FOREST AND STREAM 
[July i6, 1910. 
118 
a B81 BBS 
Erected at Sand* Point, L. I. for 
Mrs. HELEN K. GOULD 
Eight Rooms 
BUNGALOWS 
Portable and Permanent 
We erect them or ship 
K. D. All sizes and 
kinds. The one shown 
is built of “ Asbestos 
Cement.” 
BillingS'Stevens Co. 
4 East 42d St., New York City 
Send for Catalogue. 
"Resort* +or Sportsmen. 
A GUARANTEE 
OF SERVICE 
IVe ran the Roosevelt expedition—let us 
run yours. 
Every Sportsman should visit East Africa, 
the home of the Lion, Elephant, Buffalo, 
Rhinoceros, Hippopotamus and countless 
species of Antelope. 
q No other firm in theworld has our experience in 
African Sport, or our facilities for handling an 
expedition into the heart of Darkest Africa. 
q IVe were the sole agents for the outfitting 
and organization of the Roosevelt Expedition. 
A letter or wire to us will bring you all 
the information you require. 
If you use us as your agents you will be re¬ 
lieved of all hurry and worry. Delightful 
sport and complete satisfaction assured. 
•J Estimates given covering everything from New 
Yorfy an d home again. Our illustrated booklet is 
a work °f ar h Free on application or direct to 
Forest and Stream Pub. Co. Brought right up 
to date With latest game law changes. 
NEWLAND TARLTON & CO. Ltd. 
166 Piccadilly, London W., ENGLAND 
Cable Addresses: 
WAPAGAZI, London and SAFARI, Nairob 
RIPOGENUSLAKE CAMPS, MAINE. 
Cover a grandforestareaof 250square 
miles. TROUT will rise to the fly all 
summer. MOOSE, DEER, BEAR 
and GROUSE in the Fall. 
Special reduced rates for 1910. For 
illustrated circular and other informa¬ 
tion, address REG. C. THOM AS, 412 
Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Or 
direct to RIPOGENUS LAKE 
CAMPS, Grant Farm P. O., Maine. 
HUNT IN MONTANA. 
Take a big-game hunting trip through the grand and 
scenic mountains surrounding the Yellowstone Park. 
ELK, DEER. SMALL GAME. BEAR, SHEEP. 
We have well-known bear dogs, experienced guides, 
old-time hunters, complete pack outfit and gentle saddle 
horses. Special accommodation for ladies. Private phy¬ 
sician furnished if desired. 
WILL B. SHORE, Gardiner, Mont. 
KONRAD SCHAUER 
Mombosa, British East Africa 
The well-known firm of specialists 
for organizing and fitting out 
Hunting and Scientific Expeditions 
as well as planning trips for 
TOURISTS 
Practical preserving, packing and shipping 
of trophies — many years’ experience. 
<<17T T A DE XJTT T ** A splendid health resort in the African 
Aid aUL 111LL . Highlands—“A Sportsman’s Home.” 
The largest dealers in live animals and African 
curios. :: Literature sent free on application. 
NEWFOUNDLAND 
Excellent Salmon and Trout Fishing; also Caribou 
Shooting. Tents, guides, boats provided. Write 
BUNGALOW, Grand Lake, Newfoundland. 
NEWFOUNDLAND 
Salmon and Sea Trout fishing; best obtainable. Guides, 
etc., provided. Write FAIRVIEW, Crabbes, N. F. 
T can arrange for sportsmen for hunting trips to the 
Sierra Madre Mountains, where game is abundant and 
sport guaranteed. Last party killed 5 lions and 3 bears in 
12 days’ trip. Everything provided excepting rifles and 
liquors, including good dogs, which are a necessity for 
success with lions. Terms moderate. Apply MEXICO, 
care Forest and Stream. tf 
THE ANGLER S GUIDE 
1910 
How, When and Where to Fish. 
NOW READY. 
It tells not only where to fish with fair pros¬ 
pects of success, but how to get there and how 
to fish. It covers the whole of the United States 
and Canada, and is so handy that no fisherman 
can afford to be without it. 
