FOREST AND STREAM 
631 
EVENT NO. 6. 
The Preliminary Handicap. 
loo Targets .Entrance $7.00 
REGULAR ENTRIES must be made at the Cashier’s 
Office, on the shooting grounds, before 5 P. M., Tues¬ 
day, May 12. PENALTY ENTRIES may be made after 
Tuesday, May 12, up to the time the first gun is fired 
in Event No. 5, by paying $10 entrance—targets included. 
Entries are not transferable, and entrance money cannot 
be withdrawn after handicaps have been allotted. 
OPEN TO AMATEURS ONLY. 
Manufacturers’ agents, paid representatives, etc 
shoot in the above events for “targets only.” 
THIRD DAY, MAY 14th. 
Thursday. 
Regular 
Program. 
may 
Events and 
Number of 
Targets. 
1— 20 Targets 
2— 20 Targets 
3— 20 Targets 
4— 20 Targets 
5— 20 Targets 
Entrance $1.40 
Entrance $1.40 
Entrance $1.40 
Entrance $1.40 
Entrance $1.40 
Optional 
Sweepstakes 
Extra. 
Entrance $1.00 
Entrance $1.00 
Entrance $1.00 
Entrance $1.00 
Entrance $1.00 
100 Targets Total.$7.00 Total.$5-oo 
Optional Sweep on the too Targets ....$5.00 
The $1.00 extra entrance for the Squier Money-Back 
System iis included in the $7.00 Regular Program en¬ 
trance. 
Squier Money-Back System Losses Paid Each Day. 
EVENT NO. 6. 
THE SOUTHERN HANDICAP. 
100 Targets .Entrance $10.00 
REGULAR ENTRIES must be made at the Cashier’s 
Office, on the shooting grounds, before 5 P. M., Wednes¬ 
day, May 13. PENALTY ENTRIES may be made after 
Wednesday, May 13, up to the time the first gun is 
fired in Event No. 5, by paying $15 entrance—targets 
included. Entries are not transferable, and entrance 
money cannot be withdrawn after handicaps have been 
allotted. 
OPEN TO AMATEURS ONLY. 
Manufacturers’ agents, paid representatives, etc., may 
shoot in the above events for “targets only.” 
TO REACH SHOOTING GROUNDS. 
(From Hotels in Roanoke). 
Take Salem cars, which pass through the shooting 
grounds. 
SHIPPING INSTRUCTIONS. 
Guns, ammunition, etc., forwarded by express MUST 
BE PREPAID, and sent to the Boyd-Sweeney Company, 
Roanoke, Virginia. Mark your own name on the 
box that goods are shipped in, and it will be de¬ 
livered at the shooting grounds without charge. 
Further information relative to the Tournament will 
be cheerfully furnished by W. S. Jones, secretary, 
Roanoke Gun Club, 608 First National Bank Building, 
Roanoke, Va. Or by Elmer E. Shaner, manager. The 
Interstate Association, 219 Coltart Avenue, Pittsburgh, 
Pennsylvania. 
MR. SPORTSMAN 
LEAVE YOUR OUTFIT 
TROUBLES AT HOME 
THE JOY OF LIVING 
AVe can equip von THOROUGHLY, ECONOMICALLY and SATISFAC¬ 
TORILY with liigh-class Tents, Waterproof Goods, Sportsmen’s Clothing, 
Steamer and Pullman Rugs, Blankets, Etc., Etc. 
AVOID CUSTOMS, SHIPPING AND ALL OTHER INCONVENIENCES 
tt GRANT-HOLDEN-GRAHAM-LiMITED Catalogue 
147 Albert Street, OTTAWA, CANADA 
Come to 
Nature’s Greatest 
Recreation Ground 
GREAT GUNS!!! 
Our April List of 
Odd and Second-Hand Guns 
has just come off the press. It will be worth 
your while to look it over. There are many 
BARGAINS ON THIS LIST 
Write for it at once 
Schoveriiog Dajy & Gale# 
302-304 BRODAWAY, Cor. Duane St. 
NEW YORK CITY 
WANT TO SWAP GUNS? 
