I much less than usual cost of 
one’ Tireg fabricated by the 
STEWART PROCESS give re- 
I markable service on good and 
| bad roads. You, too, can get 
1 12,000Miles 
■ During this cut-price sale, we 
I give you absolutely Free a 
I Standard,brandnewtubewith 
I every tire! 2 tubes free with 2 
Tires! Be sure to state it 
straight side or clincher is 
I wanted. 
FREE examination 
30x3 
30x3 X 
32x3 14 
31x4 
32x4 
33x4 
34x4 
32x4 J4 
33x4 
34x414 
35x414 
35x5 
37x5 
6.70 
7.40 
8.95 
10.15 
10.30 
11.90 
12.30 
12.55 
13.10 
13.40 
13.90 
14.90 
15.10 
12.55 | 
14.50 | 
16.40 | 
17.35 ■ 
18.30 I 
19.35 ! 
20.10 I 
21.10 I 
21.90 ■ 
22.95 | 
24.85 ■ 
25.65 | 
■ JICC O « ACT ■ 
I order'^tires' | 
I prefer to remit with or- Money - Back Guarantee m 
^tewart Tire Co. J)eptM2!^2 1st&Raci neAv^C hica goj 
Gov’t 7x7 Tent $IO 
Made of ten oz. Govt, white can¬ 
vas. Wonderful value, poles $1.50 
extra. Write for FREE 2.000- 
article catalogue, No. 53. 
RUSSELL’S, 
245 W. 42nd St., New York. N. Y. 
STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP, MAN¬ 
AGEMENT, CIRCULATION, ETC., RE¬ 
QUIRED BY THE ACT OF CON¬ 
GRESS OF AUGUST 24, 1912 
of Forest and Stream, published monthly at New 
York, N. Y., for April 1st, 1923. 
State of New York ) / 
County of New \ ork j 
Before me, a Notary Public, in and for the 
State and county aforesaid, personally appeared 
T H. Mearns, who, having been duly sworn ac¬ 
cording to law, deposes and says that he is the 
Business Manager * 1 2 3 4 of the FOREST AND 
STREAM and that the following is, to the best ot 
his knowledge and belief, a true statement of the 
ownership, management (and if a daily paper, the 
circulation), etc., of the aforesaid publication tor 
the date shown in the above caption, required by 
the Act of August 24, 1912, embodied m section 
443, Postal Laws and Regulations, printed on the 
reverse of this form, to wit: , 
1. That the names and addresses of the pub¬ 
lisher, editor, and business managers are: 
Publisher, Forest and Stream Publishing Co., 
221 W. 57th St., N. Y. City. 
Editor, William Bruette, 221 W. 57th St., 
N Y. City. 
Business Manager, T. II. Mearns, 221 W. 57th 
St„ N. Y. City. 
2. That the owners are: (Give names and ad¬ 
dresses of individual owners, or, if a corporation, 
give its name and the names and addresses of 
stockholders owning or holding 1 per cent or more 
of the total amount of stock.) Forest and Stream 
Publishing Co., 221 W. 57th St., New York, 
N Y.; William Bruette, 221 W. 57th St., New 
York, N. Y.; J. R. Harbeck, 67 Liberty St., New 
York N. Y.; Norwood Johnson, Pittsburgh, Pa.; 
George Bird Grinnell, 238 E. 15th St., New York, 
N. Y.; E. L. Parker, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
3. That the known bondholders, mortgagees 
and other security holders owning or holding 1 
per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mort¬ 
gages, or other securities are: (If there are none, 
so state.) None. . . 
4. That the two paragraphs next above, giving 
the names of the owners, stockholders and secur¬ 
ity holders, if any, contain not only the list of 
stockholders and security holders as they_ appear 
udoii the books of the company, but also, in cases 
where the stockholder or security holder appears 
upon the books of the company as trustee or in 
any other fiduciary relation, the name of the per¬ 
son or corporation for whom such trustee is act¬ 
ing, is given; also that the said two paragraphs 
contain statements embracing affiant’s full knowl¬ 
edge and belief as to the circumstances and con¬ 
ditions under which stockholders and security 
holders who do not appear upon the books of the 
company as trustees, hold stock and securities in 
a capacity other than that of a bona fide owner; 
and this affiant has no reason to believe that any 
other person, association, or corporation has any 
interest direct or indirect in the said stock, bonds, 
or other securities than as so stated by him. 
T. IT. MEARNS, Business Manager.^ 
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 16th 
day of March, 1923. 
[Seal MARTHA B. McCLERNAN. 
(Mv commission expires March 30, 1924.) 
Warm, Dry Quarters 
and Well Cooked Meals 
In stormy weather, the Not-a-Bolt Portable 
Cast Iron Stove goes right along warming the 
camp and cooking meals as good as those 
from the kitchen range—without soot, flying 
sparks or smoke filled eyes. Be sure your 
camp stove is a 
NOT-A - BOLT 
PORTABLE ?ron STOVE 
Will not burn out or warp, and occupies but 
very small space in the luggage. No bolts or 
screws to lose—up in a minute down in the 
same time. 
