Oec. 14, 1895.] 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



In New Jersey. 



THE BOILING SPRINGS THANKSGIVING. 



Nov. IS.— There was a good attendance to-day at the grounds of the 

 Boiling Springs Gun Club, Rutherford, N. J , the occasion being the 

 annual turkey and sweepstake shoot of the club. Some excellent 

 shooting was done by McAlpin, .Teanneret, Frank and Huck, McAlpin's 

 work being especially noticeable for his score of 73 out of his last 75, 

 the last event being at 5 pairs, in which Mac made a clean score. 

 Hall, who only shot in the last two events, made a 10 straight and 8 

 out of 10 in the pairs. The weather was all that one could wish for 

 target shooting. Scores: 



Ties. Ties. 



Proctor.... 1111011111— 9 101111* P Carver 1101101110-7 10 



Shell 1110111111—9 101110 Pearson 1111100110-7 



Moork 0111111110-8 11111101* Green 0001111101-6 111*- 



Wojeck ....1011111110-8 11111100 Smith 1100110110-6 110 



Brooks 1110111110—8 11110 Larsen ,.0101101101—6 110 



Gray 1110110111-8 Hubbard 1110010011-6 



Bonebill... 1110011101— 7 11* Sachem.., 1101001011—6 



Other scores in this evert were: Stevens, Cap. Milchplson, Warren 

 and McNaught 5, Doc and McDonald 4, Fulton 3, Terwilliger 3, Par- 

 tridge 1. 



No. 1, 10 targets: Bonehlll 10, Carver 8, Shell 8, Sachem 8, Pearson 7. 

 Larsen 7, Wojeck 7, Proctor 7, Moork 7, Warren 7, Brooks 0, Smith 6, 

 Stevens 6, Cap 5, Little 5, McNaught 4, Williams 4, Hubbard 3, Doc 3, 

 Fulton 3, McDonald 2, Gray 2. Partridge 2. 



No. 2, same: Wojeck 10, Proctor '.), Pearson 9, Sachem 8, Moork 8, 

 Shell 8, Bonehill 9, Brooks 8, Little 9, Smith 8, Williams 7. Warren 7, 

 Carver 6, Larson 6, Pinto 6, Green 6, Fulton 5, Stevens 4, Partridge 2, 

 Hubbaid2. 



No. 3, same: Brooks 9, Sachem 8, Warren 7, Moork 7, Williams 7, 

 Bonehill 7, Wojeck 7, Shell 7, Little 7, Carver 6, Proctor 6, Green 6, 

 Carlson 5, Larsen 4, Pearson 4, Pinto 3 McNaught 2. 

 » Dec. 7.— The monthly club shoot of the Boiling Springs Gun Club 

 was held this afternoon. All sweepstake events were at unknown 

 angles. Frank led in the club shoot with a score of 47 out of 50. 

 Scores: 



Events: 12 3 4 5 Events: 13 3 4 5 



Targets: 10 10 15 15 15 Targets: 10 10 15 15 15 



Huck 9 10 15 13 15 Paul 10 10 .. .. 



Bhaw , 7 6 13 .. .. Marvin 10 11 .. .. 



Greiff 10 1Q 14 9 13 Welles 13 7 11 



McAlpin 10 7 11 .. .. Thornton 11 12 12 



' Frank 10 . . 12 . . .. Barron 9 5 11 



James 7 Collins... 12 11 10 



The club shoot is at 50 targets per man, the first 2^ beins: shot at un- 

 known angles, the last 25 at traps in reverse order. Score: 

 Frank 11111111111111111111111111110111100111111111111111-47 



Collins 11111101101111101111111111111001111111100111111111-43 



Paul 11111101010111111011111111111111101011111011110111—42 



Huck. iiiioiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioomoinmmoomiioi-4d 



Welles 10111111111111111110011011111001110011110111111101-40 



Greiff, 11111111101111010111110111111110111011110111001101-40 



Thornton 11111111111011111111011110011101011110111011110101-40 



McAlpin lllllllllOlllllOlOlllOlOlllOlllOlllllllOOOlllOllll— 39 



James 10101111111111011111011011100110100111001001111011-35 



Barron llllOOllllOllllOlllinOlOllllOOlllOlOOOlOlllOOllll-35 



Marvin 11110101101111111101011011010111100011000011011110—33 



Shaw 11111101011111011000100111001111100010001101001101—30 



lmbert ■ 00100000000000100000000000100000000000010000000000- 4 



EAST SIDE GUN CLUB. 



