190 
FOREST AND STREAM 
March, 1918 
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MISCELLANEOUS 
MISCELLANEOUS 
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES FOR SALE 
—Price, $50.00 and up. Mrs. Genevieve Chand¬ 
ler Phipps, Greystone Camp, Evergreen, Colo. 1 t 
THE FAMOUS POLICE DOGS—PUPPIES 
and grown stock of excellent qualities for sale. 
Philip H. Geil, 1801 No. 24th St., Omaha, Nebr. 
l.t.c. 
GROUSE DOG PUPPIES—WHELPED JULY 
1st 1917 Sired by the Grouse Dog Champion, 
Ro’dfield Dan, Jr. (35515); dam the famouse 
Marse Ben bitch. Doc’s Marse Queen (30408). 
Tlire edogs, one bitch, finely ticked, four months 
old. Enrolled. Prices right considering breeding. 
Abundance of Gladstone Blood, these puppies will 
make you the ideal Grouse dog. Elmer Roeder, 
Austin, Pa. _** 
HOUNDS AND HUNTING — MONTHLY 
Magazine featuring the hound. Sample free. 
\ddress Desk F, Hounds and Hutmng, Decatur, 
jU. 3-18-1.t.P-T.F.c. 
ECZEMA, EAR CANKER, 
goitre, cured or no charge. 
Write for particulars describ¬ 
ing the trouble. Eczema Remedy Company, Hot 
Springs, Ark. (12 115-18) 
SIXTY-MINUTE WORM REMEDY FOR 
Dogs—A vegetable compound administered with 
food. Harmless. Results guaranteed. Prepaid, 8 
doses 50c; IS, $1: 50,( $2; 100, $3.50. Chemical 
Prfoducts Co., Box 1523, Minneapolis, Minn. 
6.17-18 
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY 
HAVE YOU ANYTHING TO SELL OR EX- 
change. Books, guns, rifles, cameras, bicycles, 
motorcycles, and miscellaneous objects? Adver¬ 
tise in The Texas Trader, a magazine which 
offers a market to everyone, everywhere. Present 
rate 2c a word or 50 words $1. Send 10c in 
silver for a sample copy. The Texas Trader, 722 
Spaulding St., San Angelo, Texas. Please tell us 
where you saw this ad. t-t- 
62 VARIETIES PURE BRED CHICKENS, 
Ducks, Geese and Turkeys, Live Mallard Decoys, 
Wild Geese and English Setter Dogs, several 
High-Class Guns for sale. Special attention given 
to sportsmen. Large Illustrated Poultry Cata- 
logue mailed for 4c. C. M. Atwood, Box 22, 
Dundee, Minn. l.t.com. 
FAST SELLER; IMPROVED FABRIC BACK 
Patch for inner tubes. $1 kit sent postpaid for 
50c Extra discount for large order. Every 
motorist a prospect. Consumers’ Mfg. & Supply 
Co., Minneapolis, Minn. 2-t.Js. 
FORD TOURING, 1916 MODEL—ENGINE, 
Transmission and front assembly just been over¬ 
hauled. Car in first class condition. All good 
tires. Price $260. Small deposit will hold car 
until spring. Private owner. Leckie, 497 
Diamond Ave., Woodhaven, Long Island. l.t.K. 
TWO SPLENDID MOOSEHEADS—magnificent 
specimens, 40 to 50-inch spread; good color; ideal 
for Club or Hall decoration; prospective purchaser 
can deposit purchase price with Forest & Stream, 
and heads will be sent on approval—money to 
be returned if heads are not satisfactory. E. W. 
Loveojy, Lowell, Mass. 
CALIFORNIA GOLD, QUARTER SIZE, 27c; 
i/ 2 size. 53c; Dollar size, $1.10. Large cent, 100 
years old and catalogue, 10c. Norman Shultz, 
King City, Mo. l.t.K 
TRAINED BEAGLES, RABBIT HOUNDS, 
fox-hounds, coon, opossum, skunk, dogs, setters, 
pointers, pet, farm dogs, ferrets, guinea pigs, fancy 
pigeons rats, mice, list free. Violet Hill Kennels, 
Hanover, Pa. 10.1.12-18. 
