324 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[March 4, 1911. 
THE OU TDOOR LIBRARY 
<1 Seasonable Books dealing with every phaseof the life in the Open. 
Handbooks of Sport. Books that make "roughing it” easy. Books 
for Fisherman, Hunter, Yachtsman, Canoeist, Camper, Nature 
Lover. Books of Travel and Adventure for Young and Old. 
Book Catalogue Free on Application. 
No. 6 
KEEPING POSTED 
1 . 
Uncle Lisha’s Shop. 
By Rowland E. Robinson. Life in a Corner of Yankee- 
land. The shop itself, the place of business of Uncle 
Lisha Peggs, bootmaker and repairer, was a sort 
sportsman’s exchange, where, as one of the traterni y 
expressed it, the hunters and fishermen of the widely 
scattered neighborhood used to meet of evening and dull 
outdoor days "to swap lies.” Cloth. 187 pages. I rice, $1.25. 
Sam Lovel’s Camps. 
Rowland E. Robinson. Another charming story of 
life in innermost Yankeeland. Quaint and delightful 
stories of a delightful life. A splendid book for boys and 
scarcely less pleasing to their elders. Cloth. Illustrated. 
Postpaid, $1.00. 
American Big-Game Hunting. 
The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club. Theodore 
Roosevelt and George Bird Grinnell,_ editors. Narra¬ 
tives of white goat hunting, elk hunting, old times in 
the Black Hills, prong-buck coursing, nights with the 
grizzlies, buffalo days, blacktails in the Bad Lands, notes 
on forest reservations and game refuges. Contributors: 
Theodore Roosevelt, George Bird Grmnell, Owen lis¬ 
ter, Winthrop Chanler, Col. Geo. S. Anderson, Col. 
Roger D. Williams, Archibald Rogers, F. C. Crocker, 
Dean Sage, and others. Cloth. Illustrated. Postpaid, 
$2.50. 
Trail and Camp-Fire. 
The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club. Editors: 
George Bird Grinnell and Theodore Roosevelt. Illus¬ 
trated. Like its predecessors, the present volume is de¬ 
voted chiefly to the great game and outdoor life of 
Northern America; yet it does not confine itself to any 
one land, though it is first of all a book about America, 
its game and its people. Cloth* 353 pages. Price, $2.50. 
American Big Game in Its Haunts. 
The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club for 1904. 
George Bird Grinnell, Editor. This is a fourth and by 
far the largest and handsomest of the club’s books. It 
opens with a sketch of Theodore Roosevelt, founder of 
the Boone and Crockett Club, and contains an extremely 
interesting article from his pen descriptive of his visit 
to the Yellowstone Park in 1903. Other papers are on 
North American Big Game; Hunting in Alaska; The 
Kadiak Bear; Moose, Mountain Sheep; Game Refuges, 
and other big game topics. 490 pages and 46 full-page 
illustrations. Price, $2.50. 
American Duck Shooting. 
George Bird Grinnell. With 58 portraits of North 
American Swans, Geese and Ducks, Plans of Boats and 
Batteries. Fifty Vignettes in the text and a chart of 
the topography of a duck’s plumage. Cloth, 630 pages. 
Price, $3.50. Edition de luxe, price, $5.00. 
The Art of Shooting. 
Charles Lancaster. An illustrated treatise on the art of 
shooting. Illustrated. Cloth. Price, $1.25. 
The Gun and Its Development. 
W. W. Greener. With Notes on Shooting, Breech¬ 
loading Rifles, Sporting Rifles, Shotguns, Gunmaking, 
Choice of Guns, Choke-boring, Gun Trials; Theories and 
Experiments. “The Gun and Its Development” is the 
standard work of the age on projectiles and all relating 
to them. Fully illustrated. Cloth. 770 pages. New 
edition. Price, $4.00. 
Domesticated Trout. 
Livingstone Stone. Contents: Trout Breeding Works, 
Ponds, Buildings, Hatching Apparatus. The Nursery, 
Taking the Eggs, Hatching, Care of Alevins, Rearing the 
Fry, Growing the Large Trout, General Observations. 
Cloth. Illustrated. Postpaid, $2.50. 
Modern Fishculture in Fresh and Salt Water. 
Fred Mather, author of “Men I Have Fished With.” 
with a chapter on Whitefish Culture by Hon. Herschel 
Whitaker, and a chaper on the Pike-Perch by James 
Nevin. Illustrated. Price, $2.00. 
Familiar Fish and How to Catch Them. 
Eugene McCarthy. A Practical Book on Fresh-Water 
Game Fish. With an introduction by Dr. David Starr 
Jordan, President of Leland Stanford Junior University, 
and numerous illustrations. Price, $1.50. 
Training the Hunting Dog for the Field and 
Field Trials. 
B. W’aters. This is the latest and best manual on the 
subject. As an owner and handler of field trial dogs, 
and one having had an exceptionally wide experience in 
the field and at field trials, Mr. Waters was admirably 
equipped to write such a work. It has, a . 1 f ead XJ ak “ 
place as the standard authority. Cloth. 281 pages. 
