306 
FOREST AND STREAM 
May, 1918 
Clothes for Camp Wear 
Camp life demands the best and most serviceable of clothing. Sudden 
changes of weather need not interfere with your pleasure, 01 keep you 
inside against your will if you choose 
Duxbak »r KgmEdt 
for your outfit The season and the weather will dictate your choice. 
Duxbak for cold and stormy weather; Kamp-it for milder and more 
pleasant days. 
DUXBAK clothes are made of strong, pliable, specially woven duck 
(Rainproofed). 
KAMP-IT garments are made of a lighter material (not rainproofed). 
Kamp-it is usually chosen for ladies’ garments. 
You will find a Duxbak or Kamp-it garment designed for 
every form of outdoor work or recreation. 
Send for new Style Book. Free of course. 
Most Sporting Goods Dealers handle these clothee. 
NORTHWESTERN (, 
) 
Under Club Lease 
k Game and Fishing Reserves 
QUEBEC Only 24 hours from Toronto or 16 from Quebec City. 
(Where the Moose & Fishing Movies New York is talking of were taken) 
FOR JULY—AUGUST OUTINGS 
WONDERFUL CANOE TRIPS VIRGIN FISHING 
We offer those seeking something away from the more-beaten paths, some of the grandest 
canoe cruises, for 14, 21 and 28 day trips, combing a real Wilderness, sight of many moose and 
unspoiled fishing. 
A NEW LODGE ON OUR SALMON-TROUT LAKES 
Located in wonderfully picturesque surroundings, the centre of grand fishing. Here’s a real 
Outing the Ladies can enjoy. 
BIG GAME. SEASON OPENS SEPTEMBER 1st (MOOSE and BEAR) 
Capable Guides, Efficient Organization, New Lodges—makes this an outing proposition hard 
to equal. Literature and reservations of 
lANUCK’S 
'AMPS 
S. E. SANGSTER 
(Box 393) 
OTTAWA, CAN. 
SPORT WITHIN OUR 
HORIZON 
(continued from page 275) 
by bluebirds, tree swallows and house 
wrens. The favorite location for nesting- 
houses is on posts of fences bordering 
fields, absolutely in the open, eight to ten 
feet from the ground. We nail the box 
to a 2 x 4-inch timber six feet long, and 
spike this to a fence-post along cultivated 
fields or the game enclosures. Birds re¬ 
sort eagerly to these, and we hope to build 
up considerable colonies. 
In order to carry out successfully the 
educational or demonstration side of the 
Experiment Station work, and to show the . 
methods to visitors, besides the publica¬ 
tion of results, Mr. Ams has generously 
provided a furnished residence, known as ' 
the “Audubon House,” which is the head¬ 
quarters of the work, being equipped with 
collections of birds and a small working 
ornithological library, for use of students 
and visitors. He has also equipped, near 
by, the “Amston Inn,” which will be open 
to the public. The summer activities will 
begin the first week of June with the open¬ 
ing of the Audubon House. Visitors will 
be received at any time and shown the 
work. There will be, however, a Sum¬ 
mer School session, with courses of in¬ 
struction, field demonstrations, and even¬ 
ing lectures by specialists, beginning on 
July 6, and lasting three weeks. The 
courses will be on general bird-study, field 
ornithology, the breeding and management 
of game-birds and water-fowl, attracting 
birds, and Nature photography both with 
plate and motion-picture cameras. These 
courses and lectures will be of value to 
bird-lovers, teachers, land-holders, those 
who would learn game-breeding for pleas¬ 
ure or profit, and amateur photographers 
of wild game. Descriptive circulars will 
be mailed on application to Forest and 
Stream. 
The general conception and plan is that 
this Association should provide a ren¬ 
dezvous for instruction and social meeting 
afield of lovers of birds and game, where, 
within easy access, they can get interesting 
and unusual sights of wild game and bird 
life under delightful natural conditions and 
in congenial fellowship. Here is an un¬ 
usual opportunity for reputable people 
who love wild things amid unsullied Na¬ 
ture, free from objectionable elements, to 
enjoy the privileges of a great private 
estate as though they owned it. 
FINISHING GUNSTOCKS 
(continued from page 290) 
If you are buying a new gun from the 
manufacturer, or ordering one made, 
specify how the wood-work shall be fin¬ 
ished, just as you would select the cloth 
your new suit shall be made of. 
Fishing-rods are generally of lance-wood, 
greenheart, or bamboo; all are close- 
grained woods, and will require only the 
varnish coats and the rubbing and polish¬ 
ing, as described for close-grained woods. 
By following the directions above you will 
have a job to show your friends, and if 
these directions are followed and you 
should happen to lose your rod or gun 
overboard, and you do not recover it for 
a year, the woodwork, at least, will be as 
| good as the day you lost it. 
