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FOREST AND STREAM. 
the . idea 
FeminP ton 
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PUMP GUN 
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Solid breech-Hammerless 
The sportsman who goes hunting in 1908 without investigating these three modern guns is not up-to-date. The Pump has the slide 
action—the Autoloading guns load themselves. Ask your dealer or write us TO-DAY. 
Ilion, N. Y. REMINGTON ARMS COMPANY Agency, 313 Broadway, New York 
tonsters, standing on their backs and jumping 
om one struggling fish to another; now with 
ne foot on one and one on another. Men, 
I /omen and children walked upon fish, and 
ragged them to the shore as fast as they could, 
bile the fishermen, standing amid the strug- 
ling mass, killed hundreds. This curious war- 
ire continued for several hours, but finally the 
am was broken, and the great mass of fish 
purged ahead and continued their migration, 
I ‘aving hundreds of dead and wounded behind. 
WHALE PICTURES. 
Whales are rapidly becoming extinct, ac- 
> ording to a statement made at the American 
; luseum of Natural History. So impressed by 
Ipe evidences of the near approach of the time 
! f the disappearance of the great sea mammals 
as become Dr. Herman C. Bumpus, director 
f the museum, that he has issued instructions 
o Roy C. Andrews, the museum’s whale ex¬ 
ert, to get every photograph of whales he can. 
Mr. Andrews is now at a whaling station off 
lie west shore of Vancouver, B. C., where he 
as had almost remarkable success all the Slim¬ 
ier. In a letter to Dr. Bumpus, just received, 
e says that on that day no less than twenty- 
I nir humpback whales were brought in. The 
mseum at present has no skeleton of the hump- 
i ack, and Mr. Andrews is now preparing sev- 
ral for shipment. He writes that he has taken 
cores of photographs of the whales from all 
: onceivable positions, so that when they shall 
i ave become extinct, it will be possible for 
Suture generations to see how they looked. 
1 Mr. Andrews regrets that all the whales be- 
f 'g caught qt this station are large ones, meas- 
ring from 6o to ioo feet in length. He said 
j, iat a big whale with a young calf had just been 
i,rought in. He milked the whale, filling a quart 
i ail, and the milk looked so rich and good he 
! ecided to drink some of it. 
“Never again!” he writes, and from what he 
| dds in the same connection one might think 
e said “Ugh!” a good many times. “I feel 
j orry for the calf,” he writes. 
Mr. Andrews says he has been able to get 
ne photographs of the whale’s hind legs, which 
re now no more than nubs, having become so 
com disuse. As is well known, some million 
cars ago the wdiale lived partly on land. When 
| took to a seafaring life altogether it had no 
l:.se for its legs, and these gradually lost in de¬ 
velopment until now they have almost dis- 
i ppeared. The importance of his photographs 
Ir. Andrews thus points out. 
He goes from Vancouver to Murderer’s 
ove. on the south coast of Alaska, another 
! haling station, where he expects to obtain a 
umber of skeletons of sulphur-bottom whales 
I l varying sizes.—New York Times. 
All the game laws of the United States and 
anada, revised to date and now in force, are 
ven in the Game Laws in Brief. See adv. 
K_ennel Special . 
Ads under this head, 2 cents a word a time (or 3 cents 
in capitals). Cash must accompany order. 
If you want thorough satisfaction, send me your setters 
and pointers. My success is due to long experience in 
England, six years in this country. Distemper specialist. 
$1 brings my booklet on training. Terms for training, 
$12.50 per month Gilt-edge references. ARTHUK 
EVANS, Thomasville, N. C. 
Cocker Spaniels.—Everything in thoroughbred Cocker 
Spaniels on hand and for sale. Prices reasonable. Cor¬ 
respondence solicited. ARTHUR C. BURNS, Frank¬ 
lin, Delaware Co., N. Y. 
Two grandly bred Airedale Terriers, four months, show 
specimens: Male, $25.00; Female, $20.00. R. HENRY, 
Germantown, Ohio. 15 
WANTED.—ONE GOOD DOG for retrieving ducks. 
Thoroughly trained and reliable. Between four and five 
years old. Answer X., care Forest and Stream. 14 
Training shooting dogs my specialty, with satisfaction 
guaranteed. W. T. MITCHELL, Hurt, Va. 
THE STANFORD BEAGLES.—GET THE BEST. 
