name plate guarantees the quality and correctness of model, 
for free.illustrated catalog to-day. Agencies in all large cities. 
TOWN CANOE CO., 221 Middle St.. Old Town, Me. 
Wl) 
Where, When and How to Catch 
Fish on the East Coast of Florida. 
By Wm. H. Gregg, of St. Louis, Mo., assisted by Capt. 
John Gardner, of Ponce Park, Mosquito Inlet, Fla. 
With 100 engravings, and 12 colored illustrations. 
Cloth. Illustrated. 268 pages. Map. Price, $4.00. 
A visitor to Florida can hardly make the trip without 
this hook, if he is at all interested in angling. It gives 
a very complete list of the fishes of the East Coast of 
Florida, and every species is illustrated by a cut taken 
from the best authorities. The cuts are thus of the 
most value to the angler who desires to identify the fish 
he takes, while the colored plates of the tropical fish 
shown in all their wonderful gorgeousness of coloring, 
are very beautiful. Besides the picture of fish, there are 
cuts showing portions of the fishing tackle which the 
author uses. A good index completes the volume. 
FCREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[Feb. 29, 1908. 
STRELINGER in your 
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your Pocket: 
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GOOD ALWAYS 
THE STRELINGER 
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TROUBLE LEAVES when the Strclinger 
comes aboard. 
*25 to *2,500 
motors 
We carry in stock 2 and 4-Cycle Marine 
and Stationary engines, 1 1-2 to 50 H. P 
Send for Catalogue. Special bargains on a few sample 
THE STRELINGER MARINE ENGINE CO., 
Dept. 6, 46 E. Congress St., Detroit, Mich. 
Training the Hunting Dog. 
For the Field and Field Trials. By B. Waters, author 
of “Modern Training,’* “Fetch and Carry, etc. 
Price, $1.50. 
This is a complete manual by the highest authority 
in this country, and will be found an adequate guide for 
amateurs and professionals. 
Contents: General Principles. Instinct, Reason and 
Natural Development. Natural Qualities and Character¬ 
istics. Punishment and Bad Methods. The Best Les¬ 
sons of Puppyhood. Yard Breaking. Heel. Pointing. 
Backing. Roading and Drawing. Ranging. Dropping 
to Shot and Wing. Breaking Shot, Breaking in, Chas¬ 
ing. Retrieving. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Mullins Steel Boats Can’t Sink 
Send*for catalog of Motor boats, Marine Engines, Row Boats, Hunting and Fishing Boats 
THE W. H. MULLINS COMPANY, 120 Franklin Street. Salem^Ohio.__ 
Houseboats and Houseboating f 
BY ALBERT BRADLEE HUNT 
A volume devoted to a new outdoor field, which has for its puipose 
three objects: 
FIRST—To make known the opportunities American waters afford for enjoyment of 
houseboating life. 
SECOND—To properly present the development which houseboating has attained in 
this country. 
THIRD—To set forth the advantages and pleasures of houseboating in so truthful a 
manner that others may become interested in the pastime. 
The book contains forty specially prepared articles by owners and designers of well- 
known houseboats, and is beautifully illustrated with nearly 200 line and half-tone 
reproductions of plans and exteriors and interiors. A most interesting chapter is devoted 
to houseboating in England. 
Outdoor people, and, above all, city people, will be greatly interested in this volume. 
The people of the United States are turning more and more toward an open-air life in 
summer, yet the lands accessible to centers of civilization are being taken up and utilized 
so rapidly that they are each year growing more and more expensive. 
The work is printed on extra heavy paper, and is bound in olive green buckram, 
price is $3.00 net. Postage 34 cents. 
The 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING COMPANY 
346 Broadway, New York 
GAME NEAR LOS ANGELES. 
No other large city of the country is so close 
to the haunts of wild game, large and small, 
and to game fishing as is Los Angeles, says 
the Express of that city. This fact is empha¬ 
sized by a map and some literature just issued 
by a railway for the guidance of sportsmen who 
come to this region. 
The map, which was prepared from data 
furnished by Professor Charles Frederick 
Holder, shows the exact locality where all kinds 
of game and wildfowl may be found, as well as 
the best fishing grounds, from Santa Barbara to 
Lower California. 
Besides, to the northyast of Mount Lowe, 
bears are to be found in the vicinity of San 
Antonio peak, and south of Banning in the San 
Jacinto region. They are more numerous in 
the northwest part of Los Angeles county, along 
San Francisco Creek, and out in Santa Bar¬ 
bara county, in the San Rafael Mountains. 
Mountain lions and wildcats are numerous in 
some localities on the northern slope of the 
San Bernardino and San Gabriel ranges, in both 
Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties, 
while deer are found in the San Jacinto region, 
east of Caion Pass, on the north side of the 
Sierra Madre, in Los Angeles county, in the 
Santa Monica Mountains, and at a number of 
places in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties. 
A few antelope also are found in the. Sierra 
Pelona, in the northern part of Los Angeles 
county, and over the line in Kern county. 
Eagles and California condors are found in 
a few places, and such game as quail, doves, 
coyotes and foxes are very numerous along the 
foothills and in the mountains- of this entire 
region. 
Mountain sheep, which are becoming rare, are 
found across the international line in the moun¬ 
tains between the Pacific and the Gulf of Cali¬ 
fornia, south of San Diego. 
It is not necessary to go to Lake Tahoe for 
trout. They can be found in Bear Lake and 
Bear Creek, north of San Bernardino peak; 
while rainbow trout are numerous in many of 
the mountain streams along the San Gabriel 
and San Bernardino ranges. 
A FISHY STORY. 
A few days ago, says a Newfoundland paper, 
while Mr. Peter Kielly. of Petty Harbor, was 
splitting some fish which had been taken in his 
trap, he found in the stomach of one a tin of 
lobsters, in excellent condition. The can was 
opened in the stage room, and two of the as¬ 
sistants, so Mr. Kielly says, ate the contents, 
which were well preserved. The fish, no doubt, 
must have been large to swallow a tin of lobsters 
without mastication, and evidently came ashore 
for it. as lobsters are too high priced at present 
to be thrown overboard. 
American Big-Game Hunting. 
The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club. Editors: 
Theodore Roosevelt and George Bird Grinned. Il¬ 
lustrated. Cloth, 345 pages. Price, $2.50. 
Contents: A Buffalo Story, bv Capt. Geo. S. Ander- 
' — Co ' — 
son. The White Goat and His Country, by Owen 
Wister. A Day With the Elk, by Winthrop Chanler. 
Old Times in the Black Hills, by Col. R 9 ger D. Wil- 
Hams. Big Game in the Rockies, by Archibald Rogers. 
Coursing the Prongbuck, by Theodore Roosevelt. After 
Wapiti in Wyoming, by F. C. Crocker. In Buffalo 
Days, by Geo. Bird Grinned. Nights with the Grizzlies 
by W. D. Pickett. The Yellowstone Park as a Game 
Preserve, by Arnold Hague. A Mountain Fraud, b> 
Dean Sage. Blacktails in the Bad Lands, by B. Rum 
sey. Photographing Big Game, by W. B. Devereux 
Literature of American Big-Game Hunting. Our Forest 
Reservation. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Moose Hunting and Salmon Fishing 
and other sketches of sport. Being the record of per 
sonal experiences of hunting game in Canada. By T 
]J. Pattillo. 300 pages. Price, $2.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
