286 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[FEB. 17, 1906. 

+ 

For Sale. 
BROOK TROUT FOR SALE. 
We have constantly on hand 
fine supply of Brook Trout, all 
sizes for stocking purposes, Al- 
so for table use at 75c. a pound 
Visitors privileged to catch own 
trout. 
PARADISE BROOK 
TROUT CO., Parkside, Pa., Henryville Railroad Station. 
LIVE QUAIL 
Western birds only. Positively no worthless Southern 
migratory birds offered. Also pheasants, etc. 
E. B. WOODWARD, 302 Greenwich St., New York. 
LIVE WILD WHITE CANADIAN Hares 
WALTER R. SOPER, Bucksport, Me. 
BROOK TROUT. | 
fry seernge and two-year-olds, for stocking 
brooks and lakes. Address NEW ENGLAND TROUT 
FARM, Plympton, Mass. 
BROOK TROUT 
of all ages for stocking lakes and streams. Brook trout 
eggs in their season. For the next_30 or 60 days I will 
make prices on yearlings very low. FURNACE BROOK 
HATCHERY (E. L. Maglathlin), Kingston, Mass. 
FOR SALE—BROOK TROUT.—FINE HEALTHY 
Fish of all sizes. sabe eggs in season. Warranted de- 
livered anywhere, represented. Correspondence 
solicited. BAY SIDE. TROUT FARM (A. B. Savary), 
East Wareham, Mass. 
THE BROOKDALE TROUT CANNOT BE BEAT 
for stocking ponds and streams. For the next few 
weeks we will make fy ne. low price on young fry and 
large fish. Also fly-fi 
BROOKDALE "TROUT CO., Kingston, Mass. 
BROOK TROUT. 
It will pay you to correspond with me before buying 
eggs, fry or yearlings in any quantity. I guarantee a 
safe delivery anywhere. Crystal Spring Trout Farm 
L. B. HANDY, So. Wareham, Mass. 
ages for 
BROOK TROUT eu and _ lakes. 
trout eggs in any quantity, warranted delivered anywhere 
in fine condition. Correspondence solicited. 
THE PLYMOUTH ROCK TROUT CO. 
Plymouth, Mass. 
Live Quail Colorado Top Knots 
A few thousand for February, March and April delivery. 
Please order quickly. 
New York. 


cheap. 
tf 

E. B. WOODWARD, 302 Greenwich 'St., 


Proverte: yon ‘Salam 
_ SALMON FISHING 
everal good salmon rivers, on the North Shore of the 
St. Lawrence, offered for short or long lease. For par- 
iculars apply to the LABRADOR COMPANY, Room 
3, 40 Hospital St., Montreal, Canada. 

Loaf? io) ee 

SALMON FISHING FOR RENT 
for the season of 1906. One of the best Salmon rivers in 
Canada. Good fishing guaranteed. For further particu- 
lars address ALFRED A. ADAMS, 96 FRANKLIN 
St... NEW YORK. if 

FOR SALE. 
FISHING PRESERVES 
On Long Island 
S0 acres of land, including over 2,000 feet of the finest 
Trout Stream on Long Island, with Fisherman’s camp. 
Price $10,000. 
About 140 acres, Suffolk County. Railroad Station %4 
mile. About 10 acres under cultivation, 30 acres wood- 
land, plenty of fruit trees, three running streams and 
body of water that covers 100 acres, house 6 rooms and 
puter kitchen, barns, sheds, all in good order. Price, 
$20,000. 
250 acres, with large and beautiful South 
Country Road, cleared land, woodland, 
gant trout stream. Price $100 per acre. 
O. B. ACKERLY. 
OADWAY. NEW YORK. 
front on 
150 BR 

BEAUTIFUL CANADIAN SUMMER HOME. 
Rocky Point, on Lake Temiskaming; 202 acres. Luxuri- 
ously furnished house. Bath, hot and cold water, cottage 
for servants and guides. Three porches; tool shop; yacht 
house containing 35-foot cabin yacht and fourteen boats 
and canoes. Fine hunting and fishing. Admirably adapted 
for a club house or school camp. Situated 300 miles 
Se of Toronto. One-half hour from railroad station. 
. C. NEWELL, 409 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. 7 
‘and Where to Spend the Winter. 
| ing Without the Birds; An Episode of Shore 
orchard and ele- | 

