NORTHERN MONTANA AND 

 WASHINGTON. 



A NOTHER of the famous guides of Montana, 

 "^ who has been brought into considerable prom- 

 inence by guiding parties of well-known sportsmen, 

 among them being many English sportsmen, is J. W. 

 Schultz, whose headquarters is at Kipp, Mont. Mr. 

 Schultz was born in northern New York. During his 

 boyhood he removed to Montana. A love of hunt- 

 ing was inherent in him, and on arriving in Montana 

 he devoted himself almost solely to hunting and 

 trading with the Indians. In his early days in the 

 West the buffalo were there literally by the million. 

 He continued in his business of hunting and trading 

 until the extermination of the buiTalo, when he 

 attempted to settle down on a ranch, near the foot- 

 hills of the Rocky Mountains; but the wild life of a 

 hunter possessed so many charms for him, that he 

 spends more time in the mountains than he does on 

 his ranch, and guiding a hunting party is more con- 

 genial occupation to him than ranch work. His 

 success has made his services sought for, and he has 

 guided some of the most distinguished sportsmen 

 that have visited Montana. 



Mr. Schultz's favorite hunting ground is a country 

 north and south of the Great Northern Railway, 



