390 



RECREATION 



County. 

 Broome, 



Orange, 



St. Lawrence 



Onondaga, 



Yates r 



Dutchess, 



Dutchess, 



Queens, 



Address. 

 Sanataria Springs, 



N. Y. 

 Port Jervis, N. Y. 

 Madrid, N. Y. 

 Memphis, N. Y. 

 Penn Yan, N. Y. 

 Chas. H. DeLong, Pawling, N. Y. 

 Jacob Tompkins, Billings, N. Y. 

 Gerard Van Nostrand, Flushing, L. I. 



Name of Warden. 

 John Sullivan, 



Thomas Harris, 

 J. W. Aitchison, 

 James Lush 

 B. L. Wren, 



LOCAL WARDENS IN OHIO 

 Stark, A. Dangeleisen, Massillon 



Franklin, Brook L. Terry, 



Cuyahoga, A. W. Hitch, 



Clark, 



Erie, 



Fulton, 



Allen, 



Hamilton, 



Knox, 



Lorain, 



Ottawa, 



Muskingum, 



Scioto, 



Highland, 



Fred C. Ross, 



David Sutton, 



L. C. Berry, 

 S. W. Knisely, 

 W. C. Rippey 



Grant Phillips, 

 T.J. Bates, 

 Frank B. Shirley, 

 Frank D. Abell, 

 J. F. Kelley, 

 James G. Lyle, 



208 Woodward Av., 



Columbus. 

 161 Osborn St., 



Cleveland. 

 169 W. Main St., 



Springfield. 

 418 Jackson St., 



Sandusky. 

 Swanton. 

 Lima. 

 4465 Eastern Ave. 



Cincinnati. 

 Mt. Vernon. 

 Elyria. 

 Lakeside. 

 Zanesville. 

 Portsmouth. 

 Hillsboro. 



LOCAL WARDENS IN CONNECTICUT. 

 Fairfield, George B. Bliss. 2 Park Row, Stam- 



ford, Ct. 

 Harvey C. Went, n Park St., Bridge- 

 port, Ct. 

 Hartford, Abbott C. Collins, 783 Main Street, 



Hartford, Ct. 

 (County Warden, care Conn. Mutual Life Ins. Co.) 

 Litchfield, Dr. H. L. Ross, P. O. Box 100, Ca- 

 naan, Ct. 

 New Haven, Wilbur E. Beach, 318 Chapel Street, 



New Haven, Ct. 



LOCAL WARDENS IN NEW JERSEY. 

 Mercer, Jos. Ashmore, 124 Taylor St., 



Trenton 

 New Brunswick. 

 Pompton Plains. 

 Dover. 

 Butler. 

 Somerville. 



Middlesex, D. W. Clark, 



Morris, Joseph Pellet. 



Morris, Chas. W. Blake, 



Morris, Francis E. Cook, 



Somerset, G. E. Morris, 



Sussex, Isaac D. Williams, Branch vilie 



Union, A. H. Miller, Cranford. 



C. M. Hawkins, Roselle. 



Warren, {jg&JIgfc-r. J PMlipsburg. 



LOCAL WARDENS IN PENNSYLVANIA. 



Venango, G. D. Benedict, Pleasantville. 



Northumberland, W. A. Reppard, Shamokin. 

 Potter, Byron Bassett, Coudersport. 



Crawford, 



(West half) Jasper Tillotson, Tillotson. 



(East half) Geo. T. Meyers, Titusviiie. 

 Cambria, W.H.Lambert, 720 Coleman Ave., 



Johnstown. 

 Beaver, N. H. Covert, Beaver Falls. 



McKean, C. A. Duke, Duke Center. 



LOCAL WARDENS IN MICHIGAN. 

 Kalkaska, W. H. Dunham, Kalkaska. 



Kalamazoo, 

 Sanilac, 



C. E. Miller, 

 W. D. Young, 



Augusta. 

 Deckerville. 



LOCAL WARDENS IN VIRGINIA. 

 Mecklenburg, j.H.Ogburn, South Hill. 



LOCAL WARDENS IN WYOMING. 

 Fremont, Nelson Yarnall, Dubois. 



Uinta < {I'.L.pSerson, } Jackson. 



Carbon, Kirk Dyer, Medi ine Bow. 



LOCAL WARDENS IN MONTANA. 

 Beaverland, Wm. Sedding, Dillon. 



DISCOUNTS TO LEAGUE MEMBERS. 



The following firms have agreed to give 

 members of the L. A. S. a discount of 2 

 per cent, to 10 per cent, on all goods bought 

 of them. In ordering please give L. A. S. 

 number: 



Syracuse Arms Co., Syracuse, N. Y. Guns. 

 Davenport Fire Arms Co., Norwich, Conn. Shot 



guns, rifles. 

 Gundlach Optical Co., Rochester, N. Y. Photographic 



goods. 

 Blair Camera Co., Rochester, N.Y .Photographic goods. 

 Folmer & Schwing, 271 Canal Street, New York City. 



Photographic goods. 

 The Bostwick Gun and Sporting Goods Co., 1528 



Arapahoe St., Denver, Col. 



SOME GOOD GAME LAWS. 



The Hon. John S. Wise, writing of the 

 Silz case, says: 



When the Federal Union was formed 

 and the Constitution adopted, the States 

 granted no power to the United States 

 over the fisheries within their jurisdiction, 

 or the subject of game and hunting within 

 their limits. Concerning the former, the 

 Supreme Court of the United States dis- 

 cussed the subject fully in the case of Mc- 

 Cready vs. Virginia (94 U. S., p. 395). 

 Concerning the latter, it fully discussed the 

 subject in the case of Geer vs. Connecti- 

 cut (161 U. S., p. 519), decided in 1895. In 

 the Geer case the Supreme Court cited ap- 

 provingly (p. 529) the language of the 

 Supreme Court of California, which, 

 speaking of the authority of the people as 

 represented by the State, to whom the 

 game was declared to belong, said: 



"They may, if they see fit, absolutely 

 prohibit the taking of it or traffic and com- 

 merce in it, if it is deemed necessary for 

 the protection or preservation of the pub- 

 lic good," in the case of Ex-parte Maier, 

 103 Cal., 476. 



The Supreme Court also cited approv- 

 ingly, in the same decision, the language 

 of the Supreme Court of Illinois in Mag- 

 ner vs. The People (97 111., 320), decided 

 in 1881: 



"The ownership of the sovereign au- 

 thority is in trust for all the people of the 

 State, and hence, by implication, it is the 

 duty of the Legislature to enact such laws 

 as will best preserve the subject of the 

 trust and secure its beneficial use in the 

 future to the people of the State. But, in 

 any view, the question of individual en- 

 joyment is one of public policy and not 

 of private right." 



The case of Geer cited a number of 

 State decisions, and the Court announced 

 this general doctrine and included in their 

 references the case of Phelps vs. Racey, 

 60 N. Y., 10. It is true that 2 of the judges 

 dissented from the opinion (Field and 

 Harlan), but their dissent, in my opinion, 

 contained a weak argument and ignored 

 the strong declaration of the majority. 



