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FOREST AND STREAM 
[April 24, 1909. 
"Rejorls for SporiJimen. 
BRITISH EAST AFRICA. 
Big-game hunting parties thoroughly and economically 
equipped. 
ELEPHANT. LION. BUFFALO. 
ANTELOPE. RHINOCEROS. 
Tell us when you want to start, and we do the rest. 
Write for booklet to NEWLAND TARLTON & CO., 
LTD. (head office, Nairobi, B. E. Africa), 166 Piccadilly, 
London, England. Cables: Wapagazi; London. 
NEWFOUNDLAND 
Excellent Salmon and Trout Fishing; also Caribou 
shooting. Tents, guides, boats provided. Write 
BUNCjALOW, Grand Lake, Newfoundland. 
Rocky Mountain Guides 
Hunting trips a specialty. Elk, Deer, Mountain 
Sheep and Bear. Best hunting grounds in the 
Rockies. Also prepared to handle Park and Fishing 
Parties with wagon or pack outfit. Satisfaction 
guaranteed. References given. 
SNYDER BROS., Marquette, Wyo. 
TARPON. TARPON. TARPON. 
And then Some, at SARASOTA, FLORIDA. 
They are in largre schools along with an abundance of other game 
hsh. If you are interested, write Dr. John Halton, who intends to 
accommodate a limited number of Sportsmen at his commodious 
home on Sarasota Bay. Dr.’s private launch and boats will be at 
your disposal. Every attention will be given to your comfort and 
entertainment. Address DR. JOHN HALTON, Sarasota, Fla., 
for particulars. i8 
WYOMING. 
Ranch, Cody. Wyoming. 
Open year round for big-game hunting, fishing and out¬ 
door life in the Rockies. Address H. L. Ferguson, 
Stamford, Conn.; B. C. Rumsey, Cody, Wyo. 
“THE HOMESTEAD,” Narrowsburg, Sullivan Co., N. Y. 
Good bass and trout fishing, three miles from R.R. Daily, 
$1.50; weekly, $7 to $9. Children $5. Robert Heubner. 
POCONO MOUNTAINS 
NEW SPRUCE CABIN INN.— Where you can catch 
trout. Six well-stocked streams. Rooms en suite and 
with private bath. Acco. for families. Booklet. 
\V. J. & M. D. PRICE, Canadensis, Pa. 
HUNTING IN AFRICA 
Shooting parties outfitted and guided in 
Rhodesia. Best'English and American refer¬ 
ences. Abundance of Big Game. Address 
WILLIAM FINAUGHTY. JR.. 
Bulawayo. Rhodesia. 
Do you want to fish, canoe and camp along water where 
big gamy trout will rise to a fly? 
BIG TUNK LODGE. 
Cherryffeld, Maine. 17 
We will insert your Hotel or Camp Advertisement 
in a space of this size (one inch) at the following 
rates: One time, $2.10; three months (13 insertions). 
$18.20; six months, (26 insertions), $35.00; one year 
(52 insertions), $60.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM. NEW YORK. 
XOants and Ejcchangej. 
SPORTSMEN! HUNTERS! TRAPPERS! 
I will pay good prices for all kinds of live wild water 
fowl, either wing-tipped or trapped birds. 
G. D. TILLEY, Darien, Conn. 
TRAINING vs. BREAKING. 
Practical Dog Training; or Training vs. Breaking. 
Pv S. T. Hammond. To which is added a chapter on 
tr. lining pet dogs, by an amateur. Cloth, 165 pages. 
Price, $1.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
1*r0per1y for Sale. 
FOR SALE. 
Property for a Club. 
• 
Unexcelled on the Coast for gunning, fishing and boating 
club. Location, ocean side of Eastern Shore, Virginia. 
Bay birds, ducks, geese and brant, quail and rabbit shoot¬ 
ing, excellent fishing, surf bathing, automobiling and 
driving. Building new and fitted with electric lights. 
Hot, cold, and salt water. Furnished and ready for oc¬ 
cupancy. Address, A. H. G. MEARS, Wachapreague, 
Va. Agents wanted. 
SHOOTINGS IN 
SCOTLAND. 
