
RECREATION. 
XXIX 













Makes a Pie That 
Melts in your Mouth 
Those who know Libby’s 
delicious Mince Meat never 
bother with the labor of mak- 
ing a winter’s supply of home- 
made. 
Libby’s is so convenient, 
wholesome, pure. 
Put up in packages enough 
for two large mince pies. 
Ask your grocer or write 
LIBBY, McNEILL & LIBBY, Chicago. 
Drop a postal. for book, new edition, 
“How to Make Good Things to Eat.” 

We do not live 
on Fifth Avenue, hence 

We do not pay 
Fifth Avenue rents. We live ina 
modest street, and do a modest busi- 
NESS. 
That’s why 
we can dothe Fifth Avenue style of 
work at modest prices. Give us a 
trial and we will convince you of the 
truth of these statements. 
Our Winter Importations now on 
view. 
FRED. C. MARTIN, 
Merchant Tailor, 


M. A. Frost, of Woodland, and Ernest Smith, of 
Caribou, made a fishing trip to Beaver brook some 
days ago. They fished 2 days and caught about 800 
brook trout. They never saw trout bite so well as in 
those 2 days. ‘They camped on the beach at the 
forks of East and West branch one night and 2 deer 
attracted by their campfire came up to within 4 or 5 
rods of them and stoud there 5 minutes. They saw 2 
more in the morning.—Bangor (Me.) Commercial. 
Dear Sir: I am in receipt of your letter 
in regard to fishing, and will say in reply 
that a friend and I did have a nice lot 
of brook trout that we caught in 3 days, 
but we carried them out a distance of 5 
miles through the woods. We had about 
600 in number and could have caught many 
more if we had so desired. We went to 
Beaver brook, a stream that enters into 
the Aroostook river. Game is plenty in 
that vicinity. We saw several deer and 
saw signs of large game. Iam going there 
hunting next month. 
Ernest L. Smith, Caribou, Me. 
Here is another pair who would no 
doubt dub themselves “sportsmen,” yet 
they seem bent on taking everything in 
sient and leaving nothing for their neigh- 
ors. 
GOT A DOSE OF THEIR OWN MED- 
ICINE. 
Pana, Sept. 19g—(Special) —Considerable excitement 
has been caused here by the fact that Henry Pope and 
‘“Waxey ” Kreiger, who were drowned in the Okaw on 
Aug.7, came to their death by the use of dynamite. 
There has been a mystery connected with the drowning 
that has remained unsolved up to this time. Both 
youn men were expert swimmers and the news that 
oth drowned in the same pool simultaneously caused 
much comment. It now comes out that the fishing 
pac resorted to the use of dynamite to procure fish. 
‘wo sticks were thrown in the pool. One exploded, 
covering the surface of the water with fish. Thinking 
the other one useless, Pope and Kreiger jumped into 
the water, but no sooner had they done so than the re- 
maining dynamite stick exploded, killing both young 
men. The facts have been suppressed owing to 
the state law in regard to using dynamite in Illinois 
waters. The other members of the party have all left 
the city, and itis thought no attempt will he made to 
apprehend or bring them to trial.—Springfield ([IIl.) 
Register. 
Again, I say, it served them right, and 
I wish every man who uses dynamite for 
killing fish might meet a smilar fate. The 
men who do such brutal work can, without 
exception, be spared and the community 
will be much better off without them. 
EDITOR. 
IT ONLY COSTS $1 
TO TICKLE A MAN OR A BOY A 
WHOLE YEAR. 
RECREATION DOES IT. 
$1. 
— 
IN ANSWERING ADS PLEASE 
$55 West 23d St., New York. | MENTION RECREATION. 