RUSSIAN WOLFHOUNDS—IDEAL COMPAN- 
ions, Puppies and grown hounds for sale. Dela¬ 
ware Valley Farms, Titusville, N. J. l.t.c. 
BUY, SELL AND EXCHANGE ALL SORTS OF 
old-time and modern firearms. Stephen Van Rens¬ 
selaer, 805 Madison Ave., New York City. 
12.t.2-19-c. 
ALABAMA. $750 BUYS 5 ACRES ON RIVER 
boat landing, fresh and salt water, fishing—fine 
for Club. Dr. Condres, Bangor, Mich. l.t.K 
ASK BOIES’ HE’S GOT’EM—ALL VARIE- 
ties Dogs, Cats, Rabbits, Cavies, Rats, Mice, Fer¬ 
rets, Fur-bearing Animals, Poultry, Pigeons, 
Pheasants, Peafowl, etc. Complete Catalog, valu¬ 
able Feeding and Breeding Chart 5c BOIES’ Rab¬ 
bit Book, many receipts for serving, 25c.) Boies, 
Box 200, Millbrook, N. Y. . t.f.c. 
WINTER HOME IN FLORIDA. WOULD AP- 
peal to sportsmen for its hunting and fishing. For 
price and terms, address W. B. Plealy, Copper 
Hill, Arizona. l.t.c. 
GORDON SETTER, THREE FEMALE PUP- 
pies. Spayed, five months old, from best strain, 
well marked. Floyd T. Field, Savannah, N. Y. 
l.t. 
IMMENSE PROFITS RAISING BELGIAN 
Hares for us. We furnish stock and pay you 
$2.00 each and expressage when three months 
old. Contracts, booklet and full information 10c. 
Thorson Rabbit Company, Aurora, Colorado. 1 t 
"GAS-SOL” GIVES YOU 15 TO 40% MORE 
mileage and eliminates carbon. Money back Guar¬ 
antee. 100 tablets treat one hundred gallons 
gasoline. Price One Dollar. Live Agents wanted. 
Gas-Sol, Dept. “F,” Wakefield, Mass. l.t. 
RABBITS—STANDARD BRED BELGIAN 
Hares for sale. Wayne Moats, Waynesboro, R. 1, 
Penna. l.t. 
BEAGLE PUPPIES WINNERS—$3.50 AND 
$4.50 each. Broken Dogs cheap. Week’s trial. 
M. Baublitz, Seven Valleys, Pa. l.t. 
ORATIONS, DEBATES, SPEECHES, SPE- 
cial papers. Original, accurate compositions with 
true ring prepared for all events. 500 words $1. 
Ephraim Buchwald, Dept. F, 113 East 129th St., 
New York. l.t. 
BOSTON TERRIER PUPS WANTED. GIVE 
description and price. Art Pet Shop, 1244 Penn 
Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. l.t. 
WILL EXCHANGE BEST PEDIGREED 
Airedales, outdoor kind, for phonograph or west¬ 
ern saddle. A. Orman, Albee, S. D. l.t. 
COCKERELS FROM GUARANTEED TRAP- 
nested stock with records of 200. O. W. Zelie, 
Appleton, Wis. l.t. 
GRAND LOT OF PUPPIES, FLORIST, 
Hempfield and Tippecanoe strains. Truesdell’s 
Kennels, Shipshewana, Ind. l.t. 
FOR SALE—GERMAN SHEPHERD DOG, 
female, Hilda of Elmview, two years of age. 
Price reasonable. Charles Schott, 1065 17th St., 
Milwaukee, Wis. l.t. 
PRICES FOR MOUNTING HEADS AND 
whole bodies, heads size of Deer, $3.25; heads size 
of Moose, $12.00; birds size of Big Owls, $2.25; 
birds size of Eagles, $4.00 to $5.00; birds size of 
Blackbirds, $1.00; Bodys size of Squirrels, $1.50. 
