152 
Forest and Stream 
A New Out-OI-Door Book 
Motor Campcraft 
By 
F. E. BRIMMER 
Are you planning a camping trip with 
your motor car? Are you an “old-timer” 
at it, or have you the vaguest idea what 
should be included in your camping 
paraphernalia? 
This is a new book, the first of its 
kind, by an experienced motor camper, 
filled with all the necessary information 
in regard to motor campcraft. 
Here .is a full discussion of the merits 
and demerits of the various types of 
equipment, from the long-handled spoon 
to stir the coffee to the crowded and 
groaning trailer. 
It is a book no camper should be 
without. 
Probable price $1.75 
At all bookstores 
The Macmillan Company 
64-66 Filth Avenue New York 
You Fishermen and Duck Hunters 
WE HAVE IT. 
A SECTIONAL STEEL BOAT, which ca» 
be strapped on run-board of auto. 
Write for catalog and prices 
The ALFRED C. GOETHEL CO. 
DEPT. B, 829 31st ST. MILWAUKEE, WIS. 
Hunting With the Bow and Arrow 
By SAXTON POPE 
An Illustrated book—200 pages mak¬ 
ing tackle—hunting with Ishi the 
Indian — shooting small game, . deer, 
lion, bear with the bow. Price $3.00. 
THE JAMES H. BARRY COMPANY 
1122 Mission Street, 
San Francisco, California. 
.C £Se£S 3 ft. Telescope 
4 See people end objects miles away 
^Jjustlike they were close, see Moon 
una Stars es you never did be- 
fore. Brass bound, useful and enter-^j 
taining. •■Could tell, color of 
aeroplane 4 miles away ~-Mtb. . 
Yarbrough. ‘•Watch I I T||I I ?a£> ml fo 
2°mnes V away 8 '’ °^’ mountainsoomoon'’ 
2 Th n n y c. Palmer. Thousands pleased. 
£ir8- OFFER — eend only 26c with 
order. On arrival deposit $1.76 with postman. 
I^^Or if you prefer, send $1.86 with order in full payment, 
gent postpaid. Satisfaction guaranteed or mo^y returned, 
FERRY St CO. G832 East End Avo. Dept* 13 0 Chicago 
GOLD SEAL 
NO TEAR BOOT 
A “husky” — 
but not clumsy 
—b o o t for 
sports men’s 
use in rough 
going. Stands up manfully under the onslaught 
of snags and rocks while you are stream fishing, 
due to the sturdy duck fabric foundation upon 
which this boot is constructed. Not a tear will 
you find, even after a hard day’s hunting or 
trapping on cut-over land where jagged pole ends, 
roots, and slivered stumps abound. 
“No tear.no swear.” 
Ask Your Dealer or Write to 
GOODYEAR RUBBER CO. of NEW YORK 
787-89 Broadway, cor. lOtb Street, New York City 
Branches at Milwaukee, Wis,; St. Paul, Minn.; 
Kansas City, Mo.; St. Louis, Mo.; Portland, 
Ore.; San Francisco, Cal. 
TENTS 
Get Our 
Catalogue 
American Awning 
& Tent Co. 
236 State Street 
Boston, Mass. 
WILDFOWL GUNS 
Our 12-BORE MAGNUMS shooting 3-in. 
Paper Shells (1% ozs. shot) have an ef¬ 
fective Killing Range of 80 to 100 yards. 
Send for particulars to 
G. E. LEWIS & SONS 
32 & 33, Lower Loveday Street, 
BIRMINGHAM, ENGLAND. 
Established 1850 
The illustration shows why the LIVINGOOD COLLAPSI-] 
BLE CAMP STOVE bakes and roasts so perfectly Note the 
COMPLETE CIRCLE of intense heat around the oven’s contents 
—even temperature on all sides. It enables the kind of cooking 
that doubles the joy of camping out. 
