572 
FOREST AND STREAM 
December, 1921 
THE MARKET PLACE 
HINDMAN'S WILD CATS. AN OLD 
strain of pit games. Game to the core. Stags 
and pullets for sale. $9 per trio. N. H. Hind- 
man, Collier, West Va. 
MINK, SKUNK, SILVER FOX, BLACK 
Siberian Hares for sale. We are not shippers, but 
breeders of fur-bearing animals. Low prices. Safe 
delivery and satisfaction guaranteed. Goff and De 
Long, Lovells, Mich. 
PHEASANTS FOR SALE, SILVER AM- 
herst. A. Ganlocher, 123 Valentine Lane, Yon- 
kers, N. Y. 
SILVER FOXES INTERNATIONAL CHAM- 
pion — Beat all competitors World’s Fox Shows, 
Boston, 1919 and 1920. 19 ribbons and 6 cups ; 
“Borestone Loami” International Champion. Reg- 
istered milch goats. Borestone Mt. Fox Ranch, 
Onawa, Maine. 701 Drexel Building, Philadel- 
phia, Pa. 
WILL PAY GOOD PRICE FOR ONE OR 
two cub bears. Address W. Bishop, 121 So. Bos- 
ton, Tulsa, Okla. 
MISCELLANEOUS 
16-FOOT ROWBOAT, 12^-FOOT ROW- 
boat, 12-foot folding rowboat. Construction blue- 
prints, 30c. each. Wee-Sho-U Co., Western Mar- 
ket, Detroit, Mich. 
BIG HORN ROCKY MOUNTAIN SHEEP 
heads. Two rare, newly mounted for sale. Abso- 
lutely perfect in every way. 'References. Edwin 
Dixon, Taxidermist, Unionville, Ontario. 
FOR SALE — GENUINE ELK TUSKS. 
Fred Smith, Box 58, East Orange, N. J. 
FOR SALE— MOUNTED OWLS AND DEER 
heads from north woods ; photographs free. Geo. 
E. Link, Taxidermist, Philips, Wis. 
FOR SALE— NEWLY MOUNTED, RARE 
Rocky Mountain mule deer heads of particular 
beauty. Also woodland caribou heads, newly 
mounted. Edwin Dixon, Taxidermist, Unionville, 
Ontario. 
FLY TYING MATERIALS, SUPPLIES, 
books, flies, leaders. Catalogue free. A. Will- 
marth, Roosevelt, New York. 
MAKE YOUR OWN FISH-BAGS, LAND- 
ing nets, fish and turtle traps, hammocks, grocery 
bags, etc. Big profits making these for sale. Com- 
plete instructions and full equipment prepaid, $1.00. 
A. Parsons, 126 Lulu St., Wichita, Kans. 
MOOSE, ELK, ROCKY MOUNTAIN SHEEP 
and mule, deer heads, sets of horns, for sale for 
mounting; scalps to mount the horns you now 
have. Boxed, baled or crated to go cheaply by 
express anywhere in U. S. A. under special gov- 
ernment permit guaranteeing delivery. Edwin 
Dixon, Taxidermist, Unionville, Ontario. 
OLD KENTUCKY TOBACCO — 3-YEAR- 
old leaf, ripe, rich, nature-cured. “The kind that 
made Kentucky famous.” Chewing and smoking, 
3 lbs., $1.00 postpaid. Kentucky Tobacco Asso- 
ciation, W509, Hawesville, Ky. 
SALE— SIX PAIRS NEW OIL SLICKER 
pants, yellow, $1.50 each. Alfred Hensel, May’s 
Landing, New Jersey. 
SEND US $2.60 AND WE WILL MAIL YOU 
a five-piece cutlery set, just the thing for the hunt- 
er, trapper, sportsman and the home; if not satis- 
fied return immediately and your money will be 
refunded. W. F. Huffman Co., New Alexandria, 
Penna. 