Field, Cover and Trap Shooting. 
By Captain Adam H. Bogardus, Champion Wing 
Shot of the World. Embracing Hints for 
Skilled Marksmen; Instruction for Young 
Sportsmen; Haunts and Habits of Game 
Birds; Flight and Resorts of Waterfowl; 
Breeding and Breaking of Dogs. Cloth, 444 
pages. Price, $2.00. 
“Field, Cover and Trap-Shooting” is a book of 
instruction, and of that best of all instruction, 
where the teacher draws from his own rich ex- 
perience, incident, anecdote and moral to illustrate 
and emphasize his teaching. The scope of the 
book—a work of nearly 500 pages—is shown by 
this list of chapters: 
Guns and Their Proper Charges. Pinnated 
Grouse Shooting. Late Pinnated Grouse Shoot- 
ing. Quail Shooting in the West. Ruffed Grouse 
Shooting. Shooting the Woodcock. The Snipe 
and Snipe Shooting. Golden Plover, Curlew and 
Gray Plover. Wild Ducks and Western Duck 
Shooting. Wild Geese, Cranes and Swans. Wild 
Turkey and Deer Shooting. The Art of Shooting | 
Wing. Shooting Dogs—Breeding and 
Pigeon Shooting—Trap-Shooting. 
FOREST & STREAM PUB. CO. 
a 
Sam Lovel’s Boy. 
By Royland E. Robinson. Price, $1.25. 
Sam Lovel’s Boy is the fifth of the series of 
Danvis books. No one has pictured the New 
Englander with so much insight as has Mr. Rob- 
inson. Sam Lovel and Huldah are two of the 
characters of the earlier books in the series, and 
the boy is young Sam, their son, who grows up 
on the 
Breaking. 
under the tuition of the coterie of friends that we | 41) the names of this kind have been shot off yet. 
know so well, becomes a man just at the time of | 
the Civil War and carries a musket in defense of 
what he believes to be the right. 
FOREST &7 STREAM *PUBMCO: 
Bears I Have Met—And Others. 
Price, 60 cents. 
After some years of peaceful slumber, Mr. 
Kelly’s most excellent book of bear stories was 
roused to life by a recent criticism of Mr. Seton, 
the question being where Mr. Seton got his ma- 
terial for his bear stories, for a number of people 
suggested that it was taken from Mr. Kelly’s 
book. With the merits of this controversy “our- 
selves have naught to do,” but the matter in Mr. 
Kelly’s book is excellent, interesting and worthy 
of pretty much any author. 
By Allen Kelly. Paper, 209 pages. 
FOREST & STREAM PUB. CO. 
Shore Birds. 
Six papers reprinted from the ForEsT AND 
STREAM. Paper, 45 pages. Price, 15 cents. 
Contents: J. Haunts and Habits; Where the 
Bay Birds Live and What They Do at Home. II. 
Range and Migration; Where They Go to Breed 
III. A Morn- 
Shooting. IV. Nomenclature; A List of Our 
American Species of Limicole, with a Description 
of Each Species. V. Localities; Where to Go to 
Shoot Them. VI. Blinds and Decoys; How to 
Shoot Them After You Have Reached the 
Grounds. 
FOREST & STREAM PUB. CO. 
Camp Life in the Woods. 
And the Tricks of Trapping and- Trap Making. Con- 
taining hints on camp shelter, all the tricks and bait 
receipts of the trapper, the use of the traps, with in- 
popenons for the capture of all fur-bearing animals. 
By W. Hamilton Gibson. Illustrated. Cloth, 300 pp. 
Price, $1.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO. 
| still holds rewards for delvers. 

