























































158 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[JULY 27, 1907. 

Taxidermists. 
SAVE YOUR TROPHIES. 
Write for our Illustrated Catalogue, 
“Heads and Horns.” 
It gives directions for preparing and preserving Skins, Antlers, 
etc. Also prices for Heads and Rugs, Birds and Fish, and all 
kinds of work in Taxidermy. 
Ward's Natural Science Establishment, 
ROCHESTER, N. Y. 


J. KANNOFSKY, 
PRACTICAL GLASS BLOWER 

and Manufacturer of 
Artificial ere for birds, animals and manufacturing purposes a 
specialty. Send for prices. All kinds of skulls for the fur 
trade. 369 Canal Street, New York. 
Please mention “‘Forest and Stream.” 
ROWLAND. 
TAXIDERMIST, 
A specialty in mounting Moose, Elk, Caribou and Deer 
heads. Call and examine work. 
No. 182 SIXTH AVENUE, 
Tel 4206 Chelsea. Near 13th St. NEW YORK 
ERED SAUTER, Taxidermist. 
Established 1860. 
Formerly No. 3 
No. William St., 
Removed to 
42 Bleecker St., 
cor. Elm St., 
will continue to 
please customers 
with the best durable work, Also carry large assortment of Game 
Heads, Rugs and attractive groups, for sale and to rent. 
) TAXIDERMISTS 
Dealers in Supplies, Glass Eyes, and 
all materials used by the trade. 







Also all kinds of 
ENTOMOLOGICAL SUPPLIES. 
Send for Catalogue. 
THE M. ABBOTT FRAZAR CO. 
93 SUDBURY ST. 
BOSTON, MASS. 

Dept. 2 

NEW EDITION 
Dated July } 
Tinie 
Game Laws in Brief 
Contains the new Laws of 
39 States, Territories and 
Provinces. 
Sold by dealers everywhere, 
for 25 cents, postpaid, by 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO. 
+ 

For Sale. af 
Small-Mouth Black Ben 
We have the only establishment dealing in young small-mouth 
blae& bass commercially in the United States. Vigorous young 
bass mn various sizes ranging from advanced fry to 3 and 4-inch 
fingertings for stocking purposes. 
Waramaug Small-Mouth Black Bass Hatchery. 
Correspondence invited. Send for circulars. Address 
HENRY W. BEEMAN, New Preston, Conn. 
BROOK TROUT. 
Eggs, fry, yearlings and two-year-olds, for stockin 
brooks and lakes. Address NEW ENGLAND TROU 
FARM, Plympton, Mass. 
BROOK TROUT. 
It will pay you to correspond with me before buying 
eggs, fry or yearlings in any quantity. I guarantee a 
safe delivery anywhere. Crystal Springs Trout Farm, 
L. B. HANDY, So. Wareham, Mass. 
of all ages for stocking 
BROOK TROUT brooks and Iakes. - Brook 
trout eggs in any quantity, warranted delivered anywhere 
in fine condition. Correspondence solicited. 
THE PLYMOUTH ROCK TROUT CO., 
Plymouth, Mass. 
BROOK TROUT FOR SALE. 
We have constantly on hand 
fine supply of Brook Trout, 
all sizes for stocking purposes 
Also for table use, at 75c. a 
pound. Visitors privileged to 
catch own trout. 
PARADISE BROOK 
TROUT CO., Parkside, 






Pas 
Henryville R.R. Sta. 

THE BROOKDALE TROUT CANNOT BE BEAT 
for stocking ponds and streams. For the next few 
weeks we will make a ve low price on young fry and 
large fish. Also fly-fishin 
BROOKDALE TROUT CO., Kingston, Mass. 

Berkshire Trout Ponds and Hatchery, Hartsville P. O. 
Mass.—A lot of fine healthy trout for sale. For informa- 
tion write or- phone to GEORGE W. SHULTIS, Super- 
intendent, Hartsville P. O., Mass. Phone, 16-13 Great 
Barrington, Berkshire Hills. 
FISH FOOD 
For Hatcheries 
HEARTS AND LIVERS. 
special attention to 
Clubs and Trout Growers—assuring 
deliveries zt all times. 
Livers guaranteed free 
Correspondence solicited. M. ABRAMS, 
St., New York City. Ref., State Fish 
Cold Spring Harbor, L. I 
SALE.— PERFECT ROCKY 
FIFTEEN INCH. W. E. 
NEW YORK. 

