10 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



[MAkcH 31 1 1892. 



New Jersey Trap Shooters' league. 



It would be an. extremely difficult matter to And a more con- 

 genial party or one with more overflowing ,i lllity and good nature 

 than the one which congregated on the grounds of the Passftfc 

 City Rod and Gun Club, at Passaic, N. J., on Friday last. It was 

 the second of t he series of team champ onship contests of the New 

 Jersev Trap Shooters 1 L°ague which drew the party together 

 au<l it was the hospitality and good management of the members 

 of the Passaic Oitys, as well as a spirit of good fellowship, which 

 kept the party together unt'1 darkness precluded any possibility 

 of seeing a bluerock target whizzing through the air. The day 

 was a perfect one in every respect, the sun shiniDg bright and 

 clear and the air being soft and Palmy as on an April dav. There 

 was just a suspicion of a breeze, just enough in fact during the 

 earlier hours to clear away the smoke from the guns. After 2 

 o'clcck the -wind strengthened potnewbat, but at no time was it 

 strong enough to seriously affect the flitrht of the targets. 



The shooting house of the Passaic City Rod and Gun Club is 

 situate on a rise of ground about ten minutes ride by stage from 

 Passaic proper, the ground sloping gradually downward toward 

 the traps. The shooting house is a fair-sized one, with a single 

 room, the secretary's office being separate from the main build- 

 ing. On Friday a big marquee was pitched alongside the shooting 

 house, and here a caterer was established with an abundaut 

 supply of temperance cordials, sandwiches, clam chowder and 

 coffee, ail of which received proper attention from the shooters. 

 The shooting was done under the 5-trap rapid-tiring system, blue- 

 rock targets and traps being used, and the traps being pulled by 

 aid of Paul North's famous electric trap pull. 



The shooting was done from a platform, fifty feet long and 

 twelve feet wide. The back of this platform was about a foot 

 above the ground, but owing to the slope of the earth the front 

 was several feet above terra firma. The traps, too, had to be 

 raised, the shields beiugfully eight feet high. Further down the 

 hillside, and about t! :0yds. distant, was a scrag] y growth of tim- 

 ber, but so rapid was the pitch of the ground that the targets 

 weut above the line of these, thus giving a clear foreground. I 

 have attended trap tournaments by the score in the days gone by 

 and have seen some fine handling of traps aud targets, but I can 

 recall no instance in which traps have worked more perfectly or 

 targets flown better than on this occasion. Somewhere about 

 6,000 bluerock targets were thrown in all, but I doubt if more than 

 twenty -rive were broken by the traps. The North electric pull 

 worked perfee'ly. and after carefully noting its working I am 

 fain to believe that the old obsolete style of ropa and handle trap- 

 pull has seen its best days and will soon be relegated ro oblivion. 



The writer reached the grounds about 11 o'clock, having trav- 

 eled from Newark iu a side-bar buggy behind Maud Q , W. Fred 

 Quimbv's pet roadster, the genial Fred himself handling the rib- 

 bons. At the time of our arrival a goodly party was already at 

 work smashing targets in accordance with the conditions of a 

 regular programme arranged by the Pa=saic C'tvs. Busily moving 

 here and there, getting things in readiness for the team shoot 

 announced to begin at noon was "Little" Neaf Apgar, the ener- 

 getic and efficient manager of the New Jersey League, and who 

 is known all over the country as a hustler, whether it be in shoot- 

 ing at birds or inanimates, in managing a shoot or in booming 

 trade for Henry C. Squires. Another flitter about was Win. H. 

 Hobart, the League's rustling secretary and treasurer, another 

 rattling good target smasher and manager and Von Lengerke & 

 Det mold's right bower at tournaments. There was also six-foot- 

 two J. L. Smith, from Haekettstown, N. J., who is an adept at 

 either bird or target shooting as well as in loading the Smith 

 cartridge. Of the local club there were President Abbett and 

 Messrs. Campbell, Shaw, Coeman, Wise, Evans, Gaston and 

 Palmer, all of whom were kept busy receiving the visitors and 

 obliging them to feel at home. Gus Freche, the Newark Gun 

 Club man, spent an hour on the grounds, but Was obliged to leave 

 without trying his luck at the traps. 



