59 8 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[April 13, 1907. 
T ajcidermi-rt’t. 
SAVE YOUR TROPHIES. 
IS (Jrite 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. V. 
J. KANNOFSKY. 
PRACTICAL GLASS BLOWER 
and Manufacturer of 
/Artificial eyes for birds, animals and manufacturing pur¬ 
poses a specialty. Send for prices. All kinds of skulls.for 
Jfae 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 i860. 
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. 
American Big Game Hunting. 
The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club. Editors: 
Theodore Roosevelt and George Bird Grinnell. Illus¬ 
trated. Cloth, 345 pages. Price, $2.50. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
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. 
For Sale. 
RESURRECTION OF THE PUP. 
Small-Mouth Black B&ss 
We have the only establishment dealing in young small-mouth 
blat't bass commercially in the United States. Vigorous young 
bass in various sizes ranging from advanced fry to 3 and 4-inch 
fingerlings for stocking purposes. 
War&maug Small-Mouth Black Bass Hatchery. 
Correspondence invited. Send for circulars. Address 
HENRY W. BEEMAN, New Preston, Conn. 
BROOK TROUT. 
Eggs, frv, yearlings and two-year-olds, for stocking 
brooks and lakes. Address NEW ENGLAND TROUT 
FARM, Plympton, Mass. 
BROOK TROUT. 
It will pay you to correspond with me before buying 
eggs, fry or yearlings in any quantity. I guarantee a 
safe delivery anywhere. Crystal Springs Trout Farm, 
L. B. HANDY, So. Wareham, Mass. 
DDAAIf TDAI IT" of all ages for stocking 
Dfvvlvllk 1 BxvMJ 1 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 rvorv-migratory. 
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 MACKENSEN, 
YARDLEY, PA. 
Agenlsfor JULIUS MOHR, Jr.. Ulm,Germany. 
Exporter of Live Game. Wild Animals, Fancy Pheasants, etc. 
Continued from page 586. 
there a schooner drifted helplessly on the tide; 
Little Pup after being paddled out beyond She 
piers drifted slowly up toward the Narrows. 
It was noon time before the upper bay was 
reached and shortly after noon the fair tide 
which had been calculated on to take them cleai 
through the East River, slackened and ther 
started to ebb. 
It was certainly most discouraging to Pup’s 
crew. Had there been any air at all they woulc 
have been able to make it, but now all thoughts 
of getting through to the Sound were futile. 
It was fully 3 o’clock before the little cuttei 
bucking the tide reached Governors Island. 
Here nature suddenly changed her countenance' 
A dark streak appeared on the water along the 
Jersey shore, rapidly spread over the bay unti 
it reached the cutter. Then things became sud 
denly very active, and Pup with a white coamei 
rolling away off each bow, her sails bellying al 
most to bursting, and two men sitting well aft 
bounded off before the strong breeze up the tur 
bulent East River. 
Anyone who has traversed this river know: 
what a lively bit of water it is under the Brook 
lyn bridge. Tug boats, ferry boats, steamboats 
lighters and tows, all seem to meet here at the 
same time and see how near they can come t< 
fouling without actually sinking each other. an< 
woe to the poor outsider who happens to intrudi 
while they are having this interesting marin> 
football scrimmage. 
The poor little Pup was the outsider and he 
came the football. Yankee skippers and pilots 
Irish engineers and stokers. Swedish, Germai 
and even Italian deck hands were all at one am 
the same time in the polite vocabulary of th 
water front requesting the two men to take tha 
blankety, blank - of a blankety, blank — 
out of the way. 
Gladly would the pair have done so, but where j 
Ferry slips were poor places to get afoul of an< 
every dock they passed required dodging fron 
tugs backing out or scows comine ruthless! 
head on that required immediate action to pre| 
vent going under them. 
The short man had the tiller, the tall man 
trimming sheets; both had their hands full t 
guide that little toy of a boat clear of trouble; 
The tide was running like a mill race againsi 
them and a heavy cross sea tossing Pup abou| 
so her boom would be dragging two feet unde 
one minute and six feet in the air the next. 
And so when the tall man, overcome by th 
lively action of the beat, gave way to remorse 0 
something else and became violently sea sick, th 
short man began to think it high time to resor 
to drastic measures for relief. 
The sun was getting low, the wind blowinj 
harder every minute * there wasn't a lantern 0 
any kind on the boat and so to attempt to sai 
a 14ft. cutter up the East River at night lost a. 
its charms and just above the bridge the fir? 
loop hole of escape presented itself. 
There was an opening of about eight feet be] 
tween two steamships with an open space be 
vond them. With a sweep like a sea gull th 
little Pup swept round and shot into the crevied 
her masthead just level with the steamer’s deck:] 
Her momentum carried her past the ships an 
there a haven ot refuge appeared; an empty slid 
Letting the sails run down the short mai 