I buy Raw F"urs. Write for prices on any thing 
you have to sell or mount. F. Gent. Rockford, 
Minn. l.t. 
SEND ME YOU TAXIDERMY. WORK— 
First class work at reasonable prices. A. C. 
Penfield, Conneautville, Pa. l.t. 
HAVE YOU READ THE FINISHED MYS- 
tery. 608 pages. Maroon gold binding. Biblical, 
wonderful, just out, order now. Postpaid, 60c. 
Mrs. G. Brown, R. 2, York, Pa. 11 
ELECTRIC, LIGHT; FOUR-PASSENGER, IN- 
closed top, run only 913 miles since factory re¬ 
built and equipped with new battery and tires 
year ago: best electric ever offered in city for 
$475. Indiana Battery Service Co-., 1007 North 
Meridan St., Indianapolis, Ind. l.t. 
FROM A SPORTSMAN’S 
DAUGHTER 
Editor Forest and Stream : 
When a middle-aged and very domesti¬ 
cated woman stops at a newsstand, where 
“Good Housekeeping,” “The Ladies’ Home 
Journal.” etc., are staring her solemnly in 
the face, she is not expected to buy a “Gen¬ 
tleman’s Magazine.” And it is always with 
a shy, apologetic glance towards the above- 
mentioned treasures that I reach for a 
copy of Forest and Stream. 
There’s a reason. 
I am a daughter of many generations of 
well-to-do sportsmen and hunters, and my 
birthplace is in France, beyond the battle¬ 
line, in the territory temporarily occupied 
by the Germans. What might its present 
condition be ? Does my father’s house still 
stand? The house that, when I was a 
child, was to me a castle of sacred, inviola¬ 
ble safety, of unshakable security. When 
I stood, on a cold winter’s night in the 
farthest corner of our garden, looking out 
over the smooth, white meadows, glistening 
in the moonlight, with the wolves howling 
on the edge of the still, snowbound forest, 
while a distant train sounded a blast of its 
whistle as it rumbled on through the snowy 
stillness.—It all seemed a necessary part of 
my home,—that howling of the wolves, and 
the rumbling of the train, for it enhanced 
the sense of security of my home. 
And when the snow melted, and the vio¬ 
lets came out in that corner, I stood there, 
looking towards the forest, as it got greener 
and greener... .And then came the first call 
of the cuckoo, and Spring was here. It al¬ 
ways had been thus, for generations, and I 
knew it always would be. 
And when the hunting season opened I 
could hear the short, high-pitched barking 
of the hounds on a trail; I heard the shots 
fired, and once, during a drag hunt I saw 
a doe “break through” and come out in the 
open. She ran down a slight incline be¬ 
tween the field and the forest, and at the 
bottom of it, cleared a small creek in one 
graceful bound, and disappeared again in 
the thickets. 
And through the long winter nights, when 
the men would sit around the stove telling 
hunters’ yarns, or praising the remarkable 
intelligence of their dogs, we children sat 
and listened. Yet, it had always been thus, 
—when our grandfather was a boy, he sat 
and listened to tales of his grandfather and 
his friends. And after my sister and 
brother and I would be grown and old, 
other children would sit and listen, or stand 
in the corner of the garden on a wintry, 
moonlit night looking out over the glisten¬ 
ing meadows, towards the forest, with the 
wolves howling at its edge, and the whistle 
of a distant train sounding shrill through 
the wintry night. 
To-day, when I read how whole towns 
are wiped out and forests‘destroyed by the 
bursting shells, I realize that things can 
never again be the same, not while the 
Earth stands. And there are moments 
when the remembrance of it all strikes me 
like the stab of a dagger : and I want to 
throw myself, facedown on the ground and 
tear my hair and scream ,—not because I 
wish my childhood days back, but for the 
pack of lies that Life held out to the eager, 
trusting child. Jay Way. 