Some lime before noon a stags on the side of whioh was 1be 

 legend ' The Shooters of Newark," reached the ground, bearing 

 E. D. Miller, the Springfield expert, who looks niter the Eastern 

 interests of the Standard Kevstone Co.; Ferd Van Dyke, manager 

 of Von Lsngerke & Detmold's Newark store, and one of Jersey's 

 most expert shooters; Carl von Lengerke, of Newark; Tbos. 

 Brantingham, '"lee Kay" Keller, of the IT. S. C. Co., Charles 

 ("Dutchy") Smith, of Plainfield; C. M. Hedden and W. G. Hollis, 

 of Newark; Chas. Dean, of Vlaplewood; S. S. Hedden, of East 

 Orange, and J. Warren Smith, nf Orange. Later came a big 

 truck bearing the members of the East Side-Mutual Gun Club, nf 

 Newark. The next arrivals were the members of the Boiling 

 Springs Fish and •Gun Club, of liutherford, piloted by Paul Jean- 

 neretr Then came the Brunswick Gun Clun, of New Brunswick; 

 the Woodside and Southside gun clubs, of Newark; Maplewood 

 Gun Cmb, East Orange Gun Club and the New Jersey Shooting 

 Club, of Claremont. The Passaic Citys and Independents, of 

 Plainfield, were already on the grounds primed for hot work. Al. 

 Heritage ("Uld South Paw"), of Jersey, was on hand talking up 

 his big tournament, to be held at Marion; W.Fred Quimby was 

 booming bluerock targets and Smith guns, and everybody else 

 had some pet schenift to boom. 



The big team shoot had 10 entries, each team being comprised 

 of 10 men and the conditions calling for 25 targets per man. This 

 was started at the appointed hour and proved to be a rattling 

 contest throughout. As in the February contest held ou the 

 Woodside grounds in Newark, the Independent Gun Club, of 

 Plainfield, went to the front with a rush, breaking 112 out of its 

 125 targets. The scores showed a 21. two 23s, a 22 and a 20, this 

 shooting being even enough to win in almost any company. The 

 South Side Gun Club of Newark, came to second position with 

 105 breaks, although its team held the tail-end position in Febru- 

 ary. During the team contest the duties of referee were pel- 

 formed by Jacob Pentz and Al. Heritage, C, H. Townsend, of 

 Forest and Stream, and Frank Mason being impressed as 

 scorers. The scoring was made easy with the aid of one of the 

 Keysioue Company's excellency arranged manifold tournament 

 and club score books, which admits of the making of five cop es 

 at one impression of a pencil. 



And anent this question 1 would suggest to the New Jersey 

 Trap-Shooters League in particular, and to all clubs in general, 

 that they would incur the: everlasting gratitude of newspaper 

 correspondents if they would use one of the above books for all 

 their shooting and have them manipulated by men who can get 

 good impressions of the scorers. Newspaper men are notoriously 

 the besi-nauired and most obliging people in existance (!) and are 

 willing at all times to help along the good cause. So far as 

 matches, either by individuals or teams, are concerned they are 

 willing, in fact anxious, to do the scoring, but it should not be 

 left for them to score an entire day's work in the way of sweep- 

 stakes. At Passaic the management used carbon and manifold 

 in a few of the sweepstake events, but the duplicates in some 

 cases could not, be deciphered and the scribes were obliged to 

 borrow the original sheets aud make copies for themselves. In 

 future the L u ague should use a book and make copies enough to 

 supply the correspondents of the sporting press. We are willing 

 to help you out by scoring for you, brothers of the League, but 

 don'c compel us to sit down after the day's work is ended and 

 copy all the scores. Let the League superintend the scoring of 

 all events and save us trouble. 



