4 
n.O^ 
H 
It’s All Inside 
All Kampkooks fold like a 
suit case when not in use. 
All parts, including tank 
and legs, pack inside. 
AMERICAN,, 
[ (AMPKOQK 
t u t t n p a i C ' A fvl P STOVE 
Kampkook No. 4 is shown 
in the picture. Has warm¬ 
ing shelf, folding wind 
shield, detachable tank. 
Two-quart tank holds six 
hours' fuel supply. Folds to 
4H x 10)4 ■x 19 inches, 
weighs 14 pounds. Price 
in U. S. $11.75. 
OLIDAY PICNICS, week-end trips to the woods and lakes, 
vacation tours—every outing requires the American 
-Kampkook. This dependable, sure-fire stove is always 
ready at a moment’s notice, for any cooking job Enables 
the camper to prepare a big meal or roadside lunch a y 
where as quickly and conveniently as at home. No fuebo 
gather, no muss or trouble; makes its own gas from the same 
grade of gasoline you use in your car. Burns a hot, blue 
flame free from smoke, soot and odor. Win. proof. sa 
anywhere. Used by most experienced campers. Six styles 
$7.50 to $15.60. Sold by leading dealers everywhere, ihe 
genuine bears the name American Kampkook. 
Catalog of complete line of Kampkooking necessities sent onrequest. 
American Gas Machine Co., Inc. 
832 Clark St., Albert Lea, Minn. 
SEND TO 217 OCEAN AVE., B'KLYN, N. Y„ EUK NEW 
BASS LURES t 7d n b? LOUIS RHEAD 
__ . twt t a T7T? r\T> 
8HK5.T 
EXTRA STRONG BASS SINGLE LEADERS OF IMPORTED SALMON GUT 
A—6 Feet, With Loop at Each End.50c 
B—414 Feet, With Loop at Each End.40c 
C—4 Feet, With Loop at Each End.35c 
D—6 Feet, Fly-Tapered, One Loop.®0c 
E—6 Feet, Two-Loop Snells.60c 
F—414 Feet, One-Loop Snell.. 
G—4 Feet, One-Loop Snell. ...- •••••••■• 
H_6 Feet, Fly-Tapered, Two-Loop for Snells..75c 
LONG RANGE WILD FOWL GUN 
Write for 
Catalog No. 319 
Smith Guns, regular 
frame-any grade-8 
to 8<4 lbs.-three- 
inch chamber- made 
to shoot modern high 
velocity shells, and 
kill consistently at 75 to 85 yards. 
These guns are designed to replace the heavier 
bores, and to give better results when using high velocity shells. 
Our special system of choke boring gives extreme velocity and 
penetration, uniform patterns, and makes the L. C. SMITH 
The Hardest-hitting Gun in the World 
THE HUNTER ARMS CO., Inc., Fulton, N. Y. 
McDonald & Linforth, Pacific Coast Representatives, Call Bldg., San Francisco, Calif. 
Export Office: 50 Church St., New York City 
Send for Our 
SPORTSMEN’S BOOK CATALOG 
FOREST & STREAM PUBLISHING COMPANY 
221 West 57th Street, New York City 
we had gone many hundred yards we 
were heartily sick of our bargain, and 
it seemed that we were either plunging 
through muskeg, crawling over and 
under windfalls or wading the stream. 
Otter Creek was about as crooked as 
the Devil’s imagination and half of the 
time we didn’t know where we were 
going. 
We came to a series of old heaver 
dams, but from the look of things they 
hadn’t been occupied for three or four 
years. The dams had been, in most 
cases, directly across the main chan¬ 
nel, and the force of the current in 
high water time had torn them away. 
While walking along the edge of one of 
these old dams a cow moose and two 
yearling calves splashed across the 
water in front of us. It was getting 
on toward the time that the cow moose 
gives birth to her awkward young, and 
I was hoping to be able to show Wells 
one or two of the comical little beggars. 
In the mud along the shore we saw the 
awe-inspiring footprint of a large 
grizzly, and although the track was 
very fresh the country about us was 
so thick with brush that we had no 
hopes of seeing the shaggy beast. 
After traveling till well on toward 
night we camped at a dam where there 
was fresh beaver sign. Wells was for¬ 
tunate enough to shoot a nice big one 
and we caught another small one in a 
trap that night. Next morning, on 
1 carefully inspecting the layout, we came 
to the conclusion that there were very 
few, if any, beavers left, so we con¬ 
tinued on our way upstream. To the un¬ 
initiated the work of one or two beav¬ 
ers is evidence of at least twenty, and 
one is very apt to overestimate the num¬ 
ber of beavers in a certain dam. A 
man of considerable experience, pro¬ 
viding he is a close observer, can come 
very close to figuring how many of 
these interesting animals live in a cer¬ 
tain place. The most certain way of 
doing this is to make careful note of 
the teeth marks in trees freshly cut 
about the place and the tracks in the 
mud where the animals come out of the 
water. This business of inspecting the 
teeth marks may seem a little far¬ 
fetched, it is nevertheless very simple. 
A perfect tooth will make a clean, even 
cut in fresh green wood, but no two 
teeth are exactly alike. In a beaver 
family there will sometimes be young 
of two and three different ages, as 
they do not attain maturity until the 
fourth year. This fact will easily en¬ 
able the rankest amateur to separate 
them into classes, and a little close 
study will do the rest. 
We found the remaining portion of 
the west fork of Otter Creek had been 
trapped out by breed or Indians the 
preceding fall, so we hurried on 
through toward the head of the Creek 
and there striking my trapping trail 
P n ar> .^99 
In writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. It will identify you. 
