PUBLISHER'S DEPARTMENT. 



4*9 



Winning targets to be published in Rec- 

 rkation as soon as possible after awards 

 shall have been made. 



Target, 6 inches square, with lines drawn 

 diagonally from corner to corner and cross- 

 ing in centre, from which point measure- 

 ments are to be made, to centre of break. 



Targets are black, with white lines, and 

 may be placed on any base or background, 

 at pleasure of shooter. 



Targets will be furnished from this office 

 at 20 cents a dozen — a sum barely sufficient 

 to cover the cost of making the cut, and of 

 printing. Send in your order at once if you, 

 intend to compete. 



In a tournament of this kind, ties cannot 

 be shot off, for obvious reasons. All orig- 

 inal scores will, therefore, be decided on 

 their merits, and prizes awarded accord- 

 ingly. 



PUBLISHER'S DEPARTMENT. 



WHAT ABOUT THE TELESCOPIC GRAPHIC JR? 



I should like to hear from any reader of 

 Recreation who has used a 4 x 5 Tele- 

 scopic Graphic Jr. Camera, made by Fol- 

 mer & Schwing, 271 Canal Street, New 

 York. 



I am thinking of buying one and should 

 be glad to know the opinion of any one 

 who has used them. 



Am delighted with W. E. Carlin's ar- 

 ticles on " Hunting with a Camera," and 

 hope to see many more of them. 



Joseph A. Close, 11 Myrtle Avenue,. 

 Stamford, Ct. 



I have had excellent results from a 4 x 5 

 telescopic Graphic Jr. Camera. The work 

 I have done with it is far superior to that 

 previously done with a camera and lens 

 costing 3 times as much. 



If any one of your readers are in doubt 

 as to the quality of this camera I can show- 

 work which will convince them of its 

 superiority. 



Robert L. Stillson, Centre and Pearl 

 Streets, New York. 



I have found it necessary, for the peace 

 and comfort of my home, to buy another 

 telescopic Graphic Jr. Camera. My wife 

 is going South again, for 3 or 4 weeks, and 

 wants to take my camera, and I don't 

 intend to be without a Graphic Jr. for so 

 long as I was last time she was visiting. So 

 I see no other way out of the difficulty but 

 to get another camera: for she, like my- 

 self, thinks so much of this one that she 

 says she would not enjoy her trip without 

 it. I cannot enjoy staying at home without 

 it, so there you are. 



We almost had a fight about the camera, 

 as to who should have it, so for the sake 

 of peace I have ordered another. 



Walter H. Pitt, State Street and Boerum 

 Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. 



Another man who has been using a 

 Graphic, Jr., says: 



" It is the best camera, for a sportsman, 

 I have ever used." 



GUYOT SUSPENDER FACTS. 



Experience has proven that the claims 

 made for the genuine Guyot suspenders are 

 in reality true. It is said these susperrders 

 are absolutely perfect in every detail — the 

 only hygienic braces ever made. Charles 

 Guyot devoted his life to the solution of 

 what he considered one of the greatest hu- 

 man problems, which was to practically 

 make the most important portions of the 

 masculine attire keep their position in an 

 easy and sensible manner. With Guyot 

 suspenders attached to men's trousers they 

 never become baggy at the knees, but al- 

 ways retain their intended graceful lines. 



If your furnisher attempts to substitute 

 any other for the genuine Guyot suspenders 

 you can obtain same by sending 50 cents in 

 stamps, for a sample pair, to the Guyot 

 agents at 621 Broadway, New York City. 

 Mention Recreation. 



A NEW BULLET MOULD. 



The Ideal Mfg. Co., New Haven, Conn., 

 has made an improvement in large bul- 

 let moulds, such as are used extensively 

 by the Military shooters. It is called the 

 Armory Mould. Previous to the produc- 

 tion of this mould, the square headed screw, 

 shown in the cut-off slot, performed 2 func- 

 tions, that of holding the cut-off plate down 

 close to the face of the mould, and a stop 

 for the cut-off at both ends of the slot. 



The cut-off being hit frequently, by 

 thoughtless operators, after it reached the 

 screw, caused it to loosen and let the plate 

 lift up from the face of the mould, in the act 

 of cutting off the sprew. This resulted in 

 bad work and often in breaking the screw. 

 The Ideal Company has overcome the pos- 

 sibility of this, in the new mould. Note at 

 the letter A, near the upper handle, that the 

 cut-off rests on a separate stop pin which 

 receives the shock, leaving the screw to per- 

 form the one function of holding the plate 

 down. The end of the slot on neither side 

 of the cut-off reaches the screw, as shown 

 by the opening at the letter A. 



