


Raise Silver Foxes 
Easy to raise. Larger profits 
than any other live stock rais- 
ing. Stands strictest investiga- 
tion. Recommended by Gov- 
4 different plans. 
One will suit you. Complete 
description free. Send today. 
C. T. DRYZ, Box 1033, Eagle R 

ernment. 

PR ea aoe) 
iver, Wis. 


BIG MONEY IN 
RAISING SILVER FOX 
We buy all youraise. Profitsup 
to 300% have been made ina 
single year, Write for free infor- 
mation about this wonderful 
money making business, 
Duffus Silver Fox Co. 
38-J W.34th St.,New York 
J. KANNOFSKY ccass‘siower 
and manufacturer of artificial eyes for birds, animals and 
manufacturing purposes a specialty. Send for prices. AU 
kinds of heads and skulis for furriers and taxidermists. 




GENUINE U.S. 
GQVERNMENT 
MARCHING 
GOMPASS 
Closing Out Stock 
Absolutely new and perfect. 
Mopiede rs Special to 
orest and Stream 
readers $1.75 
This is a brand new day 
and night compass made by 
Sperry Gyroscope Co., for 
U. S. Government. Lu- 
minous Dial is suspended 
in spirits, focusing eye- 
piece. Furnished with 
plush-lined leather case 
with belt loop and _ hooks, 
at $1.75. No catalogue. 
Stockbridge Sporting Goods Co. 
Dept. F. S.7 Stockbridge, Mass. 
, aS 
WILBUR SHOTGUN PEEP SIGHT, 
} deadly addition to the modern shotgun. Makes good 
shots of poor ones. Fast enough for snap shooting, 
ducks, or at traps. Automatically shows how to 
lead correctly—No more guess work. Made of blued 
steel, clamps rigidly on breech of gun barrels. 12, 
16, 20 28 gauges. Double guns only. Postpaid, $2.50 
including booklet. ‘‘Wing Shooting Made LEasy.’”’ 
Booklet alone sent on receipt of ten cents. Teaches 
the art of wing shooting. 
WILBUR GUN SIGHT 
116 "Vest 39th St., P.O. Box 185, Times Square, New York 
ip Im, XCHITECT 
ay. Dignified, Exclusive Profession 
jQnot overrun with competitors. 
d¥.Crowded with opportunity for 
eee money-making and big fees. 
$5000 to $10,000 incomes attained 
4 Sa experts, Easy to master under our 
"_7~ correspondence methods. Diploma award- 
pewe—"ed. We assist students and graduates in 
getting started and developing their businesses. Estab- 
lished 1916. Write for information; it will open your 
eyes. Do it today. 
American Landscape School, 71-F Newark, New York 

In writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. 
shining brightly in the sky above will 
transport one back to the swimmin’ hole 
days with such vividness as to leave 
one half startled. Bullhead fishing is 
so coupled with the pleasures of boy- 
hood that it is the one door that will 
open Memory when all others have 
failed. 
So fascinating is bullheading that 
where one has aimed to be out but an 
hour or so it will be far past midnight 
before any thought is given to “pulling 
stakes” and going for home. At that 
time one should have a goodly catch. 
The later it is the more active is the 
bullhead. He may not sleep by day, 
but one thing is certain—he is a night- 
rover. He ramifies about on the bottom 
and if one should strike certain pools 
or pot-holes where they are wont to 
linger he is sure to catch all that he 
desires. There is a method often used 
—that of baiting a hole in which case 
all of the bullheads in a ten-acre pond 
will be drawn to it, for doubtful in our 
minds as it may seen that a fish can 
smell, it is certainly true that a bull- 
head can follow his nose to a piece of 
liver. There are those who sink a calf’s 
head to the bottom of a pool and the 
bullheads in three or four nights will 
cluster around it in layers that are 
hard to pry apart. The knowing one 
then drops down a hook with a piece of 
liver on it and shortly thereafter wel- 
comes a bullhead with a hook so deep 
down in his vitals that nothing short 
of dynamite will remove it. 
But its all in the game of bull- 
heading! 
Touring with Raymond 
Spears 
(Continued from page 404) 
labor is saved if one in the practice 
comes right down in the beginning to 
the simplicities that are inevitable after 
the first two weeks on the road. The 
one and two-night trips prepare for 
this rapid development of touring 
practice. 
T have watched tourists, from those 
on their first night out to those who 
have been on the way as long as two 
years or more. The novices have count- 
less difficulties with their equipment. 
They don’t know where anything is. 
They don’t know how to put up the 
tents. They haven’t the least idea 
about team work—they all build the 
fire, they all make the beds, and they 
all go running around at this and that 
—the grub burns, the tent is half put 
up, the beds half made. After two 
hours of effort, and in the dark of the 
night, the newcomers are still pound- 
ing stakes and still snatching bites be- 
tween tasks. Team work is learned in 
It will identify you. 
, 
practice trips. One builds the fire, two 
throw the tent flap over the car, one 
drives the stakes, one makes the beds, 
and so it goes. Two, three, four people 
find theirindividual tasks. Even chil- 
dren find things to do—have fun doing 
them. : < BY 
The embarrassment of learning to 
do things while on a long tour is far 
greater than when going out over one 
or two nights. One confronts prac- 
tically every problem of automobile 
touring every day. Meals, beds, camps, 
questions of food, weather, and the rest. 
But on a practice trip, one studies beds 
on one expedition; on the next, cooking; 
on the third, loading and unloading the 
car. Some articles are used at every 
meal and should be kept handy; other 
articles are used only for the bed, and 
may be packed all day, undisturbed in 
its lashings; and if the meals are ac- 
cording to menus, it follows that the 
grub box wil be packed accordingly 
with the next meal’s supplies on top. 
In our own experiences, my family 
has found that a week spent quietly in 
camp beside an Adirondack lake, learn- 
ing the outfit, saves enormous quanti- 
ties of energy on the rest of the dis- 
tance across the continent. One learns 
the cooking, the sleeping, the change in 
atmosphere from the house to the tent. 
No matter how methodically one goes 
about his automobile tour, the last day 
or two before the start is sure to be 
hectic and difficult. Previous nights 
out, previous meals in the open, pre- 
vious trial.trips of a day or two, ease 
the way for this hard preparation. 
It is a fact that many tourists quit 
work on Saturday at noon and start 
after dinner for a week, two weeks, or 
a month’s tour. And this without 
previous experience. They begrudge 
the hour after dinner used in pack- 
ing the car. Other tourists start on 
Sunday morning, and some get away 
on Monday. Practice trips will enable 
one to get away with the car loaded 
calmly, and right, on Saturday after- 
noon. But it would pay the tourists if 
they spent, of a month, three or four 
days on short, practice trips, shaking 
down their load, and finally making 
their getaway in the middle of the 
week, having taken on needed articles, 
and, more especially, discarded the in- 
evitable countless things that are not 
needed, but which stack up on a load 
when unpracticed and inexperienced 
theorists endeavor to make their get- 
away. 
One learns something new on every 
trip. I don’t think one can go forth 
on a week’s trip, no matter how ex- 
perienced he may be, and not encounter 
a new experience, discover a new 
wrinkle of service. The more one 
tours, the more modest will be his re- 
gard for himself—the more anxious he 
Page 436 
