Dec. 8, 1906.] 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
9 2 5 
erroneous point work. Each backed well. Count 
found and pointed five bevies, flushed two bevies 
excusably, had a divided point on one bevy with 
Avalon, and showed skill in his single bird work. 
Also he had excellent bird sense. Avalon pointed 
a single and was unsteady on a bevy point. 
Shot Wind’em and King Woolton started at 
3 :o3. The heat was a poor one. King showed 
ability to find and point birds, but gave little 
heed to the game. He was beyond control much 
of the time. Shot Wind’em ranged with speed, 
but was very weak in his work on birds. 
Thursday. 
There was a sharp frost during the night. The 
morning was clear, cool and sharp. As the sun 
rose, the chill was dissipated. Everything was 
favorable for good work. 
Gipsy Noble and Lemon’s Rodfield started at 
8:21. The bird work was meagre, but such as 
it was it was a mixture of good and poor. Their 
range was fairly good. 
Caesar and Granite Dick started at 10:33. 
Caesar soon took a long cast, and quite a while 
was devoted to searching for him. In the mean¬ 
time, Dick found and pointed two bevies. When 
the dogs were brought together again, Caesar 
worked much better to the gun. He is a dog 
of tremendous energy, speed and endurance, but 
at times is difficult to control. Dick found and 
pointed a third bevy. He ranged well and with 
fairly good judgment. 
Policy Girl and Maud T. started at 1:26. Maud 
was completely overwhelmed in this heat by 
Girl’s superior work. The latter found and 
pointed three bevies, made several false points, 
some good points on singles, ranged with fair 
speed and judgment and showed much merit. 
Maud’s work was inferior. 
WINNERS. 
1st. Fishel’s Frank. 
2d. Jessie Rodfield’s Count Gladstone. 
3d. Policy Girl and Granite Dick divided. 
The Forest and Stream may be obtained from 
any nezvsdealer on order. Ask your dealer to 
supply you regularly. 
IN DANGER. 
“I have often stood in a slaughterhouse,” observed the 
fleshy man from Chicago, ‘‘while the butchers were kill¬ 
ing the hogs on all sides of me.” 
“Oh,” exclaimed the tender-hearted, but tactless New 
Haven girl, “weren’t you dreadfully afraid?” 
"Routes for Sportsmen. 
CLYDE LINE TO 
FLORIDA 
Only Direct All-water \ Route Between 
New York, Boston and 
Charleston, S.C., J acksonville, Fla. 
St. Johns River Service between Jacksonville, 
Palatka, De Land, Sanford, Enterprise, 
Fla., and Intermediate Landings 
The "Clyde Line” is the favorite route between New 
York, Boston, Philadelphia, and Eastern Points. 
and Charleston, S. C., and Jacksonville. Fla., 
making direct connection for all points South and Southwest. 
Fast Modern Steamships and Superior Service 
THEO. G. EGER, V.P. &. G.M. 
General Office: Branch: 
Pier 36, N. R. N. Y. 290 Broadway 
A Cluh Cockt&il 
IS A BOTTLED DELIGHT 
The best beginning to Christmas merri¬ 
ment and the most delightful drink in the 
world. To be prized for their uniform 
delicacy in flavor, for their rare smooth¬ 
ness—of perfectly blended old liquors, aged 
in wood to exquisite mellowness. No 
chance-proportioned, unblended cocktail can 
possibly be so good. CLUB COCKTAILS 
are measure-mixed to absolute uniformity. 
Seven kinds—all delightful—of good 
grocers everywhere. 
G. F. HEUBLEIN & BRO., Sole Props. 
Hartford New York London 
GO TO 
Homosassa, Fla. 
A SPORTSMAN’S PARADISE. 
Hunting: and Fishing:. Wild Game. 
Deer, Panther, Bear, Raccoons, Wildcat, Rabbits, Opossum, 
Wild Turkey, Ducks. Fish in abundance. 
THE RENDEZVOUS, 
NEW HOTEL. 80 Acres. Tropical Park. Southern and 
eastern exposure on Homosassa River, Sunny outside sleeping 
rooms. Booklet on request. W. S. LOWRY, Manager. 
Open Dec. 1, 1906. 
Duck, Quail and Rabbit Shooting 
at Bayport, Long Island. 
Dogs, guns and ammunition furnished; moderate charges; 
best accommodations. Apply 
HENRY STOKES, Bayport Hotel, Bayport, L. I. 
TOWER HILL FARM 
will accommodate sportsmen for the season, November 
1st to March 1st. Quail, woodcock and other game. 
Good dogs and team. Comfortable Southern home. En¬ 
gagement with one party at a time. I. M. TULL, 
Kinston, N. C. 
SHOOTING, FISHING and BOATING. 
Sportsmen who desire a home on the sea shore where there is 
good shooting, fishing and boating, write for information to 
E. M. MAXWELL. Cardinal, Mathews County, Va. 
HOTEL GRACE, 
Clarksville, Mecklenburg County, Va. 
