1070 
FOREST AND STREAM 
SPORTSMAN TOURIST 
SALMON FISHING 
I have 354 miles of Good Salmon Fishing on the 
famous Nepisiguit River, and also good Sea Trout Fish¬ 
ing, which I will lease in periods or for the Season. 
There is accommodation for three or four ladies or 
gentlemen in a comfortable and well-furnished lodge, 
which is beautifully located and secluded, with ice 
house and smoking den, and situated about midway ot 
the fishing. Lodge is nine miles from railway station, 
and reached over a good auto road. Experienced guides 
always on hand. For full particulars write to 
HENRY BISHOP, Bathurst, New Brunswick 
For Your Spring Trout Fishing Trip 
this year try the justly famous old Sullivan County 
trout streams—the Willowemoc and the Mongaup. Re¬ 
stocking every year has kept these streams the most 
reliable for good sport of any in this section. You can 
put up at the Old Cooper Homestead—of high reputation 
for almost half a century as a fisherman s resort. A 
new house, all modern improvements, good rooms and 
every comfort—open fireplaces. Season opens April 4th. 
Make arrangements now and come early. Write tor 
booklet and rates. Address nr v 
MISS ADA COOPER, De Bruce, Sullivan County, N. Y. 
The ADIRONDACK^ 
To close estates I have several very fine 
camps for sale. These places have every im¬ 
provement of a city home. They vary in size 
from 30 to 900 acres. 
Also, a very handsome cottage at Thous¬ 
and Island Park, St. Lawrence River. 
When you are ready to purchase a camp 
or cottage in the Adirondacks, consult me, 
for 1 have the properties. 
C. W. HILL, - - Utica, N. Y, 
21 Stewart Building 
FOR SALE 
Golf, Fishing, Farming 
MANCHESTER-IN-THE-MTS. 
Desirable property for summer resi¬ 
dence, located in Village of Manches¬ 
ter, Vt. Fine trout brook, 3 small 
ponds all well stocked, 8-room house, 
2 barns, 3 poultry houses, 600 maple 
trees and sugar house. 
Cottage life surroundings. 
Write 
C. F. ORVIS CO., Manchester, Vt. 
There’s Good Fishing 
to be had in the two lakes near 
the Stevens House, in the Adi¬ 
rondacks. 
And hunting can be enjoyed 
without the necessity of a long 
trip. 
The Lake Placid golf links are 
on the hotel grounds. All out¬ 
door diversions. 
THE SPORTSMAN’S PARADISE 
For Special June Rates and Booklet Address 
STEVENS HOTEL CO., Lake Placid, N.Y. 
CEDAR GROVE HOUSE 
On Lake Bomoseen, 7 hours ride from New York 
—ideal for boating, bathing, fishing, and all outdoor 
recreations. 
Large-mouth Oswego bass abound up to 8 lbs., 
small-mouth black bass to 6 lbs., besides pan-fish 
and large pike. 
Cottages, park grove, 50-guest hotel with modern 
improvements, local produce; tennis, baseball, driv¬ 
ing, with hotel livery, tramping with guides, steamer 
and launch on the lake. 
Rates $10 to $15 per week. 
EDWARD DUNN, Prop. Castleton, Vermont 
This Practical 
Casting Reel 
Will serve you long and 
well. It is easy running, 
can’t backlash, eliminates 
all line trouble. 
THE MONARCH REEL 
is simple, well-made, efficient—and the 
cost is far below that of the average reel 
not comparing with the Monarch in dura¬ 
bility and workmanlike qualities. 
Fits any standard reel-seat, will handle any 
standard casting-line, 80 yards capacity. 
While the bait is on its journey through space, from 
the tip of the rod to the chosen spot “where the big 
ones are,” THE MONARCH never fail's in its duty of 
paying out the line with surprising smoothness. 
When you have finished, and returned from io 
minutes “shore leave,” your line will be dry on the 
reel. 
THE MONARCH REEL and our famous 
SUBMARINE BAIT, both sent for. 
$2oo 
FT. WAYNE BAIT & REEL CO., FT. WAYNE, IND. 
$3.00 ANYWHERE POSTPAID IN U. S. 
Save Your Shoulder. Don’t Flinch 
Free Colored Insist on seeing this pad at your dealer's 
( ' ir " ,lnr W. FFHKIN8. 1(1 Sea Street, Everett, Mass. 
Red 
Rubber 
Cemented 
to Black 
Rubber 
FISH AND SPAWN FOR STOCKING 
BROOK 
TROUT 
OF ALL S I ZES 
For Stocking Purposes. Eyed 
Eggs in Season. Hotels Supplied. 
