288 
FOREST AND STREAM 
May, 1920 
DOGS 
S?^85g^%! 
A square meal for your DOG and a square 
deal for your POCKETBOOK. 
Over half a 
century of 
square deal- 
ing has built 
up 
Send 2 cent stamp for catalogue “Dog Culture” containing val- 
uable information regarding feeding, rearing, etc. 
SPRATT’S PATENT LTD. Newark, N. J. 
Dent's Condition Pills 
A marvelous tonic for do^s that are all out of sorts, run down, thin and un unity 
with harsh staring coat, materated eyes and high colored urine. There is nothing to 
equal them for distemper, mange, eczema and debilitating diseases. You will notice 
the difference after a few doses. 
^1f^«n < ?s bs ’ THE DENT MEDICINE COMPANY 
A practical treatise on dogs and their training (60 pages fully illustrated), mailed for 
10c. to all customers. 
There is Nothing 
Succeeds Like Success 
During the past seven years I have trained and 
wpn in Field Trials with moTe than thirty differ- 
ent d o®. with wins all the way from the British 
Columbia and Prairie Derbies to the National 
Championship. Every win with the exception of 
one was won by perfect bird work. Having fin- 
ished and discarded my last year's dogs, I am 
now ready for a few Derbies and a few shooting 
dogs. f?end four dog to the man who revolution- 
ized American Field Trials and put the point 
iai» the Derbies. Unlimited country full of 
QvafL flly string is limited. I go to Manitoba 
is June. 
R. K. (Bob) ARMSTRONG 
The Thistle 
BARBER, NORTH CAROLINA 
ENGLISH SETTERS 
and POINT ERS 
A nice lot of good strong, 
healthy, farm raised puppies 
of the best of breeding 
GEO. W. LOVELL 
Middleboro, Mass. 
Tel. 29-M 
ROYAL FLUSH 
Litter Brother to 
MARY MONTROSE 
(three times National Champion) 
William Ziegler, Jr., Owner. 
Address all communications and ship 
bitches to 
H. A. TOMLINSON 
Mailing address: Archdale, N. G. 
Shipping address: High Point, N. C. 
Stud Fee $50.00 Send for booklet 
WESTMINSTER KENNELS, TOWER HILL, 
111., offer reliable Coon, Opossum, Skunk, Fox, 
Wolf, Coyotte, and Rabbit Hounds on ten days’ 
trial. Dogs just starting to trail, $10. Also 
puppies. We continue to sell Crakerjack Rabbit 
hounds at $15. Liberty Bonds and War Saving 
Stamps taken. 
DOGS! DOGS! DOGS ALL KINDS. FOX 
Terriers, Bulls, Airedales, Collies, Irish Terriers, 
etc., male and female pups. I handle more dogs 
than any other man in the country. Quick sales 
and small profits. Specify the kind of dog you 
want. I will positively fill your order. Leo 
Smith, 305 Varick Street, Jersey City, New 
Jersey. 
ness, except such special areas as the 
Yellowstone Park. Elsewhere game must 
have its place, but its proper place, and 
we have got to approach this whole sub- 
ject with a spirit not of compromise but 
of intelligent analysis of conditions. 
There has got to be an element of state- 
craft in the administration of a problem 
of this sort which touches many and 
varied interests. 
THE HARLLEE 
METHOD 
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 283) 
of caution: “Prone, kneel, squat, sit, lie- 
down.” No marking or spotting per- 
mitted until the string is completed when 
the tyro should study his group through 
the ’scope the same as in rapid fire. Keep 
firing until the tyro has made four five- 
shot battle scores, giving his 20 shots for 
record. 
This completes the 60-shot instruction 
course and now he is ready to try 
The Full Course: Fire the instruction 
course exactly as given, except in this 
instance it is fired as a complete unit of 
sixty consecutive shots and to qualify as 
a marksman the tyro must make an ag- 
gregate score of at least 250 x 300 points. 
This is simply the “final examination” 
and gives the coach an excellent idea of 
the man’s average ability. The course 
may be repeated as often as necessary, 
but must always be fired as a complete 
unit of 60 consecutive shots. 
If a 50-yard range is not available, do 
the shooting at either 50 feet or 25 yards 
on targets scaled down for that distance, 
putting up a fresh target for each five 
shots. We found that 50 yards and the 
No. 2 (half-size) Hun target to be the 
ideal combination. This target is 12 x 18 
inches and by pasting it on a piece of 
fiber board and using pasters it is good 
for a hundred shots and often many more. 
If some old-timer happens to think this 
course of firing looks rather easy let him 
try it and he will discover that it takes 
“some shooting” to average 90% (270 x 
300). A lot of cracks tried it out last 
season and none of them made anything 
even approaching a possible. During Oc- 
tober we used the slow fire stage as part 
of a military smallbore match and the 
top score was 97 x 100 with only 11 out 
of a field of 31 scoring 90 or better. Next 
month I will describe our smallbore 
skirmish run and in the meantime would 
be glad to send a few Hun targets to any 
brother rifleman who would like to try it 
out for himself. 
THE IRISH SETTER 
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 243) 
ested in the contemplated Field Trials to 
be held in Manitoba. Mr. Chas. Essel- 
styn of Hudson, N. Y., Dr. Joseph 
O’Connell of Buffalo and Benjamin A. 
Howes of New York City, comprise the 
Committee in charge. 
