May t6, 1908.] 
799 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
Columbus Gun Club. 
"Oti'MBUS, O., May 9.—Tlic programme for the Ohio 
ate shoot will be mailed about May 15. The shooters 
im other States who wish to come to Columbus, with a 
•w of Retting some goo<l practice over the complete 
ic of traps that will he used at the Grand American 
undieap will find a programme worth coming for. We 
sh to advise all who may contemplate coming to write 
Fred Shattuck, secretary. 42 Board of Trade Building, 
ilumbus, 0., for this programme and the same will be 
nt promptly. The dates are June 2, 3 4 and 5. The 
tire line of Grand American traps will be ready for use 
May 16, and any shooter coming this way will find 
le trapping accommodations at any hour of the day, 
im Monday morning until Saturday night of each week, 
i that they can go down the line and try them all. 
■tiers have been received from shooters as far away as 
dorado, stating that they would be here for the Ohio 
afe shoot. From all indications, there will he a large 
iwd here. The entry looks as if it would reach near 
150 entries. 
shooting about Columbus has been very seriously lian- 
:appcd by the extremely strenuous weather that has 
•vailed in this latitude for the past two weeks, making 
almost impossible to shoot or accomplish much in any 
v out of doors. The weather man says that after May 
it will be different. 
The lockers for the G. A. H. and the Ohio State shoot 
; now finished and a great many reservations are 
eady in. The lockers rent for $1.50 for G. A. II., $2 
wn. and 50 cents refund on return of key; State shoot, 
for locker and $1.50 down, 50 cents refund on return 
key. 
VIr. H. K. Smith was obliged to undergo a very seri- 
s operation at Grant Hospital this week, and came 
t of the shock with very good prospects for recovery. 
:ry few of the boys knew that Harry was to be taken 
the hospital, and they all hope for a speedy recovery, 
ores: 
Invents: 
1 
2 
3 
4 
5 
6 
7 
8 
9 
Targets: 
20 
20 
20 
20 
20 
20 
30 
20 
25 
R Taylor. 
. 18 
18 
17 
19 
20 
26 
12 
?,?, 
W Cumberland.. 
. 16 
17 
18 
17 
18 
19 
26 
IS 
ebster . 
. 17 
16 
17 
1.8 
21 
15 
20 
H Smith. 
. 15 
15 
16 
15 
24 
ii 
16 
atferd . 
. 17 
12 
14 
17 
18 
16 
ilin . 
. 14 
12 
13 
14 
19 
14 
22 
16 
. 15 
11 
17 
115 
hilling . 
. 15 
17 
14 
17 
17 
M Smith. 
. 14 
14 
17 
16 
17 
16 
T Wells. 
. 13 
12 
13 
13 
14 
12 
hisnor . 
. 16 
17 
15 
.dd . 
. 5 
8 
rker . 
. 16 
17 
14 
15 
17 
. 18 
17 
17 
10 
18 
17 
all . 
. 17 
16 
15 
18 
17 
Try . 
. 16 
14 
15 
17 
15 
attuck . 
. 18 
19 
18 
No. 7 was at 30 singles; No. 8 at 10 pair doubles; No. 
25 targets for secretary trophy. 
Xifle 'Range and Gallery. 
Fixtures. 
ly_2V-22.—New Haven, Conn.—Southern New England 
Schuetzen Bund. 
ly 27-Aue. 1.—Wakefield, Mass.—New England Mili¬ 
tary Rifle Association. 
jg. 10-13.—Camp Perry, O.—Ohio State Rifle Associa¬ 
tion. 
Providence (R. I.) Revolver Club. 
It wasn’t Casey at the bat who made us hug each other 
it Saturday afternoon; it was the gait set by Freeman 
our match with that bunch of old friends at Wilming- 
n, for when the near pistol champion punched six 
'les in the ten-ring and four in the nine circle, with a 
irter of 96 points in the first outdoor match of the 
ason, we felt encouraged, and we needed this sort of 
mg to offset the losing reputation we have no doubt 
med during the past few months. This match called 
r teams of ten men, 30 shots per man, in strings of 
at 50yds., Standard targets, previously signed and ex- 
anged; scores to be exchanged by telegraph. Our boys 
ed hard to make a team average of 80, but of course 
H short, and with 18 points deducted from the scores of 
ose who used pistols, we had an idea that the only 
>od feelings we could have would be those that started 
; and when the Delaware team score came in we won- 
red what the trouble was. 
Two of our members had a nip-and-tuck race, tying 
most shot for shot. One caught a 90, making a clean 
ore of bulls and the first Creedmoor possible for us 
is season, and one struggling despondent has been 
ugged slowly toward 80, and had there been two more 
rings, might possibly have felt like doing his usual 
ng and dance. 
Individual scores of P. R. C. team, and net total of 
llmington, were as follows: 
H Freeman, .22 S & W pistol. 96 90 89—275 
C Parkhurst, .38 Colt, officer’s model. 81 86 90 257 
m AI my, .22 S & W pistol. 85 87 79—251 
E Joslin, .38 Colt, officer’s model_ 83 77 86—246 
Argus, -45 Colt, new service mil. 84 81 76—241 
C Miller, .38 Colt, officer’s model . 84 81 76—241 
C Hurlburt, .38 Colt, officer’s model. 75 76 77—228 
m F Eddy, .38 Colt, military. 73 72 76—221 
Licbrich, .22 Remington pistol. 77 65 81—223 
II Willard, .38 S. & W. 66 74 09—209—2392 
Less handicap for pistols. 18 
Team net total .2374 
llmington team net total.' 2353 
ovidence Revolver Club won by. 21 
For other Rifle Nezvs see pages 762 and 765. 
K_ennel Special. 
Ads under this head, 2 cents a word a time (or 3 cents 
in capitals). Cash must accompany order. 
