HUNTING AND FISHING GROUNDS AND PLEASURE RESORTS. 
207 
scription, affording capital sport. Rabbits are 
quite plenty and ruffed grouse and occasional- 
ly a deer, it is said, are started in the adjacent 
woods. The hotel accommodations are good, 
and the charges reasouable. Reached by Cam- 
den & Atlantic Railroad. 
At Perth Amboy are quail, ruffed grouse, 
and a few woodcock; there is also excellent 
fishing in the vicinity. Cieese Creek, a short 
distance from Perth Amboy, is a noted resort 
for anglers who delight in captu6ing sheeps- 
head, striped bass, blackfish, weakfish, hing- 
fish, bluefish, porgies, &c. Cheese Creek is 
also the feeding ground for mallards, sprig- 
tails, black ducks, shore birds, jack snipe, and 
other varieties of wild fowl and the snipe fam- 
COATESVILLE BRIDGE, PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. 
ily. At South Amboy are ruffed grouse and 
quail, and also some few woodcock. At the 
Old Bridge and Spottswood good rabbit shoot: 
ing can be had. At Cranberry are quail, wood- 
cock, and squirrels, rabbits and squirrels be- 
ing quite abundant. These places are on the 
Pennsylvania Railrood, Camden & Amboy Di- 
vision, aud east of Bordentown. At Porden- 
town, almost within the corporate limits of the 
village, there is an extensive piece of marsh 
land, called ‘‘The Meadows,” that are excel- 
| lent feeding grounds for snipe and woodcock ; 
and all the thickets around the mill-pond at 
“The Meadow,” and along the stream extend- 
ing about a mile southeast to Reeve’s Mill 
Pond, are also good woodcock grounds, ‘* The 
