HUNTING THE ELK BY THEODORE EOOSEVELT Copyrlrrht, IHS, by O. P. Putnam's Sons. PubllBlied under arranrnment with O. P. rulnam i Bona, Nuw York and I-ondon XE ilay Morrlfleld and I went out together anil hud b rather excltln dinse after Home bull elk. The prerloti evening, to ward Biiuupt, I had seen three bull trotting off across an open glade toward n great stretch of forest and broken ground, up near the foot of the rocky peaks. Next morning early we started off to hunt through this country. The walk ing was hard work, especially up and down the steep cliffs, covered with slip pery pine needles; or among the wind- Soon the venison itttiht uer broiling. falls, where the rows of dead trees lay piled up across one another In the wildest confusion. We saw nothing until we came to a largo patch of burnt ground, where we at once found the oft, black soil marked up by elk hoofs; nor had we penetrated Into It more thnn a few hundred yards before we caine to tracks made but a few min utes before, and almost Instantly after ward saw three bull elk, probably those I had aeeu on the precedlug day. We had been running briskly up bill through the soft, beary loam. In which our feet made no noise, but slipped and Ti YOUTH'S cor.iPAr.ior. IT MMII inn Will TNI YU1 Hill. The Contents of the S3 Issues for lo will Include 50 Star Articles By Men and Women of Distinc tion In Many Vocations. 250 Capital Stories Of Chnrartfir and Adventure. liultHllnu, six r'lno Serlnls. 1000 Up-To-Date Notes tin Current -'vents. Natural History and Sclnnco. 2000 One-Minute Stories Hits of Humor and Miscellany The Weekly health Article. Timely editorials. The. Chil dren's Pane, etc. Smmplo Com of thm uptr on J IllattrattJ Announeomont for 1909 Hnt f rom to ony mddrotM. Free to January, 1909. Evry now aubecrib? who at nc cut out and Nndi (hit clip (or monliona this ppr) with $1.75 will rocoivo rRfcfc All tha imuvi of Th Companion for Iho remaining waaki of ltHH, including tha Doautiivl Holiday Nutnbora. Tha Companion! Calendar for 1909 "In t.rtndmothar'ft Isardan," lit ho raphad in thutaan color. Than Th Companion for tha S2 rok of iTHty a library of tha baat raading for avorr aiambar of lha family. THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, BOSTON, MASS. SUBSCRIPTIONS RECEIVED AT THIS OFFICE. o sank deeply; as a consequence, 1 was all out of breath and my hand bo un steady that I missed my first shot Elk, however, do not vanish with the Instantaneous rapidity of fright ened deer, and these three trotted off In a direction quartering to us. I doubt If I ever went through more violent exertion than In the next ten min utes. We raced after them at full apeed, opening Are; I wounded all three, but none of the wounds were Immediately disabling. They trotted on and we panted afterwards, slipping on the wet earth, pitching headlong over charred stumps, leaping on dead logs thut broke beneath our weight, more than once measuring our full length on the ground, halting and fir ing whenever we got a chance. At last one bull fell; we passed him by after the others which were still run ning up-hill. The sweat streamed Into my eyes and made furrows In the sooty mud that covered my face, from having fallen full length down on the burnt earth; I sobbed for breath as I toiled at a shambling trot after them, as nearly done out as could well be. At this moment they turned down-hill. It was a great rellof; a man who Is too done up to go a steep up-hill can still run fast enough down; with a last spurt I closed In near enough to fire again; one elk fell; the other went off at a wulk. We passed the second elk and I kept on alone after the third, not able to go at more than a slow trot myself, and too much winded to dare risk a shot at any distance. He got out of the burnt patch, going into some thick timber In a deep ravine; I closed pretty well, and rushed after him into a thicket of young evergreens. Hardly was I in when there was a scramble and bounce among them and I caught a glimpse of a yellow body moving out to one side; I ran out toward the edge and fired through the twigs at the moving beast. Down It went, but when I ran up, to my disgust I found that I had jumped and killed. In my haste, a black-tall deer, which mast have been already roused by the pas sage of the wounded elk. I at once took up the trail of the latter again, but after a little while the blood grew less, and ceased, and I lost the track; nor could I find It, hunt as bard as I might The poor beast could not have gone five hundred yards; yet we never found the carcass. Then I walked alowly back past the deer I had slain by so curious a mis chance, to the elk. The first one shot down was already dead. The second was only wounded, though It could