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FOREST AND STREAM. 
[April 6, 1907. 
T ajciderm isis. 
For Sale. 
SAVE YOUR TROPHIES. 
'CLI rite for our 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. 
J. KANNOFSKY. 
PRACTICAL GLASS BLOWER 
and Manufacturer of 
Artificial eyes for birds, animals and manufacturing 
poses a specialty. Send for prices. All kinds of skulls for 
&he fur trade. 369 Canal St., New York. 
Please mention Forest and Stream. 
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 
FRED SAUTER. Taxidermist. 
Established i 860 . 
Formerly No. 3 
No. William St., 
Removed to 
42 BleeckerSt., 
cor. Elm St., 
will continue to 
please customers 
with the best durable work. Also carry large assortment of Game 
Heads, Rugs and attractive groups, for sale and to rent. 
TAXIDERMISTS 
Dealers in Supplies. Glass Eyes, and 
all materials used by the trade. 
All kinds of Game Heads purchased 
in the raw. Mounted specimens for 
sale. Send for Catalogue. 
THE M. ABBOTT FRAZAR CO. 
93 SUDBURY ST. 
Dept. 2 BOSTON. MASS. 
RAW FURS WANTED. 
Highest cash prices. Send for circular. E. G. BAKER, 
& SON, 116 South Water St., Providence, R. I. 
For Sale. 
LIVE QUAIL. 
Positively Western birds. No worthless Southern 
migratory birds offered. Also pheasants, etc. Estab¬ 
lished 1838. 
E. B. WOODWARD, 302 Greenwich St., New York. 
LIVE WILD WHITE CANADIAN HARES CHEAP. 
WALTER R. SOPER, Bucksport, Me. 
Quail, pheasants, partridges, wild turkeys, ducks, swans, 
deer, peacocks, foxes, ferrets, European game. U. S. 
PHEASANTRY, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 
Smalt-Mouth Black Bacss 
We have the only establishment dealing in young small-mouth 
black bass commercially in the United States. Vigorous young 
bass in various sizes ranging from advanced fry to 3 and 4-inch 
fingeriings for stocking purposes. 
Warainaug Small-Mouth Black Bass Hatchery. 
Correspondence invited. Send for circulars. Address 
HENKY W. BEEMAN, New Preston, Conn. 
BROOK TROUT. 
Eggs, fry, yearlings and 
brooks and lakes. Address 
FARM, Plympton, Mass. 
two-vear-olds, for stocking 
NEW ENGLAND TROUT 
BROOK TROUT. 
It will pay you to correspond with me before buying 
eggs, fry or 5 'earlings in any quantity. I guarantee a 
safe delivery anywhere. Crystal Springs Trout Farm, 
L. B. HANDY, So. Wareham, Mass. 
BROOK TROUT 
of all ages for stocking 
brooks and lakes. Brook 
trout eggs in any quantity, warranted delivered anywhere 
in fine condition. Correspondence solicited. 
THE PLYMOUTH ROCK TROUT CO., 
Plymouth, Mass. 
BROOK TROUT FOR SALE 
We have constantly on hand 
fine supply of Brook Trout, 
all sizes for stocking purposes 
Also for table use, at 75c. a 
pound. Visitors privileged to 
catch own trout. 
PARADISE BROOK 
TROUT CO., Parkside, 
Pa., Henryville R.R. Sta. 
THE BROOKDALE TROUT CANNOT BE BEAT 
for stocking ponds and streams. For the next few 
weeks we will make a very low price on young fry and 
large fish. Also fly-fishing. 
BROOKDALE TROUT CO., Kingston, Mass. 
REMINISCENCES OF A 
SPORTSMAN. 
BY J. PARKER WHITNEY. 
This is a volume of extraordinary interest. 
The author, who is a well known man of affairs, 
and conspicuously successful in large business 
interests, has drawn from his life-long partici¬ 
pation in field-sports a thousand and one inci¬ 
dents worth the telling. The book is compelling 
in its hold on the reader; once begun it will not 
be put aside until finished. 468 pages. Price, 
$3.00 (postage, 25 cents). 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Your Last Chance! 
To Secure Hungarian Partridges, 
the most ideal game birds for stocking purposes, very 
hardy, extremely prolific and absolutely rvoix-migratqry. 
From our last importation of this season we will furnish, 
while they last, single pairs at $7.00; larger quantities at 
reduced rates. 
Now in season: Red Deer, Fallow Deer, Axis Deer, 
Roe Deer, Wild Boars; all kinds of Pheasants, Bohemian, 
English Ring-necked, Reeves, Golden, Silver, White, 
Amherst, Versicolor, Elliott, Soemmering, Impeyan, 
Peacock, Swinhoe, Nobilis, Manchurian, Mongolian 
Argus, Melanotus, Temminik, Satyr,. Tragopan, Prince 
of Wales and others. Swans: White, Black, Black¬ 
necked and Bewick. Fancy Ducks: Mandarins, Wood 
Ducks, Widgeons, Teals and others. Fancy Pigeons. 
