354 
FOREST AND STREAM 
Stopped this 
fellow with a 
20-Gauge be¬ 
cause I shoot 
the 
LEFEVER 
Single Trigger 
I missed him with the first, but the second 
barrel struck him so quick and hard that 
he crumpled up and came down-a dead 
one. You can improve your shooting if 
your gun is right. Better send at once for 
Art Catalog of 
Lefever Shot Guns 
$25. to $1000. 
Lefever Arms Company 
200 Maltbie St., SYRACUSE, N. Y. 
A Sportman’s 
Opportunity! 
Three large 
mounted moose 
heads for sale. 
59-56 and 53 
inches spread of 
horns 30-22 and 
20 points respect- 
i v e 1 y . Perfect 
heads of the very 
best class in every 
way, very moder¬ 
ate prices. Express 
prepaid, duty free 
on approval any¬ 
where in U. S. A. Also mounted elk, 
mountain sheep and other perfect game 
heads. References: Alfred 1. Dupont, 
Wilmington, Delaware; Edwin A. Lemp, 
St. Louis, Mo., or the editor of Forest and 
Stream. Your inquiry is asked. 
EDWIN DIXON, 
Ontario’s Leading Taxidermist, 
UNIONVILLE, ONTARIO 
Nationale of Belgium. The Remington auto loader shot 
gun and the Remington auto loader rifle have almost 
exact duplicates in the arms put out under the same 
patent by the Belgian factory. The Browning pistol 
patents are used by the Belgian company and by the 
Colt people. Now with the Belgian factory doubtless a 
wreck from the terific fighting about Liege, with the 
war an uncertain thing in length, and with the Bel¬ 
gians fighting with every able-bodied man in their 
ranks, tihe question is whether the American companies 
will step in and take care of the demand for the Brown¬ 
ing gun as it was made in Belgium. 
Next to the American, the English factories are in 
the best condition to take advantage of the busy state 
of our Teutonic friends. But, while no reports are 
available, it may be suspected that the condition of 
the English army equipment is not of the best. 
The British War Office was busy playing with an ex¬ 
perimental rifle, a Mauser pattern to fire a modified 
.280 cartridge, when the war broke out. The rifle had 
been in the experimental state for two years, and seemed 
to be a failure. 
Without doubt some of the big English factories, 
such as the Birmingham Small Arms Company and 
other makers of arms for the government, are working 
at top speed, turning out Lee Enfields to make up 
enough rifles to arm all the English troops that could 
be mustered. The war caught England in a bad time, 
so far as the infantry rifle is concerned, and the British 
troops go into action with the poorest arm of any of 
the nations involved. 
If Canada becomes heavily involved in the struggle, 
the Ross rifle would speedily cease coming across the 
border. The Ross Rifle Company is primarily a manu¬ 
facturer of arms for the Canadian government and when 
the Canadians need army rifles badly, everything else in 
that factory stops right there, and the man wanting a 
Sauer shot gun, a Sauer-Mauser, a Luger carbine, a 
Francotte singe trap gun or anything else made trans- 
Atlantic may find himself disappointed. The Francotte 
factory, near Liege, is doubtless as completely knocked 
out as the Pieper and the Fabrique Nationale. 
Some of the mail order, catalog houses will be ob¬ 
liged to use American-made stuff instead of the “T. 
Barker” clap-trap they have been passing out for years 
to unsuspecting customers in pastoral walks of life. 
The ‘‘Celebrated Damascus finish” barrel will be hard 
to obtain in the event of a war at all prolonged, be¬ 
cause the gentlemen in the business of turning out 
these fine pot-metal guns are now engaged in keeping 
GERMAN INFANTRY ON THE ROAD TO BRUSSELS 
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