- A
- Ancient mariners, 5
- Animals, kindness to, 33, 34
- Ape, evolution of, 234
- “Arab steed,” how to make an, 254
- Army, to make a pasteboard, 217
- Artificial water, 206
- Aviary, how to make a back-yard, 63
- Axe, tree-top club-house built with, 10
- Axles, car-wheel, 172
- B
- Bantam coops, 55
- Beard, Frank, 224
- Beard, Santa Claus’s, 249
- Bed, Daniel Boone cabin, 123;
- Lincoln, 124
- Binders, to make water club-house foundation, 101
- Birds, 63
- Bonbon box, the cabbage, 265
- Buffalo, to make a herd of, 276
- Bugles, wooden, 141
- Building material, house-boat, 150
- Bumpers, house-boat, 155
- Bunks, house-boat, 164
- Burgoo, Kentucky, 107;
- ingredients of a, 109;
- how to cook a, 109
- Burgoo master, 108, 109
- Bridge of matches, 206
- Bridle, to make a, 274
- C
- Cabin, how to build and furnish a Daniel Boone, 116;
- lumber for, 118;
- ground plan of 6 × 10, 119
- Cabin, house-boat, 157;
- street-car used as, 168
- Cage, to make a galvanized-wire netting, 39;
- receiving, 46
- Cake, the “Fake,” 266, 268
- Camera, hunting with the, 20
- Camp dress, women’s, 133
- Camping out. See Daniel Boone cabin, 116
- Carp, 52
- Carpet tacks as blow-gun darts, 264
- Cars, back-yard switchback, 170
- Catfish, 52
- Centre-piece, house-boat, 151
- Chalk talk, how to give a, 222
- Chestnut wood for foundation posts, 75
- Chickens, coops for, 54;
- need of shelter for, 54;
- material for coop, 56
- Chimney, Daniel Boone cabin, 130;
- stick, 131;
- Santa Claus’s, 66;
- tin-can, 68
- O
- Oilcloth for underground club-house roof, 94
- Oiled paper for glass, Daniel Boone cabin windows, 127
- Oil-stove, 73
- Old Dan Tucker, 110, 111, 112
- P
- Paddles, how to make, 193
- Panorama box, how to make, 283
- Panorama show, a, 218
- Passageway, underground club-house, 93
- Pattern, how to reproduce, for Wild West show, 270
- Peepers, how to capture, 45
- Pennsylvania pond stew, 107
- Pheasants, cage for, 37
- Picnic, how to have fun at a, 105
- Picnic box, 106
- Pigeons, lofts for, 54;
- material needed in making, 56;
- nests for, 60;
- drinking-troughs for, 61
- Pitch-peg-pin pitching, 112
- Plumb, a home-made, 75
- Prairie chickens, cage for, 37
- Purlins, back-yard workshop, 80
- Q
- Quail, wire cage for, 37
- R
- Rabbits, cage for, 37
- Rafters of tree-top club-house, 14;
- back-yard workshop, 79;
- underground club-house, 94;
- house-boat, 160
- Rat, 21;
- short-tailed meadow, 23, 26;
- wire cage for, 37
- Receiving-cage, 21
- Receiving-tank, bath-tub as, 191
- Reins, Arab steed, 256
- Reptiles, house for, 41
- Ribs, house-boat, 156, 157;
- Arab steed, 255
- Ridge-plank, how to make a, 79
- Ring-master, dress of, 259
- River people, 147
- River-rats, 5
- Robinson Crusoe, 4
- Rock bass, 52
- Rodents, 21;
- cages for, 37
- Rollers, panorama, 284
- Roof, tree-top club-house, 14;
- underground club-house, 92, 94;
- Daniel Boone cabin, 123;
- house-boat, 162
A NEW BOOK FOR INVENTIVE BOYS By DANIEL C. BEARD The Jack of All Trades OR, NEW IDEAS FOR AMERICAN BOYS Profusely Illustrated. Square 8vo, $2.00 No writer for boys has a larger or more enthusiastic following than Mr. Dan. Beard, and the announcement of a new book by him should be welcome news to his many young friends. “The Jack of All Trades” has been written in response to a direct demand from boys from all over the United States and many parts of the British Provinces. From their letters the author discovered that there was a great demand for more material along the lines of the “American Boy’s Handy Book” and “The Outdoor Handy Book.” “The Jack of All Trades” presents a vast number of new ideas which any boy can put into execution, and which will be a source of endless delight. CONTENTS Part I. Fair Weather Ideas Tree-Top Club-Houses—How to Capture and Trap Small Live Animals—The Back-Yard Zoo—A Back-Yard Fish-Pond—Pigeon and Bantam Coops—How to Make a Back-Yard Aviary—A Boy’s Back-Yard Workshop—How to Build an Underground Club-House—A Boys’ Club-House on the Water—How to Have Fun on a Picnic—How to Build and How to Furnish a Daniel Boone Cabin—Flat Boatman’s House—The American Boy’s House Boat—Back-Yard Switchback—How to Build a Toboggan Slide in the Back-Yard. Part II. Rainy Weather Ideas A Home-Made Circus—Good Games with Toothpicks and Matches—Fun with Scissors and Pasteboard and Paper—How to Prepare and Give a Boys’ Chalk Talk—A Christmas Novelty for Boys—How to Make Two Boys into One Santa Claus—A Circus in the Attic—A Boys’ Stag Party—A Wild West Show in the House—How to Have a Panorama Show. CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS, Publishers 153-157 Fifth Avenue, New York THE BEARD BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE The Outdoor Handy Book FOR PLAYGROUND, FIELD AND FOREST By DANIEL C. BEARD With more than 300 Illustrations by the Author. Square 8vo, $2.00 “It tells how to play all sorts of games with marbles, how to make and spin more kinds of tops than most boys ever heard of, how to make the latest things in plain and fancy kites, where to dig bait and how to fish, all about boats and sailing, and a host of other things which can be done outdoors. The volume is profusely illustrated and will be an unmixed delight to any boy.”