


















tf OR Bode AND STREAM. [SEpT. 28, 1907. 



SUNSET ON THE PRAIRIES. 
Small Yacht Construction They have tamed it with their harrows; they have broke 
it with plows; 
e e y H 
Where the bison used to range it some one’s built hin 
and Rigging. self a house; ” 
They have stuck it full of fence posts; they have girdle 
‘Club Cocktails| 




































A pone Manual of Practical Boat and Small Yacht it with wire 
Building. With two complete designs and numerous They have sham Pie . 5 Tee ert . 
diagrams and details. By Linton Hope. 177 pages. ey eve shamed it and profaned it with an automobil 
. cr ae oe Bes 2 0 m i . ° . 
Are scientificall y blended from _Cloth. Price, $3.00. They have bridged its gullied rivers; they have people 
th hoicest felicia d The author has taken two designs for practical demon- _ it with men, 
e choicest oO: iquors, an stration, one of a centerboard boat 19ft. waterline, and They have churched it, they have schooled it, they hav 
are further improved by aging the other a cruising cutter of 22ft. waterline. 30th de- » steepled it—Amen. ; ; 
: 5 signs show fine little boats which are fully adapted to They have furrowed it with ridges, they have seeded 
In wood. They appeal espe~ | American requirements. Full instructions, even to the ‘ be grain, 
* : | minutest detail, are given for the building of both these And the West that was worth knowing I shall never se 
cially to the sportsman, as they | boats. The information is not confined to these yachts again. ‘. 
alone; they are merely taken as examples; but what is 
said applies to all wooden yacht building according to 
the best and most approved methods. 
are always ready and so easily 
served. They can be cooled 
by laying the bottle in 
a spring hole or exposing 
to the cold air. What is 
more appreciated than a 
delicious cocktail as a 
They have smothered all its camp-fires, where the beate 
_ plainsman slept, 
They have driven up their cattle where the skulkin 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. Pd heey bans 
They have made themselves a pasture where the timi 
| a deer A ould browse, 
¥ a here the antelope were feeding they have dotted o’« 
Field, Cover and Trap Shooting. ay, With cows; aa ie | 
There’s a yokel’s tuneless whistling down the bison 
By Captain Adam H. Bogardus, Champion Wing Shot _, Winding trail, | 
of the World, Embracing Hints for Skilled Marks- Where the redman’s arrow fluttered there’s a gl 









in prelude to your dinner aoe Instruction for Young Sportsmen; Haunts and D _with a = f ‘ki i , 
{ =e ” : labits of Game Birds; Flight and Resort of Water- Jriving up the cows for milking; they have cut its wil} 
MANHATTAN 1 ae a a cae: or fowl; Breeding and Breaking of Dogs. Cloth, 444 I Regibcns oj ml 
; : , aves. rice, $2. ij nto forty-acre patches till its glory is all spent 
Cocktails shooting? You can have pages. Price, $2.00. sits. ae 
. Bia ye “Wield, Cover and Trap Shooting” is a book of instrue I remember in the sixties, where as far as I could see 
it by buying the “Club tion, and of that best of all instruction, where the teacher | It had never lord or ruler but the biutals and me; ‘ | 
Cocktails. G Most popular ce sie: oe eb rich recs a ak easier cca Sty blight of man was on it, and the endless acr«| 
s x ; ? ie and mora o illustrate an¢ emphasize Nis eaching,. 1e ay 
kinds: Manhat.an (whiskey scope of the book—a work of nearly 500 pages—is shown | Just as God Almighty left them on the restful Sevent| 
base), Martini (gin base). For by_this list of chapters: - = day; 
sale by all reputable dealers. eee and Their seroper Cherase. pinnate rats When no sore rose from its vastness but a murmure 
7 5 100 ing. bad \ : innatec é srouse . LOO Ing. Jual hum an dim, 
AV OID IMITATIONS Shooting. Shooting the Woodcock. The Snipe and Like the echoed void of Silence in an unheard Prair 
Sole Proprietors: Snipe Shooting. Golden Plover. Curlew and Gray hymn; 
rr | Plover. Wild Ducks and Western Duck Shooting. Wild And I lay at night and rested in my bed of blanke 
Gy. F. HE & 7 | Geese, Cranes and Swans. Wild Turkey and Deer Shoot- Peet = Ms ; 
ing. The Art of Shooting on the Wing. Shooting Dogs Much alone as if I was the only man in all the world. | 
HARTFORD NEW YORK LONDON | —Breeding and Breaking. Pigeon Shooting—Trapshoot- eas z ‘ : ee | 
: ing. But the Prairie’s passed, or passing, with the passing 1 

sORReT ID STRE SI BLISHING i, the years, ; : 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. Till there is no West worth knowing, and there are ry 
— — Pioneers; ; 
They have riddled it with railroads, throbbing on ar 
4 Motor Boats. Row Boats on and on, 
Mullins Steel Boats Hunting and Fishing Boats They have ridded it of dangers till the zest of it is gon | 
built of steel with air chambers in each end like alife boat. They can’t sink, Faster, more And I’ve saddled up my pony, for I’m dull and lon| 
buoyant, practically indestructible, don’t leak, dry out and are absolutely safe. No calking, no 
bailing, notrouble. Every boatis guaranteed. 
Highly endorsed by sportsmen. The ideal boat Qgygge=ses 
for pleasure, summer resorts, parks, etc. Boats Ap 
reIuE iz 



some here, 
To go Westward, Westward, Westward, till we find | 
new Frontier; 
: ; To get back to God’s own wildness and the skies v| 
shipped the same day orders are received. used to know— 
The W. H. MULLINS COMPANY ’ eect 3ut there is no West—it’s conquered—and I don’t kno} 
126 Franklin Street, Salem, O. Write for Catalogue where to go. 





















—J. W. Foley in the New York Times 

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 
under the new title 
My Life As An 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 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 
bine Lidianvor ine eri meneten their time, how the young men gambled, how they courted their sweet— 
those deccnibedin Wis ciultes hearts, how the traders imposed on the Indians and how the different 
splendid book, ‘My Life as an tribes fought together. The one central figure of the book is 
Indian.” The white blanket , A 
coat and the handkerchief Nat-ah -ki, 
about the head were the char- 2 : : ; : 
seteritunldeece OF aba GIRoA the beautiful Indian girl who became the author's wife. 
that people. 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 

This is the picture of an old 