Cultural 
supplying Fish 5 : 
and safe 
prompt 
I give 
and _ parasites. 
610-612 W. 58th 
Commissioner, 
from disease 
MOUNTAIN 
BROWN, 
4 
FOR 
SHEEP HEAD, 
147 E. 30TH ST., 

Sale:—Fine specimen of Bison head, mounted. 
For 
Address for particulars, 
FRANK E. BLAKE, 156 Fifth Ave., New York. 
ao 

Sam Lovel’s Boy. 
By Rowland E. Robinson. Price, $1.25. 
Sam Lovel’s Boy is the fifth of the series of Danvis 
books. No one has pictured the New Englander with 
so much insight as has Mr. Robinson. Sam Lovel and 
Huldah are two of the characters of the earlier books in 
the series, and the boy is young Sam, their son, who 
grows up ‘under the tuition of the coterie of friends that 
we know so well, becomes a man just at the time of the 
Civil War, and carries a musket in defense of what he 
believes to tbe the right. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 

American Big Game Hunting. 
The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club. Editors: 
Theodore Roosevelt and George Bird Grinnell.  Illus- 
trated. Cloth, 345 pages. Price, $2.50 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
LIVE GAME & GAME BIRDS 
To Restock Your Preserves. 
Write for our price lists. 
WENZ & MACKENSEN, “4° - 

Yardley, Pa. 

~ 
FISH AND FISHERIES OF CALIFORNIA. 
Continued from page 141. 
salmon fashion, to return to its native stream 
only as a mature fish to spawn. Under arti- 
ficial propagation instead of one in one hun- 
dred, the hatcheries secure ninety-five from 
every hundred eggs, and are able to put the 
young salmon into the river in much better con- 
dition to escape its enemies and attain maturity. 
The hatcheries have done much also to re- 
stock the trout streams of the State. Every 
stream in California is a trout stream, and in 
practically all it ought to be possible to take 
fish in abundance. Unfortunately, however, the 
great enemy of the angler, the trout hog, is 
naturalized in California, and in many of the 
best streams the trout scarcely gets a chance to 
lay its eggs. 
Native to California are the following species 
of trout: 
1. The steelhead, in the coastwise streams 
running up from the sea. 
American trout. 
2. The rainbow trout, the most widely dis- 
tributed of all. There are a number of local va- 
rieties—the true rainbow of the coast streams, 
the Shasta rainbow of the upper Sacramento, 
the Gilbert rainbow of the Kern and King 
rivers, and the golden trout of Mount Whitney. 
3. The Tahoe trout, a splendid large trout 
of the Nevada basin, introduced into the 
Feather River, the Blue Lakes, and other bodies 
of water. From it is developed the huge silver 
trout of Lake Tahoe, spawning in the lake itself. 
4. The cutthroat trout, the common trout of 
the Columbia region, found south to the Eel 
River in California. 
5. Dolly Varden trout, of the upper Sacra- 
mento River and northward. 
Besides the trout and salmon, California has 
a variety of game fishes. Important among 
these is the great tunny, or leaping tuna, which 
ranges from 150 pounds to half a ton in weight, 
and is found in greatest abundance about Avalon 
on Santa Catalina. This wonderful bay has 
many other roving fishes, taken with the trolling 
spoon, chief among them being the yellowtail, 
the albacore and the huge bass, called the jew- 
fish. These noble fishes deserve protection from 
the amateur angler, who catches a dozen or a 
hundred of them and has them hung up and 
photographed, himself beside them, and who 
then hires the guide to bury them while he 
goes away to have fun of his own fashion some- 
where else. About the Santa Barbara Islands 
are the barracuda and the great flying fishes, 
also game fishes. 
Some important additions have been made to 
the fishes of California. The eastern brook 
trout has been introduced in many streams. The 
striped bass and the shad were both planted as 
early as 1878 in California rivers from the Po- 
tomac and Schuylkill, and have been of the 
greatest value to California. The striped bass 
can be found in the markets at all times, and in 
flavor these fish are as good as in their native 
waters. Other fishes which have been intro- 
duced are the carp, which has proved an un- 
mitigated nuisance; two species of catfishes, 
which while having value, have displaced better 
native fishes; the black bass, which thrives well 
in the ponds, and the blue-green sunfish, intro- 
duced into Clear Lake as food for the bass. 
ing most valuable fish yet to be introduced is 
the Japanese Ayu or Samlet, a diminutive sal- 
mon about a foot long, as delicate in flavor as 
a fish can be. It runs in countless numbers in 
all the clear streams of Japan, Corea and For- 
This is the largest 

mosa, and should have a place in California. 
The eel should also’ be introduced into our 
streams. 
The fisheries: of Alaska deserve mention in 
this connection, as they are largely tributary to 
California, being developed principally by Cali- 
fornia capital, and their product finding its way 
to the markets by way of San Francisco. The 
red or blue-back salmon is the chief species in 
the Alaska industry. It outranks in value every 
other species of fish in the world. Its annual 
product in’Alaska is worth a million dollars 
more than the original cost of the whole terri- 
tory. It exceeds the entire mineral output of 
Alaska by nearly two millions annually. The 