not rise. When it saw us coming it seught to hide from us by laylag Its neck flat on the ground, but when we came up close It raised Irs bead and looked proudly at us, the heavy inane bris tling up on the neck, while Its eyes glared and lta teeth grated together. I felt really sorry to kill It Though these were both well-known elks, tbelr antlers, of tea points were small, twisted, and lll-shapednu fact hardly worth preNervlng, except to call to mind a chase in which during a few minutes 1 did as much downright hard work as It has often fallen to my lot to do. The burnt earth had blackened our faces and hands till we looked like negroes. The finest bull, with the best head that I got was killed In the midst of very beautiful and grand surroundings. We. bad tu-ea hunting through a great pine wood which ran up to the edge of a broad canyon-like valley, bounded by sheer walls of rock. There were fresh tracks of elk about and we had been advancing up wind with even more than our usual caution when, on stewliig out Into a patch of open ground, near the edge ef the cliff, we came upon a great bull, beating and thrashtug his antler agalnat a young tree, about eighty yards off. II stopped and faced us for a second, bis mighty antlers thrown In the air, as he held his head aloft Itchlnd him tow ered the tall and sombre pines, while at his feet the Jutting crags overhung the ibvp chasm below, that stretched off botweeu high walls of barren and snow-streaked rocks, the evergreens clingtru; to their sldex, while along the bottom the rapid torrent gathered In place into black and sullen mountain likes. As the boll turned to run I struck him Just behind the shoulder; he reeled to the death-blow, but stag gered gamely on a few rods Into the foreitt lefore sinking to the ground, with my second bullet through his lungs. Two or three days later titan thut I killed another bull, nearly as large. In the same patch of woods In which I had slain the first A bear had been feeding on the carcass of the latter, and, after a vain effort to find Ills den, we determined to beat through the woods and try to start him up. Ac cordingly, Merrltlcld. the teamster, and myself took parallel courses some three hundred junta apart, ami started at one end to walk through to the other. I doubt If the teamster much wished to meet a bear alone (while nothing would have given Merrlrteld more hearty and unaffected eujoyment than to have en countered an entire family;, and he ROOOE RIVER COURIER. gradually edged In pretty close to me. Where the woods became pretty open I saw him suddenly lift his rifle and fire, and immediately afterwards a splendid bull elk trotted past in front of me. evidently untouched, the team ster having missed. The elk ran to the other side of two trees that stood close together some seventy yards off. and stopped for a moment to look round. Kneeling down I fired at the only part of his body I could see be tween the two trees, and sent a bullet Into bis flank. Away he went and I after, running In my moccasins over the moss and pine needles for all there was In me. If a wounded elk gets fairly started he will go at a measured trot for many hours, and even If mor tally hurt may run twenty miles be fore falling: while at the same time he does not start off at full speed, and will often give an active hunter a chance for another shot as he turns and changi-s his course preparatory to taking a straight line. 80 I raced along after the elk at my very best speed for a few hundred feet, and then got an other shot os he went across a little glade. Injuring his hip somewhat Tbts made It all right for me. and auother hundred yards' burst took me up to where I was able to put a ball In a fatal spot, and the grand old fellow sank down and fell over on his side. No sportsman can ever feel much keener pleasure and self-satisfaction than when, after a successful stalk and good shot, he walks up to a grand elk lying dead In the cool shade of the great evergreens, and looks at the massive and yet finely moulded form, aud at the mighty antlers which nre to serve In the future as the trophy and proof of his successful skill. Still hunting the.elk on the mountains is as noble a kind of sport as can well be imagined; there Is nothing more pleas ant and enjoyable, and at the same time It demands that the hunter shall bring Into play many manly qualities. There bave been few duys of my hunt ing life that were so full of unalloyed happiness as were those spent on the Bighorn range. From morning till night I waa on foot, in cool, bracing air, now moving silently through the vast melancholy pine forests, now treading the brink of high, rocky prec ipices, always amid the moat grand and beautiful scenery; aud always