Nov. 2S.— The East Side Gun Club, of Newark, N. J., held its regular 

 monthly shoot to-day (Thanksgiving Day) at its grounds on Newark 

 Meadows. Some good shootiDg was done by the half score of mem- 

 bers present, four events at live birds being decided as follows: 



No, 1, 7 birds: Koegel 7, Hilfers 6, Hassenger 6, Perry 4. 



No. 2 No. 3. No. 4. 



Koegel .....2110111-6 2012110-5 12011—4 



Hilfers 2121222-7 1222011-6 1 0221-4 



Hassenger 1200211—5 1120111-6 11101—4 



Leuthauser 1210211—6 2110211—6 02<!01— 4 



Perry 0120121-5 2111221-7 21210-4 



Perewent 2201111—6 11111-5 



Roth 1021000-3 12112-5 



Bitz 1220210- 5 21120 -4 



Batch 0212221-6 20201-3 



Koehler 2011111-6 21111-5 



FORESTERS' gun club. 



Nov. 28 —The regular monthly shoot of the Foresters' Gun Club, of 

 Newark, N. J , was held to-day on the club's grounds, foot of Peddie 

 street. Hayes, F. Sinnock and J. Flemming made the best scores, C. 

 Smith scoring 17 out of 20 in the ninth event. Scores as follows, all 

 events except No. 9 being at 10 targets: 



Events: 13345678 Events: 13345678 



Hayes 8 7 6 9 10 8 8 10 Tarlton ....75947886 



J Flemming 88777897 Young 7546447 10 



F Sinnock. ,8 9 7 9 7 10 9 8 T Smith..., 78785777 

 D Flemming 57586776 



No. 9, 20 targets: 



Hayes lllllllOlllllOlOllll— 17 Jewell 11110101000100110011—11 



J Flem'ingll0110110110100n010-12 T Smith .. .10111001101011001111-12 

 F Sinnock.l011ll010lU10011111— 15 C Smith... .11101001111111111111-17 

 DFlem , ingllH1110011110101100-14 A Smith . . .10110111011010101000-11 

 Tarlton ....11010111011001111111—15 Qoode ....11110011110101101011—14 



UNIDN HILL GUN CLUB. 



Nov. 28 — The Union Hill Gun Club, of Hoboken, N. J., held a 

 Thanksgiving Day shoot to-day, the following being the scores made: 



C Woolmington 2020110211—7 21111-5 11011—4 



Unteriner 0101120011-6 10110-4 



Ruttenbaum 1210210111—8 



J Waller 0010000000-1 



AVolk 0100001210 -4 12021-4 



F Hall 2120111111-9 11211—5 21111-5 



J Hughes 0121120210-7 10210-3 



P Sullivan 0000001012-3 21102 -4 21000—2 



TDennehy 0010011111— fi 01120-3 



J Worth 0000000000 - 



J Woolmington 0101001110—5 



F Bender 0201021010-5 22022 - 4 01111—4 



J Sullivan 10021—3 11101—4 



TLennon 00112-3 00101—2 



Berriman 11011—4 



AT THE CARTERET CLUB. 



Dec. U— The 17th and last competition for the "President's cup," at 

 the Carteret Club's grounds, Bayonne, N. J., took place this afternoon. 

 The "cup," which, as previously stated in Forest and Stream, was an 

 order for a Purdey gun — price not to exceed S400— is now the property 

 of J. P. Knapp, wno scored his 5th win this af cernoon. 



The attendance to-day was an old-time one, 14 shooters taking part 

 in the sweep which was shot in connection with the cup contest. Of 

 the 14 there were 8 in for the cup, and this 8 Included the strongest 

 amateurs in this part of the country: George Work, Fred Hoey, J. P. 

 Knapp, L T Duryea, J. Seaver Page, L. H. Thompson, W. B. Mead 

 and W. H. Stafford: the first 6 would make a strong team against any 

 similar number of shooters from any section. Tnompson made his 

 first appearance at the Carteret, or for the matter of that at any 

 Eastern grounds, since he left tor Colorado; his position at the traps 

 — one of the easiest we have ever seen— has not altered in the slight- 

 est, while his execution is as it always was, equal to the best of them. 



