. Rod and gun. edeadly cold from the precincts of niycovering. But it was worth it. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS THAT beginning with .lanuary 1911 the price of HOD AND GUN IN CAN-ADA MAGAZINE will be increased to . per annum, this rate to applyto postpaid subscriptions mailed to any part of Canada, the United States orGreat Biitain. Old subscribers ivho are in arrears will be charged at the rate of$ per annum up to December 1913 and . per annun\ thereafter. That weliavc not made this increase before—as has been done by practically every otherCanadian and American dollar magai^ine—is pro


. Rod and gun. edeadly cold from the precincts of niycovering. But it was worth it. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS THAT beginning with .lanuary 1911 the price of HOD AND GUN IN CAN-ADA MAGAZINE will be increased to . per annum, this rate to applyto postpaid subscriptions mailed to any part of Canada, the United States orGreat Biitain. Old subscribers ivho are in arrears will be charged at the rate of$ per annum up to December 1913 and . per annun\ thereafter. That weliavc not made this increase before—as has been done by practically every otherCanadian and American dollar magai^ine—is proof of our reluctance to do so, not-withstanding the enormous increase during the past few years in the cost of produc-tion. We trust that our subscribers will appreciate the necessity for this changeand that we shall be able to make the magazine of sufTicient interest throughout thecoming year to more than compensate our subscribers for the additional small in-crease in the subscription late. THE PUBLLSHERS. Pholo by Tail .. ^ ^. ,. ,,,,.,, ,, A Stretching up from a Field of White -Mt. Resplendent AN ASCENT OF MOUNT RESPLENDENT B. B. H. THAT fifteen miles of trail that broughtus to our camp site on Robson Pass wasa bit fatiguing to those of us whose in-adequate preparation for such a jaunt hadbeen, for the five or six days immediatelypreceding it, the comfortable accommodationprovided by a Grand Trunk Pacific it was worth it all, even though onessubsequent excursions had been limited to halfhour walks, for within range of our camp-firewas a region well worth coming many milesto sec. Mt. Robson whether seen in cloud, inbrilliant sunlight, or by moonlight, was su-perb. But Mt. Robson was not all. It wasbut one feature, though the dominating one, ofa magnificent area surrounding the site onwhich the tents of the 1913 camp were while we might have confined ourselvesto the attractions that were adjacent to themain camp, very few of us


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectf, booksubjecthunting