te Tes mee > D 4 ‘ & Cornell University Library Field, cover, and trap shooting.Embracin Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www. archive.org/details/cu31924000520241 CAPT Aolk CHAMPION WING SHOT OF FIELD, COVER, AND TRAP SHOOTING. BY ADAM H. BOGARDUS, Champion Wing Shot of America. EMBRACING HINTS FOR SKILLED MARKSMEN ; INSTRUCTIONS FOR YOUNG SPORTSMEN ; HAUNTS AND HABITS OF GAME BIRDS ; FLIGHT AND RESORTS OF WATER FOWL: BREEDING AND BREAKING OF DOGS. EDITED BY CHARLES J. FOSTER. New Yore: J. B. FORD & COMPANY. 1874. Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1874, by J. B. FORD & CO., In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, Washington, D. C. ° JOHN ROSS AND COMPANY, PRINTERS, 27 ROSE STREET, NEW YORK TO THE Won. Hoon WK. Wackett, Recorder of New York, A GENTLEMAN RENOWNED ALIKE FOR PROFI- CIENCY IN FIELD SPORTS, AND FOR LEARNING, WISDOM, AND IMPARTIALITY ON THE BENCH, THIS BOOK IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED BY THE AUTHOR AND THE EDITOR. CONTENTS. ——+ 44 —— CHAPTER I. GENERAL INTRODUCTORY REMARKS, Great Increase of Field Shooting—Delights of the Sport—Expe- rience in the Field—Beginning in Albany County, New York, at Ruffed Grouse and Woodcock—Removal to Sangamon River, Illi- nois—Great Abundance of Game—Numerous Deer—Removal to Elkhart, Logan County—Vast Numbers of Pinnated Grouse— Gillott’s Grove—Osage Orange Hedges and Quail—Pinnated Grouse shot too early—Diminution of Breeding Places—Migration of the Grouse late in Fall—Ducks and Geese in Corn-Fields —Nesting Places of Grouse and of Quail—Evil of Prairie- Burning late in Spring—Snipe, Golden Plover, and Upland Plover —The American Hare or Rabbit~Hawks after Game—The Win- nebago Swamp Breeding-place of Ducks and Crane—Wolves in the Swamp—A Wolf-Hunt in Gillott’s Grove—Eagles and Foxes, ete,,. 2 © © © © © &© 8 «© «© © « 18-84 CHAPTER II. Guns AND THER PROPER CHARGES. Skill and Ingenuity of Gunmakers—Improvements and Inventions of Late Years—Vast Advantage from the Breech-Loader—Safest and best of Guns—Proved by Experience—Close Hard Shooting— Convenience—Safety and Rapidity of Loading—Certainty in Wet Weather—Comparative Cost of Breech-Loaders—Metallic Car- tridge-Cases—Size of Guns—Advantage of Weight—The Suitable Stock—Proper Filling of Cartridges—Trials of Guns — Breech- Loader vs.. Muzzle-Loader—Loading of Cartridges—Quantity of Powder—Sizes of Shot for Different Game—Dead-Shot Powder— Tatham's Shot—Disadvantage of very Large Shot, . . 95-54 4 CONTENTS. CHAPTER III, Pinnatep Grouse SHOOTING. Abundance in the Prairie States—Of Service to the Farmer— Grouse Polygamous—Booing’ of the Cocks in Spring—Nesting- time and Nests—Rapid Growth of the Young Birdse—Suppcsed Hybrids—Grouse Shcotirg in August tco Early—Tke Easiest there is—The Corn-Fields the only Protection—Grouse found at Morning in Stubbles—In Clear Weather no Shooting in the Middle of the Day—On Damp, Cloudy Days Grouse in Stubbles all Day—On Clear Days Shoot again towards Evening—Grouse in Pasture-Land—Shooting in McLean County—Beware of Shoot- ing too Quick—Mr. Sullivant’s Great Farm—Water for Men and DogsmustbeCarried, . . « « «© «© « « 571 CHAPTER IV. Late Prsnatep Grouse Skoorina. Tho Middle of the Day the best Time—Good Shooting in Corn after tho Frosts—Wheat Sowed in Corn-Yields—No Shooting on Cloudy Days—November Shooting Best—Grouse in Sod Corn—A Day in Champagne County—Grouse will not Lie on Damp, Cloudy Days _—Indian Summer a Good Time—The Prairies in Spring—Cn Bright Mornings in Winter—Scene near Chatsworth, Iroquois County, on a December Morning—Necessity of Silence in Late Grouse Shooting—A Trip to Christian County,. .) - 72-88 CHAPTER V. Quart, SHOOTING IN THE WEST. Abundance of Quail in the Western States—Increase in the Prairie States—Osage Orange Hedges a Great Cause—Afford Nesting Places, Prctect from Hawks, and Shelter in Severe Weather— Nesting Places and Nests—The Quail Hawk—Beginning cf tho Shooting—Best Shooting after the Frostsin November and De- cember—Up at Early Morning—Fine, Clear Days Best—Lio well when Scattered—Pack late in Fall—Run in Damp and Wet Weather—Netting now Unlawful—Quail Shooting on Salt Creek, Sangamon River—Quail not Difficult to Shoot—Missed through ‘Hasto—Shooting on Shoal Créek, Missouri—Quail in Hedges— .QuailinthoGouth,. . . 2... ee BRHICE CONTENTS, 5 CHAPTER VI. Rurrrp Grousr SHOOTING. Distribution and Habits of the Birds—Found in Wild, Lonely Places—Favorite Food of Ruffed Grouse—Beauty and Pride of the Bird—The Drumming of the Male—Deceptiveness of tho Sound—Macdonald’s Drummer-Boy—Much Drumming Before Rain—Nest of the Ruffed Grouse—The Young on the Cass River, Michigan—Wolves at the Camp on the Cass—The Chippewa Indians—Wildness of Ruffed Grouse—The First I ever Shot— Ruffed Grouse hard to Shoot Flying—Goes for Densest Part of tho Thicket—May be Shot over Setters, . q ‘ 7 107-120 ~ CHAPTER VII. SHOOTING THE Woopcocs. Arrival in Spring—The Breeding Season—Nest of the Woodcock— A Woodcock in Confinement—Voracity in Feeding—Young Full Grown in July—Solitary Birds after Separation of Brood—Noc- turnal in Habit—Supposed Second Migration—Laboring Flight in Summoer—Difficult to shoot—Density of Foliage—Snap Shooting— Swift and Twisting Flight in Autumn—Bottoms and Islands of the Mississippi River—Woodcock on the Llinois River—Scarcer in general in the West than in the Atlantic States—Fall Wood- cock Shooting, é si o S A 5 a S z 121-182 CHAPTER VIII. Tux Syiprp anpD Snipz SHoorine. Breeds North of Virginia, but only sparsely in the United States— Arrives at Columbus, Kentucky, early in March—Never appears before the Frost out of Ground—Nearly a Month Later in Illinois than in Kentucky—The Spring Shooting Best—Snipe Wild at First Arrival—Get Fat and Lazy—Snipe Shooting on the Sanga- mon—Snipe very Abundant in the West—Should be Beat for Down-Wind—No Need for Dog on Good Snipe Ground—Difficult to Shoot in Corn-Fields—Shooting on the Bottoms—Lasy to Kill when Fat—A Proposed Match—In Snipe Shooting much Walking Required—Snipe Shooting along Sloughs and Swales—Hovering of Snipe—Tho Fall Snipo Shooting, a . . . 7 183-148 6 CONTENTS. CHAPTER IX. GoupEN PLover, CurLEW, GRAY PLOVER. Arrival of Golden Plover and Curlew—First Seen on Burnt Prairies —Plover like Bare Earth and Pastures—Golden Plover and Cur- lew in Flocks Together—They Follow the Plough—Lying Down for Plover—Plover Shooting from a Buggy—The Method of It— How to Shoot Plover on Foot—Plover Circle Round the Wounded —An Afternoon’s Shooting near Elkhart—Plover Shooting in Christian County—Golden Plover Scattered—Fast Flyers and Good Practice—The Upland or Gray Plover—Last of Spring Migrants—Breeds in Illinois, Iowa, ete.—Ready to Pair when It Arrives—Should, not be Shot in the Spring—Nest of the Upland Plover—Difficult to Shoot in Autumn—Horse and Buggy Needed —Flight of Upland Plover—Sand Snipe and Grass Snipe, . 149-167 CHAPTER X. Witv Dvoks AND WESTERN Duck SHOOTING. The Prime Western Ducks—Beauty of the Wood Duck—Its Rapid Flight—The Mallard—Its Excellence and Beauty—Comparison with Canvas-Back—Mallards’ Nests—The Flappers—Ducks begin to Arrive by Middle of February—Habits of Mallards and Pintails —Their Vast Numbers—Remain Four or Five Weeks—Coming of Ducks in the Fall—Vast Numbers—When Cold Sets In—Heard in the Air all Night—Duck Shooting in the Corn-Fields—Color of Clothes Important—Ducks Wary and Far-Sighted—Method of Shooting, . . . «© 6 © © «© 6 + « 168-182 CHAPTER XI. Ducks AND WESTERN Duck SHOOTING. Cold ‘Work in Hard Weather—The Mlinois River—The Western Corn-Fields—Shooting in Them in Fall—Osage Orange Hedges— light of Ducks in Wet, Windy Weather—In Clear Weather— Ducks in Flight seem Nearer than They Are—Shooting at Prairie Ponds and Sloughs—Live Decoys Best—Dead Duck Decoys bet- ter than Wooden—Method of Setting Dead Mallards as Decoys— Duck Shooting in the Winnebago Swamp—Duck Shooting in Ford County—Mr. M. Sullivant’s Great Farm—Duck Shooting on the Sangamon—Shooting from the Timber—Ninety-five Mallards with No. 9 Shot— Water Fowl Seek Timber in Hard, Windy Weather, . ‘ : r ‘i , ’ 7 i * ‘ 188-197 CONTENTS, +t CHAPTER XII. Wiup Grrsr, CRANES, AND SWANS, The Canada Goose and Brant Goose—Mexican Geese—Hutchinson’s Goose—The White-Fronted Goose—The Snow Goose—Migraiion of Wild Geese—Flight of Wild Geese—Habits of the Geese—First of the Spring Migrants— Geese on Pasture-Lands—The Best Shooting Places—Means of Concealment—Shooting on the Pas- tures from a Buggy—Long Shots at Geese—The Fall Geese—In Wheat-Fields and Shocked Corn—The Roosting Places—Times when Geese Resort to Timber—A Flock on the Ice—Getting into the River—The Ague, anda Remedy—Shooting Brant and Mexican Geese—Great Packs of Mexican Geese—The Cranes of the West —The Sand-Hill Crane—Its High Flight in Spring—Feeding on Corn in Fall—The Large White Crane—Wounded Cranes Fight Hard—Flesh of Cranes when Hung—Pelicans and Swans on the Mississippi, « «1 « «© © *® =» «© #& » TBR CHAPTER XIII. Witp Turkey AND DEER SHOOTING. Excellence and Beauty of the Wild Turkey—Its Haunts and Habits —Methods of Shooting Turkeys—The Wild Turkey’s Nest—Track- ing Turkeys in Snow—Shooting in Thick Snow-Storms—Shooting at Crossing Places—Tracking Turkeys on the Sangamon—Lost in the Timber—A Walk Home of Thirteen Miles—The Great Gobbler of the Sangamon—Turkey Shooting on Shoal Creek—The Cold Nights in Camp—Eleven ‘Turkeys‘to One Gun in Half a Day— After a Wounded Deer—Camping Out without a Tent—A Heavy Thunder-Storm on Delavan Prairie—Deer Shooting in the West— Haunts and Habits—My First Deer—Deer Shooting on Horse- back, . 7 y . . . an) ie . «4 223-250 CHAPTER XIV. Tur ArT or SHOOTING ON THE WING. Tho Art Easily Acquired—Boys Should begin to Shoot Early—No Danger of Accidents—Loading Guns—Large Shot and Too Much Shot Mischievous—Guns for Boys—Handling the Gun—Loading the Gun—Light Loads at First—Shooting at a Target—No Shoot- ing at Sitting Birds—Shooting Larks and Blackbirds—How to Aim—Shooting at Young Grouse—The Causes of Missing—How to Aim at Crossing Birds—Long Shots—The Shot Towers at New York—The Cartridge Company of Bridgeport, + og) 851-873 8 CONTENTS. CHAPTER XV. Sportina Dogs—BREEDING AND BREAKING. Setters and Pointers—Advantages and Drawbacks of Each—The Sharpness of Prairie Grass—Cockle-Burrs in Setters’ Coats—Set- ters Retrieve Well in Water—Cross-Bred Dogs—How to Breed Them—Their Stoutness in ‘the Field—No Timid Dogs Among Them—History of Fanny, Daughter of a Pointer Dog and Setter Bitch—An English Pointer not to be Called Ofi—He Points at Grouse all Night—Best Age for Breaking Dogs—Method of Break- ing—The Setter, Jack—Dick, Son of a Pointer Dog and Setter Bitch—Miles JohmnsonasaBreaker,. . . « « 276-209 ' CHAPTER XVI. PIcGEon SHOOTING. My Beginning at Pigeons—-Match against Staunton—Against A. Heinman—Championship of Ilinois—Match to Shoot from Buggy —Match at Five Hundred—Match to Kill One Hundred Consecu- tively—Match against Mr. King~Match against Doxie—Sweep- stakes at Chicago—Match against J. Kleinman—Match with Ira Paine—Championship and Other Matches—Matches with A. Kleinman—Match against Four Marksmen—Advice to Members of Shooting Club—Suggestion for New Rule—H and T Traps— Scores of Championship Matches—Scores of Exhibition and Other Matches—Conditions and Rules of Champion Badges and Medals ~—Rules of Pigeon Shooting, aS 0 PREFACE BY THE EDITOR. —_—_—_4-——___- Ix the following work, Captain Bogardus has placed before his readers all the knowledge of the haunts and habits of game-birds, and of the art of shooting on the wing, which twenty-five years’ almost constant pursuit has enabled him to attain. It is conveyed plainly and briefly, but fully and without the slightest reserve or qualification. It was deemed that this full communication of ‘all he knew on these subjects was due to his readers, when he resolved to appear before the public as the author of a book. Few men have had an ex- perience as varied and as large; none, I verily believe, have attained as much knowledge of game, or as much skill with the gun. Of late years, at many places where his skill was displayed, he was often urged to embody what he knew of game and of the art of shooting in a book, in order that sportsmen whose other avocations prevented them from paying very great and prolonged attention to those subjects, might reap the benefit of his experience. With a view 10 PREFACE BY THE EDITOR. to comply with these requests, he came to New York, and proposed to me that 1 should assist him in the necessary composition of the work. Perceiving the vast fund of practical knowledge he had amassed, and knowing that the book would form a most valuable contribution to sport- ing literature, I gladly acceded to his proposal, and the result of our combined and conscientious labors is now before the public. I believe this is the first work of the kind that was ever undertaken by a thoroughly prac- tical man, and strictly confined to the knowledge and information derived from his own observa- tion. It would have been very easy to make the book twice as large as it is, by copying, with or without credit, as is the custom, long extracts and descriptions from the standard authors of natural history in this country, but to what useful end? These matters have been copied by one author after another about a dozen times already, and readers have been so provoked by the everlasting repetition of Latin names for familiar birds, that many must have been on the point of pitching the pedantic copy-books into the fire. In this work another method has been followed altogether. Tere are the observa- PREFACE BY THE EDITOR. 11 tions and accumulated knowledge of a man who has been practically engaged in the pursuit of game- in a thoroughly sportsmanlike manner for twenty-five years. For much the greater part of that period, Captain Bogardus has maintained and brought up his respectable and interesting family, almost solely by his gun. From that fact, I concluded that his was the knowledge and experience which would be valuable and instructive to sportsmen, young and old, and interesting to the general public. The former do not want to listen to people who know no more than they know them- selves. The latter do not want to peruse the work of a man on any subject if he never rises above mediocrity, while they gladly welcome the book of one who has proved himself a master of his art. Because Captain Bogardus had been able to live for many years solely by his gun, he was of all men best qualified to enlighten old sportsmen, and instruct the young in regard to the habits and haunts of game and the art of shooting. It has often been said that pinnated grouse could not be killed by the gun in the months of November and December, because they were so 12 PREFACE BY THE EDITOR. wild, and this alleged fact was made the excuse for the trapping and netting by which the markets of the great cities are mainly supplied with that bird in those months. Hardly one out of twenty then offered for sale has been shot. But Captain Bogardus proves that this is either pure inven- tion of the netters and trappers, or due to the imagination of those whose skill with the gun being small, and whose knowledge of the habits of the game being scanty, have failed to kill any at such times themselves. He tells us how he killed them with the gun, and how you can kill them if you follow his instructions. It will be seen by this work that Captain Bo- gardus has been a sportsman of the most resolute and persistent character. No difficulty deterred him, no fatigue subdued him, no misfortune dis- heartened him, when he was out with his dogs and his gun. He has also been a man of the closest observation and of much _ reflection. Hence his philosophy on the habits of birds of pursuit by the sportsman, and in regard to the art and principles of shooting, will be found especially valuable and interesting. CHARLES J. FOSTER. FIELD, COVER, AND TRAP SHOOTING. CHAPTER I. GENERAL INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. Wirnin a comparatively recent period the num- bers of those who follow the delightful and healthful sports of the field have increased almost beyond calculation in this country, and they are still ra- pidly augmenting. Among all those sports there is none so easy of attainment, and certainly none so invigorating, useful, and enjoyable, as the pur- suit of game-birds, waterfowl, etc., over dogs, or, at flight time, in the neighborhood of the haunts of the latter. The vast extent and variety of our territory—woodland interspersed among prairie, pas- ture, and cultivated farms—the great abundance of game to be met with by those who know when and where to seek for it, and the many kinds to be found in these favorite haunts at the proper seasons, afford such excellent and varied shooting as may hardly be experienced if sought for anywhere 13 14 FIELD SHOOTING. else. The art of shooting swift-flying birds on the wing is of comparatively recent origin in this country. Years ago but few people followed it, and they had mostly acquired their skill in Europe before they came here. The quickness and art necessary for even moderate success were almost comparatively unknown in the regions where such game most abounded, and they were in a great measure deemed worthless, of no more practical use than the curious tricks of a juggler. This was not unnatural. The backwoodsmen, and those set- tlers who had made lodgments in the immense prairies of the Western States, could kill a buck with the rifle, or knock over a fat turkey with the same arm; and those who had old-fashioned smooth- bores seldom shot with anything less than buck- shot, or the largest sizes of other shot. Hence they looked with a sort of lazy curiosity akin to contempt upon the doings of the men -who, with good guns and small shot, killed “little birds,” as quail, plover, woodcock, snipe, etc., were denomi- nated. The use of the setter and pointer wes practically unknown. The game was considered to be a trifling matter, not worth the powder and shot expended upon it. The latter were somewhat dear, and money was very scarce. The hunters GENERAL INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. 15 and Indians called the shot-gun by the derisive term “ squaw gun,” and wondered that grown men should delight in its use. All that is now greatly changed. Thousands every year enjoy sport of the highest order, and fill their bags in the most artistic man- ner, in many parts of the country where shooting on the wing was formerly unknown. Shooting of this sort once enjoyed is never willingly relinquished altogether. Those who are able to afford the cost and spare the time from their avocations in the great cities impatiently count the days which must intervene before the time comes for them to jump aboard the train with their guns and their sporting paraphernalia, bound to the shooting-grounds—the places where game is to be found in abundance. Arrived in these sections, and meeting with old friends, the harassed and weak grow vigorous again, and the strong become stronger. The consciousness of skill, the confidence begotten of success, give such a spring to the mind and nerves, and inflame the ardor of pursuit to such a degree, that the fatigues of the excursion are scarcely perceived, and its privations, if such they may be called, are laughed at and merrily endured till speedily forgotten. The habits of the various kinds of game are a subject of great interest and observation, The fine and_ 16 FIELD SHOOTING. cager instinct of the dogs, their great sagacity, en- durance, and patience, are remarked with pride and admiration. The features of the varied landscapes —hill and vale, woodland and riverside, vast prairies with groves and fringes of timber on the branches of winding and meandering streams, broad fields of land, now in pasture, now covered with brown stubble, now waved over by the green flags of the corn, tall, strong, and a place of refuge for quail, grouse, etc.—afford constant pleasure to the sports- man. And after the labors and sports of the day are done, the camp-fire beneath the trees, on the banks of a stream or the margin of a little lake, is a place of calm recreation and repose. You may hear the call of the night-birds, and the low, sup- pressed noises of the nocturnal animals afoot after their prey, but neither the hoot of the owl nor the howl of the wolf will drive slumber from the pillow of brush upon which you rest. The night brings enjoyment almost as pleasant as that which was the recompense of the exertions of the day. Having followed shooting for twenty-five years, mostly all through the different seasons, and some- times camped out as much as three months at a time, never sleeping in a house during that period, I believe I have a sound and extensive practical w GENERAL INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. 17 knowledge of the matters upon which this book is to treat. I am no scientific naturalist, and what I know has not been derived from books. I cannot: give the Latin names of birds of game, waterfowl, snipe, woodcock, ete., and if I could you would not care about them, because the constant repetition of them makes no impression at all upon the sportsman. To him the quail is simply a quail, the pinnated grouse (commonly called prairie chicken) is a grouse, and no Latin is required to make him understand what you mean by a snipe or a woodcock. I cannot set down the sci- entific names by which naturalists distinguish the birds of which I shall treat, but I know their haunts and habits, and I can tell you when and where to seek them, and how to kill them in a sportsmanlike and satisfactory manner. I was born in Albany County, New York, and began to shoot at fifteen years of age. I was then a tall, strong lad, and have since grown into a large, powerful, sinewy, and muscular man. I have always enjoyed fine health, had great strength and endurance, and been capable of much exertion and exposure. When I began to shoot, there was a good deal of game in Albany County, and it chicfly consisted of ruffed grouse and woodcock, 18 FIELD SHOOTING. which are difficult birds for young beginners. I received no instructions from anybody, but I pos- sessed a quick, true eye, and steady nerve, and had, as I believe, the natural gifts which enable a man to become in time, with proper opportunity, a first-rate field shot. It was a long time after that before I ever shot at a pigeon from a trap, and I confess that I had for many years a strong prejudice against that sort of shooting. There were no quail, snipe, or ducks about Albany County at that time, and it was not until I re- moved to the West that I became familiar with them and with the pinnated grouse. Seventeen years ago I moved to Illinois, and settled on the Sangamon River, near Petersburg. It was more a broken, swampy country, with much cover, than a prairie land like that to the northwards in the State. Game of all sorts was in vast abundance. There were vast numbers of quail; the pinnated grouse were rather numerous, though nothing like as much so as upon some of the great prairies; ducks and geese came in immense flocks every spring and fall, and deer and turkeys abounded. It was, too, and is to this day, one of the best places for snipe that I know of. It was a para- dise for a sportsman; and as for the snipe and GENERAL INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. 19 quail, there was hardly a man there who could kill them except myself. Lots of men used to go out to see me shoot. There was one, a great hunter of deer and turkeys, with whom I became very intimate. At first he laughed at me when he saw me loading with No. 8 shot. “That wunt kill nothin’, stranger,” said he. “What little I do at quail I do with No. 1. shot, and - for prairie chicken I always use BBs. You can’t stop *em with anything lighter.”. But he changed his opinion when he found by experience that I could kill ten to his one, and then it was the old story of the fox and grapes. “ Darn the little creatures, I say!” he exclaimed; “I got no use for ’em anyhow!” At that time I used -to stint myself, in quail-shooting time to twenty-five brace a day. When I had got them, I gave over for the day. Often when I was shoot- ing quail in the oak barrens two or three deer have got up close to me. I shot some turkeys; but my bag was mostly made up of quail and pinnated grouse in the fall, and of snipe in the spring. There were snipe in the fall too, but not so many. Ducks and geese were plentiful in the fall and spring, but I did not go after them much at that time. I had no wagon and team, and a 20 FIELD SHOOTING. bunch of ducks and geese is very heavy to carry.” The country about the Sangamon was wild and very sparsely settled. Even now it has no large population, and remains a great resort for ducks and geese, a fine place for snipe, and the quail still abound. There was a fine variety of ducks. The bag would include mallards, bluebills, pin- tails, green-winged teal and blue-winged teal, with some wood-ducks. I consider the mallard the best duck we have in the West, and I doubt very much whether there is any better anywhere else. A great deal is said about the canvas-back, and with justice; but I do not think them any better eating than mallards are in the fall of the year, when they come on large and fat and glorious in plumage from the wild rice-fields of the north- west, away in the British territories. After staying on the Sangamon about two years I moved to Elkhart, in Logan County, where I have lived ever since. It is in the heart of the State of Illinois, a hundred and sixty-six miles south of Chicago, eighteen miles northwest of Springfield, and one hundred and fifteen miles from St. Louis. It was then a grand place for game, and is very good now late in the fall, when the pinnated grouse pack and partially migrate, Fif- GENERAL INTRODUCTORY REMARKS, 21 teen years ago the prairies there were but sparsely settled, and not one acre in a thousand had been broken up. The grouse were in immense num- bers; the quail, though, were not as plentiful as on the Sangamon in the brushy land of the oak barrens. There was, however, and is now, a grove of timber six hundred acres in extent, not far from the town. It is one of the finest in the State, and in it and on its borders there were many quail. This grove was then owned and still belongs to Mr. John D. Gillot. He has a great stock-farm, his pastureland running for seven miles at a stretch. Being a man of great enterprise, as well as large means, he planted hedges all over this estate. They have now grown up, and, affording harbor and nesting-places for the quail, the latter are now more plentiful in that neighborhood than they were when I first went to live there. At that time very few in those parts used the double- barrelled gun, and shot over dogs. I was about the only one who followed shooting systematically and thoroughly. But though the quail in that neighborhood are now very abundant, they are hard to kill. The corn grows very tall, and as ‘soon as a bevy is flushed away they go for the cornfields. Once in them, with the stalks stand- 22 FIELD-SIIOOTING. ing thick and high above your head, you can only kill birds by snap shots such as you make at woodcock in thick cover. You can find them on the stubbles and in the pastures at the right time of day, but when you have fired your two barrels at them they are off to the corn. The pin- nated grouse lie in the corn and on the borders of it a good deal too. There was no trouble in killing a great number when I first went there. T have known sixty young ones to be killed in a morning in one field, not more than a quarter of a mile from Elkhart. For my part, I am very much opposed to such doings. The commence- ment of the shooting season ought to be fixed by law a month later. When the shooting begins, the birds are very young, though of good size, and do not fly either fast or far; the weather is hot, and I am satisfied that above half of those which are killed are spoiled and never used. At the present time the grouse are much more scarce about Elkhart, especially young grouse. The chicf reason is the want of good nesting-places. Except in Mr. Gillot’s extensive pastures, there are no good nesting-places left of any account. This is what causes the great diminution of the numbers of pinnated grouse. They are so prolific, and GENERAL INTRODUCTORY REMARKS, 23 their food is so abundant, that they could stand shooting in and out of season, and even the trap- ping and netting which are so extensively carried on in many parts; but when the prairie is all or nearly all broken up, no good breeding-places remain, and young grouse are not to be found. Thus it has been in a great measure about Elk- hart. Late in the fall, when they pack and come in from the distant prairies where they breed, the birds seem to be as plentiful or nearly as plentiful as they were before. About the last of October and in November you may see as many as five hundred in a pack. They are then strong and wild. Some people maintain that the pin- nated grouse do not migrate from one place to another. I am certain that with us they do. There are. now ten times as many about Elkhart in November as there are in September, therefore the bulk of them are not bred there. Moreover, I have been at Keokuk in Iowa late in the fall, and have seen the grouse coming from the interior of that State in large numbers, and flying across the Mississippi River into Illinois, They are never known to do so at any other season, and if that is not migration I do not know what it can be. The river there is so wide that the flight 2Q4 FIELD SHOOTING. across is a long one for a grouse, and I think nothing but the migratory instinct would induce the grousé to make it, unless it were pressing danger. Now they fuce the danger in order to make their migration, for the people shoot at them as they fly over the town to cross the river, and some are killed. I think they no doubt cross the Mississippi at many other points to make the east bank, and no one ever sees them return to Iowa. Ducks and geese are not so plentiful about Elkhart as they are on the San- gamon,. Still their numbers are very large at times. They come out in the evening to feed in the corn- fields, and at such times 1 have often killed twenty couple, which is a pretty good: bag for one gun. Snipe are now scarce in the neighborhood of Elk- hart. Cultivation and the draining of swamp- lands have converted the places which were the favorite resorts for snipe into the best wheat and corn land in the State; The change of condition in the land is the chief cause of the diminution of game of various sorts in particular places. It has more to do with it than all other causes. Al- though the pinnated grouse are trapped and netted by thousands, as well as shot in a sportsmanlike manner, it would not of itself reduce their num- GENERAL INTRODUCTORY REMARKS, 25 bers so as to be greatly perceptible. Immense numbers are sent East which are taken in nets and traps. Some. are killed by coming in contact with the telegraph wires in their flight. But all these causes would be inadequate to reduce the stock much if the breeding birds had the nesting- places which they formerly used. The grouse used to breed in the prairies, commonly along the edges of the sloughs. In many parts the prairies are nearly all broken up and brought under cul- tivation. Many now make their nests in the fields of the farmer, and these nests are nearly all broken up and destroyed by the ploughing in the spring. Quail, whose nests are made in hedges and corners of fences and under bunches of bram- bles, escape, and we see them increase in numbers in the very places where the grouse diminish. A great source of destruction to the nests of the grouse might be easily prevented. In most places there are patches of prairie left for pasture, and in these the birds build. Many farmers follow a practice of burning these patches over late in the spring, under a notion that it improves the pasturage by causing the young grass to spring up fine and succulent as soon as the weather gets warm. When these patches of prairie are burned 26 FIELD SHOOTING. over, there are commonly many nests in each, sometimes scores of them, and they are half-full of eggs. This cuts up the supply of grouse root and branch, and reduces the numbers to a serious extent every year. It is a great mistake on the part of the farmers, for the grouse, by consump- tion of grasshoppers and other destructive insects, is one of the agriculturist’s best friends, and the grass would be just as good if the patches of prairie were burned over late in the fall, when there would be no nests destroyed. It is to be hoped that this plan will be adopted for the fu- ture; and I think it will be, for the possession of guns and sporting-dogs, and the love of shooting, are spreading among the farmers of the West, and these, after all, will be in time the most efficient preservers of the game. The men, such as my- self, who go every fall to shoot in the great un- broken prairies which still exist in Ford County, Champagne County, and about there, burn the grass themselves late in the fall, and thus leave nothing to be burned the following spring in nest- ing-time. By this means the stock of grouse is fully kept up, and it is from thence the great packs migrate towards the last of October and in November. Upon this subject I consider myself GENERAL INTRODUCTORY REMARKS, 27 competent to speak. I have had much experience, and haye conferred with many practical men whose experience is nearly or quite as great as my own. What I have stated I know to be truc. No doubt, when the hen-birds have lost their first nests by the plough, or by the much more destruc- tive burning of the prairie patches late in spring, they make other nests; but these also are often destroyed; and if they are not, the broods are small and late, and quite unable to take care of themselves when the shooting season begins. The best spring shooting in Illinois is snipe; and in many parts, such as that on the Sangamon River, the birds are found in abundance. I know of no better ground for them anywhere. After the snipe come the golden plover, sometimes in very large flocks. This beautiful and delicious little bird stays with us some three or four weeks, and the sport they afford is excellent. They are commonly shot from horseback, or by means of a wheeled vehicle, as is said to be the prac- tice in the Eastern States. You must be a good sportsman to fill your bag with them, and there is no better practice for a good shot than at them. After remaining with us about a month the golden plover go farther north to breed. The up 28 FIELD SHOOTING. land or gray plover stays with us and breeds in Illinois. They flock to some extent, but. not. in such large numbers as the golden plover do. I have often seen as many as four hundred or five hundred of the latter together, and they sometimes fly so close in the pack that a great many can be cut down with two barrels when you can get within fair distance. After they have scattered and run before they fly, the practice at the single birds is as good as anything for the education of a marksman. The upland plover are more open in their flight, as well: as in smaller flocks. They ought not to be shot at all in the spring with us, for they do not arrive from the South until about corn-planting time, and then they are ready to pair and make their nests. September is the proper month to shoot them. They are then very fat and delicious for the table. They frequent the great pasture I mentioned belong- ing to Mr. Gillot. When Miles Johnson of New Jersey was in Illinois shooting with me over that ground, he said he had never seen such plover as those before—that is, for size and fatness—and that each of them would fetch half a dollar in Boston market. Eight or ten years ago the American hare, GENERAL INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. 