8 4 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[Jan. 18, igoi 
THE RECOGNIZED AUTHORITY 
GAME LAWS IN BRIEF 
A Digest of the Statutes 
of the United States and 
Canada governing the 
taking of game and fish. 
Compiled from original 
and official sources for 
the practical guidance of 
sportsmen and anglers. 
The Brief is complete; it 
covers all the States and 
Provinces, and gives all 
provisions as to seasons 
"If you are wise*’ for fish and game, the 
imitations as to size or 
number, transportation, export, non-resident 
licenses, and other restrictions, for the prac¬ 
tical guidance of sportsmen and anglers. 
It is revised to date, and is correct and 
reliable. 
••If the Brief says so, you may depend on it.” 
A standing reward is offered for finding an 
error in the Brief. 
In the Lodges of the Blackfeet 
which was published serially in Forest and 
Stream as by W. B. Anderson, has been issued 
over the author’s true name, J. W. Schultz, and 
under the new title 
My Life As Ai\ Indian 
The story is one of the most faithful pictures 
of human life ever drawn. It tells of the life 
of the plains Indian in the old days, when buf¬ 
falo hunting and journeys to war were the oc¬ 
cupations of every man. It describes the every 
day life of the great camp, tells how the men 
and women passed their time, how the young 
men gambled, how they courted their sweet¬ 
hearts, how the traders imposed on the Indians, 
and how the different tribes fought together. 
The one central figure of the book is 
Nat-ah'-ki, 
the beautiful Indian girl who became the 
author’s wife. .... 
But it is needless to describe this book to 
readers of Forest and Stream. Those who 
read it as a serial will surely want the volume on 
their library shelves. Price, $1.65, postpaid. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO , 
FILE YOUR FOREST AND STREAM 
Club Cocktails 
• -•***•• -" *"< 
; . fiA ...... ! 
Manhattan 
Cocktails- 
Are scientificall / blended fion 
the choicest old liquors, an< 
are further improved by agin 
in wood. They appeal espe 
dally to the sportsman, as the 
are always ready and so easil 
rerved. They can be coole 
by laying the bottle i 
a spring hole or exposin 
to the cold air. What i 
more appreciated than 
delicious cocktail as 
prelude to your dinne 
after a day’s fishing c 
shooting? You can ha\ 
it by buying the ‘‘Clu 
Cocktails.” *| Most popul 
kinds: Manhattan (whiski 
base), Martini (gin base). F 
sale by all reputable dealei 
AVOID IMITATION 
Sole Proprietors: 
G. F. HEUBLE1N & BRC 
HARTFORD NEW YORK LONDO 
PRICE 25 CENTS. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO 
346 Broadway, New York 
We have provided a cloth file binder to hold 26 num¬ 
bers of Forest and Stream. It is simple, convenient, 
strong durable, satisfactory. The successive issues thus 
bound’make a handsome volume, constantly growing in 
interest and value. 
The binder will be sent postpaid on receipt of one 
dollar. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO 
Hunting in Many Lands. 
The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club. Ed 1 
Theodore Roosevelt and George Bird Grinnell. Vig t 
Illustrated. Cloth. 448 pages. Price, *2.60. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO 
In the Lodges of the Blackfeet 
which was published serially in Forest and Stream as by W. B. Ander¬ 
son, has now been issued over the author’s true name, J. W. Schultz, and 1 
under the new title 
My Life As An Indian 
■ 
This is the picture ot an old 
time Indian of the north, one of 
those described in Mr. Schultz’s 
splendid ,book, “My Life as an 
Indian.” The white blanket 
coat and the handkerchief 
about the head were the char¬ 
acteristic dress of that time and 
that people. 
The story is one of the most faithful pictures of human life ever drawn. 
It tells of the life of the plains Indian in the old days, when buffalo hunting 
and journeys to war were the occupations of every man. It describes the 
every day life of the great camp, tells how the men and women passed 
their time, how the young men gambled, how they courted their sweet¬ 
hearts, how the traders imposed on the Indians and how the different 
tribes fought together. The one central figure of the book is 
Nat-ah'-ki, 
the beautiful Indian girl who became the author’s wife. 
But it is needless to describe this book to readers of Forest and 
Stream. Those who read it as a serial will surely want the volume on 
their library shelves. Price, $1.65, postpaid. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO., 
346 Broadway, New York 