Price, $1.50. 
Log Cabins and Cottages. 
William S. Wicks. This book covers building for the 
woods from the simplest shelter to the most elaborate 
cottage, cabin or house, and their furnishing and fitting. 
The details and directions are at once simple and com¬ 
prehensive, and the illustrations are numerous and il¬ 
luminative. Cloth. Illustrated. 44 full-page plates and 
numerous text illustrations. Postpaid, $1.50. 
Pocket Kennel Record. 
A handy book for immediate record of all events and 
transactions, relieving the owner from risk of forgetting 
important kennel matters by trusting to memory. 
Morocco. Postpaid, 50 cents. 
Diseases of the Dog. 
By Hugh Dalziel. A handbook for amateurs. Treats 
of the causes of disease in dogs, symptoms and treat¬ 
ment, modes of administering medicine, treatment in 
cases of poisoning, etc. Paper. Postpaid, 40 cents. 
The Spaniel and Its Training. 
F H Mercer. To which are added the American and 
English Spaniel Standards. Cloth. Illustrated. Price, $1. 
Pheasants; Their Natural History and Prac¬ 
tical Management. 
W. B. Tegetmeier. New, enlarged edition. 16 plates. 
Cloth. 237 pages. Price, $3.50. 
Woodcraft. 
Nessmuk. No better book was ever written for the 
help and guidance of those who go into the woods for 
sport and recreation. It is simple and practical, and 
withal a classic, written with a rare and quaint charm. 
Cloth. 200 pages. Illustrated. Postpaid, $1.00. 
2 . 
4. 
Houseboats and Houseboating. 
Albert Bradlee Hunt. The book contains forty spe¬ 
cially prepared articles by owners and designers of well- 
known houseboats, and is beautifully illustrated with 
nearly 200 line and half-tone reproductions of plans and 
exteriors and interiors. A most interesting chapter is 
devoted to houseboating in England. Extra heavy paper, 
buckram. The price is $3.00 net. Postage; 34 cents. 
How to Build a Motor Launch from Plans. 
Charles G. Davis. A thoroughly practical guide for 
the amateur. Shorn of all blind technicalities, it con¬ 
siders displacement, good construction and faulty, stabil¬ 
ity, setting up the keel, framing and planking, with care¬ 
ful explanations. Each step is followed up to the care 
and running of the gas engine. Cloth, 9 folding draw¬ 
ings, 8 full-page plates, 40 smaller diagrams, 170 pages. 
Postpaid, $1.50. 
Manual of the Canvas Canoe. 
F. R. Webb (“Commodore”). Many illustrations of 
designs and plans of canvas canoes and their parts. Two 
large, full-sized working (24x38) drawings in a pocket in 
a cover. Cloth, 115 pages. Price, $1.25. 
Canoe and Boat Building. 
W. P. Stephens. Contains plan and comprehensive 
directions for the construction of canoes, row and sail 
boats and hunting craft, directions that the amateur 
with tools can follow. Fifty plates and working draw¬ 
ings in separate envelope. Cloth. Illustrated. 264 pages. 
Postpaid, $2.00. 
Canvas Canoes and How to Build Them. 
Parker B. Field. The book gives very precise instruc¬ 
tions by which a man with ordinary mechanical bent may 
build a serviceable canoe at slight cost—a plan and all 
working directions. Paper. Postpaid, 50 cents. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO., 127 Franklin St., New York 
As you read Forest and Stream through 
each week, you are frequently reminded 
of one thing or another that you desire to 
purchase. Such and such must be sup¬ 
plied to make your Shooting, Fishing, 
Camping or Cruising outfit complete. 
Possibly you need waterproof shoes, or 
waterproof clothing. Or a new tent P 
It is your intention to take a much longer 
trip this time, than usual. And you may 
be located where you do not have ac¬ 
cess 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. Our experts are right at your elbow. 
It does not cost you a penny (except 
your postage) to take advantage of 
their knowledge. They know where 
to buy and how. It is their business 
—and your advaniage. 
Glance carefully over our advertising 
columns. If you don’t see what you 
want, write in to our Information De¬ 
partment. You will receive a full de¬ 
tailed reply—post haste—we’ie 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 \uth 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 
Life and Sport in Labrador 
NAPOLEON A. COMEAV. 
In “Life and Sport on the North Shore of the Lower 
St. Lawrence and Gulf,” Mr. Comeau has made a valu¬ 
able addition to the literature of rod and rifle—and more. 
It is a book of engrossing personal interest to the sports¬ 
man or general reader, ana of rare value to the student 
of wild life. 
The author describes the events and experiences of 
fifty years, spent in the cause of humanity and science 
in one of the most interesting and least known sections 
of Canada. He writes as one sportsman to his fellows, 
detailing his experiences with the wild things of wood, 
shore and sea, with plenty of stirring experiences with 
big game and gamy fish. 
Illustrated, 450 pages. Paper. Postpaid, $2.50. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
