84 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[Jan. 15, 1910. 
How many barmade cock¬ 
tails have you had that were 
really suited to your taste ? 
Leave chance-made drinks for 
those who don’t appreciate 
good liquor and to yourself 
and your critical friends serve 
CLUB COCKTAILS. They’re 
infinitely better. 
Don’t judge these mixed- 
to-measure joys by any 
made-by- guesswork drink. 
Martini (gin base) and Manhattan 
(whiskey base) are the most popular. 
At all good dealers 
G. F. HEUBLEIN & BRO. 
Hartford New York London 
A Problem’s Solution 
LOG CABINS & COTTAGES, 
How to Build and Furnish Thom. 
A seasonable book when all minds are bent on th« 
problem of getting close to nature. Mr. Wicks in tws 
delightful book offers timely advice to every one wm 
wants to build a simple summer home at one with ita 
aurroundings of wood or stream or shore. 
This is a thoroughly practical work, treating of the 
how, the where, and the with what of camp building ana 
furnishing. It is helpful, too, in regard to furnishing, 
and withal a most beautiful work. 
Cloth, profusely illustrated, $1.50 postpaid. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Camo Life in the Woods 
HAMILTON GIBSON 
A Complete Manual of Wood Life 
Handy, complete, with full explanations and 
directions so written that they are readily un¬ 
derstood, Camp Life in the Woods is an in¬ 
valuable book for camper, hunter, fisherman, 
trapper, for every one who goes into the woods 
for sport or recreation. 
Covers all details of “roughing it,” camp¬ 
ing. shelter building, cooking, woodcraft, canoe 
building and handling, trapping and taxidermy. 
Good for every outdoor man. 
Full of “the tricks” that make for success in 
YOU OUGHT TO HAVE YOUR HIDE TANNED 
and head mounted. It will not cost you any more—if as much—to have 
your work done in the largest establishment of the kind in the world. 
We tan deer skins with hair on for rugs or trophies, or dress them 
into buckskin glove leather. Bear, dog, calf, cow, horse or any other 
kind of hide or skin tanned with the hair or fur on, and finished soft, 
light, odorless, mothproof and made up into rugs, gloves, caps, men’s 
and womens’ garments when so ordered. Send for catalog. 
Taxidermy and head mounting are among our particular specialties. 
The Crosby Frisian Fur Company, 573 Lyell Ave., Rochester, N. Y. 
SIX BOOKS 
FOR BOYS 
and for boys who are grown 
up—but who would like to 
live their outdoor days again 
Jack The Young Ranchman 
Jack Among The Indians 
Jack The Young Trapper 
Jack The Young Canoeman 
Jack In The Rockies 
Jack The Young Explorer 
By GEORGE BIRD GRIN NELL 
$1.25 Per Volume 
Postpaid, $7.50 The Set 
No better books were ever written for boys—real 
boys. A young New York lad is sent to the far west 
for his health, falls in with an old frontiersman, and 
under his guidance learns the lore of the plains, the 
woods and the mountains. Each summer he returns 
for new experiences and adventures of the kind that 
boys love to read of. 
There is no preaching in these books, but they are 
just the kind of clean, healthy outdoor books that 
parents want to put in the hands of young boys, and 
that satisfy and delight the boys as well. 
W|H AT AN OLD TIMER SAYS 
Byron, Ill., Jan. 30, 1909 .—Editor Forest and Stream: 
I wonder if you know what treasures you have in Mr. 
Grinnell’s “Jack Books”? Often the people who are 
closest to a thing fail to see all its beauties. 
To me these books are like a light at night to any wild 
creature. They continue to attract me, and I have read 
them again and again, for they bring back the past in a 
wonderful way to the men who have traveled the high 
plains, and scaled the mountains which tower bold and 
blue above them. 
Did it ever occur to you that it is a little strange that 
an old fellow like Hugh Johnson should give the best 
extant description of the old parks of Colorado? I cotton 
to that Hugh Johnson. I enjoy all that he tells us and 
especially his Indian beaver lore. Indeed, I am fascinated 
by the whole of the big book—for that is what it is—a 
big book about old times written in six parts; not only 
a big book of surprising and surpassing truth and value, 
but in vivid interest the bulliest of all bully books that 
treat or ever did treat of the high plains and the moun¬ 
tains, and their wild inhabitants, two-legged and four¬ 
legged, white and red. 
From these books the younger generation will learn 
much of what even the fathers of most of them hardly 
knew. A. J. Woodcock. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO., 127 Franklin Si., New York 
trapping, it is indispensable to every one, novice 
or old timer, who plans a campaign against the 
fur-bearing animals the coming season. Cloth, 
fully illustrated. 
Postpaid, $1.00 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO., 
127 Franklin Street, New York 
Uncle Lisha’s Shop. 
Life in a Corner of Yankeeland. By Rowland E. 
Robinson. Cloth. 187 pages. Price, $1.25. 
Danvis Folks. 
A continuation of “Uncle Lisha’s Shop” and "Sam 
Lord’s Camps.” By Rowland E. Robinson. 16 mo. 
Price, $1.25. 
The shop itself, the place of business of Uncle Lisha 
bootmaker and repairer, was a sort of sportsman’s 
exchange, where, as one of the fraternity expressed it, 
the hunters and fishermen of the widely scattered neigh¬ 
borhood used to meet of evenings and dull outdoor days 
"to swap lies.” 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Uncle Lisha’s Outing, 
A Sequel to “Uncle Lisha’s Shop.” 
Robinson. Cloth. Price, $1.25. 
By Rowland 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
E. 
