Sept. 24, 1910.] 
FOREST AND STREAM 
517 
There’s a Moose 
for You 
Pack your guns — leave your 
cares and worries behind—get 
away for a week or two hunt¬ 
ing in 
■cheMJHINB 
WOODS 
Old guides report the signs that mean 
plenty of deer, grouse, partridge and 
other game as well as moose. 
Law offin Maine October 15th 
Our books, “Directory of Guides’* and 
“Fish and Game Country” contain 
a list of guides that know 
every nook and crook in 
the woods. Sent for _ 
4 cts. in stamps. 
Address 
“RECREATION DESK,” 
North Station, BOSTON. 
i 
TOO MUCH SUCCESS. 
Joseph Garlock, a newsdealer, of Bloomfield, 
N. J., has spent one day a year in the last 
twelve years fishing, without catching a fish or 
getting a bite. The other day, his thirteenth try, 
he got a bite that has cured him of fishing, says 
the New York Fishing Gazette. 
He went on a steamboat from Newark, cast 
out his line and waited. Although those about 
him began to haul in fish, Garlock didn’t get a 
nibble. Then he hired a small boat and went 
out alone. Soon something tugged at his line 
with a vengeance. 
Garlock tried to haul it out, but the fish, with 
the strength of a whale, swam seaward, pulling 
Garlock and the boat along. Garlock seized 
the oars and pulled toward the shore. But the 
fish was too much for him. Steadily it dragged 
him toward the deep. Finally he got- out his 
knife and cut the line. 
“That settles fishing for me,” he said as he 
landed. “But I’d give anything to know what 
that thing was.” 
AND THEY WENT IN. 
Fishing in the south of Ireland recently, two 
visitors met a native angler on the river bank 
and asked if he knew of an inn thereabouts. 
“No inn for seven miles,” he gruffly replied. 
They fell into talk with the man, and one of 
them gave him a fine gut cast. “Ye’ll be officers, 
for the garrison?” he inquired after a while. 
“No, we’re from Glasgow.” After pondering a 
moment the Irishman observed: “Now I think 
of it, there’s an inn just round the bend there.” 
And so there was.—Fishing Gazette. 
HUNT 
ONE-TRIGGER 
y- ///* TFT is no great achievement to get both 
V / birds with a Hammerless Smith Gun 
X equipped with the Hunter One-Trigger attach- 
f ment. Because it is so easy. Still the satisfaction 
is none the less, for it does require a good eye and 
' a steady hand. 
/ 
THE GREAT ADVANTAGE of the Hunter One-Trigger 
is that you do not disturb your aim by changing from one 
trigger to the other. You simply pull the same trigger 
each time. There’s no relaxing of the muscles—no re- 
gripping—no re-adjusting yourself to the different length of 
stock represented by the distance between the two triggers 
—no disturbance of your aim. There’s no creeping or drag¬ 
ging, either—and no firing of both barrels at the same time. 
Write your dealer at once—or us direct—for hand¬ 
somely lithographed Catalogue—it’s free. 
f The greatest gun in the world today is the new V— 
20-Gau^e Hammerless Smith Gun with the 
Hunter One-Trigger attachment. Weighs only 5% to 7 pounds. 
THE HUNTER ARMS CO., 90 Hubbard St., Fulton, N. Y. 
“I want to thank you for the great pleasure you 
have afforded me during the past 35 years by mak 
ing a gun that has stood the test that few can equal. 
I bought it the fall of 1870 and paid $1 70. 1 have now 
laid aside my old and true friend until such time 1 am laid 
to rest, when it will be in the box with me. 1 doubt if 
there ever was a gun made that has been so much used as 
mine. She has not cost me five cents for repairs, and only last 
fall she was just as true as ever.” 
C. A. L., Litchfield, Minn., U. S. A. 
Send for price list and booklet “The World’s Views on 
Greener Guns.” 
W. W. GREENER, Gunmaker, 68 Haymarket, London 
Works: Birmingham, England 
44 Cortlandt Street, New York. 
63-65’Beaver Hall Hill, Montreal. 
American Big Game in its Haunts. 
The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club. Editor, 
George Bird Grinnell. Vignette. New York. 497 
pages. Illustrated. Cloth. $2.50. 
Contents: Sketch of President Roosevelt; Wilderness 
Reserve, Theodore Roosevelt; The Zoology of North 
American Big Game, Arthur Erwin Brown; Big Game 
Shooting in Alaska—I. Bear Hunting on Kadiak Island; 
II. Bear Hunting on the Alaska Peninsula; III. My Big 
Bear of Shuyak; IV. The White Sheep of Kenai Pen 
insula; V. Hunting the Giant Moose, James H. Kidder; 
The Kadiak Bear and His Home, W. Lord Smith; The 
Mountain Sheep and Its Range, George Bird Grinnell; 
Preservation of the Wild Animals of North America, 
Henry Fairfield Osborn; Distribution of the Moose, 
Madison Grant; The Creating of Game Refuges, Alden 
Sampson; Temiskaming Moose, Paul J. Dashiel; Two 
Trophies from India, John H. Prentice; Big Game 
Refuges, Forest Reserves of North America, Forest Re¬ 
serves as Game Preserves, E. W. Nelson, etc., etc. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Camp-Fires of the Wilderness. 
By E. W. Burt. Cloth. Illustrated. 221 pages. Price, 
$1.25. 
The volume treats of a multitude of matters of in¬ 
terest to the camper, who, unless he is made comfortable 
by the exercise of a little expert knowledge and thought¬ 
fulness, may find himself when in camp the most miser¬ 
able of mortals. A man who has had experience, makes 
himself as comfortable in camp as at home, while the 
free and independent life, the exercise that he is con¬ 
stantly taking, the fresh air in which he works, eats and 
sleeps, combine to render his physical condition so per¬ 
fect that every hour of every day is likely to be a joy. 
“Camp-Fires of the Wilderness” is written for those 
persons who wish to go into camp, yet are without ex¬ 
perience of travel, chiefly by canoe and on foot, through 
various sections of the country, and it may be read with 
profit by every one who enjoys camping. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
