tell us 
■whatyou're interested in. 
SHANNON 
816 Chestnut St., Philade'phia 
DUXBAK 
SPORTSMEN’S CLOTHING 
Just the thing for gunning, fishing 
camping, climbing, boating. Booklet with samples of materialfree 
BIRD. JONES <Zl KENYON. 3 Blandina St.. Utica. N. Y. 
INTER-OCEAN 
HUNTING TALES 
Edgar F. Randolph 
• 
A series of hunting reminiscences of rare 
charm for the sportsman and for the wider 
circle which delights in true tales of outdoor 
life. With none of the high coloring and ex¬ 
aggeration which give a false note to so many 
hunting stories, Mr. Randolph’s book is never 
lacking in interest. 
He covers the field of sport with the rifle, 
east and west, drawing a vivid word picture of 
life in the open, subordinating his own exploits 
to the main incidents of outdoor experience, 
i giving much valuable information on camp life, 
hunting and the habits of wild game, and con¬ 
tinually delighting the reader with the freshness 
of his viewpoint. 
9 This book will strike a sympathetic chord in 
the. memory of every big-game hunter of ex¬ 
perience and will prove of real value to the 
novice who is planning an excursion into the 
sPfld. 
Cloth, 170 Pages. Richly Illustrated 
Postpaid, $1.00 
New York City 
The Indians of To-day. 
By George Bird Grinnell. Demi-quarto, 186 pages, 
buckram. Price, $5.00. 
It describes the old-time Indian and the Indian of to- 
d»y,. *nd contrasts the primitive conditions and ways 
of living with those of the present. It contains over 
fifty full-page portraits of living Indians from photo¬ 
graph*. 
| Contents: The North American Indians. Indian 
Character. Beliefs and Stories. The Young Dogs’ 
Dance. The Buffalo Wife. A Blackfoot Sun and Moon 
Myth. Former Distribution of the Indians. The Reser¬ 
vation. Life on the Reservation. The Agent’s Rule. 
Education. Some Difficulties. The Red Man and the 
White. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Pigeon Shooting 
By CAPT. A. W. MONEY 
A standard book on the sport by a 
recognized expert, covering all phases of 
live-bird and clay-pigeon shooting with 
much that is of value to every man who 
wishes to be complete master of his gun. 
Covers position, guns, ammunition, 
handling, sighting, field shooting, trigger 
pulls, technique and practice. This book 
will soon be out of print. Listed to sell 
at $1. Our price, while they last, 
75 cents, postpaid 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO. 
OUT WEST 
- 19 10 - 
OUT WEST is the magazine you need for in¬ 
formation about a live section of our country. “Some¬ 
thing Doing out West” is our watchword. Many 
big propositions are being developed out here, and 
we are going to let you know. 
OUT WEST will run a big illustrated article each 
month on some new industry or significant develop¬ 
ment of Western resources. These articles are of 
general interest to all, and spell “dollars” to the alert. 
OUT WEST has a certain literary prestige which 
will be maintained. We will feature the work of 
new Western writers, who put some of the snap and 
vim of the West into their fiction. We have some 
corking good business stories for early use, and plenty 
of breezy out-door stuff. 
OUT WEST will follow up R. C. Pitzer’s clever 
serial with another winner touching another side of 
“the romantic West.” 
OUT WEST cuts its subscription price for 1910. 
One-fifty instead of three dollars is the price for 1910, 
but the value of the magazine will be doubled. 
And now, it’s up to you! 
OUT WEST in 1909 was a $3.00 magazine, and 
though the markets were full of $1.50 magazines 
OUT WEST subscribers paid $3.00 cheerfully for 
what they wanted. You see, it’s not a question of 
“how cheap” but “how good,” with our people. 
Don’t you think they are worth cultivating ? 
OUT WEST MAGAZINE COMPANY 
Mason Opera House Building - Los Angeles, Cal. 
OUT WEST, 1910 
Watchword 
“ Something Doing.” 
OUT WEST. 1910 
Feature articles that 
spell "Dollars.” 
OUT WEST, 1910 
Fiction with a snap 
and vim. 
OUT WEST. 1910 
The new serial a 
winner. 
OUT WEST. 1910 
Doubles value but cuts 
price to $1.50. 
OUT WEST. 1910 
A word to advertisers. 
KENNEL LEDGER 
Complete, Compact, Pocket Size. 
Specially arranged according to the direc¬ 
tions of an experienced kennel manager. Full 
printed headings for receipts, expenses, data, 
etc. Ruled pages. Memoranda spaces. The 
most complete and handy small kennel record 
yet devised. Smooth, heavy paper, ioo pages, 
6}4 x 4. Cloth covers. 
Postpaid, 80 Cent*. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. COMPANY. 
127 Franklin St., New York. 
FETCH AND CARRY. 
A Treatise on Retrieving:. By B. Water#. 134 page*. 
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 modern 
manner of dog training. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
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, $L00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