The birds this afternoon seemed to be better than usual, and that's 

 saying a good deal, because Carteret birds now are a pretty warm lot. 

 Fred Hoey was able to tell something about the quality or the birds 

 before he had gotten through shooting; every bh d he drew but ono- 

 nis 7th— seemed to know that Hoey was at the score, and every moth- 

 er's son of them when liberated imstied its wings as fast as it coull. 

 Duryea also drew a hard lot of birds, the 32yds. mark handicapping 

 him on his 1st and 3d birds, both of which fell dead out of bounds, 

 The fact that only 33 out of the 229 shot at in the cup contest showed 

 any incoming tendencies speaks volumes for the birds; add to this a 

 Slight breeze that was by no means favorable to the birds, and it will 

 be readily seen that the birds were far above ordinary ones. John S. 

 Hoey acted as referee throughout, but his work was, barring the cold, 

 almost a sinecure. 



With fourteen entries, that included the men mentioned above as 

 shooting for the cup, it was a matter of considerable surprise to find 

 only one straight, George Work, at the end of the filth round. He 

 ran straight up to the tenth round, when he lost a fast driver from 

 No. 1 dead out of bounds. Knapp lost his 3d and 4th birds, both hard 

 ones from the 32yds. mark; he lost his 14th, also a good bird, that 

 clearly beat him. When he had lost three birds it loosed as if he was 

 out of the race for the cup, as Work and Thompson at tne close of 

 the fourteenth round had each of them missed but two birds, Thomp- 

 son's work on his 14ih being a poor piece of shooting. Work lost hts 

 18th, a driver from No. 3. This left Thompson alone ror the cup, 

 wita only two misses when he killed his I8:h bird and had but two 

 more to shoot at. Ha fell down, however, on his very next bird, let- 

 ting in both Work and Knapp. These three then killed out, closing 

 their scores with 17 each. The conditions of the contest call for ties 

 to be stint off miss-and-out. Thompson dropped his 3d tie bird, leav- 

 ing the cup between Work r3 wins) and Knapp (4 wins) Tf there was 

 to be another contest for the cup Work must win this heat. A? mat- 



ters stood, Work was defending $400, the value of the gun which he 

 was giving as the "cup," while. Knapp was shooting to win the $400 

 order. It was a $100 miss-and-out! Work drew a right quartering 

 driver from No. 4 for his 4th bird; it did not seem so very fast, but he 

 failed to center it and the bird, hit hard, went over the boundary, 

 falling dead outside. Then Knapp had to kill to win; everybody left 

 the club house and went out to watch the result of the shot. He 

 killed his bird easily, and was for a few minutes afterward kept busy 

 slmkiug hands with those who crowded up to congratulate him. 



With all this account of the cup contest, the shooting of H. A. 

 Butler and G. S. McAlpin must not be overlooked. Butler shot very 

 well indeed, killing some remarkably hard birds, his 12th being a 

 streak of black that was cleverly centered with the second after being 

 clean missed with the first. He won first money alone in the sweep 

 with 18 out of 20, his 18th bird falling dead out of bounds. McAlpin 

 handicapped himse.f by being a little careless over his 1st bird, 

 that was perhaps a trifle faster than he judged it to be. He then 

 killed 13 straight, several of them really good birds, and it began to 

 look like Mac for part of first money, but his 15th shot was an unac- 

 countable miss, while his l*th, like Butler's, went over the fence to 

 die. He went out with 17, tieing Work, Knapp and Thompson for 

 second money, dividing with Knapp on the shoot-off miss-and-out at 

 the end of the fourth round; in bis tie birds McAlpin was very for- 

 tunate, drawing four easy incoming birds in succession. 



The way the traps fell to each shooter was as follows, 46 being 

 about an average. It will be noticed that there was only one trans- 

 gressor, No. 5: 



No. 1. No. 2, No. 3, No. 4. No. 5. Total. 



