S T 2 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[March 30 , 1907 . 
PETERS CARTRIDGES 
SCORE ANOTHER SUCCESS 
At the Annual Zettler Gallery Championship Match, New York, March 9th to 16th, 1907 
ZIMMERMANN TROPHY— Won by L. P. Ittel. 
100 SHOT MATCH— W. A. Tewes, 2d, score 2466. L. P. Ittel, 3d, score 2463. 24 out of 28 first 
prize winners scored over 2400 —all using Peters Cartridges. 
CONTINUOUS MATCH— O ut of six making three perfect scores, A. Hubalek, L. P. Ittel and L. C. 
Buss used Peters Cartridges. 
PREMIUMS CONTINUOUS MATCH —Out of three making five perfect scores, L. P. Ittel used Peters 
Cartridges. 
The WORLD’S RECORD. 2481, made by W. A. Tewes. and the U. S. CHAMPIONSHIP for TEN CONSECUTIVE 
YEARS, demonstrate Superiority of the SEMI-SMOKELESS KIND. 
THE PETERS CARTRIDGE COMPANY. 
NEW YORK: 98 Chambers St. T. H. KELLER, Manager. CINCINNATI. OHIO. NEW ORLEANS: 321 Magazine St. J. W. OSBORNE, Manager 
Camp Life tn the Woods. 
And the Tricks of Trapping- and Trap Making. Con¬ 
taining hints on camp shelter, all the tricks and bait 
receipts of the trapper, the use of the traps, with in¬ 
structions for the capture of all fur-bearing animals. 
By W. Hamilton Gibson. Illustrated. Cloth, 300 pages. 
Price, $1.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Blackfoot Lodge Talcs. 
The Story of a Prairie People. By George Bird Grinnell. 
Cloth. 300 pages. Price, $1.75. 
Mr. Grinnell has for years been on terms of intimacy 
with two of the three tribes which made up the great 
confederation known as the Blackfoot Nation, and having 
the confidence of the braves and wisest of the old men, 
he has penetrated deep into the secret history of the 
tribe. 
Hunting Without a Gun. 
And other papers. By Rowland E. Robinson. With illus¬ 
trations from drawings by Rachael Robinson. Price, 
$ 2 . 00 . 
This is a collection of papers on different themes con¬ 
tributed to Forest and Stream and other publications, 
and now for the first time brought together. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
STEVENS RIFLE TELESCOPES 
The Bull’s-Eye, as viewed through a STEVENS TELESCOPE, is simply an image of Bull’s- 
Eye—not the real Bull’s-Eye. The image of Bull’s-Eye is formed at spot where the cross hairs are laid, 
making the two coincident—both equally distinct. 
The middle aged or elderly person in using the ordinary sights can, perhaps, see the Bull’s-Eye 
distinctly and the sights, but not both together, as one or the other will blur. If he concentrates his 
mind on the sight of the rifle, the Bull’s-Eye becomes blurred, and if he concentrates his mind on the 
Bull’s-Eye, the sight becomes blurred. This is owing to the lack of accommodation which affects every 
person aged from Forty Years up. 
STEVENS ’SCOPES MAKE OLD EYES YOUNG AGAIN . 
Full data and illustrations concerning the famous STEVENS TELESCOPE will be found in 
Special Telescope Catalog. Send for it —with a STEVENS the veteran can compete with the 
youngest shooter without a handicap. 
J. STEVENS ARMS AND TOOL COMPANY 
1 
. 
CHICOPEE: FALLS, 
P. O. Box 5668 
New York Office, 98 Chambers Street. 
MASSACHUSETTS 
