Feb. 17, 1912 
FOREST AND STREAM 
223 
Schoolboy Shooters. 
Marksmen from the various high schools yesterday 
discarded the sub-target machine for real rifles and am¬ 
munition. in the annual open shooting tournament, under 
auspices of De Witt Clinton, over the ranges in the 
Seventy-first Regiment .Armory. 
Morris High School, holders of national interscholastic 
Be high man at the traps. 
Shoot the finest brush gun made. 
Mechanical construction perfect. 
Some Good Reasons 
Why You Should Shoot 
P 
THE 
ARKER 
GUN 
Send today for illustrated catalogue. 
PARKER BROS 
New York Salesrooms: 32 Warren St 
Meriden, Conn. 
Game Laws in Brief 
A new and revised edition for 1912. 
It gives all the fish and game laws of the United States and Canada. It is complete 
and so accurate that the ecMtor can afford to pay a reward for an error found in it- 
“If the Brief says so, you may depend upon it.” 
Sold by all dealers, or by mail by us. Price, twenty-five cents. 
Forest and Stream Publishing Co., 127 Franklin St., New York 
W. T. CARROLL, 
Captain, Rifle Team, University Nebraska. 
OUTDOOR PHOTOGRAPHS 
GEORGE ARTHUR GRAHAM, 
Secretary, Yates Rifle Club, University Nebraska. 
championship, made almost a clean sweep of the big 
^ogram. In the competition for first teams, Morris led 
Ue \\ itt Clinton by 7 points, and in the second team 
match the Bronx boys won with 11 points to spare. 
Forest and Stream wants good photographs of shooting, fishing, yachting, 
canoeing, camping, natural history and kindred subjects. Pictures that tell 
a story preferred to those depicting still life. Carbon prints, and those made 
on printing-out papers, will be given preference. Pictures that have not 
been used in other publications will, if available, be paid for. 
THE ANGLER^S WORKSHOP 
Rodmaking for Beginners 
By PERRY D. FRAZER 
Not only Americans, but anglers of Great Britain and nearly every European State, 
South Africa, Australia, Canada, are making their fishing rods under the simple instruc¬ 
tions laid down by the author in this useful little manual. A Japanese, after reading the 
book, took up rod repairing for his fellow countrymen as a business. An Englishman 
followed it in making several of the sixty-five rods that he has in his collection. A 
Russian appreciated the book so much that he suggested a Russian translation. The 
British sportsmen’s papers have quoted from it time and time again. In that country it 
has helped bring about a great change in rod types, and to attract attention to the ex¬ 
cellence of American fishing rods. In fact, “Rodmaking for Beginners” has become the 
standard manual wherever fishing with rod and reel is practiced. 
The reason is obvious. The book is written in plain English, and all the details are 
set down so simply that a boy can follow them. All of the types of rods used on fresh 
and salt water are described and specifications given. Separate chapters cover all details, 
and the one on split cane rodmaking is the only comprehensive treatise on that subject 
ever published. 
Cloth, 180 pages, four full-page illustrations, 6 o working drawings, making plain every 
feature of the text. Postpaid, $i. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO., 127 Franklin Street, NEW YORK 
