Aug. i 7, 1912 
FOREST AND STREAM 
223 
For Sale. 
GAME BIRDS 
Hungarian Partridges, Quail, Ring-neck Pheasants, Wild 
Turkeys, Capercailzie, Black Game, Wild Ducks, Decoys. 
Beautiful Swans, Fancy Pheasants, Peafowl, Cranes, 
Storks, Ornamental Ducks and Geese. 
“Everything in the bird line 
from a Canary to an Ostrich. ” 
I am the oldest established and largest exclusive dealer 
in land and water birds in America, and have on hand 
the most extensive stock in the United States. 
G. D. TILLEY, Naturalist 
Box “f" Darien, Conn. 
RAINBOW TROUT 
are well adapted to Eastern waters. Try stock¬ 
ing with some of the nice yearlings or fry from 
eur hatchery, and you will be pleased with the 
results. 
PLYMOUTH ROCK TROUT COMPANY, 
Colburn C. Wood, Supt., Plymouth, Mass. 
Small-Mouth Black Bass 
We have the only establishment dealing in young small- 
mouth black bass commercially in the United States. Vig¬ 
orous young bass in various sizes, ranging from advanced 
fry to 3 and 4 inch fingerlings for stocking purposes. 
Waramaug Small-Mouth Black Bass Hatchery. 
Correspondence invited. . Send for Circulars. Address 
HENRY W. BEEMA.N - - New Preston. Conn. 
RDAAIf TDAIIX ot a!1 ages f° r Stocking brooks 
DlVV/VrH lIVVvUI anc j lakes. Brook trout eggs 
in any quantity. Warranted delivered anywhere in hne 
condition. Correspondence solicited. 
THE PLYMOUTH ROCK TROUT CO., 
Plymouth, Mass. 
% a f I I DUCK COAXERS. Attracts 
\M\M I i 9 1 CELiERY. waterfowl. Plant in your 
V VJ 8 BbbEse# rice. preserve. Write for circular. 
CLYDE B. TERRELL - - Oshkosh, Wis., R5. 
FOR FALL DELIVERY 
Best home-bred stock of Pheasants and Waterfowl, raised 
here under the best conditions. Prices reasonable and 
quoted on application. 
J. C. PHILLIPS, Windyknob Farm, Wenham, Mass. 
CONSULTING FISHCULTURIST.— Founder and late 
Managing Director of Welham Park Hatcheries, England, 
advices on all matters connected with fishculture. 
Donald Walker, Drumlin Trout Hatchery, Barneveld, N.Y. 
Oil paintings of birds, fish, game, 11x15, 75c. each. 
RAY GLICK, Malinto, O. 
Wants and Exchanges. 
OLD TIME PISTOLS WANTED 
I will purchase any of the following American-made re¬ 
volvers: Alsop, Butterfield, Baily, Bliss & Goodyear, 
Cochran, Crispin, Colt’s Dragoon, Colt’s Walker, Colt’s 
(stamped Pat. Arms. Mfg. Co., Paterson N. T.), Ells, 
Freeman, Hart, Joslyn, Leavitt, Libeau, Le Mat, May¬ 
nard, Nepperian, Porter, Pliers, Plant, Pond, Pecare & 
Smith, Pettingill. Rupertus, Walch, Whitney ring trig¬ 
ger, Warner. Also all kinds of American-made pistols 
with hammer underneath barrel, American-made flint¬ 
lock horse pistols, duelling pistols in pairs; any pistols 
stamped C. S. or C. S. A. If vcu have any of these for 
sale, give full description and price. 
T. H. PARRY, care Parry Mfg. Co., Indianapolis, Ind. 
WANTED 
To buy 5,000 brook trout, 5 to G inches long, delivered at 
Kildare, Franklin Co., N. Y. Write, giving price deliv¬ 
ered to J. S. Ehrich, Kildare Club, Franklin Co., N. Y. 
I WANT TO BUY 
Live black, silver-patched and cross foxes; also minks, 
martens and fishers. Highest prices paid. State prices and 
write or telegraph to John D. Haslam, Fortune Cove, P.E.I. 
BOOK WANTED.—“In the Greenwood,” by Rowland 
E. Robinson. C. B. Pratt, 53 Franklin St., Boston, Mass. 
Property for Sale. 
DUCK SHOOTING. 
For Sale—Two shares in an exclusive Shooting Club. 
Excellent feeding grounds yield best duck shooting in 
America. Other game in season ir-r f'-rms, apply to 
W. R. Bayes, 40 Wall St., New York. 
is simple justice that they should make such pro¬ 
vision. When a man devotes the best years of 
his life to the service of the State, he is at 
least entitled to the same consideration that he 
would receive from a private corporation, and 
he should not suffer financially or physically on 
account of his willingness to serve the public. 
BRITISH MEASURES TO PREVENT 
RABIES. 
Consul-General John L. Griffiths, of 
London, says: 
‘‘Respecting the measures adopted in Great 
Britain to exclude rabies and the manner of sup¬ 
pressing an outbreak, should it appear, the fol¬ 
lowing particulars have been obtained from the 
British Board of Agriculture and Fisheries: 
“In accordance with the order of the board 
of March 23, 1897, a copy of which is forwarded 
[and may be had from the Bureau of Manufac¬ 
tures], and also by virtue of powers vested in 
them by various statutes, every dog attacked by 
rabies must be immediately slaughtered. Notice 
of any actual or suspected case must be imme¬ 
diately given to a police constable, who is re¬ 
quired to wire the information to the Board of 
Agriculture and also to an inspector of the local 
authority. After the afflicted animal has been 
destroyed it is subjected to a post-mortem ex¬ 
amination and thereafter buried in it: skin 
(slashed so as to be useless) at a depth of not 
less than six feet and covered with a sufficient 
quantity of quick lime or disinfectant. 
