April 6, 1907.] 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
559 
Remington Autoloading Rifle 
The powerful penetration of this arm is shown by the two accompanying cuts. 
On the left, machine steel 5-16 of an inch thick, cleanly penetrated by the .35 calibre 
bullet. The bone on the right, equal in size to the femur of the moose, shows the 
shattering power of two shots in live tissue. Self-loading, with solid breech and 
safe safety. 
List price , $ 30 . For sale by all dealers, subject to 
discounts. A full line of "Double Darrel Shotguns. 
THE REMINGTON ARMS COMPANY 
ILION. N. Y. 
Agency, 315 Broadway. New York City S«xles Office. San Francisco. Cal. 
better express the various dimensions of his feel¬ 
ings, he hurled into that motor car, into the un¬ 
protected faces of mecanicien and owner, a blis¬ 
tering fire of North Dakota metaphor which 
would have shriveled men of less stern mettle. 
Then Mr. Shevlin, losing his temper, struggled 
■ to his feet and bestowed upon the Dakotan no 
mean portion of Wall street’s submerged vocab¬ 
ulary. Concluding, he gave the car horn, a great 
affair, a mighty blast. It was a climax, a speak¬ 
ing climax. The sound rumbled against the belly 
[of the bronco like tennis balls against a drum. 
The frightened steed, as he bolted for the shrub¬ 
bery lining the drive, moved his legs so fast that 
he resembled a corpulent centipede. 
But Joyce, still holding on, wheeled in a great 
circle, and came upon the drive just as Mr. Shev- 
lin’s car, which was hitting up full speed, ap¬ 
proached. The cow puncher had loosened his 
lariat early in the affray, and as the car swept 
! past the thin hempen line shot like a yellow 
streak after it. Neatly the coils settled around 
Mr. Shevlin's shoulders, and a second later he 
was nipped from his seat, landing sprawling by 
the wayside, as though he had flown there. 
What next would have happened will never be 
I known, since mounted patrolman George Frisk, 
who was a spectator of the encounter, drove up 
at the crucial moment and disengaged the utterly 
furious broker from the bight of the lariat. Mr. 
Shevlin demanded that the Westerner be ar¬ 
rested, and when informed that there was doubt 
1 that the Penal Code contained a specific punish¬ 
ment for lassoing citizens, he changed his com¬ 
plaint to assault and abusive language. Patrol¬ 
men McCormick and McKeown having appeared, 
the cow puncher, bronco, motor car, chauffeur and 
all were taken to the West Sixty-eighth street 
station, where Joyce was arraigned before Ser- 
[geant Stevenson. 
! “This is not the wild west,” said Mr. Shevlin, 
glaring at the cowboy and rubbing his head and 
I shoulders. “This is no Buffalo Bill country, and 
I these fellows should be taught their places. He 
: snaked me right out of my car with his lasso.” 
! “So,” observed the sergeant with broad police 
humor, “so he threw his lazzaretto over you, did 
| he?” 
| “Well, it was a lariat, or lasso, or something, 
I know that,” grumbled the complainant. 
From the station the party went over to the 
West Side Court, where Mr. Shevlin admitted 
that perhaps he had been rather torrid in his 
1 repartee before the throwing of the lariat. 
Finally, he decided that perhaps the cowboy had 
had trouble enough and declined to press his 
complaint. 
! “It’s a mighty high-handed piece of business,” 
; remarked Magistrate Steinert, “to think that you 
cannot ride in your motorcar without being las- 
Aoed. Complaint dismissed.” 
1 — -- - - 
Hunting: i n Many Lands. 
The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club. Editors: 
Theodore Roosevelt and George Bird Grinnell. Vignette. 
Illustrated. Cloth, 448 pages. Price, $2.50. 
\ FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
I * 
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, 
Belle of Hessan; sire, Kent’s Chip. Price, $50.00. 
A. P. PIULL, 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. 
Young dogs and puppies by Tony’s Count. 
FRANK FORESTER KENNEL, 
14 Warwick, N. Y. 
Cockers.—All colors and types, from registered stock. 
Prices reasonable. Satisfaction guaranteed. ARTHUR 
C. BURNS, Franklin, Delaware Co., New York. 
Place your dogs with us and have them ready for Fall Shoot¬ 
ing- CLARION KENNELS, Scottsburg, Va. 
For Sale.—English setter dog, four years. Broken. Re¬ 
trieves. Best breeding. H. LOOMIS, New Rochelle, 
N- Y. _14 
For Sale.—English setter uuppies, 9 weeks old. Sire’s 
sire and dam’s sire imported. Males, $10; females, $5. 
Box 32, Lockwood, N. Y. 
Uncle Lisha's Shop. 
Life in a Corner of Yankeeland. By Rowland E. Robin¬ 
son. Cloth. 187 pages. Price, $1.25. 
The shop itself, the place of business of Uncle Lisha 
Peggs, bootmaker and repairer, was a sort of sportsman’s 
exchange, where, as one of the fraternity expressed it, 
the hunters and fishermen of the widely scattered neigh¬ 
borhood used to meet of evenings and dull outdoor days, 
'to swap lies.” 
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. 
Canoe Cruising and Camping. 
By Perry D. Frazer. Cloth. Illustrated. Price, $1.00. 
Full of practical information for outdoor people, 
whether they travel in canoes, with pack animals or 
carry their outfits on their own backs. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
St. Louis World s Fair, 1904: Gold Medal & Highest Award 
Paris Exposition, 1900: Gold Medal & Highest Award 
SPRATT’S PATENT 
AM. LTD.} 
Manufacture pecially prepared Foods for 
DOGS. PUPPIES. 
CATS. RABBITS. 
POULTRY. 
PIGEONS. GAME. 
BIRDS. FISH. 
Write for Catalogue, “Dog Culture,” with practical 
chapters on the feeding, kenneling and management of 
dogs; also chapters on cats. 
Spratt’s Patent l «? ^'£"L u Vm<> 
(America) Ltd. ) 1324 Valencia St., San Francisco, Cal. 
DOG 
:BOOK OJV 
DISEASES 
AND 
HOW TO FEED. 
Mailed FREE to any address by the author. 
H. CLAY GLOVER, D. V. S., 1278 Broadway, New York. 
IMPROVED SPIKE COLLAR. 
For use in dog training. Price, $2.00. By 
mail, $2.10. Send for circular. 
B. WATERS. 
346 Broadway. Now York. 
“A MEDICINE CHEST IN EVERY BOTTLE” 
OLEO CANINE 
Is the only reliable all-round remedy for 
DOGS AND PUPPIES. 
It cures the ordinary ailments of canines when all other 
dog remedies utterly fail. Trial Bottle 25 cents. 
Standard size 50 cents. If sent by mail 65 cents. 
Booklets for the asking. Advice freely given. Agents 
wanted everywhere. 
THE OLEO REMEDY COMPANY, 
132 East 23d Street, - New York City. 
HORSE AND HOVND 
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- 
ting. The Hunter. Schooling of Hunters. Cross- 
Country Riding and Origin of the American Hound. 
Breeding and Raising Horses. The Kennel Scent. The 
£° x - J, ri 8 ks ??, d Habi ‘s. of th e 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. 
