598 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[Oct. 9, 1909. 
"Resorts for Sportsmen. 
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. 
BIG TROUT 
IN PLENTY 
in the 10 square miles my Antlers Camps cover. Com¬ 
fortable individual or party lodges; fine table; telephone. 
Special rates to summer visitors and large parties. Book¬ 
let free. S. A. POTTER, Jo Mary Lake, Norcross, Me. 
Duck Shooting on Moriches Bay 
Best shooting on Long Island. Ducks, snipe, quail, 
partridge, rabbit. Live decoys, experienced guides. Write 
now for accommodations in newly renovated hotel on the 
beach. WM. GRAMBART, Prop., Cupsogue House, 
Center Moriches, L. I. 
UPPER ROACH RIVER HOUSE. 
Last season 52 Buck Deer and 9 Bull Moose from here. 
Six trout ponds; also stream fishing; 14 miles from Lily 
Bay. Buckboards and teams for canoes and baggage. 
Guides. Rates reasonable; table guaranteed. Train to 
Greenville Junction, Maine. 2000 feet above sea level. 
Write to G. W. PARKS, Roach River, Me. 
HUNTING IN FLORIDA. 
Birds, Turkey, Cat, Fox, etc., on plantation. Not far 
from Duck, Deer and Bear. Good board and beds; 
open fires; horses and vehicles; pure water; good R.R. 
and telegraph facilities. 
WOODLAND PLANTATION, Lloyd, Fla. 
NEWFOUNDLAND 
County, New Brunswick. 
RIPOGENUS LAKE CAMPS 
DUCK SHOOTING. 
Guides, Boats and Decoys on Great South Bay. Best 
accommodations, at Bayside Hotel, Eastport, L. I. 
H. J. ROGERS, Prop. 
Excellent Salmon and Trout Fishing; also Caribou 
shooting. Tents, guides, boats provided. Write 
BUNGALOW, Grand Lake. 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 
big game. Moose, Caribou and Deer plentiful. For par¬ 
ticulars write to LEWIS & FALDING, Perth, Victoria 
Grand Island Forest and Game Preserve 
An island containing 13,600 acres, located in Munising 
Bay, Lake Superior, two and on^-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 
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-GLIFFS IRON CO. 
Land Department Munising, Michigan 
N ew spruce cabin inn. s 
located hotel in Pocono Mountains. Rooms en suite and with 
private bath. All amusements. Special rates, Sept., Oct., Nov. 
Grouse or pheasant, rabbit, deer shooting in season. Booklet. 
Cresco Station, D. L. & W. R. R. W. J. & M. D. Price, Canadensis,Pa. 
Cover a forest area of 250 square miles, and offer the 
best hunting in the State for Moose and Deer. Send 
for illustrated circular and map. REG. C. THOMAS, 
Chesuncook P. O., Maine. 
TO SPORTSMEN and COLLECTORS. 
Being now free, I jm anxious and willing to take one 
or more sportsmen to Africa or Abyssinia big-game shoot¬ 
ing. Sport guaranteed, and the trip made at the 
minimum cost. With luck, profits on trading and on 
specimens, should nearly cover cost of trip. Elephant, 
Rhino, Hippo, Buffalo, and other Antelope of all 
species (bongo and ocapi excepted) guaranteed, and 
Lion and Leopard a practical certainty. Address, 
JOHN LETHBRIDGE, Care Forest and Stream. 
'Resorts for Sportsmen. 
UNTING PARTIES 
The Waugum. Select Family and Transient 
Hotel. Special attention to Hunting, Fishing, Auto¬ 
mobile Parties. Accessible, near Garage. Spend 
the Autumn in the beautiful Berkshires. Postals. 
Box 82 Canaan, Conn. 
QUAIL SHOOTING. 
I control absolutely fifteen square miles of as fine quail 
shooting as can be found in America (adjoins game pre¬ 
serves of August Belmont, Esq.), and invite five desirable 
sportsmen to join me in forming a club. Expenses only 
the actual cost to me of leased privileges, keep of dogs, 
horses and guides. A new hotel in the preserves has 
mineral baths, electric lights, flowing wells and perfect 
sewerage. Terms from $2.50. Winter climate among 
long-leaf pines unsurpassed. This is entirely out of the 
ordinary. H. LEE SOLOMONS, President of Bank of 
Estill, Estill, Hampton Co., S. C. tf. 
EXCLUSIVE HUNTING ON 25,000 ACRES. 
Furnishing first-class accommodations, guides, livery, 
hunting lands and trained dogs for the hunting of quail, 
wild turkeys and deer. Northern references. Special 
attention to parties containing ladies. Trained and 
untrained quail dogs for sale. 
Dr. H. L. ATKINS, Boydton, Va. 
BLAKESLEE LAKE CAMPS.—Unequaled deer, moose, 
bear and bird shooting. Will guarantee you a shot at 
two deer if you spen.d a week at my camps this fall. 
Send for free illustrated booklet and map. 
JOSEPH IT. WHITE, Eustis, Me. 
"Property for Sale. 
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. Keeper’s 
dwelling furnished for housekeeping. For full particulars 
address 
THE CLEVELAND-CLIFFS IRON CO. 
Land Department Negaunee, Michigan 
BERKSHIRE TROUT HATCHERY FOR SALE. 
140 acres. Fine 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. 
and Exchanges. 
SPORTSMEN! HUNTERS! TRAPPERS! 
