KERR ADJUSTABLE GUN SLINGS 
For Service and Sporting Rifles 
When you sell Rifles—sell Kerr Slings 
Two Sales at One Time 
Webbing, $18.00 per doz. Leather, $30.00 per doz. 
Discount to Dealers 
ADJUSTABLE STRAP CO. 
611 Chestnut St. * Philadelphia 
Raise Silver Foxes 
Easy to raise. Larger profits 
than any other live stock rais¬ 
ing. Stands strictest investiga¬ 
tion. Recommended by Gov¬ 
ernment. 4 different plans. 
On„ will suit you. Complete 
desc. .ption free. Send today. 
4f£ 
C. T. DRYZ, Box 1033, EAGLE RIVER, WIS. 
MAKE A RIFLE OUT OF YOUR LUGER 
LUGER CARBINE,16”barrel 
Model de luxe. 
Mail us your Luger t T fe^r^^mm r a. 9 mm. Catalogue 1 
for equipping it with Ton Cents 
any of the above INTERCHANGEABLE LONG BARRELS 
with 880 yard sight. Free labor. Shoot 200 accurate shots 
per minute with our 32-shot magazines and holster-stocks, 
equalling 8 riflemen. World famous V. Chr. Schilling 
super-accurate Mausers; Mannlicher sporters; LUGER, 
MAUSER, etc., pistols. PACIFIC ARMS CpRPORATION, 
Liberty Bank Building, San Francisco, Calif. 
TAXIDERMY OF MERIT 
Fur and leather tanning and dyeing. Our completely 
equipped tanning and fur manufacturing dept, is at 
vour disposal. 
BIG GAME AND HEAD MOUNTING A SPECIALTY 
Write for catalogue. 
H. H. MINER & SON 
Estab. 1876. 
209 LAKE ST. SARANAC LAKE, N. Y. 
TRAOC MARK 
555 
RtCJSTtRLD 
II GLEAN 
SUSPENSORY 
Price$1.50 
EACH MORNING 
Th* SSS has two Separata Sacks; while 
one is being washed the other can be worn. 
The best suspensory made for comfort and 
convenience; no irritating leg straps. 
SIMPLE SANITARY SCIENTIFIC 
Mailed in plain package on receiptof $1.50. 
Satilfaction guaranteed. Send stamp for book- 
let - MEYERS MFG. CO. 
59 Pnrlr PIapp. Watertown* N. Y. 
PEC0NIC INN 
The Lon£ Island Paradise for fishermen. 
Bass—Pickerel—Perch. 
Two hours from New York by express 
trains. 
Write for full information which we will 
gladly furnish, about fishing, rates and 
accommodations. 
PECONIC INN 
Calverton L. I., N. Y. 
THE PRESCOTT SPINNER 
“GETS-EM 
. OFF, 
9 IN. 
OVERALL 
WEEDLESS 3 0$ 
Plain _25<t 
your Dealer—Send for Circular 
Prescott spinner Mfg. Co. 
by chas.h.stapf. PRESCOTT 1 WIS. 
binoculars 
BENNER & CO. 
Achromatic Adjustable Prisma 
Type Clear White Crystal SX 
Lenses. Ideal for Hunting, 
Camping, Fishing, etc. Guaran¬ 
teed perfect. Well made and 
serviceable; will last a life¬ 
time. Black morocco covered 
body. Case and Shoulder Straps 
included. Value $20.00. Our 
special price, C.O.D., $8.75. 
Order to-day. This instrument 
guaranteed to please or money 
cheerfully refunded. 
D-5 Trenton, N. J. 
122 \\ 
00 ] 
Mf* 
Al.loss 
Al.Tbss Pork Rind Minnows 
Oriental Wiqqler 
- Shimmy Wiqqler -$122 
Little Eqypt Wiqqler • •754 
Shimmyette Fly Rod W iqqler-504 
Bass, Musky or Fly Rod 
Pork Rind Strips 45^ Jar. 