29 commonly called the rabbit, used to abound about Elkhart. I and another man, by beating the hedges, one on cach side, after the first snow, when there was about four inches on the ground, once killed a hundred and sixty in a day. They decreased at one time, but recently they have been getting numerous again, and there is now a good head of them. The abundance of game in any given year depends very much upon the breeding season, for there are commonly old ones left to raise a good stock. If the spring is warm and moderately dry, the broods of quail and grouse are large, and the young birds grow up strong, so as to be able to. fly fast and go a good distance when the shooting season begins. When the spring is cold and wet, many broods -are lost through the nests being drowned out. The broods which are hatched ont are small, and the young birds have a hard time of it until summer begins. The last spring was a very favorable one in the West, and grouse and quail are numerous and strong. Farmers who had seen many nests of grouse told me that in most in- stances every egg had been hatched out, and in June I saw myself as many as twelve young grouse in a gang. All the old ones that I ob- 4 30 FIELD SHOOTING. served had large numbers of young birds, and the latter were large and strong. The Western coun- try abounds with hawks, and these persecute the quail, grouse, and duck very much. I have seen a bevy of quail in such desperate terror when pursued by a hawk that they dashed against a house and many were killed. I kill all the hawks I can, and often let a grouse go unshot at in order to bring down a hawk. There is one bird of that order which makes great ravages among the ducks. It just kills for the sake of killing, for it strikes down one after the other. It is a small, long-winged hawk, very muscular and strong, and uncommonly rapid in flight. I have seen this hawk when pursuing ducks strike one down and ‘let it lie, going on after the others, and continuing to harass and kill until the prey could reach water. This hawk does not consume a fourth of the grouse and duck it kills. It is not large enough to carry away a good-sized duck, and I doubt whether it could fly away with a grouse for any distance. Eighty miles from Elk- hart there is the Winnebago Swamp, a large and wild track of water, moss, and cover. Ducks, such as mallard, teal, and widgeon, breed there in large numbers. [ have often flushed them GENERAL INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. 31 from their nests when I have been snipe-shoot- ing thereabout. A few geese breed there also, but perhaps these are only those which, owing to being wounded or to some accident, have been unable to join the great flocks in their spring flight towards the North. From what I am told by men who have been explorers and hunters in the service of the Hudson’s Bay Company, no matter how far north Indians or white men may penetrate, it is found that the geese go farther in the summer, and bring back their broods in the fall. In this Winnebago Swamp I have occasion- ally found the nest of the sand-hill crane, and sometimes that of the bluc crane. The crane builds its nest on the top of a muskrat house, just as the geese do in that section. It lays two eggs, much larger than those of a goose, especially in length, and one of the cranes commonly keeps watch by the nest. The nests of the ducks are built on tussocks of grass. The Winnebago Swamp used to harbor many wolves, and there are a con- siderable number there yet. Three years ago, in company with a hunter named Henry Conderman, I found the den of a she-wolf in the swamp, and we took her litter of six whelps. Afterwards we trapped the old one. We got thirty-five dollars 82 FIELD SHOOTING. from the county, as it pays a bounty of five dol- lars a head. The gray prairie wolf is very de- structive of young pigs, lambs, geese, etc., and wolves are more numerous in Illinois now than most people suppose. Last spring Mr. Gillot took a litter of five whelps in his grove near Elkhart. He has a grand wolfhunt every sum- mer. The men who have hounds in the neigh- borhood meet, and a small pack is got together, with which we hunt the grove, and there is nearly always fine sport. Mr. Gillot’s daughters have fine saddle-horses and are good riders. With some other ladies they sec the chase from the hills, and there is a grand time. Last summer we ran three down in the pastures and killed them. Another also took to the open, “and was killed after the hunt was over in one of the pastures by Mr. L. B. Dean: Thus there were four ac- counted for, all of one litter and about half: grown. But the old wolves go& away, as they usually do, for our hounds are not able to run on to an old wolf. They go very fast, keep up their lope for a long time, know the ground well, and are very cunning as well as fierce when cornered or brought to bay. Gray foxes are numerous with us. Eagles are commonly to be GENERAL INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. 33 found along the creeks, and they are sometimes very bold. Last winter one made a sudden pounce and grabbed a grouse I had just shot. I gave him the No.6 shot from the other barrel, and as he was near I expected to sec him fall, but he got away with the charge without the grouse. From that which has been stated in this intro- ductory chapter, it will be apparent that there is no trouble in finding places where ‘good shooting may be had. Even where there are no pinnated grouse, the sportsman may find plenty of work for his dogs and his gun. It is not to be expected that, in parts very thickly settled and populated, there will be the abundance and variety of game which might once be found. Many snipe-grounds are now drained, and some are even thickly built over. The brakes and thickets which once held the woodcock have largely been cut up and cleared away. Quail, however, are more nume- rous in many States than they ever were before. The shooting at them is excellent in most of the counties of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky, Iowa, Missouri, Wisconsin, and Minnesota. North- ern Indiana and Michigan are also famous for snipe and duck, as Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, and 34 FIELD SHOOTING. Minnesota are. Perhaps the best general shooting is to be had in Northeastern Missouri, for there, besides grouse, quail, waterfowl, etc., the sports- man may come upon wild turkeys and deer, and the same is true of some parts of Iowa. Of the best places for game in the Eastern States I am not so well acquainted, and I shall, therefore, say but little about them. This book is mainly to relate the results of my own experience, not to gather up and adopt what others may know. CHAPTER II. GUNS AND THEIR PROPER CHARGES. I coven never see any use to the shooter in a long theoretical or practical description of the principles and details of guns as they are made. All such knowledge is necessary to the gunmaker, but of no practical use at all to the shooter, for which reason I shall say next to nothing about it. It is no more essential to the marksman or young sportsman that he should understand the mecha- nism and mode of manufacturing guns, than it is that he should determine whether the Chinese or Roger Bacon first invented gunpowder before he shall fire a shot off. Sportsmen may safely leave such matters to the gunmakers, who are nearly everywhere a very ingenious, painstaking, trust- worthy class of men. There is no handicraft in which more care is displayed or more ambition felt to excel. The improvements and ingenious devices which have so rapidly followed one an- other of late years, all proceeding from members of 35 36 FIELD SI00TING, the art and mystery of gunmaking, establish this beyond doubt. There are plenty of men among us who can remember when nothing was in use but the old flint-lock gun. They have not forgot- ten the misfires which often occurred, when the sportsman was left staring after the bird, which flew away rejoicing, and impartially distributing his curses between the flint, the lock, and the priming. The percussion-lock with its detonating cap was an immense improvement, and, no doubt, suggested the use in the household of the friction- matches which have quite superseded the old- fashioned tinder-box with its piece of flint and steel. Then came the breech-loader, an invention of enormous value, and so much improved upon since its first discovery and application that upon this principle, with various details of construction for opening, shutting, and securing the piece at the breech, the most convenient, the safest, and the best guns in the world are now made. A few years ago many good sportsmen would have dis- puted this statement, and there are some who will do so now. It is, however, founded upon large experience and many trials of the breech-loader in my own hands, against the most vaunted muzzle- loaders in those of other good marksmen and GUNS AND THEIR PROPER CHARGES. 37 sportsmen. I was for some time after breech-load- ing guns came out of a contrary opinion, but results convinced me of my error. Results always convince reasonable men—that is to say, a great preponderance of results. When such a man has held a cherished opinion upon what seems to be sufficient grounds, he does not abandon it all at once because something happens which seems to tell against it. He tries the matter again and again, and when, after a large number of trials, there is a great preponderance of results against his preconceived opinion, he changes it. Now the fool never changes his. No matter what happens, the obstinate blockhead will not admit of change in consequence of discovery, His motto is, “ What I says I stands to!” I first began to shoot with an old musket—flint- lock, of course, and probably one of those specimens of “Brown Bess” which had been used in wars against the French and Indians before the Revolu- tion. I was then a boy, and soon found out that for the game about Albany County, New York, “ Brown Bess” would not do. As soon as by hard work and careful saving I had got together twenty-five dollars (twenty-five dollars was rather hard to get in those days) I bought a muzzle-loader. It was a 38 FIELD SHOOTING. cheap gun, and I do not recommend cheap guns but when a man cannot afford an expensive on a cheap gun is a good deal better than none, c than an old “Brown Bess” musket. For som years after 1 went to Illinois as well as before, never shot with any but common guns. I kille ‘plenty of game, and could always sell a gun whe it was pretty well worn out for as much as I ha paid for it.. Men looking at the size of the bunc of grouse or ducks | brought in, or at the twent: brace of quail to which I stinted myself in th oak barrens on the Sangamon, thought it was th gun which accounted for the success, and were read: to buy it. Afterwards I got a Greener gun, one oi the best muzzle-loaders that I have ever seen. paid one hundred and twenty-five dollars for it and it had but one fault. It weighed seven pound and a half, which is too light for my estimate oi excellence. It kicked when pretty heavily charged and kept my finger and cheek sore. But it was : close-shooting, hard-hitting gun, and when thi breech-loaders came out I would not have swappe it for a hundred of them. I thought they wouk not put their shot regular and close, and that the) would lack penetration. I have since completel) changed that opinion. I was then ready to shoo GUNS AND THEIR PROPER CHARGES. 39 with the Greener gun against any man with a breech- loader, and would have laid all the money I could raise that I beat him in the field and at the traps. I might possibly have done so, for I have never yet met a man who could beat me in field-shooting, but the breech-loading gun would not have been the cause of my opponent’s defeat. My opinion of breech-loaders now is, that they excel muzzle-load- ers in three or four particulars of the very greatest importance. Of course I speak of good guns. In the first place, they put the shot closer and dis- tribute them more evenly than muzzle-loaders do. Some sportsmen will say “No!” I should my- self have said No once, and so would several other noted marksmen I can name who were afterwards convinced by me against their wills, and now use no guns but breech-loaders. A breech-loader will also shoot as hard as a muzzle-loader, provided you use a little more powder. My breech-loading guns have shot harder than any muzzle-loading gun I ever tested them against, but I used a dram more powder, and of fine quality at that. I think I was the first man who ever stepped up to shoot a championship match at pigeons with a breech-load- ing gun. It was against Ira Paine, on Long Island. I was defeated in the match, but it was not the 40 TIELD sIlooprsa. fault-efthe gun. I liked that so well that 1 agreed to shoot at,one hundred birds every day for a week against Paine; each day’s match to be inde- pendent of the others—a hundred birds each for five hundred dollars. We shot the first of the six, but as I killed eighty to Paine’s sixty-two, he paid forfeit on the other matches. Since then I have used breech-loaders altogether, whether for match- shooting or in the field. Besides the superiority of their shooting, the quickness of the shots when you come upon birds in the field which lie well is a very material advantage. The greater ease with which the ammunition is carried is another; and the cleanliness and complete absence of danger in loading is a further great point. Many accidents formerly occurred in the loading of muzzle-loaders. And I must say this for the gunmakers, even when cheap muzzle-loaders were in use, not one accident in a hundred, in my experience, was ow- ing to defects in the barrels of the guns. Of the few which burst, nine out of ten were either im- properly loaded or the charge had partly shifted before the trigger was pulled. The fact is now aud always was, that the vast majority of acci- dents with guns are not caused by bad guns, but by bad handling of guns which are good enough GUNS AND THEIR PROPER CHARGES, 41 for anybody’s use. Another great thing in favor of the breech-loader is its certainty in wet and damp weather; there are no-misfires -on~that ac- count. The first cost of a breech-loader is some- what larger than that of a muzzle-loader of equal goodness and finish. Formerly the cost of ammu- nition made it dearer to use, but the employment of metallic cartridge-cases has changed that. They can be used over and over again, and I have used some above a hundred times. Thus the expense of ammunition has been largely reduced. There has, too, been a great reduction of late in the price of good, strong, exact-shooting breech-loading guns, and they will, no doubt, soon supersede muzzle- loaders altogether. Many of the superb, highly- finished and fitted guns are sold, but if a man can- not afford to go to the highest price, he can find good serviceable weapons for less money. Still, as a good gun will last a man the greater part of a lifetime, it is well to buy the best you can really afford when you are about the business. A serviceable breech-loader can now be got for a hundred dollars; but where you have means pay more money for a better finished, and perhaps - “truer and more durable, article. I shoot with a gun of ten gauge, thirty-two inches in the bar- 42 FIELD SIIOOTING. rels, and ten pounds weight. This is a gun for all sorts of uses. It will stop anything that flies or runs on this side of the Rocky Mountains, if properly charged and aimed. Many may think ten pounds too heavy to carry, but the advan- tage of a good solid gun in delivery of fire is very. great. I do not like light guns, neither muzzle-loaders nor breech-loaders. The breech- loader I am now using was a three-hundred-dollar gun, and, considering the prices they were selling at when I bought it, was worth the money. It has done a great deal of work—much hard work —and done it well. I have shot with it twelve times in matches against time, undertaking to kill fifty birds in eight minutes, and have won the money every time. I have also killed with it fifty-three out of fifty-four birds in four min- utes and forty-five seconds. This was at Jersey- ville, Illinois, twenty yards from the trap and two birds in the trap. H. B. Slayton was present. At New Orleans I killed one hundred and eleven out of one hundred and eighteen in seventeen minutes and thirty seconds, and picked “up my own birds. I have shot many other, matches with this gun, besides using it in a vast amount of field-shooting every spring, fall, and GUNS AND THEIR PROPER CHARGES. 43 winter, All this work it has stood well. It has never been to a gunsmith-shop to be repaired, and is as tight at the breech and as perfect in the opening and clasping action as ever it was. These facts prove conclusively that there is no- thing wrong in the principle of a breech-loader, and that, if such a gun is properly constructed, it will stand as much wear and tear as @ muz- zle-loader. I am, however, of the opinion that shooting the time-matches has somewhat impaired the fine shooting qualities of this gun by mak- ing the barrels so hot. I fancy it does not now throw its shot so close or distribute it so evenly as it did before the barrels were heated in these matches. They got so hot that the resin broiled out of the soldered joints along the rib, and in one instance burned my hand through a buckskin glove. To shoot well, a man must have his gun so stocked as to fit him. Some require a longer stock than others. Some like stocks which are nearly straight, while others can shoot with a gun the stock of which is crooked. It depends mostly on the build of the man. A long-armed man does not want a gun with a short stock. A man with a moderately long neck cannot use a gun which is straight in the stock with ease 44 FIELD SHOOTING, or pleasure. I choose a stock of moderate length, and one that is rather crooked—one with a drop of about three inches. This sort of a gun comes even up to the shoulder with most men, and you do not have to crook the neck much in taking aim with it. Some people pretend that there is no need to look along the rib at the bird in order to shoot well. They shoot well, and they say they do not do so. I believe they are mis- taken. Taking aim does not mean dwelling on the aim and pottering about in an uncertain way with the gun at the shoulder. Even in snipe- shooting there is a distinct aim taken, though, when a good-fitting gun is brought up to the shoulder, the aim is almost instantaneous, and the discharge follows on the next instant. At pigeons some men do shoot without sighting the bird; but they know just where the bird must fly from, and they have the trick of covering the trap by raising the breech and lowering the muzzle as if done by a gauge, and then they blaze away. Such men often kill the bird before it gets on the wing, and this proves that practically they shoot at the trap and just beyond it, rather than at the bird. This sort of thing is impracticable in the field, and there, if not everywhere else, the man GUNS AND THEIR PROPER CHARGES, 45 who sights his bird along the rib of his gun, in shooting straight forward, makes the best bag. There are, of course, some situations in which you must practise snap-shooting to get any shooting at all. At woodcock in cover, or at grouse and quail in corn, you can have but a glimpse of the bird you shoot at, and you must aim just where intui- tion, as it may be called, tells you the bird will be. In cases where the bird can be plainly seen it should be distinctly aimed at. It is not a ques- tion of quickness. Jn the time-matches where I must necessarily shoot very quick, and in those matches where I stand between two traps forty yards apart, which are pulled at the same time, I sight my bird before I pull the trigger. If I did not, I could never accomplish the feats which have become easy to me. There are still many men prejudiced against breech-loading guns, and some who have given them a trial remain so. But in most of these latter cases the men have either got hold of a poor gun, or do not know how to load a good one. If the cartridge is not properly filled, wadded, and turned down, the shooting will be inferior, no matter how good the gun may be or how skilful the shooter. Last April I saw a match shot at Frank- 46 FIELD SHOOTING. fort, Kentucky, in which one man used a breech- loader and the other a muzzleloader. As soon as they began to shoot I saw that the breech-loader, although it was in the hands of the best man of the two, would be beaten. And why? Because his cartridges were not properly filled. The wads on the powder, instead of lying flat and snug, were often partly edgewise. It was the same with the wads on the shot, besides which the cartridges were not well turned down over the wads. The shooter who had lost the match blamed his gun, which was a light one, and sent for one of ten pounds weight, like mine. But if he is as careless in loading his eartridges for the heavy gun as he was when he had the light one, the shooting will not be any better. I could have told him how to win, but it was not my business to interfere in the matter. The shot in the cartridges should have been taken out, the wads sent home true, and the ends of the cases turned down close after the shot was replaced and evenly wadded. The first time I visited New York and other Eastern States for the purpose of pigeon-shooting I spent some days with Miles Johnson, of Yard- ville, Mercer County, New Jersey. He is a fomous pigeon-shooter and an excellent field sports- GUNS AND THEIR PROPER CHARGES. 47 man. Few men, if any, know better how, when, and where to make a good bag of woodcock, snipe, or quail. Now, Miles had a number of crack muzzle-loaders, expressly for shooting-matches, and he was confident no breech-loader could equal them in pattern and penetration. I remarked that I had a good gun, and would shoot against him and his best muzzle-loader at a target. Miles declared with some heat and vociferation that “he’d be —” if I could beat him in shooting at a target at all, let alone using a breech-loader against the most famous of his muzzle-loaders. However, taking paper for targets and our guns, we repaired to an old barn near Yardville, and shot at them. Mr. Nathan Dorsey was present. I beat Miles very easily, and with an ounce of shot put more pellets in the target from the breech- loader than he did with an ounce and a half from his muzzle-loader. Miles hardly knew what to make of it, but, perceiving that the penetration of my shot was also good, he finally acknowledged that a good breech-loader would beat any other sort of gun in shooting, and he now shoots with one himself. And thus it will be found in almost every case. When a man has strong precon- ceived opinions, it is of very little use to argue 48 FIELD SHOOTING. with him. The effectual thing is to show him that he is in error by actual demonstration of the facts in his presence. Nothing but actual experi- ence would have convinced me at one time that a breech-loader would shoot as well as, or better than, a first-rate muzzle-loader. Now I know the fact. I convinced Abraham Kleinman, of Calumet, Illi- nois, in the same practical manner. He is, in my opinion, the best duck-shooter in the country, and one of the best at pigeons from the trap. His brothers, John and Henry, are also good shots. They had used muzzle-loaders all their lives, and could not be persuaded that breech loaders were good until Abraham found that I could beat him and use one. He then got one himself, and John and Henry soon followed his example. Nearly all the good shots in Illinois now prefer the breech-loading gun. Some held out against it for a long time on the ground that it was new—as if every good thing which is old had not been new itself one time. Not very long ago the percussion- lock was new. Again, some people have a pre- judice as to breech loaders, believing them to be defective in the very points wherein they excel. On the seventh and eighth of last April I shot at Frankfort, Kentucky, for sweepstakes. All the GUNS AND THEIR PROPER CHARGES. 49 subscribers except myself had muzzle-loading guns. It was a wet, damp day, and my opponents had got it into their heads that the breech- ‘loader would often miss fire in such weather. They therefore insisted upon a change in their rules so as to provide that when the gun missed fire it should be a lost bird, no matter how well the gun might have been loaded. I must admit that I chuckled inwardly as I agreed to this change. I knew the weather might affect their caps, but that it could not impair mine in the cartridges. We shot the first day; the muzzle- loaders missed fire several times, while my breech- loader never missed fire at all. The upshot of it was that for the second day’s shooting they de- manded the repeal of the new rule, so that they could have another bird after a misfire, if the gun was properly loaded and capped. I could, of course, have resisted this demand effectually ; for when in such a case action has begun, there can be no change in rules or conditions without the unanimous consent of all concerned as principals. But I agreed to the change, and won both stakes. A good breech-loader will shoot as well in wet weather as in fair weather, and there will be no misfires on account of damp. But if there is a 50 FIELD SHOOTING. defect in the action of the plunger, so that it does not strike square on the cap, there will be mis- fires in any weather. This is a point which needs particular attention in the choice of a gun. As I said before, I shoot with a gun of ten pounds weight now, and prefer it much to those of seven and a half pounds, with which I used to shoot formerly. But some think a gun of ten pounds too heavy to carry through a long day and use in all sorts of ground. For many a lighter gun would be better for woodcock-shooting, and for grouse and quail in tall corn. But I would not recommend any one to get a gun of less weight than seven and a half pounds for general shooting and good service. If in choosing a gun you are in doubt concerning the weight which will suit you, give the gun the benefit of it, and take one a pound heavier than you have had before, if it weighed seven and a half pounds or less. A man soon gets used to the extra pound in the weight of his gun, and carries and uses it as easily as he did the lighter one, while the shooting of it will be much nicer and more pleasant, and the bag of game will be larger. The question is one of conve- nience, hardly of strength; for any man fit to go into the field at all can carry and use a gun GUNS AND THEIR PROPER CHARGES. 51 of eight pounds weight. It is true that until men have worked themselves into some condition, they will get tired in tramping over the prairies and fields and through the coverts carrying such a gun, but so they would if they carried nothing but a cane. x In loading a gun of ten gauge for grouse I put into my cartridges four and a half or five drams of powder and an ounce of No. 9 shot, in the early part of the season. Later on I use No. 8 shot, and still later No. 7% In November and December, for the shooting of grouse and duck, I charge with No. 6. Some use larger shot for ducks, but a charge of No. 6 from a good gun, well held, will stop a duck as far off as seventy yards sometimes. With a strong charge of pow- der and shot of moderate size there is greater penetration, and a better chance of hitting besides. When I go out expressly for brant and geese, I load my cartridges with No. 2; but when out for general shooting, I have killed many brant and some geese with No. 6. For quail-shooting I use No. 8 or No. 9; for plover, No. 8; for snipe, No. 10. For wild turkeys I once preferred shoot- ing with a rifle, but | now use the breech-loading shot-gun with No. 1 shot in the cartridges. 52 FIELD SHOOTING. With such a gun and ammunition I have killed as many as eleven in one forenoon. For field- shooting and match-shooting I have hitherto used what is called Dead Shot powder, and have found it very good. I have, however, since given a thorough test to the Orange Powder made by the Laflin and Rand Powder Company. I found the Orange Ducking and Orange Lightning Powder: the best for giving penetration that I have used, and as good for making pattern as any. I shot it from my own gun, and can conscientiously and strongly recommend it. They make lower grades of pow- der nearly as good, but the sportsman had better buy the sorts mentioned. In champion matches I use paper cases for the cartridges, and put in five drams of powder, with two pink-edged wads over it. They must be forced down square and level upon the powder with a rammer, but not rammed too hard. An ounce and a half of No. 9 shot is then put in, evenly placed, and a thin wad, or the half of a split pink-edged wad, is pressed down firmly and evenly upon the shot. The cartridge is then to be turned down smoothly and closely on the upper wad. In matches and in field-shooting I always have used the shot made by Tatham & Brother, of New York, when it was @UNS AND THEIR PROPER CHARGES. 53 possible to get it. When I shot the championship match against Abraham Kleinman, of Calumet, at Chicago, there was none of Tatham’s shot of the right number in the city. Being determined to shoot with no other, if I could help it, I tele- graphed to Detroit for a bag, and it was sent on by express in time for the shooting. I killed all my hundred birds, and only seven fell out of bounds. I decidedly prefer No. 9 shot to any other number at the trap. or field-shoot- ing 1 employ metallic cartridge-cases; they shoot well and are cheap, as they can be used many times over. The paper ones shoot a little the best, but a bird or two in field-shooting is a mere nothing, and metal cases do well enough. I load them with five drams of powder and one pink- edged wad square down upon it, and the same as to the shot. I employ wads two sizes larger than the bore of the gun. Thus, for a ten-gauge gun, No. 8 wads. This is necessary to keep them firm, so that the charge may not start in one barrel when the other is fired. Even with the large, tight wads in the cartridges it is best to fire the barrels as nearly alternately as may be. It will not do to shoot one barrel four or five times with the charge in the other all the while. 54 FIELD SHOOTING. 