998 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[Dec. 17, 1910. 
Resorts +or Sportsmen. 
MIDDLE SOUTH > 
Free from climatic extremes, and 
wholesome in every respect. :: :: 1 
FOUR EXCELLENT HOTELS, 50 COTTAGES- \ 
The only resort having THREE 18-HOLE GOLF \ 
COURSES, all in pink of condition. FINE LIVERY \ 
OF SADDLE HORSES, Country Club, 40,000 ^ 
Acre Private Shooting Preserve, Good Guides and 
Trained Dogs, Model Dairy, Tennis Courts, Trap 
Shooting, etc. 
No Consumptives Received at Pine hurst 
Through Pullman service from New York to Pinehurst 
via Seaboard Air Line. Only one night out from New 
York, Boston, Cleveland, Pittsburg and Cincinnati. 
Send for illustrated literature and list of 
Golf Tennis and Shooting Tournaments. 
Pinehurst General Office: 
PINEHURST, NORTH CAROLINA 
or Leonard Tufts, Owner - - - - Boston, Mass. 
HUNTING IN FLORIDA 
On the Indian River 
Twenty ducks guaranteed any morning. Canvasback, 
mallard, widgeon and teal. Also deer, turkey, quail and 
snipe shooting. Particulars and references by addressing 
HOTEL DIXIE. Titusville. Fla. 
P. S. ERRICSON, Prop. 
No sport, no pay. I can take parties to the Sierre Madre 
Mountains, where they can enjoy first-class sport. Bear, 
lion, peccary, deer and turkey. If I don’t show sport, I 
ask no pay, and everything goes free. Terms moderate. 
JOHN A. M. LETHBRIDGE, Nueva Casas Grandes, 
Chihuahua, Mexico. 
BAGLEYFARM, BAGL ^?n£ ,LLS ' 
Kenbridge Station, Va. Road. Guests are offered shooting 
privileges on 20,000 acres of land, undoubtedly the best for 
uail, deer and turkey shooting in the South. Guides, 
og3 and horses furnished. 
EXCLUSIVE HUNTING ON 23.000 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. 
HUNTING IN FLORIDA. 
Ideal winter home for family. Good shooting; horses and 
vehicles; dog furnished; open fires; pure water; every 
comfort to guests. Railroad and telegraph. 
WOODLAND PLANTATION, Lloyd. Fla. 
A WILD TURKEY HUNT IN 
OLD VIRGINIA! 
A noted game preserve fronting James River. Owner 
absent this year. A grand chance for a yachtsman to 
entertain his friends. Send for records of previous annual 
hunts and terms of rental. Address RICHARD EPPES, 
City Point, Va. 
SPORTSMEN! 
Fine location on my farm for a club. Ouail plentiful. 
25 MRS. B. F. WHITE, M^bane, N. C. 
Winter Sport with Rod and Gun 
Sportsmen, spend your winter vacation 
here. All kinds of hunting, from panther 
to duck; exciting game fishing; fighting 
tarpon in the bay; big mouth black bass in 
river. Booklet sent free. Correspondence 
invited. Address T. D. BRIGGS, Prop. 
The Kefidezvons, lomos&ssa. Pie. 
“Resorts for Sportsmen. 
HUNTERS’ LODGE! 
GOOD QUAIL SHOOTING! 
Choice Accommodation for Gentlemen 
and Ladies. Come and bring your wife. 
General FRANK A. BOND, 
Buies, N. C. 
Hunting Without a Gun, 
And other papers. By Rowland E. Robinson. With 
illustrations from drawings by Rachael Robinson. 
Price, $2.00. 
This is a collection of papers on different themes con¬ 
tributed to Forest and Stream and other publications, 
and now for the first time brought together. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
A Problem’s Solution 
LOG CABINS & COTTAGES; 
How to Build and Furnish Thom. 
A seasonable book when all minds are bent on the 
problem of getting close to nature. Mr. Wicks in this 
delightful book offers timely advice to every one who 
wants to build a simple summer home at one with its 
surroundings of wood or stream or shore. 
