244 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[Aug. 
14. 1909. 
A Bottled Delight 
When you mix a cocktail, 
you take chances. When 
you use CLUB COCK¬ 
TAILS you don’t even 
have to mix. Just pour 
over cracked ice and 
you’ll have the most deli¬ 
cious and satisfy¬ 
ing drink you ever 
tasted. 
They can’t help 
being better than 
the mi xed at 
random kind. 
Martini (gin 
base) Man- 
hattan(whis- 
key base) 
are always 
popular. 
C.F.HEUBLEIN I MARTINI 
& bro. 
Hartford 
New York 
London 
Just Out! 
“THE SMALL YACHT” 
By EDWIN A. BOARDMAN 
T HE author, who has large personal experience in designing and sailing 
small yachts, being the winner of the Seawanhaka cup in 1905, deals 
with the entire subject of handling racing boats in language that is readily 
understood by the youngest amateur. There is nothing which makes for 
success in small boat racing, from tuning up to jockeying, left out. Part 
One deals with preparing the boat for the race, while Part Two enters into 
every detail of handling under every condition, with notes on American am 
foreign racing, expense, equipment, winter care, sailing conditions, types, 
etc. Altogether it is not only the latest, but the best work on the subject- 
invaluable • for the enthusiast. Cloth, 46 plates from photographs, 18 
diagrams, 24 plans. 
Postpaid, $2.13 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING COMPANY, 
127 Franklin Street, New York 
MY SIXTY YEARS ON 
THE PLAINS 
True Pictures of a Vanished Life 
“BILL" HAMILTON 
Appropriately enough W. T. Hamilton, the 
last survivor of the old race of free trappers, 
became the author of one of the best pen pic¬ 
tures of the old life of the plains and moun¬ 
tains ever written. 
No work of fiction offers more adventure, 
more thrills of desperate bravery, heroic en¬ 
durance and hair breadth escape than this un¬ 
adorned narrative of the life of the old trap¬ 
per and plainsman, the companion of Bill 
Williams, Jim Baker, Carson, Bridges and the 
rest whose names are household words. 
“Sixty Years on the Plains” is all that the 
names signifies and more. It depicts every phase 
of frontier life, hunting, trapping, Indian fight¬ 
ing, the beginnings of Empire building. From 
the store house of sixty years of wonderfully 
full experience, Mr. Hamilton drew the material 
for a book of splendid interest and real value. 
Cloth, Illustrated. 
Postpaid, $1.50 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Building Motor Boats and 
Managing Gasolene Engines 
are discussed in the book 
“HOW TO BUILD A LAUNCH FROM PLANS” 
A complete illustrated work on the building of motor 
boats and the installing, care and running of gasolene 
motors. By Charles G. Davis. With 40 diagrams, 9 
folding drawings and 3 full-page plans. Price, post¬ 
paid, $1.50. 
The author is a builder and designer of national repu¬ 
tation. All the instruction given is defined and com¬ 
prehensive, 40 diagrams, 9 folding drawings and 3 full- 
page plans. That portion of the book devoted to the 
use and care of gas engines should be most carefully 
perused by every individual who operates one. The book 
is well worth the price asked for it. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
The “Forest and Stream” Trap Score Book 
Meets the needs of gun clubs and shooters in every particular. The I.V 
sheets are heavily ruled—an advantage all scorers will appreciate, particu¬ 
larly when working in a dim light. The horizontal spaces are numbered 
from i to 30. Broad perpendicular lines divide these into groups of five, 
which aids the eye of the scorer greatly. Similar heavy lines divide the 
perpendicular spaces into groups of six; thus the squads are distinguish¬ 
able at a glance. 
The paper manifolds easily, and carbon sheets are placed in the book 
for that purpose. 
It contains the American Shooting Association Rules for Live-Bird 
Shooting, for Double Live-Bird Shooting, for Inanimate Target Shooting; 
Hurlingham Revised Live-Bird Rules for single and double rises, and the 
o j 
Rose System of dividing purses. Price, $1.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO., NEW YORK 
The “Game Laws in Brief” gives all 
the fish and game laws of the United 
States and Canada. It is complete 
and so accurate that the editor can 
afford to pay a reward for an error 
found in it. “If the Brief says so, you 
may depend on it.” Sold by all 
dealers. Price, twenty-five cents. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO^. 
127 Franklin Street, New York. 
