Jan. 5 , 1907 ] 
FOREST AND STREAM 
39 
REMINGTON REVOLUTION 
t 
The highest trap shooting honor goes to the Remington Shot Gun this year, for with it W. H. Heer 
, won the year’s average for 1906, scoring 96.3%—the highest year’s score ever made. 
The Remington Autoloading Rifle and Shot Gun have met with universal success. 
Remingtons are the guns of the present and future. 
Buy a 
*.'Remington 
REMINGTON ARMS COMPANY, 
Agency, 315 Broadway, New York City. 
ILION. N. Y. 
when thought is given to the fitness of things. 
The call of the killdee is in keeping with the 
character of its surroundings. Its note has an 
element of wildness in it that is found in the 
note of no other of the shore and upland birds, 
except only the curlew. The note has an ap¬ 
pealing characteristic that too seldom finds a 
response.—.Boston Traveler. 
ALL IN THE GAME. 
.Promising themselves and their friends to be 
I good, and never, never to do so again, so long 
as they live, Messrs. M. R. Kellum and Percy 
Cavill, returned home recently from a week’s 
hunting trip to Cape Florida and vicinity, says 
the Miami Metropolis. 
They sailed away from Miami in Mr. Kellum s ; 
launch, Camie, enthusiastic and drawing pictures j 
of hundreds of duck, deer and other game that 
were to fall their victims. They could see it all 
as plain as day; it was nothing but pleasure and 
snort. But, alas, it turned out different. 
They had no difficulty in reaching Cape Sable, 
but after they got there the trouble began. 
I Everything went wrong—wind, rain and no one 
knows what, occurred. Enough is to say that 
they left the launch at Cape Sable, and sailed for 
two davs in a 10ft. dinghy to Tavanier Creek. 
From Tavanier Creek they “hoofed” it twenty of 
the longest miles that man ever tried to Jewfish 
I Creek. There a good Samaritan set them across 
the creek in a launch to the mainland, and the 
Homestead tram did the rest. 
Mr. Kellum is aching in every joint and Mr, 
Cavill is limping about with corns on his feet as 
big as “shinplasters.” Despite all this both 
Kellum and Cavill assert and affirm that they 
made a good bag of duck and other game, but 
| fishing and hunting yarns have been spun be¬ 
fore.—Jacksonville Times-Union. 
UNNATURALIZED FOREIGNERS AND 
FIREARMS. 
Whether it would be advisable or not to pro- 
1 vide by Congressional enactment that unnatur- 
I alized foreigners in the United States shall not 
I be allowed to possess firearms, as has been pro- 
: posed now and then by the local authorities of 
•various communities, it is interesting to observe 
1 that such a measure appears to be vaguely sug¬ 
gested in the following extract from the annual 
report of the game commissioners of the State of 
Pennsylvania: “We reiterate the assertion re¬ 
peatedly made that the presence of many un¬ 
naturalized foreign-born residents within our 
I borders, and their disposition to use guns, legally 
and illegally, is a constant and exceedingly grave 
j menace to our wild life in the State and to the 
■ peace of many communities wherein these peo¬ 
ple are found. Many of them have a crude idea 
i of the true meaning of the word ‘liberty,’ and 
j construe it to mean a license to do as they may 
! see fit, regardless of law. This disposition, con- 
\ nected with the low value they appear to place 
. upon human life, seems to make them individually 
and collectively a dangerous people, and one upon 
whom the strong hand of the law cannot be too 
quickly laid.”—Army and Navy Journal. 
• 
* 
f • 
K_ennel Special . 
Ads under this head, 2 cents a word a time (or 3 cents 
in capitals). Cash must accompany order. 
For Sale.—Full-blood English BEAGLE Hounds, Hunt¬ 
ers that are hunted. OAKLAND BEAGLE KENNELS, 
Pontiac, Mich. 
Norwegian bearhounds, Irish wolfhounds, deer and cat 
hounds. English bloodhounds, American foxhounds. 
Four-cent stamp • for illustrated catalogue. 
ROOKWOOD KENNELS, Lexington, Ky. 
FOR SALE.—Pointer dog, liver and white, five years old, 
well broken on quail, pheasants and woodcock; backs, retrieves 
and obedient to whistle and command. Dam, Bell of Hessan; 
sire, Kentis Chip. Price, $50.00. A. P. HULL, Box 153, 
Montgomery, Pa. 