' 17121736 CiluuilubP.iXrevdand 
J. KANN0FSKY GLASS-BLOWER 
and manufacturer of artificial eyes for birds, animals and 
manufacturing purposes a specialty. Send for prices. All 
kinds of heads and skulls for furriers and taxidermists. 
328 CHURCH ST., Near Canal St., NEW YORK 
WILBUR SHOTGUN PEEP SIGHT, 
deadly addition to the modern shotgun. Makes good 
shots of poor ones. Past enough for snap shooting, 
ducks, or at traps. Automatically shows how to 
lead correctly— No more guess work. Made of blued 
steel, clamps rigidly on breech of gun barrels. 12, 
16, 20 28 gauges. Double guns only. Postpaid, $2.50 
including booklet. “Wing Shooting Made Easy.” 
Booklet alone sent on receipt of ten cents. Teaches 
the art of wing shooting. 
WILBUR GUN SIGHT 
116 West 39th St., P.O.Box 185, Times Square, New York 
JOHNSON’S FOLDING DECOYS 
Tough waterproofed jute-fiber "cartridge-board,” arranged to fold up and slip 
into your hunting coat pocket. Natural colors and shape fool the wisest ducks. 
Non-capsizable, and will last for years. Much handier and lighter than wooden 
decoys, and they bring the ducks in as well, or better. Not a novelty, as they 
have been in use by thousands of satisfied hunters for many years, 55 cents each, 
or $6.60 a dozen at dealer’s or direct, postpaid on receipt of price. 
Wm. R. Johnson Co., 70 Columbia St., Seattle 
as she plays with the Pawns that dare 
to outdo her. 
After we had left the turmoil of 
Ghost Rapids behind we felt so much 
relieved that we hardly knew how to 
contain ourselves. We were now within 
fifteen miles of our destination, and if 
nothing untoward happened us we 
would make there early in the after¬ 
noon. All this time the sky had been 
overcast, and as we sat on the raft eat¬ 
ing our lunches it started to snow. The 
stuff came down so thick for some time 
that we thought seriously of going to 
the shore, for we could scarcely see 
fifty yards ahead of us. But after a 
few minutes of this it grew lighter, 
and while still coming down steadily 
was not so thick hut what we could 
see fairly well. 
We were drifting along idly past a 
sandstone cliff, the current was so 
smooth that we paid no particular at¬ 
tention as to where we were going, 
when all of a sudden we started directly 
for this rock wall. Grabbing our pad¬ 
dles we sought frantically to evade it 
but it seemed as though some irre¬ 
sistible force, some unseen monster, had 
hold on us. But when within a few 
feet of the cliff we felt our craft hit 
the off current and were immediately 
carried away again. We were just 
thanking our lucky stars when we 
started upstream and before we knew 
it were again headed for the rock, in 
precisely the same spot. Slowly it 
dawned over us that we were in the 
grip of a whirlpool! After going 
slowly around in this fashion for a 
third time we tried to think of some 
scheme for escaping the clutches of 
the undertow. I took a long pole that 
lay on the raft but was unable to touch 
bottom at any point in our circuit, and 
several times the pole was almost jerked 
from my hands by the force of the 
under current. 
Paddling with all our might seemed 
to have no effect so we tried another 
scheme. At the point where we whirled 
away from the cliff in our endless 
circling, the raft seemed to hang for 
the fraction of a second not more than 
four feet from the rock wall. Watch¬ 
ing our chance, we placed one end of 
the stout pole against the wall and 
pushed with all our might. For a mo¬ 
ment we hung, then just as we were 
about to acknowledge defeat we went 
on slowly downstream. 
After escaping the whirlpool we had 
no more excitement until within a mile 
or so of our destination. It had stopped 
snowing by this time but the hills were 
white from the wet stuff that had fallen. 
We were drifting along and as we 
happened to glance up on a hill a half 
mile or so distant we saw three bears. 
Wells had a .405 Winchester, and I 
carried my trusty .280 Ross. We opened 
fire from the raft, but immediately re- 
Page 520 
In writing to Advertisers mention Forest, and Stream. It will identify you. 
