Feb. 25, igu.] 
FOREST AND STREAM 
283 
American Game Bird Shooting 
'Ey George 'Bird Grinnell ^ 
This new book covers the whole field of upland shooting in America as this field has never 
shotgun.'“it'deaL 6 with the bi£ the 
t d he S wiId eS tuIkeys bitS ^ W °° dc ° ck ’ Sni P e ' 3,1 the North A ™rican quail, all the grouse and 
The completion of this book was a large task, requiring exceptional qualifications knowledge 
and experience, and was never before accomplished by any other author. & 
two K he f 0mpani0n , volume t0 Mr - Grir -nell s book, “ American Duck Shooting ” Thus the 
two books cover the entire field of game birds taken with the shotgun with complete 
description of their natural history features. 8 ’ complete 
A very complete monograph for sportsmen 
and naturalists. .. .with anecdotes, of his own 
and others. ... the book will be enjoyed not 
only by sportsmen but by the general reader.” 
—The Sun, New York. 
“An important, thoroughly reliable and well 
written book; a work that will be read with in¬ 
terest and pleasure by sportsmen. The work 
is the first complete one of its kind.” 
—The Boston Globe. 
“No book as good as this on the subject treated, 
nor so fully covering the field, has been pro¬ 
duced.” —The Salt Lake Tribune. 
AMERICAN 
GAME BIRD 
SHOOTING 
GRINNELL 
_ .i - 
This volume is especially welcome—a treat 
to every man who loves to tramp the uplands 
with dog and gun. ” -Inter-Ocean. Chicago. 
“Each bird is taken up in turn, the best methods 
to hunt, the selection of guns and loads, cloth¬ 
ing and dogs are set forth simply and fully.” 
—Baltimore American. 
It is, I think, a model of what such a book 
should be—but so seldom is. It is, indeed, 
much more than a treatise on field sports, for it 
furnishes such full and excellent life histories of 
the birds of which it treats that it should find a 
place in every library devoted to pure orni¬ 
thology.” 
—William Brewster, Cambridge, Mass. 
InL Uw m deta1 ’ the .way S ° f life of all the American Game Birds; woodcock, 
o3- IS ’ mountaIn Quail, California quail, Gambel’s quail, scaled quail and Mearn’s 
Pinnated l y ns g e b Se ’ *”**'*' ^ Canada gr ° USe ’ ruffed all the ptarmigan, 
p nnated grouse, sharp tail grouse and sage grouse, and the wild turkeys. 
PAR v T anous mertods'l/ 0 , ? la ” d ,fT Here " e described at lan 8> h »»■< d«ail a" ihe 
such as guns bad:X‘^clSr" ab ° Ve ' “ d Vari ° US “ ,dS “ Sh ° 0ti " S ' 
PAR foriig„ aS e t,ivi' h ' he ?T ing ° f Cf l e pas ‘ and 'he efforts to reduce 
Dr Clinton F Hod game rds l ° rest0cb our covers . and of the successful attempts by 
• Uinton F. Hodge to rear in captivity the ruffed grouse and bobwhite. 
n,nH jhv A VOlUme >' S handson ? el y illustrated. There are colored plates of the ruffed grouse and the quail, 
fhe, i, menc * s greatest bird painter, Louis Agassiz Fuertes, and 48 other full page plates most of 
cenes In e Se text”" 1 ’ ° f differem Sf>edeS ° f birds and interesting’shooting 
vl a 3 number ° f useful and interesting line cuts. Everyone who delights in the 
volume which speakTthe c ran . lpmg ‘ he fieid and * 00< | s with d °g and gun should possess this handsome 
shooting. P na W ° rd ° n up and s l 10 °ting, as its predecessor in this field did on wildfowl 
Cloth. About 575 pages. Price $3.50 net. Postage 25 cents. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO., 127 Franklin Street, NEW YORK CITY 
