
OH, BROTHER! 
WHAT A MOVEMENT! 
The NEW WIGGLE FISH 


No. 2400 
Weight 34 oz. Price $1.25 
Length of Body 3% in. 
No other lure ever made can compare with it! In Pep, 
Not only looks like a fish but also 
has a more natural, fast-swimming, flexible movement than 
any other lure on the market! It’s double jointed with 
a wagging, fluted, nickeled tail, giving a perfect, life-like 
movement and flashy action that makes it a deadly killer 
of Bass, Pickerel, Pike and Muskies! Has plenty of action 
when pulled slowly, fast reeling causes lure to run deeper! 
Be sure you have ene of these wiggling fools on your first 
will Catch More Fish! 
Beauty and Action! 
fishing trip so you, too, 
HERE’S ANOTHER! 
BABY WIGGLE FISH 


Weight ‘2 oz. >. No. 
Length «of body 2'2 in. i 
2500 
Price, $1.15 
Like its larger namesake with the same flashy action and 
life-like movement! Equipped with one treble hook! The 
size of the lure and place of hook makes more than one 
treble hook unnecessary! And it DOES Catch ’Em! Will 
be furnished with single or deuble hook when so ordered. 
FOR FLYROD ANGLERS! 
FLYROD 
FROGGIE 
F-80 Green Meadow Frog 
F-81 Brown Meadow Frog 
CATCH MORE FISH! 
Lures 
Flyrod. Anglers, Take Notice! Here’s a real Weedless 
beauty! It gets the Bass—not the weeds! Looks, floats 
and actually kicks and swims like a frog! Length of body 
1 inch! <A wonderful companion to the Famous Flyrod 
Crawdad all anglers like so well! 
NEW HUSKY PIKIE 

a Geta siee Pa sate 
Length of body 6 inches 
No. 2300 
Price $1.35 
Another Pikie! ’Nuff Sed! Just like the Famous Pikie 
Minnow, only larger, with heavier hooks, ete. You’ll need 
one when you go after the BIG FISH! 
THE FAMOUS PIKIE MINNOW 
No. 700. Price $1.00 
Known as the greatest Fish Getter in every part 
of the country. 
Weight 34 oz. 
Get any of these real fish getters from your dealer 
or direct from us! Everyone guaranteed to be 
satisfactory to you in, every respect or money re- 
funded! Dealers sell our baits under this guar- 
antee and we protect them! 
Creek Chub Bait Company 
172 So. Randolph St. Garrett, Ind. 

108 
In writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. 

death long before the winter actually 
began. Elk will do well and keep in 
good condition in three feet of loose 
snow if there is something under the 
snow for them to eat, but it is a pitiful 
sight to see them pawing through the 
snow looking for food only to find that 
they have been robbed of their winter 
forage by the cattle and sheep who 
used the range in the summer. If the 
domestic live stock could use the areas 
in question the year around it would be 
a different proposition, but they cannot 
do so. 
T is merely summer pasture for them 
paid for at the rate of about fifty 
cents per head for the cattle and fifteen 
cents a head for the sheep for their 
pasturage for the whole summer sea- 
son. Why buy hay at from ten to sixty 
dollars per ton to feed elk and then on 
the other hand sell the equivalent of 
two or more tons of hay for fifty cents. 
It is worth just as much or even more 
to the elk left just as it is on their win- 
ter range as it would be put up into 
haystacks and then fed out in the win- 
ter. 
The eastern tourist is bringing more 
money into the mountainous sections of 
the Rocky Mountain states than the 
live-stock industry ever did and he is 
not hurting the country. It is a better 
country for his having been there. The 
same certainly cannot be said of a band 
of sheep. 
Year by year more and more people 
are coming to realize what a wonderful 
vacation land we have right here in 
our western United States. These 
people are ‘spending huge sums of 
money for the privilege of seeing this 
great wild playground and one of the 
most charming features of the whole 
trip to them is the fact that there is 
still a remnant of the vast big game 
herds that once roamed this region. 
These noble big game animals mean 
much to them in terms of sentiment in 
the thrill it gives them as they ride up 
to the edge of some mountain park or 
timber line meadow to come onto a 
herd of elk or perhaps a single magni- 
ficent monarch whose antlers while 
naturally large look much larger cov- 
ered with velvet as they are at this 
time of the year. 
FTER twenty years of riding the 
trails and climbing the hills in the 
Rocky Mountain section, my outstand- 
ing memories of wonderful vistas are 
those where some mountain peak or 
hidden lake or perhaps some highland 
meadow surrounded by snowy moun- 
tains framed the picture in which the 
real point of interest was the little herd 
of elk or deer or perhaps a small band 
of mountain sheep or a mother bear 
with her cubs. It is the ever present 
thrill of expectancy of seeing game 
around the next bend in the trail or 
just over the next ridge that lures one 
onward when once he has turned his 
back to civilization and followed a game 
trail that led to the summer feeding 
grounds of game in the high ranges. 
It is because of the presence of game 
that our sections of western mountains 
are so fascinating. Take away the 
game and most of their beauty would 
be lost. 
I have talked of this to hundreds of 
people whose experience has been the 
same as mine and to scores who have 
made these trips with me. There is a 
lot of healthy exercise and exhilara- 
tion in climbing the hills and it gives 
one a chesty feeling to stand at the 
top of the world and look out over the 
forests and parks, lakes and rivers be- 
low, but to the average person out for a’ 
vacation, softened by eleven months’ 
residence in the city there is not enough 
inducement in trailing through the hills 
and climbing the high ranges for just 
that end in itself. It is the ever present 
chance of seeing real big game that 
makes them take up a notch in their 
belts and go further and then just a 
little bit further in the hope of seeing 
something alive and wild. 
N this way the western vacationist 
gets more out of a month’s trip than 
he would in many months of uneventful 
exercise. It is the mountains and air 
plus the presence of big game that does 
it. He goes back to reside in the city, 
but in mind he is following some mon- 
arch of the forest so that he may get 
a better look at it or perhaps even ob- 
tain a good photograph. It is the pres- 
ence of game and the chance of seeing 
it under even more favorable circum- 
stances than last year that bring him 
out again and while he is thinking of 
game in terms of sentiment dear to 
sportsmen, he is paying for it ungrudg- 
ingly in good gold coin of the realm, 
in figures far beyond what any stock 
ranch could pay and he is taking noth- 
ing away from the same country except 
pleasant memories. 

Bob 
(Continued from page 93) 
the woods. One I recognized as that 
of old Si Evans. 
Soon Bob came running up and 
rubbed his nose against me, followed 
closely by Evans and his man. The 
explanation was soon made. It was all 
Bob’s doing. 
“Where,” said I, “did Bob learn so 
much?” 
“Oh! I trained him since he was a 
little pup,” said Evans. This explained 
all, for a more thorough sportsman 
than old Si Evans cannot be found in 
three States. 
It will identify you. 