—New York Tribune. SUMMARY OF CONTENTS Marbles—Tops—Latest Things in Kites—Aerial Fish and Dragons—Hoops and Wheels—How to Make the Sucker—Up in the Air on Stilts—Bait, Live and Dead—Fishing—Aquatic Sports—Rigs of All Kinds for Small Boats—Shells and Canoes—Hints for Collectors—Honey-Bee Messengers—A “Zoo”—Choosing Up and “It”—Counting Out Rhymes—Swimming—Games of Tag—I Spy—Leap Frog—Various Sports for Hot Days—Tip Cat—Games of Ball—Mumbly Peg, Hop-Scotch, and Jack Stones—Hints for Bicyclists—Camping Out—Boy’s Ballista—“Tally-ho!” and Other Cries—Indian Games for Boys—Football—Golf, Hockey, and Shinny—Turtle Hunting—Skating—Stunning Muskrats and Fish—Snowball Battle and Snow Tag—Sleds. From Charles Dana Gibson: “It makes a man of a boy and a boy of a man.” “This book is praiseworthy from end to end, and will find favor even with those who have long since passed to man’s estate.”—The Nation. “It is one of the completest things of the kind ever written, and with it one can hardly conceive how a boy could be without pleasant and profitable amusement at any time. It treats of directions for every season of the year, in and out of doors, and on land and water. One of the best things about it is that it furnishes employment for a boy’s ingenuity and mechanical skill. It seems as if this book must be destined to an immense popularity.”—The Advance. THE AMERICAN BOY’S HANDY BOOK Or, What To Do and How To Do It By DANIEL C. BEARD One volume, 8vo, fully Illustrated by the Author, $2.00 Mr. Beard’s book tells the active, inventive, and practical American boy the things he really wants to know; the thousand things he wants to do, and the ten thousand ways in which he can do them, with the helps and ingenious contrivances which every boy can either procure or make. The author divides the book among the sports of the four seasons; and he has made an almost exhaustive collection of the cleverest modern devices, besides himself inventing an immense number of capital and practical ideas. SUMMARY OF CONTENTS Kite Time—War Kites—Novel Modes of Fishing—Home-made Fishing Tackle—How to Stock, Make, and Keep a Fresh-water Aquarium—How to Stock and Keep a Marine Aquarium—Knots, Bends, and Hitches—Dredge, Tangle, and Trawl Fishing—Home-made Boats—How to Rig and Sail Small Boats—How to Camp Out Without a Tent—How to Rear Wild Birds—Home-made Hunting Apparatus—Traps and Trapping—Dogs—Practical Taxidermy for Boys—Snow Houses and Statuary—Winged Skaters—Winter Fishing—Indoor Amusements—How to Make a Magic Lantern—Puppet Shows—Home-made Masquerade and Theatrical Costumes—With many other subjects of a kindred nature. “It is an excellent publication, and is heartily recommended to parents.”—The Brooklyn Eagle. “The book has this great advantage over its predecessors, that most of the games, tricks, and other amusements described in it are new. It treats of sports adapted to all seasons of the year; it is practical, and it is well illustrated.”—The New York Tribune. “It tells boys how to make all kinds of things—boats, traps, toys, puzzles, aquariums, fishing tackle; how to tie knots, splice ropes, to make bird calls, sleds, blow guns, balloons; how to rear wild birds, to train dogs, and do the thousand and one things that boys take delight in. The book is illustrated in such a way that no mistake can be made; and the boy who gets a copy of this book will consider himself set up in business.”—The Indianapolis Journal. THE AMERICAN GIRL’S HANDY BOOK HOW TO AMUSE YOURSELF AND OTHERS By LINA and ADELIA B. BEARD With nearly 500 Illustrations by the Authors. One volume, square 8vo, $2.00 Eight new chapters have been added to the forty-two which have carried this famous book to the hearts of all the young people since its first appearance, and everything that the girls of to-day want to know about their sports, games, and winter afternoon and evening work, is told clearly and simply in this helpful and entertaining volume. The volume is fully and handsomely illustrated from drawings by the authors, whose designs are in the best sense illustrative of the text. SUMMARY OF CONTENTS First of April—Wild Flowers and Their Preservation—The Walking Club—Easter-Egg Games—How to Make a Lawn Tennis Net—May-Day Sports—Midsummer-Eve Games and Sports—Sea-side Cottage Decoration—A Girl’s Fourth of July—An Impression Album—Picnics, Burgoos, and Corn-Roasts—Botany as Applied to Art—Quiet Games for Hot Weather—How to Make a Hammock—Corn-Husk and Flower Dolls—How to Make Fans—All Hallow Eve—Nature’s Fall Decorations and How to Use Them—Nutting Parties—How to Draw, Paint in Oil-colors, and Model in Clay and Wax—China Painting—Christmas Festivities, and Home-made Christmas Gifts—Amusements and Games for the Holidays—Golf—Bicycling—Swimming—Physical Culture—Girls’ Clubs—A New Seashore Game—Apple Target Shooting—Water Fairies. Louisa M. Alcott wrote: “I have put it in my list of good and useful books for young people, as I have many requests for advice from my little friends and their anxious mothers. I am most happy to commend your very ingenious and entertaining book.” Grace Greenwood wrote: “It is a treasure which, once possessed, no practical girl would willingly part with. It is an invaluable aid in making a home attractive, comfortable, artistic, and refined. The book preaches the gospel of cheerfulness, industry, economy, and comfort.” CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS, Publishers, 153-157 Fifth Ave., New York
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