FOREST AND STREAM 
[July io, 1909. 
Resorts for Sp< rtsmen. 
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; alsp Caribou 
shooting. Tents, guides, boats provided. Write 
BUNGALOW, Grand Lake, Newfoundland. 
^JP AMONG VERMONT’S GREEN 
HILLS and on LAKE CHAMPLAIN 
Best Summer Resort Region. Terms $5 to $10 per week. 
Handsomely illustrated booklet containing 150 pages, lull 
information, also details Tercentenary Celebration, Lake 
Champlain. Send 6 cents to “Summer Homes, No. 
St Albans, Vt.; 360 Washington St., Boston; or 385 
Broadway, New York. Free on personal application. 
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. 
W J. & M. D. PRICE, Canadensis, Pa. 
SPORTSMEN, come our way for the best hunting and 
fishing country, on the North Shore of Lake Superior. 
Moose, Caribou and Bear, numerous; also Trout, Bike, 
Pickerel and Bass, weighing from 1 to 7 lbs., were caught 
at our camps last year. Only one day’s travel by canoe 
from the Canadian Pacific Railway. Twenty-four moose 
seen in twelve days from our camp door in Oc¬ 
tober last year by American sportsmen. We furnish 
everything. White guides only are employed by us. 
Write for particulars in regards to our hunting country. 
Address GRAY & ARMSTRONG, Schreiber, Ontario, 
Canada, Box 31. 
NEWFOUNDLAND 
Salmon fishing and caribou hunting^ best obtainable. 
Guides and camp outfit supplied. BAY ST. GEORGE 
HOTEL, Stephenville Crossing, Newfoundland. 
NEW BRUNSWICK 
Sportsmen.—If you are planning a hunting trip this fall 
and want good heads, try our camps on the Serpentine, 
headwaters of the Tobique River. A noted country for 
bie same Moose, Caribou and Deer plentiful. For par¬ 
ticulars write to LEWIS & FALDING, Perth, Victoria 
County, New Brunswick. 
Grand Island Forest and Game Preserve 
An island containing 13,600 acres, located in Munising 
Bay. Lake Superior, two and one-half miles from Munising, 
Michigan. Efficient boat service between island and mainland. 
Stocked with Caribou, Elk. Moose, and various species of Deer 
and Birds. Located in the upper peninsula of Michigan, 
where fishing and hunting abounds. Excellent rail and water 
connections. Hotel Williams and Cottages with all modern con¬ 
veniences, located on the island, opens for business June 20th. 
Terms Reasonable 
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. 
FETCH AND CARRY* 
"Resorts for Sportsmen. 
BIG GAME SHOOTING IN 
BRITISH EAST AFRICA 
Outfitters of Shooting and Scientific Expedi¬ 
tions. We are the only firm in the country, who 
through eleven years’ of existence, their large 
and varied experience and connections, can 
GUARANTEE every sportsman, who is an 
average shot, within six weeks 
100 Head of Mixed Game 
providing our advice is followed. Terms and 
Catalogues on application. All communications 
should be addressed to the Principal, 
CHAS. A. HEYER, M. E. A. U. N. H. S., 
Nairobi, British East Africa. 
Telegraphic address, HEYER, NAIROBI, 
A. B. C. Code, 5th Edition. 
property for Sate. 
For Sale—Large Tract Hunting and Fishing Land 
at a very moderate price per acre, about 34,000 acres 
of hunting and fishing lands i 
of hunting and fishing lands in one body, in Clinton 
Co., Pa., on main line of Pennsylvania R.R. to Buffalo, 
with station on the property, with no inhabitants whatever 
on the entire property, with the exception of those em¬ 
ployed, residing in houses belonging to the property. 75 
miles of brook trout streams, an abundance of deer, bear, 
ruffed grouse and other game. Adjacent to the Pennsyl¬ 
vania State Forest Reservation, thoroughly provided with 
graded roads and numerous camps. One of the finest 
locations for a hunting and fishing association in the State 
of Pennsylvania. For information, price and terms, apply 
GLEN "uNION^LUMBER CO., LTD., Pottsville, Pa. 
FISH HATCHERY FOR SALE or LEASE 
Munising, Michigan. 
Located at railroad station of Munising Railway Co., 
near Lake Superior. Hatchery fully equipped for hatch¬ 
ing and raising fish. Eight outdoor ponds. Keepers 
dwelling furnished for housekeeping. For full particulars 
address 
THE CLEVELAND-CLIFFS IRON CO. 
Land Department Negaunee, Michigan 
Additional Cottages, on Grand Island, on the shores of Lake 
Superior, furnished for housekeeping, for rent by the week, 
month or season. Lots, on which to build cottages, for lease. 
For illustrated booklet, containing full information, apply to 
THE CLEVELAND-CLIFFS IRON CO. 
Land Department Munising, Michigan 
Trout Ponds and Farm. Formerly State Hatchery. 
Spring flowing 1200 gallons per minute. House with 
modern improvements overlooking spring and ponds. 2 
tenant houses, barns, etc. Price, $18,000. Address J. H. 
SLACK, Troutdale Ponds, Bloomsbury, N. J. 
“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. 
