When Other Lures Fail! 
Trout Bug 
50 cents — . 
Sizes 3,6 or 8 Ring, snell hook Devil Mouse-75 cents. Sizes Vo or Vo hooks 
Bass Bug 
60 cents 
Sizes Vo. Vo. Vo or 3 
eyed hooks 
When other lures fail Devil Bugs often get big 
fish because no other lure is like them, iney 
are not flies—they are not spinners—they are 
not plugs. They look, feel and crunch like real 
bugs—and they float without paraffin. .But to 
get big fish with Devil Bugs you must know 
just how to use them. .. 
The Devil Bug Book tells how to use Devil 
Bugs so that big fish just can’t resist them. 
Send for it. It is yours—free—upon request. 
V.C.TUTTLE’S 
,FVIL BUGS 
^mtti c mnr. Ol.D FORGE. N- 
Enjoy Life Outdoors 
by wearing Berkshire Moccasins. 
Made for the woods, the road 
and for sports. Beal outdoor 
footwear—comfortable and dur¬ 
able. Uppers are soft, firm 
Chocolate Elk. Soles axe of 
flexible Chrome Leather es¬ 
pecially tanned for moccasins, 
light-weight but very durable. 
Heels are of live rubber and 
every pair is guaranteed to 
stand hard use. 
Men’s sizes, 6—11.$6.00 
Boys’ sizes, 2— 5Ys .$5.50 
C and E widths. 
BERKSHIRE 
MOCCASIN CO. 
Dept. S. 
Holliston, Mass. 
St. Lawrence Skiffs and Square Stern Rowboats 
INDIAN GIRL CANOES 
Special 11 ft. Canoe for Hunting and Fish¬ 
ing trips; can be carried on runnmg-board 
of automobile. 
Literature and Prices on Request 
ST. "LAWRENCE BOAT WORKS, Inc. 
Ogdensburg, N. Y. 
OUTING EQUIPMENT 
TBADt MAflk 
Notice the extra wide hips of this Stoll 
Perfection tent, giving standing room all 
around, insect-proof, sewed-in floor and 
screened windows—also mildew-proof and 
will give absolute protection in all weather. 
Large windows and door—large awning 
and windbreak—the most unusual value 
you’ll find. 
Write to-day for complete catalog, of 
beds, tents, tables, refrigerators, etc. 
The Stoll Manufacturing Company 
3231 LARIMER ST., DENVER, COLORADO 
For Sale 
Game Preserve 
5 0,000 acres timber land in southeast 
Georgia, surrounded by two navigable 
rivers,^ the Atlantic Ocean and a main line 
railroad running north and south. 
The timber stands on about 40,000 acres of 
it, consisting of the following, viz.. 
9,000,000 feet of Cypress 
5,000,000 feet of Ash 
15,000,000 feet of Oak 
30,000,000 feet of Red Gum 
140,000,000 feet of Pine 
4,000,000 feet of Ties 
10,000 acres in nutritious grass for cattle 
and hogs. The freight rate by water to 
New York is $8.00. 
The 50,000 acres is entirely surrounded by 
wire fence. Can be made self-sustaining by 
stocking with cattle or hogs, which can run 
on this grass eleven months in the year, or 
by selling off small portion of timber an¬ 
nually. 
Artesian wells are scattered all over the 
property. 
Finest game preserve in America: Wild tur¬ 
key, ducks, deer, quail, and fresh and salt 
water fishing. ' 
The price they are asking for this property 
is $16 per acre (it is easily worth $25 per 
acre). The land is worth more money than 
the price asked, and the timber alone is 
worth the money. If you are interested. 1 
am willing at any time to show the property. 
BOX 501, FOREST & STREAM 
Get Tandy Ellis* book, CAMP COOK¬ 
ING, including famous Kentucky 
recipes for Burgoo; barbecued lamb, 
soups, etc. PRICE 60c, 
J. L. RICHARDSON CO. 
167 N. Lime Lexington, Ky. 
CAR 
OWNERS 
WANTED! 
To use and intro^ 
duce the great-^ 
est improve- 
mentin Inner ( 
Tubes since 
autos were 
invented. Air ’ 
gauge in valvev 
stem of every'. 
Tube shows at > 
a glance through „ 
the Unbreakable Trans- .... 
parent Valve Cover amount of air In tires 
Aift'€A@g " u "? Tubes 
— sell on sight to almost every car owner because they 
save trouble, time, worry and expense Add one-third 
to life of tiree. Paul salesmen make big profits Belling dirsct to 
car owners. Oar million dollar factory can uae 
men at once Experience not necessary. Big llluatratea rree 
SSk tet". how the Paul Plan will start yon in thi. big moncy- 
making business without capital. Writ* for Froe Book Today. 
THE PAUL RUBBER CO. v Dept. 59. Salisbury, N.C. 
marten tracks in that direction, set 
out all the small traps I had. Then 
it commenced to snow in earnest. 
Every trip over my lines it seemed as 
though half of the traps were out of 
working order through being smothered 
with snow. In this way a number of 
martens were prevented from getting 
into my traps; such is the life of the 
trapper and something is always 
happening to keep one from getting 
rich at the game. The marten is a 
very small animal and a trap must be 
working so as to require very little 
pressure to set it off, otherwise the 
weigth of the animal will not effect it. 
Whenever the trapper makes a set 
for a certain animal he is not assured, 
by any means, that he will catch one 
of these particlar furbearers. He is 
apt to catch anything from a “Whisky 
Jack” (Canadian Jay) to a silver gray 
fox. The smaller traps catch a host 
of creatures, such as squirrels, mice 
and birds of all description, such 
catches being termed “flukes” in the 
trapping trade. We have a flying 
squirrel in this country that is about 
the worst pest imaginable, being car¬ 
nivorous as well as herbivorous, they 
will eat the trapper’s baits whenever 
the opportunity presents itself and 
naturally get caught if the trap is 
working. These creatures do not ac¬ 
tually fly; their method of locomotion 
is very peculiar. Climbing to the top 
of a high tree they spring out in the 
direction they desire to travel and “vol¬ 
plane” toward their destination by 
virtue of a web which extends from the 
forefeet to the hind ones, on either 
side of the body. 
The fact that much innocent game 
is thus killed by the trapper is to be 
deplored; this is occasioned by the use 
of the steel trap at whose door the 
claim of cruelty in trapping is laid. 
In defense of the trapper himself one 
can only say that he is using the most 
efficient device obtainable; it is up to 
each individual trapper to be as hu¬ 
mane as possible and employ additional 
devices that kill instantly along with 
the use of the steel trap. Snares are 
used extensively in this country; they 
kill quickly and with very little suffer¬ 
ing on the part of the victim. Dead¬ 
falls are especially to be recommended 
for their humane features, and I have 
personally employed them considerably 
in the capture of the marten. They 
are so constructed as to cause a heavy 
log to fall on the back of the unwary 
victim who gnaws at the bait on the 
trigger, and death is instantaneous and 
merciful. The beauty of the deadfall 
is that one may be built to kill a 
grizzly bear. 
(To be continued) 
