[efever 
New Lerever Nitro- 
SPECIAL onty $29.00 
O. K.’ed and pufchasedin 
quantities by the U.S 
Navy. Well finished 
considering the 
price. Built to 
shoot right and 
stand as much 
use asthe most 
expensive gun 
Most durable 
lock ever 
put in a 
gun— 
first lock 
fired 
over 
Every 77,000 
gun proof- 
tested with an 
extreme load 
A standardized 
gun built only 
in 20-ga. 28 in., 
16-ga, 28 in., and 
times. 
12-ga. 28 and 30 in. with 
14 in. stock and about2 % in 
drop. A Lefever won the world’s 
championship at the Olympic 
games in London. Lefever has 
stood for service and durability 
for over 50 yrs. Write for Catalogue 
Lelever Arms Co., Ithaca, N.Y. 

Get This Sightand 
_@ Be aBetterShot 
Faster, more accurate than any open rear 
sight. Fits most American sporting rifles 
At your dealer's, or give us his name and 
make, model and caliber of gun. Write for 
free folder, or send 10c for complete catalog 
and manual. 

Lyman Gun Sight Corporation 
110 West St., Middlefield, Conn. 
LYPMAN 
SIGHTS 
Better Your Aim 

“Old Town Canoes” are patterned after real 
Indian models. They are graceful, strong and 
remarkably steady. ‘Old Town Canoes” respond 
instantly to every stroke of the blade. They are 
low in price. $64 up. From dealer or factory. 
The new 1924 catalog is beautifully il- 
lustrated. 
colors. 
It shows all models in full 
Write for your free copy to-day. 
OLD TOWN CANOE CoO. 
495 Street, Old Town, Maine, U.S. A. 
BASS-HOUNS 
TROUT - HOUNS 
y The deadliest flies ever de- 
vised for taking bass and 
Their success is be- 
td , 
. ” 5 as 
. yy . i 
’, ‘. X i 
4 "i 
a] 
Ta 
a 
trout. 
yond belief. Made in both 
Also furnished tied on Jamison 
barbless hooks. Dry fly fishing for bass is sport su- 
preme. Write for my little book that tells you how. 
It’s free. Dealers write for catalog and prices. 
A. J. KOSHOLLEK, Stevens Point, Wis. 
—— 
wet and dry patterns. 
In writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream, 





Interstate Park; Harlan P. Kelsey, 
chairman of the New England Con- 
ference for the Protection of National 
Parks; and Colonel Glenn S. Smith, 
Topographic Engineer of the Geological 
Survey. 
Stock Streams for New Jersey 
ITH the effects of last summer’s 
drought that exterminated the 
fish in many streams largely overcome 
by wholesale restocking operations of 
the State Fish and Game Commission, 
New Jersey anglers face the prospect 
of lively sport during the present trout 
season. Thousands of adult trout are 
being liberated every day under direc- 
tion of wardens, to supplement the 
heavy fall planting of fish, so that 
there will be no lack of speckled 
beauties when artificial flies begin to 
dance over the ripples and pools. 
The planting of trout is being con- 
centrated in the natural trout brooks 
of the northern counties. Brown trout 
and brook trout, raised at the great 
fish hatchery at Hackettstown, will 
predominate in this season’s distribu- 
tion. Rainbow trout are being released, 
but in diminished numbers, as experi- 
ence has shown that the rainbow, while 
popular with anglers, leaves the brooks 
and runs into the sea, making it an 
uneconomical fish for restocking pur- 
poses. Large numbers of brown trout 
are being placed in some of the south 
Jersey streams where other trout will 
not thrive. Most of the waters in the 
southern countries, however, are better 
suited for bass, pike and perch. 
New Jersey’s methods of restocking 
have made its trout streams a para- 
dise for eastern anglers. Fished out 
long ago but for the annual replenish- 
ment of the supply, these streams now 
afford sport that otherwise would be 
available only for the angler who could 
seek it in distant states. In many of 
the streams that are fished the hardest, 
the state will continue restocking right 
through the open season, so that at no 
time need anglers lack for sport. In 
addition to the adult trout now being 
liberated, hundreds of thousands of 
fry and fingerlings have been placed 
in feeders of the main trout streams 
during the past year, where, as they 
grow, they naturally work their way 
into the deeper waters. 
Twenty-five trout a day is the liberal 
bag limit allowed by state laws. Fish- 
ing clubs have an unwritten law, how- 
ever, that no sportsman shall take 
more fish than he can use. 

Gorilla Sanctuary 
Ae the request of the Belgian Am- 
bassador to the United States, 
Professor Carl Akeley of the Ameri- 
can Museum of National History is 
collecting data from the National Park 
It will identify you. 
Service of the Department of the In- 
terior on the management and control 
of National Parks as practiced in this 
country. 
The material is to be used in con- 
nection with the formation of a great 
National Park and Gorilla Sanctuary 
to be projected by the Government of 
Belgium in the Belgian Congo in South 
Africa. Two years ago Professor 
Akeley visited the Belgian Congo to 
collect information on gorillas and he 
found a situation suggesting the neces- 
sity of establishing a sanctuary and 
research station for the purpose of 
preserving these fast disappearing 
animals so that they might be the sub- 
ject of intimate study. 
This proposal was enthusiastically 
endorsed by Baron de Cartier, the 
Belgian Ambassador to the United 
States, who has worked very earnestly 
in its behalf. As the matter now 
stands the original proposal for the 
gorilla sanctuary has been developed 
into one for a great national park com- 
prising probably the most beautiful 
scenic region in Africa and some 
splendid game fields. In 1919 the King 
and Queen of the Belgians during their 
visit to the United States toured sev- 
eral of the national parks, being 
tremendously impressed with the ex- 
ample set by this Government in pre- 
serving the flora and fauna and the 
most conspicuous examples of American 
scenery in national parks for the 
benefit and enjoyment of the people. 
It is understood that as a result of 
their trip the Royal Forests of Belgium 
have been made into a national park. 
Jack Miner and the Birds 
ATURE lovers who have followed 
the work of Jack Miner, bird lover 
and conservationist, will be pleased to 
know that he has written a book con- 
cerning his experience. On his prop- 
erty at Kingsville, Ontario, countless 
flocks of wild Canada geese and other 
water fowl congregate each season. 
This condition was brought about by 
Mr. Miner’s earnest desire to see 
migratory birds given a square deal, 
and was in one sense the origin of the 
game refuge idea. Since the modest 
beginning of the work many years ago, 
the founder of this great haven has 
delivered countless lectures on the sub- 
ject of wild life preservation; his place 
among the leading conservationists of 
America has indeed been well earned. 
Readers of FOREST AND STREAM who 
have followed Jack Miner’s work will 
welcome this volume and we recom- 
mend it to those who are not familiar 
with his accomplishments. 
“Jack Miner and the Birds” may be 
obtained by addressing Manly F. 
Miner, Kingsville, Ontario, Canada. The 
price is three dollars, postpaid. 
Page 802 