SSS WOOD CHECKERING TOOLS. POST- 
paid, $6.25 per set. One holding tool and three 
blades. Sportsman’s Service Station, Tenafly, 
N. J. 
TOBACCO, POSTPAID; FRAGRANT, MEL- 
low leaf, smoking or chewing; 10 lbs., $3.20; 5 
lbs., $1.65; 3 lbs., $1.00. Checks taken. Money 
back if not pleased. Clark’s River Plantation, 
Hazel, Ky. 
TRAPPERS! SEND FOR MY FREE CATA- 
Iog of trappers’ supplies. Send $1 for 65-page, il- 
lustrated book of trapping methods. Walter L. 
Arnold, Guilford, Maine. 
TRAPPERS POISON. GOES’ LIQUID 
poison capsules kill animals on spot; Goes’ luring 
bait attracts them. Sixteenth season in market, 
with excellent results. Write for free circulars. 
Edmund Goes, Milwaukee, Wis., Station C. 
TWO EXTRA LARGE AND PERFECT, 
newly mounted winter killed moose heads of great 
beauty for sale. Moderate prices. References. 
Edwin Dixon, Taxidermist, Unionville, Ontario. 
(Continued from 571) 
PHOTO SUPPLIES, ETC. 
MAIL US 20c. WITH ANY SIZE FILM FOR 
development and six velvet prints. Or send six 
negatives any size and 20c. for six prints. Or 
send 40c. for one 8 x 10 mounted enlargement. 
Prompt, perfect service. Roanoke Photo Finish- 
ing Co., 220 Bell Ave., Roanoke, Virginia. 
SPORTSMEN WHO KODAK AND WANT 
hand work, exceptional results and the finest fin- 
ish in the states. Mail film to Beach Studios, 
Canajoharie, N. Y. 
REAL ESTATE FOR SPORTSMEN 
FORTY-ACRE FARM TO SELL; GOOD 
buildings, orchard, woodlot ; 100 rods to new brick 
high school ; shower bath gymnasium ; seven 
teachers; one church, filled twice on Sundays; 
town on Macinaw trail near the great resorts of 
Western Michigan. For more particulars write 
owner: E. D. Post, Alba, Mich. 
MR. SPORTSMAN OR MR. BUSINESS MAN 
— Do you want retirement and pleasure both sum- 
mer and winter? Twenty-five acres in clear cold 
water, abounding with bass and bream, swimming 
pools and fountains, embracing 650 acres of land 
abundant with quail and squirrel, ducks in season. 
$75,000 in improvements at great sacrifice. Lo- 
cated near Southern Railroad, Jasper County, Mis- 
sissippi. Write the owner, K. C. Hall, Laurel, 
Mississippi. 
WANTED TO PURCHASE FOR CASH GEN- 
tleman’s inland sporting camp, bungalow or camp 
site with tract of ground wooded, lake or stream 
ownership appurtenant ; reasonably accessible by 
motor or rail from New York, where fishing and 
hunting may be obtained. Photographs, descrip- 
tion and price to be submitted in answer to this 
advertisement. C. J. M., Box 777 Forest & 
Stream, 9 East 40th Street, New York City. 
WOULD LIKE TO HEAR FROM SOME 
chaps between thirty and forty years of age who 
desire to locate on a lake shore homestead in one 
of the best hunting and fishing sections of the 
country. One thousand dollars is sufficient to do 
a lifetime. Make every day a vacation, go and 
come as you please and be your own boss. _ Ad- 
dress Paul Case, Ponite du Bois, Manitoba, 
Canada. 
$5.00 DOWN; $5.00 MONTHLY; FIVE- 
acre fruit, poultry, fur farm ; river front ; Ozarks ; 
$100. Hunting, fishing, trapping. 1973 North 
Fifth, Kansas City, Kansas. 
TAXIDERMY 
HIGHLY CONCENTRATED TANNING 
solution, tan your own furs, leather and rugs, tans 
in thirty minutes, moth proof forever ; also wash- 
able without shrinkage or hardening ; tans leather 
like kid, results of twenty years’ experiment, solu- 
tion for 100 square feet of skins and full instruc- 
tions for use. $2.00 money order. C. M. Huff, 
Seney, Mich. 
