402 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[March 14, 1908. 
Light as a feather—staunch, 
swift and steady, with good 
capacity—built for years of hard service, 
hunting, cruising or pleasure. * 
This name plate guarantees the quality and correctness of model. 
Send for free illustrated catalog to-day. Agencies in all large cities. 
OLD TOWN.CANOE CO., 222 Middle St., Old Town, Me. 
L Send for 
OLD T( 
v-— 
A STRELINGER in your 
Launch is like Gold in 
your Pocket: 
Mighty Satisfactory 
The STRELINGER Always Goes 
d ig" ' i Safe, Simple, Durable, 
'I ■ I Reliable, Powerful. 
■ L, “GOOD AS EVER, after 10 years of ser- 
Z&xM ?■' v ' ce -'’ That’s the way we build them. 
GOOD ALWAYS 
r TROUBLE LEAVES when the Strclinger 
n Kdra comes aboard. 
THE STRELINGER ■■ We carry in stock 2 and 4-Cycle Marine 
(4 (lye.—1 to 4 Cyl.) and Stationary engines, 1 1-2 to 50 H. I’., 
$25 to $2,500. Send for Catalogue. Special bargains on a few sample 
motors. 
THE STRELINGER MARINE ENGINE CO., 
Dept. 6, 46 E. Congress SL, Detroit, Mich. 
Mullins Steel Boats Can 9 t Sink 
—the fastest and safest boats built. Made of pressed steel plates, with air cham¬ 
bers in each end like a life boat, they are absolutely safe. Faster lighter and more 
buoyant than wooden boats—practically indestructible—they don t leak, crack, 
dry out or wear out, and every boat is absolutely guaranteed. The ideal boats for 
pleasure, summer resorts, boat liveries, etc. D _, 
Send for catalog of Motor Boats, Marine Engines, Row Boats, Hunting and Fishing Boats 
THE W H MULLINS COMPANY, I2fi Franklin Street. Salem, Ohio._ 
FREE ON REQUEST 
WINNERS 1907 
A Record of the Races held by the Leading Clubs During 1907 
EDWARD SMITH (SL CO. 
Manufacturers of 
CHICAGO 
Spar Coating 
NEW YORK 
American Big-Game Hunting. 
The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club. Editors: 
Theodore Roosevelt and George Bird Grinnell. Il¬ 
lustrated. Cloth, 345 pages. Price, $2.50. 
Contents: A Buffalo Story, by Capt. Geo. S. Ander¬ 
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. Roger D. Wil¬ 
liams. 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 Grinnell. Nights with the Grizzlies, 
by W. D. Pickett. The Yellowstone Park as a Game 
Preserve, by Arnold Hague. A Mountain Fraud, by 
Dean Sage. Blacktails in the Bad Lands, bv 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 Caaada. By.T. 
R Pattillo. 300 pages. Price, $2.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Where, When and How to Catch 
Fish on the East Coast of Florida. 
By Wm. IT. 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 book, 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. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
FILE YOUR FOREST AND STREAM 
We have provided a cloth file binder to hold 26 num¬ 
bers of Forest and Stream. It is simple, convenient, 
strong durable, satisfactory. The successive issues thus 
bound’ make a handsome volume, constantly growing in 
interest and value. 
The binder will be sent postpaid on receipt of one 
dollar. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
AN EQUAL DIVISION. 
Here is a good old paragraph which was 
dug up by Jesse R. Salmon in his researches 
last week and printed in the Newark Call. It 
was from the Pennsylvania Gazette of March 
27 , 1753 : > 
“By an Act lately passed in New Jersey, any 
Person seeing another carry a Gun over any 
inclosed Land, not his own, by Information 
against him, obliges him to pay Five Pounds, 
and be bound over to his good Behaviour, one- 
half to the Informer, and in case of Failure, to 
be dealt with at the Justice’s Discretion; In Con¬ 
sequence of this Act, we hear, a few Weeks 
ago, a poor Fellow, in East New Jersey, was 
taken in the Fact, and brought to a Justice: 
The Justice accordingly was obliged to give 
Judgment; but the poor Fellow, Gurt and all, 
not being worth Half the Money, the Justice 
was at a Stand what to do; at Last determined 
him a Whipping of 30 Lashes, and as the In¬ 
former was entitled to one-half the Fine, very 
judiciously ordered him to receive one Half the 
Lashes.” 
A DEER FARM. 
A few miles from Stella, Missouri, says the 
Rural World, is a novel live stock establishment. 
Browsing about in perfect contentment in a deer 
park is a herd of beautiful deer. This deer park 
consists of fifteen acres and at present there are 
seven deer on the place, eleven having already 
been sold this season. The young deer are sold 
each year and bring $35 a pair. They are 
shipped in August or September. A Mr. Rose- 
berry has been raising and selling deer for four¬ 
teen years, having as many as twenty-five on 
hand at one time. 
»4 JOURNAL OF OUTDOOR Lfl 
TRAVEL NATURE STUDY SHOOTING FISHING. YA< 
CORRESPONDENCE. 
The Forest and Stream is the recognized medium ol 
entertainment, instruction and information between 
American sportsmen. The editors invite communications 
on the subjects to which its pages are devoted. Anony 
mous communications will not be regarded. The editors 
are not responsible for the views of correspondents. 
SUBSCRIPTIONS. 
Subscriptions may begin at any time. Terms: Foi 
single copies, $3 per year, $1.50 for six months. Rate: 
for clubs of annual subscribers: 
Three Copies, $7.50. Five Copies, $12. 
Remit by express money-order, registered letter, money 
order or draft payable to the Forest and Stream Publish 
ing Company. The paper may be obtained of news 
dealers throughout the United States, Canada and Grea 
Britain. Canadian subscriptions, $4.00 a year, $2.00 to 
six months. . _ . . T , 
Foreign Subscriptions and Sales Agents—London 
Davies & Co., 1 Finch Lane; Sampson, Low & Cc 
Paris: Brentano’s. Foreing terms: $4.50 per year; $2.2 
for six months. 
ADVERTISEMENTS. 
Inside pages, 20 cents per agate line. Special rates fo 
three, six and twelve months. Eight words to the lnu 
fourteen lines to one inch. Advertisements should b 
received by Saturday previous to issue in which the 
are to be inserted. Transient advertisements must 11 
variably be accompanied by the money, or they will nc 
be inserted. Reading notices, seventy-five cents per Imi 
Only advertisements of an approved character insertei 
Display Classified Advertising. 
Hotels, Summer and Winter Resorts, Instructioi 
Schools, Colleges, etc. Railroad and Steamship Tim 
Tables. Real Estate For Sale and To Let. Seeds an 
Shrubs. Taxidermists. The Kennel. Dogs, etc. Wan 
and Exchanges. Per agate line, per insertion, 15 cent 
Three months, 13 times, 10 cents per line. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO. 
346 Broadway, New York. 
