580 
FOREST AND STREAM 
LEFEVER 20-Gauge 
Swings Up Easily 
Whether you are shooting from horseback or tramping all day, 
you will like the light-weight LEFEVER. 
The 20-Gauge gives as much if not more penetration power with 
all the pattern you can ask for. 
LEFEVER 
SHOT 
GUNS 
All Gauges 
List Prices 
$25 to $1,000 
Own a LEFEVER 20-Gauge 
at $37.50 (List Price) 
If your dealer does not carry in 
stock, we will sell you direct. 
Write for offer. 
When you write for catalog, en¬ 
close 75c. for the Lefever Ideal 
Cleaner. It takes the rust and 
powder burns out of any barrel. 
The Lefever system of taper bor¬ 
ing is now famous, because it gives 
longest range, greatest penetration, 
the least recoil and the most evenly 
distributed pattern possible. 
For Field, Blind or Traps 
LEFEVER ARMS CO. 
200 Maltbie St. 
SYRACUSE, N.Y. 
$25 Up 
List Price 
TENNESSEE STOPS GAME SELLING. 
W. D. Howser, State Warden of Tennessee, in 
a recent letter to me, writes “Tennessee has join¬ 
ed her sister states in prohibiting the sale of 
game. This will especially interest those of your 
state who shoot on Reelfoot Lake. 
“Last year we had thousands of ducks on Reel- 
foot Lake, and this year, those who visit the lake 
should find a hunter’s paradise . 
“Reports received from all parts of the state 
indidate that we have more game, especially 
more quail than we have had for years. 
“We predict that the hunter who visits Tennes¬ 
see will become an annual visitor. The people 
of the state are becoming more interested in the 
conservation of our game and fish and the laws 
will be more rigidly enforced, and. naturally, we 
will have more game and fish for those who 
handle the rod and gun. I want to congratulate 
you for the effort made towards the conserva¬ 
tion of our wild life and we stand ready and 
willing to give j'ou any assistance in our power, 
at any time.” 
The hunters of Missouri and adjoining states 
rank favorably with those of most any other 
locality in conservation energy and accomplish¬ 
ment. 
If the federal law is declared constitutional 
it is apparent they should receive proper consid¬ 
eration. If the present law is unconstitutional, 
we have no fear that our services will not be most 
welcome in any future efforts to obtain needed 
federal laws.—E. T. Grether, St. Louis, Mo. 
AS TO WILSON’S SNIPE. 
Wilson’s Snipe generally known as Jack Snipe 
is familiar to everyone who ever hunted over 
local waters. He is as regular in his arrival 
as the seasons and makes his appearance in the 
Spring and Autumn with never failing accuracy. 
To those who are versed in his habits and who 
have hunted him successfully, the bird that does 
not fly that furnishes such keen hunting. They 
are found in abundance in all lowlands, marshes 
and loamy soil of Long Island and generally 
come in the wake of a few warm days. 
