May, 1920 
FOREST AND STREAM 
283 
whole public, and complete cooperation in 
all its work. That Col. Graves has ad- 
vanced the Forest Service well into the 
public confidence, nobody familiar with 
his work will deny. He has made game 
conservation a part of the work. He has 
formulated a policy, established it in the 
Forest Service program, and has in- 
creased the public interest in the conser- 
vation of game. Game conservationists 
will always be under a deep obligation to 
him. 
At my personal request he has written 
a brief article on the relation of the For- 
est Service to game. Forest and Stream 
is publishing it in this issue. It should 
be carefully studied by everybody inter- 
ested in the future of game conservation. 
THE HARLLEE 
METHOD 
(continued from page 268) 
yards and 50-yards. This silhouette ap- 
peals to the shooter’s imagination be- 
cause there are three kinds of hits; kills, 
wounds and ricochets, with a penalty of 
4 points for a high or lateral miss. A 
“low liner” is a potential hit, but a high 
shot is a total loss, and this target is 
specially designed to overcome the in- 
stinctive, yet pernicious tendency of all 
men to overshoot their mark. Another 
unusual feature is that “qualification” is 
based upon a man’s ability to consistently 
group his shots within the effective zone, 
not upon a stipulated number of points, 
this is called a “battle score” and consists 
of either 5 or 10 consecutive shots, all of 
which are either 4s or 5s, a single 3, 2 or 
1 makes the string void. 
Slow Fire: Start with prone and when 
the shooter has made a five-shot battle 
score he is required to repeat the per- 
formance from the sitting position. Next 
he is given the choice between squatting 
and kneeling, and completes this stage 
standing off-hand. Total, 20 shots for 
record composed cf four selective five- 
shot battle scores made in four different 
positions in the order named. The tyro 
will probably fire quite a number of car- 
tridges before he passes in a qualifying 
score from the standing position and will 
thereby learn a lot about trigger squeeze 
and timing. There is no limit on the 
number of scores made, but a man must 
qualify prone before he can move up to 
sitting, and so on up to standing. 
Rapid Fire: The same as slow fire, 
except that the five shots must be fired in 
one minute with a single shot rifle or in 
thirty seconds with a repeater, no mark- 
ing, coaching or spotting of shots through 
a telescope permitted until the string is 
completed, and always have the tyro 
study his group through the ’scope be- 
fore the target is pasted up or replaced. 
Total, 20 shots for record. 
Monkey Drill: The five shots must be 
fired in one minute with a single shot 
rifle or in forty-five seconds with a re- 
peater, the shooting to be done in this 
order : 1st shot prone, 2nd shot kneeling, 
3rd shot squatting, 4th shot sitting and 
5th shot prone. As the firing is going 
on, the coach should give these commands 
(continued on page 288) 
The Kit Complete 
V 
& 
In your knapsack along with your tobacco can 
and fishing tackle put three compact Borden cans. 
When supper time comes round and you’re miles 
away from civilization — your supply of fresh, 
^ country milk for cooking and your coffee 
are right with you, in a convenient form too. 
~73crrcleM4 Coffee 
Coffee, milk and sugar combined. It saves 
you time, trouble and space in your pack. 
Simply add hot water and your coffee's done. 
Rich milk and pure sugar— bubbled to- 
gether. Three generations of campers 
have used it whenever cooking called for 
milk and sugar. It gives coffee a delicious 
creamy flavor. 
~75crc£e/nJ 
Evaporated Milk 
Unsweetened — sterilized — absolutely pure. 
Put it in coffee undiluted — for other cook- 
ing uses dilute with an equal part of water. 
Ready for chowder,- soup or anything you 
cook with milk. 
Camp Cooking — an honest-to-goodness cook book prepared especially 
for campers, will be sent to you on request. 
THE BORDEN COMPANY 
MILK PRODUCTS 