N. F. 1IOXIE, R. F. I). 
Plymouth _ Massachusetts 
Small-Mouth Black Bass 
We have the only establishment dealing in young 
small-mouth black bass commercially in the United 
States. Vigorous young bass in various sizes, rang¬ 
ing from advanced fry to 3 and 4 inch fingerlings 
for stocking purposes. 
Waramaug Small-Mouth Black Bass Hatchery 
Correspondence invited. Send for Circulars. Address 
HENRY W. BEAMAN New Preston, Conn. 
Brook Trout , of , al1 ages for stocking 
SIUUl brooks and lakes. Brook 
trout eggs in any quantity. Warranted delivered 
anywhere in fine condition. Correspondence 
solicited. 
THE PLYMOUTH ROCK TROUT CO. 
Plymouth, Mass. 
THE YEAR OF THE POINTER. 
(Continued from page 1039) 
Another good setter derby of last season was 
Kirk’s Buss, a son of Wise’s Ruby’s Sport (H. 
D. Kirkover, Buffalo). 
The pointers in the derbys were not a bad lot 
by any means. On the prairies, Rap’s Pansy Blos¬ 
som won the All-American derby. In the Inde¬ 
pendent trials, Sanlou Ned won out, and in the 
Continental trials three pointers won the entire 
purse, Lady Wayne taking first, Speculation sec¬ 
ond, and Attakapas Rap third. In the Georgia 
derby, Speculation won first, but the other places 
were accounted for by setters. 
Naturally after these successes the pointer 
breeders feel that they have a slight edge on the 
setters. But it must not be forgotten that there 
are seasons when one breed or the other, for no 
apparent reason, fails to show at its best. Last 
year happened to be such a one for the setter. 
Perhaps there is a reason, but to go into a pro¬ 
lix dissertation as to the whys and the where¬ 
fores is not in the scope of this paper. 
In conclusion it might be said, however, that 
setter breeders are aware that they have gone 
wrong in some of their breeding operations. 
Realizing this, they have set about to remedy the 
evil, and, therefore, we may look to the setter 
to hold his own in the future. No doubt when 
balances are struck from season to season it will 
be found that one breed is as good as the other, 
whether he wears short or long hair. 
BAIT ANGLING FOR BLACK BASS. 
(Continued from page 1033) 
open shore and the boat drifts in before a wind 
to cover the section into which the boat is drift¬ 
ing and then let it settle quietly against the bank 
and cast as far as possible on both sides. This 
will very often pick up a fish that would other¬ 
wise be missed through the spaces between casts 
being too great. 
'It is well to remember that bass will not al¬ 
ways take the first cast at night. It may be the 
tenth one before they will rise to investigate. 
There are fishermen who go out on a windy 
night and anchor the boat in one spot for an 
hour or more at a time, sit back comfortably and 
cast on all sides during that time, and come in 
with fish. 
During July there is generally good casting 
during the day with frogs and wooden minnows, 
providing the sun be not too warm, the best cast¬ 
ing being from sunrise until nine o’clock and 
from sunset until darkness, or if it be a rainy 
day the whole day may prove to be good. 
There is really no telling just when they are 
going to feed, consequently one must stay on the 
grounds and wait for the luck to change. 
RAINBOW TROUT 
are well adapted to Eastern waters. Try stocking 
with some of the nice yearlings or fry from our 
hatchery, and you will be pleased with the result. 
PLYMOUTH ROCK TROUT COMPANY 
PLYMOUTH, MASS. 
Stock Your Streams 
and Ponds with Trout 
My name and address is . 
Lake covers about .. acres. 
Highest temperature is ... 
Does your water now contain trout? . 
Fill in above, mail to us and we will send you 
interesting circular on Brook Trout and suggestions 
for stocking. Address all correspondence to 
R. E. HAYFORD, Superintendent 
Willowemoc Creek Hatchery 
De Bruce .... SULLIVAN CO., N. Y. 
The Grand Trunk—and the Grand Trunk Pa¬ 
cific—will give you this year if you desire, an 
opportunity to go clear west to the Facific, over 
a route that is absolutely new, and which will 
enable you to gaze at regions that until now 
have been beyond the reach of even the hazard¬ 
ous traveler—or adventurer. More immediately 
interesting is the fact that the Grand Trunk will 
take you past the north shore of Lake Nepigon, 
that wondrous sea of some 70 or 80 miles in 
length, and the breeding ground of the world 
famous Nepigon trout—nearly as long, if some 
tales are to be believed. From Prince Rupert, 
the most northerly railway terminal on the conti¬ 
nent, the Grand Trunk has established a quick 
steamship service to Alaska. 
Fifteen hundred elk wantonly shot by poachers 
within the past sixty days east and north of 
Gardiner, Mont., have been reported by State 
Game Warden De Hart, who has just completed 
an investigation of game law violations in that 
locality. The animals were slain for their teeth. 
Many toothless yearlings, however, were included 
in the massacre. 
