318 
FOREST AND STREAM 
May, 1918 
GUNS AND AMMUNITION 
FOR SALE—TWENTY, STANDARD MAKES, 
shotguns. Eight new. Description and price on 
application. A. M. Williams, Bradford, Pa. 
FOR SALE—TWO ESPECIALLY FINE HAND 
made 12 gauge shot guns, by Fred Adolph, a 
three-barreled gun and rifle, price $350, and a 
Chas. Daly gun of exceptionally fine finish $650; 
both new. Von Lengerke & Detmold, Inc., 200 
Fifth Ave., New York City. 
FOR SALE—12 GAUGE REMINGTON AUTO- 
matic shotgun in first class condition. Price 
$40. Joseph J. Smith, No. 1 Liberty St., New 
York City. 
OUR SHOT CONTAINER CARRIES FROM 50 
to 100 yards according to gauge before container 
drops, while shot continues on its flight. We 
do not send samples. Our guarantee stands good 
or money refunded. Rush your orders is our 
advice or a lot of you will be disappointed. $2 
per hundred, Postpaid. Long Distant Shot Con¬ 
tainer Co., Marinette, Wis. 
WANTED—NEW SPRINGFIELD RIFLE, ’06. 
Albert Harran, Jersey Shore, Pa. 
WANTED—REMINGTON OR WINCHESTER 
automatic rifle not under 35 cal., latest medel 
and new condition. H. Webster, 148 Central St., 
Springfield, Mass. 
WANTED 22 CAL. REPEATING RIFLE 
pump. N. P. Randall, Brattleboro, Vt. 
INSTRUCTION 
LEARN YACHT DESIGNING. ALBUM 51 
Yacht Designs, 25c. Yacht Model Emporium, 
Liverpool, N„ Y. 
LIVE STOCK 
WANTED—DRY BEAR PAWS AND GALLS, 
also live bear. Bear Exporters, Eureka, Cal., P. 
O. Box 860. 
MAGAZINES WANTED 
ADVERTISER WILL PAY ONE DOLLAR 
for copy of Forest and Stream, June, 1916. 
Address, Waters, c/o Forest and Stream. 
WANTED—FEBRUARY, 1917, ISSUE OF 
Forest and Stream., C. S. Bliss, Midland 
Michigan. 
WANTED—FOREST AND STREAM ODD 
numbers in 1905-6-7-8. Complete or files for 
these years. Unbound preferred. State price. 
Chas. N. Kessler, Helena, Mont. 
MOTOR CYCLES 
BIG BARGAINS IN GOOD MOTORCYCLES 
we have taken in exchange on new ones. Send 
for special bargain list. Shaw Mfg. Co., Gales¬ 
burg, Kansas, Dept. 238. 
FOR SALES OR TRADE—ONE EXCELSIOR 
and one Harley Davidson, single cylinder mo¬ 
tors, magneto ignition, in excellent shape. What 
have you. L. A. Lenz, Box 496, Lacon, Ill. 
INDIAN—TWIN A-l CONDITION, FIRST 
$130 takes it. Boyd Clogston, Ballston Lake, 
N. Y. 
MOTORCYCLES FROM $25 UP—NEW AND 
2nd hand. Easy terms, large list to choose from, 
all makes, send 4c stamps for Bulletin “P,” Peer¬ 
less Motorcycle Co., Watertown, Mass. 
NEW DAYTON MOTOR BICYCLE—CLUTCH 
—Excellent condition—Run under 500 miles. $80 
cash. George Johnston, Langdon, North Dak. 
NATURE BOOKS 
“TEXAS NATURE OBSERVATIONS,” 
handsome book; 332 halftone illustrated pages; 
reliable and enduring essays; endorsed by natural¬ 
ists, teachers, hunters, editors, etc.; descriptive 
circulars. Address, Dr. R. Meager, San An¬ 
tonio, Texas. Price $2.50. 
PATENTS 
CASH FOR INVENTIONS AND PATENTS. 
Write Fisher Mfg. Co., 2195 Railway Exchange, 
St. Louis, Mo. 
MODELS, EXPERIMENTAL WORK, TOOLS 
and Dies. Laabs Mfg. Co., 235 Bidwell Terrace, 
Rochester, N. Y. 
PATENT SENSE—"THE BOOK THE IN- 
ventor Keeps..” Worth more than all other 
patent books combined. Free. Write R. S. & 
A. B. Lacey, 201 Springer Bldg., Washington, 
D. C. Established 1869. 
SPORTING GOODS MANUFACTURERS AND 
others. Shoeplate makes any shoe a pair of spikes 
in a jiffy; light, strong. Patent cheap at $30,000. 
Will consider any reasonable offer. Write Alfred 
Schrader, Box 135, Surrey, N. Dak. 
UNIVERSAL RAZOR STROP HOLDER, PAT- 
ent 1,181,197. Mail Order proposition used 
in homes, hotels and Pullman Cars, easily made; 
have punches and dies for same, ready to put 
article on market. W. C. Verge r, Kingsport, 
Tennessee. 
PHOTOGRAPHY ' 
EXPERT HAND-COLORING. PRICES MOD- 
erate. Send print with ten cents for sample of 
work. Frederick Grant, East Hampton, Conn. 