1 believe there is nothing more needful to be said concerning guns, ammunition, and loading. It will have been seen that I believe in the necessity of large charges of good, strong powder more than in the efficacy of very large shot. The smaller shot, as I believe, are driven at higher velocities, and have greater penetration, than larger ones, Besides, the number of pellets to the weight of the charge is a very material thing. The more there are, the more will, in all pro- bability, be put into the bird shot at. But, as a matter of course, in following this principle a man is not to run into extremes and use very small shot for large game. On the other hand, he is not to be too ready, when the birds are not brought to bag, to lay it to the fault of small-sized shot. No shot is big enough to stop a bird without hitting him; and before changing the size of the shot or finding fault with the gun, it will be better to endeavor to mend ard improve the aim. CHAPTER II. PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING. Tux pinnated grouse, commonly called prairie- chicken where it is most abundant in the West, is a handsome bird, weighing from two pounds to two and a half pounds, sometimes nearly three when it has reached mature size. It is a delicious bird on the table, cither when split and broiled while young, the flesh being then white, or roasted when of full size. It formerly prevailed in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Long Island, and Kentucky, in parts where there were open heaths; but it is not now found until the valley of the Mississippi is reached. There are none in Ohio, but few in Indiana and Michigan; but it is plentiful in Illi- nois, lowa, Minnesota, Kansas, Nebraska, and parts of Missouri and Wisconsin. The pinnated grouse is a bird of the grassy plains and great prairies, and does not frequent the woodland, save on frosty mornings, when it may be seen perched on trees near the edges of the groves, At such times, too, it will be seen perched on fences and corn-shocks, 55 56 FIELD SHOOTING, On such mornings, when the weather i3 still as well as chilly, the grouse may be heard cackling and chattering in the timber-land for a consider- able distance inwards, but on other occasions they never resort to the groves. This bird is certainly of much service to the agriculturist, as it consumes many grasshoppers and other de- structive insects, while the little wheat, corn, and oats it eats does not amount to anything by comparison. Indeed, its food, before the wheat- land is in stubble, is probably wholly composed of insects and the buds of heather and other plants to be found in the prairies and in the spacious pastures of the West. Before the great prairies of Illinois and other Western States were broken up by the plough of the settler, the grouse were more numerous than they are now, and they could not have fed on grain, because there were no fields of grain within hundreds of miles of them. It is the same now in those parts where the prairies are still extensive, and on the great pastures where droves of bullocks, hundreds strong in number, are fatted for the Eastern mar- kets. It is my firm belief, from observations made for many years about the time of the breeding season, that the pinnated grouse is poly- PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING, 57 gamous, like our domestic cocks and hens. I have never seen them paired off as quail are. Early in the spring the cocks are together in gangs. They get on hilly places,' swell out their necks, and make a booming noise, which can be heard at a considerable distance. At this time, too, they fight with each other like game-cocks. The hens at the same season are to be found in gangs, but not on the same ground as the cocks. While the latter congregate on the hills the hens remain on the prairie, and go into the corn-fields to feed. A great deal of corn remains standing all the winter in the West, and is not shucked until it is time to plough and plant again. The grouse mostly roost in the long grass of rich bottom- lands. About the last of April and beginning of May the hens make their nests. I have found one on the tenth of May containing as many as eight eggs. The nest is made on the ground, and formed of a little grass, and is a good deal like that of a domestic hen when she makes one in the fields. When the hen-grouse can conveniently get to the prairie, they build in that grass. When they cannot, they build in the fields, and often in patches of weeds. In the bottoms, which are generally wet at that season, the nests are made 58 FIELD SHOOTING. on tussocks of thick grass which rise above the surface. When the weather happens to be wet about the last of May, many nests in the bottom- lands are overflowed, and the young which may have been hatched mostly perish by cold, starva- tion, or drowning. The hens which have had their nests destroyed by floods, by prairie-burn- ing, or by the plough, commonly build again, but their broods are late, and usually of small num- ber. The hen lays from twelve to eighteen eggs, white in color, and about the size of those of a bantam hen. The hen sets twenty-one days, the same as barn-door fowl. Thé young run as soon as hatched; and if a man or a dog should go near where they are, they will hide and skulk under the grass, even on the first day, while the old hen will try to lead the intruder away. They feed on insects for the most part, the old hens catching them at first for the young chicks. The latter, however, soon learn to catch them for themselves. As they grow larger, they feed a good deal on herbage. The young increase in size very rapidly. They are not hatched until early in June, at the earliest; and on the fourth of July, in a favorable season, I have seen broods which were half grown. The breeding-time varies ac- PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING. 59 cording to the season and the situation, but every year there are some broods early, some late, and some very late, the latter being brought off by hens which have lost their first nests. By the fifteenth of August some of the broods are about full grown; but they are then tame, and, having grown so rapidly, are weak on the wing, and soon tire. I believe hybrids have been produced by the hen-grouse and the bantam cock. Last spring, at Omaha, Nebraska, I saw in the possession of Mr. George A. Hoagland, President of the Shoot- ing Club, a bird of the preceding year, which had been shot out of a covey of seven or eight. This bird was believed to be a hybrid. There was another of the same brood in the town, and both were well stuffed and set up. All the brood were alike as to markings and appearance. Their size was that of a grouse two-thirds grown. In shape they were more like the bantam or barn-door fowl than the grouse. The ground color of their plumage was a dingy white, but they were spangled all over with feathers colored and barred like those of grouse. That they were hatched by a hen-grouse is unquestionable, for she was often seen with them. She made her nest close to a house, and it was believed that a domestic cock 60 FIELD SHOOTING. was the father of her young ones. Albinos of the grouse species are sometimes seen, but those above referred to were not at all like Albinos. There is a very beautiful specimen of the Albino at the Grand Central Hotel at Omaha, and the supposed hybrids did not resemble it in the least. lwas informed that this brood of spangled grouse or hybrids were exceptionally wild. But for all that most of them were shot, though but two pre- served. These birds are still to be seen at Omaha, and it might be well for a scientific naturalist to examine them. The game-law of Illinois allows the shooting of grouse to commence on the fifteenth of Au- gust, and in some States it is suffered to begin as early as the first of that month. Both these dates are too early. The first of September would be quite soon enough, and most sportsmen would prefer that date. As the law now stands, nearly all begin to shoot early; for as some will do so, it cannot be expected that many others will refrain. On the fifteenth of August some broods of grouse are full grown, but the great majority are not, and many broods are not more than half grown, while some are so small as to be almost unable to fly. These are the broods of birds whose first PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING. 61 nests were broken up in the spring. I never shoot at these half-callow young, but there are plenty of people who do. The early-grouse shooting is very good practice for young beginners with the gun, as they lie until you are near them, and fly slowly. But it would be just about as good if the shooting was deferred fifteen days later by law, as the birds would still lie close and fly slowly. The early shooting makes the birds wild before they would otherwise become so, and it brings many to the bag half grown that would, under other circumstances, be bagged full grown. In the early part of the season grouse-shooting in the West is the easiest there is. The birds lie well to the dogs, their flight is slow, and they can usually be marked down near at hand. There is, however, one thing which affords pro- tection to the grouse, and presents considerable difficulty to the shooter. There are commonly corn-fields at no great distance, and if they fly into the corn when flushed in the stubbles or the prairie, it is very difficult to kill them. It is, on the whole, better to let them go as not at- tainable. Men cannot shoot well in tall corn; dogs can do but little in it, even the best of dogs, at that season, and young ones are utterly 62 FIELD SHOOTING. useless, as they can neither see you nor you them, and no instructions can be given to them. The early season is the time for young beginners, as the broods are then numerous and easily found. If the shooting was not allowed before September, it would. answer the purpose of teaching the no- vices quite as well; for though the birds would be somewhat stronger on the wing, they would lie just as close, and would be larger. After the broods have been shot at two or three weeks, they are thinned out considerably, and have be- come much wilder. They. are then of fine size, the weather has become cooler, and the birds can be kept, At least half of the young grouse killed in the month of August become spoiled and are never used. Some may doubt this, but I state what I know to be facts. In August the weather is very often close and sultry; for though there is commonly some air on the wide prairies, the breezes do not then prevail. At the beginning of the shooting scason the grouse will be found at carly morning in the stub- bles. They have gone out of their roosting-places to feed in the stubbles of the wheat and oat fields, which have then been pretty well overgrown with rag-weed, and afford thick cover. Where flax is PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING, 63 cultivated, you may look for them in the flax stubbles, as they are some of their most favorite resorts. Another good place to beat, whenever you see one, is a bean-patch, The navy bean is a good deal cultivated in Illinois and lIowa, and the grouse resort to the patches. About nine or ten o’clock, when the sun has got high and the morning hot, the grouse leave the stubbles and bean-patches, and walk into the long prairie-grass or into the corn. On such days, in clear weather, at that season of the year, it is best to give over shooting about ten o’clock, and lie by until late in the afternoon, when you may pursue your sport again with prospects of success, and fill up your bag. .To continue after the grouse in the middle of the day is merely to distress your dogs and to fatigue yourself for nothing. There is no scent, and the grouse will not lie in the open prairie. But on damp, cloudy days the case is altogether different, The birds then remain in the stubbles all day, unless flushed and driven into the corn; the dogs can work and scent better; and under these overcast skies are the best and most glo- rious days of the grouse-shooter in the early part of the season. Later in the fall and at the be ginning of winter the habit of the grouse is 64 FIELD SHOOTING. different, as will be specially noticed further on, A cloudy day, cool air, the dogs feeling and working well, plenty of grouse in the stubbles, ‘and the sportsman out of the glaring sunshine and able to shoot deliberately and well, make great enjoyment and a good bag. On the clear days, when the grouse have left the stubbles for the prairie-grass. and corn, instead of shooting all the time until you are tired, as you will be before night, until you have been seasoned and got into hard condition of muscle and wind, lay off in some house, or your camp, or in your wagon in the shade, if you can find it, until about four or half past four o’clock in the afternoon. Then it will be time to begin to beat the stubbles again. The grouse will have come, or will be coming, on to them again from the resorts in which they spent the hot hours of the day; and you and your dogs, being refreshed and rested, will be in good fettle for the sport. The sun will get low, and finally go down over the distant swells of land to the westward; the dew will begin, insensibly to you, to fall; the dogs will find the birds easily, they will lie well, and you may shoot as long as you can see in the twilight. In some parts of Illinois, lowa, and other PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING. 65 Western States there are very extensive ranges of pasture-land, on which great herds of cattle, many from Texas, are fattened. These lands have not been broken up by the plough at any time, but, being regularly depastured, have lost much of the prairie character. They remain, however, good resorts for grouse, and the shooting over them is some of the best to be had. The grouse bred on them probably never see a stubble-field, at least until after late in the fall of their first year. Their habits are the same as those of the birds which are found near the arable corn, wheat, and oat lands. In the morning they will be found on the ridges and knolls where the grass is short. In the heat of the day they retire into the long grass which abounds in low, moist places. In the evening they return to the knolls and ridges again. These pastures are sometimes of the extent of two thousand acres or more, and the shooting on them is second to none in those States. Yet they are comparatively little shot over, especially in the early part of the season. As a rule, it is believed the grouse are more abundant where the land is varied and stubbles, pieces of prairie, corn-fields, and patches of beans are found in the immediate neighborhood 66 FIELD SHOOTING. of cach other. For this reason most of the sportsmen, especially those of the towns near at hand, or from the more distant cities, who shoot mostly in the early part of the season, go to them, and do not attempt the wide pastures. But give me the sport on the latter, and let me be- gin about the middle of September, when most of the grouse bred on them are full-grown, strong birds, coming down with a thump seem- ingly hard enough to make a hole in the ground when killed clean and well. The grouse in these places commonly lie first-rate to the dog, and get up by twos and threes, so that a good shot has a chance to bring to bag many of the covey, and those he cannot shoot at the first rise may be easily marked down. In 1872 Miles Johnson of New Jersey was shooting with me in McLean County, Illinois. We camped near Bell- flower, and had a man for camp-keeper while Miles and I shot. We were out ten days, and in that time bagged six -hundred grouse, shooting only mornings and evenings, As I have said be- fore, and wish to impress particularly upon my readers for their information and advantage, it is of no use to try for grouse in the middle of the day, when the weather is clear, in the early part PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING, 67 of the fall. The best day Miles Johnson and I had that time was in one of the great pastures 1 have alluded to above. It contained from five to ten thousand acres. We -went into it early in the morning, and came out about cleven o'clock in the forenoon with eighty full-grown grouse. That was a capital morning’s sport, no doubt, but I have often had as good. While we were at the camp near Bellflower. we were visited by Johnson’s friend, Mr. Eldridge of New Jersey. With him came Dr. Goodbreak of Clinton, Illinois. The doctor is an army surgeon and an ardent and excellent sportsman. They shot with us two days, using muzzle-loaders; but when Dr. Goodbreak had seen the execution I did with my breech-loader, sometimes getting two or three nice shots while one was loading, and often killing a long way off, he was satisfied as to which was the best style of gun, and sent an order for a breech-loader to cost three hundred and fifty dollars. After being there ten days Miles Johnson left for home. I remained at the camp, and in a while A. Leslie and H. Robinson of Elkhart came up and shot with me. It was then getting late in the fall, and we had excellent success. The grouse were wild and very fast on the wing. They were 68 FIELD SHOOTING, strong, and it took good shooting. and hard _hit- ting to bring them to the bag. I killed from ten brace to twenty brace a day, and averaged about fifteen brace. My companions together did not secure as many. In shooting grouse on the pas. tures, and indeed anywhere, you should beware of shooting too soon. Many more birds are missed at short than at long shots, in my opin- jon. The sudden, loud whirr made by the rising of the grouse when it gets up startles young sportsmen, and some nervous, excitable old ones too. The shot is hastily delivered, while the bird is so near that the charge has not distance enough to diverge and spread in, and the game is often missed. If the shooter had waited for steady sight of the bird along the rib, which is not to be a slow, pottering aim, it would have been often brought down. In McLean County, Ford County, and the others of the tier on that line, there is as. good grouse-shooting as any I know of anywhere in Illinois. They are in the section of country lying southwest of Chicago, and a line drawn from that city to St. Louis in Missouri would pass through them. As good places as any to get off the railroad at are Bellfiower in McLean County, and Gibson in Ford County. PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING. 69 Twelve miles from Gibson is the great farm of Mr. Michael Sullivant, formerly of Columbus, Ohio. He has a tract of land containing forty- five thousand acres. It is a splendid place to shoot, and real sportsmen are made welcome by the owner. I was there last spring after brant and ducks, and made heavy bags. I saw at that time large numbers of grouse—a powerful breed- ing-stock. In shooting over the great pastures I have men- tioned particular care must be taken not to go near the herds. of cattle. They are pretty wild, and the coming near them of dogs makes them excited. In the first place, the farmers do not like to have dogs taken near their cattle, and every good sportsman should carefully avoid do- ing anything which may annoy the owners of the land on which he may be. I can always get along pleasantly with the owners of the land, and so may any one else who will use them well and refrain from d@age. In the second place, if shooting parties go near the great herds of cat- tle with their dogs, the bullocks will come for the latter at a run in a big drove, the fright- ened dogs will run to their masters, and before the men can get out of the way of the furious 70 FIELD SHOOTING. rush they may be knocked down, trampled over by scores of hoofs, and very likely killed. When shooting in these vast pastures, J take care to give the herds a wide berth, and keep well away from them. Even then they will sometimes begin to move towards the dogs, in which case I put the setters or pointers, as the case may be, into the buggy as soon as possible, and drive off out of the sight of the herd. In shooting grouse in Illinois, Iowa, and the other prairie States, the sportsman should take water in his buggy or wagon for himself and his dogs. The prairies are very spacious, the water-courses wide apart, the droughts sometimes long and severe. If he thinks to find water in natural places for him- self and his dogs, which need it oftener and more than he, they will be very thirsty before hoe reaches any. If he comes to a house at such times, he will find that water is the most scarce and precious thing about the place. The well is all but dry. The farmer’s hors@ are on short allowance. His milch cows are stinted, and stand lowing round the empty trough at the well half the night long. The people sometimes, in very dry seasons, have to haul water from a distance, as their own wells become dry, and their cattle PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING, . 71 ~ and horses must be provided for. In this state of affairs it cannot be expected that the people will furnish half a bucket of water for a stranger or two and the dogs. Therefore when you start out from house or camp, take in your buggy or wagon a five-gallon jug of water as a thing of prime necessity. CHAPTER IV. LATE PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING. In the preceding chapter I have described the places and times to seek the pinnated grouse in the earlier part of the shooting season, and pointed out the methods of hunting for them by means of which satisfactory success is most likely to be ob- tained. We now come to the latter part of the season, the months of October and November, with that of December; for the resolute and hardy sportsmen who care nothing for cold and wet may sometimes prefer a bag of winter grouse to one of duck or brant. In the month of October the prairies have become brown, and later on the corn will have been wilted by the early frosts, if it has not been already. Some of the best shooting of the year, to my mind the very best, is now before the sportsman; but it needs work, and young beginners will not find the grouse so easy to kill as they were in August and Septem- ber. In the early part of the season the best shooting hours were early and late in the day. 72 LATE PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING. 13 Now it is the reverse; the middle of the day is the proper time. When I first came to Illinois, the grouse in October and later were mostly found in the prairie-grass. There has now been a change in their habits, and they seem to like best to lie in corn. I suppose the reason was that as prairies were much broken up, and the quantity of land in corn rapidly increased, the grouse found out that the lying in the corn was excellent, and the habit was soon formed. In the corn there is a great plenty of various kinds of food. The ground is mellow and affords excellent dusting places. In the West wheat is often sowed while the corn is still standing, being put in with a cultivator-plough. These wheat-fields in the corn are favorite places with the grouse, and I have many a time killed eighteen or twenty in one such field. Also, when wheat is sowed out upon the prairie, grouse will go to those fields at early morning. When the sun gets high, they will go into the prairie-grass, round the edges of the young wheat, and lie there all the middle of the day. Then there is nice shooting. At four or five o’clock, towards evening, the birds will go out upon the young wheat-fields again. This is in clear weather. On cloudy days the grouse stay 74 FIELD SHOOTING. on the wheat, the bare places of the prairie, and on ploughed’ land all day, and it is of no use to go after them. You may just as well stay in your tent or house as go after grouse, for you cannot get near them. If there are quail in the neighborhood, you may have sport with them. In only one way can grouse be shot late in the fall in cloudy, overcast weather, and it is hardly worth while to employ that. You may drive up in a buggy, as we do in plover-shooting, and so get near enough, but it is more trouble than the game you will kill is worth, and I never do it. I may say here that those who go out soot ing in the prairie States need to have a wagon or' buggy with them. It may be done without, but the work is very severe. The prairies are very wide, and it is a good way from one favorable point to another. When I first went to Illinois, seventeen years ago, I used to start out in the morning, on foot, and shoot all day. I used no dog at all then, and had but a poor, light gun, which did but little execution, though I shot middling well. When I had got about seven or eight grouse, I used to hide them and mark the place, to be taken up on my way back. With this gun I speak of and common pow- LATE PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING. 15 der J have often shot away a pound of the latter to get twenty-five or thirty birds. I fol- lowed, in those days, the example of other people, and used shot several sizes larger than was necessary or proper. At that date we used No. 1 or No. 2 in October and November, and I believe I was one of the first to discover that with No. 6, from a good gun, with a strong charge of powder, the biggest cock-grouse that ever flew could be brought to the bag. At the end of my day’s shooting at that period I used to have to carry twenty-five or thirty grouse as well as the gun for four or five miles, sometimes further. This was no small matter. The October shooting of grouse, good as that is, may be excelled, according to my notions, by that in November. They generally lie in the corn among the tumble-weed, so called from its growing up and rolling over so as to form snug cover; and they are especially fond of lying in the sod-corn, which is that grown upon the land the first crop after the prairie is broken up. This sod-corn does not grow up tall, as the corn on older-tilled land does. In November the blades of the corn are hanging down, wilted by the frost. The stalks are shrunk. The dogs can 76 FIELD SHOOTING. work in it, and you can see to shoot in it. But it takes good shooting to make good bags. The birds are now at full growth and strength. They have in all probability flown the gauntlet of many guns, and the weaker ones have been thinned out of the packs. But on clear days they lie well to the dogs, and, being swift and strong on the wing, when they rise the sport afforded is capital. One of the best days I ever had was in November, near Farmer City, Cham- pagne County, Illinois. I was accompanied by Mr. Nathan Doxie, of Geneseo, a keen sports- man and good shot. At that time he shot with a muzzle-loader, while I used a breech-loader. It was a clear, bright day, warm for the time of year. We beat the sod-corn, of which there was a great deal in the neighborhood, and, when the birds flew out into the adjoining prairie, we could mark them down. Our bag was a very heavy one. I killed fifty-seven grouse and Mr. Doxie knocked over eighteen, making seventy- five fine fat birds in all. Mr. Doxie said it was the first time he had ever been beaten in the field. There was another person shooting near us all day, but he did next to nothing, killing ‘but five grouse, as I remember. I have shot LATE PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING, 7 with many men in the month of November, and good shots too, but never one that I did not beat. Three times in the course of my experience in field-shooting I have killed ten grouse with two barrels. Once in Menard County, near Salt Creek, late in November, I came upon a plank fence in a light snow-storm. It happened that there was a grapevine growing thickly over part of the fence, and, getting this between me and the birds, I secured a pretty close shot. They were scattered along the fence for a distance of about ten yards. With the first barrel I killed nine, and with the other one. Another time I got a shot at a lot near a fence, and killed ten with two barrels. And once in Logan County I got within shot of about twenty birds which were in short grass, and killed ten with both barrels. Such shots as these are very seldom to be got. “A man may shoot half a lifetime and never meet with one. I have often, in the early part of the season, killed a grouse with each barrel out of a pack which rose near me, and then slipped in another cartridge, and killed a third. But this is only to be done when they are lazy and fly slowly, and it cannot be done then unless 78 FIELD SHOOTING. the shooter is very quick. Some men say that I am slow because I will not shoot until I have sighted the bird; but I think these sort of field- shots and my time-matches at pigeons are suffi- cient to prove the contrary. I believe I am as quick as anybody I ever met, but I will not fire at random, and I advise the reader never ta do so. Late in the fall, when grouse get up a little wild, and fly swiftly, it takes good shooting and hard hitting to kill them. Sometimes in No- vember, on a clear day and rather warm, they lie close, and get up one after the other after the first of the pack have gone. There are always some lying scattered from the body of the pack, and as one falls down, fluttering its wings, another will rise, sometimes two. Qn such occasions the immense superiority of the breech- loader over the old sort of gun becomes mani- fest. I have been at such a time shooting with @ man who used a muzzle-loader, and have‘ actually stood in my tracks and shot six grouse while he was loading his gun. The grouse will sometimes lie so close on a clear day in Novem- ber that they will remain hidden until you are within ten yards of them, and then get up with a tremendous whirr of wings. It is things of LATE PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING, 79 this sort that sportsmen will be glad to know and what I state is drawn from experience solely At the same season of the year, if the weather is cloudy and damp, the birds are so wild that you cannot get near them; and to try is to lose your time and labor for nothing. The Indian Summer is a good time for shooting grouse, and very pleasant for the sportsman. The sun has not the scorching power which you feel in August and the early part of September; but it is warm, the air soft and still, and not very hezy—rather like thin, white smoke scattered from a great distance. The birds feel comfortable in the dead grass of the prairie or among the sod-corn. They are fat and lazy, and hate to get up until compelled to do so, Any clear, warm day late in October or in November is just as good as an Indian Summer day. At this season it is useless to go out before the dew is off the grass; whereas in the earlier part of the shooting the more you get into the thick of it at early morn- ing, the better for you. The prairies are hand- some in the fall of the year, but not so beautiful as in the spring, when the grass is about ‘six inches high and full of wild flowers. The wea- ther is fine, the air pleasant and fragrant. The 80 FIELD SHOOTING. cock-grouse which have flown out of the bottoms at early day are heard booing on the knolls and ridges. Hawks of various kinds, large and small, are wheeling about overhead, and far away, high up in the distance, you may see the great eagle cir- cling and sailing round about with motionless wings. But of all the sights I have seen on the prairies, the finest, the most striking and glorious, have been on bright, frosty mornings in December, or later on in the winter sometimes. On such a morning, while the frost still hangs on the grass, the prairie looks like a wide sea covered with sprays of diamonds. The most beautiful sight I ever saw in my life was on a prairie at Oliver’s Grove, near Chatsworth, Iroquois County, Illinois. We went in the night to Chatsworth, where there was no house then, intending to hunt turkeys at Oliver’s Grove at early morning. As there was no house at Chatsworth Station, we stayed in the car till daylight. It was a bright, clear morning in December, and the sun, just risen, lit up all the prairie with its horizontal, glancing rays. Every blade of grass on the prairie, every tree in . distant grove, glistened and sparkled like diamonds in strong light. Away in the distance, five hun- dred yards out upon the prairie, there stood two LATE PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING. 81 deer, motionless and beautiful, we might almost have thought lifeless, they looked so strange in that wonderful scene; only we could see the breath streaming from their nostrils into the cold, frosty air. For dazzling radiance and strange beauty, I never before saw such a prospect, and may per- haps never see quite the like again. After a while the deer walked leisurely off into the long grass and brush near the slough to lie down in cover. The game we came for were not to be found, and when we discovered this we turned to leave. I said to my partner, “We have been disappointed in our hunt, but in coming on it we got a glori- ous and beautiful sight—one not to be forgotten as long as we may live.” He was a very practical sort of man, and replied, “I had a good deal sooner have got a dozen fat turkeys.” On our way back to Onarga across country we had to walk fourteen miles. There were many buckwheat-stubble patches along the prairie in our way, and we took them on our road to walk up the grouse. We did not diverge to the right or left to follow those which went away, but, keeping right ahead, got about twenty brace by the time we reached Onarga. Although there were no 82 FIELD SHOOTING. turkeys about Oliver’s Grove just then, it was a good place for them, and from what I saw there must have been lots of deer in the neighborhood. In regard to grouse-shooting late in the fall of the year, there is one thing which should be par- ticularly observed. It is the necessity of silence. There should be very little or no talk indulged in between those who are on the beat. In the earlier part of the season it does not much matter what talk there is, though I am one of those who can stand a good deal of silence, when hunting, at any time; but late in the fall talking makes the grouse get up out of distance. They will rise at the sound of the human voice at that season of the year sooner than they will at the crack of the gun. If two men go along talking and gabbling, as I have seen and heard them do, the grouse will nearly all rise out of shot, while they would have lain long enough to have afforded many fair shots if silence had been preserved. In order not to be obliged to talk and call to my dogs at such times, I have them broken to hunt to the whistle and the motion of the hand. I have had some dogs that would hunt all day and never make it necessary to speak to them. I have been out with men who would talk in spite of remonstrances ona? LATE PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING, 83 against it. Either they did not believe it would_ scare up the birds, or it was not in their power to keep silent for half an hour at a time. There are, indeed, some people who never seem to be silent except when asleep, and very likely not then if dreams come over them. On these talk- ing occasions late in the fall I have always noticed that we got very few grouse. Sometimes when I have believed a pack of grouse to be all up, I have spoken a word or two to one of the dogs, when two or three more birds have risen right away. Another thing to be noted is this: when you are shooting grouse late in the fall, and the dog brings in a wounded one which flutters his wings, all the others within hearing will get up. That sound sets them on the wing as a man’s voice does, when they lie close at the loud report of the gun. I am not able to explain why this is, but so it is. There are many facts in nature in regard to the habits of game which the sportsman must accept, though he cannot arrive at the reason of them. At one time in Illinois there was a difference as to the period at which grouse-shooting should cease. It was left to the counties. In Logan County and some others it was fixed for the first 84 FIELD SHOOTING. of January. In other counties where the grouse abounded to the degree that the farmers thought they consumed too much of the crop, there was no close-time in January, February, and March. I do not think grouse ever do any appreciable damage to the crops. What grain they eat would be otherwise wasted. They may, however, do some little harm by consuming seed-wheat just after the sowing. They bite off and eat the blades of young wheat, but that often does more good than harm, and farmers sometimes turn calves into young wheat-fields to feed it off. The biting off done by grouse in the earlier stages has a tendency to make it stool well, I think. It is cer- tain that the pinnated grouse does the farmer good by consuming grasshoppers and other insects which are troublesome and destructive. The law of IIli- nois in regard to shooting grouse is now uniform all over the State. The shooting ceases on the fifteenth day of January. Thus the shooting lasts five months. I am in favor of lopping off fifteen days at the commencement, making it September 1 instead of August 15, and another fifteen days at the end, making it cease on the first of January. It would then last four months. But the duration of the shooting-time is not of so LATE PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING. 85 much importance as many people think. More are taken by trapping late in the season. To see the huge loads of grouse sent by railway to Chicago and on for the Eastern market, one would be at first inclined to suppose that the species must soon be extirpated; but this is an error. With good breed- ing-places and a fine spring the number of grouse produced is incalculable. No amount of fair shooting makes much impression on game in a good game country. In places where the game is sparse, as it appears to me to be in the Atlantic and Eastern States, save water-fowl on the sea-board, many guns may shoot so close that the proper head for a breeding-stock will not be left. It is altogether different with us. I went once to Christian County, Illinois, and shot round about the little town of Assumption from February 1 to May 20, the latter part of the time being on snipe. The game of all sorts was amazingly abundant. There was a great plenty of grouse and quail, and the number of ducks and geese was almost past belief. It is a varied sort of coun- try with. a good deal of low, wet ground, much prairie and much corn-land, and a great deal of hazel-brush along the creeks and on the edges of the groves of timber. It is a splendid country for 86 FIELD SHOOTING, game. I killed six thousand head of all sorts while there—the most part, of course, being duck, snipe, and golden plover. The grouse were extremely abundant in the spring about there. At early morning the cock-grouse could be heard booming all over, like the constant lowing of an immense herd of cattle distributed in a great pasture. It is hardly necessary to say that the booming of the grouse is not like the lowing of bullocks; what 1 mean is that the booming on every side pervaded the space all around. Christian County is about thirty miles southeast of Springfield, and is on the Ilinois Cen- tral Railroad. At this time I hold the best place for sport of all sorts in the field to be in the tier of counties which includes Ford, Piatt, McLean, and Champagne Counties, as well as Christian County. Late in the fall, however, good grouse- shooting is to be met with all over the State, un- less it be down southwest in Egypt, where there is but little prairie-land. As I have stated, great numbers of grouse are bred in the wide prai- ries which are still unbroken, and late in the fall these grouse pack and distribute themselves over the other parts of the State in vast numbers, feeding in corn-fields and wheat, oat, and buckwheat stubbles, Where I live the grouse are nearly as LATE PINNATED-GROUSE SHOOTING. 