164 
FOREST AND STREAM 
A Quality Car at a Quantity Price 
T HE Vulcan is a handsome car, with 
its streamline body and strictly up- 
to-date equipment, including elec¬ 
tric lights, and yet-it is just as powerful 
and speedy as any $1,000 car ever made. 
‘‘A better car for less money,” the 
Vulcan is not to be compared with the 
cheap “assembled” cars, for every part 
entering into its construction, even to the 
sheet metal work and castings, is made in 
the great Vulcan Shops at Painesville, 
Ohio. 
It is only by quantity production, by the 
use of special machinery, and by rigid 
supervisory economy that we have been 
able to put into this car the labor and 
material which the Vulcan Standard de¬ 
mands. 
Here then is a high-grade car at a price 
so low that you have no excuse for wait¬ 
ing longer to purchase your car. Physi¬ 
cians, particularly, will appreciate this 
sturdy car, which is such a willing worker 
and costs so little for tires and gasolene. 
READ THE 
VULCAN PLATFORM 
27 Horse Power 
3?s>" Bore, 5 n Stroke 
Unit Power Plant, 3-point 
suspension 
105" Wheelbase “Speedster” 
118" Wheelbase “Touring Car” 
32 x 3 1 -;" Tires all-round 
Transmission, Selective Sliding 
Gear, 3 Speeds forward and 
reverse. Nickel Steel Gears. 
5-Pinion Bevel Gear Differen¬ 
tial, Chrome Nickel Steel 
Gears 
Left Side Drive. Centre Control 
“Streamline” Bodies 
Electric Lights 
Full Equipment, Consisting of 
Top and Slip Cover, Wind¬ 
shield, Speedometer, Electric 
Lights and Horn, Tools, Jack 
and Q. D. Rims. 
NOW, write for our hand¬ 
some illustrated booklet. 
The Vulcan Mfg. Co. 
Dept. 26 
Painesville - - Ohio 
LIVE DEALERS WANTED 
We wanta fewmore live-wiredealersto 
sell —not merely handle -the "Vulcan.” 
Don’t lose any time in getting our 
proposition. Write or Wire To-dav 
“Vulcan” 5-Passenger 
Touring Car 
Price $850 
w. 
Ballard . 
123 
G. 
F. 
Couts . 
141 
2nd Day 
108 
2nd Day 
134 
M. 
F. Blair . 
3rd Day 
122 
3rd Day 
140 
121 
II. 
H. 
Coburn . 
132 
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118 
2nd Day 
138 
M. 
Carr . 
3rd Day 
122 
3rd Day 
139 
137 
J- 
A. 
Dagne . 
138 
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129 
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143 
H. 
L. Coleman . 
3rd Day 
123 
3rd Day 
140 
121 
D. 
Chamberlin . 
139 
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133 
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3rd Day 
133 
NEWFOUNDLAND 
A Country of Fish and Game. A Paradise for the Camper and Angler. Ideal Canoe Trips. 
The country traversed by the Reid Newfoundland Company’s system is exceedingly rich in all kinds 
of Fish and Game. All along the route of the Railway are streams famous for their Salmon and Trout 
fishing, also Caribou barrens. Americans who have been fishing and hunting in Newfoundland say 
there is no other country in the world in which so good fishing and hunting can be secured and with 
such ease as in Newfoundland. Information, together with illustrated Booklet and Folder, cheerfully for¬ 
warded upon application to 
J. W. N. JOHNSTONE, General Passenger Agent, Reid Newfoundland Company, St. John’s, New¬ 
foundland. 
F. J. Douglas . 
123 
2nd Day 
107 
3rd Day 
109 
M. A. De Dackxo ... 
130 
2nd Day 
127 
3rd Day 
124 
C. A. Dobbins . 
112 
2nd Day 
IIO 
3rd Day 
113 
John Deist . 
131 
2nd Day 
137 
3rd Day 
138 
*W. R. Crosby . 
148 
2nd Day 
146 
3rd Day 
146 
*R. W. Clancy . 
136 
2nd Day 
137 
*J. S. Day . 
3rd Day 
131 
140 
2nd Day 
146 
*W. B. Darton _ 
3rd Day 
139 
M 3 
2nd Day 
138 
*R. O. Heikes . 
3rd Day 
I42 
139 
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136 
3rd Day 
138 
*F. K. Eastman . 
139 
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141 
*George Maxwell 
3rd Day 
139 
147 
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143 
*Thomas Parker . 
145 
2nd Day 
I40 
3rd Day 
136 
*W. D. Stannard . 
135 
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140 
*John R. Taylor .... 
3rd Day 
142 
I46 
2nd Day 
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142 
A. W. Stuart . 
118 
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108 
3rd Day 
107 
B. Skinner . 
.1st Day 
116 
2nd Day 
123 
3rd Day 
105 
J. Shoemaker . 
129 
2nd Day 
114 
3rd Day 
III 
W. L. Stonehouse .. 
132 
2nd Day 
125 
3rd Day 
III 
F. D. Peltier . 
Il6 
2nd Day 
123 
3rd Day 
120 
C. W. Thrasher . 
123 
2nd Day 
IIO 
3rd Day 
117 
Mrs. Van Vogel — 
121 
2nd Day 
122 
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130 
S. G. Vance . 
134 
2nd Day 
140 
3rd Day 
138 
George Volk . 
140 
2nd Day 
141 
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139 
C. E. Winslow . 
132 
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133 
G. W. Wagner . 
.1 st Day 
140 
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144 
A. M. Wesner . 
138 
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137 
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142 
H. Waruff . 
102 
2nd Day 
135 
■"Professional. 
3rd Day 
134 
LUTHER SQUIER, 
Cashier. 
Greensburg, Ind., July 27.—Edward Carr and 
Cooper Jing, Big Four round-house employes, 
have a couple of unusual pets, young muskrats, 
which make their home in the turn-table pit in 
the New York Central yards here. The animals 
emerged from a sm'all sewer which opens into the 
pit, and when the men chanced to see them, they 
immediately placed a wire netting over the mouth 
of the sewer in such a manner that other ani¬ 
mals can get in but those there 'cannot escape. 
The musk tats have become quite 'fearless and will 
come out of the water which neatly always stands 
in the ‘base of the pit, when food is thrown them. 
Something like eight thousand bass have been 
placed in Flatrock River near here. The bass 
were not intended for this county, but were being 
shipped to Columbus from the fish hatcheries at 
Brookville. It was necessary to wait several 
hours for a train to Columbus and several hun¬ 
dred of the bass died. 
C. H. PARRISH. 