Previous to the team contest a half dozen sweepstakes were 

 shot, these being regular programme events. Below are the 

 scores in detail: 



Nos. 1 to 4, 10 birds each, $1 entry, three monevs: 



No. 1 No. 2. No 3. No. 4. 



Huck liimim-io lOiooiim—T iioioiini-8 iiioimoo-7 



Hobart.... 1111111110- 9 1111111111—10 1110111111-9 1111111111-10 

 Campbell-lUlllllon- 8 0110000110- 4 0011001010 -4 0111101101- 7 



Shaw 1101101110- 7 1011100111— 7 1101101011-8 1111110110— 8 



Coeman... 1011011101- 7 0010001UO- 4 



Abbett 1001011111- 7 0111001001- 5 1111101101-8 0101111010- 6 



James 0111101010— 6 1111010101- 7 1111001101-7 1111011100— 7 



Krebs...... 0100111011— 6 0001010 1 11 — 5 1011010100-5 110101(010-5 



Wise linooilllO- 6 1111111111-10 1111111111-9 OllHOHOJ- 9 



Evans 0100P0101— 5 



Beatty . . .1001010100- 4 



Hall 0010001011- 4 1111110110- 8 0111011101—7 1011001000 - 4 



J Smith 1111111010— 8 HllOlllil-8 1111111111-10 



Palmer 0110101000- 4 1UO01O3OO-5 1110101111- 8 



Ackerman 1101100010- 5 



Gaston OlluOlOOOl- 4 



No. 5, 15 bluerock a, gl.50 entry, four moneys, No. 6, 20 bluerock s, 

 £2 entry, four moneys: 



No. 5. No. 6. 



Hobart 111111111111111-15 11111011111111111111—19 



Miller ,111111111111111—15 10110111110111111111—17 



ODean 111111111111111-15 



Tee Kay Hill 1111111111-15 11110011111111111111-18 



Br eintn a U 111111 1 1 11 1 1110 -14 



Brantingham 101111111111110—13 10111111111001110100—14 



Apgar 111101111011111—18 11 11111 11010 11110111—19 



Shaw 111111010111111—13 10101011101111100011-13 



Wise 111010110111111— 12 11111110111110101110-10 



W Smith 101011111101111—11 11111101111111111111-19 



Huck 1101111 11101110-11 



Parry 11111011 01011 11-12 



DutcW omoiimmoi-12 liiiuioiimoiuiii-xs 



11111101111110101111-17 

 11101111111111011110-17 

 1111.111100110011111— !6 



J Smith 011111111111000-11 



Abbett 01001 1111110110-10 



Outwater 110010101101111—10 



Camphell 101110101101100— 9 



Van Winkle 011001001111011- 9 



Gaston 100001100101000 - 5 



Quimby 11111011111011110110-16 



By this time all the teams were ea°er for the real business of 

 the day, aud they at once proceeded to work. The men shot in 

 squads of 0, which took one full team and one man from another 

 team in each squad. The shooting was very rap'd and from start 

 to finish not a protest was made against the referee's or scorer's 

 work. Below are full details of this important event: 

 Independent G- C. 



Tee Kay 1111111111011111101101111-22 



Miller 1111111111111011111111111-24 



O Smith 1110111101011011111111101-20 



Apgar - Ill 1 1 10.1111110111111111 1-2.1 



Brantingham 1110111111111011111111111-23-112 



Passaic Citv R »nd G O. 



C R Wise .1111110110111011011111111-21 



B H Abbott 1011111101011111111100100-18 



D Campbell UOOllOlOllllOOllllOIOHO-16 



A W Shaw lOOQOllOlOlOOllOllllOllll— 15 



SN Kevitt 1101110010011011101001011-15- 85 



Maplewood G. C. 



C Dean 1101 111101100111 111111101-20 



Addison 1101011100110111011011111-18 



Drake 1111111100011001111101101-18 



W Smith 1101111111110111011010111-20 



Parry OlllOlOOlllOOlllUlllOOll-n— 93 



South Side G. C. 



