FOREST AND STREAM 
Oct. 5, 1912 
446 
Resorts for Sportsmen. 
Canada. 
Dinorwic-Wabigoon Regions 
Sportsmen :— 
Why not save your time and money and come to the 
Dinorwic-Wabigoon Region in Northwestern Ontario, and 
get your Moose or Caribou. I have just opened that 
region up for hunting, and it is a virgin forest. One 
party saw 52 bull moose in a two weeks’ trip. 
My home camps are 4S hours’ travel from New York 
City. Bear in mind, that I don’t fill the bush full of 
hunters. I aim to give satisfaction, and can furnish 
references in that respect. Write for full particulars and 
circulars. 
F. C. ARMSTRONG 
Dinorwic, Ont., Canada 
Florida. 
QUAIL-TURKEY—DUCK—DEER 
Located on Indian River. 174 miles south of Jacksonville- 
Dogs, guides and horses furnished. Black bass fishing. 
Reasonable rates. New management. A delightful place to 
take your wife. 
COCOA HOUSE, Cocoa, Florida 
Maine. 
MACHIAS LAKE CAMPS, Ashland, Me. 
Best Moose and Deer hunting in Maine. Remote camps. 
MACHIAS LAKE CAMPS, W. P. McNally, Prop. 
Minnesota. 
MUSCALLONGE GALORE 
Oyer 40 lakes, accommodations for 80 guests. Bass 
and Muscallonge fishing at the door. Write for 
28 page booklet. Bus meets all trains at 
PINE CONE CAMP 
Dorset, Hubbard Covinty ... Mlrvn. 
Maryland. 
BEST BASS FISHING 
On Atlantic Coast 
Kent Island Narrows - - Md. 
There are reasons, ask why. Best accommodations. 
Easy of access. :: :: :: Booklet, etc. 
FISHERMAN’S INN 
C. J. B. MITCHELL, Prop. Chester P.0 . R.D., Md 
Newfoundland. 
NEWFOUNDLAND 
LOG CABIN HOTEL 
Spruce Brook . . . Newfoundland 
Salmon fishing. Caribou hunting. Canoeing. 
Motor boating. Lovely scenery. Every comfort, 
but no frills Terms moderate. Guides, licenses 
and all, provided. 
NEWFOUNDLAND -— 
Do you want good SALMON and TROUT fish¬ 
ing? Or to shoot the ‘lordly CARIBOU? Apply 
c 1 J-*. WHITAKER, Py 
The Bungalow, Grand Lake, Newfoundland. 
New Jersey. 
OAK COURT HOTEL, Lakewood, N. J. 
Located in the Pine Belt. A family hotel, notable for a 
quiet air of domesticity and a homelike atmosphere. 
Booklet. Open October 15th to May 15th. 
E. E. SPANGENBERG, Manager. 
AN OVERLAND CANOE TRIP. 
Continued from page 445. 
hours—that is, George did—but I blew in some 
fifteen minutes later, getting winded on the 
last few hundred feet. It was a clear day and 
the view was all that could be desired, Lake 
Champlain thirty miles away seeming almost at 
our feet, and on its further side the Green- 
Mountains of Vermont looked within an easy 
day’s walk. 
About an hour and a half on the summit 
was all we could stand, owing to the cold, and 
we retraced our steps, reaching Camp Colden 
at 4 p. m. somewhat tired, having walked six¬ 
teen miles over rough trails and climbed 3,000 
feet. A good night’s sleep on pine boughs made 
us fairly rested in the morning, and after break¬ 
fast we packed back to Tahawus, where we hired 
a wagon to haul us to Harris Lake. It was a 
blot on our clean record, but we did not feel 
much like going back through the quicksands 
and making that five-mile carry. The distance 
by road was seventeen miles, taking us the en¬ 
tire day to cover it, and it must be confessed 
we all enjoyed that drive, the first rest we had 
since leaving Old Forge. 
that night we camped on Harris Lake, 
and the next day after replenishing our sup¬ 
plies at Newcomb, started for Long Lake. This 
is a fairly easy trip and seemed child’s play 
after the work we had been doing. It con¬ 
sisted of a few lifts over shallow places in the 
narrows between Harris and Rib Lakes, through 
the latter and a mile carry to Lily Pad Pond, 
through that and two other small lakes, and 
then a mile and a quarter carry to Round Pond, 
where we spent the night. From there it is a 
two-mile carry to Long Lake over a good trail; 
in fact, all the trails were good after leaving 
Harris Lake. 