Tom and Jas. Speedy, practical Shooting 
Agents, have a large number of grouse moors, 
deer forests and other shootings to let. Lists 
sent on application. Apply Speedys, Edinburgh. 
Salmon Fishing Extraordinary I 
For Sale—A half interest in one of the best fishing 
privileges on the Restigouche River, New Brunswick. 
For particulars apply to H. BIGELOW, Norwich, 
Conn. 19 
For Sale. Exclusive fishing privilege in 33- 
acre pond, 40 miles from Philadelphia. Pickerel 
and Bass. Good Hunting nearby. Write for 
particulars to Louis Wittenberg, 262 So. 2d St., 
Philadelphia, Pa. 
SALMON RIVER 
OWNER WILL LEASE salmon river and camp equip¬ 
age on North Shore St. Lawrence. Fishing for two rods. 
About 40 fish per rod can be taken during the season. 
Average, fourteen to fifteen pounds. Particulars, C. D., 
care Forest and Stream. * 
In the Woods and On the Shore 
RICHARD D. WARE. 
Narratives for Sportsmen. 
A splendid series of narratives of shooting and fishing 
experiences, told with a vividness of description and 
sportsmanlike appreciation that will appeal to every 
devotee of rod and gun. The writer has enjoyed some 
rare sport, but barring his success, the experiences are 
those of every Northern sportsman amplified. This, as 
well as a peculiar gift of story-telling, aside from the 
intrinsic interest of the narrative, constitutes half the 
charm of “In the Woods and On the Shore.” 
In brief, the narrative takes us among the caribou of 
the Newfoundland barrens, after moose in the Northern 
woods, shore bird shooting from Cyie Cod to Nova 
Scotia, duck shooting along the New England coast and 
North and South, Brant shooting at Monomoy, after deer 
in New Brunswick, and by way of variety gives us a 
glimpse of rare sport with the big trout of the 
Nepigiguet. 
Cloth, splendid illustrations, 300 pages. Postpaid, $2. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
A Problem’s Solution 
LOG CABINS & COTTAGES; 
How to Build and Furnish Them. 
A seasonable book when all minds are bent on the 
problem of getting close to nature. Mr. Wicks in this 
delightful book offers timely advice to every one who 
wants to build a simple summer home at one with its 
surroundings of wood or stream or shore. 
This is a thoroughly practical work, treating of the 
how, the where, and the with what of camp building arid 
furnishing. It is helpful, too, in regard to furnishing, 
ind withal a most beautiful work. 
Cloth, profusely illustrated, $1.50 postpaid. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
M&nhati&n Rifle and Revolver Association. 
New York, April 15.—Scores made at 2628 Broadway 
to-day follow: 
Revolver, 20yds.; A. M. Poindexter 86, 85, 85, 79; M. 
Hays 86, 83, 82, 81, 80; J. L. R. Morgan 87, 80, 80; J. R. 
Ryder 85, 84, 84, 84; A. L. A. Himmelwright 90, 88; 
G. R. Sanborn 92, 88, 85, 84, 83, 83; Dr. C. Philips 89, 84, 
84; T. P. Nichols 90, 89, 87, 86, 86, 85, 85, 84; H. A. 
Reitzenstein 79, 78, 77; A. Knowlson 83, 80, 79; Dr. R. H. 
Sayre 89, 88, 87, 86, 83; G. Grenzer 92, 88, 87, 83, 83; T. 
E. Silliman 87, 86, 84. 
April 17.—At Armbruster’s Park to-day scores were 
made as follows: 
Revolver, 50yds., 10 shots: P. Hanford 88, 92, 86, 93, 
94, 93; J. L. R. Morgan 82, 86, 89, 88, 83, 90, 93, 88, 84, 90; 
Dr. C. Philips 76, 89, 79, 85, 90, 79: J. W. Hessian 76, 80, 
88, 89, 88, 81, 84, 84, 84, 84; T. P. Nichols 94, 96, 83, 87, 90, 
83, 83, 87, 85, 91; J. E. Silliman 90, 86, 92, 96. 