after as noble and lordly game as la to be found In the Western world. Blnce writing the above I killed an elk near my ranch: probably the last of bis race that will ever be found in our neighborhood. It waa just before the fall round-up. An old hunter, who was under some obligation to me. told me that he had shot a cow elk and bad seen the tracks of one or two others not more than twenty-Ave mile off, in a place where the cattle rarely wandered. Such a chance was not to be neglected and. on the first free day, one of my Elk-born foremen, Will Dow by name, and myself, took our hunt ing horses and atarted off, accompa nied by the ranch wagon. In the direc tion of the probable haunts of the doomed deer. Towards nightfall we truck a deep spring pool, near by the remains of an old Indian encampment It was at the head of a great basin, several miles across. In which we be lieved the game to He. The wagon was halted and we pitched camp; there was plenty of dead wood, and soon the venison stenks were broiling over the coals raked from beneath the crackling cottonwood logs, while In the narrow valley the ponies grazed almost within the circle of the flicker ing flre-llght. It was in the cool and pleasant month of September; and long after going to bed we lay awake under the blankets watching the stars that on clear nights always shine with such Intense brightness over the lonely Western plains. We were up and off by the gray of the morning. It was a beautiful hunt- Then ion i nmli urn! tnotvtncnt In the WmiKT U'lOU' file. lug day; the sundogs hung in the red dawn; the wind hardly stirred over the crisp grass; aud though the sky was cloudless yet the weather had that queer, smoky, hazy look that It Is most apt to take on during the time of the Indian summer. From a high spur of the table-land we looked out far and wide over a great stretch of brokeu country, the brown of whose hills aud Talleys was varied everywhere by patches of dull ml and vivid yellow, tokens that the trees were already put ting on the dress with which they " rftON. KOVEEEMK greet the mortal ripening of the year. The deep and narrow but smooth ra vines runulug up towards the edges of the plateaus were heavily wooded, the bright green tree-tops rising to a height tbey rarely reach in the bar ren plains-country; and the rocky sides of the sheer gorges were clad with a thick growth of dwarfed cedars, while here and there the trailing Vir ginia creepers burned crimson among their sombre musses. We hunted stealthily up-wiud. across the line of the heavily timbered eou lies. We soon saw traces of our quarry; old tracks at first, then the fresh footprints of a single elk-a bull. Judging by the slze-whlch had come down to drink at a mirey alkali pool, its feet slipping so as to leave the marks of the false boofs In the soft soil. We hunted wlrh pulnstaklug and noiseless care for many nours; at iui as I led old Manltou up to look over the edge of a narrow ravine, there was a crash and movement In the tltnoer below me. nnd Immediately afterwards I caught a gllmpMe of a great bull elk trotting up through the young trees as he gallantly breasted the steep uui-siue opposite. When clear of the woous. and directly across the valley trom me, he Rtopped and turned half round, throwing his head In the air to gaze for a moment at the Intruder. My uui i .mirk ton far back. but. neverthe less, made a deadly wound, and the elk went over the crest or tne nui at o-ii.i nloneine eallon. We followed the bloody trail for a quarter of a mile, and found him dead in a tnicheu Though of large size, he yet had but Kinnll antlers, with few points. A Deceptive Attitude. A scene that was more than farcical, declares M. A. l. occurred in tho house of commons lust season. Two of the most respectable members of the bouse were seen with their coats off aud with a staid old policeman standing between them. They two had been dowustalrs to wssh their hands and by some mis chance bad changed coats. They went Into the house together. Oue of them, putting his hand Into his coat pocket, pulled out an old brier pipe of very strong flavor. It was not bis. He looked at the coat, also that of bis neighbor, aud, turning to his friend, aald: ' "Excuse me. but I think you bave put on my coat" "I beg" your pardou. I have done nothing of the kind." "I think." replied the other member, 'this Is your pipe, and if you put your band Into the right hand pocket of the coat you are wearing yon will find a cigar case." "Pear me!" was the reply. "You cer tainly are right. What shall we doT' "We cannot change in the bouse." ob served the first member. "Let us go Into the division lobby." Here Is where the policeman came in. 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