204 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[Feb. 5, 1910. 
CHAMOIS GARMENTS 
Our Chamois Jacket is the lightest, softest, and most comfortable leather 
garment made. It is worn over your soft shirt and vest, sets fairly snug to 
the body, and when worn under a canvas hunting coat makes an excellent 
combination. You will be as warm as toast with this jacket and free to walk 
fast or work fast, or stay out without discomfort. They are particularly 
suitable to Trapshooters. 
No. 71. Men’s Jacket with three pockets. $12.00 
No. 71V. Men’s Vest . . 7.00 
CHAMOIS OUTING SHIRT 
Sportsmen particularly favor this soft-tanned shirt because it gives them such 
free and unhampered movement, and still keeps them comfortably warm even in severe weather. 
Excellent for winter hunting. It is made the style of an ordinary flannel shirt with a soft turndown 
collar, and is made either regular or coat style. 
No. 71S. With two flap pockets. . ..$12.00 
The above prices are for the natural Chamois color, but gray, brown and red 
can be supplied at a small additional cost. 
NEW YORK SPORTING GOODS COMPANY 
American Home of the Westley-Richards Gun 
15 (Si 17 Warren St., near Broadway 
NEW YORK 
NEWFOUNDLAND 
A Country ol Fish and Game. A Paradise tor the Camper and Angler. Ideal Canoe Trips. 
The country traversed by the Reid Newfoundland Company’s system is exceedingly rich in all kinds of fish and 
game. flAll along the route of the Railway are streams famous for their SALMON and TROUT fiihing, alao 
Caribou barrens. ^Americans w ho have been fishing and hunting in Newfoundland say there is no other country 
in the world in which so good fishing and hunting can be secured and with such ease as in Newfoundland. 
Information, together with Illustrated Booklet and Folder, cheerfully forwarded upon application to 
J. W. N. JOHNSTONE, General Passenger Agent, Reid Newfoundland Company, St. John’s, Newfoundland. 
THE ANGLER’S WORKSHOP 
Rodmaking for Beginners 
By PERRY D. FRAZER 
A UNIQUE work, bringing the science of rodmaking up to the very moment and 
epitomizing the knowledge and experience of experts for the guidance of the 
average man. The evolution of bait-casting principles has made Mr. Frazer’s 
book supersede all previous publications on the subject. 
Every angler—young or old—who is fond of adapting his rods and tackle to his own 
ideas of what they should be, will find in this book a large fund of information gathered 
by the author in years of study, experiment and practical experience in fishing, tourna¬ 
ment casting and at the work bench. He theorizes and speculates not at all. He tells 
“the how” of everything connected with rodmaking in a way that makes results certain. 
All explanations are simple and easily followed. 
Separate chapters are devoted to each of a half dozen types of bait-casting rods; to 
tarpon, surf and light salt water rode; bass and trout, salmon and tournament fly-rods. 
Complete specifications of well-kmwvn types are given, and the chapter on split bamboo 
rodmaking is the most comprehensive treatise on the subject ever published. Indis¬ 
pensable in the angler’s library. 
Cloth, 180 pages, four full-page illustrations, 60 working drawings, making plain 
every feature of the text. Postpaid, $1.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO„ 127 Franklin St., New York 
A Problem’s Solution 
LOG CABINS & COTTAGES; 
How to Build and Furnish Them. 
A seasonable book when all minds are bent on the 
problem of getting close to nature. Mr. Wicks in this 
delightful book offers timely advice to every one who 
wants to build a simple summer home at one with its 
surroundings 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 and 
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. 
Where, When and How to Catcf 
Fish on the East Coast of Florid.' 
By Wm. H. Gregg, of St. Louis, Mo., assisted by Capt. 
John Gardner, of Ponce Park, Mosquito Inlet, Fla. 
With 100 engravings, and 12 colored illustrations. 
Cloth. Illustrated. 268 pages. Map. Price, $4.00. 
A visitor to Florida can hardly make the trip without 
this book, if he is at all interested in angling. It gives a 
very complete list of the fishes of the East Coast of 
Florida, and every species is illustrated by a cut taken 
from the best authorities. The cuts are thus of the most 
value to the angler who desires to identify the fish he 
takes, while the colored plates of the tropical fish shown 
in all their wonderful gorgeousness of coloring, are very 
beautiful. Besides the pictures of fish, there are cuts 
showing portions of the fishing tackle, which the author 
uses. A good index completes the volume. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
CORRESPONDENCE. 
The Forest and Stream is the recognized medium ol 
entertainment, instruction and information between Amer¬ 
ican sportsmen. The editors invite communication* o* 
the subjects to which its pages are devoted. Anonymous 
communications will not be regarded. , The editors si's 
not responsible for the views of correspondents. 
SUBSCRIPTIONS. 
Subscriptions may begin at any time. Terms: For 
single copies, $3 per year; $1.50 for six months. Rates 
for clubs of annual subscribers: 
Three Copies, $7.50. Five Copie», $12. 
Remit by express money-order, registered letter, money- 
order or draft, payable to the Forest and Stream Publish¬ 
ing Company. The paper may be obtained of news¬ 
dealers throughout the United States, Canada and Great 
Britain. Canadian subscriptions, $4.00 a year, $2.00 for six 
months. 
Foreign Subscriptions and Sales Agents— London: 
Davies & Co., 1 Finch Lane; Sampson, Low A Co- 
Paris: Brentano’s. Foreign terms: $4.60 per year; $ 2.9 
for six months. 
ADVERTISEMENTS. 
Inside pages, 16 cents per agate line. Special rates foe 
three, six and twelve months. Eight words to the line, 
fourteen lines to one inch. Advertisements should 
be received by Saturday previous to issue in which 
they are to be inserted. Transient advertisements must 
invariably be accompanied by the money, or they will 
not be inserted. Reading notices, seventy-five cents j)«» 
line. Only advertisements of an approved character in¬ 
serted. 
Display Classified Advertising. 
Hotels, Summer and Winter Resorts, Instruction, 
Schools, Colleges, etc. Railroad and Steamship Time 
Tables. Real Estate For Sale and To Let. Seeds and 
Shrubs. Taxidermists. The Kennel. Dogs, etc. Wants 
and Exchanges. Per agate line, per insertion, 13 cents. 
Three months and over, 10 cents per line. 
Solid Classified Advertising. 
For Sale. Kennel. Property For Sale. Real Estat* 
For Sale or To Let. Wants and Exchanges. Per agate 
line, 10 cents. Absolutely no display. No advertisement 
of less than three lines accepted. Cash must in every 
case accompany order. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO. 
127 Franklin St., New York. 
CamD 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 
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 
