American Ano-ler Advertiser. 



waters within easy reach of sportsmen are the streams 

 . . . along the line of the . . . 



Baltimore an? 



Ohio Railroad 



/^N the eastern slope of the Alleghany Mountains are the 

 Potomac, the Shenandoah and their tributaries, all 

 famous for bass, while across the divide are the Cheat, the 

 Youghiogheny and the Monongahela. The Cheat and the 

 head waters of the last two named are celebrated for brook 

 trout. The fishing grounds are in most cases within gun- 

 shot of the railroad stations, and sportsmen are saved the 

 expense and trouble of carrying their outfits long distances. 

 For rates of fare, time of trains and further information, 

 address 



Chas. O. Scull, 



General Passenger Agent B. & 0. Railroad, 

 BALTIMORE. MD. 



QuEENa Crescent 



ROUTE 

 SOUTH 



SUPERB ^VESTIBULED 



TRAINS 



TO PRINCIPAL 



SOUTHERN POINTS 



SHORT LINE 



UNEQUALED SERVICE 



SEND FOR PRINTED MATTER 



W. C. RiNEARSON, G. P; A. 



Cincinnati 



I! 



United States Hotel, 



NEWBURGH, N. Y. 



STEPHEN TREADWELL, Proprietor. 



Opposite the Ferry and within two minutes' walk of 

 West Shore and Erie Depots. Trolley passes the door. 

 Headquarters for Fishermeu and Sportsmen. 

 Rates, $2.00 per day. 



WHEEETOGO! 



...FOR GOOD... 



Shooting i"^i^ 



Fishing COUNTRY 



In the Mississippi Valley to-day is 

 along the line of *''^ m 



IN 



.QUNTAIN 



»ROUTE 



MISSOURI, 

 ARKANSAS 



AND 



LOUISIANA. 



SMALL GAME is very abundant and has 

 ^— ^— .^^^^— — been shot at very little. 

 DEER and TURKEY arc plentiful, and the 

 fishing' for black bass and other game fishes of 

 the very best. THIS LINE also reaches direct 

 from ST. LOUIS or MEMPHIS, by double daily 

 through car service, the famous hunting and 

 fishing grounds on the Gulf. 



SPECIAL FEATURES OFFERED : 



Reduced Rates to Sportsmen. 

 Hunting Cars Fully Equipped. 

 Side Tracking Cars on or Near the Grounds. 

 Carrying Free of Dogs, Guns and Camp 

 Equipment. 



WRITE For copy of Ideal Hunting and 

 ^^— ^^^— Fishing Pamphlet (descriptive and 

 illustrated) of best locations and other informa- 

 tion, to Company's Agents, or 



H. C. TOWNSEND, 



General Passenger Agent, 



ST. LOUIS. 



Hunting the Md Goat. 



The White Goat, or Rocky Mountain Goat, as it is in- 

 discriminately called, is a species of big game rarely 

 hunted by sportsmen. This is not so much because of 

 llie difficulty of killing the animal, nor because of its 

 actual rarity. It is a stupid animal, easily shot when 

 once found. It is not, however, found in the usual hunt- 

 ing grounds, as are bear, deer, elk, etc. It is remote 

 from the common localities, but where found is in 

 goodly numbers. It ranges very high up in the moun- 

 tains, above timber line usually, among rocks and cliffs 

 This requires great labor to get to it, but once there the 

 hunter will get his game nine times out of ten. 



If you care to read of a goat hunt made in the Bitter 

 Root Range in Montana, in the fall of 189.5, send six 

 cents to Chas. S. Fee, General Passenger Agent, North- 

 ern Pacific Railway, St. Paul, Minn., for Wonderland '90, 

 which recounts such a hunting expedition. 



