926 
FOREST AND STREAM 
We Make to Order GUNS 
Ranging in Price 
from $41.50 to $400 
Write for free booklet on 20 bore guns, of which PARKER BROS, are the 
pioneer makers in America. Catalogue will be sent on request. 
No specifications in the gun line are too exacting for our consideration. We invite 
correspondence relative to special guns for discriminating sportsmen. Our fifty years of 
experience in making guns for the foremost trap and game shots of the United States 
enables us to satisfy the most exacting gun user. 
PARKER BROS., Meriden, Conn. 
NEW YORK SALESROOMS, 32 WARREN STREET 
Resident Agent, A. W. duBray. P. O. Box 102, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 
GUNCRAFT 
By WM. A. BRUETTE 
A modern treatise on guns, gun fitting, 
ammunition, wing and trap shooting. 
The theoretical side of the subject has 
been covered with a scientific accuracy 
which makes it an up- 
to-date book of refer¬ 
ence, and the practical 
side of wing-shooting, 
gun fitting, the master 
eye, defects in vision 
and other important 
questions have been 
treated in a way that 
will enable either the 
expert or the amateur 
to determine if he is 
shooting with a gun 
that fits him and how 
to decide upon one that 
does. It will enable 
him to ascertain why 
he misses some shots and is successful with 
others. The secrets of success in trap 
shooting as well as the peculiarities in 
flight of the quail, the jacksnipe, the wood¬ 
cock, the ruffed grouse and the duck family 
are illustrated by drawings and described 
in a way that will facilitate the amateur in 
mastering the art of wing shooting. Car¬ 
tridge board cover, $1.00; Cloth, $1.50. 
For Sale by FOREST and STREAM Pub. Co., 128 Broadway, N. Y. 
for the answer, and when none came, spoke out 
the disgust passing in his mind. “Right straight 
away, and missed it, by Gosh!” 
“Pull,” called Hen hopefully for his last tar¬ 
get, before Obadiah could “come to.” 
“Dead,” called the referee. 
“Hoop-e-e! gi’me my tobaker,” howled Hen, 
delighted with the outcome. 
“Oh, you’ll git it all right enough,” spoke up 
Obadiah, as though in a dream. “I, gosh, 1 
don’t see how I muffed that last pigeon.” 
“Ye shot like nailers, both on ye, and I’m 
proud of ye,” spoke up the vision by the flag 
pole, as they joined the crowd. 
THE ANGLERS’ CLUB OF NEW YORK. 
The _ 1916 schedule of The Anglers’ Club of New 
York includes a number of interest events as follows: 
April IS, Preliminary Tournament; June 22, 23 and 
24, Tournament of the National Association of Scien¬ 
tific Angling Clubs at Newark; September 6, Summer 
Tournament; September 22 and 23, Fall Tournament; 
December 12, Monthly Tournament. 
The Anglers’ Club is the only exponent of fresh water 
casting in the city. The monthly meetings are held at 
the Hotel Navarre and its tournaments in Central 
Park. It stands for conservation and clean sportsman¬ 
ship, has a membership of about one hundred, and 
would welcome others similarly inclined. Members 
joining the club subscribe the following platform: “I 
believe in the conservation and propagation of all 
game fish, their capture only by fair and sportsman¬ 
like methods, and the cultivation of skill in angling. 
If. elected to membership I will abide by the Con¬ 
stitution and By-Laws of the said organization.” 
CHIPS FROM THE FLYING CLAYS. 
There are at least 250 trapshooting organizations on 
the Pacific Coast. 
Trapshooters of Florida are laying plans for the form¬ 
ing of a State Association. Florida is one of the two 
States without a State Association. 
The annual trapshooting tournament of the New York 
Sportsmen’s Association will be held at Syracuse, N. Y., 
in June. The State championship shoot will take place 
in this meeting. 
Women are getting into the “sport alluring” further 
all the time. The Western Pennsylvania Trapshooting 
Association has a woman secretary, Miss Edna Lau- 
tenslager, and she is a very capable officer. 
Plans are under way for a series of shoots through¬ 
out the country this summer for members of the Boy 
Scouts of America. The boys will be taught how to 
hold the gun and the little things to know about trap¬ 
shooting, and some day the experience may come in 
useful. 