POINTERS AND SETTERS.-Owing to the dull times 
I have come into possession of a number of exceptionally 
well bred and broken dogs which I can sell far below 
their real value. Also some nice untrained youngsters 
and puppies. 
GEO. W. LOVELL, Middleboro, Mass. 
Will train your dog on quail, woodcock and snipe. 
I erms reasonable. LOCK LADDIE. Doniphan, Mo. 
FOR SALE—SETTER and POINTER PUI’S and 
Dogs, thoroughbreds, some trained, also spaniels and 
retrievers, good ones. Inclose stamps for lists. 
THOROUGHBRED KENNELS, Atlantic, la. _ 
For Sale.—English setter puppies from bench show win¬ 
ners and perfect field stock. ADS1T, 944 Columbus 
Ave., New York. 20 
DOG MAGAZINE.—Send for free sample copy of The 
Kennel Review, a handsomely illustrated monthly. 
KENNEL REVIEW, Kansas City, Mo. 20 
REGISTERED—Red Cocker Spaniel puppies. Write 
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If you want the FASTEST RUNNING RED FOX 
HOUNDS in the South write ROQUEMORE & CO., 
Thomaston, Ga. 23 
DOGS FOR SALE. 
Do you want to buy a dog or pup of any kind. If so, 
send for list and prices of all varieties. Always on hand. 
OXFORD KENNELS, 35 North Ninth St., Philadelphia, 
Pa. 
Kennel Diseases 
By “Ashmont” (J. Frank Perry, M.D.), author of “Ken¬ 
nel Secrets.” Illustrated. 8vo. Cloth, $3.00 net. 
Postage, 22 cents. 
Every one who owns a dog should possess this invalu¬ 
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been pronounced by a competent authority far ahead of 
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minuteness with which every detail is considered leaves 
little or nothing for any future work to attempt. Es¬ 
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different kinds of mange, poisons, distemper, hydro¬ 
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of the urinary and sexual organs, and pneumonia (an 
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the work which are devoted to symptoms and diagnosis. 
The work is entirely devoid of technical terms, and is 
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FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
DISEASES OF DOGS. 
Nursing vs. Dosing. 
A Treatise on the Care of Dogs in Health and Disease. 
By S. T. Hammond (“Shadow”), author of “Training 
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This work, from the pen of “Shadow,” will have a 
hearty welcome. It comes from one who writes from full 
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assure the reader that no course of conduct is advised, 
no treatment recommended, no remedy prescribed, that 
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FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
WILDFOWL SHOOTING. 
Cu/itaining Scientific and Practical Descriptions of 
Wildfowl; Their Resorts Habits, Flights, and the Most 
Successful Method of Hunting Them. Treating of the 
selection of guns for wildfowl shooting, how to load, aim 
and to use them; decoys and the proper manner of 
using them; blinds, how and where to construct them; 
boats, how to use and build them scientifically; re¬ 
trievers, their characteristics, how to select and train 
them. By William Bruce Leffingwell. Illustrated. 373 
pages. Price, in cloth, $1.50; half morocco, $2.50. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
'amp Life in the Woods. 
And the Tricks of Trapping and Trap Making. C 
taining hints on camp shelter, all the tricks and t 
receipts of the trapper, the use of the traps, with 
structions for the capture of all fur-bearing anim. 
By W. Hamilton Gibson. Illustrated. Cloth, 300 pag 
Price, $1.00. 
SPRATT’S 
DOG CAKES 
Are the Best and 
Cheapest 
Send for FREE Cata¬ 
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which contains much use¬ 
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^ i-AIENT (Am.) Ltd. 
Newark, N J. San Francisco Cal. Boston. Mass, 
at. Louis, Mo. Cleveland, Ohio. Montreal, Can. 
•book, ojv 
DOG DISEASES 
AND 
HOW TO FEED. 
Mailed FREE to any address by the author. 
H. CLAY GLOVER, 0. V. S., 118 West 31*1 St., New York. 
Field, Cover and Trap Shooting. 
l-y Captain Adam H. Bogardus, Champion Wing Shot 
of the World, Embracing Hints for Skilled Marks- 
men; Instruction for Young Sportsmen; Haunts and 
Habits of Game Birds; Flight and Resort of Water¬ 
fowl; Breeding and Breaking of Dogs. Cloth. 444 
pages. Price, $2.00. 
“Field, Cover and Trap Shooting” is a book of instruc¬ 
tion, and ot that best of all instruction, where the teacher 
draws trom his own rich experience, incident, anecdote 
and moral to illustrate and emphasize this teaching. The 
scope of the book—a work of nearly 500 pages—is shown 
by this list of chapters: 
Guns and Their Proper Charges. Pinnated Grouse 
Shooting. Late Pinnated Grouse Shooting. Quail 
Shooting. Shooting the Woodcock. The Snipe and 
Snipe Shooting. Golden Plover. Curlew and Gray 
Plover. Wild Ducks and Western Duck Shooting Wild 
Geese Cranes and Swans. Wild Turkey and Deer Shoot- 
ln S‘ T ,he Art of Shooting on the Wing. Shooting Dogs 
—Breeding and Breaking. Pigeon Shooting—Trap- 
shooting. K 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
GAME LAWS IN BRIEF 
A Digest of the Statutes 
of the United States and 
Canada governing the 
taking of game and fish. 
< ompiled from original 
and official sources for 
the practical guidance of 
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I he Brief is complete; it 
covers all the States and 
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provisioiis as to seis ns 
"If you are wis®*‘ for fish and game, the 
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reliable. 
"If the Brief says so, you may depend on it.” 
A standing reward is offered for finding an 
error in the Brief. 
PRICE 25 CENTS. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO 
127 Franklin Street, New York 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