87 abundant in the latter part of the fall now as they were seventeen years ago. Perhaps I might say quite as abundant; but there is not anything like as many young grouse to be found in that neighborhood in August and September as there used to be. As long as the breeding-places re- main it is safe to conclude that there will never be a scarcity of grouse in Illinois and the other prairie States. But though they are nearly as numerous, they are more difficult to kill than for- merly. The young birds find the great corn-fields a place of safe refuge; and when the packs come in from the great prairies late in the fall, they are wild and swift. To get good sport the observa- tions I have made as to weather, the best hours of the day at the different scasons, and so on, should be carefully heeded. The burning of pieces of prairie late in the spring should be avoided, and it can easily be done. Let the grass be burnt the preceding fall, or, which is perhaps still more desira- ble, early in the spring. In the latter case the grass would have sprung up in places high enough to hold the nests before the hen-birds wanted to form them, besides which there are always many places ‘untouched by the fire, and these spots would be chosen by the grouse to make their nests in. By 88 FIELD SHOOTING. leaving the grass unburnt through the winter the birds would be afforded a protection in that season against their enemies—the various sorts of hawks, which are very numerous in the prairie States. The great source of mischief is the burning of the grass after the nests are made. I hope the farm- ers will follow my suggestions on this point. They are commonly ready to oblige sportsmen, and the latter should avoid anything which may cause an- noyance while in pursuit of game. CHAPTER V. QUAIL-SHOOTING IN THE WEST. Tue beautiful little game-bird of which I am now about to write is well known in almost all parts of the country. It is a welcome visitor about the homesteads of the farmer in the win- ter season, and makes pleasant the fields and brakes in spring and summer. Quail are now very abundant in the Western States, much more so, I believe, than in those of the Atlantic sea- board, although they are found in considerable numbers in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia. They are much more nu- merous now in [Illinois and the other prairie States than they were formerly. I think the cul- tivation of the land and the growth of Osage orange hedges have brought about the increase. The hedges furnish excellent nesting-places, and are also of great use to the quail as places of refuge and security when pursued by hawks. The latter are very hard on quail. Quail like the neighborhood of cultivate land, and where ‘they 89 90 FIELD SHOOTING. are not much shot at they will get so tame as to come right up to the house and barn. They used to have a very hard time of it in Illinois in severe winters. There was no protection from hawks, by which they were constantly harried and destroyed; and there being next to no cover, they used to be frozen to death in bevies. When the snow melted, the skeletons and feathers would be found in groups of eight or ten. The hedges now afford very great protection in severe wea- ther, and preserve the lives of thousands which would otherwise certainly perish of cold and starvation in their absence. They break the force of the wind, and furnish snug-lying places for the birds in hard weather. In soft snow quail com- monly manage to do very well in the open. ‘When pursued by hawks at such times, they dart under the snow, and lie safely hid from their voracious enemies. I have seen them do this hundreds of times, and have rejoiced at their escape from the talons of the swift and perse- vering foe. In two or three instances I have walked up and caught the quail which had thus dashed into the yielding snow by hand. The quail is a very interesting bird about breeding- time, and the soft, whistling note of the cock is QUAIL-SHOOTING IN THE WES7. 91 one of the pleasantest things that strike the ear in the fields in spring-time. They pair with us about the first of May. I have seen them together in bevies as late as, or later than, the middle of April. They build their nests along the hedges and near old fences overgrown with brush and brambles. They resort but little to the groves of timber for breeding purposes, avoiding them, I think, on account of egg-sucking vermin, such as skunks and crows. Crows are bold, cunning, and persistent robbers of the nests of other birds. Minks catch the old hens on the nest, and raccoons do the same. But the most destructive and inveterate enemy the quail has is the little hawk, called with us the quail-hawk. This little bird of prey is but a trifle larger than a quail himself, but it is very fierce and strong, swift on the wing, and darts upon its prey with electric speed. The nest of the quail is round, nicely constructed of small twigs, and lined with dead grass. J have seen statements to the effect that they are covered over on the top. I have found hundreds of them, and never saw one that was. The hen lays from twelve to fifteen eggs, but two hens sometimes lay in one nest, and I have seen one in which there were no less than thirty eggs. The hen- 92 FIELD SHOOTING. quail does not seem to be very particular at times about having a nest of her own. I have known them to lay in the nests of pinnated grouse, and in those of barn-door fowl which had made their nests in hedges or bunches in weeds in fence-corners. It is always easy to learn when quail are breeding in the neighborhood, for at such times as the hen is laying or sitting the cock perches on a fence, a stump, or an old cornstock, and whistles for joy. The note seems to express great satisfaction and de- light. The young quail are no sooner hatched than they are active and ready to follow their mother. The latter is very watchful, attentive, and devoted, ready to risk her own life to afford a chance of safety to her offspring. If a man or a dog approaches the whereabouts of her young brood, the mother simulates lameness, and flutters about as if in a crippled condition, to lead the intruder another way. The early broods come off about the middle of June, when, the spring being for- ward, the birds have paired early. I saw young quail and young grouse this year myself in the middle of June. It is my impression that when the season is early and other circumstances favor- able, the hen-quail raises two broods. I have often seen carly broods under the care of the QUAIL-SHOOTING IN THE WEST. 93 cock, and I think the hen was then sitting again. Furthermore, later in the year bevies of quail will be found in which there are manifestly birds of two sizes ‘besides the old ones. These bevies must be made up of young quail of different ages. I am not certain as to the hen bringing forth a second brood while the first is under the care of the cock, but I state the facts I have seen for what they are worth. There is nothing improba- ble, to my mind, in the raising of two broods a year. The hen-quail is very prolific of eggs; food is abundant and stimulating at the breed- ing season; the weather is commonly steadily fine when the first brood is brought off, and the cock-bird is abundantly able to take care of it. In the State of Illinois quail-shooting begins on the. first of October. J think the law ought to be changed so that it should not commence before the fifteenth of October. On the first of October some birds are full grown, but it is otherwise with the great majority of the young birds. Quail are a little slower in growth than pinnated grouse, and it is not before the fif- teenth of October that most of the birds are large, strong, and swift of wing. In Ohio, Indi- ana, Michigan, Minnesota,. Wisconsin, and other 94 FIELD SHOOTING. wheat-growing States, there is very fine quail- shooting sooner in the season than there is in Tlinois. With us the best shooting cannot be enjoyed until late in the fall. Before that time the immense corn-fields enable the quail to get the best of the sportsman. As soon as a bevy is flushed away it goes for the corn, which is thick, broad in the blade, and very high. I stand six feet in height, and I have seen stalks of Illinois corn so tall that I could but just reach the lowest ears upon them. There is no making headway and filling the bag in such fields as these; and the moment the quail are flushed on the wheat and oat stubbles away they go for the corn. You may give them up as soon as they reach this tall, thick, and dense cover. If you make an attempt at them in it, they will not rise above the tops, so that you cannot see to shoot; besides: which, the thickest spread of the broad blades is just about as high as your head, and above it. It is not until good, sharp frosts have well wilted the blades and caused them to hang down lifeless along the stalk that there is a good chance at the quail in such places. As long as the leaves wave crisp in the autumn wind the quail may defy the shooter. Therefore QUAIL-SHOOTING IN THE WEST. 95 the best of the shooting is in November and De- cember. You must be up by dawn of day, and scatter the hoar frost or the sparkling dew as you go to your chosen grounds. In a country where there are many stubbles, many corn-fields, and much hazel-brush the quail delight, and there, on such a morning, as soon as the sun has risen over the swells of the prairies to the eastward, they will be found in abundance. “They roost along the margins of sloughs in long grass, in stubbles where the rag-weed is thick and strong, in patches of brush, and along hedge-rows. Where there are corn-fields along the margin of sloughs, the quail are fond of roosting in the edges of the corn. As soon as the sun touches the frost on the corn and grass and the weeds of the overgrown stubbles, the quail begin to run from their roost- ing-places. At the early hours, when they are first on the move, is the best time for the dogs to find them, as the scent is then very good. When they are really plentiful, they may be easily found in any weather, but most easily on a fine, clear day, early in the crisp, cool air of the bright, frosty morning. When a bevy is flushed in such weather as this, they scatter at once, and when they pitch down they lie there hid under the first bunch of 96 FIELD SHOOTING. grass or weed or any other bit of cover they can find for the purpose of concealment. With good dogs you can then take them one after the other. When a bevy has been flushed, and the birds have scattered about and pitched down in this way, I have often killed from six to ten before picking any up. I was once shooting in Mason County,, Illinois, late in the fall, and flushed a very large. bevy of quail from a wheat-stubble. They scat- tered and flew over into a piece of prairie-grass, where they pitched down. I knew they would lie very close, and so they did. They got up one and two at a time, and out of the bevy I accounted there and then for seven brace and a half. Quail pack late in the fall, and in Mason County at that time there were: bevies of thirty or forty in num- ber. In damp or wet weather quail act in a dif- ferent. manner when flushed and scattered. At such times, instead of lying where they pitch down, they run a long distance. And then when the dog has winded them, and is about to point, or has pointed, they start and run on again. Under such circumstances it is difficult to make a good bag. It was mainly in such weather that the net- ting of quail was carried on. This bad practice is now unlawful. I saw great numbers caught with QUAIL-SHOOTING IN THE WEST. 97 nets in Missouri. Whole ,bevies were taken at one fell swoop, the quail being driven into the wings of the net by men on horseback. It is a very good thing that this destructive practice has been prohibited by law, and is now wholly done away with. As long as it was lawful the farmers on whose land it was practised did not like to interfere; but now they do interfere, and netting in Illinois and Missouri has practically ceased and come to an end. When it was lawful, two netters were harder on the quail than about two. hundred shooters, although at that time some of the latter who were apt. to miss a bird on the wing would fire at bevies of quail on the ground. This is not a practice to be followed. I have taken two or three raking shots at grouse sitting on fences in my time, but the opportunity was so rare and the temptation so great. that it. was just then irresistible. The best quail-shooting I ever had was in the Sangamon River country, about where Salt Creek falls into it. There is upon Salt Creek and the Sangamon a great deal of bottom-land with much hazel-brush and considerable timber. There are also plenty of corn-fields. The shooting there is much varied. There are vast numbers of quail, a 98 FIELD SHOOTING, great many grouse, and at the right times snipe and duck are to be found in amazing numbers. When I used to go out in that neighborhood for the purpose of shooting, quail especially, I used to get from twenty to thirty brace a day for many days in succession. Varied shooting, however, is more satisfactory sport to me, and | used to make very heavy bags of grouse, quail, and some duck —mallards and teal. It is a great place for mal- lards; some of them stop all summer and breed there, and some stop all winter, for there are parts of the river which hardly ever freeze over. Quail are more abundant about there now than they were at the time I speak of, and there are quite as many grouse; but they are both more difficult to kill than they used to be in the earlier part of the season. The corn-fields have increased so that they are now many and vast, and this serves as a defence for the birds. There are more quail in that country this year than there ever were before. There are now, however, plenty of quail all over Illinois, Iowa, and Missouri. In the southwest of Illinois, the region called Egypt, there is a great deal of brush interspersed with prairie, farm-lands, and groves of timber, and there quail may be found in great abundance. But QUATL-SHOOTINGMEN@HE WEST. 99 grouse are not as plentiful there as in the interior counties of the State. Some people think the quail a hard bird to shoot, but it is not. It flies swift but straight, and is commonly missed by reason of the shooter being too much in a hurry where it is not brought to bag. Because the flight of the bird when flushed is rapid, men think it necessary to shoot very quick, and pull the trigger without sighting the mark truly. This is an error to which three out of four misses are owing. Let the bird be well sighted along the rib before the trigger is pulled, and, no matter how fast he goes, the shot will overtake and stop him. Quail will not carry off a great many shot. There is no necessity for hurry in shooting, and this will be made manifest to sportsmen if they will sometimes step the ground from where they fired to the dead bird. They will find that in nine cases out of ten it was not as far off as they believed it to be when they fired at it. Many of those thought to be as much as forty yards off when the trigger was pulled will be found dead at thirty yards, and some at five-and-twenty. This shows that there is commonly plenty of time to get well on the bird before shooting, instead of blazing away on the 100 FIELD SHOOTING. instant at random. I have shot thousands on thou- sands myself, and know that my misses were com- monly caused by being in too much of a hurry to fire. When I have missed with the first and killed with the second barrel, I have considered it a plain proof that I ought to have let another second elapse before firing the first barrel; for if a bird, flying in the open straight away, or quartering, is well sighted with a good gun pro- perly charged, it is next kin to a miracle for it to escape. After good experience I resolved to take more time in quail-shooting, and I have found the practice answer. I can now kill nearly every quail I shoot at within fair distance. Quail generally lie close to the dog when they will lie at all well, and do not get up until the shooter is near them. ‘The experience of sportsmen will confirm this, and it will show that there is no reason whatever for shooting in a hurried man- ner, but very strong reasons for guarding against it. By taking time you not only get the bird well sighted, but the extra distance it has gone gives the shot so much more chance to spread, and thus increases the chance to kill. A few years ago, after the. close of the war, | went, in the middle of January, on a shooting QUAIL-SHOOTING IN THE WEST. 101 excursion to Lynn County, Missouri. I hunted on Shoal Creek, in the neighborhood of Cameron; a place about fifty miles east of St. Joseph, on the Missouri River. It was a good place for game. There were quail, pinnated grouse, some ruffed grouse, turkeys and deer in large numbers. I killed many turkeys and a few deer; but of these [ shall give some account further on, under the proper ‘heads. The country is wild and broken, with much brush and timber, and abounds in gullies, deep hollows, and steep ravines. The bevies, when flushed, would frequently fly for the thickets and gullies, and then it was difficult shooting. Sometimes, however, they would scat- ter and drop in the grass of the pieces of prairie, and then I had beautiful sport, killing from twenty to thirty brace a day. The pinnated grouse were not numerous about there, but the ruffed grouse were in fair numbers for them. Jowa is a good State for quail. There are more groves of timber and more brush there than in Illinois, but the latter is much the best State for pinnated grouse, and the growing up of the Osage orange hedges has supplied in many farts the want of brush, and thus increased the head of quail. When flushed in the open, the birds very 102 FIELD SHOOTING. often go for the hedges, and then a great deal may be done with a gun on each side of the hedge while the dogs are beating it. One man cannot do much with the quail when they take this refuge. Some of these hedges are eight or ten feet high; others have been so trimmed as to be four feet through and thick of growth. With a man on each side of the hedge there is very pretty shooting. If you are out without a companion, and the quail take to the hedges, you may trust one side to an old, well-trained dog, and take the other yourself. Always send the dog to the lee side. If you have a companion, and he leaves to you the choice of sides, as most men will do, not knowing that it makes any differ- ence, always take the windward side. By so doing you will get three or four shots to your com: panion’s one when the wind is blowing athwart, ct nearly athwart, the hedge. The reason is very simple, though seldom thought of. The dog to lee- ward winds the quail in the hedge, and, as a mat- ter of course, puts them out on the windward side; while the scent is blown away from the dog on your side. I have been out with men who did not understand this, and they would say, “Cap- tain, what the d—l makes almost all the quail fly QUAIL-SHOOTING IN THE WEST. 1038 out on your side of the hedge?” Half the suc- cess of sporting, outside of being a good shot, depends upon the knowledge of* such things as this. There is another matter to be mentioned here. The best dogs in the world are sometimes unable to find and put up all the birds in a bevy of quail. I have often been out with men who had first-rate dogs, and have, to their amazement, given them absolute and irrefragable proof of this fact. They have been not a little annoyed at first when they saw me put up quail which their dogs had been unable to find after the bevy was gone. But it was no fault of the dogs, nor were they unable to detect the quail | because the latter withheld their scent, as some have argued they have power to do. I do not believe they possess any such power. It is not a question of no scent, but of too much. The bevy have been lying there and running all over the ground, so that it is covered and tainted with scent to such a degree that the noses of the dogs become full of it, and that is why they cannot find and put up one or two birds which lie close in their hiding-places and decline to move. I will now relate a notable instance of this sort of thing which oceurred last fall. It was near Selma, 104 FIELD SHOOTING, Alabama, in the neighborhood of which city [ was shooting with a gentleman named Ellis and Mr. Jacobs, a gunsmith, On the day in question Mr. Jacobs did not take the field, and Mr. Ellis and I were alone. He had a brace of splendid set- ters, a black and a red. For one of the dogs he had paid two hundred and fifty dollars, and he would not have taken five hundred for the brace. They had fine noses and were splendid workers. In the course of our sport we found o bevy of quail in old grass at the edge of a bit of prairie which had once been ploughed up, and was now an old garden all overgrown with weeds and briers. The quail ran in the grass, but finally got up together. Mr. Ellis killed two and I killed two. A few went away, and were marked down at some distance. Mr. Ellis believed they were all gone. The dogs beat the ground tho- roughly, and could find no more. I said that 1 believed there might be more, upon which Mr. Ellis made his dogs try it again, and then con- fidently pronounced that there could not be an- other quail there. I said, “I still think there may be quail here and I will show you how to make them rise if there are any.” With that I imitated the kind of whistling noise made by the old quail QUAIL-SHOOTING IN THE WEST. 105 when she has young ones. Up got one, and Mr. Ellis killed it; away went another, and I stopped it. Mr. Ellis was greatly astonished, and did not know what to make of it. I explained the matter, telling him that if the dogs had been taken off to another pari of the field,-and kept there long enough for the old scent to have exhaled from the ground and passed away, they ‘would have found the two quail readily enough when brought back to the place. The ground was so saturated with scent that the dogs could not distinguish that of the remaining birds, and could not put them up with- out stumbling right on them. I have often seen the same thing happen with a close-lying lot of pimated grouse in long prairie-grass. 1 do not believe in the theory advanced by some that quail or any other game-bird can withhold their scent so as to prevent a good dog from winding them when he comes near. I had fair sport in the South last fall, principally at quail, round the cotton-fields, but there seemed to be a scarcity of game. There was not one quail to a hundred which would have been found in good situations in Illinois. Iwas in Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee, and nowhere was game in what we should call fair plenty in the West. At Paris, Tennessee, they 106 FIELD SHOOTING. held the erroneous opinion that a pigeon-shooter could not be a good field shot. They said they had a man who could beat any pigeon-shooter in the field. 1 told them to send for him, as I was willing to shoot against him for a hundred dollars, fifty shots each, to be taken alternately. They would not make the match. In Mississippi I shot with Mr. Galbraith. The birds were scarce and wild. There were more about Selma than any other place Iwas at. So far as my experience went, the shoot- ing was nothing to that which may be had in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Iowa, Wisconsin, Min- nesota, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, ete. There were as fine a lot of gentlemen in the South as | have ever met, and they were good shots and keen sportsmen. CHAPTER VI. RUFFED-GROUSE SHOOTING. Hiryerto we have been concerned with the sport to be had in pursuit of game-birds, pinnated grouse, and quail, which are found in the neighborhood of cultivated farms, and, as regards the latter, often in the immediate vicinity of the habitations of man. We now come to one whose favorite haunts are wild, solitary places not frequently intruded upon, and almost always lying remote from thickly- settled sections of country. The ruffed grouse. is 2 very handsome bird, and in situations where it is seldom shot at it seems to take a sort of pride in exhibiting its beauty in a stately and graceful manner. It weighs about a pound and a half; is plump on the breast; and its flesh, white, juicy, and delicate, is delicious eating. It is usually half spoiled in city restaurants by splitting and broiling. It ought to be roasted and served with bread-sauce. The ruffed grouse is extensively distributed from east to west, but is nowhere found in any great 107 108 FIELD SHOOTING. abundance. Its habits are not nearly so gregarious as those of the pinnated grouse, and no such multitudes are to be found anywhere of ruffed grouse as may often be met with of the former species in the great prairie States. The ruffed grouse is but seldom found in coveys, though sometimes a brood of full-grown birds are found still together in some lonely nook among the woodlands, or in a solitary, sheltered spot in severe winter weather. It is generally found singly or in pairs, and loves sylvan solitudes, steep’ hillsides, wooded dells, and the neighborhood of gullies and ravines. The rougher and more broken the country, the better the ruffed grouse like it, provided it is well timbered with the trees and well covered with the shrubs upon whose buds the birds mainly feed. It is, however, often met with in the deep, heavily-timbered bottom-lands of the northwest part of Michigan. The buds of birch, beech, and laurel (so-called) are the favorite food of this bird in winter and spring. In summer it no doubt feeds largely on berries and insects. [ do not think it ever visits the stubble-lands to pick up wheat and buckwheat, though there are some such bits of stubble in the very heart of the woods in which it is constantly but thinly RUFFED-GROUSE SHOOTING. 108 found. In the New England States it is met with, and is sparsely distributed in New York and New Jersey. In some of the wild, half mountainous tracts of New Jersey, -where the undergrowth consists largely of laurel, it is more abundant. It is also frequently met with in West Virginia. In Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, Illi- nois, Missouri, and Iowa the ruffed grouse is also found; but so far as my knowledge and experience go, it is most abundant of all in some parts of Wisconsin and the northwest part of the lower peninsula of Michigan. It is said that the buds of the laurel and some of the berries upon which the ruffed grouse feed have a tendency to make the flesh poisonous. I can- not confirm the theory, though I have eaten many a grouse whose crop was full of the buds in question when drawn. In general appearance it has some resemblance to the pinnated grouse, but is a smaller bird, with a long, square tail, very full -feathered, which it carries over ‘the fallen leaves and mossy sward among the timber with a conscious pride and a swelling, strutting gait in places where it is little disturbed. It is, in fact, a beautiful ornament to the romantic soli- tudes and deep, heavy woods which it inhabits. 110 FIELD SHOOTING In places where it is seldom shot at, the bird, at the approach of man, instead of taking wing, often spreads its tail, ruffles up the feathers of the neck, and struts off with the proud air of the true cock of the woods. In the spring of the year, at the approach of breeding-time, and at other seasons just before stormy, rainy weather, the male bird drums at dawn of day. It may sometimes, too, be heard performing this singu- lar feat in the night, and on a sultry afternoon when a thunder-storm is brewing. The drumming is usually made on an old log, and each male bird seems to have his favorite place for the joyous performance. He begins by lowering his wings as he walks to and fro on the log, then making some hard strokes at intervals, and finally so increasing the swiftness of the movement that the sound is like the rapid roll of a snare-drum muffled by a position in the depths of the woods. The sound is very deceptive as to the place of the bird. " He may be comparatively near, while his drumming really seems like muttered thunder a long way off. On the other hand, the hearer sometimes supposes the hidden drummer to be close at hand when he is at a very considerable distance. In wild situations, near lonely preci- RUFFED-GROUSE SHOOTING. 111 pices, the beating of the ruffed grouse upon his log may remind one of Macdonald’s phantom drummer, whose story was beautifully and forcibly told in verse by General William H. Lytle, who fell, covered with glory and renown, at Chickamauga: ‘* And still belated peasants tell How, near that Alpine height, They hear a drum roll loud and clear On many a storm-vexed night. This story of the olden time With sad eyes they repeat, And whisper by whose ghostly hands The spirit-drum is beat.” I have often seen the tops of old logs divested of their mosses and worn smooth by the constant drumming of the cock ruffed grouse, and have stood within thirty yards and seen the bird per- form the operation. Just before rain the grouse drum frequently, and the repetition of this sound from various quarters in the daytime is a pretty certain indication of the near approach of. wet weather. The female builds in the Western States about the first of May. The nest is formed of leaves and dead grass, and is built in 112 FIELD SHOOTING, a secluded place at the root of a tree or stump, or by the side of an old, mossy log over- grown -with blackberry briers. The hen lays from twelve to fifteen eggs, and when first hatched the chicks are the most beautiful, cunning, and alert little things that can be seen any- where. The editor of this work had an excellent opportunity for observing them and their watchful, devoted mothers on one well-remembered occa- sion. Nearly thirty years ago he was upon an exploring expedition in the northwest part of the lower peninsula of Michigan. The country was then very thinly settled about there. A few ‘men had with much labor hewn out little clear- ings in the heavy-timbered woods in places on the banks of rivers, but the great industry was log- ging in the pine-woods, splitting shingles, and fishing during the spring freshets, when the low- lands and wet prairies were literally covered with pickerel. The ridges were thickly timbered with beech and maple where not covered” with pine, and the bottom-lands were clothed with gigantic oak, black-walnut, basswood, _ hickory, and butternut trees. It was a country watered by a network of rivers, which united to form the Saginaw, soon after which junction the latter fell RUFFED-GROUSE SHOGTING. 118 into the bay of the same name in Lake Huron. We started in canoes, well provided with provi- sions, arms, and ammunition, and paddled for the mouth of the Cass. It was in June, and the young flappers (wild ducks) were swarming in the rivers. Above the bend of the Cass we made our first camp. The region was then very wild. Deer abounded, and the wolves howled hideously around the camp at night. We treed two .or three wild-cats, and shot them with rifles. “We had no shot-guns. A baad of Chip- pewa Indians were encamped near. us. The men of the tribe lived by hunting and fishing with the spear. The women and girls made money by gathering. cranberries in the marshes when the wild fruit was ripe. These Indians assured us that a few elk were: still left in the great woods which here surrounded our party, and they. said that in the fall there were lots of bears. It was just the hatching-time of the ruffed grouse, which we found numerous in the bottoms among the heavy timber, They had seldom been mo- lested, and were not very shy, but rather bold and fearless. One day we cut down a butternut- tree, wanting it to make a temporary bridge across a creek, and, having lopped the top, went 114 -FIELD SHOOTING. to our tent to dinner. On our return we came upon a hen-grouse with a brood of young newly hatched. Uttering a cry, she scuffled and fluttered about at our feet with the most motherly cour- age and devotion, behaving as if she were wounded, in order to draw us off. But we had seen her young ones run under the leaves of the fallen butternut-tree, and caught two or three of them. They were beautiful downy little things, and watched us intently with their bright eyes. The mother, stimulated by alarm, remained near us while we held her young after the others had scuffled off, and we had the pleasure of placing the little things on the ground again, and seeing them hide in the cover. We walked away to a distance, and soon heard the mother calling her brood of little ones to the shelter of her protec- tion. The yorng are very quick and cunning at concealment. As soon as they hear the mother’s warning cry they dart into cover, and, if there is no other at hand, they will seize a leaf with bill and feet, and turn over so that it may conceal them. While the party remained above the bend of the Cass river there came up a tremendous thunder-storm, followed by a cold wind from Lake Huron. Previous to the storm the cock ruffed RUFFED-GROUSE SHOOTING. 115 grouse could be heard drumming in all directions. It is a flat, alluvial country, much of the bottom- land being overflowed early in spring, as all the wet prairies thereabouts are; but, nevertheless, these bottoms abounded with grouse in the breed- ing-season. The ruffed grouse can seldom be relied upon to fill the game-bag alone; for the most part it is sparsely and thinly distributed over the regions it inhabits, though in some secluded spots where they have not been disturbed a good number may sometimes be killed in the fall before the broods have dispersed. It is as wild in disposition as any bird that flies. The young of the pinnated grouse may be brought up in confinement, but I do not think those of the ruffed grouse can be reared in the same way. I began to shoot ruffed grouse, when still a boy, in the neighborhood of Burnville, Albany County, New York, in company with a man named Paul Hochstosser. He was a hunter by calling, and a good one, well versed in the woodcraft of the region, and the best shot with the double-barrelled gun then in those parts. The first bird I ever killed was a ruffed grouse perched in a hemlock-tree. He was on an arm close to the trunk of the tree, bolt upright, with 116 FIELD SHOOTING. his neck stretched up. This is their habit when they take to trees, and they are not easily distin- guished from knots. 