122 
FOREST AND STREAM 
February, 1918 
PATENTS 
PATENT ON IMPROVED ARTICLE-CAR- 
rier for sale on cash or royalty basis. Reasonable 
terms. For full particulars address, Joseph Fallis, 
Gunn, Wyoming. 1 t 
AMERICAN PATENTS AND TRADE-MARKS. 
F. V. Winters, Patent Lawyer, 125 East 23rd 
St., New York City, secures patent protection 
everywhere. Telephone connection. 1 t 
STARTLING PATENT FACTS. SEND 
postal for new 90 page book FREE. Your idea 
may mean a fortune if handled rightly. Learn 
how my service differs. Send sketch or model 
for actual search. George P. Kimmel, Patent Law¬ 
yer, 81-B. Oriental Bldg., Washington, D. C. 
PHOTOGRAPHY 
DEVELOP YOUR FILMS AND PRINTS BY 
this first-class ready developer, which takes the 
place of Metol or Rodenal. 2 oz. 35c; 4 oz. 60c. 
Send for a bottle of Indianol, prepaid. (No 
Stamps). Indianol Company, Orange, New Jer¬ 
sey. We develop films 10c a roll, 3c a print, l.t. 
YOUR FIRST ROLL OF FILMS DEVELOPED 
and printed, 10 cents. Special Trial Offer. Any 
size. 6 prints free. Or 6 prints from Kodak 
negative any size for 10c. Extra work addi¬ 
tional. Roanoke Photo Finishing Company, 220 
Bell Ave., Roanoke, Va. (3 t 2-18-C) 
PICTURES 
ARTISTIC, FASCINATING AND EXQUISITE 
Den Pictures. O. W. Miller, 105 Chambers St., 
New York. l.T. 
POST CARDS, ETC. 
BOYS, SEND “HER” A VALENTINE! 
Your Choice of the loveliest Valentines, Easter, 
Birthday, Religious, Washington Birthday, 4th 
July, Holiday, Season or Greeting Post Cards— 
or richly colored (actual) War Views, Army and 
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Historic and Scenic Wonders of America, 
Famous Movie Stars or Pretty Girl Post Cards, 
all of any of above subjects or assorted to your 
order—everyone a gem of elegance and beauty— 
the regular 2-for-5c sort—sent postpaid for 30c 
per 50; 25, 15c; 12, 10c. 144 assorted War and 
World Views Poster Stamps (300 subjects, col¬ 
ored, gummed), 10c; 3 sets for 25c. 115 U. S. 
Flag Seals, gummed and in various designs, 
10c; 3 sets, 25c. Buy from us and save money. 
Satisfaction Guaranteed. We also want AGENTS 
for these quick sellers. Ask for prices and sales 
plans. Hutchins Magazine Agency, Box 411-A, 
Summerville, Ga l.T.c-1 
POULTRY 
BLUE RIBBON COLUMBIAN ROCKS— 
Nine hens and one cock for only $30.00. No 
better birds for the money. The most beautiful 
of the great Rock family. Robert S. Frick, Sel- 
lersville. Pa. l.T. 
COLORED MUSCOVY DUCKS—ONE FINE 
trio yearlings. $5.00. Sunnyfields Farm. Wall¬ 
ingford, Conn. 1 t 
COLUMBIAN WYANDOTTES; WILBURTHA 
Strain. Satisfaction guaranteed. Fordham Poul¬ 
try Yards, Sayre, Pa. 1 t 
INCUBATORS. TWO QUEENS 200 CAPAC- 
ity, Two-Brooders, 250 capacity; double gun, tent, 
Tenor horn, violin, banjo. All new condition. 
Want Barred Rock Pullets and new fire-arms. 
J. A. Chelton, Fairmount, Md. (3 t 2-18-C) 
LIGHT BRAHMAS—FELCH STRAIN THAT 
has won in every show. The finest young stock 
I ever raised. Pictorial price list for asking. 
