Save Money! Wear 
Comfortable, Serviceable 
army clothing 
Khaki or 0. D. Shirts, Breeches, Coats, Leg- 
gins, Boots, Hats, Etc. NEW CATALOGjust \W 
out, lists BARGAIN PRICES on Clothing, also 
Tents, Blankets, Cots, Guns and other sports- .a 
men’s needs. Write today for FREE COPY. v 
ffirniims 
ESTABLISHED 
Dept. 301 Box 1835, Richmond, Va. 
NATIONAL 
SPORTSMAN 
is a monthly magazine, crammed 
full of Hunting, Fishing, Camping, 
Trapping stories, and pictures; 
valuable information about guns, 
rifles, revolvers, fishing tackle, 
camp outfits, best places to go for 
fish and game, fish and game laws, 
and a thousand and one helpful 
hints for sportsmen. National 
Sportsman tells what to do in the 
woods, how to cook grub, how to 
build camps and blinds, how to 
train your hunting dog, how to 
preserve trophies, how to start a 
gun club, how to build a rifle 
range. No book or set of books 
you can buy will give you the 
amount of up-to-date informa¬ 
tion about life in the open that 
you get from a year's sub¬ 
scription to the National 
Sportsman. 
SPECIAL OFFER 
On receipt of $1.00 
we will send you 
National Sportsman 
for a whole year 
together with one 
of our handsome 
Mosaic Gold 
Watch Fobs 
shown herewith. 
Mail your order 
today. Your money 
back if not fully 
satisfied. 
NATIONAL SPORTSMAN 
281 Newbury St., Boston, Mass. 
THE PRESCOTT SPINNER 
“GETS-EM 
whenallo t he^-7 edless 3o 
\ . I P L Al N 25t 
0 YOUR DEALER-SENO FOR CIRCULAR 
PRESCOTT SPINNER MFG. CO. 
by chas. h. stapf. Prescott > wis. 
GUNS! GUNS! GUNS! 
Why not trade in that old Rifle, Shotgun 
or Revolver? We will make you a generous 
allowance on a new one of any type, or 
sell you at a bargain price. If you wish to 
sell a firearm, write particulars. 
Box 1038—City Hall Station, New York, N. Y. 
olTs 
* c 77 ieBest that Money Can Buy" 
GENVi/SlE ‘ 
FIREARMS 
DELIVERED TO YOU <fc C OO 
ON RECEIPT OF-4* L-F DEPOSIT 
25 Cal. 6-Shot COLT Pocket Model 
Hammerless.$17.00 
22 Cal. 8-Shot or 380 Cal, 7-Shot COLT Pocket 
Model Hammerless.$20.50 
32 or 38 Cal. COLT 
Police Positive 4, 
' BarrelT' $27.00 
f 32.20 or 38 Cal. COLT Police Positive 
P- Special 4, 5 or 6" Barrel . . $28.50 
32.20 Cal. or 38 Cal. COLT Army 
Special 4, 5 or 6” Double eon Oil 
— Action Revolver.JJU.UU 
ALL ORDERS must be accompanied with De¬ 
posit of S5.00. Pay Balance to Postman on 
— arrival. Please state Caliber, Model and Slio. 
Satisfaction Guaranteed Or Money Back 
We sell Fire Arms to Law-Abiding Citizens tor 
dome Protection and Hunting Purposes Exclusively. 
EDWARDS IMPORT TRADING CORP. 
158 Broadway Dept, C-8 New York 
Four layers—three of waterproofed and one 
RUSSELL’S 
Ike Walton” 
Lightest of Sports, 
man’s boots, yet 
offering remark¬ 
able resistance to 
wear. Molded to 
foot-shape so per¬ 
fectly that you’ll 
find comfort to 
the end of the stif* 
fest day’s trail. 
Made to your meas¬ 
ure from chocolate, 
chrome-tanned lea¬ 
thers a selection of 
waterproofed veals; 
Flexible wear-fight¬ 
ing Maple-pac soles. 