I will pay cash for your gun, rifle, or pistol, or 
exchange with you for any other firearm you may 
want. Write me what you have, what you want, 
and I will make you an offer by return mail. 
S. J. Francis, 8 Cornhill, Boston, Mass. 
_______ 
OFFICIAL HEADQUARTERS FOR SPORTSMEN 
DURING THE TOURNAMENT. 
HOTEL ROANOKE, 
Opposite N. & W. Passenger Station. 
PONCE DE LEON HOTEL, 
Commerce St. and Campbell Ave. 
The management of the above Hotels will welcome the 
visiting sportsmen and their friends, and extend them 
every courtesy during their stay. 
N. C. R. Gun Club. 
Dayton, Ohio., April 25, 1914. 
As usual we had a rainy afternoon. We have had so 
many that we rather expect it and would be disap¬ 
pointed if it did not rain. • A fair number of our shoot¬ 
ers were out, and some very nice scores were made. 
During the afternoon our officers and members planned 
a Shooting Party to attend the First Tournament of 
the Central Ohio Trap Shooters League, which will be 
held by the Mechanicsburg Gun Club on the Springfield, 
Ohio, shooting grounds Tuesday, April 28th. Our club 
is very much interested in this league, which was.origi- 
nated by Luther J. Squier, and in our opinion it is one 
of the best ideas that has been advanced for the splen¬ 
did sport of trap shooting in our state. Twenty of our 
members are expecting to take part next Tuesday, and 
we are going to make a strenuous effort to win the team 
championship for the season, although we fully realize 
that there are many other strong steady shooters in the 
thirteen other clubs of the league who will give us a 
hard, fast race. 
We are hoping for a fine day, and an attendance of 
over 100 at this First League Shoot. 
Dear reader are you a Trap Shooter? If not, why not? 
We want to entertain you at the 15th Grand American 
Handicap, which will be held in our city September 
7 to II, 1914. 
W. F. MacCANDLESS. 
Sec’ 
and 
Treas. 
Shot 
at 
Broke 
J. R. Taylor. 
97 
R. 0 . Heilces. 
. 100 
92 
C. II. Rogge. 
91 
H. W. Heikes. 
. 100 
90 
F. C. Koch. 
. 100 
89 
W. F. Biippus. 
. 100 
88 
J. M. Markham . 
. 100 
88 
C. A. Sheets . 
. 100 
83 
J. H. Pumphrey . 
. 100 
81 
I. D. Platt . 
. 100 
79 
L. J. Squier . 
. 100 
77 
C. E. La Porte . 
. 100 
75 
Fred Oswald . 
• 75 
6l 
Charleston Gun Club. 
Charleston, W. Va., April 18, 1914. 
The following scores were made to-day on the grounds 
of the Charleston Gun Club: 
Shot at Broke P. C. 
deGruyter . 50 46 92 
Fultz . 100 90 90 
Davis . 100 86 86 
Goshorn . 100 86 86 
Shepherd . 100 83 83 
Crider . 50 38 76 
Staehlin . 25 16 64 
Johnson . 60 36 60 
Lewis . 60 31 51 
Morancy . 75 38 50 
Freudenberger . 75 36 45 
J. A. deGRUYTER, Secretary. 
(Continued from page 627.) 
ly to the considerable age of many of the speci¬ 
mens and partly to the great heat which pre¬ 
vailed during the summer of 1913. No less than 
210 animals were lost by death, of which the 
most important, perhaps, were two splendid 
giraffes; but 29 primates died. 
A census of the exhibits at the Zoological 
Park numbered mammals, 601 specimens, repre¬ 
senting 208 species; birds, 3,042, representing 905 
species, and reptiles, 1,086, representing 177 spe¬ 
cies 
The new workshop at the Park was completed 
in May last, and the Society will be able to do 
there much work which it has hitherto been 
obliged to send out, and to do it at a lower cost. 
At the Aquarium quite the most important re- 
cept during the year, from the popular stand¬ 
point, is that of the porpoises captured at Cape 
Hatteras and still in a healthy condition in the 
great pool in the middle of the Aquarium. Dr. 
Townsend’s work at the Aquarium continues to 
be as popular and useful as it always has been. 