The ideal quail hunter’s home. Also deer, duck, geese, 
turkey, etc. Deer season, Oct. 1 to Jan. 1. Quail and 
other game, season, Nov. 1 to Feb. 1. Large areas for 
hotel guests. Modern hotel, with water-works, inside 
toilets, electric bells, etc. Fine place for sportsmen and 
their families. Experienced guides and good dogs. Address, 
W. F. SNEAD, Prop., Clarksville, Mecklenburg Co., Va. 
EDWARD SHEFFIELD. 
Guide and Outfitter, St. Anthony, Idaho. Reference. 
Currituck Sound—Sportsmen’s Home. 
Game plentiful; geese, swans, ducks of all kinds. This 
land is in the center of the Swan Island property. I 
bait my land with corn and rice. Rates per day, $4, 
guides, board, decoys. L. R. WHITE, Corolla, N. C. 
This property is for sale. 26 
Hotels for Sportsmen. 
FOR GOOD OUA1L SHOOTING go to EUGENE 
ALSTON, Panacea, N. C. 23 
Burners’ Lodge 
Luxurious Winter Home for 
Gentlemen and Ladies. 
Abundance of Quail! 
Unlimited Shooting Grounds! 
JWol a Cheap Place. 
FRANK A. BOND. Buies, N. C. 
Brookline, Mass., Jan. 30, 1906. 
Col. Fred A. Olds, Raleigh, N. C.: 
My Dear Sir —Having just returned from a visit 
to Gen’l F. A. Bond, Hunters’ Lodge, N. C., I 
hasten to thank you for having put me in com¬ 
munication with that gentleman. Certainly no one 
could ask more than a comfortable home, a luxu¬ 
rious table, pleasant society and an abundance of 
game within easy reach; and all of this General 
Bond offers those who are fortunate enough to be 
his guests, and when in addition to this, one finds 
his charges extremely moderate, it is certainly 
what you described as a "Bonanza.” Thanking you 
again for your valuable assistance, I am yours 
faithfully, 
(S) Arthur L. Walker. 
MERRITT KINNE, 
Sportsmen’s Guides for partridge, quail, woodcock and 
rabbit. Dog training and boarding a specialty. Refer¬ 
ences on application. We are located on O. W. R. R., 
Centerville Station, Sullivan Co., N. Y.. 
DUCKS. SNIPE. QUAIL AND 
RABBIT ON LONG ISLAND. 
Live duck decoys. License to gun on club grounds. 
Good accommodations. Write for dates. G. CARY 
SMITH, Centre Moriches, L. I. 
BAGLEY FARM, 
Bagley’s Mills, Va. 
Philadelphia Representative. 444 So. 43d Street. 
La Crosse, or South Hill stations; 6 hours from Washing¬ 
ton, D. C., on Seaboard Ry. 20,000 acres of shooting land 
for guests. Positively the best quail, turkey and deer 
shooting in the South. Guides, dogs and horses fur¬ 
nished. tf 
Having some 26,000 acres of exclusive shooting privileges, 
a number of trained quail, wild turkey and ceer dogs, 
competent guides, first-class accommodations and livery, 
I am offering to the sportsman, accommodations, hunt¬ 
ing lands, guides and trained dogs for the hunting of 
quail, wild turkey and deer, taking charge of every ar¬ 
rangement from their stepping off of train at my place 
to their departure from same. A few well-broken quail 
dogs for sale. Northern references given. Game, quail, 
deer and wild turkeys. Open season, Nov. 1 to Feb. 1. 
For further information address DR. H. L. ATKINS, 
Boydton, Va. 
HORSE AND HOVND 
By Roger D. Williams, Master of Foxhounds, Iroquois 
Hunt Club; Keeper Foxhound Stud Book; Director 
National Foxhunters’ Association; Official Judge, 
Brunswick Hunt Club. 
“Horse and Hound” is encyclopedic in all that per¬ 
tains to foxhunting. It has chapters as follows: Hunt¬ 
ing. The Hunter. Schooling of Hunters. Cross- 
Country Riding and Origin of the American Hound. 
Breeding and Raising Horses. The Kennel. Scent. The 
Fox. Tricks and Habits of the Fox. Jn the Field. 
Hunt Clubs. The style is clear and crisp, and every 
chapter abounds with hunting information. The work is 
profusely illustrated. Price, $2.50. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Sa.m Lovel’s Boy. 
By Rowland E. Robinson. Price, $1.25. 
Sam Lovel’s Boy is the fifth of the series of Danvis 
books. No one has pictured the New Englander with 
so much insight as has Mr. Robinson. Sam Lovel and 
Huldah_ are two of the characters of the earlier books in 
the series, and the boy is young Sam, their son, who 
grows up under the tuition of the coterie of friends that 
we know so well, becomes a man just at the time of the 
Civil War, and carries a musket in defense of what he 
believes to be the right. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