The Never-rip seams 
embody the skill of 
expert boot makers. 
Ask sportsmen who have 
worn the "Ike IValton” 
what they think of 
them —then follow 
their advice. 
^e’SCOUT 
Choicest of genuine moccasins for camp and out- 
ing wear. Shaped to natural lines of the foot. 
Made in chocolate and gray elkskin with rubber 
soles or the flexible, sturdy Maple-pac soles. 
Your dealer should be able to show Russell foot¬ 
wear. If he can’t produce, write for catalog. 
Wo C. RUSSELL MOCCASIN CO. 
910 Capron St. Berlin, Wis. 
trouble too big for him. People have 
imposed on the liberality and hospital¬ 
ity of the West overmuch. They have 
accepted altogether too much free help 
from local people. Men who drive past 
garages with their automobiles in bad 
condition are imposing on those who 
may be obliged to give help far out in 
the wilderness. The shiftless, neglect¬ 
ful tourists cannot expect to be helped 
along. But when a man who has done 
everything he could to keep himself out 
of trouble, finds himself in a mess— 
then he is justified in asking local help. 
Some tourists take all the time. Some 
give all the time. Some try not to do 
either. The time comes, however, when 
one must lend a hand, or accept a hand 
of some kind, even though it may be 
half the other fellow’s can of water. 
The courteous thing to do in the desert 
when one finds a stalled car is to stop 
and ask if anything can be done, if 
they have plenty of water, and if any¬ 
body wants to ride on to town. In the 
deserts, the railroad trains must stop 
on signal to give water to any one who 
asks for it. Certainly, an automobile 
can do no less than that. 
Tourists are of the utmost help to 
one another. Strangers all, they are 
beholden to one another, rather than to 
local people. Their interests are not 
only at the wayside, but ahead and be¬ 
hind—perhaps all along the road for 
more than three thousand miles. Gen¬ 
erally, the tourist is a far more satis¬ 
factory adviser than the local man, in 
matters relating to the trails. On 
short detours, local evidence or warn¬ 
ing is satisfactory. But when it comes 
to a matter of choosing between two 
routes, as the Lincoln Highway or the 
Sante Fe trail, tourists’ advice, and es¬ 
pecially the concentrated and compiled 
advice of the Lincoln Highway Associa¬ 
tion (Detroit, Mich.), or the informa¬ 
tion bureau of the Southern California 
Auto Club (Los Angeles, Cal.) is worth 
: far more. 
Don’t throw away one-third of 
your profits on traps that catch 
by the leg only. 
have TWO sets of jaws that g.ip 
( . both leg and body and make es- 
\ \ cape impossible. Never have to 
% i he set to drown—never Injure 
t f the pelt — never have any 
Sfi spring breakage. ff 
i'Y / 
Sent direct if your dealer does 1) 
not have them. 65c each in less 
than dozen lots, or $7.00 a f,jf• 
dozen, in dozen lots and over » 
in U. S. Prepaid. 
Write for Free Folder. 
W. A. GIBBS & SON 1 
Dept. D-3, Chester, Pa. \ 
When one has traveled the highways 
a few thousand miles, he learns to dis¬ 
tinguish tourists, and classify them. 
The hotel tourists, people who drive 
from town to town, putting up in the 
taverns, are in a class by themselves. 
They save all the trouble and bother of 
camp making—and miss some of the 
finer hours of twilight in the lonely 
places by the trail. There are tourist 
campers of all grades, experts and 
utter incompetents. The looks of a 
load will often betray the kind of people 
who are with it. 
Generally those who are on their first 
trips make their greenness obvious by 
sundry failures in fire making, or tents 
falling down, or loud lamentations be¬ 
cause everything goes wrong. Old 
timers have a way of coming into camp, 
making a few motions and before one 
In writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. If will identify you. 
Page 652 
