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ATTENTION 
Sportsmen, Hunters 
{ make GARMENTS and NECKPIECES from 
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M. GELLER 
Tanner and Furrier 
1446 St. Johns Place Brooklyn, N. Y. 

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Duffus Silver Fox Co. 
aif W-. 30th St.,New York 





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Sportsmen, improve your shooting grounds by plant- 
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A table delicacy. Appetizing. Healthful. Neatly 
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In writing to 
At the shout of “come in,” in stepped 
a full-blooded Chippewa Indian. He 
soon explained in broken English that 
he was a trapper on his way, by dog 
team, to a good virgin trapping terri- 
tory further on, where he expected to 
build a log hut and remain for the 
winter. He and his dog team remained 
over night at our camp, and in the 
early morning departed, to be lost to 
all civilization in the dark forest until 
the following April. 
Besides hunting, exploring and 
feasting our eyes on some of nature’s 
most beautiful primitive scenery, our 
camp life during the four weeks was 
one continual round of joy, mirth, 
pleasure and contentment. Had we no 
business or home ties back in the U. 
Ss. A., every member of our party 
would have been willing to remain all 
winter, even though we would have 
encountered snow eight or ten feet 
deep a little later in the season. 
As per past orders, we expected the 
big log sleds to return from the rail- 
road after us on November 30th. Most 
of us spent a big part of the week, 
before that date, with axes and cross- 
cut saws making trails for the teams 
to draw out our various moose to the 
main trail. Deer and other game we 
could drag in ourselves, but as a good- 
sized moose will weigh as much as an 
average horse naturally we had to de- 
pend on teams to drag them to the 
sleds; that is if we expected to realize 
our cherished ambition to take home 
two or three of our largest and best 
moose in their whole natural state. 
About the appointed time, three 
teams came After hard 
work, all game was dragged to the 
main trail and loaded on two sleds. 
Camp was broken and all our outfit 
and equipment was loaded on sled No. 
3. We waved a tender farewell to the 
dear old camp site and all its pleasant 
surroundings, and as_ the © sleds 
squeaked, each one looked at the other. 
I knew from the visible sad expres- 
sions that it was painful to sever the 
heart strings from the sacred inner 
precincts of nature. 
in for us. 

Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. It will identify you. 
TOURING WITH 
RAYMOND SPEARS 
(Continued from page 79) 
the ground during the night. A U-bar 
bed-leg will work into sand or ground 
six or seven inches merely from the 
weight, unless a bit of wood or stone 
is put under it for a foundation. 
OME beds are easier to set up be- 
fore the tent. I tore a hole in one 
of my automobile tents in opening up 
a bed’s jack-knife sides. Except in 
rain, it was best to put up the bed 
first and then stretch the tent. But 
cots can be put into a tent, after it is 
up, and the variation due to back 
fastenings or inaccuracies in pitching 
will not matter—but it does matter a 
good deal if the accurate running- 
board bed is not covered by an acé¢u- 
rately-stretched tent. One learns these 
things—but a little forethought, or 
warning, will help many to overcome 
some of these annoyances. 
In a party of four, for example, one 
member will usually look after the 
supper. The grub can, grid, cooking 
utensils, are all set out where the fire 
is to be. The folding sewing-table is 
set up. Then one of the boys goes out 
with the ax and gathers firewood, with 
which a blaze is started. This may be 
omitted when a cold supper is to be 
had—the main meal having been eaten 
at noon. But a fire is cheerful, espe- 
cially in a rain storm, or on a cold, raw 
night, or where a smudge is desirable 
to drive away mosquitoes or gnats. I 
think a fire is always a worth-while 
addition to a camp, if it is permissible 
under the conditions. 
Thus the fire, cocking, and tent 
stretching are three separate things to 
do. Perhaps two will put up the two 
tents, and prepare the beds, while two 
tend the fire and cook supper. The 
celerity with which experienced tour- 
ists, even with clumsy equipment, will 
make camp is surprising. I saw three 
men with a big old car, a 20-foot 
square canvas for tent, and complicated 
folding beds, roll into a New Mexico 
church grounds, and in fifteen minutes 
they had camp made and were sitting 
by their sheet-iron stove on which their 
supper was cooking. I saw a man and 
his wife, with a grown daughter come 
into a camp at: a school ground one 
night in Illinois, the girl leading the 
way treading the ground and search- 
ing with her big handflash for stumps 
or other obstructions. In five minutes 
they were under cover, and in fifteen 
minutes they had blown out their light 
and gone to bed. With such examples, 
the tourists may well cut out a lot of 
waste time and ill-spent energy. 
Weather is always an important 
camp condition. If a north wind 
blows, the back of a tent should be 
Page 112 