Grown stock, grown youngsters ready to train at once, 
and puppies innumerable. Prices and photos, 6 cents 
stamps. STANFORD KENNELS, Bangall, N. Y. 14 
Beagles, fox hounds, rabbits, pigeons, ferrets, sporting 
and pet dogs of every description. Send 10 cents for 40- 
page catalogue. Brown Beagle Kennels, York, Pa. 
Cockers for hunting. Address W. A. SUTHERLAND, 
De Lancy, N. Y. 
WANTED.—Two brace pointers or setters to train; 
abundance of game; life’s experience. R. K. Armstrong, 
Barber Junction, Rowan Co., N. C. 
Will train your dog on quail, woodcock and snipe. 
Terms reasonable. LOCH LADDIE, Doniphan, Mo. 
WANTED DOGS TO TRAIN. Best grounds in North. 
Terms, $10 per month. JAMES A. ROSETTER, Albany, 
Ohio. 
DOGS FOR SALE. 
Do you want to buy a dog or pup of any kind. If so, 
send for list and prices of all varieties. Always on hand. 
OXFORD KENNELS, 36 North Ninth St., Philadelphia, 
Pa. 
POINTERS AND SETTERS. 
Thoroughly trained dogs; also some good yearlings and 
puppies. GEO. W. LOVELL, Middleboro, Mass. 
Kennel Diseases 
By “Ashmont” (J. Frank Perry, M.D.), author of “Ken¬ 
nel Secrets.’’ Illustrated. 8vo. Cloth, $3.00 net. 
Postage, 22 cents. 
Every one who owns a dog should possess this invalu¬ 
able book, which has been long in preparation, and has 
been pronounced by a competent authority for ahead of 
any other work yet attempted upon the subject. The 
minuteness with which every detail is considered leaves 
little or nothing for any future work to attempt. Es¬ 
pecially important chapters are those on eczema, the 
different kinds of mange, poisons, distemper, hydro¬ 
phobia, ear and eye diseases, vaginal diseases, diseases 
of the urinary and sexual organs, and pneumonia (an 
especially valuable contribution), also the portions of 
the work which are devoted to symptoms and diagnosis. 
The work is entirely devoid of technical terms, and is 
written in such entertaining style, that any one with a 
love of dogs would find it not only valuable and help¬ 
ful, but interesting as well. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
SPRATT’S 
DOG CAKES 
Will Keep a Dog in Show Form 
and Working Condition. 
Send for Free Catalogue “Dog 
Culture,” which contains much 
valuable information. 
SPRATT’S PATENT (Am.) Ltd. 
Newark, N. J. San Francisco, Cal. Boston, Mass. 
St. Louis, Mo. Cleveland, Ohio. Montreal, Can. 
soon Off 
DOG DISEASES 
AND 
HOW TO FEED. 
Mailed FREE to any address by the author. 
H. CLAY GLOVER, D. V. S., 118 West 31st St., New Yart. 
A SEASONABLE BOOK 
Modern Fish Culture in Fresh 
and Salt Water 
BY FRED MATHER. 
Fishing is in the air. It is becoming more and more 
necessary for the individual angler to consider the future 
supply of game fish. Stream and lake stocking is the 
order of the day. It can be done on a small scale as 
well as on a large one. Fishculture, too, can be made a 
profitable side line. 
Mr. Mather’s book is designed to enable the individual 
to do what public authorities and clubs are doing at 
large expense. It is thoroughly practical, easily under¬ 
stood, and treats of every phase of fishculture. It is 
just the thing for the man who owns a small pond or 
stream section and wants to provide fish for sport or the 
table at moderate cost. Heavy paper. Cloth. Illustrated. 
Price, $2.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
DISEASES OF DOGS, 
Nursing vs. Dosing. 
A Treatise on the Care of Dogs in Health and Disease. 
By S. T. Hammond (“Shadow”), author of “Training 
vs. Breaking.” 161 pages. Cloth. Price, $1.00. 
This work, from the pen of “Shadow,” will have a 
hearty welcome. It comes from one who writes from full 
knowledge. “The results of more than fifty years of 
experience are here given,” writes the author, “and I 
assure the reader that no course of conduct is advised, 
no treatment recommended, no remedy prescribed, that 
has not been thoroughly tried and tested by the writer, 
and is believed to be entirely trustworthy in every re¬ 
spect.” Sent postpaid on receipt of price, $1.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