Rifle, 50yds., 10 shots: Dr. W. G. Hudson 228, 226, 234; 
J. W. Hessian 218; M. Hays 202, 200, 214, 201; C. E. 
Tayntor 199, 215; L. V. Hudson 205, 213, 205, 210, 221; 
G. P. Sanford 197, 204, 183, 201; F. N. Sanford 191, 176, 
184, 202, 187. 
Jos. E. Silliman, Treas. 
International Championship. 
The three-cornered international match between Eng¬ 
land, Australia and America, for the indoor champion¬ 
ship of the world, with miniature rifles, began on April 
19. Each country is represented by 50 of its best marks¬ 
men. The conditions are 30 shots per man, in strings 
of 5; position, any; any rifle' not over .230 caliber; any 
sights not containing glass; distance, 75ft.; target, with a 
%-inch counting bull, counting 10, a sighting bull count¬ 
ing 9, and eight concentric circles, 14-inch apart, counting 
from 8 down to 1. Nineteen members of the American 
team were assigijed to the Zettler Rifle Club range, at 
159 West Twenty-third street. New York. The remaining 
members were assigned to ranges in Philadelphia, New 
Haven, Washington and Newark. The members, Dr. 
W. G. Hudson, of New York; C. A. Niemeyer, of Col¬ 
lege Point, L. I., and L. C. Buss, of Brooklyn, com¬ 
pleted their scores in the Zettler gallery on the first day. 
Dr. Hudson made a total of 287 out of 300. Niemeyer, 
280; Buss, 291. 
Cincinnati Rifle Association. 
The following scores were made at our regular meet¬ 
ing on April 4, shooting at 200yds., offhand, on the 
German ring target: 
King. Special. Honor. 
Nestler . 211 218 217 215 211 58 
Hasenzahl . 209 218 215 214 189 67 
Bruns . 200 224 214 214 183 54 
Hofer . 189 206 202 199 194 60 
Freitag . 170 195 192 169 165 62 
Drube . 193 191. 59 
PUBLISHERS’ DEPARTMENT. 
A timely announcement, in view of the large number of 
American sportsmen who are contemplating African hunt¬ 
ing expeditions, is that of Wm. Finaughty, Jr., Bulawayo; 
Rhodesia. Mr. Finaughty is well recommended, is 
familiar with the big game country, and is prepared to 
outfit parties. 
The New York, Ontario & Western Railway has issued 
a most attractive vacation booklet, which is not only a 
complete vacation guide to one of the most delightful of 
summer countries—a paradise for health-seekers and fish¬ 
ermen—but a beautifully illustrated and printed souvenir 
of the region. Complete information as to rates, hotels 
and boarding houses, and attractions is comprised in 
this handy volume. 
Dowagiac is a familiar word among anglers. Dowagiac 
bait are well known, and Dowagiac bait-casting rods are 
destined to become equally popular. The rods are all 
made with Heddon’s improved finger grip, which is a 
part of the cork grasp; and with locking reel-band. The 
price is low, the quality high. Write to James Heddon & 
Son, Dept, 9, Dowagiac, Mich., and ask for “The Art 
of Bait-casting,” a free booklet that is full of useful in¬ 
formation. 
What is a Rigamajig? If vou want to know, send a 2- 
cent stamp to the John J. Hildebrandt Company, Logans- 
port, Ind., and receive one of its new catalogues, in 
which the Hildebrandt Rigamajig is illustrated full size 
in colors. This catalogue is a useful one for bass and 
trout fishermen, for it contains illustrations of all the 
excellent lures made by John J. Hildebrandt, who is 
himself a veteran angler and a past-master in devising 
and making lures worth buying. His new pearl spoon 
baits are also attractive lures. 
The Jamison Coaxer baits and flies are made by a 
practical angler of wide experience, who knows what 
other .anglers want and supplies them. These Coaxer 
flies can be floated into places out of reach of one who 
fishes with ordinary flies or with worms, and they per¬ 
form so many curious antics in the current that they 
attract trout when other lures fail. Write for a sample 
dozen to W. J. Jamison, 1274 Polk street, Chicago. 
The Forest and Stream may be obtained from any 
newsdealer on order. Ask your dealer to supply you 
regularly. 
