514 
FOREST AND STREAM 
November, 1921 
YOUR MILITARY RIFLE REMODELED 
$60.00 to $75.00 
BASIS OF PRICES: 
Stock, selected American Walnut, 
complete, including steel butt-plate, 
pistol-grip cap and checkering $37.00 
Furnishing and fitting No. 4S sight... 15.00 
Removing military rear sight, turning, 
polishing and reblueing barrel $5 to 8.00 
S S S hand checkered butt-plate 3.00 
Checkering boh handle 2.00 
S S S plain swivels (for fastening to 
stock) pair $1.50 
S S S front band and swivel (encir- 
cles barrel and fastens through fore- 
arm) 3.50 
Fitted 4.00 
Set screw for adjusting trigger-pull . . . 2.00 
Webb sling 1.80 
S S S Gun Case 4.50 
OUR PRICES ARE FOR QUALITY AND 
GUARANTEED WORK 
RESTOCKING— REBLUEING— ENGRAVING— REPAIRING GUNS of 
every description. Rifles tested by machine rest. MANUFACTURERS 
of SHOOTING ACCESSORIES. 
JOIN THE SPORTSMAN’S SERVICE CLUB : SERVICE FOR SPORTSMEN 
SPORTSMAN’S SERVICE STATION 
TENAFLY, N. J. 
& 
d 
A 
4 
K * nDT F’C Nitro-Solvent Oil 
MAKP LD |J Cleans Guns Easily 
This wonderful oil removes the residue of all powders and 
easily loosens metal fouling and leading. Prevents rusting 
and pitting. Free from harmful chemicals and moisture. 
At sporting goods and hardware stores and post exchanges; 
2 oz. bottle 35c, 6 oz. can 6sc. By mail 10c extra. Sample 
freE MARBLE ARMS & MFC. CO., 
526 Delta Ave. Gladstone, Mich. 
PLAN FUTURE HOME NOW 
Send for Stillwell Building 
Books With Economy Plans 
of new California Styles suit- 
able for any climate. Famous 
for comfort and beauty. 
“Representative Cal. 
Homes” 
6 to 10 Rooms — 
51 plans — $1. 
‘The New Colonials” 
5 to 12 Rooms — 
60 plans — $1. 
“West Coast 
Bungalows” 
5 to 7 Rooms — 
S r,, 60 one-story — $1. 
PECIAL OFFER: Send $2.50 for all 3 above rnrr 
books and get book of 80 Special Plans, » 
also Garage folder. 
Extra 43 “Little Bungalows,” 3 to 6 Rooms — 50 cts. 
Money back if not satisfied. ' 
E. W. STILLWELL & CO., ARCHITECTS 
618 CALIFORNIA BLDG. LOS ANGELES 
8X Army 
Binoculars 
8x — 40; individual fo- 
cusing eyepieces. Day 
and night lenses. Made 
for the German Govern- 
ment. 
Regular Price $60. $ 0/4 50 
SPECIAL OFFER ^ 
Complete with solid leather case. 
Mail orders promptly executed. 
M. A. MODELL & SONS 
71-79 Cortlandt St. New York 
Write for pamphlet No. 50 to Dept. Bl. 
WILBUR SHOTGUN PEEP SIGHT, 
deadly addition to the modern shotgun. Makes good 
shots of poor ones. Fast enough for snap shooting, 
ducks, or at traps. Automatically shows how to 
lead correctly— No more guess work. Made of blued 
steel, clamps rigidly on breech of gun barrels. 12. 
16, 20 28 gauges. Double guns only. Postpaid. $2.50 
including booklet. “Wing Shooting Made Easy.” 
Booklet alone sent on receipt of ten cents. Teaches 
the art of wing shooting. 
WILBUR GUN SIGHT 
116 West 39th St., P.O. Box 185, Times Square, NewYork 
SAMUEL MERRILL’S 
“The Moose Book” 
Is the first book you should own, no mat- 
ter why you are interested in moose. It 
tells you where they run, their habits, how 
to hunt them, how to preserve the head, 
and even how to cook their juiciest cuts. 
“No sportsman’s library can be 
complete without it. It is al- 
most a moose encyclopedia, so 
complete is it .” — Outdoor Life. 
The latest edition, superbly illustrated. 
$6.00, postage extra. 
E. P. DUTTON & CO., 681 5th Av., N. Y. 
YoOr Pipe » PainTe^ 
make PIPES OF GEWffll IMPORTED ,h 
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PEN -Sweet PROM FIRST J^pipP-THFY'LL 
I WILL— BRING HE 
ny^YflUR PIPETMPHf 
Ptu help yo\f for i 
NEW YORK CITY Dept. T 
MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED 
We Cater to the Particular Smoker 
THE MOOSE OF THE 
MIRAMICHI 
( Continued, from page 491) 
small fir tree, a little in advance of my 
guide, and waited for our quarry to step 
into a little meadow ahead. I waited, 
but he was wary. He kept in the alders 
that grew along the stream and crept up 
more quietly as he drew near us. He 
was still concealed in the thick brush, 
but not more than a hundred feet away, 
when a fitful breeze carried our scent 
to him. With a cough he wheeled, and 
after the first few plunges the noise sub- 
sided and the big brute stole through 
the woods as quietly as a rabbit. 
Neither of us saw him, but Jack said 
he must have had a small head, for no 
moose with a spread could have come 
up through those alders and not have 
made more noise from the antlers com- 
ing in contact with the brush. After that 
experience I knew my guide could call. 
In coaxing that bull away from the cow 
he used all the “moose talk” in a moose’s 
vocabulary. Both our guides were past- 
masters in their art, and just the best of 
good fellows. 
When we reached the beaver dam for 
which we had originally started it was 
a little late for good calling, but the ex- 
perience just recounted was worth the 
trip. We seated ourselves on an old 
fallen tree and the guide began to call. 
No answer. Fifteen or twenty minutes 
elapsed; then a grunt came from across 
the dam. Almost immediately the second 
bull answered just to the right of the 
first. We were trying to locate these 
when the third one came up from below 
the dam and he was within range be- 
fore we heard him. He had stopped 
one hundred and fifty yards away, but I 
could not see his antlers because of the 
trees. 
Jack whined and the bull started tow- 
ard us on the run. I saw he had a good 
head. “What about him, Jack?” I asked. 
“That’s probably the best I can do, Doc- 
tor,” whispered Jack modestly. “Take 
him.” The little rifle spoke. He was 
running broadside and I caught him just 
a little too far back to get the shoulder- 
blade. The bullet mushroomed, tore his 
chest badly and flattened out against the 
-opposite scapula. He did not fall, but 
with a peculiar shrug wheeled and tore 
away. The second shot caught him in 
the left hip and penetrated to the right 
shoulder. With the second report of the 
gun he stopped and turned his left side 
toward me. The third shot broke his 
shoulder and he went down. 
It was not until I had actually gone 
up to him that I realized what a really 
splendid trophy I had secured. He had 
a well-balanced set of antlers, carrying 
twenty-six points and a spread of fifty- 
six inches. These, with his fourteen- 
inch bell, constituted a head of which 
the most exacting sportsman might well 
be proud. 
We bled our game, then went back to 
camp to get help to care for the head 
and meat. Thus at the end of the third 
day we had our legal allotment of moose, 
but the hunt was not over, as there still 
remained a chance for deer, bear and 
In Writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. It will identify you. 
