RECREATION’S ADVERTISER 

The RECREATION 
Will 
Effort tin 
Hunting the Red Deer 
By Wittiam ArtHuR BABSON 

{|This will be one of the special features of our November 
big game number. It is a carefully prepared treatise on 
the white-tailed deer and its hunting, and has the adyvan- 
tage over much that has been written on the subject in 
that its author is not only a hunter of wide experience, 
but he knows how to write. The article will be illustrated 
from photographs. 
Outclass 
its 

Some Alaskan Big Game 
By R. W. Strong, U.S. G. S. 
{/Mr. Stone visited the interior of Alaska for the United 
States Geological Survey, and this article has been sanc- 
tioned by the Director of the Survey. It will tell of the 
experiences of the author with the big game of the region 
north of Fairbanks on the Tanana River, and between 
Circle City and Fort Hamilton on the Yukon. The 
illustrations are from photographs of live wild game, made 
by the author. 






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The Sons of the Settlers 
By ERNEST RUSSELL 

4/The renascence of rea], old-time country life in the 
Eastern States, and particularly in New England, will 
be graphically pictured in this series of articles. Under 
the caption, ; 
An Antidote for the 
‘Shame of the Cities’ 
Mr. Russell has collected, at first hand, as a nucleus 
for the opening paper of the series, a wealth of facts 
and experiences; and these he has supplemented with 
a keen, optimistic analysis of the relation of our national 
effort and the true national ideal. 
{‘‘The Sons of the Settlers” is a story that is really 
dramatic in its essential features, and the author has 
done strong, original work in its writing. The very 
theme smust appeal forcefully to all home-loving 
Americans. The opening paper will appear in our 
See ee ee ee 

Grmest Russell 

Hunting in the Big Thicket 
By Gison WILLETS 
(Mr. Willets is a special correspondent of world-wide ex- 
perience. He has ‘‘done”’ everything from a éete-a-tete with 
royal personages of the Far East to a bear hunt in the brush 
of west Texas, and, needless to say, he writes ‘‘good stuff.’ 
This particular story tells with surpassing interest of a 
happy hunting ground in the Southwest. 
High Ground in Fox-Hunting 
By Bric.-GEN. Rocer D. WILtIAMs 
“|This authoritative and highly interesting article by the 
celebrated author of ‘Horse and Hound” epitomizes 
American fox-hunting to-day, with a touch of retrospect and 
a glance into the future. Whether you be.a fox-hunter or 
not, you should read it, for it gives a truer insight of the 
sport than any magazine article that has appeared. 

November number. 

His Woodland Highness, the Moose 
By James LEDDyY PEQUIGNOT 
{The author of this combined article and story was full of 
his subject. and had a good subject, hence he produced an 
unusually good manuscript. It requires more than an ordi- 
nary knowledge of woodcraft and the habits of the game fora 
writer to outclass all others in handling a subject about 
which so much is written 
The Merry Little Hound 
By N. Writttams HAYNES 
{The beagle is given a fine run in this article—allowed to 
show what he is good for, and it will surely result in the 
conversion to rabbit-shooting of many hunters who have so 
far disdained to follow the sport. And it is well that it 
should, considering the really good fun such shooting 
affords and the rapidly diminishing supply of upland game 
birds. 
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