I will pay good prices for all kinds of live wild water 
fowl, either wing-tipped_or _traj}ped_ birds. 
G. D. TILLEY, Darien, Conn. 
The Pistol and Revolver. 
By A. L. A. Himmelwright, President U. S. Revolver 
Association, Director New York State Rifle Asso¬ 
ciation. 
A handy pocket-size volume of 157 pages of practical 
information covering the entire subject of Pistol and 
Revolver Shooting. This work is strictly up-to-date, 
including the latest development in smokeless powder; 
the 1908 Revolver Regulations and Practice of the United 
States Army, the United States Navy and the National 
Guard; the Annual Championship Matches and Revised 
Rules and Regulations of the United States Revolver 
Association, etc. Besides being a useful, practical hand¬ 
book for the experienced marksman, the work will also 
prove particularly valuable for beginners. 
Contents: Historical: Arms—Military, Target, Pocket; 
Ammunition; Sights; Position; Target Shooting; Re¬ 
volver Practice for the Police; Pistol Shooting for 
Ladies; Clubs and Ranges; Hints to Beginners; Selec¬ 
tion of Arms; Manipulation; Position and Aiming; Tar¬ 
get Practice; Cleaning and Care of Arms; Reloading 
Ammunition—primers^ shells, bullets, powders, reloading. 
Appendix.—Annual Championship Matches of the U. S. 
Revolver Association; Rules Governing Matches, etc. 
Records of the U. S. Revolver Association. 
In three styles. Paper, 60 cents. Cloth, $1.00. Full 
Morocco, $1.50. A liberal discount to military organiza¬ 
tions and shooting clubs on orders of ten or more copies. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO 
Modern Training. 
Handling and Kennel Management. By B. Waters. 
Illustrated. Cloth, 373 pages. Price, $2.00. 
The treatise is after the modern professional system of 
training. It combines the excellence of both the suasive 
and force systems of education, and contains an exhaus¬ 
tive description of the uses and abuses of the spike collar. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
birds’ power of flight. Each is stamped 
“Witherby, High Holborn, London,” and bears 
a distinctive number, which in the smaller sizes 
is stamped inside the ring, and it is hoped that 
anyone into whose hands should fall a bird so 
marked will send the bird and the ring—or, if 
this is not possible, the particulars of the num¬ 
ber on the ring, the species of bird, and the lo¬ 
cality and date of capture—to the address given. 
REINDEER. 
A subscriber writes ridiculing somewhat the 
idea of making practical use of the reindeer, 
says the Monetary Times. As a matter of fact, 
on the Labrador coast, the breeding of these 
animals is being practiced commercially. Dr. 
Grenfell, the well known missionary, and a man 
whose statements are not influenced by imagina¬ 
tion, says that a little more than a year ago a 
herd of two hundred and fifty reindeer were 
sent to Labrador and placed in charge of Lieut. 
Lindsay, a British officer who had served in the 
African war. In the short time since their in¬ 
troduction this herd had last autumn increased 
to 420 head. It now consists of 450; in an¬ 
other two months’ time there will probably be 
200 more, and within another eighteen months 
the animals will, at the same rate of reproduc¬ 
tion, double their numbers. They might soon 
have 10,000 reindeer in the country, Dr. Gren¬ 
fell says, and a very remunerative industry 
might be established if judiciously fostered by 
the Canadian Department of Agriculture. 
The country is admirably suited for these 
animals, which are able to get their own living 
both winter and summer. Thirty deer can live 
comfortably upon one square mile, and there 
are 500,000 square miles available for their sus¬ 
tenance. The animals are 1 very valuable for 
draught purposes, for meat, for their hides, 
and for dairying. There are generally about 
fifty stags in a herd, and a plan is now under 
consideration for the distribution of others. In 
Siberia reindeer stags may be purchased for 
fifty cents and others at twenty-five cents each, 
while on Labrador a good animal is worth 
about $20. 
The animals are invaluable as beasts of 
burden and for hauling firewood. They are also 
excellent dairying animals, the milk being en¬ 
tirely free from any objectionable taste; it is 
rich in cream and makes excellent butter and 
cheese. They are now milking sixty animals 
daily. Thus the reindeer is emerging from 
Hans Anderson’s “Snow Queen” into . the 
realms of the practical. 
SHOULD NOT COUNT THE COST. 
One occasionally hears an angler who has 
been after salmon say, “Do you know what 
that salmon costs me?” People who reckon what 
their fish cost them in £ s. d. that way ought 
to stay at home. E. M. Tod sends me a cutting 
from the Edinburgh Evening Dispatch, in 
which very delightful is Hamish’s remark to 
one of those anglers who seem to think you 
ought to get full market value for the fish you 
catch. Why, the anticipations and the journey 
to catch them are worth the money. But here 
is the story: 
“An English gentleman went to Killin for a 
week’s fishing on Loch Tay. He was very un 
lucky, having got nothing for the first five days 
Of course, this hotel bill and the fact that he 
had a boatman to pay made his fishing rather 
expensive. On the last day, however, he killed 
a nice salmon. ‘Hamish,’ said the gentleman 
to the boatman, ‘do you know that fish cost 
me about £20?’ (alluding to the expense). 
‘Aweel, sir,’ quoth Hamish, ‘a’things are mixed 
wi’ mercy; it’s a heaven’s blessing ye didna 
catch any mair!’”—Fishing Gazette. 
i 
All the fish laws of the United States and } 
Canada, revised to date and now in force, are 
given in the Game Laws in Brief. See adv. 