The LIVINGOOD COLLAPSIBLE STOVE burns wood, 
leaves, charcoal, corncobs—anything handy.. Fires quickly even 
in the wind, rain or when the mercury drops below zero. 
The entire stove, pipe, legs, warming 
shelf, hearth (everything except the oven in 
which foods and dishes may be packed) folds to a 
thickness of 4 inches and weighs only 17 pounds. Made of 
best black iron without a single screw or bolt. Nothingto lose 
or break. Good for a lifetime of service. 
The intermediate size costs $8.50 without oven, 
$13.00 with oven and roasting pan. 
WHEREVER OUTING GOODS ARE SOLD 
Or direct frpm the factory, express collect. Satisfaction guaran. 
teed. Prices of other sizes upon request. 
LIVINGOOD MANUFACTURING CORPORATION 
LEBANON, PENNA. 
name is Pan-Yang, the word pan mean¬ 
ing a circle or disc, and referring to the 
horns. The Mongol name is argoli. 
In Southwestern Kansu a smaller 
wild-sheep occurs. This is the bharal, 
or blue sheep, known to science as 
Psuedois nahura. In this form the 
horns instead of being in the form of a 
compressed spiral, as in the domestic 
ram, make a graceful curve outward and 
backward, more like those of a goat. 
It is of a grayish color with black and 
white, or cream, legs. 
T HREE kinds of antelope, or gazelle, 
may be said to occur in North 
China, albeit only, on the fringes. 
These are the Mongolian gazelle (Gaz- 
clla gutturosa) , which may be found in 
the extreme north of both Chihli and 
Shansi; its true home being the grass 
lands of inner Mongolia: Przewalski’s 
gazelle ( Gazella przewalskii) , whose 
home is the Ordos Desert and the Gobi, 
but which ranges into Northern Shensi; 
and the Tibetan gazelle ( Gazella picti- 
caudata), which occurs in Western Kan¬ 
su on the Tibetan frontier. These are 
all graceful animals of a light, buff-fawn 
color above, whitish below. They, occur 
m herds, often of considerable strength, 
in the regions they occupy. The Mon¬ 
golian gazelle is the largest, and is 
characterized by its large head, swollen 
larynx, and very small tail. Przewal¬ 
ski’s gazelle has a much longer, rather 
bushy tail, which it often holds erect in 
a goat-like manner, especially when 
alarmed or on the alert, while its horns 
are more sharply curved than in the 
preceding species. The Tibetan gazelle 
is the smallest, and has somewhat longer 
horns than the others, while its tail 
though longer than that of the Mon¬ 
golian gazelle, is considerably shorter 
and less bushy than that of Przewalski’s 
gazelle. All three species go by the 
name Hzvang Yang, or “yellow sheep” 
in China, while the Mongols call them 
gurrusu. 
The gorals, of which four species oc- 
. cur in our region, may be described as 
connecting links between the true goats 
and the antelopes. They are small, 
active animals, not unlike the well-known 
chamoise of Europe in general appear¬ 
ance and habits, but with straight, or 
only slightly curved horns. Two species 
are found on the Kansu-Tibetan border, 
namely, the gray goral ( Urotragus 
drier eus, M.-Edw.), a large form, and 
the grizzled goral ( U. griseus, M.- 
Edw.), a smaller form. In these the 
color is gray. In the Tsing Ling, in 
South Shensi, a much darker form oc¬ 
curs, the name U. niger having been 
given it by Heude; while in Shansi and 
Chihli a fourth species in which the 
color is brownish-grey, and the tail is 
very long is fairly abundant in certain 
districts. This last was called U. cau- 
dalus by Milne-Edwards, who described 
it from the Chihli mountains. The 
genus is represented in Manchuria by a 
very large form named U. raddeanus by 
Heude; on the middle Yang-tzu by 
another form called U. henryanus, and 
in the coastal mountains of Southeastern 
China by yet another called U. arnoux- 
ln writing to Advertisers mention Forest and. Stream. It will identify you. 