“Whenever an actual or a suspected case of 
rabies is reported, an order is issued requiring 
all dogs within the district (and the surround¬ 
ing area) where the outbreak occurred to be kept 
under control by (1) confinement in a kennel or 
other inclosure from which the dog cannot es¬ 
cape; or (2) secured to some premises by a 
collar or chain; or (3) efficiently muzzled with 
an effective wire cage muzzle, and also led (by 
a person) with a collar and chain or other at¬ 
tachment. Until the order is withdrawn it is an 
offense to move any dog outside the area de¬ 
fined in such order, or permit any dog or other 
animal to come into contact with any animal to 
which the order applies. 
“When a dog feels ill in the early stages of 
rabies it is anxious to get away from its home 
and to go ‘on the march.’ Cases are known 
where dogs so affected have been found to have 
continued ‘on the march' for seventy miles. In 
consequence of this fact, whenever an outbreak 
occurs tffie area brought under the jurisdiction 
of an order such as described is very large. To 
prevent, if possible, the spread of the disease 
the provisions of the act are applied at once to 
the entire territory.’’ 
AN ACCIDENT DUE TO AIR WASH. 
During the first aeroplane meeting held at 
Rheims, in 1909, aviators for the first time re¬ 
alized the dangers of flying in the wake of an 
aeroplane. Although the perils that lurk in the 
wash of a flying machine are fully appreciated, 
nevertheless a serious accident occurred at Villa 
Coublay, near Paris, on July 5 last. Lieuts. 
Briez and Burlez. of the French Army, started 
on a flight to Belfort, each in a monoplane. 
Lieut. Burlez had attained an altitude of about 
600 feet, passing the other man at greater speed 
100 feet higher, forcing .a current of air down¬ 
ward and causing the machine driven by Briez 
to lose its equilibrium. The monoplane crashed 
to the ground and Briez suffered two broken 
legs, a fractured jaw and injuries to his chest. 
He is expected to recover.—Scientific American. 
You can get a pretty good idea of the kind 
of sportsmen who read Forest and Stream 
from what the publication offers them to read. 
It’s of the highest grade. 
Taxidermists. 
J. KANNOFSKY. 
PRACTICAL GLASS BLOWER 
and manufacturer of artificial eyes for birds, animals and manu¬ 
facturing purposes a specialty. Send for prices. All kinds of 
heads and skulls for furriers and taxidermists 369 Canal 
Street, New York. 
Please mention “Forestand Stream.” 
SAVE YOUR TROPHIES 
Write for Illustrated Catalogue 
‘‘Heads and Horns” 
It gives directions for preparing and preserving Skins, Antlers, 
etc. Also prices for Heads and Rugs. Birds and Fish, and all 
kinds of work in Taxidermy. 
Ward’s Natural Science Establishment 
ROCHESTER. N. Y. 
ROWLAND, 
TAXIDERMIST, 
A specialty in mounting- Moose, Elk, Caribou and Deer 
heads. Call and examine work. 
No, 182 SIXTH AVENUE, 
Tel. 4205 Chelsea, Near 13th St. NEW YORK 
Property for Sale. 
TIMBERLAND ON LAKE 
AND RIVER. 
Eight thousand acres of timberland, with several miles 
of lake and river front, situated on a large lake in the 
center of the game and fishing country of Northern and 
Central Maine. This tract of land would make an ideal 
reservation for a club, or for anyone desiring an invest¬ 
ment in timberlands. For information, address 
Lock Bex No. 11, Auburndale, Mass. 
CANADIAN CAMP 
For Sale or To Let 
Completely furnished, situated in Laurentian Range 
Mountains on Lake L’Achigan, P. Q., night’s run from 
New York. Main house, 20 rooms, 12 master’s rooms, 
4 baths; winter lodge. 4 rooms and bath, all outbuildings, 
30 acres of land, 600 feet beach front, altitude 1,000 feet, 
unlimited supply spring water; bass, brook and lake trout 
fishing; deer, partridge, bear shooting in season. Ideal 
camp for anyone wanting high class place for private use, 
club or sanitarium. 
Apply, PEASE & ELL1MAN 
340 Madison Avenue New York City 
A RARE INVESTMENT 
Safer than Bonds and Mortgages 
Four hundred and eighty acres of beautiful level land 
in Keith County, Nebraska. Rich black loam, six feet 
deep, which produces all kinds of big agricultural crops. 
Fcrty bushels of wheat to the acre, and all other crops 
in proportion. These lands are located eight miles from 
the county seat, and six nr'es from the thriving, bustling 
town of Brule, on the main line of the Union Pacific 
Railroad. The town has church, high school, hotels, 
all kinds of stores, grain elevator, etc., etc. I will also 
sell 160 acres adjoining Brule, fronting on the Union 
Pacific Railroad, under cultivation, with all improvements. 
The climate is unsurpassed for all lung or throat dif¬ 
ficulties. Elevation, 3,200 feet. 
For terms and particulars address 
E. H. BARTON, 32 Bank St., Batavia, N. Y. 
