Shelter
7 |
III. |
How to Make the Fallen-Tree Shelter and the Scout-Master |
11 |
IV. |
How to Make the Adirondack, the Wick-Up, the Bark Teepee, the Pioneer, and the Scout |
15 |
V. |
How to Make Beaver-Mat Huts, or Fagot Shacks, without Injury to the Trees |
18 |
VI. |
Indian Shacks and Shelters |
22 |
VII. |
Birch Bark or Tar Paper Shack |
27 |
VIII. |
Indian Communal Houses |
31 |
IX. |
Bark and Tar Paper |
36 |
X. |
A Sawed-Lumber Shanty |
39 |
XI. |
A Sod House for the Lawn |
47 |
XII. |
How to Build Elevated Shacks, Shanties, and Shelters |
52 |
XIII. |
The Bog Ken |
54 |
|
XIV. |
Over-Water Camps |
62 |
XV. |
Signal-Tower, Game Lookout, and Rustic Observatory |
65 |
XVI. |
Tree-Top Houses |
72 |
XVII. |
Caches |
77 |
XVIII. |
How to Use an Axe |
83 |
XIX. |
How to Split Logs, Make Shakes, Splits, or Clapboards. How to Chop a Log in Half. How to Flatten a Log. Also Some Don'ts |
87 |
XX. |
Axemen's Camps |
92 |
XXI. |
Railroad-Tie Shacks, Barrel Shacks, and Chimehuevis |
96 |
XXII. |
The Barabara |
100 |
XXIII. |
The Navajo Hogan, Hornaday Dugout, and Sod House |
104 |
XXIV. |
How to Build an American Boy's Hogan |
107 |
XXV. |
How to Cut and Notch Logs |
115 |
XXVI. |
Notched Log Ladders |
119 |
XXVII. |
A Pole House. How to Use a Cross-Cut Saw and a Froe |
122 |
XXVIII. |
Log-Rolling and Other Building Stunts |
126 |
XXIX. |
The Adirondack Open Log
|