T ROUTING _ 
,H rnlo& do 
\JJ L RPCKIES 
Mountain Peaks 
Of the 59 mountain peaks in 
the United States 14,000 feet 
high or over, 46 are in the 
Colorado Rockies. 
2 National Parks 
Rocky Mountain National Park 
—-the most popular of all the 
National Parks; and Mesa 
Verde National Park, the 
Ancient Cliff Dweller Ruins, 
are in Colorado. 
15 National Forests 
There are 15 National Forests 
in Colorado. Total area is over 
13,000,000 acres. They contain 
6,000 miles of fishing streams 
and over 500 lakes. 
Living Glaciers 
These huge masses of living 
glaciers that have carved their 
way through “The Snowy 
Range’’—the source of Denver’s 
cool days—are accessible from 
Denver. 
Rail and Auto Scenic Trips 
In a few hours, now, the angler can go by auto, to out-of-the- 
way fishing streams and lakes in the National Forests of 
Colorado, to where only a few years ago it required a long, hard 
trip with guide, pack-train and extensive camp equipment. 
Write Today for Free Booklet 
that tells what you can see, time required, cost of trips to 
Rocky Mountain National Park, Mesa Verde National Park, 
Denver’s Mountain Parks, The Glaciers and 60 other short 
trips. Rail trips: Platte Canyon,Georgetown Loop,Moffat Road. 
DENVER TOURIST BUREAU, 54117th St., Denver, Colo. 
60 short trips of from one hour 
to a day, or a week, can be taken 
into the Colorado Rockies. 
CAMPING HIKING 
FISHING MOTORING 
GOLFING CLIMBING 
COOL DAYS 
COMFORTABLE NIGHTS 
It’s ALL in 
COLORADO 
Mr. Fisherman! 
W HY not have a try at 
Mountain Trout? The 
territory beyond 
Lander, Wyo., on the Chicago 
& North Western Ry. has 
been rightly named the 
Fisherman’s Paradise. There 
you can have the best trout 
fishing of your life and at 
the same time enjoy some 
of the grandest scenery in 
the Rocky Mountain Region. 
Just another step from there 
to Yellowstone. Write to 
C. A. Cairns, Passe ngerTraffic 
Manager, Chicago & North 
Western Ry., 226 West 
Jackson Street, Chicago, Ill., 
for further information and 
descriptive booklet. 
CAMP SUPPLIES 
Before you buy—see our new Catalog Si 
of Touring and Camping Tents, Cloth¬ 
ing, CookiDg Outfits, Army Goods, etc. 
Lowest Prices In America. 
Hundreds of Bargains all guaranteed. 60f£ less than dealers 
price. Send your name and address ♦oday for FREE BOOK. 
CARNIE-G0U0IE CO., Dept. 542 Kansas City, Mo. I 
Established Twenty-two Years 
Still Holding Regal 
Prices to Low Level 
Here is the ideal four-cycle engine for 
\ 15-ft. to 18-ft. fishing boats. Weight 
^ 135 lbs. Starts easily; throttles 
to slow trolling speed. 
Price $120 
regal engines 
made in 17 sizes, 
one to eight cyl¬ 
inders, and built 
for long, hard ser¬ 
vice. Catalogue and 
new low price list 
on request. 
Regal Gasoline 
Engine Company 
Division Street 
Coldwater, Michigan 
English Ringneck 
PHEASANT EGGS 
Guaranteed delivery at your post office. 
Five Dollars for fifteen. All pens headed 
by cocks imported this year. 
Arden Estate, Arden, Orange Co., N. Y. 
Duck Foods That Will Grow 
If the reader is interested in growing duck foods, 
Wild celery, Sogo pond Widgeon grass or any of our 
Currituck duck foods, write us. We have been in the 
business many years and know how to grow ttie foods. 
If fond of duck, goose, quail or snipe shooting, write 
us for reservation for next season. 
WHITE’S GAME PRESERVE 
Waterllly, Currituck Sound, N. C. 
THE HORSE-HAIR FISH 
LINE 
(Continued from page 307) 
to come together. Twist as tight as 
desired, then advance and insert anew 
in the slit as shown in (H). (The first 
thought when one is twisting a line 
like this is that it will untwist as it 
hangs free. This will surprise you for 
it will not. It is true that when you 
hold it up free it will untwist a little, 
but just a little, and then it will stay 
that way.) 
One can proceed then as shown in 
Figure VII. This consists of attach¬ 
ing to the end of the winding stick 
containing the finished line, a weight 
of some kind not to exceed a half 
pound, or heavy enough in all events 
to hold the line stationary while the 
twisting is done. This can be hung 
over the back of a chair, etc., as 
shown in Figure VII, so that when the 
line is twisted it will turn of its own 
accord to untwist a few times, as I 
have mentioned; then, when the un¬ 
twisting is over it can be wrapped on 
the stick and the twisting of the two 
lines together can be continued. The 
method once seized upon is very sim¬ 
ple, but unless understood its very 
simplicity is as intricate, and as little 
to be understood as a Chinese puzzle. 
But master the various moves and you 
will be surprised how smoothly and 
well one can take up the making of a 
line of this sort. I will admit that 
you may meet with some minor difficul¬ 
ties in the twisting, but even the 
poorest amateur, if the various moves 
are mastered, should be able to make 
a line after a few attempts. 
When your line is completed stretch 
it out and pull it and go over it, rub¬ 
bing it down by having a glove on your 
hand so that the fingers will not be 
hurt. It will be noticed that the ends 
of the hair where each was inserted in 
the line will be sticking out here and 
there along the whole length. Do not 
clip these off when the line is made, 
nor when you have stretched it and 
rubbed it down. Use it to fish with 
for a little time so that each hair is 
stretched its full length, to pull in as 
much as each will go, then the ends 
of the hairs thrust out here and there 
may be clipped off close. You will 
then be surprised to find that you have 
a line that will be as tenacious as any 
line ever was or ever will be. One 
point more. A line such as this if 
merely coiled around a stick will, if 
allowed to remain, take on a coiled 
effect and will be hard to straighten 
in the water. Therefore lay it on a 
piece of hoard a foot or more in length, 
wrapping it on lengthwise. It will 
then come out more or less straight in 
the water. 
In writing to Advertisers mention Forest 'an'd Stream. It will identify you. 
Page 326 