This is a thoroughly practical work, treating of the 
how, the where, and the with what of camp building and 
furnishing. It is helpful, too, in regard to furnishing, 
and withal a most beautiful work. 
Cloth, profusely illustrated, $1.50 postpaid. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
The Atlantic Monthly—1911 
THE PATRICIANS 
A Serial Novel by JOHN GALSWORTHY 
The Atlantic has not published a serial since 1908. The editors have been waiting for a story 
which seemed to unite marked narrative interest with that finish of workmanship which should 
characterize an Atlantic serial. Such a story is “The Patricians,” a new novel by John Gals¬ 
worthy; the story of agreeable people living their lives among the shifting problems which 
confront the English aristocracy of to-day. It is fundamentally a love story, and the two con¬ 
trasted heroines will be remembered long after the last chapter is read. 
A JOURNAL OF THE SIERRAS 
By JOHN MUIR 
John Muir left college with little money and less health, and offered his services to a ranch¬ 
man. He was engaged as a herder to help drive some two thousand sheep. This journal is a 
finished record of this unforgettable journey. Besides its exquisite appreciation of the glories 
of the sierras, the journal gives a highly entertaining account of the drive, interspersed with 
philosophy, wit, knowledge, and infinite enthusiasm. 
ROBERT E. LEE 
By GAMALIEL BRADFORD, Jr. * 
A series of sympathetic, fair-minded studies of the character of a great American by a writer 
educated in the traditions of Massachusetts’ abolitionists. In the preparation oi these papers 
Mr. Bradford has exhausted every source of first-hand knowledge. The Lee he draws is the Lee 
of fact, not the Lee of legend. 
A YEAR IN A COAL MINE 
By JOSEPH HUSBAND 
The author of this narrative, after graduating from college, sought employment in a coal mine 
of the Middle West. After months of labor in a community of underground workers composed 
of every nationality, a fire broke out, and against it for three months the men fought a series of 
tragic battles culminating in utter disaster. The story is told with great dramatic energy, and 
the pictures of life four hundred feet below the earth’s surface are strangely interesting. 
THE CO-OPERATIVE FAMILY 
By FRANCIS E. LEUPP 
A series casting a white light upon many 
domestic difficulties. Among them will be 
such papers as “The Crooked Stick,” “The 
Problem of Priscilla,” “ The Stranger within 
Our Gates.” 
MAN AND BIRD AND BEAST 
Few regular readers of the Atlantic have 
forgotten Mr. H. C. Merwin’s delightful 
paper on “ Dogs and Men.” It is good news 
to announce other papers in the same category; 
“ Horses and Men,” Henry C. Merwin. 
“ My Dog Punch,” Robert M. Gay. 
“In Praise of Parrots,” Franklin James. 
THE ETHICAL CONDUCT OF 
GREAT BUSINESS 
This is at the heart of the most important 
problems confronting the American people. 
The Atlantic hopes to number among its 
earlier papers on this topic “ The Public and 
the Railroads,” E. P. Ripley, President of the 
Santa Fd;” “Manufacturing and Industrial 
Peace,” Myron T. Herrick, capitalist and 
former Governor of Ohio. 
NEW ARTICLES 
By GENERAL MORRIS SCHAFF 
Nothing which the Atlantic has printed of 
late years has brought a more human response 
than General Schaff’s “ Battle of the Wilder¬ 
ness.” General Schaff is now at work on a 
new series of historical papers for the 
Atlantic. 
THE ATLANTIC CALENDAR FOR 1911 
will be similar in form to the one published in 1910, the quotations being entirely new. This 
calendar is a storehouse of ideas, exquisitely expressed, and a constant reminder of what is 
best in American literature. Price 50 cents postpaid, or a copy will be sent to new subscrib¬ 
ers sending us $4.00 for 1911. 
The Atlantic Monthly Go., Boston, Mass. 
35 CENTS A COPY $4.00 A YEAR 