We can also furnish Japanese Deer, Albino Deer, Rein¬ 
deer, Llamas, Gazelles, Antelopes, Foxes, Squirrels, 
Ferrets, etc. Write for price list. 
WENZ (SL MACKENSEN, 
RARE BOOKS FOR SALE.—DRUMMOND’S 
“LARGE GAME and NATURAL HISTORY of South 
and Southeast Africa.” See “Hunting in Africa,” For¬ 
est and Stream, Feb. 23. M. S. HUTCHINGS, Dover, 
N. H. 14 
YARDLEY. PA. 
Agentsfor JULIUS MOHR, Jr.. Ulm,Germany. 
Exporter of Live Game, Wild Animals, Fancy Pheasants, etc. 
International Rife Match. 
Mr. Brutus J. Clay, American Minister to Switzer¬ 
land, has forwarded through the Department of State a 
copy of a note received from the committee of the “Tir 
Federal” inviting American marksmen to be repre¬ 
sented by a delegation at the international rifle and pis¬ 
tol matches to be held at Zurich in July, 1907. The note 
is accompanied by printed copies of the special regula¬ 
tions under which the matches will be conducted. These 
international matches have taken place for a number of 
years in different countries, and the directors of the 
“Tir Federal” are especially anxious that marksmen of 
the United States shall be represented. 
Owensville Rifle Club. 
Owensville. Ind., March 22.— The following scores 
were made to-day by the Owensville Rifle Club, 25yds., 
Win. ring target, telescope sights: 
G A Wetter. 246 246 247 245 242 249 247 247 244 241—2454 
J Montgomery..243 246 244 246 244 247 247 244 245 247—2453 
Jas. Montgomery. 
PUBLISHERS’ DEPARTMENT. 
The Oleo Remedy Co., 132 East Twenty-third street, 
New York city, call attention, in our business columns, 
to the excellence of their Oleo Canine, their all-round 
remedy for dogs and puppies, the merits of which they 
sum up in the phrase, “A medicine chest in every bottle.” 
Booklets and advice can be obtained of them for the 
asking. 
Great game preserves continue to be established in the 
South, and it is but a week or two since we referred to a 
new one :n Florida. A most attractive opportunity is 
this week offered to some wealthy individual or some as¬ 
sociation of wealthy men to establish a game preserve on 
the waters of the historic James River, and in the Blue 
Ridge Mountains. The great Glenwood estate of 30,000 
acres is offered for sale by Mr. Wm. Anderson, and 
should appeal very strongly to any one whose means 
enable him to establish a large preserve in the South. 
Quite apart from the great opportunities which this estate 
offers as a game preserve are its commercial possibilities. 
On the estate are minerals and timber, and the land 
offers astonishing opportunities for agriculture, fruit 
growing, forestry, and stock raising. We shall be sur¬ 
prised if this opportunity is not taken advantage of by 
some well-to-do reader of Forest and Stream. 
A CIRCUS ACT IN THE PARK. 
From the New York Evening Post. 
As a rule a cow puncher visiting _ this city, 
from remote parts beyond the Mississippi river, 
assumes forthwith a guileless manner, a suit of 
conventional shoddy, and wanders forth in the 
midst of the big, buzzing confusions of the metro¬ 
polis with mind attuned to little but wonder and 
awe. He and his kind rarely figure in the news 
of the day save as complainants or witnesses in 
wire-tapping games, and not even then provided 
they have retained sufficient money to “strike” 
for the plains. 
Jack Joyce “got in” from Shelby, N. D., the 
other day with none of this sort of diffidence, 
however. He spent the first two days of his visit 
in looking over the town, and then, pining with 
nostalgia, he went to a sporting goods store and 
bought a flapping hat. He also purchased a pair 
of chaps at a theatrical costumer’s, some yards 
of rope, and, at one of the stables in the vicinity 
of Columbus Circle, hired a horse and a saddle 
with a pommel. Thereafter Joyce eschewed the 
tall buildings, the sight-seeing _ automobiles, and 
the like, giving over the remaining days of his 
sojourn here to equine circumnavigation of Cen¬ 
tral Park. 
One morning, mounted on his fiery bronco, 
which cantered and lurched at a rakish angle, 
the North Dakotan dashed into the park from 
the Circle, just as a motorcar containing John 
Shevlin, a broker, pumped through the gate. In 
doing so the car grazed the bronco’s flank. 
Things happened at once. The bronco, with a 
wicked leer, drew his four feet together, and so 
arranged his body that the saddle was—quicker 
than it takes to tell it—at a supreme point of 
elevation. Joyce, of course, was still higher. But 
he landed squarely again, and observing an ex¬ 
pression of cold hauteur and annoyance rather 
than of friendly concern depicted on the face of 
the broker, he brought his quirt down sharply 
on the flanks of his steed, urging him directly 
in front of the car. Be it said to the broker’s 
credit, that he advised his chauffeur to slow down, 
which the man did. 
This gave Jack the opportunity he sought, and 
dropping the reins in order that he might the 