For Sale.—Dogs, hogs, Pigeons, Ferrets, Belgian Hares. 
8 cents for 40-page illustrated catalogue. 
_C. G. LLOYDT, Dept. “M.,” Sayre, Pa. 
FOR SALE—Thoroughly trained pointers, setters and 
hounds. Can furnish you a good one at a moderate price 
at any time. GEO. W. LOVELL, Middleboro, Mass. 
FOR SALE.—Registered Chesapeake Bay pups, four 
months old. MAURICE SCHINDLER, Sisseton, S. D. 
For quick sale.—Several trained pointers, setters, coon, 
fox and rabbit hounds, at half values. Box 147, Newton, 
N. C. 
Hounds for Sale.—Eight fox and one deer hound. Good 
hunters. E. P. BAILEY, Breeder and Trainer, Kennett 
Square, Pa. • 
For Sale.—Thoroughbred English Setter, thoroughly 
trained and guaranteed. Bargain. Bojt 528, Englewood, 
N. J. 1 
MODERN TRAINING. 
Handling and Kennel Management. By B. Waters. 
Illustrated. Cloth. 373 pages. Price, $2.00. 
This treatise is after the modern professional system of 
training. It combines the excellence of both the suasive 
and force systems of education, and contains an exhaus¬ 
tive description of the uses and abuses of the spike collar. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. ’ 
THE KENNEL POCKET RECORD 
Morocco. Price, 50 cents. 
The “Pocket Kennel Record” is, as its name implies, a 
handy book for the immediate record of all events and 
transactions which take place away from home, intended 
to relieve the owner from the risk of trusting any im¬ 
portant matter to his memory. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
FILE YOUR FOREST AND STREAM 
We have provided a cloth file binder to hold 26 num¬ 
bers of Forest and Stream. It is simple, convenient, 
strong, durable, satisfactory. The successive issues thus 
bound make a handsome volume, constantly growing in 
interest sn*d value. 
The binder will be sent postpaid on receipt of one 
dollar. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
SPRATT’S PATENT 
CALENDAR. 
Our 1907 Calendars are now ready to mail. The edition is' 
limited; therefore send name, address and two cent stamp. 
Labels are now being printed. 
We also manufacture specially prepared Foods for 
DOGS. PUPPIES. 
CATS. RABBITS. 
POULTRY. 
PIGEONS. GAME. 
BIRDS. FISH- 
SPRATT’S PATENT (AM.) Ltd. 
Market, Congress and Jefferson Sts., Newark, N. J. 
: ’BOOK. OJV 
DOG DISEASES 
AND 
HOW TO FEED. 
Mailed FREE to any address by the author. 
H. CLAY GLO-VER, D. V. S., 1278 Broadway, New York. 
DO YOU HUNT? 
Trained COON. FOX txnd DEER 
HOUNDS For Sale. Reasonable Price* 
Here in Arkansaw we have millions of 
Coons, Foxes and Deer at our door to 
train our hounds with, and we train them 
too. They “ Deliver the Goods.” A few 
trained Rabbit and Squirrel Dogs. Also 
untrained Pups. For particulars address 
SPRING RIVER KENNELS 
Box 27, Imboden, Ark. 
IMPROVED SPIKE COLLAR. 
For use in dog training. Price, $2.00 By 
mail, $2.10. Send for circular. 
B. WATERS. 
346 Broadway, New York. 
HORSE AND HOUND 
By Roger D. Williams, Master of Foxhounds, Iroquois 
Hunt Club; Keeper Foxhound Stud Book; Director 
National Foxhunters’ Association; Official Judge, 
Brunswick Hunt Club. 
“Horse and Hound” is encyclopedic in all that per¬ 
tains to foxhunting. It has chapters as follows: Hunt¬ 
ing. The Hunter. Schooling of Hunters. Cross- 
Country Riding and Origin of the American Hound. 
Breeding and Raising Horses. The Kennel. Scent. The 
Fox. Tricks and Habits of the Fox. ^In the Field. 
Hunt Clubs. The style is clear and crisp, and every 
chapter abounds with hunting information. The work is 
profusely illustrated. Price, $2.50. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Canoe and Camp Cookery. 
A practical cook book for canoeists, Corinthian sailors 
*nd outers. By “Seneca.” Cloth, 96 pages. Price $1.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
I 
