612 
forest and stream 
November, 1920 
THE 
MAN 
OF THE 
FOREST 
By Zane Grey 
has a message on every page 
of life lived gloriously in the 
open, of adventure, of daring, 
of romance, of the wonder of 
forest and mountain. More 
than a million readers have 
• thrilled to this romance of the 
Arizona mountains — this novel 
of a hidden paradise and how 
a man and woman found love 
together in the shadow of the 
encircling mountains and in the 
deeper shadow of the danger 
that lurked behind them. Illus- 
trated. $2.00. 
THE PEDDLER 
By Homy C. Rowland 
Another delightful and really 
mysterious mystery story cen- 
tering around that gang of in- 
ternational crooks of which 
Chu-Chu le Tondeur was the 
founder. It is an intriguing 
tale of this band’s operations 
in a rich American colony. 
$ 175 - 
ALL-WOOL 
MORRISON 
By Mohnan Day 
A high - speed, twenty - hour 
cross-section of American life. 
This story of a young mayor’s 
fight to save several millions 
for his state — at the risk of the 
love of the one woman — makes 
a novel humorous, and human, 
and true. Frontispiece. $1.90. 
CALIBAN 
By W. L. George 
is the story of “Bulmer” — a 
man with a genius for success, 
with the power to control the 
destiny of a nation, but who 
was unable to regulate his own. 
And it was love which taught 
him his weakness. $2.00. 
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OUTDOOR BOOKS 
MANUAL OF TAXIDERMY. By C. J. Maynard, 
and Chester A. Reed. Detailed instructions for 
collecting, skinning and mounting birds, ani- 
mals, fish, reptiles, and insects, and for tan- 
ning skins, rugwork, preparing backgrounds, 
etc. Illustrated by drawings and photographs of 
mounted specimens. $1.50 net. 
THE TRAPPER’S GUIDE. A manual of instruc- 
tions for capturing all kinds of fur-bearing ani- 
mals, and curing their skins; with observations 
on the fur trade, hints on life in the woods, 
narratives of trapping and hunting excursions. 
By S. Newhouse and other trappers and sports- 
men. This is the best book on trapping ever 
written. It gives full descriptions of all the 
animals which the American trailer is likely 
to meet with, tells how they live, how to trap 
them and how to care for and cure their pelts. 
No man who is interested in trapping animals, 
whether it be muskrats or bears, should be 
without this complete manual of instruction. 
Ninth edition. Cloth. Illustrated. Price $1.00. 
FOREST & STREAM (Book Dept.) 
9 East 40th Street, New York City, N Y. 
Samuel Merrill’s 
THE MOOSE BOOK 
Covers the entire field of the splendid 
sport of moose-hunting. The hunter, 
scientist, general reader — even the 
camp cook will find a section where 
the subject is treated from his view- 
point. Revised to date. 
“No sportsman’s library can be complete 
without it. It is almost a moose encyclopedia, 
so complete is it .” — Outdoor Life. 
New revised Edition . Superbly illustrated. 
Net, $6.00, postage extra. 
E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 5th Ave., N. Y. 
WHITETAIL DEER IN 
NEW HAMPSHIRE 
(continued from page 584) 
always finds the deer to the windward 
of the starting place. 
The method we use in New Hampshire 
seems to work out all right, the failures 
being due to faulty application and not 
to the method itself; one of our principal 
faults is missing the deer when we shoot 
at him. We believe three men to be the 
ideal team. They work together, one 
man following the track and the others 
flanking ahead, one on each side, or 
otherwise. Normally neither flanker 
should go closer than 100 yards to the 
line the deer would take were he to travel 
in a straight line, and should endeavor to 
be at a stand ahead about that distance 
from said line when the trailer comes 
ahead on the track and jumps the deer. 
This gives each man a fine margin of 
safety for himself, and chances for a shot 
are even better than if each tried to post 
himself straight ahead, for a deer does 
not travel in a straight line. Each 
flanker as he goes ahead, hunts deer all 
the while, all the way, on the plan that 
if the deer has wandered much to one 
side, one of them may jump him and get 
a shot, and if he has not, they will not 
jump him but will be waiting for him 
ahead when the trailer jumps him. The 
trailer should be instructed as to how 
long a start to give the flankers before he 
starts ahead. This will vary with con- 
ditions, but should be from fifteen to 
thirty minutes. Too thorough and care- 
ful hunting on the flanks is to be con- 
demned as the chances are that the deer 
is not there, and the main chance is the 
only one to take in this game. When the 
flank country is not “deer” country, of 
course, no hunting there is necessary. 
To keep the team in touch, we once 
tried whistles, but they were a failure, 
being not loud enough. The flanker on 
the windward side must swing wide to 
avoid jumping the deer himself, and he 
quite often gets to where he cannot hear 
the trailer’s whistle at all, and this 
causes a great deal of bother, especially 
if the deer decides he is not being fol- 
lowed and does a fish-hook looking for a 
bed or something, and gets jumped head- 
ed the wrong way; then the flanker a 
half mile ahead to the windward can 
hear only a pretty loud noise from the 
trailer who is probably another half mile 
away before he decides to call the flank- 
ers back. It is irritating to stand and 
stand and then give up and go back and 
take up the track and follow it through 
a sw?mp or two, and finally find that he 
could have gotten into a fine position by 
traveling half the distance. To assist the 
flankers and keep them advised of the 
deer’s movements, the trailer uses a horn 
and sound-signals to them the direction 
the tracks are leading and what the deer 
is doing, such as running, loping, walk- 
ing, feeding, lying down, etc. This, besides 
assisting the flankers, lends great inter- 
est to their end of the game by stimulat- 
ing their imaginations. The trailer must 
at all times keep in mind the probable 
position of the flankers, and allow them 
to swing around when necessary. When 
he considers it advisable, he calls them in 
THE VANITY GIRL 
By Qvmtpton Mackenzie 
Retains the subtle, ironic com- 
edy of “Poor Relations,” yet 
strikes into an even deeper 
problem than “Sylvia Scarlet.” 
The man born to the purple 
proves a bounder^it is his 
pretty butterfly wife from the 
stage world who makes high 
sacrifice to noblesse oblige. 
$ 2 . 00 . 
HARPER & BROTHERS 
1817 
York 
5 
GOOD $t 
MAGAZINES 1 
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