RECREATION. 



XXVll 



?^5!75RWv 



A Watch Case Wears 



at point of contact with the hand or pocket. 

 A solid gold case wears thin and weak, and a 

 cheap filled case wears shabby. A Jas. Boss 

 Stiffened Gold Case is guaranteed to wear for 25 

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 you wear it. This is why thousands wear the 



IAS. BOSS 



s ffiT Watch Case 



in preference to a solid gold case. Ask your jeweler to show you a Jas. Boss Case 

 and look for the Keyston© trade-mark stamped inside. Send for Booklet. 



THE KEYSTONE WATCH CASE COMPANY, Philadelphia, Pa. 



White Mountain Views Free 



To any person sending me a subscription to Recre- 

 ation accompanied by $1. 1 will send two mounted 

 photos, on velox paper taken among' the v\ hite Moun- 

 tains, size 6x8; one shows Mt. Washington snow 

 capped. To any one sending 2 subscriptions with $2. 

 I will send a souvenir of the White Mountains, size 

 4^x5^ containing s^ven photos. Send P. 0. Money 

 Urder. 



M. E. TUTTLE, Box 337, Dover, N. H. 



DoYouKeepaGun? 



If so, would ycu not like a rack for it ? 



Do you keep more 

 than one gun? 



If so, would you not like racks for all 

 of them ? 



For 5 yearly subscriptions to 

 RECREATION 



I will send you 



a pair of buffalo horns 



beautifully polished and mounted on nickel 

 bases, which may be screwed on the wall. 

 A pair of these horns make a unique and 

 convenient gun rack, and a valuable trophy 

 of the grandest game animal America ever 

 had. 



These horns are easily worth 



five dollars 



a pair and sell readily at that price. I have 

 been fortunate in securing a considerable 

 number of them at a price that enables me 

 to make this remarkable offer. 



Send in your Club at once. 



I have a 22 caliber Stevens rifle. It is 

 badly leaded, the lead being formed in 

 small rings in the barrel. I have used 

 mercury without satisfactory results. Please 

 tell me how the lead can be removed. 



J. H. Potts, Shepardstown, W. Va. 



AXSW. R. 



The only safe remedy for your rifle is to 

 send it to the Stevens Arms Company and 

 let them clean it out. Possibly it is not 

 lead yon found in the barrel, but that the 

 barrel has rusted and pitted. If so, noth- 

 ing can remedy that, not even the man who 

 made the gun. The only way you can 

 make such a barrel effective is by having 

 it re-bored to a larger caliber. Any gun- 

 smith could run a cleaning rod through the 

 barrel, tightly fitted, and use emery powder, 

 which would probably remove some of the 

 obstructions, but, as I have said, if the bar- 

 rel is pitted, that would not cure it. — Edi- 

 tor. 



yyMjuy 



1 OIL —SMEL TER--MB NESI i 



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