FOREST AND STREAM 
[Aug. 25 , 1906 . 
31 * 
Taxidermuls. 
For Sale. 
SAVE YOUR TROPHIES. 
'COrite for oar 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. 
ROWLAND, 
TAXIDERMIST, 
A specialty in mounting Moose, Elk, Caribou and Deer 
heads. Call and examine work. 
Small-Mouth Black B&ss 
We have the only establishment dealing in young small-mouth 
black bass commercially in the United States. Vigorous young 
bass in various sizes ranging from advanced fry to 3 and 4-inch 
fingerlings 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 stocking 
brooks and lakes. Address NEW ENGLAND TROUT 
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 Spring Trout Farm. 
L. B. HANDY, So. Wareham, Mass. 
No. 182 SIXTH AVENUE, 
Tel. 4206 Chelsea. Near 13th St. NEW YORK 
FRED SAUTER, Taxidermist. 
Established i 860 . 
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. 
Manual of the Canvas. Canoe. 
By F. R. Webb (“Commodore”). Many illustra¬ 
tions of designs and plans of canvas canoes 
and their parts. Two large, full-sized work¬ 
ing (24x38) drawings in a pocket in a cover. 
Cloth. 115 pages. Price, $1.25. 
This interesting manual of how to build, cruise 
and live in a canvas canoe is written by one of the 
most enthusiastic of the older generation of canoe¬ 
ists, who has had a long experience of cruising 
on the Shenandoah River, and of building the 
boats best adapted to such river cruising. With 
the help of this volume, aided by its abundant 
plans and illustrations, any boy or man who has 
a little mechanical skill can turn out for himself 
at trifling expense a canoe alike durable and 
beautiful. 
Contents: Practical Construction. Cost. Specifica¬ 
tions. Working Plans and Patterns. Putting on the 
Canvas. Painting. Finishing. Camp Equipment. Hints 
on Cruising and Camping, flints on Camp Cooking. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
DISEASES OF DOGS. 
Nursing vs. Dosing. 
A Treatise on the Care of Dogs in Health and Disease. 
By S. T. Hammond (“Shadow”), author of “Training 
vs. Breaking.” 161 pages. Cloth. Price, $1.00. 
This work, from the pen of “Shadow,” will have a 
hearty welcome. It comes from one who writes from full 
knowledge. “The results of more than fifty years of 
experience are here given,” writes the author, “and I 
assure the reader that no course of conduct is advised, 
no treatment recommended, no remedy prescribed, that 
has not been thoroughly tried and tested by the writer, 
and is believed to be entirely trustworthy in every re¬ 
spect.” Sent postpaid on receipt of price, $1.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Book of the Black Bass. 
Comprising its complete scientific and life history, to¬ 
gether with a practical treatise on angling and fly¬ 
fishing, and a full description of tools, tackle and im¬ 
plements. By James A. Henshall, M.D. Illustrated. 
Cloth, 470 pages. Price, $3. 
Dr. Henshall's monograph is the standard work on the 
black bass and all that relates to it. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
BROOK TROUT 
of all ages for stocking 
brooks and lakes. Brook 
trout eggs in any quantity, warranted delivered anywhere 
in fine condition. Correspondence solicited. 
THE PLYMOUTH ROCK TROUT CO. 
Plymouth, Mass. 
FOR SALE—BROOK TROUT.—FINE HEALTHY 
Fish of all sizes. Eyed eggs in season. Warranted de¬ 
livered anywhere, as represented. Correspondence 
solicited. BAY SIDE TROUT FARM (A. B. Savary), 
East Wareham, Mass. 
THE BROOKDALE TROUT CANNOT BE BEAT 
for stocking ponds and streams. For the next few 
weeks we will make a very low price on young fry and 
large fish. Also fly-fishing. 
BROOKDALE TROUT CO., Kingston, Mass. 
RAINBOW TROUT. 
We offer 100,000 rainbow fingerlings, ready for delivery 
in October and November, for stocking private ponds, 
lakes and streams. Low price. Correspondence solicited. 
SPRING BROOK TROUT CO., Kalamazoo, Mich. 
LIVE QUAIL. 
Season opens for Western birds, October 1. Please book 
orders early. Also Colorado top-knot quail, pheasants, 
rabbits, wild turkeys, etc. Established 1838. 
E. 3. WOODWARD, 302 Greenwich St., New York. 
Live Game for Stocking Game 
Preserves and Parks. 
Wild caught Hungarian partridges, pheasants, 
hares, roe deer, delivery November-February. 
From my park I can offer 20 strongest Hun¬ 
garian red deer, 50 fallow deer, 12 axis deer, 20 
roe deer, 12 Llamas, flamingoes, pelicans, cranes, 
white storks, rheas; 30 pairs of white and black 
swans; 10 pairs black-necked swans; 100 pairs 
fancy ducks, as Mandarins, Carolinas, widgeons, 
teals, pintails, wild geese, white and blue pea¬ 
fowl. Fancy pheasants: Golden, silver, common, 
Reeves’, Amherst, versicolor, Elliot, Soemmer¬ 
ing, Elliot, peacock, Swinhoe, Argus, Melanote 
pheasants. During the season October-Decem- 
ber, live capercailzies and black game. Wild ani¬ 
mals for zoo and menageries—lions, leopards, 
European lynxes, 100 foxes, etc. For prices and 
particulars apply 
JULIUS MOHR, Jr., 
ULM a. D„ - - GERMANY 
Establishment for Export of Wild Animals and 
Live Game. 