Breintnall lOimilUOloilOlllOlllll— 20 



Whitehead 1111111111111111111111101-24 



Quimby 1111 101 101101011001 1 1U 1 11—18 



Phillips 11101] 1101011 111111101101-20 



Hobart 1111111110111111111011111-23-105 



Brunswick G. C. 



VanNuis 10111111001111111] 1111110-21 



Vonrhees OClOlOOll'OlOlOlOllllllll— 16 



Booraem OHIO"- .; 10-12 



Fick looooniioouiooooiooooioo- 8 



Pettit 1101110110111100111001000-15— 72 



New Jersey Shooting Association. 



Bigoney 1111111010111111111111110 -22 



Moore 1^111111 1 11 1111111 11 1 1 1 11-24 



Vi rden 011 1 10 1 011001 1 1 1 1 11 : 00 11 1-18 



Schaefer linCOHOOllilOOHOLlllO!— 17 



Simpson 1110111110111111110111111-32—103 



Woodside G. O. 



Sickles 0111101101011111110111111-20 



Co ttrel 1 010 1111 1 1101 01 01 1101 01001-16 



Van Dyke 1011111011101010101111111—19 



S Cork ef air 01000010] 111 1101011 1 1101 1—16 



C Von Lengerke 1111111110111111111001111—32 — 93 



Boiling Sprints G C. 



Ed Collins 1111111011111011011101111—21 



O ut wat er 1 11011 10111101H H 0 ' 111 1 01-19 



Post 1110111 110011111110111 1 11-21 



Meyer 101U011 11111100101111101— 19 



Huck 1 100011111011111 111101011-19- 99 



East Orange. G. C. 



S S Hedden 1101011110110101101101100-16 



W Dukes 111111101 1 11001 10 mil ] Oll-l a 



Babbage 1110110011110101111011111—19 



T Dukes 111111 1111011111101111011-22 



R Dukes 0010011101111001110111111-17— 93 



East Side Mutual G. C. 



C M Hedden 1101111111111110110111111-22 



Baar 00011100111 11110101010111—16 



Per men t 1001 11 11 1001 0111 01 1010101—16 



Schrafft 01101010111111010111 11101— 18 



Koegel 1010110111111110111101111-20- 92 



The above shooting concluded, the programme events were 

 again taken up and the traps w> re again kept busy. Had the 

 League used two instead.of one set of 5 traps, there is no doubt but 

 nearly 10,000 targets would have been thrown, as everybody was 

 full of shoot and had plenty of ammunition. It is hoped that in 

 future contests the League will give the boys an abundant oppor- 

 tunity to exercise themselves. The management of this affair 

 was of the most satisfactory character throughout, not a "kick" 

 or growl being heard from start to finisn. 



Btlow are detailed scores of the programme events which closed 

 this pleasant meeting. 



Nop. 7 and 8 same as previous events: No. 9, 15 singles, $1.25 en- 

 try, four moneys: 



No. 7. Nn. 8. No. 9. 