1 knew their habits, and had good eyes. That day I had played truant from school, and, taking my father’s old firelock, I went out to hunt. The greater part of the day was gone before 1 got one of the birds I saw in a proper sitting position. However,, there he was at last, and as I was too small to hold the musket. out and take aim from the shoulder alone, [ steadied it against the bole of another tree. Bang she went, and down came the grouse, but only winged. There was snow on the ground, and, boy- like, I dropped the old musket into it, and went for the wounded grouse. The ground was a steep hillside, the bird fluttered down it, and I went after, tumbling and rolling for as much as a hun- dred yards. But I secured it at last, and thinking it was glory enough: for one day, as the saying is, I recovered the old musket and returned home. The truancy was condoned because of the bird. After that I hunted every time I could get a chance to do so. I soon got hold of a single-bar- relled gun with a percussion-lock, and by perse- verance for some time learned to shoot on the wing. Paul was a great woodcock-shooter, and RUFFED-GROUSE SHOOTING. 117 we sometimes shot in company. In going after ruffed. grouse in those days we used to take a small spaniel dog, which would flush them out of the brush, and cause them to take to the trees. They arc not casy to distinguish, as 1 said before, when on the tree, from their sitting upright close to the trunk, their plumage being somewhat the color of the bark. This habit must be remem- bered by the sportsman when he believes the bird is treed, but is unable to make him out. When several have taken to the same tree, shoot the- onc which sits lowest first, and the others will not take wing. If the upper onc is shot, its fall starts the others off More ruffed grouse are shot sit- ting than flying. It is a very hard bird to. shoot on the wing—hard to hit and hard to kill, Other birds, when flushed in woodland, fly for the openings in the trees; the ruffed grouse, on the contrary, plunges right into the densest part. of the thicket. The man who commonly kills the ruffed grouse he shoots at on the wing is fit to hold his own at any sort of shooting on the wing. The bird com- monly rises in difficult ground with a whirr like the sudden roar of a waterfall, and goes away at clectric pace for the thickest part of the. brake. The birds were scarce in Albany County, New 118 FIELD SHOOTING, York. The most I ever killed in a day there was six. In Cook County, Illinois, I have killed fifteen in a day. In Missouri, on Shoal Creek, when I was hunting turkeys, I found ruffed grouse in fair numbers, considering the nature and habits of the bird, and killed forty or fifty in the three weeks I stayed there. Of all the places I know, the ruffed grouse are most plentiful in the timber-lands of Wisconsin and Minnesota and the upper part of Michigan. But it is a bird of very secluded habits, and when settlements have become thick and much of the timber has been cleared off, it disappears. A well-watered timber country, with plenty of thick underbrush among rifts and gullies, is the place to look for it as a com- inon rule, though they are also found in the great woods of heavy-timbered bottom-land. In looking for ruffed grouse especially I use No. 8 shot, and, if I found them while turkey-shooting, I changed the cartridge. I do not use spaniels now, but shoot ruffed grouse over setters. They will lic pretty well to the dogs sometimes, and where not shot at will sometimes strut off in front of him in plain sight. When shot at much and‘wild, the ruffed grouse must be pointed by the dog from a considerable distance. It will not lect him get close, and as soon as the Y RUFFED-GROUSE SHOOTING. 119 setter moves a step forward the grouse springs up and goes away like a bullet for the thickest part of the cover. I have seen stories in print of ruffed grouse taking to water, of its being caught and let go, and then caught again. I do not be- lieve one word of such things. The man who invented them can know but little of the nature and habits of this very wild bird. In the deep snows of winter the ruffed grouse roost under the snow. They dart at it with great speed, and make a sort of burrow beneath the surface. At other times they roost on the ground. When out coon-hunting at night, I have often put them up from their roosts on the ground. It has been maintained that they sometimes roost in trees ; and as they certainly take to trees readily enough when flushed by a barking dog, and feed on the buds of trees, it seems reasonable to believe that they may sometimes roost in them. On the other hand, many men of experience declare that they never roost in trees. I have often seen them in trees very carly in the morning, but it was out at the ends of the branches, feeding on the young buds. I will not positively affirm that the ruffed grouse never roosts in trees, but I think it never does so when it can help it. In very severe weather, 120 FIELD SHOOTING. when the crust upon the snow is too strong to be pierced, the ‘bird may seek shelter under the thick boughs of pines, and close to the trunk on the leeward side. It can stand a great deal of cold, and, unlike some other birds, can always find its food—the buds and tender twigs of trees and shrubs—in the hardest weather. The sports- man who goes into the places the ruffed grouse frequents will see some of the most picturesque scenes and romantic landscapes that the country affords. Hills and ravines, secluded woodland dells, the foliage rich and ripe with the deep tints of autumn, will meet his eye, while the music of mountain-brooks and the roar of waterfalls will fill his ears, CHAPTER VII. SHOOTING THE WOODCOCK. In the estimation of sportsmen in this country, as well as in Europe, the woodcock is regarded as one of the very highest game-birds. To make a good bag of woodcock is a feat to be proud of. The bird is generally scarce, even on the best ground, and in its most favorite haunts it is difficult to find and kill, and is one of the richest morsels on the table that the woods and fields supply. The woodcock of America slightly differs from that of Europe in size and markings, but the variations are of no moment to the sports- man. Upon this continent the woodcock winters in the Southern States, and in regions still further south, and comes north in spring, remaining till the ground freezes late in the fall. The bird oreeds in Canada and Nova Scotia, as well as in northern and middle States of the Union, East and West; and it sometimes rears two broods in a season. This is not, however, commonly the case, but it is certain that when the old 121 122 FIELD SHOOTING. birds have lost their nests or their young through floods in the breeding-time, they rear a late brood. The woodcock arrives north in March, and generally builds in April. Much depends, however, upon the earliness or lateness of the spring, which sometimes varies nearly a month. Its nest has been found in March in very early situations, but it is believed that in such cases they were those of old birds which had passed a mild winter in some chosen, sheltered spot, and- never gone south at all. It is reasonable that after having made its migra- tion from the far south to the latitude of New York, Illinois, Michigan, and Canada, the birds would require some weeks for restoration before laying their eggs. The nest is made on the ground, in a piece of woods or brushy swamp, and is composed of grass and leaves. The hen lays four, sometimes five eggs, and the young run as soon as hatched; the little ones are active and rather cunning at hiding, though not to such an extent as the chicks of the ruffed grouse. The woodcock displays the same care and manifests as much devotion to her young as the ruffed grouse, and employs the same expe- dient of simulating lameness to draw off an in- SHOOTING THE WOODCOCK. 123 truder from their neighborhood. The hen-wood- cock is a tame bird when sitting, and will not leave her nest for any light reason. When I was a boy, they used to build in a swamp on my father’s farm in Albany County, New York, where I have more than once crawled up and caught the old bird in my hand, and released her after looking at her eggs. This would not induce her to forsake her nest, and in this she differs from some other wild birds. Wild ducks are not easily driven from their nests, and, after being disturbed once or twice, will still return again. The English pheasant, if once flushed directly off her eggs, always forsakes them. I never saw more than five eggs in a woodcock’s nest, and usually there are but four. It has been stated that a woodcock’s nest, with eight full-fledged young ones, was found on the banks of Loch Lomond, in Scotland. I believe these were the young of some other bird, if eight were found, for the story is almost absurd on its face. Young woodcocks, full-fledged, are never found in a nest. The young, when first hatched, might be, but they are then covered with dowle, and not with feathers. The wood- cock has been kept in confinement, and proved 124 FIELD SHOOTING. itself to be a voracious feeder. It was no small trouble to keep it supplied with worms. It bored in to the earth given to it, and was always ready for food. The digestion of the woodcock is very rapid. This accounts for the fact that birds which arrive poor speedily get condition in good ground. For the procurement of its food, for which it bores in soft, moist ground, fat, loamy soils, and rich vegetable mould, it has a long, slender bill, very sensitive, and a long, prehensile tongue with barbs on the end. The young grow rapidly where the lying is good and the food plentiful. In favorable seasons they have attained their growth by the fourth of July, when the shoot- ing commences. But in some places, in some years, they are not above two-thirds grown at that date. J saw woodcock at Boston this year in the middle of July not two-thirds grown, and it was a pity they had been shot. After the broods have once dispersed, the woodcock is a solitary bird. It is true that a number of them may sometimes be found in the same swale, “cripple,” or piece of woodland, but that is because the lying of the place suits them, and the boring is good, worms and the larvee of insects SHOOTING THE WOODCOCK. 125 being abundant in the soil. The woodcock does not frequent sandy, thirsty soils, nor gravelly ground, nor sour, wet meadows. It wants warmth and richness, as well as plenty of moisture. The bird is nocturnal in its habits, and its great eye, placed far backwards and upwards in its large head, enables it to see by night and in the gloom of the thick coverts in which it lies by day. It never flies by day, unless disturbed, and seldom feeds in the daytime, unless it be on rare occa- sions in the thick shade of some moist and closely- overgrown spot in its cover. Late in the evening, when it is nearly dark, the woodcock leave the cover, and betake themselves to wet, rich places to bore for their food. It used to be a popular notion that woodcock and snipe ate nothing, and lived merely by what was called suction; whereas they are both voracious feeders and like the richest quality of food—namely, the plump worms and insects to be found in fat soils. After indus- triously spending the night in finding food to satisfy his enormous appetite, the woodcock rec- turns just before dawn of day to the thick brake or close overgrown “cripple,” in which he lies while the daylight lasts. Where there is good lying and good feeding ground, woodeock may be 126 FIELD SHOOTING. found in the season, and in spots where one bird has been shot it is common for another to take its place in a day or two. Where such birds come from, and why they did not come before the place was tenantless, is not known. Although in: some sort methodical in its ways and habits, the woodeock often seems to be erratie in its comings and goings to and from certain localities. Some days the birds will be found plentiful, for them, in certain ground. On another day, without any obvious reason for their absence, not one can be put up in the same piece. The weather or some other cause un- known has induced them to make a local change, and this has sometimes been magnified, I think, into a second migration or a permanent removal to the uplands and bluffs. I do not believe that there is any second migration northwards of the woodecock after breeding-time; nor do I believe that the birds go to the uplands and bluffs, and stay there until the beginning of October. It is not true that no woodcock are to be found in their usual haunts in September. I have found and shot them myself in that month in fair num- bers. It is truc that there are not as many as there were in July, and for the very SHOOTING THE WOODCOCK. 127 good reason that vast numbers have been shot, while those which are left have become moro wild and wary. Another reason for the seeming absence of birds, except here and there, is simply this: with us, grouse-shooting in the latter part of August and September is so much easier, and affords so much greater chance of success, that very few go after woodcock in those months, and the birds have it all to themselves in woody swales, tangled thickets, and the islands over- grown With the willow and the alder, until October brings down the great division of birds bred to the northward of the United States. Early in the season and during the hot weather the woodcock is a lazy bird, and seems to labor in its flight. It is not, however, easy to kill on that account, for when it rises, often very close to you, it goes up among the thick foliage, right on end, as it were, to the top of the cover, and then, after flying horizontally for about twenty yards, it suddénly flops down again. When it does this after being shot at, men often think they have killed it, while in truth not a feather has been touched. The thickness of the covert in full leaf prevents the shooter from having any- thing but a glimpse of the bird, and he must 128 FIELD SHOOTING. make a snap-shot at where intuition tells him the woodcock ought to be. Besides this difficulty, the upward flight is calculated to distract the aim, even when the bird is not absolutely concealed by the density of the foliage. Commonly it is flip-flap of the wing, and the woodcock has gone away, often not seen by the sportsman at all. In some places it is practicable to send the dog in to beat the thicket while you remain on the edge to shoot as the cock fly. Where the brush is short this may be done, and, if there are many birds, the sport will be good. Three years ago I had some nice shooting by following this me- thod on Rock River, Illinois. When the cover is large, and the timber and saplings are twenty feet high, the above-mentioned plan will not work. You must go in then with the dogs, and take your chance of snap-shots. Later in the year the woodcock is sometimes found in more open pieces of timber—that is, in places where the under- brush is not so very thick. But it is still a pretty hard bird to shoot, for now it flies like a bullet, and zigzags and twists about among the close-standing stems, going for an opening through which to make a straight flight. The woodeock flushed in cover always goes for an SHOOTING THE WOODCOCK. 129 Opening; the ruffed grouse never does, but sets sail for the closest and densest part. Now, when the woodcock is going swift and twisting among the stems of the saplings, he is very easy to miss, and sportsmen who make good bags of cock in the prime of the fall season have a right to be proud of their exploits. This sort of shooting is ‘much more pleasant than that to be followed in the tangled “cripples” of New Jersey, all over- grown with cat-briers and thick brush, with no good footing where you are, and no possibility of knowing where you will be next. In Albany County, New York, we used to use cocking-spaniels when woodcock-shooting. I have had none of that breed in the West, and now employ setters. They are bolder and better in forcing their way in rough places than pointers. The thin skins of the latter get all cut and torn, and their feet give out. But the best dogs [ have ever had for general sport, take one sort of shooting with an- other, have been cross-bred between the setter and the pointer. For work these beat any purc- bred dog I ever owned, and, I may add, ever saw. But concerning this I shall treat further on. A great many woodcock may be found about Lockport, Ilinois, forty miles southwest of Chi- 130 FIELD SHOOTING. cago, but the brush is so thick in the swamps’ in summer and early fall that the shooting is diffi cult. There are a few on the Sangamon, but only a few. On the bottoms and islands of the upper Mississippi River, right down to St. Louis, many woodcock may be found. The bottoms and islands are rich alluvial mould, and the wood- cock finds himself well placed in them for cover, for food and breeding-places. The brush com- monly grows down to the water’s edge, and old logs lie among the bushes. The woodcock also frequents the thickets on the cdges of the bayous and sloughs, and, when the bottoms have been overflowed, the birds use them as soon as the water has receded. During the ftoods they shift their places, and lic further from the rivers, but in the same sort of ground as before. In New York they were sometimes found in wet corn-ficlds adjacent to cover, but I do not think they cver arc in the West. On the Illinois River, about Pekin, Peoria, and Havana, there is fair woodcock-shooting ; but the bird is scarce every- where in the West, compared with other sorts of game. Indeed, the woodcock is not only rela- tively scarce in the West, but, as I thirk, abso- lutely scarecr than in the Atlantic States. There SHOOTING THE WOODCOCK. 131 is not in the prairie States so much of the sort of ground the woodeock likes as there is further east. I do, indeed, know of plenty of ground ia Central Illinois which one would think just suit- able for woodcock, but, owing to some reason which I have never been able to discover, the birds are not found there. A stray one or two may be picked up occasionally, but they are never there in any number. I suppose it to be owing to some peculiarity in the soil. These neighborhoods have much of the right kind of food, and snipe abound near them; but for some reason the woodcock does not like them. About the middle of October there is a great increase in the number of woodeock in the bottoms and islands of the Mississippi and Illinois rivers. Flights of those bred further north then arrive, and they stay until driven away by sharp frosts. When they first arrive from the North, the leaves are still thick, but the white frosts, which are quite insufficient to freeze the ground and drive the woodcock south, wilt the leaves, and then the shooting ‘is pleasant and good. Generally speaking, the woodcock remain well along through November, and some seasons they have not all gone by the Ist of December. They like the 189 FIELD SIIOOTING, neighborhood of little streams which trickle through brush and among timber. The most I ever killed in a day was fifteen couple. I have heard men boast of having killed fifty couple in a day; but if they did it, the birds must have been vastly more abundant than I ever saw them anywhere. The woodcock is easily killed when you can get an open shot; but that is rather seldom, except at the last of the season and in such small patches cf short brush as I mentioned above. A wood- cock, when winged, does not run off as quail do. The birds have tw sorts of flight. In one it goes laboring and slow, just over the tops of the branches, to which height it has risen almost per- pendicularly, and then it soon flops down again. Its other mode of flight is swiftly away among the stems of the trees, darting here and there until it has found its opening, along which it goes like a bullet. I was told in the South that it is very plentiful along the edges of the bayous in the winter there. The negroes go out by night in boats with torches, and, paddling along, the woodcock on the muddy margin are knocked down with sticks. I heard of this, but never saw it, and merely tell the tale as it was told to me. CHAPTER VIII THE SNIPE AND SNIPE-SHOOTING. Tuis well-known and excellent little bird of passage is to be found all over the country, in suitable ground, at the times of the spring and fall migrations. It winters about the wet rice- fields of the Southern States, and comes north in the spring, going to its breeding-grounds, which are mainly in higher latitudes than the United States. It is true that a few remain all summer in the Eastern States, and also in those to the westward, and rear broods of young; but by far the larger number continue towards the north, pausing about a month in the middle latitudes. It does not breed south of Virginia. In Kentucky, Indiana, and Michigan some snipe are bred in the sedges of the wet prairies and about the edges of the wild rice-swamps. In Illinois a few nests are made about the Calumet, and some in the great Winnebago Swamp, which is part pool, and a great deal of high grass marsh. About Co- lumbus, Kentucky, the first flights of spring snipe 183 : 134 FIELD SHOOTING. arrive on the river-bottoms by the first of March in an early spring, but much depends upon the forwardness of the season and the state of the weather. The snipe need not be looked for until the frost is quite out of the ground, no matter how genial and pleasant the days may be. The reason seems to be plain. As long as there is frost in the ground the worms and larve of in- sects upon which snipe feed are underneath the frozen strata, and cannot be found in the soft mud of the surface. In Illinois and Northern Indiana the frost holds in the ground much longer than in South- ern Kentucky. It penetrates a good deal deeper, and the spring is more backward than in the last- named region. Hence the snipe do not come to the Calumet, the Winnebago Swamp, the Sanga- mon, and the other favorite haunts which it fre- quents in Illinois, until nearly a month after they have appeared at Columbus. When they first arrive, the birds are thin and wild, and do not lie well. In a short time, however, they get very fat and become lazy. I find that in New Jersey the fall snipe-shooting is the best, and that the birds tarry so short a time in the spring that sometimes there is scarcely any spring snipe-shoot- ing at all, Now, with us the reverse of this is THE SNIPE AND SNIPE-SHOOTING. 135 the case. The snipe stay much longer in the spring in the Western States than they do in the fall, and they distribute themselves more over the face of the country. In the autumn migration they keep more to the lines of the great rivers, and stay but a short time. One reason, no doubt, is that in the spring there is much more wet ground, such as suits the snipe. In the fall many places in which the birds lie thick in April are quite dry, and noelonger suitable as feeding- places, The snipe likes wet places even more than the woodeock. Tis favorite resorts are wet bogs, plashy places in grassy meadows, the rich, moist ground of river-bottoms, and the margins of grassy sloughs and bayous— ‘* By the rushy, fringéd bank, Where grow the willow and the ozier dank!” The best snipe-shooting with us is in the spring of the year, though very good sport may be had in the fall. In the spring I have sometimes killed from twenty-five to fifty couple a day for many days together. When the birds first come, they are poor and wild, and the shooting is difficult ; but a little time spent upon the rich bottom-land, which swarms with worms and other food, puts them 186 FIELD SHOOTING. in flesh. They are able to indulge their sharp and almost insatiable appetite, and soon grow fat. I shot snipe several spring seasons in company with R. M. Patchen, of Atlanta, Logan County, Illinois. Our favorite ground was the Salt Creek bottoms on the Sangamon, and I doubt whether there is any better ground in the world. We have killed as many as three hundred and forty in a day, and our bag was seldom as small as seventy-five couple at the right time. Lhe ground we shot over was the grassy, sedgy bottoms along Salt Creek, near where it falls into Sangamon River, and across the latter stream along the bottoms in Mason County. The shooting there begins about the first of April. In many places the bot- toms at that time of the year have been recently overflowed, and a scum of mud and slop is left, in which the snipe seem to delight. Snipe are vastly more abundant in the West, in the proper snipe-ground, than they are in the East. 1 find that in New Jersey and . Pennsylvania snipe-shooters think they have had an average fair day’s sport if they have killed about eight couple. Now, we should not think we had been shooting at all if we killed no more than that number. THE SNIPE AND SNIPE-SHOOTING. 137 A great many people go up-wind when after snipe, believing that it gives a much better chance to the dogs. I always go down-wind, and use no dog at all, except for retrieving purposes. There is no need to use a dog to find snipe on good snipe-ground at the proper times and _ seasons. The bird always rises against the wind, and flies up-wind or across it, making zigzags when he first gets under way. Now, if you are to wind- ward of the bird when it rises, it is nearly cer- tain to give you a side shot. As I remarked before, when they first come from the south in the spring, the snipe are wild. Their numbers are very large, but the ground is nearly bare, the grass having but just started. Four or five will get up: together, and sometimes as many as twenty, all uttering the shrill squeak which they make on taking wing. The rich bottoms, low, marshy ground around sloughs, and wet corn-fields, are good places to look for snipe. As they eat the plump worms and other rich food which they find in abundance in the loamy soils and black, vege- table deposits, the snipe become fat, and then they lie close and well. I never found any diffi- culty in shooting them then. Later on in the season still they get very fat, and will hardly rise 138 FIELD SHOOTING. at all, save when put up by a noise like that of their own squeak. That is the only way to make them rise, and their flight is lazy and slow. Those which remain after the first of May are then so fat that they can hardly fly at all, and when they are picked at this time they look like a lump of fat bacon. When not over-fat, snipe fly swift. They hang on the wind for an instant, and then dart away zigzag up-wind or across the wind. I have several times killed two with one barrel, and on one occasion I killed three. It was in Logan County, as I was walking along the bank of a little slough. The three snipe got up in line, the nearest within twenty yards, and they all three fell to the right barrel. When they first come in the spring, it is difficult to shoot snipe in the corn-fields. They dodge about among the stalks, and rarely rise over the tops of them. A man who kills three out of four in the corn-fields at that time is a good shot. In shooting over the bottom-land it is best for two guns to be in company, and to walk down-wind some thirty or forty yards apart. Nearly all the birds may tlten be got. The shooters will be nearly certain to kill all the birds that rise between them, if they are good shots. In shooting at snipe it is a great THE SNIPE AND SNIPE-SHOOTING. 139 error to shoot tod quick. The snipe, at first getting on the wing, twists and wires in and out in his flight. If shot at then, it may be killed, but is more likely to be missed. By waiting until it has gone a rod or two you may get a much easier shot. The fhght of the bird is then straight, and, though it presents but a small mark, there is no real difficulty in hitting it. Side shots are the best of all for a good shot. Be- ginners are somewhat apt to shoot behind the bird. The right time to pull the trigger is just as the snipe begins the direct flight. It is not a hard bird to kill on the bottoms, even while somewhat wild, if you can shoot well and go the right way about your beat,. which is down- wind. Afterwards, when they have got fat, it is as easy to kill as any bird I know of. In talking with General Strong, who is a _ good sportsman and fine shot, and other gentlemen of Chicago, about snipe-shooting, I found it was their impression that it was a hard bird to shoot. Now, I knew well that, taken in the right way, at the right time, it was a very easy bird to kill; and I offered to back myself to shoot and bag a hundred snipe in a hundred consecutive shots, If ‘I missed one shot out of the one hun- 140 FIELD SHOOTING. dred, I was to be the loser. I was willing to put up the money, and to take General Strong him- self as referee to see that I did it. They, how- ever, declined to make the wager. If it had been accepted, | should have chosen the Salt Creek and Sangamon bottoms for the ground, and taken the last week in April for the period. The birds are then fat and lazy, and I am confident that 1 could have done the feat. I should not, as a matter of course, have bound myself to do it within a certain time, because it is not possible to say when you can find birds thick on the ground. The snipe is somewhat erratic in his habits, and change of weather causes them to change their ground. If I had found snipe on that ground as thick as 1 have sometimes done, 1 believe I should have killed the one hundred, without a miss, in one day. I should not have taken any but fair chances, and I should not have let fair shots go unimproved. In order to perform a feat of this kind a man must have several essential qualifications. He must be a dead-shot. He must have the best of nerve, and never be flurried in the least. With such a man, and a gun of ten bore, charged with five drams of powder and an ounce and a quarter of No. 12 THE SNIPE AND SNIPE-SHOOTING. 141 shot, the snipe rising near at hand will have but a very small chance of getting away. But as one miss will lose the wager, it is abso- lutely necessary that the shooter should know when he is holding his gun so that it is virtu. ally certain he will kill. If I had got the match, | should have used no dog to shoot over, but should have walked the bottoms, going down- wind, and should have chirped the snipe up with their own cry. I have often killed thirty with. out a miss, when shooting for. no wager, and taking every bird that rose within fair distance, as they got up anywhere. These things may seem strange to many sportsmen, especially those who are mostly conversant with places where game is searce and, being much disturbed and shot at, quite wild. But different localities and very different circumstances must be allowed for. I state nothing which is not true, and nothing but what I can support by good testimony—that of men who know the ground, and are acquainted with many of the anecdotes and feats I relate. In general snipe-shooting a man who kills two out of four is accounted a good shot, and this is generally done by beating up-wind. Now, if such a man will try my plan and beat down. 142 FIELD SHOOTING. wind, having no dog save one to retrieve dead birds, he will find he can do much better. He will kill a great many more of tho birds he shoots at. I have been snipe-shooting with men who called themselves good shots, and 1 have secn them miss full half of the birds they shot at. They almost always fired too quick, while the snipe was making his darts here and there before going off straight. Asa general rule, you must be willing and able to do a great deal of walking when snipe-shooting, if you would make a large bag. When I first shot snipe on Salt Creek bottoms, it was with a muzzleloader, and I had no horse and buggy. With a horse and buggy to go to the ground and earry the bulk of the ammunition all day, and with a breech-loader, 1 could have killed three or four hundred snipe a day. I could do so now if I could walk all day, as I could then; but since I was shot in tho thigh my endurance in walking, especially on wet, slippery ground, is not as great as it formerly was. I could once walk from dawn of day till dark, only stopping to eaé and drink, and could tire the best man I cver had in company in a long day’s tramp after game. It was upon that and upon knowledge and judgincnt, largely dc- THE SNIPE AND SNIPE-SHOOTING. 143 rived from experience, as to the likeliest places to find game, and how it would behave when found, that I relied in challenging any man in the world in field-shooting in the West. 1 counted upon. these things as much as I did upon my ability as a marksman. My challenge stood three years, and had publicity through the sporting news- papers. There was plenty of talk about taking it up, but no one ever did so. I hear from time to time about some man who i3 said by some other man to be the best general field-shot in the Western country. This best general field-shot is commonly some man who was never heard of before by me or by anybody else outside of his own small neighborhood. I believe I know as many of the real dead-shots of the West as any man in that section, and yet some one is mentioned as the best of all, of whom I never heard before. These foolish opinions and hollow reputations are commonly held and manufactured by those who have taken up the absurd notion that a man who is a good trap-shooter at pigeons cannot be a good field-shot. Now, the reverse of this is commonly the case. The best shots I have known at pigeons have been good shots in the field, but many men who do well enough in the field fail at pigeons, 144 FIELD SHOOTING. In snipe-shooting in the West along sloughs or wet swales, in the prairie or corn-fields, there should be two guns in company, one on each side of the slough or swale. Your companion will com- monly be willing that you shall take either side you choose, as few nien know that it makes any difference. But it makes a very material differ- ence when the wind is blowing across, or nearly across, the slough, and if you take the windward side you will have the most shots. I have always done so, and have often killed two or three snipe to one killed by my companion, ‘The reason is simply this: the snipe fly up-wind, and those which rise on the leeward side of the slough cross it to windward, while none of those which -get up on tho latter side fly to leeward. Vhen the snipe first come on in the spring, it is often primarily discovered by a certain habit they have of hovering in the air of nights, and ‘making a kind of humming noise with their wings, as they fall from a height. I have often been out duck-shooting at night at that season of the year, and, hearing this noise in the air, have become aware ‘that the snipe had arrived from the south. Before they leave for the north to breed they often do the same thing by day, and it is only when in the THE SNIPE AND SNIPE-SHOOTING. 