fstiMf 8. 8ft. U88A8A -bifnJnFAlilH 
754 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
f 
OSH BILLINGS said that “the only thing some underwear is 
good for is to make a fellow scratch and forget his other troubles." 
THAT WAS BEFORE THE DAY OF 
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It is the fleece of comfort, and cant scratch 
Keeping out the cold and keeping in the bodily'heat is only the beginning of the good work of Wright’s 
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the market. Yet it is within reach of people of moderate means. Not a fad, just a sensible “ loop-knit 11 woolen gar¬ 
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Is a product based upon the need of an underwear with an unusually wide range of elasticity. It is knit on patented im¬ 
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normal shape and size. Made in beautiful fabrics of cotton, also wool \A/ R I Cn UJT’C 
Inquire at your dealer’s for Wright’s Underwear and __ v? 1 3 
always look for the woven Jcbel trade-mark. . R _ needle 
Union Suits and Two-piece Garments. trade wITmark' 
“ Dressing for Health,” a valuable booklet free. 
WRIGHT’S HEALTH UNDERWEAR CO., 94 Franklin St., New York 
RIBBED UNDERWEAR 
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UNIVERSAL LAMP, 
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and address all orders Lamp Department. 
Modem Training. 
Handling and Kennel Management. By B. Water*. 
Illustrated. Cloth, 373 pages. Price, $2.00. 
The treatise is after the modern professional system of 
training. It combines the excellence of both the suasive 
and force systems of education, and contains an exhaus¬ 
tive description of the uses and abuses of the spike collar. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Gas Engines and Launches. 
Their Principles, Types and Management. By Francis 
K. Grain. 
The most practical book for the man or boy who owns 
or plans to own a small power boat. It is motor launch 
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busy people, and every line of it is valuable. Cloth, 123 
pages. Postpaid, $1.25. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Hunting Without a Gun, 
And other papers. By Rowland E. Robinson. With 
illustrations from drawings by Rachael Robinson. 
Price, $2.00. 
This is a collection of papers on different themes con¬ 
tributed to Forest and Stream and other publications, 
and now for the first time brought together. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
The Story of the Indian. 
By George Bird Grinnell, author of “Pawnee Hero 
Stories,’’ “Blackfoot Lodge Tales,” etc. 12mo. Cloth. 
Price, $1.50. 
Contents: His Home. Recreations. A Marriage. 
Subsistence. His Hunting. The War Trail. Fortunes 
of War. Prairie Battlefields. Implements and Indus¬ 
tries. Man and Nature. His Creation. The World of 
the Dead. Pawnee Religion. The Old Faith and the 
New. The Coming of the White Man. The North 
Americans—Yesterday and To-day. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
“The Finest Gun in the World” 
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The finest gun in the world is the A. H. FOX DOUBLE BARREL HAM- 
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Net prices $37.50 to $362.00. If your dealer cannot supply 
you, or offers substitutes, send your order direct to us. 
[Nov. 6, 1909. 
seemed all right until I printed that anacom 
atrocity. Within twelve hours of its public 
tion about six thousand correspondents wro 
calling my attention to the fact that the reptile 
tail was fastened with string or fibre to tl 
bottom branches of the tree. Two contempc 
raries have referred to me since as ‘the Stufft 
Snake Editor.’ ” 
Clancy sank back in his chair, and asked n 
to explain everything. I left the office voic 
less with indignation. Only a big-game foi 
would have attempted to explain those picturi 
to Clancy.—Albert Dorrington in Fry’s Maj 
azine. 
UNCLE HENRY’S CARIBOU. 
The moose feeds down wind, so that he ca. 
see what is coming in front of him and sme 
what is coming behind him. Stalking hii 
therefore requires plenty of skill. Not onl 
must the hunter take thought of Mr. Moose 
big nose and sharp eyes, but he must nc 
crack a twig or rustle a leaf or speak above 
whisper lest the great ears, always on th 
alert, detect his approach. 
For this reason Uncle Henry Braithwait 
says that when it comes to still-hunting th 
noisier the day the better he likes it. Let th 
wind blow! It will rustle the leaves and sna 
the twigs and keep everything moving and sjfif 
ing around, so that even a moose can’t see an 
hear quite straight. 
Uncle Henry Braithwaite, by the way, is th 
father of guiding in New Brunswick. He’ 
dean of the whole shooting match. He’s th 
Grand Old Man of the Miramichi. He’s bee 
trapping, hunting and guiding in its forests fo' 
fifty-five years, and as he sits opposite you ii 
the hotel at Fredericton he looks as if he migh, 
be a business man from Brooklyn! But he isn’ 
Bears? Why, folks that know will give yo' 
to understand that unless you’re good at figure 
you couldn’t even count the bears that Unci 
Henry has shot or trapped or nabbed some! 
how. And moose? Well, just ask the ladie: 
They’ll tell you how he piloted them to victor} 
And caribou? Why—but that recalls a caribo 
story that Uncle Henry tells on himself. 
According to the New York Sun, there’s 1 
Mrs. Moses, of Tilton, N. H., who goes up tj 
New Brunswick with her husband, both of ther. 
good shots and good hunters. One time whe 
Uncle Henry was out with Mrs. Moses, sh 
pointed out a caribou feeding at a distance. I 
distance? Well, rather! Mrs. Moses has sue! 
sharp eyes that Uncle Henry frankly says sh 
always sees the game before he does. Ntt' 
bad for a woman. 
The caribou having been sighted, Unci 
Henry proceeded to lead Mrs. Moses toward i 
by a cautious and elaborate stalking whict 
proved so extremely successful that althougl, 
they were on open ground, with only oc 
casional rocks and bushes for shelter, they actu 
ally got within twenty yards of their quarr, 
without being discovered. Uncle Henry wa 
powerful proud of himself. Thinks he: 
“Well, when I can take a lady across opei 
country right up to a caribou’s nose, I thin! 
I’m a good deal of a stalker, I am!” 
Just then the caribou turned its head am 
Mrs. Moses had to shoot it in order to detail 
it. When they went up and looked at th' 
creature it was blind on the side where tha 
wonderful bit of stalking had just been done! 
Uncle Henry was much taken aback. Yet i 
is not so remarkable to find a blind caribou 
The brow antlers, as the two flat horns grow 
ing so peculiarly close over the face are called 
sometimes send a prong into on^ of the eyes 
permanently destroying the sight. 
People who are inclined to sniff contemptu 
ously at the reports of women hunters, 
imagining that the guides do everything excep 
pull the trigger—and sometimes that too—ough 
to get Uncle Henry’s testimony on the subject 
He says he asks no better sport than to g< 
with some of the women he has guided. Ac 
ording to him they are even cooler than tin 
men, have sharp sight, are quiet in stalkinf 
and take their dose of discomfort cheerfully. 