Frankly, humorous names don’t wear. At least 
not unless they are inspired by such genius as is 
illustrated by Woodpile. That was a masterly 
stroke, and I expect to see it followed by Dust- 
pan, Makin’s, Pantalets, Shoestring, Wastebasket, 
Crate and a raft of other inferior imitations. — 
Here are some suggestions for better ones: 
Thirst—wouldn’t that hit off some yachts, not to 
say owners? Or Three Sheets, or Prosit? Fool- 
ish might be worth the derision it would excite. 
Silly would follow that. How’s Wart, or Thing? 
Now and This are suggested, and It. Also What. 
Then there’s Tub and Cub. I think Kid was 
used for a motor boat once. 
The limit of this sort of nonsense would be 
reached by Name. 
For longer names there is Roustabout and 
Bumblebee. Deficit would create a diversion, and 
it has an opposite—Dividend. Coupon could be 
used in case a separate name is desired for a 
tender. 
Names fall into classes like yachts themselves. 
What suits a Cape cat may be rank for a cruising 
motor boat. Even houseboats deserve peculiar 
consideration. Siesta is a suggestion for an ark, 
_ or Slouch, or Mecca, or even Nicotine. Hashish 
is an attenuation. Wink or Whiff would do for a 
little rater, but would ridicule a seagoing ketch. 
Many a good name has been drawn from the 
sport itself, and the elements it depends on. Un- 
fortunately this supply is limited, but the vein 
Windward was 
a fine thing in its day. Four Winds is even bet- 
ter. But why not Fair Wind? Then there’s 
Gust, Fluke, Catspaw and Williewaw. This: lat- 
ter has a better derivation than one thinks at first. 
Of nouns there is likewise a scarcity. But have 
we had a Lance? Other weapons will be sug- 
gested—Derringer, Cutlass, Bullet and so forth. 
Six-Shooter has been used effectively. But not 
Then, without resorting to mythology, there is 
an immense field among the flowers, the birds and 
the stars. These need no professional guide. It 
is wonderful that such stupid names are chosen, 
and there is so much borrowing when you think 
of the almost limitless field offered by nature. 
Then there are the nouns having an adjectival 
force, and they have afforded the best list of 
names ever carved or painted. One thinks at 
once of Reliance. The British navy has borrowed 
thunder from this source. There’s room here for 
the owner to fit himself as well as his boat. Way- 
ward and Wilfull are suggested, and Winsome, 
to keep near the end of the alphatbet. Omega 
itself would be modest enough for anyone. 
Some names Suggest the uses of the craft— 
Zigzag, for instance. Fol-de-rol wouldn’t look 
bad on an arch board, or screwed to a pilot house’ 
So far we haven’t dipped into foreign language, 
but it is permissible if you pluck such a posy as 
Mariposa. Spanish and Italian are best. Al- 
most any word from these tongues will suffice, 
if you have no pride to deter you from thieving. 
French comes next, and even German helps a 
little. There’s Gltick. Japanese has proved a 
rich mine, and will continue to yield high grade 
ore. And this brings us to Indian nomenclature. 
It’s all right within bounds. Hiawatha is a lit- 
tle overworked, though Nahma shines undeni- 
ably. Indian filtered through locality has been re- 
sponsible for successes, as witness Genessee. I 
only blaze a tree here and there. The South is 
rich in Creole and Indian and Spanish names. 
And Arcadia, taken as a frame of mind, was a 
good one for the steel yawl that bears it. 
The catboat can have a nomenclature of her 
own. Pussy has so many characteristics that 
afford suggestions. Grimalkin is a new one. 
Singe-cat has been used. Yowler would do for 
a catboat owner who abhors cats. The yawl, 
too, can have something appropriate, and the 
motor boat. For the latter why not Spunk, or 
Hysterics? Rah-rah would do for a coaching 
launch, and for a flat, round-bowed center- 
boarder what better than Slapstick? In some 
cases, as a fleet of one-design boats, there could 
be similarity throughout. A pair could be called 
Chills and Fever. 
And now we come to the confessedly most 
difficult class—the sentimental. This is the de- 
spair of certain minds. This the reef they bring 