At Long Lake we paddled nine miles down 
to the village for more provisions, and then 
started along the regular canoe route for Sara¬ 
nac Lake. 
That trip is so well known I will not at¬ 
tempt to describe it; sufficient to say that we 
made it without exertion or mishap and reached 
Saranac Lake village on Saturday afternoon, 
feeling that we had put in a fairly strenuous two 
weeks. 
JUMPING FISH. 
The mode of locomotion known as jumping 
is shared by a variety of animals of widely dif¬ 
ferent classes. Kangaroos and jerboas among 
the mammals, thrushes and robins among birds, 
as well as such familiar forms as frogs, cockles, 
crickets and fleas—all illustrate this proneness 
to leap, mostly as a means of getting quickly 
over the ground, and even lions and tigers, which 
never spring under ordinary circumstances, read¬ 
ily adopt this method of attacking their victims. 
A considerable number of fishes are remark¬ 
able for their leaping powers, and several of 
these performers are on that account specially 
favored by anglers, since by jumping clear of 
the water, in some cases many times in succes¬ 
sion, they tax the fisherman’s skill more severely 
than fish less active and thereby give added zest 
to their capture. 
Members of the salmon family are univer¬ 
sally famous for their high jumps. The sea 
trout, which gladden Devon rivers under the sea¬ 
sonable name of “harvest peal,” are untiring 
acrobats, say the London Globe, and a fish of a 
pound weight will more than once jump several 
times its own length out of water when hooked 
before coming to the net. 
Unless the fisherman responds promptly by 
lowering the top of his rod, the fragile gut is 
liable to part, and as it is part of every sports- 
Resorts for Sportsmen. 
New York. 
DEER AND BEAR 
Shooting for the big game man and plenty of partridge for the 
spread shot preferent; one night’s ride from New York City. 
In Heart of the Adirondacks 
This is the place for shooting in comfort, beds that rest you and 
food that is a joy to the inner man. 
BEAR MOUNTAIN CAMP 
J. M. BALDERSON, Proprietor 
Cranberry Lake - Wanskena P. O., N. Y. 
DUCKSHOOTEIIS —I have good accommodations for 
point shooting. The most comfortable shooting. Stay 
aboard of auxiliary sloop near feeding ground to save 
early rising if preferred. Write number in party and 
dates preferred. Ernest P. Hulse, East Moriches, L. I. 
GOOD POINT SHOOTING 
Roth Duck and Geese. First-class board and accom¬ 
modations. For details address HARRY G. CARTER, 
l!ox 155, East Quogue, L. I. 
W. J. O’Neil, proprietor, and Hammond, guide: good board and 
first-class accommodations. Good bird dogs and hounds. 
Centerville Station, Sullivan Co., N. Y. 
Nova Scotia. 
Moose Hunting 
KEDGEMAKOOGE LAKE 
NOVA SCOTIA 
Open season. Sept. 16 to Nov. 16. Big-game license, $30. 
A modern club house, with all conveniences, open to the 
public in the very heart of the best moose country in 
America. Competent licensed guides, full equipment, 
and first-class acommodations. For information, booklet 
or game laws, write 
J. W. THOMPSON, New Grafton, Nova Scotia. 
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. 
Duck, Goose, Swan, Quail, Snipe shooting.- Convenient 
for yachtsman going through Currituck. JASPER R. 
WHITE, Waterlily, N. C. (Currituck Sound). 
Virginia. 
QUAIL SHOOTING 
None better in llie South. Guides, dogs, good accom¬ 
modations in Midland, Virginia. Season, Nov. 1. Birds 
very abundant. Address CHAS. WOMACK, R. F. D. 1, 
Farmville, Ya. 
Having Good Hunting Lands 
And competent guides, I am prepared to entertain 
sportsmen for the coming season. Open from Nov. 1st 
to Feb. 1st. Mrs. O. M. ATKINS, Box 33, Boydton, \ a. 
Many of Forest and Stream's subscribers. 
are the most enterprising and wealthiest sports¬ 
men. They are keenly alive to their own in¬ 
terests and are buying, not only sporting goods, 
but all sorts of luxuries people can afford now¬ 
adays. There is purchasing power in this cir¬ 
culation, Mr. Advertiser. 
Chas. D. Barney Co. 
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