174 
FOREST AND STREAM 
SOfiOO Camping Trailers This 
Summer 
The Gipsy Trail 
$250.^ 
The Ten Ton Wheels - 
192.^° 
The Prarie Schooner - 
170.^ 
The Auto Camp 
- 59.22 
CAMPiERS’ OUTFITS 
Send postal for Catalog No. 14 
tut: r^TDQV TPAIT .. 1524 chestnut st. 
1 Hh OlUoI 1 KAIL .. PHILADELPHIA, PA. 
Tefever 
New Lefever Nitro- 
SPECIAL only $29.00 
Well Snished, considering 
the price. Built to shoot 
right and stand as 
much use as the 
most expensive 
gun. Most dur- 
able lock ever 
put in a gun 
— first lock 
fired over 
77,000 
times. 
Every 
gun proof- 
tested with an 
extreme load. 
A standardized 
gun built only 
in 20-ga. 28 in., 
16-ga. 28 in., and 
12-ga. 28 and 30 in. with 
14 in. stock and about2j^ in. 
drop. A Lefever won the world’s 
championship at the Olympic 
games in London. Lefever has 
stood for service and durability 
for over 50 yrs. Write for Catalogue 
Lefever Anns Co., Ithaca, N.Y. 
For over-night 
stops this spring 
and canvas bed 
goes up in a jiffy. 
Most practical 
means of saving 
money on hotel 
bills. 
Holds two comfort- 
ably. Very strong. 
Just the bed ior 
those who want to 
CAMP IN COMFORT 
Weight — 14 lbs. Folds up — 4 ft. x 4 in. 
COMPLETE $15.00 
FARRELLY’S OUTDOOR STORE 
122 Jefferson Ave. E, Detroit, Mich. 
ITHACA WINS 
Chas. Askins, 
First Lieut. 
U.S.A., noted 
writer and 
authority on 
g^ns and am- 
munition, demon- 
strator and 
teacher of the 
use of guns for 
Uncle Sam during 
the war, says: “I 
have shot an Ithaca 
gun steadily for 11 
years — it grows 
tighter and sounder 
with age.*' 
Catalogue Free 
Double guns for 
game $37.50 up. 
Singlebarrelirap 
guns $75 up. 
’ ITHACA 
GUN CO. 
Ithaca, N. Y. 
Box 25 
ELECTRIC LIGHT 
for camp, Summer cottage 
or country home. Do not 
be without this great com- 
fort and convenience. 
Portable, easily installed, 
self cranking, uses gaso- 
line or kerosene. Capac- 
ity, generating set, 750 
or 30 twenty-five- 
laraps; battery — 60 
hours or 10 twenty- 
five-watt lamps for 8 hours. 
$1 QCOO for quick 
.1 sciles. 
Write for circular 89F97 to 
W. R. BONHAM, 2819 Wentworth Ave., Chicago 
April, 1922 
THE BIG GRIZZLY OF 
BELLA COOLA 
{Continued from page 168) 
owl gave fitful greetings from a nearby 
pine and a weasel watched intently from 
another tree as the work progressed. | 
Long ere we reached the camp the I 
moon was riding high, unveiling her i 
light. By its aid we pitched our tent 
not far from the trapper's cabin. The : 
sugar-loaf mountain showed clear and | 
the stream at its base was silvered ore. j 
In the distance beyond, where loftier | 
peaks took form of castle and minaret, i 
a like spell of enchantment was cast. ' 
The tent-flap closed and shut out the 
scene, but such scenes and happenings 
are never closed to memory. All who ; 
have sought the open and taken a 
pleasure in Nature’s offerings, at times 
will draw the veil aside, and feel tlie . 
thrills and joy once more, and assuredly ' 
will never ivgrct the days so spent. | 
DOWN-STREAM DRY-FLY 
FISHING 
{Continued from page 157) 
yet I am convinced, with all their sagac- 
ity, trout do not learn by experience to 
understand the danger of the barbed 
imitation insect, though the hook is the 
first thing they observe. Every angler 
has frequently hooked and lost trout by 
imperfect skill or tackle, and then go on 
the following day to capture it — if feed- 
ing, under the same conditions, on the 
same fij’ upon which it has previously 
been hooked, yet lost. 
' I 'HE greatest danger of up - stream 
* fishing is, if you take up a certain I 
position to cast over and beyond the ris- | 
ing fish, the trout, 'while ascending to | 
take the fly, will frequently become en- 1 
tangled, or at least strike the gut leader, i 
which scares it, or what is known as I 
“putting down,” from the feeding. I 
Another disadvantage from up-stream ! 
casting is that the fly most always floats I 
back at a different speed than the gut- I 
leader, — more rapid or slow, — according I 
to the current-flow. In cither way, the ’ 
fly, being lighter in weight, is soon 
drowned, even in short-cast fishing. It 
is also e.xtremcly poor judgment to stand 
below, in line with the rising trout, be- 
cause you are bound to disturb other fish 
— perhaps larger in size, that lie below 
the one you seek. Trout always choose 
to feed in a line behind each other along 
the runway. Current formations seem to 
force insects to float in certain lines, — 
and, naturally, trout locate themselves di- 
rectly underneath, unless the glut is a 
heavy rise when the entire surface of the j 
river is covered. At such unusual events, 
trout still retain their chosen places, tak- i| 
ing what floats over them. | 
All these disadvantages I have proved 1 
beyond any doubt can be« obviated by ! 
fishing my suggested impro^■cd methcTd 
of "side dry-fly casting” — that is,, from 
the stream side to have the rod-tip 
follow along after the fly without the 
line hjilging'^he leader or drowning the 
fly. It is often possible to walk along 
