474 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[Sept. 22, 1906. 
WARNING 
All genuine Ansley H. Fox 
Guns are sold with a tag bear¬ 
ing the signature of Ansley 
H. Fox attached. None are 
genuine without it. Look for 
this before you buy. The fol¬ 
lowing are a few of the large 
houses handling our goods: 
William Read & Sons, Boston. 
Schoverling, Daly & Gales, New York. 
Charles Godfrey Company, New York, 
E. K. Tryon Company, Philadelphia. 
Supplee Hardware Company, Philadelphia. 
J. B. Shannon & Sons, Philadelphia. 
Hibbard, Spencer, Bartlett & Co., Chicago. 
Norvell-Shapleigh Hardware Company, St. Louis. 
J, F, Schmelzer & Sons Arms Co., Kansas City. 
John Meunier Gun Company, Milwaukee, Wis. 
Fletcher Hardware Company, Detroit, Mich. 
Made only by 
A. H. FOX GUN COMPANY, Philadelphia, Pa. 
Not connected with The Philadelphia Arms Company. 
.. .. . ..... . ... . . . . . . . . -t 
“INFALLIBLE” SMOKELESS, 
“NEW SCHULTZE” and 
“NEWE. C. (Improved”) 
Won All the Honors at the 
EASTERN HANDICAP TOURNAMENT 
PHILADELPHIA, PA., July 17-19, 1906. 
FIRST and SECOND MONEYS in the EASTERN HANDICAP. 
FIRST and SECOND MONEYS in the PRELIMINARY HANDICAP. 
HIGH AVERAGE for ENTIRE TOURNAMENT. 
FIRST AND SECOND GENERAL AVERAGES. 
THE LONG RUN of the Tournament—100 STRAIGHT. 
JVole. —L. &. R. Brands of Shotgun Smokeless Powders won OVER 70 per cent, of the 
TOTAL PURSE in the EASTERN HANDICAP. 
LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO., - 170 Broadway, New York. 
Vn . . . . mm . . . . 
GUARANTEE. 
This Gun is guaranteed to be absolutely free 
from all defects in workmanship or material, and 
we will gladly replaoe, free of charge, any parts 
which at any time prove in the least defective. 
We guarantee the mainsprings and top-lever 
springs against breakage for all time, and we also 
guarantee all of our guns to shoot any smokeless 
powder and never get loose. 
A. H. FOX GUN CO. 
MAKERS OF 
“THE FINEST GUN IN THE WORLD" 
PHILA., PA., U. S. A. 
I hereby ceriifyd|ul the gun bearing this 
tag and No.r^ZyCyC. is a genuine Ansley H. 
Fox Gun, m#tti under my latest improvedpatents- 
TION. 
See “that the gun bears the same number as this 
tag and has the full name “ANSLEY H. FOX" 
on the side of the frame. 
to scrutinize the character of the intruder. 
Alarm will then take possession of them, and 
wheeling round the troop will gallop off at top 
speed; but inquisitiveness will soon gain the 
upper hand, and circling round, they will again 
approach the object of their attraction. After 
another and more prolonged examination, they 
will scurry off raising a cloud of dust as they 
clatter along over the sun-baked surface. Should 
the cause of their restlessness remain hidden 
behind some friendly rock or boulder, they will, 
impelled by their over-powering curiosity, ad¬ 
vance to within a comparatively short distance 
before being satisfied with its identity. The 
sharp sight, or the extraordinary smelling 
powers, of the Oz’is ammon may fail to give due 
warning of the proximity of some hostile foe, 
be he a human being or the equally dreaded 
ounce, but a glimpse of the ludicrous antics and 
persistent gambolings of a group of spirited 
kyangs will at once furnish them with a clue 
that is rarely, if ever, neglected. 
On descending from the roof of the world, 
the first rung of the ladder brings us into the 
precipitous haunts of that most clever of moun¬ 
tain-sheep, the burhel. Many and many a time 
has a patriarchal ram been advised of the pres¬ 
ence of man, and the skulking snow-leopard 
been foiled of its prey by the opportune shriek 
of the powerful huinwal pheasant, as it skims 
with wings outstretched over some deep cleft in 
the mountain-side, in the recesses of which, the 
herd, unconscious of the lurking enemy anxiously 
watching its every movement, is grazing on a 
small patch of green grass, while on every side 
the rugged heights and snow-clad peaks rise 
skywards. Mountain game of this description 
invariably watches the boulder-strewn slopes be¬ 
neath for signs of an unwelcome intruder; and 
the crafty ounce, fully aware of this character¬ 
istic, stalks his victim from above, pouncing un¬ 
expectedly on a straggler from the herd. It is 
the shrill note of the huinwal pheasant, or ram 
chikor as it is sometimes termed, itself dis¬ 
turbed from its rocky perch, that gives the timely 
signal to be on the guard against molestation 
from a hiaher altitude. 
Proceeding further down the ladder of descent 
from those elevated regions, the forest line is 
reached, and the sight of the verdant foliage 
and shade-giving trees is indeed gladsome to the 
eyes of the wanderer, to whom the bleak moun¬ 
tain slopes and the endless plain devoid of all 
vegetation has been the daily spectacle. The 
habitat .of the black bear and musk deer has 
been entered, and bird-life appears more numer¬ 
ous. The sportsman climbing the hill-side, if 
observant, may possibly become aware that he 
is being followed by a pair of large crows. If 
he be wise, he will not endeavor to drive them 
off; for they may prove of great utility to him. 
Perchance he will hear a loud cawing issue from 
a clump of thick bushes in his vicintiy, and will 
perceive the birds dashing into the cover and 
creating a disturbance to which he may resent; 
but let him have patience, and observe closely 
the doings of his noisy companions; presently 
from out the thicket shambles a bear, whose 
attention is so entirely occupied by the irritating 
attacks of his winged tormentors, that he fails 
to notice that a far more deadly enemy is near 
at hand, eager to encompass his destruction. 
This is indeed a danger signal, but a signal full 
of danger to the shuffling quadruped. 
BIG GAME 
calls for a good gun. 
“3-lnrOne” keeps any 
gun good—oils trigger, 
lock, action perfectly—cuts out . 
all residue of black or smokeless t A 
powder—keeps all metal parts 
bright and free from rust. Gen¬ 
erous sample free. Write to 
G. W. COLE CO., 121 Washing¬ 
ton Life Bldg., Hew 'fork City. 