FOR SALE—GOERZ ANSHUTTZ CAMERA, 
folding, light weight. Dagor lens, Focal plane 
shutter. Latest Model. In perfect working order. 
Bargain. Write M. A. Kempf, 2937 York St., 
Denver, Colo. 
POSTAGE STAMPS 
POSTAGE AND REVENUE STAMPS BOUGHT 
and sold. Price lists free. Parker, Bethlehem, 
Pennsylvania. 
POSTCARDS 
20 PRETTY POSTCARD VIEWS 10c. 
Castle Co., 21 Locust, Hagerstown, Md. 
POULTRY 
AMERICA’S FINEST BANTAMS; 40 VARI- 
eties. Shipped on approval. Catalogue 2c. F. 
C. Wilbert, Grand Rapids, Michigan. 
ANCONAS—FANCY SHOW BIRDS AND 
breeding stock. Mark Lewis, Alma Center, Wis. 
1. T. 
BARRED ROCKS, THOMPSON’S “IMPER- 
ial” Ringlet eggs for hatching, $2.00 per 15; 
$7.00 per 100. Winners at Mt. Holly Fair, Hud¬ 
son B. Haines, R. F. D. No. 1, Mt. Holly, New 
Jersey. 
EGGS, EGGS, EGGS OF WHITE & BLACK 
Leghorns, $2 per 15. H. C. Hunt, Delaware, Ill. 
FOR SALE—TWO CANDEE MAMMOTH HOT 
water incubators, capacity each 4,800 eggs, good 
order, used three years, must move, reasonable 
price. B. Blum, Rockville Centre, L. I., New 
York. 
FOR THE BEST ORPINGTONS, ALL VA 
rieties, you must send to their originators, Wil¬ 
liam Cook & Sons, Box S, Scotch Plains, New 
Jersey. Send for catalogue. 8-tf 
PHEASANTS, CHINESE, MONGOLIAN, 
Reeves, Amherst, Golden, Silver and Japanese 
Silkys, Bantams, Pigeons, Doves. New Zealand 
Rabbits. No order too large. Three thousand 
full wing Chinese. Fall delivery. Marmot Pheas- 
antry, Marmot, Ore. 
POULTRY PAPER, UP TO DATE. TELLS 
all you want to know about care and management 
of poultry, for pleasure or profit; 50c per year, 
four months for 10 cents. Poultry Advocate, 
Dept. 12, Syracuse, N. Y. 
RING-NECK PHEASANT EGGS $3.00 PER 
dozen; $20 per 100. All other varieties, $5 per 
dozen. “Pheasant Farming,” postpaid, 50c. 
Simpson’s Pheasant Farm, Corvallis, Ore. 
STANDARD BRED BARRED ROCKS RING- 
let Strain eggs per 15, $2. Satisfaction guaran¬ 
teed. O. Nesdahl, Shevlin, Minn. 
CANOEING ACROSS 
SOUTHERN JERSEY 
(continued from page 291) 
as the night wore on. When the sun 
rose I was up with the energy of a 
hunter and soon on my course. Present¬ 
ly my stream was joined by the Hospi¬ 
tality branch and others. From six to 
eight yards in width it became 20 to 30 
yards across, with superb trees of maple, 
oak, gum and pine on both sides, and for 
grand beauty I will match it against any 
stream on our Atlantic seaboard. Fre¬ 
quently there were very pretty little grassy 
marshes or lily patches along the sides 
bordering the great forest, and it was so 
much like northern Maine that I instinct- 
see moose feeding on 
T intervals the stream 
swung near the bluff 
or cliff of 40 feet or 
so that still marked 
the bounds of the an¬ 
cient channel. The 
growth in the swamps 
had been mostly ma¬ 
ples; but in the after¬ 
noon run of the second 
day I passed through 
a great swamp of gum 
trees, very lofty, over¬ 
shadowing the stream and making a sol¬ 
emn flickering cathedral light that remind¬ 
ed me of scenes in some of the wonder¬ 
ful cypress swamps of Florida. 
The whole run was about 70 miles, 
measured in straight lines on the map, 
but the canoe must have covered 130 miles 
or more as it followed the bendings of the 
streams, which sometimes turned back¬ 
wards. In many places the canoe had to 
traverse 3 miles to make one indirect dis¬ 
tance. Sometimes when the current was 
so swift that the canoe seemed to be 
making 4 miles an hour, it was making 
only one mile an hour in direct distance 
on the map. 
At the old abandoned mill at Weymouth 
some people told me extravagant tales of 
the length of time, from six to ten hours, 
required to make the run to May’s Land¬ 
ing. But they were mistaken; the river 
soon straightens out and I made the run 
in three hours. 
At May’s Landing I passed out of the 
forest, and the next day’s run to the ocean 
was through the salt marshes and lacking 
in incident. I had cut Southern Jersey 
in half with a canoe and in so doing had 
learned a great deal about the State. I be¬ 
lieve there is no pleasanter way in which 
to spend a vacation than on a canoe trip. 
The constantly changing scenery relieves 
the monotony of camp life and the spirit 
of Adventure lurks always around the 
nearest bend. 
ively expected to 
these level places. 