Butler 3 4 4 7 2 20 



Knapp..,-. 4 5 5 3 7 24 



McAlpin 7 3 3 7 4 24 



Work 6 1 5 6 6 24 



Thompson 3 6 7 4 3 24 



Duryea 4 6 3 8 3 18 



Stafford 3 2 3 3 5 16 



Page 4 3 4 2 3 16 



Hoey , 1 3 2 8 5 14 



Mead 3 1 2 5 11 



Edey 3 1 3 2 2 11 



Thomas 3 4 1 3 11 



Chapin 2 2 1 3 3 11 



Wright 1 3 2 6 



The following table 

 Name. Gun. 



Butler Parker 



Knapp .... Purdey 



McAlpin .. .Francotte . 



Work Purdey 



Thompson. Purdey 



Duryea ... .Francotte, , 

 Stafford... Purdey 



The full score in the 



44 



of guns and 



Powder. 

 Du Pont. 

 Schultze. 

 Schultze. 

 E. C. 

 Schultze. 

 Schultze. 

 Schultze. 

 President's 



43 4' 

 powders us: 

 Name. 



Page 



Hoey 



Me id 



Edey 



Thomas. . 

 Chapin . . . 

 Wright . . . 

 cup contest 



43 



229 



id will be of interest: 

 Gun. Powder. 



. Purdey Walsrode. 



.Purdey 



. Purdey Schultze. 



.Francotte .Schultze. 

 .Greener . . ,E. C. 

 .Francotte .Schultze. 



.Purdey Schultze. 



was as follows; 



Trap score type— Copyright by Forest and Stream Publishing Co. 



15422444341321234543 



H A Butler (28) 2 131U111222222221.1 2-18 



58234535245412253151 

 N ? \ \ -T \ T T t f r> T H-><- 

 J P Knapp (32) 220U222222222022222 2-17 



11453511344141312254 

 \i/\ttr + ^ T< — >*-<-< — >t-T^ 



01122122212221022.2 2-17 



G S McAlpin (29) . 



45415332415151141354 

 Geo Work (SI) . 2 2*121122.20;<J112202 2-17 



35213232435534214223 

 ^ T ? -f \\->^<-$ SX? T T 

 L H Thomp3on (31) 2 21*222212 2 22022120 2—17 



. 21352521152334214 3 

 $ T T \^T,f<-^1V T T<-T ? 

 L T Duryea (32) •2»11»2»1221221220 —14 



2411534 5 54583251 



T ? *"t "v-^T v+S<- 



W H Stafford (28) 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 —12 



2531353115241324 



J S Page (30) U21.221122222200 —12 



21354535424552 



Fred Hoey (31) 2 2 022022220220 —10 



132553 41144 



W H Mead (28) 1 12 2 1 2 2 — 7 



13244151335 

 /"'vf'xT*— >T;"r>T 

 W S Edey (29) , 2 2.20222200 — 7 



45255333322 

 E F Thomas (28) 2 2 2 2 *22000 — 7 



45541123524 

 O M Chapin (30) .2 1102 1 2 2 a0 — 7 



2 2 5 2 15 



H G Wright (29) 2 2 • — 2 



Ties, miss-and-out: 



5213 . - 5334 



Knapp ...2 2 2 2-4 Work 2 2 2 .-3 



4 3 2 5 3 14 



McAlpin 2 2 2 2-4 Thompson.. ....2 2 —2 



Edward Banks, 

 the newark gun club's tournament. 



2) ec , 5.— The two days' tournament of the Newark Gun Club was 

 brought to a close this evening. The list of entries was very satisfac- 

 tory throughout the entire shoot, while the birds supplied by John 

 Erb, at whose grounds the shoot was held, were good flyers, particu- 

 larly in the main event this afternoon. 



Among those present on the first day (Dac. 4) were: Allen Willey, 

 of Hadlyme, Conn.; W.G.Clark, late of Altoona, Pa., but now of 

 New York city; Ohri3. Wrigat, Paterson, N. J.; M. Herrington, of 

 New York city, the representative of the W-A Powder Co. ; Jim El- 

 liott, of Kansas'City, Mo.; Gus Greiff, of New York, shooting Schultze 

 and a Francotte gun; Eddie Collins, with King's Smokeless; S.J. 

 Held, of New York city, a new addition to the ranks of live-bird shoot- 

 ers in this section, etc.; the locals were out in force, Geoffroy, John 

 Erb and Sam Castle worthily upholding the honor of the Newark Gun 

 Club. Jim Elliott shot well, killing 13 out of 14 from the 32yds. mark 

 ia the laBt event, and scoring altogether 33 out of 35 shot at during 

 the day; Jim is now shooting a pump at live birds and is showing the 

 boys what he can do with the combination of E. C. and a pump. 



