DOG OATES 
The Dog on his Travels. 
The greatest trouble which sportsmen experience in traveling to and from the 
shooting grounds is in transportating their dogs. The same troubles have fallen on 
the shoulders of kennel men and bench show exhibitors. 
The Troubl es of Dog Owners. 
Dogs are shipped in heavy boxes or are chained in the baggage car. The dog 
that goes in the box is productive of heavy express charges. The dog that goes 
without the box generally gets loose or is crippled by a falling trunk. 
The Dog’s Food arvd Water. 
In the corner of the crate is a receptacle for water, a funnel connection providing 
for its being filled from the outside. On the front of the crate, and just below the 
door, is a buffet, or pocket, for dog biscuits. All of our crates are provided with a 
removable or false bottom, which insures cleanliness. 
We Save You Money. 
In manufacturing these dog crates, we keep two points constantly in view. One ' 
is to save the money of the dog owner; the other is to save the life and limh of 
the dog. We accomplish the first by making the crate so light that the express 
charges will be greatly reduced, the saving on the first two or three trips often 
paying the cost of the crate. 
Length. Width. Height. Each. Length. Width. Height. Each. 
No. 1.. 
..24in. 
17in. 
18in. 
$9.00 
No. 4_42in. 24in. 32in. $10.00 
No. 2.. 
. .30in. 
18in. 
22 in. 
10.00 
No. 5_48in. 30in. 36in. 22.00 
No. 3.. 
. .36in. 
21 in. 
26in. 
12.00 
Special oval top crate for 2 setters, 15.00 
Send for free Dog Catalogue. 
All the Prominent ENGLISH 
UUH3 and AMERICAN MAKES 
Scott, Greener, Purdey, Jos. Lang (Sl Son, 
The New Fox (Laiesi Am. Gun), Parker, Smith, Lefever, 
IVER JOHNSON SPORTING GOODS CO. 
163 Washington Street, Boston, Mass. 
Send for High-Grade Gun 
Catalogue and Second-Hand List. 
Also Highest Quality Fishing Tackle. 
WM. READ SONS 
107 Washington St., Boston, Mass. 
Established 1826 The Old Gun House 
VON LENGERKE & DETMOLD, 
549 Fifth Avenue, 
Opposite The Waldorf-Astoria. One door from cor. 34th St. 
NEW YORK 
High-Grade 
Sportsmen’s Supplies 
Guns 
Fishing Tackle 
Croquet 
Rifles 
Athletic Goods 
Base Ball 
Kodaks 
Golf 
Foot Ball 
Revolvers 
Tennis 
Fencing 
Fine Leather 
Goods Archery 
Cutlery 
Fine Field and Opera Glasses 
Powders may come and Powders may go but 
BALLISTITE 
1 he Best Shotgun Smokeless Powder on Earth, keeps right alone", the same 
yesterday, to-day and forever. 
WINS: 
Preliminary Handicap at the Grand Western Handicap, August 21 st-23d, 
score 97 ex 100, by Mr. W. W. Shemwell, Salt Lake City. 
High Professional Average at Mountaineer’s Gun Club, Chattanooga, Tenn., 
August 28th-2Qth, score 390 ex 400, by Mr. H. J. Borden, Memphis, also 
Amateur High Average. 
High Amateur Average at Trapshooteis’ Tournament, Chicago, 111., August 
22d-J4th, score 566 ex 600. 
TRY BALLISTITE (dense) and EMPIRE (bulk). 
j. h. lau <a co„ 75 N c .“~ c »r'' 
Agents for the NOBEL*S EXPLOSIVES CO., Ltd., Glasgow, Scotland. 
Send for “Shooting Facts.” 
GREENER GUNS WEAR. 
Durability is a quality that has made the Greener gun 
famous for three generations. The Greener product goes 
through the hands of 200 of the highest paid and most skill¬ 
ful workmen it is possible to obtain, and as a result the 
Greener gun is known all over the world for its careful fit¬ 
ting and general durability. 
The following unsolicited testimonial well illustrates this 
wonderful wearing quality, and we have had other testimoni¬ 
als describing Greener guns that have been in constant and 
effective service for fifty years. 
“W. W. Greener, Birmingham, England. 
“My Dear Sir —Excuse me for taking your valuable time, but I want to 
extend my most sincere thanks and gratitude to you for the great pleasure you 
have afforded me during the past thirty-five years by making a gun that certainly 
has stood the test that few can equal. The number of my old No. 10-gauge is 
11722. I bought it of E. E. Eaton, 53 State St., Chicago, Ill., the fall of 1S70, and 
paid him an even $200 for the gun, case and loading tools; $175 for the gun alone. 
“Now that my good and true old horse died a short time ago, my present dog is 
getting old, and I, too, am not so young as I used to be, I have laid aside my 
good old true and faithful friend, until such time as I am laid to rest, when it 
will be in the box with me. But here goes for a big but true story. 
“During thirty-five years my old companion has missed but one season’s shoot¬ 
ing; during all these years she has piled up her share of game—ducks, geese, 
chicken, quail, pheasants, etc.—and back in the ’70’s she never failed to do her 
duty at all shooting matches. I doubt if ever there was a gun made that has been 
used as much as mine, and especially with the heavy loads I have always used, 
and to-day it would bother you to find a scratch or mar about her. and her barrels 
are as clean and smooth inside as a dollar; and, stranger yet, this old friend of 
mine has not cost me five cents for repairs except an extra set of firing pins, 
and she looks good for many years to come. No gun ever made is a harder 
shooter than mine. Never once missed fire, and I do not know, but it seems to 
me to be impossible to miss a bird; and only last fall she was just as true as 
ever, and never failed to do her duty. 
“My brother bought a 12-gauge W. W. Greener at the same time, and up to his 
death, seven years ago, she stood the test. I bought a 12-gauge Greener about 
1875 for a present to a friend. It also proved to be all right, although I lost 
track of it twenty years ago. 
“Excuse me for taking your valuable time, but so many times I have felt so 
grateful towards you for furnishing me with such a true and faithful companion 
that I now feel that I want to thank you a thousand times for the pleasure and 
satisfaction you have afforded me in the last thirty-five years. 
“Your guns may be just as good now as then, but I do not happen to see any 
of them since I came to Minnesota twenty years ago. I do know that none of 
the new guns I see that I would exchange my old favorite No. 11722 for to-day. 
Very sincerely your friend, 
“C. A. Laughton.” 
We have a splendid stock of Greener guns on" hand, from 
4)4 lbs. 28 bores, to 22 lbs. double 4-bores, and a catalogue 
describing them is free for the asking. 
HENRY C. SQUIRES & SON, 
No. 20 Cortlandt Street, - New York City 
