BULLETIN NUMBER TWO 



91 



H. B. Linder, Banker 



Edward Gillette, Civil Engineer, 



B. F. Perkins, Banker 

 Jas. LeFors, Ls. Inspector 

 M. L. Blake, Attorney 



D. Kahn 



H. C. Eliot, D.V.S. 



Geo. H. Brown, Hotel 



J. F. Hoop, Attorney 



J. Franklin Heald, Jeweler 



C. L. Hoag, Banker 



C. H. Grinnell, Cattleman 

 Delia C. Patrick, Ranchman 

 John E. Patrick, Ranchman 

 J. J. Mong, Ranchman 

 Mrs. Ferrier, Rancher 

 George Lord, Hardware 

 W. E. Foley, Furniture Merchant 

 P. E. Brown, Saloon 

 C. H. Taffner, Clerk 



E. R. Dinwiddie, Hardware 

 G. G. Carroll, Real Estate 

 J. J. Bentley, Real Estate 



L. C. Booth, Commercial Trav- 

 eler 



E. B. Allan, Banker 



Mrs. E. E. Clancy, Florist 

 Roy Seney, Druggist 

 John D. Stone, Storage 



F. A. Sniff, Groceries 

 L. T. Cox, Art Store 



Dr. C. E. Stevenson, Physician 

 Ernest C. Bowman, Civil Engi- 

 neer 

 W. Frackleton, D.D.S., Dentist 



D. W. Jones, Gen. Mgr., Sheri- 

 dan Railway Co. 

 P. J. Pelissier, Storekeeper 

 W. E. Pelissier 

 A. H. Hufford, Cashier 

 Thad. S. Cole, Merchant 

 T. B. Butler, Waiter 

 John M. Miller, Grain Merchant 

 F. A. Hodson, M.D., Phvsician 

 Bert C. Lee, Dentist 

 Berton B. Reed, Undertaker 

 R. A. Kinnan, Manufacturer 

 L. Verne St. John, Pharmacist 

 Donald Cofferen, Stationery 

 Wm. L. Flanagan, Ranchman 

 Rev. Edward M. Cross, Clergy- 

 man 

 Angela W. Cross 

 Sidney E. Bartlett 



Story : 



P. S. Dowling, Farmer and Saw 

 Mill 



Superior : 



O. M. Curtis 



Wolf: 

 Howard Eaton, Ranchman 

 F. A. Eaton, Ranchman 

 W. L. Eaton, Ranchman 

 Patty A. Eaton, Rancher 

 Wm. Curtis, Ranchman 

 J. L. Fleming, Clerk 

 John B. Duncan, Guide 

 A. H. Beidler 

 L. C. Herderick 



A REMARKABLE WYOMING EXHIBIT 



Voluntarily, and quite unsolicited by us, the Federation of Women's 

 Clubs of the State of Wyoming has prepared and forwarded to the 

 Wyoming delegation in Congress the most remarkable document ever 

 brought before a legislative body to secure the protection and increase 

 of American game. At long intervals we see the officers of organiza- 

 tions of sportsmen appear in lawmaking bodies with resolutions of re- 

 quest or endorsement in behalf of wild game, and of the preservation 

 of sport with the gun ; but in all our twenty-three years of experience 

 in wild life protection, we never yet have seen a real petition of sports- 

 men, numerously signed, presented in behalf of the propagation and 

 increase of wild life. Of course such petitions may have been presented 

 somewhere ; but it never has been our fortune to see one. Of petitions 

 to open gates for the slaughter of game, there have been many! 



It has remained for a powerful state organization of women to show 

 the sportsmen of America how to manifest a heartfelt and abiding inter- 



