
























>» 
FOREST AND STREAM. 

[Dec. 28, 1907. 

MENNEN'S 
|TOILET POWDER 
and insist that your barber use 
italso. Itis Antiseptic, and 
will prevent any ol th: skin 
diseases often contracted 
A positive relief for Chapped 
= Hands, Chafing, and all 
afflictions of tne skin. Removes all odor 
of perspiration. Get Mennen’s-the original. 
Put up in non-refillable boxes, the ‘‘box that lox.”’ 
teed under the Food and Drugs Act, June 30, 1906 
No. 1542 
Sold everywhere or mailed for 25cts. Saple free. 
Try Mennen’s Violet (Borated) Talcum. 
GERHARD MENNEN CO., Newark, N. J. 











Guaran- 
Serial 

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 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 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 
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, 
the 
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The people of the United States are turning more and more toward an open-air life in 
summer, yet the lands accessible to centers of civilization are being taken up and utilized 
so rapidly that they are each year growing more and more expensive. 
The work is printed on extra heavy paper, and is bound in olive green buckram. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING COMPANY 
346 Broadway, New York 

‘The 
RASS EAI 

OE 

JOSH BILLING’S SALE OF HIS DOG. 
Ir is told of Josh Billings that once tramping 
with a yellow dog as his companion, he fell 
among some Yale boys in a Connecticut village 
hotel. They took him for a farmer from way 
back, and set out to have some fun with him. 
On their inquiring with affected interest after 
the health of his wife and children, Josh, with 
counterfeited simplicity, gave them a graphic 
account of his family and farm. 
“Of course you belong to the church?” 
one of the boys. 
“Yes, the Lord be praised, and my father and 
grandfather before me.” 
“Now, I suppose you wouldn’t tell a lie,” said 
one of the students. 
“Not for the world.’ 
“What would you take for that dog?” point: 
asked 




ing to Josh’s cur, which was crouching beneath 
his chair. 
“T won’t take $20 for that dog.” 
“Twenty dollars! why, he’s not worth twenty 
cenis.” 
“T assure you I would not take $20 for him.” 
“Come, my friend,’ said the student; “now 
you say you won't tell a lie for the world. Let 
me see if you will not do it for $20. I'll give 
you $20 for your dog.” | 
“T’ll not take it.” 
“You will not? Here! Let me see if this 
will not tempt you to lie,’ added the student, 
producing a small bag of half dollars, which he 
built up in small piles on the table. Josh was 
sitting by the table with his hat in his hand, ap- 
parently unconcerned. “There,” added the stu- 
dent, “there are $20, all in silver; I will give 
you that for the animal.” Josh quietly raised his 
hat to the edge of the table, and, as quick as 
thought, scraped all the money into it except 
one half dollar, and then exclaimed: 
“T won’t take your $20! Nineteen and a half | 
is as much as that dog is worth; he is your | 
property.” 
SIXTY-THREE YEARS AGO 
“Bill” Hamilton, then 20 years of age, set out from St. 
Louis, Mo., with seven other free trappers under the 
leadership of old Bill Williams. Seven of these eight 
men are dead, but Hamilton still lives out in Montana 
and still sets his traps. He has written the story of his 
early trapping days, and the book has been published. 
It is called 
MY SIXTY YEARS ON 
THE PLAINS 
By W. T. HAMILTON 
It tells of trapping, trading, Indian fighting, hunting, 
and all the many and varied incidents of the trapper’s 
life. It is full of adventure and excitement, but the sto 
is told modestly, and there is nothing in it that is lurid. 
Amid much fighting, there is nothing that can be called 
“blood and thunder,” but there is much that is history. 
The book has all the charm of the old volumes, telling 
of early travel in the West; books which were simple and 
direct, and in which there was no striving for effect. 
It is illustrated by a portrait of the author and one of 
the celebrated Chief Washaki, and by six drawings of old- 
time trapper and Indian life, by Mr. Charles M. Russell, 
the celebrated _cowbecy artist of Great Falls, Montana. 
223 pages. Cloth. Illustrated. Price, $1.50. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
A Big-Game and Fish Map of New 
Brunswick. 
We have had prepared by the official draughtsman ot 
New Brunswick a map of that Province, giving the local- 
ities where big game—moose and caribou—are most 
abundant, and also the streams in which salmon are 
found, and the rivers and lakes which abound in trout. 
Price, $1.00. F 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
PHEASANTS. 
Their Natural History and Practical 
Management. 
By W. B. Tegetmeier. 
New Enlarged Edition. 16 Plates, Cloth, 237 Pages. 
Price, $3.50. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 












