1166 
FOREST AND STREAM 
Caribou in Newfoundland 
Solomon Gillan, licensed guide, Robin¬ 
son’s, Newfoundland, has open dates for 
the migration season and later. Excellent 
sport assured. Has complete equipment 
and supplies the grub. Engagements 
should be made at once. Apply' direct 
or to 
R. S. WARNER, 60 State St., BOSTON. 
LET THE SUMMER-BOARDER BEWARE 
The festive bee, the wasp, the yellow-jacket, spider, 
horsefly, yellow fly, red bug or chigger, flea, mosquito 
and last, but not least, the bedbug! 
First: remove the sting, if possible; 
Then: apply __ 
ANTI-TOXICO-DENDROL 
and immediate relief, complete and permanent, fol¬ 
lows. It is also a specific for Ivy-Poisoning and all 
the various Plant-Irritations incident to the good old 
summer time. 
At Druggists or by mail. 
FRONT CHEMICAL COMPANY 
P. O. Box 452 , Cincinnati, O. 
GROUSE DOG TRAINING 
Fifteen years’ experience in training the grouse dog 
has been my teacher. TRY ME and get an HONEST 
DEAL. Can handle a few derbys and all age dogs for 
the Middletown, N. Y., Connecticut and Pennsylvania 
Grouse trials. Will be on my training grounds after 
September 1st; my preserve of 15 thousand acres has 
an unlimited number of ruffed grouse and woodcock to 
train your dog on; pedigreed puppies and broken stock 
for sale at all times, the great grouse dog, a field trial 
and bench show winner, Sir Roger DeCoverly II, at 
stud at mv kennels, fee $250. Write your wants. 
RYMAN GUN DOG KENNELS Wilkes Barre, Pa. 
FOR SALE— I have two spayed English setter bitches, 
two years old, thoroughly housed, yard and auto 
broken, and with a little work this fall should come 
in fine. Was hunted last fall and guaranteed to point. 
Sire and dam both field broken and registered.. If 
you want to finish up your own dog they are nicely 
started. If you want a dog, I know of several who 
have them for sale. Write E. H. Bailey, 27 Spring 
Street, Danbury, Ct., for price and further information. 
WANTED —Sportsmen and bird dog fanciers to 
know that they can see the big All America Trials 
in the movies. Why not have field trial night at 
your local movie theater? Birds in the air, famous 
dogs pointing and ranging, camp scenes, prairie life, 
and the famous handlers and their dogs just as they 
appeared at the All America Trials. For full in¬ 
formation write WM. CORCORAN, care 220 Third 
Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
English Setters, 
94 per cent. Llewellin (whelped, July 21, 1916.) Sire, 
Cord’s Count Gladstone, by Champion, Lady’s Count 
Gladstone. This breeding is as close up to Ch. Lady’s 
Count Gladstone as it is now possible to obtain. If you 
want “The Best in Setters,” write for circular, pedigree 
and prices. F. O. Price, 26 Nowell Road, Melrose 
Highlands, Mass. _ 
X Wp C Eczema, ear canker, goitre, cured or 
1V1 lx !-• money refunded. Prepaid $1.25. Eczema 
Remedy Company, Hot Springs, Ark. 
BEAUTIFUL, HEALTHY IRISH SETTER PUPPIES, 
born in March, April and May, eligible to registration. 
Have some unusually fine females with unexcelled 
blood lines. Walter McRoberts, 1202 Knoxville, Peoria, 
Illinois. 
SPECIAL PRICES QUOTED ON DOG BREAD 
DIRECT FROM THE PRINCIPAL DOG BREAD 
MANUFACTURERS—An opportunity that will not oc¬ 
cur again. For particulars and prices address. S. J. 
F„ Care P. O. Box 1028, New York City. 
DOGS TRAINED AND BOARDED— Best arranged 
kennels in the South, located on 10,000 acres leased 
hunting grounds; forced retrieving taught dogs of any 
age; my methods never fail; thirty years’ experience. 
Jess M. Whaite, Cyrene, Decatur Co., Ga. 
ENGLISH SETTER DOGS —5 months old, from reg¬ 
istered stock of the best breeding for only $10 while 
they last: beauties and none better. Moriarty, Red- 
granite, Wis. 