The Canal Zone is a fertile field for trapshooting. 
There are quite a number of clubs in Panama, the 
largest one being the Isthmian Trap and Rifle Club, 
at Cristobal. Special events.are held on all holidays, 
and tourists are invited to join in all competitions. 
Since live bird shooting has been prohibited by law 
in Florida, trapshooting has increased in popularity. 
It is the main sport now at Palm Beach and the other 
fashionable winter resorts. 
Additional interest is being taken in trapshooting in 
the South. All through Georgia, gun clubs are being 
organized, and the Georgia championship should have a 
lot of newcomers in it this summer. 
Evidently Sam Huntley is not as anxious to shoot 
that 1000-bird match as he would have people believe. 
B. F. Ebert, of Des Moines, la., posted $250 recently 
to bind a match between an "unknown” and Huntley, 
the name of the “unknown” to be announced after 
the posting of the forfeits. Huntley declined to 
compete with an “unknown,” and also added that 
he would not shoot a match any place but in 
Chicago, and that he wouldn’t shoot the 1000 targets in 
one day. Ebert’s “unknown” is said to be none other 
than Charles G. Spencer. 
MODERN BREAKING 
Probably the most practical treatise that 
has ever been published on the training of 
setters and pointers, and their work in the 
field. 
Every phase of the 
subject has been care¬ 
fully covered and the 
important lessons are 
illustrated by photo¬ 
graphs from life. It is 
a book well calculated 
to enable the amateur 
to become a successful 
trainer and handler. 
There are chapters 
on The Art of Train¬ 
ing, Setters vs. Point¬ 
ers, Selection of Pup¬ 
pies, Naming Dogs, 
Nomenclature, Train¬ 
ing Implement, Know 
Thyself, First Lessons, Yard Breaking, 
Pointing Instinct, Backing, Ranging, Re¬ 
trieving, Gun Shyness, Faults and Vices, 
Conditioning, Don’ts. 
Illustrated by reproductions of Osthaus 
paintings. Prices, cartridge board cover, 
$1.00; cloth, $1.50. 
For Sale by Forest and Stream Pub. Co., 128 Broadway, N. Y. 
ANGLERS’ WORKSHOP 
Rod Making for Beginners 
The many anglers who take pleasure in 
making and repairing their own rods and 
fishing tackle, will find this a useful and 
entertaining work. 
It contains simple hints and careful in¬ 
structions that will enable the amateur with 
the plainest of tools,—principally file, sand¬ 
paper, jacknife, and plane,—to turn out 
bait, trout, salmon, and sea rods of which 
he can be justly proud. 
For Sale by Forest and Stream Pub. Co. 128 Bdwy., N.Y. 
NEWTON HIGH-POWER RIFLES 
Highest Velocity Rifles in the World Use 
Factory Ammunition. 
New American made bolt action rifle ready for delivery this winter. Uses Newton high power cartridges 
in .22 caliber, .256 caliber, .30 caliber and .35 caliber; also .30 caliber Springfield. 
.25 Newton, 123 grain bullet, velocity 3100 f.s., .30 Newton 170 grain bullet, velocity 3000 f s. 
Price $40.00. Send stamp for descriptive circular. Newton straight line, hand reloading tools; cost no 
more than the others. Sporting stocks and .256 barrels for Springfield rifles now ready, $12.50 each. 
NEWTON ARMS CO., INC., 506 Mutual Life Bldg., BUFFALO, N. Y. 
EMFtALD GLO 
EMRALD-GLO Sportmen’s Glasses Ease Tired Eye- 
When Trap or Field Shooting, Automobiling, etc. 
Emrald Glo natural green lenses are extra large to nrotecl 
eyes from wind, cinders, and dust. Lenses have a belt ol 
ground glass to exclude glaring light, yet leaving a clesi 
green open space to see through as large as ordinary glasses 
Can be worn over ordinary glasses. Strong, light, shell rims 
easy, pliable cable earpieces. Prepaid for $1.00. Monej 
back unconditionally if not satisfied. J 
REVERE OPTICAL CO. Dept. A Revere, Mass 
