FOREST AND STREAM 
839 
PINE TOP LODGE KENNELS 
QUAIL, WILD TURKEY, DEER, 
DUCKS, WOODCOCK and small game 
in abundance. Unlimited territory. In 
the heart of vast pine woods this up-to- 
date Club house with all modern conve¬ 
niences and amusements, auto service, 
boating, riding and driving, dogs, horses 
and guides afford the sportsman and his 
wife an opportunity to enjoy real sport, 
without discomfort and see the South, 
while escaping the Northern winter. 
Address C. & L. P. BLOW. 
Delaware, Va. 
HUNTERS’ LODGE! 
Good Quail Shooting. Choice Accommodations 
for Ladies and Gentlemen 
BEST CHEF SOUTH OF THE POTOMAC 
Not a cheap place 
GENERAL FRANK A. BOND - - - Buies, North Carolina 
ADIRONDACK^ 
SCHROON LAKE, N. Y. 
ioo well wooded lake shore lots and 200 acre preserve for 
sale. Good hunting and fishing. Beautiful and health¬ 
ful. Furnished cottages to rent. Write for booklet. 
CHAS. L. WEEKS. 
RIFLES-AMMUNITION 
Sportsmen’s Supplies 
Honest Goods, Bottom Prices, Square Deal 
Send three stamps for Eatalog 
POWELL & CLEMENT CO. 
410 Main St., Cincinnati, 0. 
FRED. SAUTER 
Leading 
TAXIDERMIST 
of America, Established 1860 
Specialist in all Branches of Taxidermy 
42 Bleecker Street New York City 
Write for Catalogue “A” 
Minnesota, but scarce where it abounded in 
former years. 
Up to last Friday in Michigan less than 4,000 
slain deer had been shipped from the upper pen¬ 
insula, compared to more than 10,000 last year. 
EDITORIAL APPRECIATIONS. 
(Continued from page 810) 
Mr. Lincoln has unmistakably operated the 
faculties of his mentality with the precision and 
strength that would rival many of more mature 
years, and readily convinces one that many of 
the positive qualities of 'his mind are kept active¬ 
ly employed. His love for the open, and for 
Mother Nature, and his desire to assist her in 
writing up her accounts for the uplift and better¬ 
ment of mankind must result in a fruitage eman¬ 
ating from a garden of pure motives and kind 
acts, based upon a fundamental principle of good 
thinking that is essential for the advancement 
of man and the improvement of his environ¬ 
ments. Mr. Lincoln’s keen perception, reinforced 
by his ready conception, his power of analysis 
coupled with pertinent comparisons, his intuition 
fired by a liberal amount of inspiration and imag¬ 
ination all serve him well in drawing the deduc¬ 
tions and arriving at the absolute conclusions that 
one notes in his diversified sketches.” 
NETTIE B. SHATTUCK, Veteran Outdoor 
Writer in Sportsmen’s Review. 
“Your essay, ‘Autumnal Trout Fishing’ in 
Outdoor Life, for October, is by far the best 
work you have yet done as a writer of the out- 
of-doors- It is an undeniable classic.” 
RUTH ALEXANDER PEPPLE (Dick Wiltse). 
“Every humble reader like myself will agree 
with me that the articles by Robert Page Lincoln 
are worthy of special appreciation—an appreciation 
much higher, broader, deeper than my clumsy 
pen can offer. That gentleman’s loving tribute 
to the genius of the Reverend O. Warren Smith 
appeals to me, not only as an unconscious tribute 
to his own delightful diction, in the portrayal 
of Nature’s beauties and glories, but an exhibi¬ 
tion of generous impulse in according praise to 
another to which he himself in the estimation 
of others is equally entitled. To Mr. Lincoln 
I confess a personal indebtedness, shared, I am 
sure, by every reader of his instructive and enter¬ 
taining articles. A thousand thanks are due to 
such splendid sportsmen as he, O. Warren Smith, 
Theodore Gordon and others, whose recorded 
experiences are so enlightening to every lover 
of forest and stream. And why not Mr. Lin¬ 
coln’s contributions in book form? Such books 
would stand side by side with ‘Men I Have 
Fished With,’ ‘Fisherman’s Luck,’ etc.—always 
within reach, always readable, bright, refreshing, 
instructive, dispelling the blues of days shut in 
and interpreting to us the many 
‘Tongues in trees, 
Sermons in stones, 
Books in running brooks. 
And good in everything.’ ” 
CHARLES D. DAVIES. 
“I have read, and been greatly entertained, 
by your articles on Nature; and am whole¬ 
heartedly subscribed to your views upon the pol¬ 
lution of streams, which coincide with my own 
convictions. Mankind nld be counted fortu¬ 
nate in having such f. rs for the common 
good.” tr 
CHART.ES BRADFORD, Wildfowler Fame. 
“I have read your contributions to the outdoor 
press with great interest.” 
CHARLES HALLOCK, 
Dean of American Sportsmen. 
“Allow me to thank you for your helpfulness 
and views upon game protection; it is by such 
gratifying help that -the great goal is attained.” 
WILLIAM T. HORNADAY, 
Curator Bronx Zoo, N. Y. 
CAO QAIF ROBINSON CRUSOE’S 
run oALLs ISLAND OUTDONE! 
St. Vincent Island, Fla., in the Gulf of Mexico 
containing nearly 12,000 acres of pine forest, 
fresh water lakes, grassy Savannahs, wild 
boar, native and imported India deer, wild 
pigs, wild cattle, turkey, millions of duck and 
all varieties of fish. The Island with bunga¬ 
lows, hunting lodges, yacht, boats and vehicles 
for sale. Easily protected. Many thousand 
acres of finest pine trees. For information 
inquire DR. V. M. PIERCE, 663 Main Street, 
Buffalo, N. Y. 
PIT GAMES 
GLOVER’S BLACK DEVIL COCKS-Hens, Stags, Pullets, Cocking 
Books, Gaffs, Muffs, Spur Saws, Dubbing Shears and Remedies. Cir¬ 
culars Free. F. R. GLOVER, Box W, Lisle, N. Y. 
WANTED —fointeis and Setters to train. Quail plen- 
iful; first class kennels. References on application. 
JAMES L. PREVATT, Buies, North Carolina. 
NORTH CAROLINA 
Center of Winter 
out-of-door life in 
the Middle South. 
Four excellent hotels. Many cot¬ 
tages. The Carolina now open. 
Holly Inn, Berkshire and 
Harvard open early in January. 
SPECIAL RATES DURING DECEMBER 
AND JANUARY 
Three 18-hole golf courses and 6-hole 
practice course, tennis, livery and saddle 
horses, model dairy, shooting preserve, 
trap shooting. Frequent tournaments in 
all sports for desirable prizes. 
Good Roads in a radius 
of 50 miles or more 
Through Pullman Service from New York 
Via Seaboard Air Line. Only one night out 
from New York, Boston, Cleveland, Pittsburgh 
and Cincinnati. 
Send for illustrated booklet giving full information. 
PINEHURST GENERAL OFFICE, PINEHURST. 
LEONARD TUFTS, Owner, vj BOSTON, MASS. 
PEKINGESE 
The ideal breed— the big-little dog; 
full of life, love and brains. 
Puppies and grown dogs. 
Prize winners and pets. 
PEKING KENNELS 
M. H. COTTON, M.D. MINEOLA, N.Y. 
Telephone, 1010 M Garden City 
