FOREST AND STREAM 
June 22, 1912 
STEVENS 
SEMI-MILITARY 
RIFl_e • 40+ 
SEMI-MILITARY 
STEVENS 
RIFLE £ TELESCOPE 
BOTH 
STEVENS 
TRAP GRADE 
REPEATER 
No. S2l 
.WORLDS RECORD SCORE 
NOW 
HOLDS THE 
ALL 
E very maker gets occasional victories, but why 
does the Factory of Precision secure such sweep¬ 
ing victories in various Rifle and Shot-gun com¬ 
petitions? Many of not National but International 
importance. 
See Here:— 
The World’s Record was established with Stevens Rifle 
and Stevens Telescope, March 15, 1911, at the Annual Indoor 
Championship of the Zettler Rifle Club Tournament, New 
York City. A. Hubalek, Brooklyn, N. Y., was the marksman 
and scored 2484 out of a possible 2500 at 75 feet distance and 
shooting offhand. Every shot went within the twenty-four ring. 
Also Here: — 
Park Rifle Club, Bridgeport, Conn., winners of U. S. National 
Championship. National Rifle Association Inter-Club League. 
Winner of 1912 Eastern Inter-Club Rifle League Champion¬ 
ship. Establishing World’s Record, 996 x 1000—25 yds. 
Won w'ith Stevens No. 404 Rifles. 
This One:— 
Deering High School, Portland, Maine. Holds High School Rifle Team World’s Record, 969 x 1000. Made with 
Stevens No. 404 Rifles. 
And Another: — 
The Amateur event of the year—the 1911 National Amateur Championship—was won with a regular stock "Trapshooter” 
Grade Stevens Repeating Shotgun—by the remarkable score of 196 ex 200—18 yards rise. 
J. STEVENS ARMS (SL TOOL COMPANY 
Dept. 326 T/?e Facforjr of ^Precision, Chicopee Fskplls* Ma,ss 
J 
Are You A Gunner? 
Do you love to follow your good dog over the fields in search of quail or chickens, or to struggle 
through swamp or along thick grown hillside, expecting to hear the roar of the ruffed grouse or 
the twitter of the fall woodcock ? If so, you should have this new hook. 
AMERICAN GAME BIRD SHOOTING 
By GEORGE BIRD GRINNELL 
(New—Just Published) 
This companion volume to “Air ericin Duck Shooting” treats of the upland game which American 
sportsmen shoot over dogs—woe dec ',k, snipe, all the quail, grouse and turkeys. 
The first part of the volume is devoted to a description of the various species and their habits—the 
way in which they live their lives. 
The second part of the book is devoted to upland shooting and treats of the methods by which all the 
upland birds are pursued and taken. The chapter “Aids to Shooting” describes the clothing, guns, 
and loads and dogs that the gunner may profitably use; while the last section of the book treats of the 
shooting of the future and the efforts to rear our native quail and grouse in domestication. 
The volume is illustrated by colored plates of ruffed grouse and quail, and 48 full page portraits of 
different game birds and hunting scenes, with a number of cuts in the text. 
Cloth. About S75 pages. Price $3.50, net. Postage 25 cents. 
This book is cf inestimable value. It contains the genuine hunter- 
naturalist facts given in the most entertaining and interesting style. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO., 127 Franklin St., NEW YORK CITY 
