
Maine HuntingShoes 
$3.40 
Send old leather top 
rubbers (any make) 
and we will attach our 
1924 Hunting Rub- 
bers, repair and water- 
proof tops, put in new 
laces and return post- 
paid for $3.40. Same 
guarantee as new shoes. 
of tongue and covering 
@ tongue, sud (With heels, $3.65.) 
Send for New Fall Catalogue of Maine 
Hunting Footwear and Other Specialties 
L. L. BEAN, Mfr. 
800 Main Street FREEPORT, MAINE 

showing 
cur patent method of 
repairing exposed part 
Rebuilt shoe 







“Built to Endure” 
Baker Guns 
For 50 Years Known to the Trade 
as Best for Service. 
Catalog Free on request, illustrating 
“BATAVIA LEADER” 
“BLACK BEAUTY SPECIAL” 
“PARAGON” 








A selective line to meet every individua 
requirement—ask ‘your Baker Agent~ 
We can give you his name. 

253 Churth S¢ 
New lork MV 






> Pea 
HII 
ar 4s @yDienise Exclusive Profession 
not overrun with competitors. 
Crowded with opportunity for 
ign making and big fees. 
\ qtr $5000 to $10,000 incomes attained 
~*~" by experts. Easy to master under our 
7~ correspondence methods, Diploma award- 
ed. We assist students and graduates in 
getting started and developing their businesses. Hstab- 
lished 1916. Write for information; it will open your 
eyes. Do it today. 
American Landscape School, 71-F Newark, New York 








ZIP-ZIP 
THOUSANDS [hace hapvy 
with this wonderful Zip-Zip shooter, 
something every boy wants and 
never gets tired of. Zip-Zip shooter 
is scientifically and __ practically 
made; boys, if you like hunting and 
outdor sports, get a Zip-Zip shooter 
with plenty of pep and force and learn 
2 that quick and sure 
aim. If your dealer 
happens not to have - 
4 them, order from us. 
- 4 Zip-Zip shooter com- SRT ieee 
plete 35c or three for $1.00; send stamps, coin or money order. 
AUTOMATIC RUBBER CO., Dept. 66, Columbia, S. C. 



In writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. 
Photo by U.S. Forest Service 
Scene in Bitter Root Mountains 

Yellowstone Trail Side Trips 
HE best known and _ heaviest 
traveled route is through north- 
ern Montana, known as the Yel- 
lowstone Trail. Through the State of 
Montana the trip along this route is 
very interesting, but far far its main 
attractiveness to a tourist consists of 
the many exceptionally interesting side 
trips which can be made. One of the 
most valuable of these is along the Park 
to Park Highway up the Bitter Root 
River. 
A trip to Medicine Hot Springs in 
the Bitter Root National Forest trav- 
erses the route followed in 1804 by 
Lewis and Clark on their “westward 
ho” trip. The roads are exceptionally 
good. The wide valley is covered by 
prosperous apple orchards and hay 
farms. Here is the home of the famous 
McIntosh red apple. To the east are 
gentle, forest-clad slopes interspersed 
with open range; to the west the sky- 
line is jagged with the never ending 
variety of form of the crags of the 
Bitter Root Range. 
90-mile trip, readily made in four 
hours, brings one to Medicine Hot 
Springs in the heart of the beautiful 
pine forests of the Bitter Root National 
Forest. Comfortable hotel accommoda- 
tions, good camp grounds and a roomy, 
hot springs swimming pool are here 
available, but the chief attraction to 
many is the unsurpassed fishing in the 
waters of the East Fork of the Bitter 
Root River. A day and a half or two 
days’ side trip from Missoula up the 
Bitter Root River would be exceedingly 
well spent. 
If the full time for the entire trip 
be not available, the traveler can in 
It will identify you. 
two and one-half hours from Missoula 
reach Sleeping Child Hot Springs, a 
few miles out of Hamilton, Montana, 
where exceptionally clean accommoda- 
tions and a large swimming pool are 
available. 
R, if one seeks a somewhat wilder 
country, accessible by a stretch of 
fourteen miles of mediocre road, Lolo 
Hot Springs can be reached by a one 
and a half-hours’ drive from Missoula. 
The road to Lolo Hot Spring follows 
up Lolo Creek, which is also on. the 
route of the Lewis and Clark trip west- 
ward. The Lolo Hot Springs are fully 
described in the official U. S. Army re- 
port of the exploration trip, and are 
located right at one of the camp sites 
of Lewis and Clark which is given a 
prominent place in their chronicles. 
JV ss0ULa is at the junction of the 
Yellowstone Trail and the Park to 
Park Highway which connects Glacier 
Park and Yellowstone Park. A two 
day’s trip toward Glacier Park out of 
Missoula will amply repay the time 
used, and will add immeasurably to the 
benefits of the trip through Montana. 
Flathead Lake, within three hours’ 
drive northward from Missoula, over 
pretty good roads, is the second largest 
body of fresh water entirely within the 
boundaries of the United States, being 
exceeded in area only by Lake Michi- 
gan. But before you go to Flathead 
Lake you will pass through what used 
to be the Flathead Indian Reservation, 
on which is being developed one of 
Uncle Sam’s largest reclamation pro- 
jects. It is a wonderful sight—the 
waving fields of grain in the shadow 
Page 616 
_—_— 
