i 



98 THE GAME BREEDER 



MORE GAME AND HThe C^ ^ *-^ ^ T^4Ay>^A/>1A °^^ DOLLAR PER YEAR 



FEWER GAME LAWS 1 , . \j2iulZ OiCCQCl SINGLE COPIES JO CENTS 



The Game Conservation Society, Publishers, have planned a magazine which 

 will be devoted to game and game fish, "from the egg to the kitchen." A maga- 

 zine for farmers, sportsmen, dealers in live and dead game, hotel-keepers, and all 

 others who are interested in game either for sport or for profit. 



While propagation and the practical protection of game will occupy much 

 space, there will be many entertaining stories of shooting and fishing, especially in 

 places where the shooting and fishing are worth while. The magazine will continue 

 to urge a reform in the game laws in States which have not amended their laws 

 so as to encourage game breeding. 



Since game and game fish rapidly are becoming plentiful in many places where 

 the laws have been reformed so as to encourage the industry of game breeding, it 

 becomes important to know how to cook and serve these desirable foods. There 

 will be a department on game cookery. 



There will be much about the gun-dogs used in taking game and also about 

 the dogs used in protecting game. 



There will be a series of important articles about the State Game Departments. 

 What they are doing and what they should do, will be an important feature of the 

 magazine during the years 1912 and 1913. These articles will be written by skilled 

 writers, instructed to tell the sportsmen and others interested just what the 

 departments are doing. Needed reforms will be pointed out, and while these articles 

 will be critical there will be no "muck raking," the object of the magazine 

 being to aid and not to hinder, to be helpful and not destructive. 



There will be a series of handsomely illustrated articles on American Game 

 Clubs and Preserves. Many interesting places have been visited by those who are 

 preparing these articles, and the reader will be surprised to learn that thousands 

 of quail are shot every year on each of a number of preserves, which will be de- 

 scribed in early issues of The Game Breeder. 



The story of the "More Game" movement, its peculiar start, and its progress 

 up to date, will be interesting to all who believe that it will prove Mr. Huntington's 

 contention, that, 



"It should be an easy matter to make North America the biggest 

 game producing country in the world." 



The magazine goes to several thousand men who are actively interested in 

 practical game preserving for sporty and to several hundred breeders 'in the United 

 States and Canada who are rearing game for profit. 