30 RABBIT HOUNDS, broken and partly broken. 
Reasonable prices; photos 10 cents. H. Welsh, May- 
port, Penn. 
OUR UNNATURAL HISTORY DEPARTMENT. 
HE mystery of the piebald duck remains un¬ 
solved, and as the species is, we confess, 
extinct, the learned readers of Forest and 
Stream need bother their heads no longer over 
the exact classification. 
But last month’s lesson was easy. No fewer 
than fifty of the class in unnatural history sent 
in the right answer. The specimen was a Florida 
manatee. 
This month we present a legitimate picture, 
and one, we believe that will set some active wits 
to working. The young animals are among the 
most commonly known species in North America, 
but what are they? We will give only one hint, 
and that because the picture itself conveys it. 
Observe the spruce or balsam boughs in the back¬ 
ground. But don’t guess martens or any of that 
family, because “they ain’t.” Address answers to 
the Natural History Editor, Forest and Stream. 
ON THE GRAND CASCAPEDIA. 
(Continued from page 1129.) 
Salmon Hole is another splendid pool, but at 
its best in low water. R. G. Dun took his fifty- 
four pounder mentioned above, from this pool, 
and C. B. Barnes captured one of fifty-one pounds 
here a few years ago. Among others of the 
choice pools are Judges’ Pool, Steve’s Beach and 
Moen Pool and a number of others that need 
not be particularized but equally as good. 
Sometimes rocks are placed in inferior pools 
to improve them. Occasionally owing to the 
swiftness of the current the banks are under¬ 
mined and washed away and the channel diverted 
from its former course and good pools rendered 
useless by the change. To avoid this, expensive 
and durable cribwork along the banks has been 
resorted to in several places. 
The ascent of the river is always made by 
“poling” and it is a fascinating sight on a bright 
day to watch the process, the long poles flashing 
in the sunlight as they rise and fall in perfect 
time and rhythm. The boatmen make the de¬ 
scent of the stream at the rate of ten miles per 
hour by paddle and current while in poling up 
stream the rate is about two and one half 
miles. 
This Month’s Lesson? 
As to flies the Silver Gray seemed to be the 
favorite and more fish were probably taken with 
it, than with other kinds, although the writer 
fared better with the Dusty Miller and one 
member of the party took his total of six fish on 
a Durham Ranger exclusively. 
When a salmon rises to a particular fly it is 
good policy to immediately substitute another and 
continue the process until perhaps His Majesty’s 
capricious whim is satisfied and he strikes home. 
All good things must have an ending and those 
delightful June days passed only too quickly. 
On July 1st, our party bid adieu to the Grand 
Cascapedia and came out by motor car as far 
as Campbellton It was the first time an auto¬ 
mobile had made the trip and its feasibility was a 
subject of grave doubt. We met with no 
difficulties however, and accomplished the sixty 
miles in four and one half hours’ actual running 
time, and pleasantest memories are associated 
with the trip. For forty miles the road skirted 
the Bay of Chaleur and more picturesque scenery 
cannot be imagined with the shining bay on one 
side and the ever changing hills and peaks of 
the Gaspe mountains on the other, and it was 
a fitting termination to the most delightful out¬ 
ing the writer has ever known. 
ASBURY PARK WINS OCEAN CITY $1,000 
SILVER CUP. 
The first casting tournament for the $1,000 sil¬ 
ver trophy offered by the Association of Surf 
Angling Clubs was held on August 12, 1916, at 
the grounds of the Ocean City Fishing Club, 
Ocean City, N. J. 
To the five members of the Asbury Park Fish¬ 
ing Club that represented that club in the tourna¬ 
ment goes the trophy and the honor of being the 
first to have their names engraved upon it. 
The four clubs, Asbury Park. Midland Beach, 
Belmar and Ocean City, comprising the Associa¬ 
tion were represented and finished in the order 
named. The total score in feet of the Asbury 
Park casters was 7,315 f ee t 10 inches, an average 
of 292 feet 7 3-5 inches per man. The winning 
team was composed of E. E. Davis, the new 
world’s champion caster; J. E. Clayton, H. Kain, 
A. J. Sahdala and C. H. Wells. 
