


} 


FOREST AND STREAM. 


AUTOLOADING GUN 
GRAND 
No other gun has so great a record. 
Two trials and one victory. 
Shotgun has been on the market but two years. 
WINS 
AMERICAN 
The Remington Autoloading 
This year was its second attempt for the Grand 
American Handicap, and in field of 500 guns, against overwhelming odds, it was shot to victory by 
Mr, J. J. Blanks, of Trezevant, Tenn. 
His winning score was 96 ex 100, and 18 ex 20 on the shoot-off, 
Mr. Blanks says: “I cannot say enough in favor of the Autoloading Remington which won me 
the Grand American Handicap. 
headaches which my other guns gave me. 
my special favorite. 
No other gun has won so many laurels in so short a time as the Remington Autoloading 
[ieignthesperect- oun: 
Shooters are everywhere adopting it as their favorite. 
Shoot the modern gun. 
THE REMINGTON ARMS COMPANY, 
_ Agency, 
313 . Broadway, 
I now have none of the bruises or 
It handles quickly and easily, and as a game gun it is 
Shotgun. 
NwaYe 
New York City 
Ilion, 

Caen ene eee eee eee 
THE TEMPER OF JUNCOS. 
New York, June 16.—Editor. Forest and 
Stream: Ina recent issue of an ornithological 
publication I notice that a correspondent calls 
attention to the fact that juncos quarrel more 
or over their food. He tells how, during 
a heavy snow fall last April, he bared the ground 
out bread crumbs and seed 
less 
and threw grass 
levery day and observed that some of the juncos, 
visiting the table he had spread, drove away 
others when they came to feed. 
More than twenty years ago I noticed this 
same thing among juncos in the northern Rocky 
Mountains, when they approached the camp to 
pick up and squabble over the scraps about the: 
fire. This is what I saw one day, when alone in 
camp, writing up my note book: 
“The modest little juncos, birds like the black 
snowbird of the east, now and then crept out 
of the forest, and advancing by cautious hops 
ito the neighborhood of the fire, feasted on the 
bread crumbs that had been dropped on the 
lcround. Feasted and almost fought, for, though 
they seem the most gimid and shrinking little 
creatures you can imagine, they have a spirit of 
heir own, and when one had found a choice bit 
lof bread, and was picking it to pieces, he al- 
llowed.no one of his companions to come very 
Inear to him. An approach was promptly met 
by a threatened attack, and the claimant of the 
bread, with grimly lowered head and _ bristling 
feathers, prepared to defend his rights. They 
hever quite came to blows, though once or twice 
war seemed imminent, for the individual threat- 
Pned declined to be bullied, and promptly threw 
himself into a defensive position; but after eye- 
ing each other fiercely for a few seconds one 
yr the other would make a little hop to one side, 
und then the other would move off, and presently 
Bhe ruffled feathers would be smoothed down and 
yeace would once more resume her sway.” 
Yo. 

Kennel Special. 
Ads under this head, 2 cents a word a time (or 3 cents | 
in capitals). Cash must accompany order. 



FOR SALE.—Thoroughly trained pointers, setters, and 
hounds. Can furnish you a good one at a moderate price 
at any time. GEO. W. LOVELL, Middleboro, Mass. 
We will thoroughly train your shooting dog on quail | 
for prairie or cover shooting. Also on woodcock. Terms 
reasonablee LOCH LADDIE KENNELS, Di ae 
Mo. t 
Uncle Lisha’s Shop. 


Life in a: Corner of Yankeeland. By Rowland E. Robin- | 
son. Cloth. Price, $1.25. 
The shop itself, the place of business of Uncle Lisha 
Peggs, bootmaker and repairer, was a sort of sportsman’s 
exchange, where, as one of the fraternity expressed it, 
the hunters and fishermen: of the widely scattered neigh- 
borhood used to meet of evenings and dull outdoor days, 
“to. swap lies.” 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Men I Have Fished With. 
Sketches of character and incident with rod and gun from 
childhood to manhood; from the killing of little fishes 
187 pages. 

and birds to a buffalo hunt. By Fred Mather. LIllus- | 
trated. Price, $2.00. 
It was a happy thought that prompted Mr. Fred Mather 
to write of his fishing companions. The chapters were 
received with a warm welcome at the beginning, and 
have been of sustained interest. The “Men I Have 
Fishel With” was among the most popular series of 
papers ever presented to ForEsT AND STREAM readers. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 

Trap-Shooter’s Ready Reckoner. 
For ascertaining at a glance the Division of Moneys in 
Trapshcoting. Paper, 26 cents. 
There are forty tables, covering varying entry fees, 
prices of targets and the number of entries, and it is the 
work of only a moment to determine the purses in the 
various events. Such a reference book as this is as use- 
ful to the trapshooter as his interest tables are to the 
bank clerk. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 


DOG CAKES 
ARE THE BEST and CHEAPEST 
AN OU tacts 
cause indigestion, loss of coat’ and 
Li Fi ore other evils. 
‘ee 
We also manufacture specially prepared foods for DOGS, 
PUPPIES, CATS, RABBITS, POULTRY, PIGEONS, GAME, 
BIRDS, FISH. 
Send for FREE Catalogue “Dog Culture,’ which contains 
practical chapters on the feeding, kenneling and general manage- 
ment of dogs, also chapters on cats. 
SPRATT’S PATENT (Am.) Ltd. 
Newark, N. J. San Francisco, Cal. Boston, Mass. 
St. Louis, Mo. Cleveland, Ohio. Montreal, Can. 
BOOK ON 
DOG DISEASES 
AND 
HOW TO FEED. 
Mailed FREE to any address by the author. 
H. CLAY GLOVER, D.V.S., 118 West 31st St., New York. 
IMPROVED SPIKE 
COLLAR. 
For use in dog training. Price, 
$2.00. By mail, $2.10. Send 
for circula. B. WATERS 
346 Broadway, New York 

Hunting in Many Lands. 
The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club. 
Theodore Roosevelt and George Bird Grinnell. 
Illustrated. Cloth, 448 pages. Price, $2.50. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Editors: 
Vignette. 









