REAL EXPRESSION AND SHAPE. EVERY- 
thing mountable from smallest to largest. Mod- 
erate prices, good work. Moose and Elk heads, 
fur rugs, etc., for sale. List. M. J. Hofmann, 
Taxidermist, 989 Gates Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 
YOU CAN TAN YOUR OWN FURS AND 
skins. You can make rugs and robes, lined or 
unlined, with mounted heads, open mouth finish. 
You will be successful at this money-making work 
from your first attempt. My formulas and com- 
plete instructions are only $3, postpaid, duty free. 
Edwin Dixon, Taxidermist, Unionville, Ontario. 
WE MAKE PAPIER FORMS FOR DEER 
heads and rug heads. We buy animal teeth, wolf, 
fox, coon, badger and bear teeth. Papier Mache 
Specialties Co., Reading, Michigan. 
POSITIONS WANTED 
AMERICAN, AGE 46, DESIRES POSITION 
as steward or manager of country hotel or club ; 
thoroughly experienced ; reliable and conscientious 
worker ; highest references ; recently with a 
prominent Berkshire county hotel ; moderate sal- 
ary. Write Box 25, Forest & Stream, 9 East 40th 
Street, New York City. 
EXPERIENCED OUTDOORSMAN, AGE 38, 
married ; wife capable and a good cook ; desires 
position in charge hunting or fishing estate. Not 
afraid of work. J. R., Box 26, Forest & Stream, 
9 East 40th Street, New York City. 
SNAKE STORIES 
( Continued, from page 556) 
to them and if not alarmed he will give 
you no notice of his presence. The big 
snake strikes only in self-defense. This 
explains why deaths are comparatively 
few. If one is struck by a big rattlesnake 
death is certain unless immediate relief 
is given. Waiting to reach a doctor is 
fatal. 
If struck on the face, neck or body the 
case is desperate. Cutting through the 
bite to cause immediate free bleeding 
may help and if you have a cool com- 
panion willing to try the old Indian 
remedy of sucking the wound there may 
be some hope. 
If struck on a limb the case is much 
more hopeful. 
Cut freely, and if possible through the 
punctures. Ligate well above the bite, 
then if you were wise enough to have a 
hypodermic needle and solution of per- 
manganate of potasium with you, inject 
it about the wound. If you feel weak- 
ened a little whiskey will help, but not 
too much. Too much will depress the 
heart. Then go to a doctor. You may 
need injections of strychnine. 
When you have to remove the ligature 
ease it off gradually to permit circulation 
in the limb. There may still be poison in 
the limb which if let suddenly into the 
circulation will paralyze the heart. 
In these times when so many people 
are hunting, fishing and tramping in the 
woods and along the streams, a knowl- 
edge of the right thing to do in an emer- 
gency should be better understood. 
Publications devoted to the “out of 
doors” might help much in this. It is 
strange that there are not more publica- 
tions that will try and instruct people. 
Nine years ago I wrote an article and 
sent it to Palm Beach and Ft. Pierce pa- 
pers. They would not print it for fear 
of scaring off tourists. Since then two 
have died of snake bite near West Palm 
Beach and near Ft. Pierce two little boys 
tried to snare and capture a rattlesnake 
alive. It bit one on the arm and he 
died. With proper and immediate treat- 
ment he might have been saved. 
The papers need not have feared for 
the tourists, for unless the tourist hunts 
for them there is not one chance in five 
hundred that they will ever see a live 
ratlesnakes. Still there is the chance that 
one who goes into the fields or woods, or 
hunts, or fishes along the streams or 
ponds may be bitten. 
Years ago when the north woods were 
wild I went up to Lake Itasca and came 
down the Mississippi in an open boat. At 
Winona I went up town to get some pho- 
tographic material. Noticing a crowd in 
front of a store window I stopped to see 
the attraction. They had closed up the 
back and made a cage of their window, 
and had sixteen live rattlesnakes shut in. 
I asked where they came from and was 
told that two men had snared them in 
the bluffs along the river. 
I was camping out nights on islands or 
on the river bank. This show discour- 
identify you. 
In Writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. It will 
