. Die Spielplätze Kanadas; eine kurze Abhandlung über Touristen-, Angel- und Jagdgebiete, die von der Grand Trunk Railway System erreicht werden. E attraktivste Gebiete für das Leben in der untram-gemähten Wildnis und wo es noch eine herrliche Wildnis vonLand und Wasserlandschaften, Wälder, Berge und Flüsse, Seen und Bäche, Die mit den meisten Fische wimmeln, und deren forestsabound mit zahlreichen Arten von großen Spiel-und Wildvögeln. Unter den wichtigsten Bezirken, die den Liebhaber von Out-of-Doors ansprechen, hat Ontario die attraktivsten, und mehrere beliebte Orte in dieser Provinz werden immer besser
1452 x 1721 px | 24,6 x 29,1 cm | 9,7 x 11,5 inches | 150dpi
Weitere Informationen:
Dieses Bild kann kleinere Mängel aufweisen, da es sich um ein historisches Bild oder ein Reportagebild handel
. The playgrounds of Canada; a short treatise on tourist, fishing and hunting resorts reached by the Grand Trunk Railway System . e most attractive territories for life in the untram-meled wilds and where there is still a magnificent wilderness ofland and waterscapes, forests, mountains and rivers, lakes andstreams, which teem with the gamiest of fish, and whose forestsabound with numerous species of big game and game birds. Among the principal districts that appeal to the lover ofout-of-doors, Ontario has the most attractive, and severalpopular localities in this province are becoming better knowneach year. The territory is known as the Highlands of Ontario, embracing nine distinct districts; those most suitable for campingand canoeing, however, being the Timagami Forest Reserve, the Algonquin National Park of Ontario, the Lake of Baysregion, Lake Couchiching and Muskoka, all of which districtsare described in the first pages of this publication. That the publicmay be fully conversant with what these organizations mean andhow they are controlled, the following descriptions are given: 42 Grand Trunk Railway System. THE CABIN, CAMP OTTER THE KEEWAYDIN GAMPS Perhaps the most famous, as well as the oldest, camp on theContinent, is Keewaydin, an American camp in the heart of aCanadian wilderness. This camp, which was founded in 1893, is on Devils Island in Lake Timagami, in the middle of the TimagamiForest Reserve. In the article on Summer Camps for the NationsYouth in Suburban Life for May, 1908, Keewaydin wascharacterized as the standard boys camp of America. To this wilderness camp come every year a large number ofAmerican boys—principally young fellows in the preparatoryschools—from a dozen large cities aid from smaller cities as farwest as Minnesota and as far south as Florida. The camp isunder the management of Mr. A. S. Gregg Clarke, Harvard, 1893, and he is assisted by a staff composed of instructors in a dozenor more of the leading eastern preparatory schools