145 mood for this that snipe are on the wing by day, except when put up. When hovering, the snipe poise themselves in the air at a considerable height, and, suddenly dropping or darting away, make this noise with their wings; then they make another hover, and then another dart. When in this humor, the snipe will not lie to dogs nor to be walked up within shot, and no sport is to be had. They usually do it on still, cloudy days. I have seen statements to the effect that at such times snipe will alight on fences, stumps, and the topmost boughs of trees. I can only say, touching these statements, that my experience is all the other way. I have been many years in a part of the country where the snipe are found in amazing abundance every spring and fall; I have seen them hovering hundreds of times, when hundreds of them were at it in the air; but I never saw one alight on a tree or a fence or on anything but the ground. I have, I think, been a close observer of the habits of such game-birds as frequented Illinois. My living depended on it, in some de- gree. This thing, however, I never saw a snipe do, and I feel quite certain that snipe in Illinois never do it. I do not say that the authors of the statements in question have made wilful misrepre- 146 FIELD SHOOTING. sentations, but I do say that they may have been mistaken, and that the birds which alighted on trees while the snipe were hovering and bleating were not snipe. It is the easiest thing in the world to see snipe hovering in the spring in places where they abound. Take a day in April when the sun is not bright and there is a hazy atmosphere. On such a day the snipe are at it nearly all day long. There will be first one and then another going through with this performance, and you may sometimes hear three or four at it at once, though not very close together. I have never met a man who had seen, or pretended to have seen, a snipe alight on a tree or fence at this or any other time. Snipe begin to arrive with us in the fall, about the middle of October, but they do not come down from the north in large numbers so early as that date. At the last of October they are commonly plentiful, but are not found in the places where they were so abundant in the spring. In the fall there are not one-fourth as many in the bottoms of Salt Creck and the Sangamon as there are in April. Neither are they so well distribut- ed over the. country along the sloughs. In go- ing south they keep more to the lines of the big THE SNIPE AND SNIPE-SIIOOTING. 147 rivers, and perhaps many of them keep more to the eastward in their southern migration than they do in coming north. I am inclined to think that this last must be the case, for the birds are not anything like as numerous in the fall, when the broods come, as they were in the spring, when the snipe went north to breed. The best fall snipe-shooting with us is along the bottoms of the Mississippi and Illinois Rivers, and about the marshes of the great Winnebago Swamp. Here the sportsman may have good shooting until late in the fall—l may say, in some seasons, until the beginning of winter, for the snipe do not leave altogether until the ground is frozen. When that happens, they go southwards. .In Illinois there is some marshy ground which the snipe do not like. Most of the land in that State, being rich loam or vegetable alluvial, suits them well; but in some places there is sand or gravel as well as much moisture, and neither of these does the snipe seem to like. I suppose the favorite food in these soils is scarce, and in all probability the birds do not like to bore in gritty ground. A few may be found scattered in wet places on such soils, but at the same time they lie in thousands along the loamy bottoms and in the marshes. In these 148 FIELD SHOOTING. latter the soil is usually vegetable mould, the rich, black deposit commonly called swamp-muck. In this the snipe delights above all. Snipe afford a vast amount of sport, but the sport itself de- mands for its proper pursuit very considerable endurance and hardihood. The snipe-shooter must expect to be wet and to be fatigued, but. he may also count upon making a good bag. It is one of the most delicious birds that flies, certainly second to none but the upland-plover and one or two sorts of duck. Many think it second to none whatever, and I doubt if it is when in prime order and properly cooked and served. In places where snipe are not plentiful it is no doubt advisable to use a dog to beat the meadows and marshes, and point them; but such is not the case where I have been accustomed to shoot. CHAPTER IX. GOLDEN PLOVER, CURLEW, GRAY PLOVER. In the West we have in the spring and fall great numbers of the golden plover—a beautiful bird, testing the skill and patience of the sports- man, and one that is very delicate and rich eating on the table. It is stated, in some books I have looked into, that the golden plover is essentially a shore bird, This is a great error, if the same species is meant, for it visits Illinois and Iowa, and I doubt not the country further west, in prodigious numbers. It is called the golden plover from being speckled with yellow on the back of the head and neck. Its principal colors are not at all like gold; and when the birds are seen in flocks on the grasslands they love to frequent, the golden spots cannot be distinguished. It is a handsome bird, graceful in shape, and quite plump. The golden plover is not quite as large as a quail, but almost, when fat. The male is dark in color, with white spots on the breast, and narrow white streaks on the cheeks. The 149 150 FIELD SHOOTING. female is gray, and a little smaller than the male. This bird winters in the south, principally upon the great grassy ranges of Texas and Northern Mexico. It arrives in the prairie States about ten days after the snipe, commonly about the tenth of April; but much depends on the forwardness or backwardness of the spring. With us there is a variation of some three weeks between a very forward spring and one that is very late. The golden plover forms one of the most numerous bodies of the great mi- gratory hordes which come north at the end of the winter. They come in flocks, some of the latter, on their arrival, being as many as three or four hundred in number. At their first coming they are to be found on the burnt prairies, and soon after they will be seen in ploughed fields and on bare pastures. They also frequent young wheat which is then fairly started, and in those spots where the plant has been drowned out or killed by the frost these birds are sure to be found. They like the bare earth and the close-eaten pastures, especially those in certain localities. From high knolls, where the grass has been eaten off short, they can sometimes be hardly driven away. In sheep pastures the plover GOLDEN PLOVER, CURLEW, GRAY PLOVER. 151 are usually found at the proper season; for the sheep is a close feeder, and likes to range on knolls and hills. Along with the golden plover, and apparently intimately associated with thei and forming part of the flocks, comes the cur- lew, another handsome and delicious bird. It is a little larger than the golden plover, stouter in build, and gray in color. In size and shape the curlew resembles a well-grown woodcock, but with longer wings and a thinner head. It has a bill about two inches long, curved in shape, and is not so high on the leg as its companion, the golden plover. They may be easily distinguished from each other when the flock is on the ground, and also when in flight. The curlew affords as good sport to the shooter as the plover, and the epi- cure, who really knows how good it is, esteems it as a dish dainty and delicate as the golden. plover itself, though, perhaps, not quite so delicious as the gray or upland plover, of which I shall treat further on. In the curlew there is no apparent difference between the male and female. In some flocks it will be found to be nearly as numerous as the plover, while in others the latter are in a large majority. When in the spring ploughing the rich soil of our prairie States is turned up, a vast 152 FIELD SHOOTING. number of fat worms are thrown to the surface. To pick up and feed upon these, the golden plover and curlew will be seen following the ploughman along the furrow. Sometimes they fly a little ahead of the plough and team, some- times abreast, of them, and all the time some are wheeling and curling round and dropping in the furrow which has just been made. At such times these birds occasionally become so bold and tame that. they come quite close to the horses, and I have known some to be knocked down and killed by the driving-boys with their whips. As a matter of course, this is rather uncommon; but their boldness and tameness, when ploughing is going on, is in strong contrast to their timidity and wariness on other occasions. They seem to be sagacious enough to know that where the men and teams are ploughing there can be no shooting, and they take advantage of that fact. The best places for shooting golden plover and curlew in the earlier part of their stay with us are the burnt ground of the prairies, where the grass is beginning to quicken, and those close- eaten and bare spots in the pastures of which | have made mention. It will be best, when going for these birds, to take a dog to bring in wounded GOLDEN PLOVER, CURLEW, GRAY PLOVER. 153 ones. At their ‘first arrival the flocks of plover and curlew are rather wild and difficult to get at. In their sojourn on, and long flights from, the plains of Texas across Arkansas, and along the Mississippi River to Illinois, Missouri, Iowa, and Kansas, they have not been accustomed to the neighborhood of men, and at first they are shy. But if not shot at and frequently disturbed, they soon get tame, and may be approached. But some knowledge of their habits and some craft are always requisite in order to get good chances at these shifty and cunning birds. On some days the flocks will be much on the wing, flying from one field to another, and all going in one direction, as wild pigeons do. At such times the shooter may take a stand in the line of flight, and get fair shooting all day as the flocks go over. It is not necessary to hide altogether; in fact, in these localities—the burnt prairies and great pas- tures—there is seldom the means to do so; but it is often desirable to lie down. Here again it must be observed that it is of no use to lie down in clothes strongly in contrast as to color with the ground or grass. The golden plover and curlew are low-flying birds, and, when lying down in about the line of flight, the shooter may 154 FIELD SHOOTING. : sometimes get a side shot at a large, close flock, and kill eight or ten with his two barrels. Some- times the birds skim on not above four or five feet from the ground. At other times they fly pretty high, but within fair shot; and when one barrel of the gun is discharged, the whole flock will come swooping down towards the earth, as- if the shot had killed them all. In that case it is very difficult to put in the second barrel with good effect. When they fly low and present side shots is the most favorable time to pepper them. At the shooting on the pastures where the birds have made their temporary home it will sometimes be found that the golden plover and curlew are not flying in flocks in one direction in such a manner that you can select a place in the line of flight. It is then best to go with a horse and buggy. The horse should be a steady one, so as to stand fire, and should also be capable of going at a good rate, as speed is one of the elements of success in driving for plover. The birds will be seen flying. about in various directions over the wide pasture, and settled in bunches on it. When put on the wing at such times, they always settle in a cluster nearly close together, and put up their head as though taking GOLDEN PLOVER, CURLEW, GRAY PLOVER. 155 a survey of the ground. When they do this at a proper distance, the horse must be put to a swift trot in such a direction as you would take if going past the plover on your own sharp business. Judge the ground and estimate the distance, so that when you are abreast “of the flock it will be within shot. The birds, in such a case, will not rise until the horse stops, and sometimes, if the shooter is quick and prompt, he may get a crack at them with one barrel just as they are upon the point of leaving the ground, and before they are actually on the wing. When a shot can be got while they are thus huddled together, many may be killed. There is no scruple about shooting at these birds in this manner among sportsmen, but few have the art and promptness to manage it. The horse must be fast. He must trot up at a swift pace. You must judge the distance nicely, for you cannot swerve out of the line and in upon the birds with- out causing them to take wing. Finally, the horse must be one that will obey a light touch of the rein, and stop rather suddenly without a jerk. When shooting plover on foot at such times as they are acting after the habit described above, the sportsman must follow the same plan in 158 , FIELD SHOOTING. principle. Instead of driving up, as if going Ly, he must run fast, as if intending to pass, and must not incline his course in towards the flock. These birds seem to act as if they reasoned and arrived’ at certain conclusions, These conclusions would be correct enough if the craft of the man were not exerted to deceive them: by false appear- ances. When the shooter is abreast of the flock, he must come to a stop, and, making a quarter- whirl, fire quickly. He must be quick, for the moment he stops in his forward course up gets the flock. J never knew a man who would not thus circumvent and shoot among a flock of golden plover and curlew in this manner, if he had the skill to achieve an opportunity to do so. 1 have heard men say they never killed any plover except on the wing. I can readily believe it} and will add, very few in any way. All I can say is that I should not like to be the plover when these parties had a chance to put in a barrel under such circumstances as those above described. The horse and buggy is the easiest way to go to work, and that itself is somewhat difficult. The man who undertakes to run up must be swift of foot, gdod in the wind, and so steady of nerve that he will not be flustered and his hand will not shake GOLDEN PLOVER, CURLEW, GRAY PLOVER. 157 when he stops suddenly and whirls to shoot. When, by a shot at the flock on the wing, two or three of the plover or curlew are crippled, the others will circle round them, and often offer chances for capital shots. The breech-loading gun is in- valuable in such circumstances as these. On one such occasion | remember having killed forty-two. golden plover and curlew, all shot on the wing, before I picked up one of them. Many a time I have killed as many as fourteen or fifteen without lifting a bird, there being opportunities to load and fire again and again while the plover swept and circled over the dead and wounded of their own flock. Sometimes the flocks of golden plover and curlew are so numerous in a neighborhood, so large in extent, and fly in such a way, that a great number may be killed in a short time. I remem- ber one such time well. It is now twelve years ago, and at that period there was a great deal of unbroken prairie in the neighborhood of Elkhart. I started out after dinner from that place, and drove two miles into the prairie. It had just been burned over, and large flocks of plover and curlew were coming in one after the other. That after- noon I killed two hundred and sixty-four plover and curlew, and got back to Elkhart at sundown. 158 FIELD SHOOTING. I got a few-sitting shots on that occasion, but the vast majority of the birds were killed on the wing, while circling round their wounded com- panions. This was done with a muzzle-loader. With a good breech-loader and plenty of cart- ridges I believe I could have killed five hundred birds that afternoon. Much of the prairie about there, which was then unbroken, has been broken up, and is now wheat, corn, and oat land. The golden plover and curlew are not as numerous in that neighborhood now as they were then. Still, there are plenty of them in the right season of the year. Of late years I have generally killed from fifty to two hundred plover and curlew a day when out after them especially. This means golden plover, as I never shoot the gray or grass plover in the spring, for a reason IJ shall presently advance. My bag has seldom been less than fifty, and not often as high as two hundred, and I have commonly shot right along during the season, pre- ferring to do so rather than to go after snipe to the Sangamon and Salt Creek bottoms. The golden plover and curlew are highly esteemed by the high-livers of the cities. There is a constant demand for them at Chicago, and good prices are obtained when they first come in. GOLDEN PLOVER, CURLEW, GRAY PLOVER. 159 Golden plover and curlew may be found almost anywhere in the prairie States in April. As I stated briefly in the chapters on pinnated grouse, i once went on a three months’ shooting-excursion lio Christian County, Illinois, starting about the first of February. My shooting companion was a hunter named Joe Phillips, and we had for camp-keeper a lively, jovial fellow named Ben Powell. The latter has acted as camp-keeper for me many years. We pitched our tent about a couple of miles from the town of Assumption, and the report was soon spread in that primitive Western village that we were a band of gipsies. One evening a bevy of brown, blushing girls ar- rived at the camp and demanded information as to where the gipsy women were. They wanted to have their fortunes told, and could hardly be persuaded that we were simply hunters and of the same race of people as themselves. After- wards some of the men of the village came, and, in conversation with Powell during the absence of Phillips and myself, boasted of a great shot they had among them. The people of the region were almost all agriculturists and herdsmen, and as for shooting game on the wing, they hardly knew what it was. The man, who had settled 160 FIELD SIOOTING. among them from a distance, professed himself a great pigeon-shot. Powell listened to the wonders this man could perform, and then enquired whether they would like to back him to shoot pigeons against one of the field-shooters of our party. They said they would, and. the preliminaries of a match were arranged, in which Powell was to put up our team of ponies and wagon against a hundred dollars cash on the other side. But the match was not confirmed; for while the discussion was still going on Phillips and I returned to camp from our hunt, and this broke it off. One of the Assumption men had seen me before somewhere, and had heard my shooting well spoken of. He caused his townsmen to draw back. I have no idea that the man they spoke of was much of a shot. Te very likely could not kill sixty birds in a hundred at eighteen yards rise. During the time we shot in Christian County Phillips and 1 kept separate accounts of the game we killed. In the three months I killed with my own gun over six thousand head of game-birds. They included pinnated grouse, brant, geese, ducks, cranes, golden plover and curlew, snipe, and a few sand-snipe. The largest number were golden plo- yer and curlew, and the next on the list was snipe. GOLDEN PLOVER, CURLEW, GRAY PLOVER. 161 On that occasion, in one afternoon, I killed sev- enty-nine ducks, brant, and Canada geese; and Phillips made a good bag the same day. It sometimes falls out so that waterfowl or other birds of pursuit are so numerous and act in such a way that a very large number may be killed. These occasions do not happen, however, very often. After the golden plover and curlew have re- mained with us some time in the spring, they are no longer seen, in large flocks, but are found scattered and distributed over the country in small companies numbering from three or four to twelve. Early in the morning these companies are found on the bare pastures. By eight or nine in the morning they will have gone to the arable land, and are following the plough in the furrow. After they have partially dispersed in this manner they fly very fast, and then they are exceedingly good practice for the skilful shooter. The man who can make nearly certain of his single plover, flying swift, as they do, after the large flocks have broken up and scattered, is a good man at any kind of shooting. I prefer it to any other kind of practice. Before shooting against Abraham Kleinman for the championship « 162 FIELD SHOOTING. badge of the United States, at one hundred pigeons each, I took two weeks’ practice at plo- ver. They were then scattered, and I shot at none but single birds. The practice was of much ser- vice, as the plover flew very swift and did not present a large mark. From what I could do with them in the field I was satisfied I should win the match, and it so turned out. I killed the whole of the hundred pigeons in the match; ninety-three of them were scored to me, and the other seven fell dead out of bounds. From the time the great flocks of plover scatter, which is sometimes as early as the twentieth of April, practice at single, fast-flying birds, such as I have mentioned, may be had until they go north to their breeding-grounds in the higher latitudes. We now come to the upland or highland, grass, gray, or whistling plover, which, according to scientific naturalists, is no plover at all, strictly speaking, but a bird of similar habits and ap- pearance, called Bartram’s tatler. As it is known among sportsmen as a plover only, I shall call it one. This bird is a little larger than the golden plover, and a little longer in the leg; it is also more upright and has a longer neck than the other. Its color is gray. It is a very GOLDEN PLOVER, CURLEW, GRAY PLOovER. 163 handsome bird, and neither the woods, the fields, nor the waters of the American continent supply a more delicious repast than is afforded by a dish of these rich and delicate birds. They winter upon the great plains of Mexico and Texas, upon both banks of the Rio Grande, and are in large numbers, though not so numerous as the golden plover and curlew. The upland plover is the last of the spring migrants from the south, and when it is seen with us we may safely predict that there will be no more cold weather. Its arrival in the prairie States is generally ten days later than that of the first of the united flocks of golden. plover and cur- lew. While it lingers longer in the south than they, there is a corresponding difference in the limits of its visits to the north. They go on to higher latitudes to breed, after having stayed about a month with us. The upland plover breeds with us, though many, no doubt, go far north of Illinois to do so. Indeed, it is found in the summer in Minnesota, and Manitoba, in the British Territory. The upland plover makes a soft, whistling noise when put up, reminding one of Burns’s ‘‘ Fall-toned plover gray, Wild whistling o’er the hill.” 164 FIELD SHOOTING, It is a dodging, cunning bird, but, when it first arrives in the latter part of April, it is very tame and very easily shot. I never shoot it at that season, and no one ought to do so; for the birds are ready to pair as soon as they reach their breeding-grounds on our prairies. It builds in the grass of the prairie pastures, on the ground, its nest being made of dead grass, and commonly under a tussock. ._ The eggs are a pale, bluish green, freckled with brown, and I do not think the hen usually lays more than three. I have a sort of remembrance that I have seen nests with four eggs in them, but I made no notes of them at the time, and am not quite certain. The young birds grow fast, and get fat on abun- dance of grasshoppers and other insects which swarm in the hot months with us. About the first of September the upland plover, young and old, are fine, plump birds, and are far more diffi- cult to shoot than the breeding-birds were when they reached the Western States in the spring. In the fall they are wild and wary, full of craft and cunning, and hardly to be approached by a man on foot, especially if he has a gun. Almost the only way to get near enough to them to shoot is by means of a horse and buggy. GOLDEN PLOVER, CURLEW, GRAY PLOVER. 165 They are to be found in scattered groups, we may say thin flocks, on pastures and meadows that have been mowed. The upland plover in its flight takes much more open order than the golden plover and curlew, though still keeping a sort of companionship, and it does not séttle in clusters, as is the habit of those birds. They run, scattering about over the pastures and mea- dows, catching grasshoppers and such like insects, and, when put up, they fly off swift, in open or- der, well spread out. The sportsman who is after them with the horse and buggy must pursue the saine tactics as those mentioned in reference to shooting golden plover and curlew in the spring. The horse must go fast, and ‘the man ‘must shoot the moment he stops. I never try to step to the ground, but shoot from the buggy. It is best to have a companion when after these wild and wary birds. While one men lies down in a selected spot, the other drives round to the far side of the birds, and gets his shot if he can. ‘Whether he does or not, the plover will be apt to fly over the man lyimg down. This is the only system which promises ‘any success for men who are after upland plover on foot in the fall of the year. It is of no use chasing after them 166 FIELD SHOOTING. over the meadows and pastures, in hopes to get near enough for a shot. Sand-snipe and grasssnipe (so-called in the West) are not snipe, but some sorts of tatlers or sand-pipers. They resemble the plover, but are smaller, being only about the size of a true snipe. The sand-snipe has a whitish breast; the grass-snipe is a gray bird. They come about the same time as golden plover and curlew, and in pretty large flocks. In dry seasons these flocks appear to unite, two or three making but one, and then they are in very large numbers together. They are nice, plump birds, as good to eat as plover, and easy to get at. However, good as they are, few people shoot them, and it is easy enough to get within range of a flock of them. They frequent marshy ground, such as the true snipe likes. Unlike the latter, however, they fly in flocks, and settle down, clustered together, on the muddy edges of sloughs and little water-holes, which they see while crossing the prairie on the wing. Once, when I was out shooting golden plo- yer and curlew, 1 saw a great flock of these smaller birds in a marshy spot near a little pond. 1 thought they were plover, but as I neared them the flock rose, and then I saw it was a vast col- GOLDEN PLOVER, CURLEW, GRAY PLOVER. 167 lection of sand-snipe. It was a dry season, and, as is then their wont, they had gathered into great flocks. They flew around, and finally settled again. I do not usually trouble myself with this bird, for nobody seems to care about it, although it is as good eating as the snipe itself, for all the long bill of the latter; but as I had come down to them, 1 concluded to take a crack at the flock. It was certainly as much as five hundred in num- ber. So I let fly with one barrel charged with No. 10, and, making a raking shot over the ground, killed fifty-four. If game were scarce with us, as it is in some parts, sand-snipe, and grass-snipe would be held in esteem, CHAPTER X. WILD DUCKS AND WESTERN DUCK-SHOOTING. Tue best of the ducks which are found in the Western States are Canvas-backs, Redheads, Mal- lards, Pintails, Blue-bells, Blue and Green winged Teal, Widgeon, and Black Ducks. There are also Wood-ducks, which, though most beautiful in plu- mage, are not very fine on the table. Some are, however, shot for the sake of their feathers, which are exported to England, where the brilliant hues of part of their plumage are used in the manu- facture of artificial flies for salmon and trout fish- ing. And besides the species mentioned above, there are two or three ducks of other sorts, which, being scarce and comparatively worthless, are of no account to the sportsman, and need not be further alluded to in this work. The wood-duck breeds in Illinois and the other Western States along the rivers and creeks, and always in or on the edge of timber. It is rather numerous along the Sangamon and the shores of Salt Creek. They make their nests in hollows of trees, and are the 168 ‘WILD DUCKS AND WESTERN DUCK-SHOOTING. 169 ouly kind of ducks which, to my knowledge, ever alight in trees. It is very beautiful, having gor- geous plumage, with a topknot on the head. The female hatches from eight to twelve young in a brood, and carries them off one by one to the water. The wood-duck is short, small, and stout, weighing about a pound and a half, and is not much prized for the table. It is very swift in flight, and can go through timber like a wild pigeon or a ruffed grouse. Of the ducks to be found with us, the most numerous, and perhaps the best, is the mallard. I consider it quite equal to the canvas-back in juiciness and flavor, and also to the redhead or pochard. Jt is true that so much has been writ- ten and said about the unrivalled excellence of the canvas-back that it may seem heretical to main- tain that the mallard is as good. Such, however, is my own conviction; and though some say that the canvas-backs of the West have not the pecu- liar flavor of those procured on the sea-coast in shallow waters, others, whose experience of them in both localities is large, say this is an error, arising from prejudice and imagination. The edi- tor of this work states some facts which go to fortify me in my opinion. We says that when 170 FIELD SHOOTING. Senator Pugh was in Washington, representing the State of Ohio, this question of the superiority of the canvas-backs of the East over those which had fed and got fat on the wild rice and wild celery of the West was mooted at a supper in which canvas-backs were tho chief dish. All those practically unacquainted with the Western ducks laughed at the notion that they could compare in excellence with those of Maryland. Mr. Pugh was rather deaf, as he always has been, but he seems to have heard the observations in question, though he did not contradict them then. He wrote, however, to a friend of his, then collector at San- dusky, on the shallow bay of that name in Lake Erie, a noted resort for Western wild fowl, re- questing him to send to Washington a few couple of fat canvas-backs. In due time they arrived, and the gentlemen of the party who had met before were invited by the senator to supper. He had procured some fine canvas-backs from Baltimore, and he took good care his guests should know it. But before the ducks were cooked those from Ohio were substituted for those of the Patapsco. They were served up, eaten with great relish, and the usual peans of praise, and not a man at the table except Senator Pugh WILD DUCKS AND WESTERN buUcK-siooTiInc. 171 knew that they had feasted on Western ducks until told so the next day. Even then they were hardly convinced. Another matter in this connec- tion is that the very able and _ well-informed author, Dr. Sharpless, of Philadelphia, stated that he could never distinguish much difference in flavor between canvas-backs and redheads, and that many of the latter were sold as canvas-backs and eaten as such by those who professed to know all about the divine flavor. The editor of this work has often received canvas-back ducks from Mr. Saliagnac, of Philadelphia, who rents shootings on the coast. The canvas-backs sent to him by that gentleman were in truth very excellent, but neither he nor any one else who partook of them thought them superior to some mallards which had been killed in a wheat-stubble in Iowa, and were sent on as a present by Mr. James Bruce, of Keokuk, now of St. Louis, Missouri. Moreover, Mr. Saliagnac himself, great sportsman and en- thusiastic admirer of canvas-backs as he is, told the editor that his breed of tame ducks, the large, white upland Muscovy, were just about as fine eating as canvas-backs when fattened and killed at the right time, and cooked in the same way. Of course all this will be hooted at by those 172 FIELD SHOOTING, who have made the wonderful, exquisite, unparal- leled excellence of the canvas-back a matter of superstition. It is indeed as excellent as any duck, and for luscious richness the ducks at least equal any other description of bird. The canvas- back is a great deal better in proportion to the praises heaped upon it than the brook-trout is; for whatever sport they may give to the angler, the “speckled beauties” are nothing like as good to eat as many other fish not thought much of. Fashion, however, goes a great way in these mat- ters, and few are as candid as the Irishman, who, having gone some distance in a sedan-chair with- out a seat, replied, in answer to the question how he liked it: “Faith, but for the name of the thing I might as well have walked!” The mallards winter in the south for the most part, though a few remain on the Sangamon all the cold season, unless the weather is very in- tense and the frost so long continued and rigid as to freeze up all the springy pools of that river. When they come north in the spring, a few remain with us and make their nests in the Winnebago Swamp and the bottoms of the San- gamon River and Salt Creek. But the vast ma- WILD DUCKS AND WESTERN bDUCK-sHOOTING. 