The World at Your Feet 
With These POWERFUL 
MILITARY 
BINOCULARS 
RRIVED! Limited quantity GENUINE im- 
ported French and German Army Officers’ 
: Binoculars, 8-Power Achromatic lenses; 
Premiere Qualite—Genuine Prisms of remarkable 
light-gathering, light-transmitting properties. Cen- 
tral focusing, easily adjusted to any eyesight. 
Beautifully finished, superbly constructed. Prisms 
in each barrel permit of great field of vision, many 
times the area of Field Glasses. We have supplied 
hundreds of them to U. S. Army and Navy Officers 
Such powerful Binoculars usually sell for $40 to 
$50. Our Drice (while they last) complete 
with genuine leather case and carrying $71 
BLESS eis bys ele see UREN sie Ra Stee Oe AE 
Send NO Money! NOTHING to Pay Postman! 
See them! Examine them! Try them for 10 days. 
vetoes after 10 DAYS’ TRIAL, you may pay at 
rate Oo 
or, tf you wish to pay cash, 
after 10 DAYS, take $1.50 $ 50 
Discount and send check or Le 
money Order JOP... ves. .--<ce 
ROADEN your field of vision! Don't live in 
a cooped-up area! A new world will open up 
net: for YOU with a pair of these wonder Glasses. 
You ll see things others can't. People, Scenes, 
Views, Games of ACTION brought right to your 
feet! The jovs of outdoors are not complete with- 
out them. The greatest Pleasure-giving INVEST- 
MENT one can make. Indispensable for sports-— 
baseball games, motoring, camping, yachting, hunt- 
ing, hiking, races, bird and nature study, ete. 
Sent on 10 Days’ FREE TRIAL! 
A Cc df { QUANTITY IS LIMITED! 
e ORDER TODAY! Send NO Money! 
2 Generations of Honorable Deatings 
ON 
/ASHIN cv © 
I 
I y 
I Importers and National Mail Order House 
1 36S Washington St., Boston, Mass. 
l For prompt attention address Import Dept. 81 
Gentlemen: Please send me 8-power Binoculars. 
j 1 enclose NO money, and pay NOTHING to 
Postman. If I am satisfied after ten DAYS’ 
I TRIAL, I have the privilege of paying for 
l 
I 
‘ 
! 

them at the rate of $4.00 monthly—-or of de- 
ducting $1.50 and sending the $19.50 in FULL 
SETTLEMENT, Otherwise, I shall return them. 
NOW! 
yourself, it will be appreciated. 
Jf you wish to tell us something about 
For.8. 9-25 

Money Back 
Guarantee 
rade 
Auto Camping Trailer 
You can load all your baggage, bedding, cots, tents, 
cooking utensils, etc., in this light weight trailer and 
hitch it to any automobile and never notice any extra 
pull on your car. Why? Because it is scientifically built, 
O7 
weighing oniy 275 pounds and with a guaranteed carry- 
ing capacity at automobile speed of 1,000 pounds. We 
are ready to prove this, hitch it behind your own car, 
and you be the judge, If you are planniag an outing 
don’t fail to write us at once for complete details. Act 
at once, 
THE BOWER MANUFACTURING CO. 
Box 21 : : é Fowler, Indiana 
5 CAMP COOKERY 
By Horace Kephart 
This book tells what a man should carry 
in both pack and head. Every step is traced 
—the selection of provisions and utensils, 
the quantity of each, preparation of game, 
building of fires, cooking of every conceiv- 
able kind of food, etc. 
154 pages. Illustrated. Flexible Cloth, $1.00 
Forest & Stream Pub. Co. 257 W. 57thSt., N.Y C. 
548 

































In writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. 
F you like to make 
things yourself, dur- 
ing idle hours, for 
use during the shoot- 
ing season, take a look 
at the accompanying 
illustration. It shows 
a reloading set that 
was made for the .30 
06 service cartridge, 
but with minor changes 
or additions will work 
just as well with sev- 
eral of the .25 and .30 
calibre cartridges. 
With the exception of 
the priming tool 
(Fig. 5) all the parts 
were made from odds 
and ends of metal’ 
found in the junk box, 
and the total cost in cash was merely 
the wear and tear on the tools used 
in making the set. The time was not 
counted, though that was not so very 
important, figured at so much per 
hour: 
To begin with, I wanted a tool to 
seat bullets of varying lengths in 
the service case and seat them with 
straight-line pressure. 
ASTING about for something to 
begin with, I hit on an old Win- 
chester .22-calibre musket barrel to be 
used for the loading tube. Three 
inches of this was sawed off, ends 
smoothed, then reamed for a distance 
equal to the total length of a 180-grain 
artridge, measuring from end of rim 
to ogive of bullet, calibre roughly .308”. 
Again the tube was bored a distance 
equaling the total length of the service 
case, calibre that of case neck. A 
third time it was bored, then reamed, 
the distance equaling length of case to 
shoulder. The taper from shoulder to 
neck was reamed. A slot was cut to 
take the spring-actuated catch-hook 
(D). The other end of tube was 
threaded to take an ordinary stove- 
bolt, %”. This bolt was bored with a 
fine drill, a depth of 4%”, then this hole. 
was reamed to fit point of service bul- 
let, and wing-nut added to lock bolt 
at any desired point. 
A flat piece of steel (B) %4” thick 
was shaped to fit the barrel sight-lug, 
and made fast with a screw. The 
other end was bored for a is" bolt, 
and this, with its nut, holds securely 
‘n position the lever (C). This lever 
An Amateur-Made Loading 
Set 
For Riflemen Who Like to Make Things 
By PERRY D. FRAZER 

An efficient set made from cast-off metal. 
was made from a piece of 4% x %” tool 
steel. To it was riveted a lug grooved 
to take the catch-hook (D). This hook 
is kept to its work by a small spring, 
as shown. A wooden handle completes 
this tool, which may be operated in the 
hands, or fastened in a vise, the lat- 
ter method preferred. It can be ad- 
justed in a moment to seat a bullet 
of any length the exact depth desired, 
without crimping. 
Fig. 2 shows a short length of 13” 
steel shaftine. The top end was coun- 
tersunk to fit head of case. From 
there the bore is 4” for a short dis- 
tance. The other end was bored out 
with a %” drill. To operate, place 
fired case in cou tersink, drop decap- 
ping plug (Fig. 4) into case, the slid- 
ing plunger automatically finding 
flash-hole, and a slight tap with a 
hammer knocks out the primer. 
HE lower end of tube was bored 
out, to leave space for a large 
number of dead primers. When full, 
these are dumped in the “hell-box.” 
The plunger is a steel tube fitted with 
a piece of hardened drill rod .050” 
thick. Rod fits snug. It will with- 
stand a tremendous lot of battering. 
If worn, snip off a new length of drill- 
rod. Cheap device. 
Fig. 8, another section from the 
rifle barrel, bored and reamed to fit 
the small end of the case, to reduce 
the neck to fit the service bullet. An- 
other length of barrel may be cut and 
worked out to serve as a sizing die 
for lead bullets. 
It will identify you. 