Agent for the U. S. A., Mr. R. A. Wenz, Yardley, Pa. 
Wanted, Wild Ducks. — Two dozen blacks and mallards, 
one dozen green-wing, and one dozen blue-wing teal, 
for delivery, alive, on or after September 16; must be 
satisfied they are wild stock. Send reply to GRIMM, 8 
Stone St., Watertown, N. Y. 11 
Denver Trap Club. 
The Denver, Colo., Trap Club had a practice shoot at 
Berkeley, Sunday, Aug. 12. More than twenty-five of 
the best, shooters of this part of the State were on the 
firing line. There were afso a few from other sections 
whose curiosity to see the new grounds drew them to 
Denver for the event. There was no particular ceremony 
connected with the opening of the five new traps. It 
was the intention of the shooters to christen the grounds 
by giving the secretary* Charles Younkman, an in¬ 
voluntary bath in the lake, hut the gentleman showed an 
amount of fight that indicated trouble for any one who 
tried. The opening was therefore rather tame. 
Shooting was kept up until late in the afternoon. 
Charles Plank was high gun, 188 from a possible 200; 
Charles Younkman was second, 156 out of 175. He broke 
95 out of his last 100, and made a run of 61 straight. 
The shooters appreciated the arrangements of the 
grounds, which permit them to stand in the shade of the 
trees, and gives them a sky background. 
Mr. Younkman continued to receive entries from both 
amateurs and professionals all over the country, and the 
indications are that the shoot will have the largest at- 
tendance of any 
G. A. H. will be 
ever held in 
outnumbered. 
the 
The 
country, 
scores: 
even 
the 
Events: 
< 
1 
2 
3 
4 
5 . 
6 
7 
Targets: 
25 
25 
25 
25 
25 
Lo 
25 
C Plank . 
23 
24 
23 
23 
24 
24 
24 
F H Sprague.... 
21 
18 
22 
22 
J H Keyse. 
15 
15 
17 
20 
W Hughes . 
21 
19 
16 
21 
24 
W P Buck....... 
21 
19 
IS 
22 
S K Plank. 
20 
20 
17 
18 
C Younkman ... 
18 
20 
22 
22 
25 
23 
W M Bowman.. 
20 
21 
17 
23 
C E Shaw. 
19 
22 
18 
22 
E A Frazer. 
16 
23 
15 
J K Marsh. 
17 
18 
22 
20 
W A Matlock.... 
17 
20 
16 
19 
20 
20 
i9 
E V Fisher. 
21 
24 
21 
22 
F Sharpe . 
14 
19 
17 
T L Neff. 
20 
18 
19 
20 
22 
Hood Waters ... 
22 
23 
21 
24 
C H Adams. 
18 
14 
E Park . 
14 
14 
S Warren . 
21 
19 
if 
22 
E S Wolf. 
13 
Beck . 
ii 
is 
22 
Ed Warren . 
17 
Marshall . 
20 
Hoffman . 
19 
2i 
15 
C Clark . 
23 
Younkman . 
25 
Matlock . 
23 
Neff . 
23 
Shaw . 
A 
.. 24 
Social 
Tramp. 
Rifle 'Range and Gallery. 
The Winchester Trophy. 
Much interest is being manifested by riflemen in the 
contest for the beautiful and valuable Winchester trophy, 
which is to be competed for during the Sea Girt tourna¬ 
ment, to be held at Sea Girt, N. J., Aug. 27 to Sept. 6 , 
inclusive. This trophy is offered by the Winchester 
Repeating Arms Co., makers of the world renowned 
Winchester rifles and ammunition, as first prize in the 
individual rapid fire match, and must be won three times 
by a contestant before becoming his property. The con¬ 
ditions of the match are intended to promote rapid fire 
with accuracy, a most desirable accomplishment for a 
rifleman. The match is to be shot at 300yds. any rifle 
having not less than a three-pound trigger pull, the 
competitor firing as many shots as possible at the target 
within the space of one minute. 
The Winchester trophy is a bronze, the work of Charles 
Schreyvogel, the well-known delineator of army and 
western life, and is entitled “The Last Drop.” It repre¬ 
sents a trooper emptying the last of the contents of 
his canteen into his hat to slake the thirst of his trusty 
horse. The subject which appeals strongly to the lofty 
instincts of man is worked out with that nicety and 
truthfulness of detail which has made Schreyvogel’s work 
famous. Being offered as a prize for a contest where the 
entry is largely made up of military men, the subject 
is a particularly appropriate one, emphasizing as it does, 
the nobility of nature for which American soldiers have 
always been noted. 
Cincinnati Rifle Association. 
The regular shoot of this Association took place on 
scores were made at 200 yds., 
target. Nestler was champion 
Honor. 
Aug. 12, when the followin 
offhand, on German ring 
of the day. Scores: 
Nestler ... 
Ilasenzahl 
Freitag .... 
Trounstein 
Allen . 
218 214 210 204 203 61 
209 209 196 188 ... 59 
,208 201 197 190 186 61 
.198 195 187 173 ... 53 
,167 152 150 143 136 56 
An old lawyer in speaking recently about General 
Ben Butler, said: 
“Ben Butler was a terror and torment to the judges. 
On one occasion Judge Sanger, having been bullied and 
badgered out of all patience, petulantly asked, ‘What 
does the counsel suppose I am on this bench for?’ 
“Scratching his head a minute, Butler replied, ‘Well, 
I confess your honor’s got me there.’ ” 
