

ATTIC U LLU LLC 
eS 
as 
FIREPROOF. 
Summer Resort, 


SEND TO 217 OCEAN AVE., B’KLYN, N. Y., 
HAND 
TIED 
~ TheMIRAMAR Ma PLORIDA. 
On the Palm-Fringed Shore of 
BEAUTIFUL BISCAYNE BAY 
Dedicated to the Comfort and Pleasure of a Superior Clientele. 
SEASON DECEMBER 15 TO APRIL 
EVERY RECREATION. UNSURPASSED GOLF, BOATING. BATHING. 
Under Personal Management of Henry N. Teague 
Greylock Hotel, Williamstown, Mass. 




Transient 
—Central 
convenient to theatre and shop and 
just beyond the din of traffic. 
The 
holds guests of distinction. 
for reservations. 


Two West Seventy-second Street 
At the Motor Entrance to 
Central Park 
NEW YORK 
Residential 
Cosmopolite 
Towering above one of the most 
beautiful garden spots of the world 
Park—Hotel Majestic is 
attracts and 
Wire or write 
refined atmosphere 
Copeland Townsend 
FOR NEW ILLUSTRATED PRICE LIST OF THE 
BASS, MASCALONGE, LAKE TROUT, PIKE, PICKEREL 
TROLLING 
MINNOWS 
LOUIS RHEAD NATURE LURES 
THEY FLOAT UPRIGHT JUST LIKE LIFE, LAST FOR YEARS. 
‘JUST GET ONE FOR A TEST. ALL PRICES, FROM 50c. 1% in. TO 
2.50 5 in. DOUBLE HOOKS. YOU CAN CAST THEM OUT TO FLOAT 
NEAR SURFACE OR SINK NEAR THE BOTTOM. FOR FALL FISHING 
THEY HAVE NO RIVAL IN GETTING LARGE FISH AND GOOD SPORT. 
WE HAVE FROGS, CRAWFISH, CRICKETS, GRASSHOPPERS, 





SHIFT WITH THE HOUSE OF 
SHIFF THE GUNMAN 
NORTH WOODSTOCK, N. H. 
Who WORE a COLT for 30 years, was never 
drunk or arrested, and yields the right to 
NONE to disarm him. HE doesn’t TAKE 
so YOU don’t GET cheap, inferior or defec- 
tive guns. Giving YOU a square deal and 
fighting the fanatics for OUR personal liber- 
ties. Shipt your stamp???? Seen inside? >??? 

In writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. 
HELGRAMITES, ETC. 
a TTTUTTTUUTTTTUTTTTAUTHTUUTTUUUUTUUUUTUUULUULUCUUULUCULUTSUUUTUOLLGUULUALULLUUOULUEULUTCUULUUUUUUTCUUUTC ULL Os 
_ Ducks GoWild OverWild Rice! 
Did you get lots of ducks this season? 
lz You can bring many more right to the 
waters and marshes near you by plant- 
ing Wild Rice, Wild Celery, ete. Ex- 
pert advice and information. Write 
TERRELL’S etl FARM. 
Dept. H-259, Oshkosh, Wis. 
SMT TUTUTUUUNUTUTUUVUUUUUITUUUIU UIT UCU UIU LUDO UU LOUUUUUUUUUU UU LULU UUU UU 0 
UU? 


TUUUUAUUCUCCUUUNTEUCEC UOT LUUU LLL 
Saatibeinieds 
SUI 
It will identify you. 
La 
ing slowly across our line, but after a 
sharp run around the base of a small 
hill we were able to cut him off and, 
though very much blown, I got a good 
shot at him at about 100 yards which, 
striking him just back of the shoulder, 
brought him down. He had a fine head 
though with fewer points than the one 
I had killed the day before. The 
operation of skinning and taking off 
the head used up the rest of the after- 
noon and it was growing dark when we 
got back to camp. 
The next morning we spent in caring 
for the two head skins which, after 
being scraped clean of any flesh, we 
turned inside out, then stuffed with fir 
bows and stretched to dry in the sun 
on the side of our cabin. When thor- 
oughly dried in this manner, i. e., in 
the air and not near a fire, I have 
found that skins keep in the best of 
condition until ready to be turned over 
to the taxidermist. Care should be 
taken to skin out ears and lips well 
so that all parts are exposed, as any 
creases or folds in the skin will fail 
to dry and become tainted, when the 
hair will fall out. 
A visit was made to the ponds we 
had noticed before and I shot two full 
grown beaver whose pelts, already in 
good condition, were stretched on hoops 
made from the stem of an alder. 
As the season advanced, we daily 
saw increasing numbers of caribou and 
during the following week I secured 
two more good stags and missed an- 
other big fellow which I shot at in a 
blinding sleet storm. My license per- 
mitted me to take five stags and three 
does, the number allowed being now 
reduced to three stags, and as I had 
already secured four, I resolved to be 
very particular as to number five and 
that nothing short of an old patriarch 
would draw my fire. Early in the 
fourth week of our stay on the hills, we 
decided to kill a young doe for meat 
as the old males were by now far too 
strong and rank to make pleasant food. 
Luck brought just such an animal my 
way about an hour after leaving camp 
one morning, and as the doe was alone 
and a strong wind blowing from her 
in my direction, I didn’t have much 
trouble in stalking and bringing her 
down. We had been hard at work 
skinning and cutting her up and had 
our disagreeable job very nearly fin- 
ished, when Henry, having a_ look 
about, exclaimed, “Good Lord, Sir, look 
at old ‘Big Horns!’” at the same time 
pointing to a hill quite a distance off. 
Right on top of a rocky ridge and 
clearly outlined against a background 
of gray sky, stood the biggest stag we 
had yet seen, with a head crowned by 
a splendid set of antlers. He certainly 
looked the lord of the moor, standing 
up there midst his wild surroundings. 
Of course we temporarily suspended 
Page ‘ 
