114 DIGEST OF GAME LAWS FOR 1901. 
l)iniiatiMl <rrouyo, woodcux'k, haro, ^(iiiirrel or plieasant; any person guilty of any 
violation of this section shall be liable to a penalty of twenty dollars for every 
(]uail, ruffed grouse, pinnated grouse, woodcock, hare, squirrel or pheasant removed 
or sought to be removed; provided, however, that this section shall not apply to English 
or ring-necked pheasants killed on preserves at present established. 
Approved Marcli 22, 1901. 
NEW MEXICO. 
Compiled Laws, 1897, p. 394. 
Sale: Sec. 1362. It shall be unlawfull to sell or expose for sale, at any time, 
any of the game, birds or animals, the killing of which is prohibited or restricted 
by this act [deer, elk, antelope, mountain sheep, ibex, mountain goat, quail, par- 
tridge, grouse, prairie chicken, pheasant, wild turkey], or to sell the flesh, hide or 
any part thereof. It shall be unlawful to sell any speckled trout, or other food fish, 
caught in any of the public waters of the Territory: Provided, That it is not the 
intention of this act to prevent dealers and butchers from selling any game, birds or 
animals killed outside the boundaries of this Territory. 
In any trial for the violation of the provisions of this act, the burden of proof 
shall be upon such dealers or butchers to prove that such birds or animals were 
killed without the boundaries of this Territory. 
Export: Sec. 1363. It shall be unlawful for any railway, express company, stage 
line, or public carrier, to transport outside the Territory, or receive for such 
transportation, any of the game, birds or animals mentioned in this act, or the flesh 
or hides thereof, that may be offered for such transportation at any place in this 
Territory. 
Propagation: Sec. 1364. Nothing in this act shall prevent professional taxiderm- 
ists from killing birds or animals for the purpose of preserving the same, nor any 
person from capturing or taking any of said birds or animals for the purpose of 
domesticating or preserving the same in parks or inclosures within this Territory: 
Provided, Such taxidermists or other persons must prove that such birds or animals 
have been preserved and us'ed for such purpose. Birds or animals so taken for such 
purposes may be shipjjed out of the Territory, only upon written ])ermit from some 
duly appointed warden of this Territory. 
Penalties: Sec. 1365. Any person or persons, or the officer, agent or employee, of 
any firm or corporation, who shall violate any of the provisions of this act, shall 
be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction thereof, before any justice 
of the peace, or other court of competent jurisdiction, shall be punished for each 
offense- by fine in a sum not less tlian twenty-five dollars nor more than one hundred 
dollars, or l)y imprisonment in the county jail for not less than thirty, nor more 
than sixty days, or by both such fine and imprisonment, at the discretion of the 
court or justice trying the case. 
NEW YORK. 
Laws of 1900, chap. 20. 
AKTICLE 1. QUADRrPEDS. 
Sale, Deer: Sec. 4. [As amended by chap. 599, Laws of 1900.] Wild deer or 
venison shall not be j)OSses8e<l or sold from November twenty-first to August thirty- 
first both inclusive. Possession thereof from the sixteenth to the twentieth of 
November shall be presumj)tive evidence that the same was unlawfully taken by the 
possessor. 
Moose, Elk, etc.: Sec. 11. [As amended by chap. 147 of the Laws of 1901.} 
There shall be no open season for wild moose, elk, caril>ou or antelope, but they 
