RECREA TION. 



XXV 



Direct From Distiller 



To Consumer 



Saving Middlemen's Profits, 

 Preventing Possibility of Adulteration. 



We are distillers with a wide reputation of 30 years stand- 

 ing. Our whole enormous product is sold to consumers direct. 

 We sell direct so that our whiskey may be pure when it reaches 

 you. It is almost impossible to get pure whiskey from dealers. 

 We have tens of thousands of customers who never buy else- 

 where. A customer who once tries our whiskey is a customer 

 always. We want more of them, and we make the following 

 offer to get them: 



We will send four full quart bottles of Hayner's Seven Year Old 

 Double Copper Distilled Rye for $3.20. Express Prepaid. We ship 

 in plain packages — no marks to indicate contents. When you get it 

 and test it, if it isn't satisfactory return it at our expense and we will 

 return your $3.20. Such whiskey cannot be purchased elsewhere 

 for less than $5.00. 



We are the only distillers selling to consumers direct. 

 Others who claim to be are only dealers. Our whiskey has 

 our reputation behind it. 



References: Third Nat'l Bank, any business house in Dayton or Com'l Agencies. 

 HAYNER DISTILLING CO., 385 to 391 West Fitth Street, Dayton, 0. 



P. S— Orders for Ariz., Colo., Cal., Idaho, Mont., Nev., N. Mex., Ore., 

 Utah., Wash., Wyo.,must call for 20 quarts, by freight, prepaid. 



fWe guarantee the above firm will do as agreed. — EDITOR.] 



I congratulate you on your success^ 

 which you deserve as one of the greatest 

 promoters of game protection. Our land 

 has been endowed with an abundance of 

 game, for generations to come, if rightly 

 protected. When the principles you so 

 strongly advocate are better understood by 

 hunters, who have not yet so far advanced 

 as to have a true understanding of the laws 

 of nature, we may hope the present large 

 number of game hogs will be reduced. We 

 will then have good recreation for true 

 sportsmen. 



Ferdinand Beck, Virginia City, Nev. 



Twynn — The coal dealer reminds me of 

 the heathen Chinee. 



Triplett — In what way? 



Well, for weighs that are dark and tricks 

 not in vain, the dealer in coal is peculiar. — 

 Louisville Courier-Journal. 



I will esteem it a personal favor if you 

 will send me the names and addresses of 

 all the sportsmen you know, who are not 

 yet readers of Recreation. 



Mr. Cubbage (meeting his friend)- 

 lo, Gargoyle, what's on foot? 

 Gargoyle — Corns. 



-Hel- 



Your generous premium, the Baby Wiz- 

 ard Camera, came to hand, and it certainly 

 is a beauty. All my subscribers are loud 

 in their praise of Recreation, and those 

 who subscribed in a friendly spirit, are now 

 anxiously inquiring when the next Rec- 

 reation will be in. 



H. C. Goodman, Denver, Col. 



Will some trap shooter tell me which is 

 the better to use, chilled or soft shot, at 

 clay targets? Some of my friends claim 

 that chilled shot glance off the targets 

 more readily than the soft. We often hear 

 the shot strike when the targets are not 

 broken. What distance should a man 

 stand from the trap who uses a 12 gauge 

 gun? Is there any allowance for a 16 



gauge: 



First Shot, Elmira, N. Y. 



I am a lover of hunting and fishing, and 

 am glad to see you roast the game hogs. 

 They are numerous in this part of the 

 State. 



V. D. Looney, Jefferson, Ore. 



I heartily approve your crusade against 

 game hogs. 



S. B. Irish, New Whatcom, Wash. 