Hobart 1111111111—10 1111011111- 9 111101111111111—14 



Apgar Ullllllll-10 1111011101— 8 1111110101 II HI — 13 



Camnbell OOUOOllOO- 4 1101000001— 4 



Tee Kay 0011111111-8 1111101111-9 110101111111111-13 



Quimby •.11111111 11- 9 1100111111- i 101111111011111—12 



Strautburger 1011100010- fi 1101100110- 6 



Dean 1111001110- 7 1111011011- 8 101001011011111—10 



Wise 1111100101— 7 lOllllOlll— 8 11111001I1111H-13 



Dutchy 1111101111- 9 1111111011— 9 111111111011111-14 



Van Winkle. 1110101001- 6 



J Smith 1111111111-10 1111111111-10 111111111110111-14 



James 1111100111— 8 1100111111— 8 111111101111011—13 



Coeman 1010001101— 5 



Kevitt 1110110110- 7 0110111011— 7 



Krebs OlQllOOOll— 5 



Jelleme 1011110.100 — 5 1111101101— 8 100111 0110 1 0010— 8 



Van Dyke 1110011C11- 7 1111110111—9 111111111111111-15 



Hol'is 1000010100 - 3 0101011100— 5 00)1001011110 1—7 



Paul 1O11111110- 8 1100011111- 7 110011110111000- 9 



Dan 1100100011- 5 



Carl 1001111111- 8 1111111111-10 111111111111111-15 



Hall 00100000C0— 1 0001001000- 2 111110000000111- 8 



C M Hedden 1011001110- 6 1U1111000- 7 



Breintnall 0111111011— 8 1111010111- 8 111110100111111-12 



Outwater 1111111100- 8 1111111111-10 001101111011100-10 



Brantingham 1111011110- 8 1011011111— 8 111611111110110-12 



ED Miller 1111111111-10 lOllllOlll- 8 111111111111111-15 



WSm'th 0011111111—8 1010111111-8 111111100111011-12 



Parry 1111111100- 8 



L Dukes 1110101000- 5 



Abbott 1111101 101- S 1111011101- 8 110110011111001-11 



Moore 1101011111- 8 1101111111- 9 111111011111001-12 



BVar J I ■"' 1 t lul - " uiVnV' . uj 11 11 -V 



Simpson 1011111011— 8 1100011111- 7 111010101111111 12 



Cockefair 1011111010- 7 0000101110 - 4 010110110111101-11 



SS Hedden 1101111111— 9 1001110111- 7 10111001C110111— 9 



W Dukes 1100100101- 5 



Hank 1010111011- 7 



Osterhout 1111101110- 8 101111111101110-12 



L)Iak^ •■ ■ "J-t'.liil- - I'-'U'.: 1 .-ilL'i-:. 



Addison 1111110111—9 111111111110111—14 



Shaw 1100111110- 7 111000101111111-11 



Koegel 1110000110- 5 111111101011111-13 



Nafle 1001011111— 7 



Lindsley 1101111101- 8 010011101000003-5 



Laue 1111111111-10 10U00111UKH11-11 



Craemer 0010000010— 2 lllHIllOlllOOl— 12 



Post 111111)111-10 010111111111111-13 



Whitehead 1101111001- 7 



Schrafft 0100110010— 6 011111111111111—14 



Meyer 1111111111—10 OlllllUUUOOl— 12 



Sickley 1011110011- 7 111111111H11I1— 14 



E, 0 ach. 1000111110-6 10001111 10111 11— 10 



Phillips 1111110110-9 lllOOOOlOllllll-lO 



Van Nuis 1111111100- 8 111111111011101-13 



C Alius 1111111110- 9 111111111111111-15 



Hollister lllllOOlll— 8 llOl'llllllllll— 14 



Babbage 101101110011111-11 



Bigoney 1101111111 11 110-18 



Vermoral 110001111111001-10 



Voorliees 010001101100110—7 



B Kvram 1110011101011011- 9 



Palmer 110010101001110— 8 



Bowes..' 001011100111110-11 



No. 10, 10 singles, $1 entry, four moneys; No. 11, 20 singles, $2 

 entry, four moneys: . j 



No. 10. No. 11. 



Beatty 1111111100- 8 



Coeman 0101110011-6 



Myer 1111111101- 9 1011011111 1011111111—17 



Post UllUliOl— » 