•the first four events were all $5 entrance, but the fifth event was at 

 15 birds, £15 entrance, biras inctuded. Owing to darkness it was im- 

 possible to finish this event, the referee calling a halt at the close of 

 the fourteenth round. It will be noticed that Gsoffroy is the only one 

 credited with a straight score out of the twelve shooters, but Sam 

 Castle, who had killed 13 straight, refused to snoot at his 14th bird, 

 claiming that it was too dark to see. The referee warned him that 

 be would score bim a lost bird if he wouldn't shoot, and as he per- 

 sisted in his determination not to go to the score, a cypher was 

 credited to him, as shown in the following scores: 



No. 1. No. 2. 



TC Wright 1.22122222- 9 2102102210-7 



WGClark 0011212200— 6 2121111111—10 



J Erb 121221ml— 10 1211212111—10 



A Willey 1111221222—10 1122112111—10 



M Herrington 2221 0.201 w -nOlVi-:- u 



L aw 21122(1021 w 2»2U»2»U— 7 



J A R Elliott 2121222221-10 



HEley 0210212011— 7 



No. 3. No. 4. No. 3. No 4, 



TOWrieht .1222-4 1111110 -6 Law 2121-4 01.2122--6 



JErb ' .1011-3 11111.1-6 JAR Eld Hfc 2211—4 2212201-6 



HEley"" 2101—3 1121200—5 Sam Casllft 1211111-7 



M Herrington, ,2211— 4 1222011—6 E Collins 2222222-7 



A Willey ..1111-4 0211123-5 G E Greiff 1211120-6 



SJHelj . .2111—4 0121112-6 E A Geoffroy 21.1212—6 



WGClark 0212-3 2101122—6 J S Duston 01.1201—4 



Nc. 5: 



A Willey (30) . .10221221122200-11 E A Geoff roy(28) 11211212122221 — 14 

 JAR Elliott (32-, .2212222 1112222-13 S J Held (28) ... .01221 212122100--11 

 j Erb (29) ..... . .11211112022111-13 E Collins (28). , , ..210210.112222-10 



W G Clark (30). ..22222120212112-13 S Castle (29) 12112211112110-13 



T C Wright"(2S) . .12011212122210—12 8 E Greiff (29) . .02211222122002—11 

 H Eley (28) 12101000000 w A Bunn (26) 22010222121121—12 



The second day's scores were all well earned, on account of the 

 quality of the birds. In event No. 1, with 6 entries, there was no 10 

 straight; in No. 2, with 10 entries, there were two straight scores. 

 Event No. 3 was at 20 birds and had 12 entries, yet 19 was high with 

 such' men shooting as Jim Elliott, Brewer, Clark, Woodruff, Geoffroy, 

 Erb, Morfey, etc. Morfey, by the way, arrived late and brought no 

 gun or shells, borrowing Elliott's Winchester and ammunition. 



Geoffroy, who has been shooting very well lately, was placed on the 

 2?yds. mark and placed 19 to his credit, taking first money alone. 

 This he would hardly have done had not Duston let two birds get 

 away under peculiar and interesting conditions: His first loss was his 

 6th bird; this flipped up and lit again close to the trap, Duston pulling 

 his gun right off the bird when he fired his first barrel; his effort to 

 kill it with the second as it sat on the ground was not successful, the 

 bird rising and flying out of bounds. His second loss was his 20th 

 bird, he having killed 18 out of 19 with a chance of 19 out of 20 if he 

 killed straight. His work on this last bird of the string looked very 

 much as if he did not want the bird to be scored to him, thus making 

 more friends for high gun shooting as against class shooting. 



Capt George Swan, of the Palmetto Gun Club, of Charleston, S. O, 

 was present, and shot live birds from traps for the first time in his 

 life. For a first attempt he did remarkably well, killing 16 out of 20, 

 some of them hard birds indeed, and losing one bird through 

 inexperience when he might very properly have claimed a balk. 

 Elliott and Brewer both shot well, the latter doing good work with his 

 pump. Clark was in poor form in the first two sweeps, and experi- 

 enced some hard luck in the big race, losing 3 dead out of bounds, his 

 5th and 13th being rattling good birds. 



