Nov. 13, 1909.] 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
No. 2 
KEEPING POSTED 
.• For several issues we have sug¬ 
gested that if you wanted infor¬ 
mation about anything, you 
communicate with us. 
. Many of our readers have used 
this department to advantage. 
. We were not able to get a job 
for a chauffeur who wanted to go 
south for the winter — but we 
may be able to, at that, before the 
snow begins to fly. 
s If you want to know about 
guns, dogs, razors, soaps, shoes, 
automobiles, salad dressings, 
steam heaters, live stock, band¬ 
ages, coffees, flags, stockings 
or scarfpins— 
in fact, if you want anything from 
a steam yacht to a cruller— 
we will get you complete data and 
information without charge of 
any kind. 
y the way—the concerns adver¬ 
ting in Forest and Stream 
is paying good money to do it. 
■ most every issue we carry the 
.. of some new article. It will 
>y you to read the advertising 
'ges carefully. 
NFORMATION DEPARTMENT, 
FOREST AND STREAM, 
■ Franklin Street, New York. 
res 
MY SIXTY YEARS ON 
THE PLAINS 
Tree Pictures of & 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 
name 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 exprience, Mr. Hamilton drew the material 
for a book of splendid interest and real value. 
Cloth, Illustrated. 
Postpaid, $1.50 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
WILDFOWL SHOOTING. 
Scientific and Practical Descriptions of 
Wildfowl; Their Resorts, Habits Flights, and the Most 
successful Method of Hunting Them. Treating of the 
selection of guns for wildfowl shooting, how to load, aim 
and to use them; decoys and the proper manner of 
using them; blinds, how and where to construct them; 
boats, how to use and build them scientifically re¬ 
trievers, their characteristics, how to select and train 
them. By William Bruce Leffingwell. Illustrated. 373 
pages. Price, in cloth, $1.50; half morocco, $2.50. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Moose Hunting and Salmon Fishing. 
and other sketches of sport. Being the record of per¬ 
sonal experiences of hunting game in Canada. Bv T R. 
Patillo. 300 pages. Price, $2.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Steel Fishing Rock ^ 
are classy. ’ Fly and bait casting fishermen are 
using them more than ever for their favorite sport 
Expert anglers who have reputations to maintain are 
making up their outfits more exclusively of “BRIS¬ 
TOL” Rods than everin the past. “BRISTOL” 
steel design,workmanship,finish and reliability have 
stood the test of time so admirably as to demonstrate 
beyond doubt their complete superiority. In buying 
speak the word “BRISTOL” with no uncertain tone 
and look on the reel seat forthe trade mark as shown 
at the topof this advertisement. Every “BRISTOL” 
Rod is guaranteed for three years. Pin your 
Luck ’to BRISTOL” Rods and youwill not lose it. 
. Fish Hook Disgorger and catalogue mailed free 
tf you send us your dealer's name. 
THE HORTON MFG. CO., 
84 Horton St.. Bristol. Conn. 
“ NEV-R-LOOZ-’EM ” 
HOOKS They are all the nam* 
i m p lies . Impossible 
for Mr. Fish to get away once he tug* 
’ ‘ ~ * kfuTi 
at your bait. Price, 10c. WeakE.. 
» - 0 . , size. 16c. A BIG WEAKFISH CATCH, 
August i°, iqo8. One day last week Wm. Smith of the Walter Mlk> 
lar L lub caught 37 larre weakfitk with our “ NeT-R-Looi-’em ” Hoaka, 
^ lo , s . 1 1 n ^ ? single strike. Smith buys all his tackle of «*. 
Do thou likewise. Agent* wanted. Also dealers in Guns. Revot 
vers and Sporting Goods. Address kirtland BROS. A CO., 90 
Chamber! St. (Dept. F. 8.), New York. 
Sam Lovel’s Camps. 
A Sequel to “Uncle Lisha’s Shop. 
Robinson. Cloth. Price, $1.00. 
By Rowland E» 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
^clc Lisha’s Shop. 
f . a Comer of Yankeeland. By Rowland E. 
obinson. Cloth. 187 pages. Price, $1.25. 
[' shop itself, the place of business of Uncle Lisha 
bootmaker and repairer, was a sort of sportsman’s 
- n $re, where, as one of the fraternity expressed it, 
■unters and fishermen of the widely scattered neigh- 
r od used to meet of evenings and dull outdoor days 
1 wap lies.” 
OREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
THE ANGLER’S WORKSHOP 
Rodmaking lor 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 rods; bass and trout, salmon and tournament fly-rods. 
Complete specifications of well-known 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 
