DWIGHT-WIMAN CLUB. 5 



yellow leaves, and the mixture of forest colours glad- 

 dened while it dazzled the eye. The luncheon at 

 Allandale, where the representatives of the senior club 

 shared in t^e hospitalities of the other, was an earnest 

 of the cameraderie which should pervade such meet- 

 ings. Reaching Muskoka Wharf at 2 p. m., having 

 passed Barrie, prettily placed on Lake Simcoe, the 

 screw steamer Kenozha was in waiting to convey up 

 the Lake and River Muskoka to Bracebridge the crowd 

 of passengers which soon loaded her. Among them 

 were some thirty Italian laborers, an abject, not to say 

 villainous-looking lot, with their pots and pans, their 

 black bread and et ceteras, bound for the track of the 

 Ontario and Pacific Junction Railway in the township 

 of McLean, the alignment of which we could see, partly 

 graded, close to Bracebridge, on the north. The rail- 

 way will, by another year, take our hunters closer to 

 their camp, for by that time it will have reached 

 Huntsville and beyond, designed as it is to tap the 

 Canadian Pacific Railway at Callander. Arrived at 

 Bracebridge, the first person to call upon is always 

 Dr. Bridgeland, who isin himself a storehouse of civil- 

 ity and information. ,, ,r : /. 



Matthews and Hedley, pleasantly accompanied 

 by George Massey of the Ochtwans, were driven 

 over from Bracebridge to Baysville by Saunders, most 

 comfortably, in the unprecedented time of two hours 

 and fifty minutes, and when they arrived found, appeas. 

 ing their hunters' appetites at Jelly's hotel, Mr. Lyman 

 Dwight, of Detroit, and Messrs. Arthur Cox, R. F. Eas- 

 son and H. W. Dwight, of Toronto, the first three home- 

 ward bound. Lyman was in great spirits after his trip, 

 and had shot " one of the biggest bucks ever seen in 



