It’s All Inside 
When not in use all Kampkooks 
fold like a small suit case with all 
parts packed inside, protected 
against loss or breakage. 
Kampkook No. 3 
Smallest, most compact size. 
Used by a quarter million campers. 
Folds to3J^x9xl5 inches, weighs 
8 pounds. Price $7.50. 
A M E Ft- I CAN 
rAMPKOOK 
tup ink AT. CAMP STOVE 
The Kampkook is a trusty vacation partner—and 
the most essential. Always ready at a moment’s 
notice for any cooking job that comes along, whether 
it’s a hurry-up lunch or a big meal. No fuel to 
gather, no smoke, no danger of fire, unaffected by 
wind or weather. 
Makes its own gas from common 
roadside gasoline 
the same grade you use in your car. Burns a clear blue 
flame, hotter than your gas stove if you want it. No soot 
or odor. Six sizes, $7.50 to $15.60. Get the genuine, look 
for the name American Kampkook. Sold by leading dealers 
everywhere. 
Write for catalog of complete line of 
Kampkooking necessities. 
American Gas Machine Co., Inc. 
832 Clark St., Albert Lea, Minn. 
G 
o 
I wood or tin, the latter being of the 
folding type and therefore most con¬ 
venient in carrying. The wooden ones, 
however, are the most natural in ap¬ 
pearance and are preferable in an es¬ 
pecially wet locality. From fifteen to 
thirty of either or both kinds set out 
to the windward of the blind is ordi¬ 
narily sufficient, though as many as 
fifty may be used to advantage. The 
heads of the stools should face into the 
wind, the stools themselves being 
placed either on small mounds or di¬ 
rectly in the water and about five feet 
apart. As a rule, a decided prepon¬ 
derance of yellowleg decoys is the best 
to use even in general shore-bird shoot¬ 
ing. A few stools should always be 
placed fifty yards or more from the 
blind. Incoming birds are first at¬ 
tracted to these and may then be 
drawn closer to the main flock of 
decoys by whistling. 
It is of especial importance that the 
blind be completely finished, the decoys 
set out and the hunter settled in the 
blind by daybreak if good shooting is 
to be expected. The hours between 
nine or ten o’clock in the morning and 
four or five o’clock in the evening are 
generally devoid of any good flights, 
the early morning'hours being almost 
invariably the best. Immediately after 
a spell of stormy weather with easter¬ 
ly winds is frequently the most favor¬ 
able time to expect a large flight of 
ZIP-ZIP 
Thousands of boys are made 
happy with this wonderful Zip- 
Zip shooter. Boys, you need this 
on your trip this summer, wherever 
a gun is sold a Zip-Zip is sold; 
if your dealer happens not to have 
them, order from us. Zip-Zip shooter 
complete, 35c, or 3 for $1.00. 
AUTOMATIC RUBBER 
COMPANY 
Dept. 102, Columbia, S. C. 
ARE BEST 
SEMD FOR CATALOGUE 
C. F. ORVIS CO. 
/MANCHESTER VERMONT 
They Do Get “ANCO Fish Baits 
he Game 
)nes 
Preserved Shiners that are bet¬ 
ter than live bait. Hold the 
hook longer. Proper color and 
appearance retained. No un¬ 
certainty of supply. If other 
lures fall try "A n c o” 
Shiners and get back to 
the days of real sport. Trial 
jar on money-back guarantee, 
40c. Write for free circular— 
‘Habits & Habitat of Game Fish." 
ANGLERS CO., 1534-0 Lake St. CHICAGO 
Heddon Made- Well Made” 
James Heddon’s Sons, Dowagiac, Mich. 
shore birds. 
As in all other types of wing-shoot¬ 
ing, the selection of a gun as regards 
gauge is a matter dependent upon the 
shooting abilities of the user. The 
man who can effectively use a sixteen 
or a twenty would be foolish and per¬ 
haps even savoring of poor sportsman¬ 
ship to use a twelve, but for the neo¬ 
phyte, the latter gauge is generally 
to be recommended. The size shot 
most frequently used is either a No. 8 
or a No. 9, tens being as a rule rather 
too small. A favorite twelve-gauge 
load is three drams of powder and one 
and one-eighth ounces of No. 8 shot, 
either soft or chilled, though chilled 
shot is to be preferred due to the fact 
j that it makes a better pattern. Two 
and a half drams of powder and one 
ounce of shot and two and one-quarter 
drams of powder and seven-eighths of 
an ounce of shot for the sixteen and 
twenty respectively are favorite loads 
in these gauges. 
Shorebird shooting as an art, as a 
science and as a form of genuinely 
sportsmanlike recreation is to be espe¬ 
cially recommended to our younger gen¬ 
eration and our sportswomen who are 
about to be initiated in the technic of 
wing shooting. For this class of our 
sporting population, at least, shorebird 
shooting does not entail the discourag¬ 
ing discomforts, the long and difficult 
shots or the objectionable recoil of the 
Pape 462 
In writing to Advertisers 
mention Forest and Stream. It will identify you. 