175 jority, after remaining with us some time, go still further north to breed and rear their young. Their northern limit is in a very high latitude. The mallard is the most beautiful of all ducks, except the wood-duck, and naturalists are agreed that the common breeds of domesticated ducks have sprung from the former. It crosses readily enough with tame ducks, to my knowledge, and the produce of the cross are prolific, though wild and apt to go away with the wild mallards in the fall. The mallards with us make their nests about the middle of April in an average season. When out snipe-shooting about the Ist of May, I have found mallards’ nests already containing seven or cight eggs. The nests are built near the water in some secluded marsh or lonely swamp, on tussocks of grass near the edges of sloughs, and in wet river-bottoms. And some- times I have found the nest of the mallard on the margin of a pond in the prairie or the pasture fields. The nest is nicely made of dry grass and sedge, and by the time the female is ready to sit it is lined with soft, loose feathers, just as the nest of the tame duck is. The eggs are from twelve to sixteen in number, in color of a greenish bluc cast, and very much like those 174 FIELD SHOOTING. of the tame ducks which lay greenish blue eggs. The eggs of some sorts of tame ducks are a shining white, as if glazed. The broods of young mallards, the flappers, are first seen about the 10th of June. There are commonly from eight to twelve in a brood. The little things are active and cunning from the first. If they are pursued, they dart swiftly under water, and, swimming beneath to the bank, just put their bills above the surface and lie quiet. When they are some- what bigger, they go out upon the margins of the streams and ponds, and hide in the grass. About the middle of October the young mal- lards are full ‘grown and well feathered so as to be able to fly fast and far. The drake is a little larger than the duck, and a large one will weigh nearly three pounds. Widgeon and the two kinds of teal also breed with us to some extent, but their nests are seldom found. In the Winnebago Swamp there are a few nests of the broadbill or spoonbill. The pintail does not breed with us, and | believe not on this side of the arctic regions. If the winter is broken, the ducks begin to arrive from the south by the middle of Feb- ruary, and in an carly spring they are found in WILD DUCKS AND WESTERN DucK-siooTina, 175 thousands by the Ist of March. When they first come to the prairic States in the spring, they are in poor condition, but after feeding about the corn-fields a short time they become plump and fat. Ducks, wild and tame alike, are great feed- ers, and will be found eating in the evening long after other birds have gone to roost. The mallards and pintails fly from their roosting- places on the water to the fields at early morn- ing, and on wet, cloudy days remain in the corn-fields all day. They are so numerous that the fields appear at such times to have ducks scattered all over them. On clear days they do not remain in the fields on the feed all day, but return to their haunts on the water about nine or ten o’clock. In the afternoon they fly to the corn-fields again about three or four o’clock, when they first come from the south; but after being with us some time their evening flight’ to the fields is not made till sundown, and some- times not till it is nearly dark. The mallards are then paired off, but not so the pintails. When not in the corn-fields, both kinds are about rivers and ponds. The blue-winged teal and the green-winged, with the widgeon, use more about sloughs and 176 FIELD CHOOTING, streams. They do not come into the corn-fields much, and are shot along rivers and _ crecks. I have, however, seen these small ducks flying to the corn-fields when it was nearly dark. At times, when ponds in corn-fields are enlarged by rains, and the low places in the fields are overflowed, many teal resort to them. From such places, at break of day, I have often put up hundreds of teal and hundreds of other kinds of ducks. A great many teal and small ducks, such as blue- bills, are shot on the Calumet River, and Abe Kleinman gets his full share of them. Mallards, canvas-backs, and red-heads are sometimes shot there too, but the smaller ducks are those which commonly prevail. The spring ducks remain with us from four to five weeks, but after the great multitudes have gone north some straggling parties still remain. Mallards pair by the middle of March, and the teal next. The other kinds of ducks are later, and [ do not think they have paired up to the time of their leaving our lati- tudes for the higher ones in which they breed in most cases. About the last of September the ducks begin to arrive from their breeding-grounds in the far north. Some are seen before that time, but they WILD DUCKS AND WESTERN DUCK-SHOOTING., 177 are those which have stopped with us to breed, and the broods they have produced. There is no great abundance from the arrivals until pretty sharp frosts have set in, which is generally about the middle of October, but some seasons not till later. Still the main body seems to hold off, and it is not until cold weather has set in fairly that the ducks come in vast numbers. Then they may be heard all night flying to the south- ward in large flocks, and a great many alight and tarry by the way. Sometimes the whole country appears to swarm with them. In places on the prairies and the great pastures where corn in the ear is dumped down by wagon- loads to feed bullocks, I have seen acres thickly covered with Canada geese, brant geese, mallards, and pintails. As a rule, shooting is not allowed in such places, because it scares the cattle; but the owners and herdsmen have some- times shifted their droves to another place, in order to give me a chance to shoot the wild fowl congregated thereabouts. Then I have had grand spots. The fall ducks remain until the country is mostly frozen up; and in an open fall they are with us in large numbers until nearly Christmas. 178 FIELD SHOOTING. Some mallards stay on the Sangamon all the winter, unless the season happens to be particu. larly severe and the cold very steady and in- tense. When the fall ducks arrive, they are in fine condition, having fed on the wild rice of the north, and the young mallards are delicious eating at that time. I know of nothing better, and of hardly anything else as good. Duck-shooting is often rough, wet work. About the rivers and sloughs it is necessary to be more or less in the water, unless the shooter has a boat; besides which, the ducks secured are necessarily wet and draggled. Shooting ducks in the cornfields, as they come to feed, is differ- ent. The shooter can usually manage to keep tolerably dry, and the ducks shot fall on the ground instead of in the water. But even then it requires considerable fortitude and much skill and patience. People who want to sit by the fire on cold, wet days, when the wind blows strong and keen, are not cut out for duck- shooters. When I go out for duck-shooting on their feeding-grounds, I first ascertain by observa- tion the fields they are flying to and from, and the places they cross the bounds at. Ducks are like sheep in some respects. Where one flock flies WILD DUCKS AND WESTERN DUCK-sHoOoTING, 179 the others follow, keeping the same general route, unless they see something to make them swerve from it. 1 then select the best spot I can find to lie down in—that:is, the one most screened from ob- servation and beneath the line of flight. A rub- ber blanket being spread, down I go on my back, in clothes the color of the grass or ground I lie on. This is an essential point. It is useless to expect the ducks to continue their flight over an object in dark clothes lying upon faded grass, or over a man in light clothes lying upon black ground. My shooting suit is corduroy, with a cap of the same; and as it is about the color of the grass, corn- stalks, and weeds late in the fall, it answers very well. If the shooter has no corduroy clothes, let him wear a linen duster over his dark clothes. The latter may do very well for a patch of black ground in a corn-field, or a dark ground at a erossing-place; but usually corduroy can be made to suit anywhere by a little care in selection, because dead grass and weeds nearly everywhere prevail. A man in dark clothes by a pond in the prairie would not get a duck in a day, no matter how numerous they might be in the neighborhood. Ducks are wary birds and very far-sighted. But some men seem to believe that 180 FIELD SHOOTING. the ducks are as foolish and as thoughtless as themselves. They post themselves in places where the color of their clothes is in strong contrast with everything else around; and when the ducks sheer off wide as soon as they see them, the shooters in question blaze away out of distance, and never touch a feather. I have been out’ with men under circumstances in which they said that the ducks all came to me as if they knew me. The simple cause of it was that I lay down in a suit of corduroy, and they were stretched out in clothes black enough for a funeral. If a man going to shoot ducks on the prairie, by the ponds and sloughs, has no corduroy clothes and no duster, let him go to the grocery- store and get a coffee-sack or two to make a smock. That material is just the right color. In regard to corn-fields, it must be noted that the ducks appear to frequent those most in which the stalks are broken down. In these no blind can be made. If one is made, the ducks will not come near it. The shooter must be down on his back, his feet towards the quarter from which the ducks are coming, and wait until they get over him. In a field where the corn-stalks are still standing a thin blind may be made of them, but WILD DUCKS AND WESTERN DUCK-SHOOTING, 181 more ducks, other things being equal, will be killed in the broken-down corn without a blind than in the other with one. When the shooter sees the ducks coming, he must not move himself, nor must he move his gun, which young beginners always have a strong inclination to do. If the man moves, the ducks approaching in the air see his movement. If the gun is moved, they catch the glance of the light upon it in time to sheer off and balk the idle discharge of the too im- patient shooter. When the ducks are seen com. ing, the man on the ground should lie quite still until they are over him, or almost over him. He should then rise quickly to a sitting posture, at which they will check their forward flight, and tower up into the air. That is the right time to shoot—I may say the only time, in this descrip- tion of the sport, in which there is a real good chance of killing. He who is trying for ducks in this way must not expect to be able to get on his feet to shoot. If he tries to do so, he will kill no ducks. He who cannot rise to a sitting posture from his back and shoot that way must wait for the ducks on his hands and knees, and shoot kneeling. It does not much matter which of these modes is adopted—although lying on the 182 FIELD SHOOTING. back is the best of the two—but it is essential that the shooter should make no move until the ducks are nearly over him. It is also abso- lutely necessary that his clothes should be of the color of the ground he lies on, for otherwise the ducks never will be over him. I have killed many thousands, and consider these to be the great points upon which the sport depends. When there is snow on the ground, the overdress of the shooter should be white, or nearly white, and a white handkerchief should be tied over his cap. At times when there is snow on the ground the ducks resort largely to the corn-fields, and the sport in them at such times is usually very good, provided the shooters carry it on in the right way. CHAPTER X1. DUCKS AND WESTERN DUCK-SHOOTING. In the spring of the year, after the ducks have come from their wintering-places, there is often some very cold weather, and, though all but the running streams are frozen over, the wild fowl never go back again, if they can possibly avoid it. Their instinct is very strong against turning to the southward at that season of the year. At such times, and at any other times, when the ice is thick, a good blind may be built of it near the open water, and much sport may be had. The shooter must of course expect to be cold, and he will be very cold while waiting for ducks in hard weather, especially when he waits a long time in vain. But the coming in of the ducks in good flights raises the spirits, stimulates the circulation of the blood, and revives the warmth of the body. I have sometimes got so cold that I could hardly charge my muzzle-loading gun; but good sport soon changed that. The shooting along the Illi- 183 184 FIELD SIOOTING. nois River is very good indeed, and there are more canvas-backs and red-heads there than there are about the Sangamon or in the neighborhood of Elkhart; but my favorite among ducks, whether for sport or the table, is the plump, heavy, beauti- ful mallard. As I remarked before in alluding to the color of the duck-shooter’s clothes, ducks know a good deal more than some of the men who go after them. You may sec some of the latter select for their shooting-place a corn-field in which the ‘stalks are all broken down, and there they go to work and build a standing blind of the stalks. “In vain is the net of the fowler spread in sight of the bird.” The ducks have probably flown over that field dozens of times, and notic- ing this blind—a thing there new and strange— they sheer off from it instead of flying on to go over it or near it, and the man inside of it gets no shots within killing distance. When I see that a man has built a blind in such a place, I just take advantage of his ignorance and folly by going and lying down some hundred and fifty or two hundred yards on one side of it. All the ducks that sheer off from it on that side I get a shot at. In this way I have often DUCKS AND WESTERN DUCK-SHOOTING. 185 killed twenty or thirty, while the man in the blind never got a duck. Sometimes the man in the blind seeing this would make shots out of all distance, more for the purpose of scaring the ducks from me than with any hope of bringing them down himself. When that has been the case, I have left him to his own devices, and gone to another part of the field altogether. It is necessary to remark for the information of Eastern readers that the corn-fields of Illinois are commonly very large, and not like the small enclosures of the Atlantic States. The former sometimes con- tain as much as a thousand acres without any intervening fenec. Production on this great scale tends to keep game plentiful in two or three ways. The farm-houses are far apart, which is one thing. As long as the corn-stalks are stand- ing green these fields aftord capital cover for pinnated grouse and quail, as remarked hereto- fore. Another thing is that they afford abundance of food for grouse, quail, turkeys, geese, ducks, ete. Some parts of the summer the birds get a- plentiful supply of insects in the corn. In the fall of the year and winter, and in the following spring, the grouse, geese, and ducks feed largely on the corn itself, there being always some scat- 186 FIELD SHOOTING. tered about, even in the fields from which the ears have been hauled off. Duck-shooting in the corn-fields in the fall is fine, pleasant sport. At that season many of the stalks are still standing, and plenty of places may be found to hide. Besides, the ducks are not then very wild, and the majority of them are young birds which, not having been shot at a great deal, are not as wary as the old stagers, who remember the shooting on their passage north in the spring. An. excellent place at this time of the year is on the windward side of an Osage orange hedge, near where they cross on their way to feed. When the wind is blow- ing against them, ducks fly low. With the wind nearly dead ahead of them, the shooter on the windward side of the hedge will get plenty of shots at low-flying ducks as they come over, and need not take the trouble to lie down in the corn at those times. Rainy, misty, windy wea- ther is the best of weather for this method. On such days the ducks are flying low and going into and out of the corn-fields all day. In clear weather they fly higher, but still low in their evening flights, coming out to feed. Sometimes the flocks will be seen high in the air, as if DUCKS AND WESTERN DUCK-SHOOTING. 187 setting out on a long migratory flight; but com- ing over a corn-field, they will sail around, shut their wings, and come sloping to the ground. Ducks generally sweep round in a circle before settling down. A pond or little slough in a corn-field is a capital place to lie for ducks. The shooter must lie down on the bank, as in other places. I have killed from three to four dozen ducks in an evening’s shooting in a corn- field, and that often. One thing I have noticed which will be of great importance to beginners in duck-shooting. It is that they always seem to be nearer than they really are when in flight. Allowance must be made by the shooter for this deceptiveness of appearance as to distance. When I have killed a duck, I have often .been surprised to find how far it fell from me. “One that seemed to be but thirty yards off would turn out to be forty-five. It was not the momen- tum of flight after being hit that could account for this, as such ducks had commonly stopped in their forward progress, and were towering up when shot at. Ducks also seem to be lower than they really are when seen in flight, and this is especi- ally the case in some sorts of weather. In some states of the atmosphere they will seem to be 188 FIELD SHOOTING. much nearer than at other times when the dis- tance is actually the same. In nine cases out of ten, when a man shoots at ducks flying over him, they are higher in the air than he believes them to be. I have often seen men fire at ducks which were so high and so far off that the flock would not change its direction at the rc- port, and just kept on, seemingly looking down contemptuously on the foolish shooter. In the spring of the year and late in fall, when the ducks are heavily feathered, a side shot is best for penetration, as it may take effect under the wing. When shooting from a blind, it is best to let the ducks pass a little before firing. When the shooter is lying on the ground, the turn made by the ducks as they tower up gives better chance of penetration; but the grand secret of penetration is a hard-hitting gun of good weight and calibre, and plenty of powder. In the prairies there are many ponds and sloughs, and the waters are generally well up in them when the prime of the time for shooting ducks comes in the spring and fall. At such places it is advisable to use decoys, and with these well set out a man may shoot on and off all day when the ducks are flying about. Wooden DUCKS AND WESTERN DUCK-SHOOTING. 189 decoys, painted to represent ducks, are used by many people, but I prefer something different, more natural than the joiner and painter can turn out. I have killed hundreds of dozens of ducks shooting over decoys, and the best I ever used were tame ducks of the color of the mallard. Three of these, a drake and two ducks, I used to fit with a piece of leather on the leg, and a string five or six yards long for each. I then staked them out in shallow water, so that they could not come nearer than four or five feet of the bank, and lay down. They were, in my opinion, much better than any dead decoy, whe- ther duck or wood. After being used as decoys for some time these ducks seemed to under- stand what was required of them, and to enter into the business with interest. They would swim about and play, and I had one pair that would call to the wild mallards when they saw them going over. The next best thing to these tame live decoys for the waters of which I am writing is the dead mallard itself. As soon as I got a couple, when not employing the tame ducks, 1 put: them out, and sometimes I have had as many as fif- teen dead ducks out as decoys together. Suc- 190 FIELD SHOOTING. cess greatly depends upon the way in which they are set out; though set out in the most artful and natural manner, they are not as effectual as tame ducks of the mallard color, because these last swim about, and the ducks flying above see them in motion. I. have sometimes killed as many as seventy or eighty ducks in a day’s shooting with decoys of dead ducks. My method of setting them out was as follows: Having killed the duck and got him on the bank, take a stick, or, on the prairie where there are no sticks, a reed, or the stalk of a strong weed, which is there big and stiff. Sharpen one end to a point, which insert under the skin of the duck’s breast and along up the neck, just beneath the skin, into the head. Do this so that the head holds a natural position to the body, and the neck is not awry. Then wade out and plant the other end of the stick in the mud over which there is a foot of water or a little more. The body of the duck must then rest on the water, as that of a live duck does, and, after having smoothed the feathers nicely, the shooter returns to his lying-down place on the bank. It is best to keep on setting these dead decoys until you have seven or eight out; and if you largely in DUCKS AND WESTERN DUCK-SHOOTING. 191 crease the number, it will be simply all the bet- ter. I make no blind by the pond or slough, but lie on the grass, unless there is brush or a growth of willow to hide in. Neither do I ever wait for the ducks to settle, but shoot while they are still on the wing. One day at Skunk’s Island, in the great Winnebago Swamp, I killed a hun- dred and thirty ducks over dead-duck decoys set out after the plan I have described, and ‘in that day’s shooting I never hid at all. I sat on a muskrat-house all the time, sometimes, however, lying down. It made no difference whether I lay or sat, for the ducks were flying thick, and in the humor to “come and be killed,” as the old song has it, which says: “Old Mother Bond got up in a rage, Her pockets full of onions, her lap full of sage ; And she went to the pond, did old Mother Bond, Crying, ‘Dill, dill, dill! dill, dill, ain! Come and be killed! The guests are all met, their bellies must be filled.’” On the occasion to which I have alluded I was out of ammunition before night. lt was late in the fall, when large flocks fly, and two or three ducks may sometimes be killed by one barrel. 192 FIELD SHOOTING. The place called the Inlet, at the east end of the swamp, some miles from Skunk’s Island, is famous ground for ducks. The Winnebago Swamp is very extensive. What is called the Outlet runs into Green River, all along which stream there is very good duck-shooting. In the big pastures, which are sometimes four or five miles long and one or two miles wide, there are often ponds at which the bullocks being fatted for market drink. At these ponds great shooting over decoys is often to be had. On Mr. Sullivant’s great farm in Ford County there are many ponds and many extensive corn-fields, and I found last spring that the shoot- ing of geese, ducks, and crane there was very good. —so good that I mentally resolved to go there again next season. In two days’ shooting, morn- ings and evenings, not over decoys, but as the wild fowl came to and went out of the corn-fields, I killed sixty-five mallards and pintails, mostly mallards, five brant geese, twenty sand-hill crane, and three large white crane. Yet F was told that the ducks and brant had mostly all gone north before I was there, and that they had been much more abundant than they were in the two days 1 shot. Mr. Sullivant’s foreman saw my ducks and cranes at the station, and made his remarks DUCKS AND WESTERN DUCK-SHOOTING. 193 to this effect: “They said that as you were a pigeon-shooter, you would not be successful in the field. I have, however, seen no such lot as that at any time this season, and yet the ducks are now scarce to what they have been.” This farm of Mr. Michael Sullivant’s is the largest in Illinois, I think, and I am _ convinced that it is one of the best neighborhoods in the State for game. From what I saw, pinnated grouse abound, there are lots of quail, and in the mi- gratory seasons great flocks cf ducks, geese, brant, and cranes. The estate was purchased by Mr. Sullivant some years ago, when it was mostly un- broken prairie. It is eight miles square, contains about forty-four thousand acres, and twenty-six thousand acres of it have already been brought under cultivation. Twenty thousand acres of it were in corn last year, and I dare say more will be this year, while three thousand acres were in smaller grain, and three thousand in meadow-grass. Mr. Sullivant, the owner and farmer of this ex- tensive and fertile tract, was formerly the largest landowner in Franklin County, Ohio, and very likely is so still. His father was one of the first settlers near Columbus, the capital of Ohio; in fact, he lived just west of the Scioto River, op- 194 FIELD SHOOQTING. posite where the State House now stands, before there was a house in Columbus at all; and his younger sons, Joseph and William, still reside in that city. The Illinois proprietor is the eldest son of the old pioneer. The family is famous for culture, enterprise, and the uncommon personal beauty of its members, They are a tall, power- ful, handsome race; and probably in all the vast regions of the West not a tribe excels this family, in all its branches, in stature, symmetry, strength, and beauty. Upon this Illinois farm there are three hundred miles of Osage orange hedges, which are yet young. Let the sportsmen remember what has been said of the hedges as affording nesting- places for game-birds, protection against hawks, and facilities for shooters, and they may conceive what these three hundred miles of hedges will do when they have grown tall and thick. Now to come back to the ducks. On the large streams, such as the Mississippi and Illinois rivers, it is commonly necessary for the duck-shooter to use a boat, and it is hardly practicable to use any but decoys of wood, painted to represent the sort of ducks expected. Upon these rivers I have killed canvas-backs, red-heads, mallards, and some few black or dusky ducks. DUCKS AND WESTERN DUCK-SHOOTING. 195 I have not been out much on these large rivers, however, but have shot more in the corn-fields, on the sloughs and ponds about the prairies, in and about the Great Winnebago Swamp, and on the Sangamon and Salt Creek. Sometimes when a man is out after other sorts of shooting, espe- cially snipe, he will find that the ducks are in such numbers, and flying in such a way, that he may abandon his intended pursuit, and turn his attention to them. His shot will be smaller on such occasions than he would have chosen for ducks; but with plenty of powder to drive them at high velocities, he will get penetration, and bring the wild fowl down. Once upon Salt Creek, near where it falls into the Sangamon, I was out after snipe, and noticed that the mallards were flying in such a way as to afford a fine chance. 1 had nothing but No. 9 shot, but de- termined to try what could be done. This was in 1868. The edge of the creek was well timbered, and, choosing my post, I seated myself on a log among the trees and brush. There was a light snow on the bottoms some three inches deep, and the snipe had to get near the margins of the streams to feed. I could have killed a good bag of them, but the ducks offered a chance 196 FIELD SITOOTING. much too tempting to be neglected. I could not forego the opportunity, and sitting upon that log, and shooting as they flew until all my ammuni- tion was expended, I killed and secured ninety- five mallards. Some few, which fell on the other side of the creek, I did not get. With plenty of cartridges and a breech-loader I believe I could have killed two hundred ducks. They were all mallards. The date was April 7. Most of the mallards flew in pairs, and their route was towards the north. I have no doubt they. were beginning their migratory flight from our neighborhood to the high latitudes. In hard, severe weather, when the wind is strong and keen-cutting, it is to be noted that ducks and other water-fowl are apt to seek the protection of the timber. At such times they will be found in creeks whose banks are well wooded, and about ponds in the timber. In these places the shooter need not go to the trouble of build. ing a blind. There are in such situations so many old logs, stumps, etc., that if he sits down in clothes of the proper color, the ducks will not make him out in time to change the di- rection of their course in flight. Thus on the great day at Skunk’s Island, in the Winnebago DUCKS AND WESTERN DUCK-SIHOOTING. 197 Swamp, and on that of Salt Creek, I had no blind, and did not hide myself in any particular manner. In the first case I sat on a muskrat house all the time; in the second I was seated on an old log while all the shooting was done. It is, however, necessary that the shooter should keep still; for the ducks will see any movement a long way off, and they know that stumps of trees and the like do not move. In cold weather, when the ducks seek the timber for shelter, they fly very fast; he who can_ kill three out of every four shots he makes is a good marksman, and will have all the ducks he will want to carry far on his back. CHAPTER XII. WILD GEESE, CRANES, AND SWANS. Amone the wild geese to be found in the spring and fall in the States of the great Mississippi Valley, there are at least two varieties which are common in the same seasons on the seaboard of the Atlantic States. These are the Canada goose, the common wild goose, known almost every- where, and the brant goose. But besides these, we have in the Western States vast numbers of small geese of other varieties, which we commonly call Mexican geese. As many as: three of these differ in their plumage, and, though found in the same flocks apparently, are no doubt the following : Hutchinson’s Goose, the White-Fronted Goose, and the Snow Goose. As mentioned above, they are only known by Western sportsmen as Mexican geese. We have, then, five or six varieties of wild geese in Illinois, Iowa, ete. Of these the Canada goose is the largest and finest, and it used to be much the most numerous. It is a 198 WILD GEESE, CRANES, AND SWANS. 199 handsome bird, weighing when fat from ten to fourteen pounds. It winters in the south, and on its passage towards the north does not stay with us a great while, though a few remain all the summer, and I have seen the nest of this goose in the Winnebago Swamp. Their great breeding- grounds are far to the north of any of the habi- tations of white men, or even of Indians. They have been seen above the latitude of eighty north, and were even then flying on towards the pole. In those solitary regions, during the brief arctic “ summer, the several kinds of wild geese rear their young in vast numbers, and, when in the fall they set out upon their southerly migration, they fly in innumerable flocks. They usually fly high, and, though their flight seems to be labored, it is very swift for so heavy a bird. In foggy weather their flight is low, and they appear to be confused, as if uncertain of the proper route. They intermix freely with tame geese, and the cross is much esteemed for its size and excellence on the table. Canada geese are rather easily domesticated, but even then the instinct of migration northward in spring is so strong that they get uneasy. Some- times when not pinioned they rise into the air and join flocks going over, and sometimes they 200 FIELD SIIOOTING, wander off and are shot as wild geese. A cross of the Canada goose no doubt improves the do- mestic goose in beauty and flavor, if not in size, and it is easy to procure it by means of wound- ed ganders, pinioned and turned down with the tame geese. The Canada goose is not so abundant in Illinois in the migratory seasons as it used to be. When I first settled in that State, there were vast flocks of these geese all over the country in the spring and late in the fall. In the daytime they were mostly in the sloughs and bottoms, and there they roosted at night, but they came out mornings and evenings to feed. They are very fond of corn, and consume large quantities of it. The reason why they are now less abundant in Illinois is the thicker settlement of the country. The main column of the Canada geese now take a more westerly route towards the south, crossing Minnesota, Kan- sas, Nebraska, Iowa, and the country up the Mis- souri River. But there are a great many in Illi- nois still at the right times of the year. The Canada goose comes earliest of all the great tribes which migrate from the south in the spring, and, considering that most of them have to fly over a space covering more than fifty degrees of WILD GEESE, CRANES, AND SWANS, 201 latitude before they reach their breeding-places, it may be supposed they cannot stop very long with us in their vernal flights. As to the few which remain all the winter on the Sangamon River and in other wild places where there may be open water, they are too insignificant to count for much. The Canada geese come in their great flocks in February, with the first freshet or open weather, and remain till the middle of March, as a rule, while a few linger along until April comes. They come before any of the ducks, and they go on north before them. The Winnebago Swamp is a great resort for the wild geese. Formerly they used to breed there in considerable numbers, but of late years their nests in that quarter have been few. They may, however, still be found by those who penetrate into the marshy recess they choose for their breeding-places. When the wild geese arrive in the spring, they are commonly lean, but, after having fed on corn for a little space, they gain flesh and become in good order. the Times. : In all cases he shall cover the money of the challenging party within one month, and name time and place of shooting, or, in failing to do so, shall forfeit the badge to the party challenging. Any party holding the badge for two years, it shall become his personal property. Any party challenging for this badge shall de- posit $250 in the hands of the editor of the Spirit of the Times as one-half forfeit. All the money from both parties to be up in said office one week previous to date of shooting, when the match becomes play or pay. Hither party may compel the other to go to the score not later than one o’clock p.m. The mstches for this badge shall be shot ac- cording to the English rules, as modified and pub- 334 TRAP SHOOTING. lished. below, at fifty single birds each, each party to bring not less than seventy birds on the ground. Hither party may trap and handle his quota of birds, or furnish a substitute. ‘The party commencing to trap shall continue until the match is half out, that is to say, until twenty-five birds each have been shot at, when the opposite party shall commence and trap an equal number. It shall be decided by “toss” which party commences trapping. The referee, in all cases, unless amicably and mutually agreed upon, to be appointed by the editor of the Spirit of the Times. In case of a tie, the parties shall shoot at five birds cach; in case of a second, they shall shoot at five more, and so on until the match is decided, the condition covering trapping to apply the same as in the match. Rules of the National Championship Badge. Rutz 1. The gun must not be carried to the shoulder until the bird is on the wing. Rute 2. A misfire shall be at the risk of ihe shooter. PIGEON-SHOOTING. 335 Rue 3. If a person pulls the trap without notice from the shooter, he has the option to take the bird or not. Rute 4. If on the trap being pulled the bird does not rise, it is at the option of the shooter to take it or not; but if not, he must declare it by saying “No bird.” Rutz 5. Each bird must be recovered -within the boundary, cighty yards, within three minutes, if required by any party interested, or it must be scored lost. If a bird is challenged to show shot-mark, it must be handed to the referee for his decision, ; Ruts 6. If a bird that has been shot perches or settles on the top of the fence or on any of the buildings higher than the fence, it is to be scored a lost bird. : Rute “7. Or if a bird perches or settles on the top of a fence, or on any of the buildings higher than the fence, and then falls dead to the ground, it is a lost bird. Ruiz 8. If a bird once out of the grounds should return and fall dead within the boundary, it must be scored a lost bird. Rutz 9. If the shooter advances to the trap aid orders it to be pulled, and does’ not shoot 336 TRAP SifO0OTING. at the bird, or his gun is not properly loaded, or does not go off, the bird is to be scored lost. Rute 10. Should a bird that has been shot be flying away, and a “scout” fires and brings the bird down within the boundary, the referee may, if satisfied the bird would not have fallen by the gun of the shooter, order it to be scored a lost bird; or, if satisfied the bird would have fallen, may order it to be scored a dead bird; or, if in doubt on the subject, he may order the shooter to shoot at another bird. Ruiz 11. A bird shot on the ground with the first barrel is “no bird”; but it may be shot on the ground with second barrel if it has been fired at with the first barrel while on the wing. Rute 12. The shooter is bound at any time to gather his bird, or depute some person to do so, when called on by his opponent; but in so doing he must not be assisted by any other person, or use any description of implement. Should the shooter be any way baffled by his opponent, or by any of the party shooting, he can claim another bird, with the sanction of the referee. tcLe 13, Shooting shall be from five traps. PIGEON-SHOOTING. 