The scores were: 



No. 1. No. 2. 



WGClark 00.1122022 -6 .2011112.1—7 



J Erb 1221112102—9 2121102111— 9 



J S Duston 1110112121-9 1121.11111— 9 



Sam Castle 11110.2111-8 1111011111—9 



J A R Elliott 1211101111-9 2212222222—10 



W H Green 1121111120-9 1111112100— 8 



G H Pierey 011210.220— 6 



G Swan 1012100111— 7 



E A Geoffroy 1221 101220— 8 



J L Brewer 2222212122—10 



No. 3, 20 birds: 



J L Brewer (32) 22202222222022122222-18 



W G Clark (30) 2221.2221 222.1 2.1112-17 



G Swan (27) .1201012221221110112-16 



G H Piercy (27) 01222202112102121122-17 



J Erb (23) 021121.ll.110.lllw —12 



E A Geoffroy (28) 1221122212122221.112—19 



J A R E liott (31) 21101212122022221222—18 



A Woodruff (29) 2221122122221.21021.— 17 



E Collins (28) 1202222.2221221.2220-17 



J S Duston (28) 11111011211211121110—18 



Sam Castle (28) 100101022212111.1222—15 



W H Hollis (28) 10110111112210101211—16 



Steglitz (26) 00001.2021 w — 4 



T W Morfey (30) 1022.222222220122220-16 



AT TRENTON. 



Dec. 6.—C. H. Allen and Dr. Woolsey shot a race to-day with G. N. 

 Thomas and William Taylor, on the Trenton, N. J., Gun Club's 

 grounds. The wind was blowing about 25 miles an hour, making the 

 shooting extremely hard ; this accounts for the comparatively poor 

 scores made. Conditions: 50 empire targets par man, 25 known angles 

 and 25 unknown a"gies. Score: 



C H Allen 10001111110111111011111111111010100111101111111111—40 



Dr Woolsey. . .10111100101111111111111110010111101001010010000001—31—71 

 G N Thomas, .11011111110011110011001111010100000011111110110000—30 



W Taylor 10010111101001010001111101010100100010111110111110 -29-59 



Onlooker. 



south side's saturday. 

 Dec. 7.— A dozen shooters put in an appearance at the South Sid 

 Gun Club's grounds, Newark, N. J., this afternoon. All sweepstake 

 events were at 10 targets, with the exception of No. 6, which was at 

 20 targets The team race, shot at known angles, was won by Breint- 

 nall's team, Asa Whitehead leading the procession with 25 straight. 

 Scores: 



Events: 1 3 3 4 5 6 7 Events: 1 3 3 4 5 6 7 



W Smith 8 8 7 9 Dawson 3 3 6 4 4 7 1 



Couch 7 7 7 7 7 .. .. Whitehead.... 9 8 9 



Sherwood.... 8 7 9 5.. 16 6 Thomas 8 7 8 6 10 17 9 



Orten 8 2 4 6 5 15 .. Folsom 9 5 7 7 16 7 



Yeomans 9 8 7 7 8 .. .. W M Smith 2 4 5 .. .. 2 



Breintnall.... 7 10 10 7 . . 15 . . 



Team race: 



Breintnall's team. 



Breintnall 1111111111,111110111110101-22 



Whitehead 1111111111111111111111111—25 



Thomas 1011111101111111001110101—19 



Folsom 0110111011001110110111111—18 



JHTerriil 1110111111011010110000110—15 



Hollis 1011100110101100010111110—15-1 14 



W Smith's team. 



W Smith 1111110111001100100101111—17 



Yeomans 1111110111111111111111101—23 



Hedden 1111101111101111111100111—20 



Sherwood 1111111010110111001111011—19 



Young 0011110111101111000111111—19 



W M Smith .,0100000101011100011000010— 9-107 



Clinton Rod and Gun Club. 



New Dorp S. I., Dec. 4.— Fourteen members took part in the mt n hly 

 shoot of the Clinton Rod and Gun Club at New Dorp this afternoon. 

