XX11 



RECREATION. 



The Focusing Weno 



A new Hawk=Eye Camera that 

 uses daylight loading film car= 

 tridges, and may be focused on 

 the ground glass. An instru= 

 ment that appeals to the most 

 experienced workers. 



The touch of a button releases the film carrier, which 

 is then pulled up by the handle, the ground glass springing 

 automatically into place. Instant and positive in opera- 

 tion. The focusing scale may, of course, be used when 

 desired. An extra extension to bellows permits of working 

 to within 18 inches of subject. 



Improved rising front, B. & L. Automatic 

 Shutter, with iris diaphragm stops. Finest Rapid 

 Rectilinear Lenses. Perfect in construction and 

 finish. 



No. 3 Focusing Weno Hawk=Eye, (3^x4^), o $27.50 



No. 4 Focusing Weno HawK=Eye, (4 x 5), q 30.00 



BLAIR CAMERA CO., Rochester, N. Y. 



Hawk-Eye Catalogues at your 

 dealers or by mail, free. 



The Rocky 

 Mountain Goat 



ranges almost wholly above timber line and in the 

 wildest, rockiest portions of 



The Rockies and the Cascades 



Few men in the country have ever been able to 

 photograph this rare and interesting animal. One 

 of Recreation's staff photographers did succeed in 

 making some fine photographs of goats, and I have 

 had 



A Few Enlargements 



made from the negatives. One of these shows two 

 goats, broadside on. The other shows three resting 

 on a narrow shelter of a perpendicular cliff. Two 

 are lying down ; another is standing up, headed 

 away from the camera, but has turned and is look- 

 ing back. 



The two pictures make an extremely interesting 

 series of studies of the white goat. These photo- 

 graphs have never been equaled in this line and 

 probably never will be. 



The prints are 10x12 in* 



and are on white mounts Y2 x 16. 



Price, $2 each. 



How many will you have ? Address 



RECREATION, 23 W. 24th Street, New York 



Several years ago you published an ac- 

 count of the experience of a lady who spent 

 some weeks on an island in Lake Huron. 

 That article drew me to the same locality 

 and I have since been a regular visitor, with 

 my family, at those islands. The accommo- 

 dation is being much improved. A large 

 camp is being built this year. The Ontario 

 Government is also giving an annual open 

 season at last for moose and caribou, 

 North and West of the Canadian Pacific 

 railroad, between Mallawa and Port Ar- 

 thur. These animals have been protected 

 for a number of years. Geo. Linklater, a 

 Hudson Bay agent for 25 years, although 

 still in his prime, who is manager of the 

 large camp at Desbarats, Ontario, says 

 he can provide plenty of moose. His pro- 

 gramme is to outfit at Desbarats, then take 

 the train to Biscotasing station and canoe 

 down from Biscotasing to Dayton or Des- 

 barats. He managed a Hudson Bay post 

 in the moose country on the upper Missis- 

 saga river for 10 years, knows all the In- 

 dians and is himself a famous hunter. 

 Either a fortnight or a month of shooting 

 can be enjoyed in this way with all the 

 Lshing any man wants thrown in. The In- 

 dian play of "Hiawatha" is now given at 

 Desbarats annually. It is very attractive 

 and is drawing people from all sections. 

 A number of Americans are at Desbarats 

 but there is room for more. 



S. H., Chicago, 



