FOREST AND STREAM. 
[May 14 , 1910 . 
?64 
Means the INDIAN S BARK CANOE Modernized 
Both trace hack to the same primitive origin the f o r JfJeu' i nourne w'f r ee 1 SLOca ta'l c?g 
proved by white man s o»n Canoes” in use from Maine to California will 
al ^iSSS^^ithX^Si^tatabl? canoeing spirit as enthralls these happy owners 
ikpsssss 
’’sszim** »• <”•'»< ~j^zx&5ssgr f&fissi?. 
Agents all cities. 2000 canoes in 
our storehouses to choose from. 
OLD TOWN CANOE CO. 
465 Middle Street 
Old Town. Maine. U.S.A. 
Pad eBoo ko n 
HINGr' 
Gives Full Particulars of 
TROUT. BASS ( Sll S‘;“ t „), PIKE. PICKEREL 
and MUSKALLONGE, 
With maps of Lakes, Rivers and Streams 
MINNESOTA. NORTH DAKOTA. WISCONSIN. 
MICHIGAN and ILLINOIS. 282 Summer 
Resorts. It will be mailed to those sending 
6c. to W. R. CALLAWAY, General Passen¬ 
ger Agt., Soo Line Bid., Minneapolis, Minn. 
Printed 
in Twelve 
Colors 
A Storekeeper Says: 
“ A lady came into my store lately and said: 
‘“I have been using a New Perfection Oil Cook-Stove all winter 
in my apartment. I want one now for my summer home. I think 
these oil stoves are wonderful. If only women knew what a 
comfort they are, they would all have 
one. I spoke about my stove to a lot 
of my friends, and they were aston¬ 
ished. They thought that there was 
smell and smoke from an oil stove, and 
that it heated a room just like any other 
stove. I told them of my experience, 
and one after another they got one, and 
now, not one of them would give hers 
up for five times its cost.’ ” 
The lady who said this had thought 
an oil stove was all right for quickly 
heating milk for a baby, or boiling a 
kettle of water, or to make coffee 
quickly in the morning, but she never 
dreamed of using it for difficult or 
heavy cooking. Now—she knows. 
Do you really appreciate what a New 
Perfection Oil Cook-Stove means to you ? No 
more coal to carry, no more coming to the 
dinner table so tired out that you can’t eat. 
Just light a Perfection Stove and immediately 
the heat from an intense blue flame shoots 
up to the bottom of pot, kettle or oven. But 
the room isn’t heated. There is no smoke, no 
smell, no outside heat, no drudgery in the 
kitchen where one of these stoves is used. 
2Stew ’Per/Sction. 
WICK BLUE FLAME 
Oil Cook-stove 
It has a Cabinet Top with a shelf for keeping plates and food hot. The 
nickel finish, with the bright blue of the chimneys, makes the stove ornamental 
and attractive. Made with 1, 2 and 3 burners; the 2 and 3-burner stoves 
can be had with or without Cabinet. 
Every dealer everywhere ; If not at yours, write for Descriptive Circular 
to the nearest agency of the 
Standard Oil Company 
(Incorporated) 
KEEPING POSTED 
1* As you read Forest and Stream through 
each week, you are frequently reminded of 
one thing or another that you desire to pur¬ 
chase. Such and such must be supplied 
to make your Shooting, Fishing, Camping 
or Cruising outfit complete. 
2. Possibly you need waterproof shoes, or 
waterproofed clothing. Or a new tent ? It 
is your intention to take a much longer trip 
this time, than usual. And you may be 
located where you do not have access to 
sporting goods houses where all of your 
wants can be filled. In fact, even the best 
of us are often in doubt when it comes to 
knowing where to get the thing we 
want at the right price. You wish you 
had a friend at your elbow to suggest. 
3. OUT experts are right at your elbow. It 
does not cost you a penny (except your 
postage) to take advantage of their knowl¬ 
edge. They know Where to buy and 
hOW. It is their business—and your ad¬ 
vantage. 
4. Glance carefully over our advertising col¬ 
umns. If you don’t see what you want, 
write in to our Information Department. 
You will receive a full detailed reply post 
haste—we’re always on the job. 
Isn’t this worth while, if for no other reason 
than to get the right information on hOW 
to reach your destination by the quickest and 
surest routes—what railroads or steamship 
lines to take? 
Don’t put this off. Co-operate with us by 
telling your relatives and friends, what we 
can do for them. 
Keep posted. Write to 
INFORMATION DEPARTMENT, 
FOREST AND STREAM 
127 Franklin Street New York 
% 
American Big Game in Its Haunts. 
The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club. Editor, 
George Bird Grinnell. Vignette. New York. 497 
pages. Illustrated. Cloth. $2.50. 
Contents: Sketch of President Roosevelt; Wilderness 
Reserves, Theodore Roosevelt; The Zoology of North 
American Big Game, Arthur Erwin Brown; Big Game 
Shooting in Alaska—I. Bear Hunting on Kadiak Island; 
II. Bear Hunting on the Alaska Peninsula; III. My Big 
Bear of Shuyak; IV. The White Sheep of Kenai Pen¬ 
insula; V. Hunting the Giant Moose, James H. Kidder; 
The Kadiak Bear and His Home, W. Lord Smith; The 
Mountain Sheep and Its Range, Geo. Bird Grinnell; 
Preservation of the Wild Animals of North America, 
Henry Fairfield Osborn; Distribution of the Moose, 
Madison Grant; The Creating of Game Refuges Alden 
Sampson; Temiskaming Moose, Paul J. Dashiel; Two 
Trophies from India, John H. Prentice; Big Game 
Refuges, Forest Reserves of North America, Forest Re¬ 
serves as Game Preserves, E. W. Nelson, etc., etc. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
