284 FOREST AND STREAM. 
[FEB. 17, 1906. 


APPR ALORS 
Smith Hammerless and Ejector 
Guns: also Hunter One-Trigger 
GOLD MEDAL 
At the LEWIS & CLARKE EXPOSITION 
Ask for our catalogue. 
HUNTER ARMS COMPANY 
NEW YORK 

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LP? LL ALND ALPS AS 
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The cream of winter sport is fox hunting with hound and 
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he Marlin .25 isa rifle of perfectaccuracy and sureness 
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will afford many pleasant hours when no other gunning can be 
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Have you our “Experience Book ”’—it’s chock full of real hunting stories. 
Free, with 130-page Catalogue, for 3 stamps postage. Write to-day. 
The Marlin Firearms Ca, 
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> 

FERGUSON'S Canoe Cruising and Camping, 
Patent Reflecting Lamps | By Perry D. Frazer. Illustrated. Cloth, 95 pages. Price 
THOMAS J. CONROY, $1.00. 
This interesting little volume is a practical guide for the 
28 John Street, cruising canoeist—the man who wishes to start away 
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canoeing as a healthful and economical method of pass- 
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of outdoor life. 
Contents: Pleasures and Advantages of Canoes; Ma- 
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ing Gear; Fittings and Duffle; Camping Outfits; Tents 
Without Poles; Recipes for Waterproofing; Sleeping Bag; 
Camp Axe; Duffle Bag; A Portable Range; 
Food; W hat to Wear; Firearms and Ammunition; Fish- 
ing Tackle; Camera; How to Cruise. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
With Silver Plated 
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UNIVERSAL LAMP, | 
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Two Grand Prizes St. Doe Exposition 
9 


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application. 
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36 CORTLANDT STREET, NEW YORK 
Established 1802. 
MAILED FREE on 



Selecting | 
Rivera eNiae lie 
| Huntington Mfg. 

Yachting News Notes. 
SCHOONER CELEST So_p.—Mr. Alfred Richards, 
of Brooklyn, N. Y., has sold the auxiliary 
schooner Celest to Mr. D. N. Seely, of Pittsburg, 
Pa., through the agency of Mr. Frank Bowne 
Jones, of New York city. Celest is 85ft. over all, 
65ft. waterline, 18ft. 6in, breadth and sit. draft. 
She was built in Norfolk, Va. in 1892. Mr. 
Seely will use the yacht along the coast in the 
summer and in Florida waters in the winter. 
RRR 
New SAILs AND RicGcING For ISOLDE..—Messts. 
Ratsey & Lapthorne are making a new suit of 
sails in their City Island loft for the British-built 
cutter Isolde, owned by Rear Commodore Fred- 
erick M. Hoyt, Larchmont Y. C. The sails are 
being made from some material specially woven 
for Mr. William Gardner. It is beautiful cloth 
and said to be much finer in wearing and speed 
qualities than anything yet produced, either here 
or abroad. Isolde will receive new wire rigging 
throughout. Capt. John Barr, Isolde’s skipper, is 
now overhauling the boat’s gear and she will be 
in finer condition next season than she has ever 
been. 
Ree 
YALE CorRINTHIAN Y. C.’s Racine SCHEDULE.— 
Regatta Committee of the Yale Corinthian Y. C. 
has arranged for the following events: 
April 4—First race for David Boies Cup. 
April 7—Second race for David Boies Cup. 
April 21—First race for Officers’ Cup. 
April 25—First race for Special Cup. 
April 28—Second race for Officers’ Cup. 
May 2—Second race for Special Cup. 
May 5—Third race for Officers’ Cup. 
May 9—Third race for Special Cup. 
May 12—Fourth race for Officers’ Cup. 
May 16—Fourth race for Special Cup. 
May 19¢—First race for Graduates’ Cup. 
May 23—Fifth race for Special Cup. 
May 25—Second race for Graduates’ Cup. 
Mav 30—Special Memorial Day race. 
June 2—third race for Graduates’ Cup. 
June 6—Sixth race for Special Cup. 
June 9—Fourth race for Graduates’ Cup. 
June 13—Special race for Commodore’s Cup. 
RRR 
NortH Witpwoop Y. C.—The North Wild- 
wood Y. C., of Cape May, N. J., including a 
number of prominent Wildwood residents, will 
obtain a charter this week, and it is the intention 
to erect a club house as handsome and commo- 
dious as any on the coast. It will be located on 
Delaware avenue, at the head of an artificial 
canal, 25ft. deep, which occupies the vacated 
Seventeenth street, which is tooft. wide and con- 
nects with the main channel in the Sound, and 
this location will place the house within four or 
five blocks of the hotels and business centers. 
The committee has partially decided to plan the 
house on the same model as that of the Atlantic 
City Y. C.’s house.—Philadelphia Ledger. 
RR E 
CRUISER JANE So_p.—The 56ft. auxiliary yawl 
rigged cruiser Jane, ex Coon, has been sold by 

| Commodore Wm. M. Goodbar, of the Memphis 
Boat Club, to Messrs. T. C. Hicks, M. Gerf and 
A. R. Bartlett, also of Memphis, Tenn., who are 
now on a criuse in New Orleans waters with the 
vessel. Jane was built by William Kirk at Toms 
in 1899. Commodore Goodbar is 
now in the market for a 1I25ft. steam yacht, and 
Robert Galloway, who took the boat south in 
1904, is having a 1ooft. power boat built by the 
Co. at New Rochelle. Yacht- 
ing is certainly enjoying a healthy growth in the 
South, and it is a good market for cruising yachts 
of medium size. 
eee 
Wuite LAKE Y. C. Joins L. M. Y. A—The 
White Lake Y. C., of White Lake, Mich., organ- 
ized last year, has joined the Lake Michigan 
Yachting Association. The White Lake Y. C. 
was the sixth club to join the Lake Michigan Y. 
A. Of the yachting clubs on the eastern shore 
of the lake the White Lake Y. C. is the most 
northerly. A $5.000 club house is now being 
erected for the White Lake Y. C 
‘ 