Mrs. J. R. Kenworthy, Wichita, Kansas. No. 5. 11 
LEGHORNS, ANCONAS, BELGIAN HARES, 
White Rabbits, Guinea Pigs. Danger’s Pet Stock 
& Poultry Co., Sleepy Eye, Minn. l.t. 
PARTRIDGE WYANDOTTES—AM OFFER- 
ing a limited number of extra large, well matured 
cockerels that will win money or add dignity to 
any flock. Sold with money back guarantee. 
Eggs in season. Edith Haxby, 138 Howe St.. 
Jacksonville. Ilinois. l.t. 
POULTRY 
PIT GAME FOWL—YOUNG TRIOS 
Walter Forrister, Framingham, Mass. 
$7.00. 
3-3-18 
POULTRY JOURNAL — PRACTICAL AND 
reliable; monthly; special introductory offer. 5 
months for 10c. The Poultry Record, Carey, 
Ohio. 1 t 
S. C. REDS—BRED GENERATIONS 
eggs. Sanborn’s heavy laying strain, 
chicks, pigeons. Males to improve your 
John A. Lancaster, Richmond, Va. 
FOR 
Baby 
flock. 
l.t. 
SILVER CAMPINES — COCKERELS 
sale cheap; no room. Homestead Strain. 
B. Grimshaw, Liverpool, N. Y. 
FOR 
Geo. 
1 t 
SPECKLED SUSSEX, $10.00 A TRIO. FIELDS 
Brothers, Sandwich, Illinois. It 
SPLENDID BARRED PLYMOUTH ROCK 
cockerels. Parks’ heavy laying strain exclusively 
(from best pens direct). Beautiful, large boned, 
vigorous birds, $3.00, $4.00, $5.00 each. W. G. 
Meradith, Dept. F, Danvers, Illinois. 1 t 
“SUPERIOR RED SUSSEX”—EXHIBITION 
and utility stock for sale. Edson Snyder, Butler, 
Mo. 1 t 
FOB SALE—WHITE LEGHORN PULLETS, 
ready to lay. E. V. Billstone, Jamestown, N. Y. It 
WANTED—YOUR ADDRESS; I WILL MAIL 
you poultry catalogue, 35 varieties, free. Her¬ 
man Blumer, Berger, Mo. 1 t 
WHITE AFRICAN GUINEAS, $1.50 EACH; 
$2.50 pair, $4 trio. Julia Moore, Kahoka, Mo. 11 
WHITE AFRICAN GUINEAS $3.50 PAIR; 
$4.5® trio. Honey Creek Poultry Farm, Kahoka, 
Mo. 1 t 
WHITE CORNISH COCKERELS REASON- 
able. L. J. Smith, Deep liver, Conn. 1 t 
WHITE ROCKS—GRAND QUALITY PEDI- 
greed pullets and cockerels. Big boned, with broad 
backs and long, deep bodies. Pure white and 
from trapnested egg-layers. Selected birds, $5 un. 
Satisfaction guaranteed. Write for full descrip¬ 
tion today. T. P. Dougherty, Route F 102, Ty¬ 
rone, Penn. 1 t 
WORLD'S BEST, GAME FIGHTING FOWLS. 
My Ancona Games are very beautiful, wonderful | 
layers, gamey flavored meat, absolutely nothing 
better or more beautiful in chickendom. Illus¬ 
trated folder free. Alfred F. Graham, Cameron, 
N. C. It 
WILD MALLAD DUCKS $1.25, EITHER SEX 
—Ernest Ellerman, Utica, South Dakota. 1 t 
REAL ESTATE 
BARGAIN—80 ACRES, IMPROVED, $800; 
$300 cash, balance terms. W. D. Blankenship, 
Buffalo, Mo. It 
560 ACRES, JOINS STATION. 3-SETS IM- 
provements. Ideal farm. Also 160, 90 wheat, 
half (estimated 1200 bushels) to,. buyer. Free 
list. Buckeye Agency, Ottawa, Kas. 1 t 
1960 ACRES COAL AND MINERAL LAND 
for sale. 1)4 miles from Rock Island Ry., cov¬ 
ered with good timber, underlaid with 5 feet of 
coal, and in oil and gas territory. Would make 
fine ranch and hunting presrve. Write, R. E. 
