[xvi 
RECREATION. 

NEWHOUSE 
STEEL TRAPS 
Made since 1848 by ONEIDA COMMUNITY 

S. NEWHOUSE 
(The Old Trapper and Trapmaker) 
Fifty years ago this famous old Trapmaker of 
the Oneida Community would not let a trap 
leave his hand till he KNEW that it would hold 
any animal that got intoits jaws. Even greater 
pains are taken now than then in selecting the 
finest steel and rigidly testing every part. 
This is why all experienced Trappers insist 
on having the 
““ NEWHOUSE ” 

‘¢T have seen an Indian trade his pony for one 
dozen Newhouse Traps.’’—Popular Magazine 
Writer. 

Eleven Sizes for Catching 
Every Fur Bearing Animal 
——_—— 
Every Trap Cuaranteed 
Illustrated Catalogue Mailed 
(2 Send twenty-five cents for “The Trapper’s Guide,” 
by S. Newhouse, telling all about fur bearing animals 
and how to trap them, together with interesting nar- 
ratives and practical directions for life in the woods. 
Mention RECREATION. 
ONEIDA COMMUNITY 
ONEIDA NEW YORK 

THE 
1904 Model 
LEATHER-COVERED = Pneu- 
matic Recoil Pad is now per- 
fect. No pump. no valve, no 
recoil, no flinch, no headache, 
no bruised shoulders, no 
money if not satisfactory and 
returned at once. 
: PRICE, $1.50. 
J. R. WINTERS 
Clinton, Mo. 

KOENIG’S SHELL EXTRACTOR. 
. Every shooter should 
have one—carryit ina 
vest pocket, Fits any 
gauge shell. Koenig’s 
Gun Catalogue, Free. 

10 Cts. Postpaid. 
E.G.KOENIG, NEW JERSEY S LARGEST GUN HOUSE 
SOUTH BROAD ST., Newark, N. J, 
AN ADVENTUROUS WOMAN. 
ELIZABETH A. VORE, 
One of the most remarkable women of 
the West is Alice Rollins Crane. Probably 
no other woman has risked so much, en- 
dured such privation, and triumphed so 
royally over obstacles that the majority of 
people would consider insurmountable. 
Alice Rollins Crane is the wife of Colonel 
L. P. Crane, of Los Angeles, California, a 
gentleman who earned his title by faithful 
service in the war of the rebellion. Mrs, 
Crane is better known to the public as Alice 
Rollins, the newspaper and story writer. 
Some years ago she had a studio in New 
York, where she made many friends in art, 
musical, and literary circles. As a vocal- 
ist she studied under Emma Abbott’s tenor, 
Professor Apmatock. 
For the last 5 years Mrs. Crane has 
been making a study of the Indian tribes 
of the Northwest, and has lived with the 
Moquis, Taquis, Cocopahs, and Apaches, 
studying their traditions and customs, and 
gathering material for forthcoming books. 
She was accompanied by her courageous 
young son, and has probably had more hair- 
breadth escapes than any other woman in 
America. Her recent perilous trip to the 
Cochise stronghold in Arizona, where she 
had her adventure with Kid’s band of rene- 
gade Apaches, has attracted much interested 
attention. 
Mrs. Crane’s home is a quaint house after 
the Mexican style, situated in a pretty court 
of tropical bloom and overrun with vines. 
She calls it her “wicky-up,” and it is over- 
flowing with Indian and Mexican curios, 
valuable old books, and paintings. 
Mrs. Crane herself is a genial, pleasant 
faced woman, thoroughly generous, and 
deeply interested in her work. Although in 
no sense a “new woman,” she wore a 
bloomer suit during her remarkable expedi- 
tion among the Apaches. 

Keep at the game hogs; they don’t get 
more than they deserve. 
Charles Nelson, Los Angeles, Cal. 