BERKSHIRE TROUT HATCHERY FOR SALE 
140 acres, cine forest. Never failing mountain springs. Ponds 
with exceptional natural conditions for trout raising. Well 
stocked with 50,000 fish. Three houses with baths and modern 
conveniences. Seven miles from Great Barrington. Good 
roads. Address J. S. SCULLY, Great Barrington. Mass. 
V&ants and Exchanges. 
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. 
A Treatise on Retrieving. By B. Waters. 124 pages. 
Illustrated. Price, $1.00. 
Treats minutely of the methods by which a dog, old or 
young, willing or unwilling, may be taught to retrieve, 
either by the force system or the “natural method. 
Both the theory and practice of training are exhaus¬ 
tively explained, and the manner of teaching many 
related accomplishments of the pointer and setter in their 
work to the gun is treated according to the modern 
manner of dog training. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Pigeon Shooting. 
By CAPT. A. W. MONEY. 
a rabbit now and then. But—it almost seems 
—somehow—that there is something wrong 
somewhere, eh? Some people have the lot— 
everything. Or the ability to get it. And the 
others have got nothing and ke;ep it all their 
lives. No ability, either—nothing but the 
craving.” He wagged his head gravely. .“Screw 
loose somewhere, you know,” he said “Funny, 
ain’t it? Well, here’s off to bed. I’m getting 
up at four o’clock to-morrow on the chance of 
getting a duck or two. Good night.” 
He disappeared, but in a second the door 
opened again, and he looked in. j 
“Make those rats hop along, eh?” he said, 
happily, grinned, and went to bed. 
I would have given much to have spent the 
fortnight with him, but the yoke of necessity 
was upon me likewise, and I came away the 
next day. 
A standard book on the sport by a recognized expert, 
covering alt phases of live-bird and clay-pigeon shooting 
with much that is of value to every man who wishes to 
be complete master of his gun. 
Covers position, guns, ammunition, handling, sighting, 
field shooting, trigger pulls, technique and practice. This 
book will soon be out of print. Listed to sell at $1. 
Our price, while they last. 
75 cents, postpaid. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
STRANGE CATCHES ON RODS. 
The hooking of a partridge on the wing by a 
Frome angler while making a cast recalls other 
similar occurrences where birds, and even rats, 
have been accidentally caught on rod and line. 
It is by no means uncommon, says the West¬ 
minster Gazette, for trout anglers to hook swal¬ 
lows and martins; indeed, these birds sometimes 
hook themselves through darting at the fly and 
mistaking it for the natural insect. 
The writer has caught a swallow with a May 
fly on the Kennet, and two more swallows, 
these latter in one afternoon, while roach-fish- 
incr This happened on the Lark, the pretty 
little Suffolk river, and at the time many swal¬ 
lows and martins were “hawking over the 
stream. Both the birds dashed at a bunch oi 
gentles and hooked themselves in the beak 
One was saved and went off all right, as did 
another swallow which was rescued after being 
knocked into the river through coming in con¬ 
tact with the rod while a cast was being made. 
The late James Tayler (“Red Palmer”) who 
was so well known as the secretary of the Gres- ; 
ham Angling Society and a skilled trout fisher, 
once hooked and landed a waterhen on a Hamp¬ 
shire stream; and several instances of bats being 
accidentally hooked have also occurred. 
One evening, too, as an angler made a cast 
close under the bank on the Herts Colne a rat 
rose to the surface and in the fading light was 
taken for a trout. The angler struck and 
hooked the rodent in the tail, a performance 
which was instantly followed by a series of loud 
squeaks and a plunge into the rushes, where the 
hook came away. More than one fly-fisher has 
before to-day also hooked a cow when that 
gentle domestic creature has, unobserved; been 
quietly browsing in the line of the cast. 
A VOLCANO THAT ROSE IN A NIGHT. 
Concluded from page 52. 
tons of lava flow over the lower rim of the 
crater; and this not resembling in any way the 
other lava, but like molten iron spreads over 
the old field and beyond, until at the sea there 
is a Niagara of fire full ten miles in width. As 
this molten lava falls into the ocean it turns to 
fine black sand and sinks, and so a new coast line 
is being built up in water three and four hundred 
feet deep. This moving molten lake advances 
at the rate of four miles an hour. As it pours 
itself into the sea columns of water are raised 
in steam to incalculable heights, and this, de¬ 
scending in a fine rain of brine, destroys vege¬ 
tation, and corrodes the galvanized iron roof¬ 
ings of churches and trading stations for miles 
around. As the torrents of boiling lava break 
against the basalt cliffs or hummocks left by 
the old flow, cliffs are melted by the heat, hum¬ 
mocks disintegrated and carried forward by the 
flow to be hurled into the sea, where they ex¬ 
plode like titanic bombs, and this is taking 
place every moment along an ever-widening 
sea-front of ten miles at least. For more than 
a mile out in the ocean the water boils, and 
from the crater still flows a steady stream ot 
lava greater, it is said, than man has ever seen 
in the past issue from any volcano of which 
there is record. Never once since that night 
four years ago, when this volcano was born in 
a peaceful valley, has it remained for a moment 
quiescent.—A. H. Ford, in ITarper’s Weekly. 