337 If more than one trap is pulled, so that more than one bird is on the wing or at large at the same time, the shooter has the option of shoot- ing or not; if he kills, the bird must be scored; but should he miss, it shall be a lost bird. Rutz 14, The shooter cannot leave the shoot- ing-mark under any pretence to follow up any bird that will not rise, but is walking away from the trap after it is pulled; and, having once left the mark after shooting at the bird, cannot re- turn to shoot at it again under any circumstan- ees, The amount of shot for each barrel shall not exceed one ounce and a quarter. Any shooter found to have a larger quantity in his gun, or who discharges his gun after his load is challeng- ed, shall be at once disqualified. The five ground traps shall be placed five yards apart, under the direction of the referee, thirty yards rise, and the use of both barrels is allowed. Rutz 15. Each shooter shall pull the traps for his opponent, or shall nominate a man to do so. The puller shall in all cases pull fairly, and without delay; and if the referee shall be satisfied that the trap was not pulled fairly, and without resort to any kind of baffling device, he shall 338 - TRAP SHOOTING. order the bird to be scored for the’ shooter, though not killed within bounds. The trap to. be pulled to be decided by tossing a die by the referee, or by such other means as shall be just and satisfactory. Rute 16. -Each shooter shall come to. the score on being called by the referee, and each may claim an intermission of fifteen minutes once during the match. Rutz 17. The boundary shall be measured from the centre of the middle trap. Rules of the Prairie Shooting Club of Chicago. [As Amended March 10, 1874.) Rue 1. Traps, Rise and Boundaries.— AN matches shall be shot from H and T plunge or lever traps, the choice of which the referee shall decide by toss. The boundaries shall be eighty yards for single birds, and one hundred yards for double birds, which shall be measured from a point’ equidistant from, and in a direct line be- tween, the two traps, or, when more than two traps are- used, in a direct line between the centre traps. The rise for single birds. shall be twenty- one yards, and for double birds cighteen yards. PIGEON-SHOOTING. 339 Rutz 2. Distance between Traps.—in single- bird shooting, the distance between the: traps shall be five yards; in double-bird shooting, when four traps are used, they shall be two and.a half yards apart. Ruiz 3. Judges and Referee—Two judges and a referee shall be appointed before the shooting commences, and the referee’s decision shall be final. He may allow a contestant another bird in case the latter shall have been balked or inter- fered with, if he thinks the party entitled to it. Ruiz 4. Birds and Decision.—Ilf a bird shall fly towards parties within the bounds, in such a manner that to shoot at it would endanger any person, another bird shall be allowed; and, if a bird-is shot at within the bounds by any person besides the party at the score, the referee shall decide how it shall be scored, or whether another bird shall be allowed. Ruiz 5. Position at the Score.—After the shooter has taken his stand at the score, he shall not level his gun or raise the butt-above his elbow - until the bird is on the wing. Should he infringe on this rule, the bird or birds shall be scored as lost, whether killed or not.. Rutt 6. Release of Birds—The shooter, when 340 TRAP SHOOTING. ready, to say “pull,” and the puller to obey such signal, and pull the trap or traps fairly and evenly, and release the bird or birds instanter. If the trap be pulled or the birds released before the signal is given by the shooter, he shall have the option of calling “No bird” and refusing to shoot; but if he shoots, the bird shall be deemed a fair one, and scored for or against him, as the case may be. Rue 7. Rise and Call of Birds—All birds must be on the wing when shot at, or will be scored as lost birds. If the bird does not rise immediately after the trap is pulled, the shooter shall have the option of calling “No bird”; and if he shoots at it on its afterward rising, it wiil be considered “a lost bird.” Ruz 8. Gathering Birds—lt shall be optional with the party shooting to gather his own birds or appoint a person to do so for him. In all cases the bird must be gathered by hand, without any forcible means, within three minutes from the time it alights, or be scored as lost. All “ birds” must show shot-marks if challenged. A bird onee out of bounds shall be scored as lost. Rute 9. Misfires. — Should. a gun miss _ fire or fail to discharge from any cause, it shall score PIGEON-SHOOTING. 341 as a lost bird, unless the referee finds, upon ex- anination, that the. gun was properly loaded, and the misfire unavoidable, in which case he shall allow another bird. Rots 10. Birds on the Wing.—1n double shooting, both birds must be on the wing when the first is shot at. If but one bird flies, and one barrel is fired or snapped, the birds shall not be scored, whether killed or missed, but the party shooting shall. have two more birds; or, if both birds fly and are killed with one barrel, he must shoot at two other birds. Rute 11. Size of Gun.—The shooter shall not be allowed to use a gun of larger calibre than that known as No. 10. Rete 12. Charge of Shot.—There shall be no restriction as to size of shot used or charge of powder, but the charge of shot shall be not to exceed the regular Dixon Measure, No. 1106 or No. 1107, 14 oz. by measure struck. off. Ruiz 13. Penalty for Overloading.—The Club shall provide a standard shot measure, and all guns: shall be loaded from the same, except in case of breech-loaders, when the referee may open one or more cartridges, to ascertain if the charge of shot is not above the standard. Any person 342 TRAP SHOOTING, found infringing on this rule shall be barred from further participation in the match. Rutz 14. Ties and Distances.—In case of ties at single birds, the distance shall be increased five yards. In case of second tie, the distance shall be increased five yards further, and this distance shall be maintained until the match is decided, and shall be shot off at five single birds. The ties on double-bird shooting shall be shot off at twenty-one yards at five double rises. Ruiz 15. Ties—At a shooting match, all ties shall be shot off on the same grounds immediately’ after the match, if they can be concluded before sunset. In case they cannot be concluded by sun- set, they shall be concluded on the following day, unless otherwise directed by the judges or referee. This, however, shall not prevent the ties from dividing the prizes, if they may all agree to do so. Should one refuse to divide, then it must be shot off. Any one of the ties being absent thirty minutes after the time agreed upon to shoot them off shall forfeit his right to contest for the prize. Rutz 16. Bribing and Penaliy.— Any com- petitor or other person bribing, or attempting to bribe, the trapper or puller, -or attempting to * PIGEON-SIIOOTING. 343 obtain an unfair advantage in any manner what- soever, to be disqualified from shooting or sharing in the results of the match. Rute 17%. To prevent Accidents—The shooter, if he use a breech-loader, shall not put the cart- ridge in his gun until called to the score. If he use a muzzle-loader, he shall leave it uncapped until called. Rute 18. Challenging and Penalties. — Any person participating in a match shall have the privilege of challenging a competitor as to charge of shot used, and the referee shall make such challenged party draw his charges and have them examined ; and, if found to exceed the limit fixed by rule, he shall forfeit his right to participate in the match, or share in the same in any way. If he fires his gun after being challenged, and be- fore the charge has been examined by the referee, he shall suffer the same penalty as for overloading. Ruiz 19. Time at Score—Each participant in a shooting match shall hold himself in readiness, and come to the score prepared to shoot when his name is called by the scorer. If he be longer than five minutes, it shall be discretionary with the referee whether to allow him to shoot or not in the match. WM. READ & SONS, 18 FANEUIL HALL SQUARE, S&S BOSTON, MASS. Importers of & Dealers in Breech and Muzzle-Loading Guns, W. C. Scott & Son’s, Westley peer Greener’s, Webley’s, Moore’s and others. Also, Remington’s, Whitney’s, and other American makes. Maynard’s, Ballard’s, Remington's, Steven’s, and other Sporting Rifles. Agents for W. C. SCOTT & SON’S BREECH-LOADERS. Every size of these celebrated Breech-Loading Guns constantly in stock—14, 22, 10, 8, and 4 bores—or imported to special order, if desired. Scott’s Nlustrated Book on Breech-Loaders, bound in morocco, 2% cts. by mail. Bussey’s Patent Gyro-Pigeon Trap for Shooting Practice. Also, Fine Trout and Salmon Rods, Flies, Reels, and every article in Fishing Tackle. SEND FOR CIRCULARS. JOSEPH BUTLER & CO., 179 E, MADISON STREET, CHICAGO, Winners of the.Chicago Gun Trial of 184, at Dexter Park, under the auspices of the Illinois State Sportsmen’s Association. Messrs. BUTLER & CO. respectfully invite the attention of the poomemen to the report of the Gun Trial. from which it will be seen that gung of their own manufacture, and those rebored by them, ex- celled both in pattern and penetration those of any other maker. Messrs. BUTLER, & CO. make a specialty of reboring guns to shoot properly, and that the erviable reputation they have achieved for this class of work is.deserved, the following extracts from the above report clearly prove: “ Three highest averages for Pattern, Daniel_T. Elston, owner,—191, 1-6. Rebored by J. BUTLER & Co. Manufactured by J. BUTLER & Co., owners,— 181, 3-6. Manufactured by J. BUTLER & Co., owners,—180, 4-6.” Breech-Loaders of their own manufacture are warranted un- exeelled by those of any other maker. Tackle, consisting of Bamboo Rods, Bass and Trout Rods, Reels, Spoon Bait, Wiies, Silkworm Gut, Plated Linen and Silk Lines, Gut and Gimp hh Hooks, and everything in the line. Sportsmen visiting the ‘West will find every requi- e Fai TO SPORTSMEN. = =) rd TR an os) rd AMERICAN a’) 4 “r} - A Compared with any other, will be found Cleaner, Heavier, and more Uniform. EIS = LE a a A WEEKLY JOURNAL (OF SIXTEEN PAGES), DEVOTED -TO FIP GD SPORTS, Practical Hutural History, Fish Culture, Protection of Game, Preservation of Forests, YACHTING, BOATING, OUT-DOOR RECREATION & STUDY. IT 18 THE OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE AMERICAN FISH CULTURISTS’ ASSOCIATION. Dhe Forest and Stream Is the only Journal published in this country that fully supplies the wants and meets the necessities of the Gentleman Sportsman. SEND FOR SPECIMEN COPY. TERMS, $5 A YEAR. — S46: Address: Forest and Stream Publishing Company, 17 CHATHAM ST. (City Hall Square), NEW YORK... 1% SOUTH THIRD ST., PHILADELPHIA. 1% DEARBORN ST., CHICAGO. THE SPORTMAN’S ORACLE & COUNTRY GENTLEMAN’S NEWSPAPER, A Weekly Review and Chronicle of the Turf, Field and Aquatic Sports, AGRICULTURE, ART, SCIENCE, LITERATURE, CHESS, DRAUGHTS, BILLIARDS, VETERINARY, SHOOTING, FISHING, Trapping, Athletic Pastimes, Natural History, Music and the Drama. —— ns E TURF, FIELD AND FARM, having by far the largest circula- tion of any paper of its class published in the country, is, by its culture and ability, the recognized authority on all the subjects of which it treats, as its high moral tone and advocacy of healthy, eleva- ting and manly sports have won for it the approval and active patron- age of the best and most intelligent people in the land: and the substan- tial evidence: of its growing popularity is the continual and steady increase of circulation throughout the WORLD. Every Turf Association, Agricultural Society, Horse Owner, Stock Breeder, Club and Library, should subscribe and have on file, for reference, a journal representing the vast interests advocated by the TURF, FIELD AND FARM. TO THOSE WHO ADVERTISE. The TURF, FIELD AND FARM has an undisputed claim to be one of the best general advéftising mediums in the United States. Its cir- culation throughout the world has increased three fold during the past three years without increase of rates, and is still extensively spreading. The paper is read by tens of thousands every week, while Horsemen, Sportsmen, Farmers, and the lovers of aquatic and kindred sports pre- serve and bind their copies. Z Specimen copies, with premium lists, catalogue of publications, ete., seut upon application. —_—_—_—____—. TURF, FIELD AND FARM ASSOCIATION, Office: 37 Park Row, New York. For Sale by Newsdealers throughout the World. BARTON, ALEXANDER, & WALLER, 101 and 103 Duane Street, New York, “IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN Breech and Muzzle-Loading Guns OF ALL THE BEST MAKERS. RIFLES, PISTOLS, AMMUNITION, And Sportsmen's Goods of all Kinds. ALSO, FISHING TACKLE OF EVERY VARIETY. FISH HOOKS, RODS, REELS, LINES, &c. Artificial Flies and Baits on hand, and made to order. FINEST QUALITY SPLIT BAMBOO FLY RODS FOR TROUT AND SALMON FISHING. Agents for the UNITED STATES ARMS CO.’S REVOLVERS. Alexander’s Pocket Cutlery. JOHN W. COURT & CO.’S FISH HOOKS. Spirit of the Cimes: THE AMERICAN GENTLEMAN’S NEWSPAPER, eign oe, Annual Subscription, $5.00. 0 e PUBLISHED WEEKLY, IN HANDSOME FORM. —o—_——_ fl Nace Journal is devoted to Field Sports, Accounts of Ex- ploration and adventure, Exploits on Flood and Field and in the Jungle and the Forest, the Current History and Philo- sophy of the Turf, the Science of Breeding and Raising Run- ning and Trotting Horses, Yachting, including the science of construction, Hunting, Fishing, Billiards, the Stage, and the Literature of the day. An especial feature is THE VETERINARY DEPARTMENT. One of the most able and successful Veterinary Surgeons of the age answers questions and gives directions and prescrip- tions, gratis, for the relief and cure of Horses, Cattle, Dogs, etc.,; suffering from disease or injury by accident. Hundreds of sub- seribers declare this department to be WoRTH THE WHOLE SUBSCRIPTION. THE SPIRIT OF THE TIMES Also gives carefully considered answers, judicial in their nature and thoroughly impartial, to questions in dispute among gentlemen, and submitted by the parties for authoritative decision. It also resolves questions of interest where no dis- pute exists and no money is involved, but where information is desired. The readers value these columns of THE Sprit very highly. ; OUR CORPS OF CORRESPONDENTS is unrivaled. GEORGE WILKES, Editor and Proprietor, 3 Park Row, N.Y. THE American Sportsman CONTAINS ALL THE LATEST RIFLE NEWS; FULL SCORES OF SHOOTING PRACTICAL NATURAL HISTORY; Fishing and Gunning. FOR SALE BY ALL NEWS DEALERS. Price, 10 Cents. IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF GUNS, RIFLES, PISTOLS SPORTING ARTICLES, 19 Maiden Lane, 20 & 22 John St., New York. BREECH-LOADING GUNS A SPECIALTY. Se Fine Gung and Rifles manufactured and imported to order. Agents for the Union Metallic Cartridge Company. The Sturtevant Brass Shell for Breech-Loading Shot Guns. BLACK’S CARTRIDGE VEST. This vest affords the best arrangement for carrying cartridges yet invented. The weight is so evenly distributed that it is scarcely felt. The heads of the cartridges can be carried down, which is of importance when the brass shells are used, as in carrying them with the heads up the weight of the shot often forces the wad forward, when bad shooting is the result. The vest is made of English fustian, and is a sportsman- like garment. ee Pree, CWC co cnsanscxcganase 08 $7.50. In ordering send measurement around the chest, and gauge of gun. SCHUYLER, HARTLEY & GRAHAM, 19 Maiden Lane, New York. Send for Circular. UNION METALLIC CARTRIDGE CO.. BRIDGEPORT, CONN.., BERDAN PATENT CREEDMOOR LONG RANGE AMMUNITION TARGET PRACTICE. eee ALL KINDS OF ee RIM & CENTRAL FIRE CARTRIDGES, <> ~~ =s*-~ PERCUSSION CAPS, ee Berdan's, Hobbs’, and Orcutt’s Primers, Gun Wadding, Brass and Paper Shells for Breech-Loading Shot = Loading Sturtevant’s Patent Brass Breech ex Sehnylet, Hartley & Grahany, 7 Importers of English. Breech-Loading Shot Guns, : ; a ial and all kinds of Shooting Tackle. Send for Circular. +e ROBERTS Works Published by J. B. Ford & Co. THE CIRCUIT RIDER. A NOVEL, By EDWARD EGGLESTON. Author of “ The Hoosier Schoolmaster,” ett., ete. Ivol, r2mo. Illustrated. Cloth, $1.75. “The breezy freshness of the Westeii prairie blended with the refinements of literary culture. It is alive with the sound of rushing streams and the echoes of the forest, but shows a certain graceful self-possession which betrays the presence of the artist’s power.” —V.Y. Tribune. ‘ A GOOD MATCH. A NovEL, By AMELIA PERRIER, Author of “Mea Culpa.” 1vol, 12mo. 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It is full of interest for all intelligent girls and young women. The work has been heartily indorsed and adopted by the directors of many of the leading Colleges and Seminaries for young women as a text-book, both for study and reading. MINES, MILLS, AND FURNACES ,. of the Precious Metals of the United States. BEING A COMPLETE EXPOSITION OF THE GENERAL METHODS EM-~- PLOYED IN THE GREAT MINING INDUSTRIES OF AMERICA. By ROSSITER W. RAYMOND, Pu. D., U.S. Commissioner of Mining Statistics. With Plates, Cloth, $3 50. This is a very particular account of the condition of the mining interests, and the processes and mechanical appliances which are applicable to them, in California, Nevada, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, tah, Arizona, Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico. It is the re- port of the.Commissioner to the Secretary of the Treasury, and embodies all the information which official investigation and _contri- butions from experts and residents of those regions can afford. 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It is eminently a book for the times, giving the author’s individual ideas about the much-vexed Woman Question, including marriage, divorce, suffrage, legislation, and all the rights claimed. by the clamorous, ‘“ A capital story, in which fashionable | ‘* Always bright, piquant, and enter- follies are shown up, fast young ladies | taining, with an occasional touch of weighed in the balance and found want- | tenderness, strong because subtle, keen ing, and the value of true worth ex-|in sarcasm, full of womanly logic di- hibited.” —Portland Argus. rected against unwomanly tendencies, —Boston Fournal, THE OVERTURE OF ANGELS. A SERIES OF PICTURES OF THE ANGELIC APPEARANCES ATTENDING THE NATIVITY OF OUR LORD, A CHAPTER FROM THE “LIFE OF CHRIST.” By HENRY WARD BEECHER. Illustrated. 1 vol. r2mo, -$2. A beautiful and characteristically interesting treatment of all the events recorded in the Gospel€ as occurring about the time of the Nativity. Full of poetic imagery, beauty of sentiment, and vivid pictures of the life of the Orient in that day. “The style, the sentiment, and faith- | commend it to many readers, to whom fulness to the spirit of the B blical record | its elegance of form will give it an addi~ with which the narrative is treated are | tional attraction."—Worcester (Mass. characteristic of its author, and will LON er musap ir a perfect fragment.”""—V. Y. World, “* Grace always finds lots of things no one else would see ; and she has a happy knack of picking up the mountains and cities and big tress, and tossing them across the continent right before the reader’s eyes. It’s very convenient,”— Buffalo Express. a7 Park Place, and 24 & 26 Murray Street, New York, Works Published by J. PR. Ford & Co, THE CHILDREN'S WEEK: SEVEN STORIES FOR SEVEN DAYS. By R. W. RAYMOND. ILLUSTRATED BY H. L. STEPHENS AND Miss M. L. HALLOcK. 1 vol. it6mo. Cloth, $1. 25. Seven cheery stories with a flavor of the holidays about them. Mr. Raymond’s conceptions are ingenious, and while the glimpses of fairy-land and its wonders will open the eyes of the little folk, the book possesses many attractions for older persons in its simple, artis- tic style, and the quaint ideas in which it revels. “ The book is bright enough to please | and, withal, admirable good sense. The any people of culture, and yet so simple | illustrations—all new and made for the that whildren will welcome it with glee,” | book—are particularly apt and pleasing, —Cleveland Plaindealer. showing forth the comical element of the book and its pure and beautiful senti- Mr, Raymond’s tales have won great | ment.”—Buffalo (N. Y.) Commercial popularity by their wit, delicate fancy, | Advertiser. OUR SEVEN CHURCHES: EIGHT LECTURES. By THOMAS K. BEECHER. rvol, 16mo. Paper, 50 cents® Cloth, $1. A most valuable exponent of the doctrines of the leading religious denominations, and a striking exhibition of the author’s magnanimity and breadth of loving sympathy. “The sermons are written ina style| ‘There is hardly a. page which does at once brilliant, epigrammatic, and | not offer a fresh thought, a genial touch readable.”— Utica Herald. of humor, or a suggestion at which the _°' This little book has created con-| reader’s heart leaps up with grateful siderable di ion among the religi surprise that a minister belonging to a journals, and will be read with interest } sect can think and speak so generously y all.”"—Phila. Ledger. and nobly.” —Milwaxukee Sentinel, HISTORY of the STATE OF NEW YORK. FROM THE DATE OF THE DISCOVERY AND SETTLEMENTS ON MANHATTAN ISLAND TO THE PRESENT TIME. A TEXT-BOOK FOR HIGH SCHOOLS, ACADEMIES, AND COLLEGES. By S. S. RANDALL, - Superintendent of Public Education in New York City. Ivol, 12mo. J/lustrated. Cloth, $x 75. Officially adopted by the Boards of Education in the cities of New York, Brooklyn, and Jersey City, for use in the Public Schools ; and in Private Schools throughout the State. 27 Park Place, and 24 & 26 Murray Street, New York. Works Published by J. B. Ford & Co. ‘LECTURES TO YOUNG MEN ON VARIOUS IMPORTANT SUBJECTS. NEW EDITION, WITH ADDITIONAL LECTURES. By HENRY WARD BEECHER. Uniform Edition of the Author’s Works, Cloth, $1 50. This was Mr. Beecher’s first book, and is known all over the world. The present edition is enriched by the addition of several new lectures, and some reminiscences of the origin of the book by Mr. Beecher. The book should have a place in every family. It can scarcely fail to interest every intelligent reader, nor to benefit every young man who reads it. I vol, 12mo. “’The subjects are all practical, and resented with characteristic impress- iveness.”—A lbany Evening Fournal. ‘* Wise and elevating in tone, pervaded y earnestness, and well fitted for its mission to improve and benefit the youth of the land.”’—Boston C. bth. “These lectures are written with all the vigor of style and beauty of lan- guage which characterize everything rom the pen of this remarkable man They are a series of fearless disserta- tions upon every-day subjects, conveyed with a power of eloquence and a prac- tical illustration so unique as to be oftentimes startling to the reader ot ordinary discourses of the kind.”— Philadelphia Ingutrer. MOTHERLY TALKS WITH YOUNG HOUSEKEEPERS. By MRS. H. W. BEECHER. WITH CARBON-PHOTOGRAPHIC PORTRAIT OF THE AUTHOR. I vol, I2mo, $2. Mrs. Beecher’s notion of woman’s sphere is, that, whatever ex- ceptional women may be able to accomplish by reason of peculiar circumstances and talents, the most women, and for all marrie lace of labor and achievement for women and mothers, is Home. This book, composed of brief and pithy articles on almost every conceivable point of duty, is an admirable monitor for young wives, and a mine of good sense and information for growing maidens, ‘* An admirable corrective to ignorance in the household.”"—W. Y. Tribune. : useful and entertaining work, crammed with friendly and admirable monitions and instruction for young housekcepers,”— Philadelphia Even- ing Herald. ~ ae This book is exactly what its title sets forth—a kind and motherly way of helping the young and incxperienced make agreeable, well-regulat and happy homes.” —Boston Globe. ae “What she has to say she says so well, with such good sense, ripe judg- ment, and such a mother-warmth of heart, that she cannot fail to help the class for whom she writes, and guide them into good and useful paths."¥— Presbyterian, 27 Park Place, and 24 & 26 Murray Street, New York, Works Pubiished by J. B, Ford & Co. WINNING SOULS. SKETCHES AND INCIDENTS DURING FORTY YEARS OF PASTORAL WORK, By REV. S. B. HALLIDAY. tvol, 12mo, Cloth, $1. The author of this volume for some time past has been, and now is, engaged as assistant in the pastoral labors of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn {Rev. H. W. Beecher’s), where, in visiting among the sick, the poor, and the afflicted of that large parish, he is continually en- countering new and interesting phases ef heart-life. These simple records of scenes among his earlier labors possess a peculiar interest. “ Pull of valuable suggestions to min- | many of its pathetic scenes will be read isters in the department of active duty.”’ | with moistened eyes, We commend the —Methodist Recorder. book to pastors and people.’’—Boston “The book is tenderly written, and | Chris‘ian Era. NORWOOD: Or, Village Life in New England. A NovEL. By HENRY WARD BEECHER. Uniform Edition of the Author’s Works, t vol, remo. MNlustrated. Cloth, $2.00, ‘This is Mr. Beecher’s only novel, and it affords a most remarkable illustration of his versatility. Full of exquisite descriptions of scenery and delifieations of social and domestic life, exceedingly graphic and trustworthy in detail, and abounding in passages of genial humor and kindly wisdom, it is altogether one of the most enjoyable novels ever published. It is fragrant with the genuine raciness of the New England soil. PLEASANT TALK ABOUT’ FRUITS, FLOWERS, AND FARMING. NEW EDITION, WITH MUCH ADDITIONAL MATTER. By HENRY WARD BEECHER. Uniform Edition of the Author’s Works, ‘rvol. r2zmo. Cloth, $2. oo. This volume, when it was first given to the public somie years ago, was most favorably received, both in this country*and in England. The present edition contains many recent additions to the original book, dealing with both the poetical and the practical side of garden- ing and farming, the whole making a volume of rare interest and value. 27 Park Place, and 24 & 26 Murray Street, New Vork. “PARKER” THE PIONEER GUN, ig Still Ahead!! GN a, EVERY FIRST PRIZE FOR TRAP SHOOTING At the last convention of the NEW YORK STATE ASSOCIATION WON WITH “THE PARKER”! Messrs. NEWELL AND HAMBLETON, winners of the only prize given for “ making the largest score in the three regular shoots,’’ Both Shot The Parker Gun!! Two of the three winners of the Grand Staie Prize, “THE DEAN RICHMOND CoP,” te"SHOT THE PARKER GUN!!.@1 Medals and Diplomas awarded THE PARKER GUN, When placed on exhibition in COMPETITION OPEN TO THE WORLD. MEDAL AND DIPLOMA From the A merican Institute—1869. SILVER MEDAL Texas State Fair, 1871. SILVER MEDAL Texas State Fair, 1873. ‘ SILVER MEDAL Mechanics and Agricultural Fair Association of Louisiana—1872. DIPLOMA From the Vermont State Agricultural Soctety—1888. DIPLOMA From the New Hampshire State Agricultural Society—1868. DIPLOMA From the New Haven County (Conn.) Agricultural Society—1867. DIPLOMA From the Sardis (Mass.) Agricultural and Mechanical Society, 1870. DIPLOMA From the Connecticut Valley Agricultural Association—1870. IPLOMA Agri ral and Mechanical Association of West Alabama—1871. « DIPLOMA Adams County (Miss.) Agricultural and Mechurical Association—1872. - FIRST PREMIUM At the Delaware County (Iowa) Fair—1871. SEND FOR REDUCED Price List, MAy Ist, 1874. Prices, $45, $50, $60, $65, $75, $80, $100, $105, $150, $200, $250. Rebounding-Locks included. : Le, PARKER BROTHERS, West Meriden, Conn. ORANGE SPORTING POWDER, MANUFACTURED BY LAFLIN & RAND POWDER COMPANY; NEW YORK. ORANCE LIGHTNING POWDER. This is the strongest and cleanest powder made. Nos.1to7. Packed only in sealed 1 lb. canisters. The coarser sizes are especially recom- mended to owners of breech-loading guns, giving great penetration with very slight recoil. For trap shooting use No. 6 in guns of 12 gauge, and No. 6 in those of 10 gauge. ORANGE DUCKING POWDER. A very strong, clean powder, good for all shooting. Nos. 1 to 5. Especially adapted to killing ducks and geese at long range, and less liable to be affected by dampness than other brands. Packed in 6% Ib. kegs, in 5 Ib. canisters, and 1 Ib. canisters. AUDUBON. This is a very quick, clean powder for woodcock and quail shooting. Nos.1to4. Packed in 123¢ Ib. kegs, 6% 1b. kegs, and in 1 lb. canisters. ORANCE RIFLE POWDER. This is more generally used for field shooting than any of the other prands, being less costly than the higher grades, and giving nearly the“ same results in the field. No powder made of this grade will show such cleanliness as Orange Rifle. Packed in 25 Ib. kegs, 123g Ib. kegs, 634 Ib. kegs, and in 1 1b. can- isters. Sizes, F, FF, FFF. All the above kinds of powder will give greater penetration and leave less residuum in the gun than any other brands known. The LAFLIN AND RAND POWDER COMPANY are engaged in the manufacture of Gunpowder for sporting and also for mining pur- poses on the largest scale, having their factories at many different points. Sporting powder is, however, made by them only in the State of New York, taking its name from the old Orange Mills in Orange Co. Their mills have the most approved methods and perfect appoint- ments, and the product is shipped to their magazines in all parts of the country, and to foreign ports. The reputation of the Orange Powder, established many years since, will be carefully guarded. Branches of the house are established at St. Louis, Chicago, Du- buque, Buffalo, and Baltimore, besides agencies in all the principal towns and cities, ' USE THE ORANGE POW DER. REMINGTONS’ Double-Barreled, Breech-Loading Shot Gun, Whitmore’s Patents. August 8, 1871. April 16, 1872. We are now prepared to furnish our IMPROVED DOUBLE-BARREL- ED BREBCH-LO ADING SHOT GUN, which we reco mmend as the best ever offered the American sports- man, combining all the most de- sirable features of the best En- glish double guns, together with some valuable improvements not found in any other. In the prod uction of these guns no expense or trouble has been spared. {in order to suit the require- ments of our different customers, we make three styles of gun, dif- _ fering only in_the finish and, kind of barrels and stocks, which we offer at the full owing prices: Plain Waluut Stock, De- ° carbonized Steel Bar- rela, © - = -+ + + = $4500 Fancy Stock, Twist Barrels, - = - = - = 6000 Extra Finish Stock, Da- mascus or other Fancy Twist Barrels, En- graved Lock Plate, = - 75 00 Inallof these guns only the best _Mmaterials and workmanship are employed. In order to enable us to offer a thoroughly well made and relia- ble gun at the low price of $45, we have omitted all ornamentation of either the stock or metal work, Bore, 10, 12 gauge. Weight: 28 inches, No. 12 gauge, 824 lbs. ; Ne oO. wants of the public. We cannot vary, in ANY PARTICULAR, from the dimensions and weight before mentioned, or in the style of. fin- ish. Send for illustrated Cata- logue and price-list. Address E. REMINGTON & SONS, 281 and 283 Broadway, N. Y. MANUFACTORY: ILION, Herkimer Co., N. Y. P. 0. BOX, 3994. OE A JOURNAL FOR THE SPORTSMEN OF TO-DAY, a 7 Published EVERY SATURDAY MORNING AT 179 EAST MADISON STREET, CHICAGO. ‘O- TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: Payable in advance. Yearly, $4.00; half-yearly, $2.00. Foreign and Canadian Subscription, post free—yearly, 18. ; half-yearly, 9s. Single copies, 10 cents. —_o__— Ng FIELD is a complete weekly review of the higher branches of sport—Shooting, Fishing, Racing and Trotting, Yachting and Rowing, Base’ Ball, Cricket, Billiards, and General Sporting News, Musie and the Drama. THE FIELD will be found in keeping with the times on all subjects pertaining to honorable sport, and will, under no circumstances, admit to its columns anything tending in anywise to demoralize or degrade public sentiment. THE FIELD being the only Sporting Journal published west of New York, and the recognized authority among the sportsmen of the West and South, among whom it enjoys a large and increasing patronage, possesses superior advantages as an advertising medium, which will be g preted ey those desiring to make their business known in the Di f : AGENTS [TOR GREAT BRITAIN.—Messrs. Kirby & Endean, 190 Oxford Street, London. NOTICE TO THE TRADE. News Agents desirous of being supplied with THE FIELD are re- quested to apply to the publishers, 179 East Madison Street, from whom only it can be obtained. EJ. ABBEY & CO., MANUFACTURERS AND IMPORTERS OF Breech and Muzzle-Loading Guns RIFLES AND PISTOLS. 0. Dealers in Fishing Tackle and General Sporting Goods. *,* Bad Shooting Guns made to shoot well. SHELLS LOADED TO ORDER. —o 43 8S. CLARK STREET, CHICAGO, Tu. JOSHPH TONKS, GUN MANUFACTURER, 45 & 49 Union St., and 1 Marshall St., Boston. IMPORTER AND DEALER IN GUNS, RIFLES, REVOLVERS & CUTLERY, Parker Breech-Loading Shot-Gun, —_—>—_—. Breech-Loading Shot-Guns of celebrated English makers. Paper and Metallic Shells for Shot-Guns of all kinds. _ Metallic Cartridges for Rifles, Revolvers_and Pistols. Caps, Wads, Powder, Shot, &., &c. ped Cutlery, Razors, Scissors, &c. Air-Guns and Cap Rifles for aloons and Fairs. Fire Arms Repaired. CORNER SECOND & WALNUT STREETS, PHILADELPHIA, IMPORTER, MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN GUNS, RIFLES, PISTOLS FISHING TACKLE OF ALL KINDS. —_<~—__—_ He invites all Sportsmen and dealers in his line to examine his stock of Flies and Spliced Bamboo Rods, which are the best in this country. We make Flies of all kinds to order, or rods of any style. Has constantly on hand a full assortment of Rods, Hooks, Lines, Baits, Reels, Hooks, Salmon Flies, Waterproof Silk Lines, Silk and Hair Trout Lines, &c. Perch Snoods, China and Grass Lines. Also, a large lot of Cane Reeds, Bamboo and Japan. A. PETERMAN, MANUFACTURER OF FINE BREECH & MUZZLE-LOADING GUNS TO ORDER. A Full Assortment of Sportsmen’s Implements ; and Fishing Tackle. ——_<—_— No. (31 WALNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. PIGEON TRAPS. “ i = | ” and corr? PLUNGE TRAPS. Common Traps . . . (per pair) $15.00 Patent Self-Closing Traps ‘ 25.00 A pair of these Traps sent by freight or ex- press on receipt of price. W. F. PARKER, West Meriden, Conn. AMERICAN STANDARD. ———_<@=2—____ PATENT SIFTED EAGLE BRAND OF CHILLED DROP SHOT, AS ADOPTED BY THE New York State Sportsmen’s Association. —y Tuos. Otis LE Roy« Co. Patent Shot and Lead Works, 261 and 263 Water St., | NEW YORK, SOLE MANUFACTURERS. SCHOVERLING & DALY, 84 & 86 CHAMBER STREET, NEW YORK, MANUFACTURERS OF THE CHARLES DALY BREECH - LOADING GUNS. These Guns are pronounced by every dealer and sports- man who has handled them to be the finest finished and closest and strongest shooting Guns in the market. The barrels are of beautiful pattern and finish, and the locks and mountings of the best quality. For sale by all the first-class Gun Dealers at our prices : Side Snap Actions sievexssseecrcaventonennyees $100.00 to $110.00 Top Snap Action, Double Bolt................ 130.00 “* 175.00 Pistol Grip Stocks (@xtra)..........sseeeceeees 10.00 _ Extra Close and Hard Shooting guaranteed for 12.00 extra. Agents for WM. POWELL & SONS. WM. POWELL & SONS’ BREECH-LOADERS Have acquired, during the past few years, the first place in the estimation of English sportsmen; as they come into use in this country, they are coming to be known as the best gun made im England.