RECREATION’S ADVERTISER 
Everybody Loves a Story 
@ We believe a little rugged fiction of high grade is good to counterbalance the special articles 
and informational experiences which have made Recreation distinctive. And so we have induced 
a few of the best-known writers of “‘ been there’ articles to do us a story for a change. These 
we are able to offer in addition to even more and better special features of vital interest to 
sportsmen. We mention on these pages some of the attractive features of the December number. 
4 how, when, where, of the | 
™ matic interest and unusu- | 
With Hound | 
and 
Wild-Cat 
By Harry H. Dunn 
@ An informational nar- 
rative that, while especially 
M™ valuable as telling the 
= wild sport of bob-cat | 
# hunting, is strong in dra- | 
ally readable as a story. | 

SID HOWARD 
{4 Doc’”’ 
and 
His Buck 
By Ernest McGaffey 
@ A charming story of 
an old hunter’s coup in 
the Arkansas wilderness. 
Strong in human interest 
and rich in the lore of 
deer-hunting, it is a real 
document of the bush. 
Illustrated from photos. 
@ This popular writer of hunting and fishing experiences has written for the December number of 
Recreation the story of The Christmas Dance at Jimmy Friday’s 
@ It is a remarkably faithful tale of the picturesque life of a lumber camp, involving a charmng 
little romance. Not one of the trashy “love stories” with which the all-story magazines are padded, 
but a real, vital tale of primitive life and primitive but interesting people. It will be illustrated 
by Lynn Bogue Hunt. 
With the Mountain Cowboys 
By Edwin L. Sabin 
# @ A “been there” story that 
@ will take you to No-man’s 
§ Land and make you acquainted 
with the real American cow- 
boy as he is to-day. Illustrated 
from excellent photographs 
taken by the author while 
riding the range with the K- 
Bar ranch outfit in Western 
Colorado. 
When corresponding with advertisers please mention RECREATION’ 
A County Gone Mad 
By J. Williams Macy, Jr. 
@ The graphic story of the 
turning topsy-turvy for a night 
and a day of a whole county 
on Long Island, occasioned by 
| the holding of the great auto- 
mobile race for the Vander- 
bilt Cup. Illustrated from 
specially made human interest 
photographs. 
HighGround inFox-Hunting 
By Brig.-Gen. Roger D. Williams 
@ In his book “ The Wilder- 
ness Hunter,” President 
Roosevelt says: “Col. Roger 
Williams, more than any other 
American, is entitled to speak 
upon hunting, and especially 
upon hunting large game with 
horse and hound.” This article 
will convince you the Presi- 
dent is right. 