Lynch, Tulsa. Price $10.00 acre 1 t 
LISTEN: 40 ACRE VALLEY FARM $1,000. 
Terms; also fine fishing resort, cheap; list. Mc¬ 
Grath, Mountain View, Mo. 11 
DO YOU WANT TO BUY A HOME, A FARM, 
or a ranch, raw land, city or business property, 
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10 cents coin for a copy of our BIG MAGA¬ 
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telling us what you want and where you want it. 
Address The World’s Mirror, Beaumont, Texas. 
T.F ” 
WHAT ABOUT YOUR 
HUNTING TROPHY? 
(continued from page 95) 
T HERE seems to have been a great 
gregariousness in sport as it was 
practiced in old France and old Eng¬ 
land—a deer hunt was not only a family 
but a social affair, always attended with 
certain august and exact ceremonies, 
whether in starting the deer, in killing it, 
or in skinning and quartering it. Does this 
gregariousness exist in American hunting? 
For the most part no—a great many of 
our hunters prefer to be alone in camp. 
And yet, in what we may call the most 
American part of America—the Southern 
States—this gregariousness in sport is even 
today an indisputable affair. You cannot 
go on a deer hunt or bear hunt in the 
South with less than ten or a dozen gentle¬ 
men attending you, each eager to do all he 
can for you. Good fellowship, a good 
time by all, a generous division of the 
spoils, rivalry on the part of all in the 
generosities of the chase—these things 
have not been changed in the Southern 
States even by our rapidly altering com¬ 
mercial institutions, and it is a very beau¬ 
tiful thing that this still remains true. 
Now, therefore, say Gaston Phoebus and 
his ancient kinsman, Edward of York: 
“Then it is fair to hunt the hart, for 
it is a fair thing to seek well a hart, and 
a fair thing well to harbour him, and a 
fair thing to move him, and a fair thing to 
hunt him, and a fair thing to retrieve him, 
and a fair thing to be at the abbay, 
whether it be on water or on land. A 
fair thing is the curee, and a fair thing 
to undo him well, and to raise the rights. 
And a well fair thing and good is the di¬ 
vision, and it be a good deer. In so much 
that considering all things I hold that it is 
the fairest hunting, that any man may hunt 
after.” 
Our old volume proves very well that its 
authors were naturalists, good out-of-doors 
men and good hunters—they tell us with 
great detail of the habits of the wild 
game animals, the boar, the hare, the roe¬ 
buck, the wolf, the hart—and we observe 
that the habits of these animals have 
changed but little in the past five hundred 
years. They tell us how each may be pur¬ 
sued in gentle and sportsmanlike fashion. 
They tell of the etiquette of the field- 
nothing of arrogance, nothing of avarice— 
always the wish to accord to the other man 
the credit of the stroke where two have 
smitten the quarry—in short that courtesy 
and manliness which make much of the 
beauty and charm of field sports even in 
these degenerate days. And when it comes 
to writing, although they write with ex¬ 
actness, with confidence and out of a wide 
experience, always they write in simplicity 
and modesty—things sometimes forgotten, 
it must be confessed, by acrimonious sport¬ 
ing writers of today who quite frequently 
are most opinionated when least informed. 
Our old book closes in the words of Ed¬ 
ward of York, who was Master of Game 
for “my right worshipful and dread Lord 
Henry by the grace of God eldest son and 
heir unto the high excellent and Christian 
Prince Henry IV. by the aforesaid grace 
King of England and of France, Prince of 
Wales, Duke of Guienne of Lancaster and 
< f Cornwall, and Earl of Chester”: 