 Harry Williamson was the only one to kill 7 straight, thus winning 

 the shoot without a tie. Score: 



H K Williamson (271 .... 2222222—7 L J Williamson (27) 1200201—4 



Dr E Schrader (27) 0111111—6 J Henderson (26) 1001011—4 



T Loiigrief (27) 1120101—5 T P Lee (26) 1010020-3 



G Kingsland (27) 2100112- 5 S Porter (25) 0100101—3 



A W Barton (26) 1201110—5 G G Schneider (25) 1022000 -3 



E W Schrader (28) 1102002-4 R Morgan (26) 00210CO -2 



L Wilson (28) 2000111—4 W H Smith (26) 1001000-2 



The following live-bird and target events were also decided: 

 No. 2, handicap sweepstakes, 5 live birds: George J. Kingsland 

 (26yds.) 3, Dr. Emil Schroder (28yds.) 4, Thomas P. Lee C26yds.) 2, 

 Richard D. Morgan (26yds.) 5, Wax H. Smith (26yds.) 2, Thomas P. 

 Longrief (26yds.) 3, Samuel G. Porter (27yds.) 2. 



No. 3, same: Henry K. Schraeier (26yds.) 5. George J. Kingsland 

 (26yds.) 4, David G. Schneider (26yds.) 3, Dr. Emil Schrseder (28yds.) 



3, Samuel G Porter (26yds.) 3, Richard D. Morgan (26yds.) 3, Thomas 

 P. Lee (26yds ) 2. 



No. 4, 10 targets, everything known: Henry K. Williamson (16yds.) 

 9, Louis G Wilson (16yds ) 9, Richard D. Morgan (16yds.) 6, Thomas 

 P Lee (16yds ) 7, Dr. Emil Schroder (16yds ) 7, David G. Schneider 

 (16yds.) 6 Thomas P. Longrief (16yds ) 5, Andrew W. Barton (16yds.) 



4. Wm. H. Smith (16yds.) 4. 



No. 5, same: Louis G.Wilson (16yds) 10, Richard J. Williamson 

 (16yd8.-) 9, Dr. Emil Schrseder (16yds.) 8, Richard D. Morgan (16yds.) 7, 

 Samuel G. Porter (16yds.) 5, Henry K. Williamson (16yds.) 7, George 

 J. Kingsland (16yds.) 6, Wm. H. Smith (16yds.) 5, Thomas P. Lee 

 (16yds ) 4. 



Central Gun Club, of Duluth. 



Duluth, Minn., Nov. 28.— The annual turkey shoot of the Central 

 Gun (Jlub was held to-day on the ice at the foot of Twenty-first ave- 

 nue, west. The ice where the shoot was held was only about 6in. 

 tnick, and several times the spectators had to be driven back to pre- 

 vent a general breaking up of the ice field. The number of entries 

 was quite large, and several ties had to be shot off, making the compe- 

 tition of great interest. The totals for the four 10-target events were: 

 Bonehill 33, Shell 32, Wojeck 32, Brooks 31, Proetor 31, Moore 30, 

 Sachem 30. The ties for these averages were shot off, Shell, Brooks 

 and Moork winning the second, third and fourth prizes respectively. 

 Scores in the events were as follows: 

 Events: 1 334 56 789 10 11 p er 



Targets: 25 25 15 15 15 10 10 10 10 10 10 Shot at. Broke, ct. 



GS McAlpin 23 22 15 12 15 10 10 9 9 10 10 155 145 93 5 



P A Jeanneret. . .. 21 23 15 13 15 9 105 H6 91.4 



C F Lenone 22 22 14 15 7 9 9 9 125 107 8=5.6 



W H Huck 23 22 15 14 13 9 9 8 9 8 8 155 138 89 



James 17 14 7 8 6 4.... 90 56 62 2 



Adams 22 19 8 10 8 7 9 8 110 91 82 7 



Abbott 21 6 2 6 55 35 63' 6 



Vermorel 21 21 7 8 10 80 67 83 7 



Marvin 17 . . 14 8 7 60 46 76 - 6 



Frank 24 10 8 10 ... . 55 52 94 5 



Laurenson 11 25 11 44 



Hutchinson ...... 17 7 7.. 45 31 68 8 



Coe 13 .. 14 10 10 70 47 67 1 



De Wolfe 10 10 30 20 66 '6 



Hall 10 8 20 18 go" 



Flaig. 6 .. 10 a 60 



lmbert 4 .. 10 4 40 