It is newly revised and brought up to date. 
Beside the best available information on fishing, 
it is full of useful hints on camp equipment and 
sites, cooking, game law information and a whole 
lot of “How tos” that are worth while. 
Postpaid, 50 Cents. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Sam LovePs Camps. 
A Sequel to “Uncle Lisha’s Shop.” By Rowland E. 
Robinson. Cloth. Price, $1.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
"Resorts for Sportsmen. 
CAMP ROSSIGNOL 
Caledonia P. O. 
Queens County, Nova Scotia 
The best TROUT and Salmon fishing, the best 
MOOSE, bear and small game hunting, and the 
most picturesque scenery in Canada! Comfort¬ 
able log cabins, canoes, motor boats, tents, 
livery and guides furnished. 
Camp Rossignol offers $10.00 in gold for the 
best photograph of camp; $25.00 in gold for big¬ 
gest trout caught; $50.00 in gold for biggest pair 
of Moose horns obtained; $100.00 in gold for best 
painting of camp. Terms, $2.00 per day. Fare, 
$15.00 round trip from Boston. Joe Patterson, 
Head Guide, Caledonia, Queens County, N. S. 
abound, and if followed up from the mouths; 
and on several churs of the Brahmaputra tiger, 
leopard, and bear, etc., are sure to be found. 
And in the oloo grass and bheels around some 
fine bags of duck, partridge, snipe and florican 
are to be had. Perhaps the finest sport for a 
varied bag of both big and small game on the 
north bank is between the Gierborelli and the 
Subansiri. The grounds, as a rule, are easy to 
shoot over, and often the unexpected turns up 
and gives likelier chances to bag a fine speci¬ 
men than in any other part qf Assam of which 
we know. And the country from October to 
April is free to all, bar a few small forest 
reserves, and every facility is afforded and every 
help rendered to any keen outside sportsman by 
the hospitable planter. If a man has the time, a 
visit to the Daphlas over the border may result 
in some real good sport in the way of wild 
goat, sheep, gurral, etc., and he might possibly 
bag a Hathi, while in all the places mentioned 
above numerous herds of wild buffalo are still 
to be found, and it is safe to reckon on getting 
a decent head. On the south bank in the Lak- 
himpur and Sibsagur districts, however, big 
game is almost extinct, and no measure of 
preservation is resorted to in the case of what 
little is left. Some hundreds of gun licenses 
have been granted indiscriminately to all sorts 
and conditions of natives who have wantonly 
destroyed everything they could lay their hands 
upon, regardless of the most ordinary principles 
of sport which should appeal even to this class 
of native shikari. Concrete instances of this 
departure from the accepted amenities of sport 
may be cited in numerous cases, of the native 
big game hunter killing new-born calves in 
breeding and closed time. We are, however, 
glad to learn that the Deputy Commissioners in 
these districts are realizing these facts and are 
confiscating every gun and cancelling licenses 
whenever they get the slightest possible chance 
of doing so.—County Gentleman. 
STRANGE FISH. 
Fred Dumont Smith, of Hutchinson, tells that 
he was fishing once in Lake Killarney. The only 
evidence he found of the finny tribe ever having 
inhabited that body of water was a rumor circu¬ 
lating about that Brian McCarty, or a man of 
some such name, had captured a salmon there 
along about 150 B. C. 
But Smith determined to fish anyway, and 
hired a guide to show him the good places. He 
fished quite a while and got not even a nibble. 
“Guide, are there any fish in this lake?’’ de¬ 
manded Smith. 
“Lashins iv thim,” was the prompt reply. 
“Any trout?” 
“Shure!” 
“Any bass?” 
“Shure!” 
“Any croppies ?” 
“Shure!” 
“Any thermometers?” 
“Shure,” responded the guide, but in a confi¬ 
dential tone. “Shure, lots iv thim. If yer wor 
here in March ye’d see thim lapin’ all over the 
lake.” 
Smith decided to wait until March.—Kansas 
City Journal. 