Descriptive circular sent free on request 
TROY FOUNDRY & MACHINE WORKS 
Dept, s Tr °y» N * Y * 
Reduce Weight 
and Bulk in 
Your Outings 
FIALA Pat. Sleeping Bag 
- ■ _ ' ' ' the test 
irket .”— 
. $34 
f Without doubt, you have the best 
light-weight bag on the market — 
Dr. G. P. Fordyce. 
Weighs 5J4 lbs. Price - 
Fiala Pat. Sleeping Bag — new 4*9^ 
model of No-Hide Fur, 80" long 
Scout Size, 68" long $20 
Doubl e Bag, for 2 people - - - $45 
COMPASS — 1J4" jeweled, silvered, 
engraved open face. Set for needle, 75c 
Write for illustrated circulars 
The only place in the XT. S. where 
Explorers and Engineers can secure 
a complete equipment. 
FIALA OUTFITS, Inc. 
Anthony Fiala, President 
25 Warren St. NEW YORK 
When Buying Your 
Kamp Stove Buy a 
Kalamazoo 
IIow nice it is to go fishing or camp¬ 
ing and he able to take a REAL 
stove with you like the KALAMA- » 
ZOO KAMP STOVE: one that you can set up in less 
than two minutes ready for your frying and cooking; 
and the beauty is you can cook all your meal at one 
time, as this stove has 260 square inches of cooking 
space, which gives you plenty of room, as the illustra¬ 
tion shows. This stove is made of the best 18 gauge 
iron; it weighs only 17 lbs., when folded it measures 
only'27%x9%x2 inches: you can lay it under your au¬ 
tomobile seat, or anywhere on the bottom of the car; 
you can pile anything on to it and it will not break or 
jam in the least. The price of this stove is only $7.00; 
extra attachment for the tent or ice fishing are $1.50, 
which is a sliding plate in the bottom and a pipe con¬ 
nection on the smoke stack. For ordinary use the legs 
are shoved into the earth and the ground used as the 
grate, when not using extra attachments. 
KNAPPER SHEET METAL AND MFG. CO. 
216 East Walnut St., Kalamazoo, Mich. 
A big stove in a small space 
A carrying case FREE 
prise as the other way around. And, 
all in a moment, I read the answer to 
“Camp Mystery.” It was a mysteTy 
no longer. 
“Oh, that’s all right,” exclaimed, the 
Scout Master. No need to apologize. 
We’re glad to have you make use of 
our little camp. Why not? It’ll come 
under that good deed a day clause. 
As far as I can make you, things 
looked better than we left it two weeks 
ago. Quite an idea, that—finding the 
bleached cow skulls and riggin’ ’em up 
—it was the fancy of the boys. 
“You see, every other week we go on 
our hikes and camping tricks. I’m 
showing the boys how to rough it, 
build shacks, cut trees scientifically and 
according to code. We spend two 
nights out here. Wanted to get as far 
away from civilization as possible. 
There was the lure of adventure about 
this place—sort o’ wild and filled with 
ghosts of pirates. And you know boys 
—they love adventure or the sugges¬ 
tion of it. They feed on romance of a 
harmless kind at a certain period in 
their lives . . . and it ought to be en¬ 
couraged. YOU have been a boy once 
—YOU understand.” 
I was doing some tall thinking. 
Yes . . . yes ... I understood! 
“Guess you must have run on the 
camp by sheer accident. It’s rather 
well hidden and nobody ever goes up 
much beyond the beach because of the 
mangrove thickets. 
“Why not stay and have supper with 
us . . . you’re welcome. What about 
it, boys?” 
A shout went up from the lads in 
brown. Sure we were! 
Sonnyboy was taking everything in 
with wide, curious eyes. 
Mike peered out from under his 
glasses and mumbled. This was all a 
trifle off the chart. He was not sure 
that he approved of it. 
“Came over in a motor-boat from 
town,” resumed the Scout Master, 
“makes a fine run. You folks are in 
The Elsie, I take it. She’s the last of 
the sailboats and a sturdy little 
craft.” 
But we could not accept the hospi¬ 
tality of our troop of new-found 
friends. Home and the northland 
called us. We were to leave on the 
following day. 
The Elsie was poking her nose into 
white spray before a lively wind, and 
Sonnyboy was at the tiller again, as I 
smoked my pipe and ruminated. 
Something the Scout Master had 
said persisted in echoing in my ears: 
“Boys love adventure and romance 
. . . they feed on it ... it ought to 
be encouraged . . . YOU HAVE 
BEEN A BOY ONCE YOURSELF 
YOU UNDERSTAND.” 
(To be Continued ) 
Page 352 
