26 
ROOSEVELT HUNTING GROUNDS. 
HOSPITABLE PLANTERS OF THE HUNTERS’ PARADISE. 
To these great estates, some of them many thousand acres in extent, good 
roads lead across country from the railroads, some hundred miles in all direc¬ 
tions. Not only does this new landed aristocracy make some attempt at rais- 
Copyright 1909, by WATERFALL—TANA RIVER DISTRICT. 
Underwood & Underwood. 
ing potatoes and European fruits and vegetables, but strongly corraled cattle 
as well, and it has been prophesied that, with the gradual moulding of the 
natives into industrious and skilled agriculturists this region and other sec¬ 
tions to the Northwest will become great producers of cotton. The frontier 
