542 
FOREST AND STREAM 
Oct. 25, 1913. 
The Sportsman Tourist. 
North Carolina. 
HUNTER’S LODGE! 
Good Quail Shooting! 
Choice accommodations for ladies and gentlemen. 
Best Chef south of Potomac. 
Terms: $3.00 per day; $75.00 per month. 
GEN’L FRANK A. BOND :: Buies, N. C. 
Best Mixed Shooting in America. 
Ducks, Geese, Swans, Quail, Shore Birds—White’s Pre¬ 
serve, Waterlily, Currituck Sound, North Carolina. 
GOOD DUCK AND GOOSE SHOOTING.—Canvasback, 
Redhead, and other ducks from battery. Also brush 
blind shooting on Currituck Sound. Address J. B. LEE, 
Tulls, Currituck county, North Carolina. 
Pennsylvania. 
Shooting at New Spruce Cabin Inn 
Rooms en suite and with private bath. Electric lights. 
Steam heat. All amusements. Excellent Grouse, Squirrel, 
Rabbit and Deer shooting. Open season for Grouse, 
Squirrel and Rabbits, Oct. 15th to Dec. 1st. Deer, Nov. 
10th to 25th. D., L. & W. R. R. to Cresco Station, Pa. 
W. J. & M. D. PRICE, P. O. Canadensis, Pa. 
Virginia. 
MODERN HOTEL 
Cottages, rent or sale on fishing grounds. Guides 
and power boat, 1 man. $3; 2 men, $4 day. Channel 
Bass, Kings, Trout, Hogfish galore. Send for book¬ 
let. A. H. G. MEARS, YVachapreague, Eastern 
Share, Virginia. 
Property For Sale. 
READ THIS 
Chance of a Lifetime 
One of the best trout hatcheries in the United States, with 
sufficient property and excellent facilities for sportsman's 
club. Located on Great South Bay, 72 miles from New 
York City. 23 acres, 15 of which are timber. 8-room house 
with electric lights, barn and large feed house. 5 minutes' 
walk from station. 30 ponds on property fed by pure 
springs. Has 150,000 trout on hand. Owner guarantees to 
raise 1%-lb. trout in 2 years at 12 cents per pound. One 
lake adjoining can be bought or leased. 3 more within 3 
miles. Good quail, partridge and rabbit shooting on prop¬ 
erty. Fine duck shooting at the back door. Not one club 
on Long Island has facilities for raising fish so safely and 
cheaply. rTosperous business and assured market tor 
breeders. Owner wishes to retire. For price and particu¬ 
lars address JOHN RACKOW, Crystal Spring Hatchery, 
Eastport, New York. 
AUCTION 
Two bungalows in the Catskills, Ulster Co., N. Y., on the 
famous Beaverkill trout stream. Also farm of 210 acres, 
with one mile of private stream, will be sold regardless of 
cost by the Ulster Lumber Co., Oct. 21. The farm would 
make a fine game preserve, and contains 60 acres of for- 
e«t. Large game of all kinds is plentiful and can be shot 
on the premises. For particulars address 
Y. R. YOORHIES, Agent, Livingston Manor, N. Y. 
Never Sick! Readers of the 
Health Culture Magazine 
Teaching the art of building and pre¬ 
serving health without the use of drugs. 
Edited by Elmer Lee, M.D .one of the 
brightest and most advanced writers on 
the Art of Living, whose teachings on the 
causes of diseases and dragless methods of 
treatment are attracting wide-spread at¬ 
tention. The Relation to Health of Food, 
Air, Exercise, etc., is considered. Its aim 
is to make its readers better Physically. 
Mentally and Morally, to save the lives 
of children, adding to the length of life, 
and the cure of disease by the use of 
drugless methods. Opposed to the use of drags, vaccination 
and serums, and needless surgical operations. There is no other 
just like it. $1.00 a year; 15c. a number; 6 months 
* On Trial” only 25c. Money back if desired. 
The Health Culture Co., 1133R Broadway, New York 
The whole trip was made without guides, and 
only by the help of a compass and a sectional 
railroad map, which we found to be very accu¬ 
rate. This map is issued by the Duluth & Jason 
Range R. R. in their pamphlet entitled, “The 
Old Vermillion Trail.” 
To anyone who enjoys a wild rugged coun¬ 
try we heartily recommend a trip to Crooked 
Lake. 
Indiana Quail. 
Indianapolis, Ind., Oct. 18 .—Editor Forest 
and Stream: Our season for hunting quail in 
Indiana opens Nov. io, and these few verses 
came to my mind during the past few days after 
we had our first frost of the season. I had in¬ 
tended sending them to an old friend, living in 
Southern Indiana, with whom I have spent many 
happy days in hunting bobwhite during the past 
ten years, and with whom I intend to hunt again 
on Nov. io. 
Around about his home we still find much 
buckberry, or Indian currant, bitter sweet, sumac, 
blackberry, wild grape and ivy vine, which trail 
the old rail fences, which are quite common 
thereabout. The verses especially point to that 
thrill so often experienced and talked about by 
all quail hunters, when the bevy is flushed—a 
thrill which never has become old to me. 
I am another one of your present subscribers 
who had the pleasure of reading Forest and 
Stream when I was a boy as long ago as a 
quarter of a century. While the verses have no 
merit, should you care to publish them you may 
do so, and in the event that you do, I shall then 
send my friend a copy. David M. Isgrigg. 
Dear loyal friend and comrade true, 
Past hunts are in review, 
I yearn to tread the fields anew, 
With Don and Gyp and you. 
I see again that old rail fence. 
Where birds were hatched of yore, 
The ivy vine which grew so dense, 
Around your out-latched door. 
The old saw mill which stands there still, 
On ground where birds are found. 
The turnip patch, the persimmon tree, 
Are scenes in dreams I see. 
On summer day and in winter gray. 
In May and autumn gay, 
We heard the flight of bold Bobwhite, 
A speeding on his way. 
The frost is here, the day is near. 
And again with keen delight, 
I hope to hear that whirr so clear. 
Of “Bob” in hasty flight. 
The Voracious Cod. 
Old fishermen say, that for its size and 
bulk, the codfish is the grossest feeder in the 
sea. It is omnivorous, nothing comes amiss to 
it. Strange finds have been taken from the 
gullets of the cod, ranging from a human hand 
to a pocket knife. Purses, pocket-books, pieces 
of jewelry, as well as other articles have from 
time to time found in them. 
An old-timer who fished off the coast of 
Newfoundland for years used to tel! a story of 
a find that, to say the least, was very unusual. 
He was fishing one day and a gust of wind took 
his sleeve-vest and blew it overboard. He was 
pretty much disgusted at his loss, especially as 
his pipe—he was an inveterate smoker—was in 
the pocket of the vest. Some time after he 
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Send $1.95 for the two magazines. If you don’t 
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as to character and quality of circulation. 
THE 
“Angler’s News” 
Wishes You Tight Lines! 
Is Certain to Interest You. 
ARTICLES — NEWS— ILLUSTRATIONS 
Concerning Sport in 
RIVER, LAKE AND SEA. 
Published weekly. Post free 6/6 one year; 
3/3 half year. 
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