Hollester OOlllllllO- 7 HlUllllOlllllllOU-13 



Shaw 11HJ111U— 10 11111011111110011111-17 



Van Dvke llllllUll-10 1011111111111 1111111-19 



Nafle 1011101001— 6 



Dean 1011111111— 9 



Wise 1111001101— 7 10011010U11U011011-14 



Osterhout 1001011110—6 



Paul U1U10101- 8 U100101010010100H1— U 



Dutchy i 1011111110- 8 UUmillllllUlUl-20 



O Hedden ... 110110011 1- 7 



Van Nuis .1011111110- 8 



W Smith lllioinil- 9 



Breintnall ...1111101111—9 



Hobart lUlllllll— 10 



Lane lOlllOlllO- 7 



Kevitt 1101010010- 5 



Lindsley 1111111100- 8 



Brantingham 1011011111- 8 



Campbell OtlOIOUOO - 5 



Krebs 7 1100011111- 7 



Huck 10UH1110- 8 



Peck 01 '1110101- 7 



Outwater 0111111011— 8 



Vtrmorel 0101101111— 7 



Apgar 1111010111- 8 



Miller 1111111101- 9 



S S Hedden 1010011001- 5 



Collins 1111111110- 9 



Quimby 1111011111— 9 



James 0111100111- 7 



Phillips 111H10I10— 8 



J L Smith 1111111111-10 



Hall 1010001010- 4 



Schrafft 0100111111- 7 



AbbUt 00111I01I1— 7 



Koegel 1111100100- 6 



T Dicks 0111101010— 6 



Tee Kay. 1011011111— 8 



Cock, fair 1111010101— 7 



Cirl 1111101011- 8 



Kraemer 1000100111— 5 



Diake 0111111100- 7 



Bigoney 1011001100- 5 



mini ii immmi-2o 



liioiiumioiiiiiio-i: 



1111 111 11111 11111111— 20 

 nilOlllHllllOULl-18 

 01111111101110x01111—16 



11111111110011111111-18 

 UlliOllllOllOllOO ..' 13 



11011111111101110011—16 

 00011110101111111011—14 

 11111111011111111111—19 

 11111011111111111111-19 



iiiiiiiiiiiiimim-20 



iooiiiiioiiiooiiioi6-i3 

 loiiiiiliioiiioioiil— it; 



01111111001100011111-14 



00111011101111111111-16 



ioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii— 19 



11111101101011110011-15 

 11110111111111111110-19 



iiiiimummiiii-20 



Lake Ontario Gun Club Tournament. 



IhOsdequoit, March 23.— At the spring tournament of the 

 Lake Ontario Gun Club, held at the Forest House to-day, the fol- 

 lowing scores were shot. The day was dark and the smoke huug 

 over the traps all the morning, and of course every one prayed for 

 a breeze. We got it. The wind came from the west. blowiDg 

 directly from the shooter to the traps; aud it did blow. It 

 knocked down every bird thrown and snap shooting was in order, 

 birds hardly showing over the screen, but traveling about 50yds. 

 before striking the ground. The shooting was at U. S. pigeons, 

 tnrownfrom the U. S. Pigeon Co.'s new traps, rapid-firing system, 

 5 traps, American Association rules, all ties div., 4 moneys. 



No. 1, 10 birds, entrance 25 cents: 



C S Smith 7 Newton 9 Babcock 8 



JCAman 4 Evershed 8 Sr. John 8 



McVean 5 Stewart 8 Foreman 7 



Walter 4 



No. 2, 10 birds, entrance 25 cents: 



McVean 6 Schulte 9 Smith ,.7 



Evershed 7 Amau B Sr.. John 7 



Newton 6 Stewart 9 Foreman 5 



WalzET 5 



No. 3, 15 bird?, en trance 50 cents: 



Mew ton 011111111110111—13 Smith lillOil'OlllOOllO- 8 



Walzer 001 Wool 1011001— 7 McVean 010011001110111— 9 



Ev<-r*hed 111111101011111-13 Stewart 111111110111111—14 



St John 111011100111110-11 Foreman 111111100110000—9 



SehUltzfl 10101100100011 1— 8 



No. 4, 20 birds, em ran c^ 75 cents: 



St John... 11111101111111110101-17 Smith 11111011111100111011-16 



Stewart.. .11111111111111111111 -SO Walz-r. .01111111011100011101-14 

 M V: an . . lOOliOOtlOl 1 1 100 101 0—1 1 Schultze. .11100111.11111011111— 17 

 Newton.. .010111 10011011011011— 13 Rvershed . 1 1 01 10 1 010 1 01 1 1 1 1 1 10— 14 



No. 5 10 double rises, entiance $1: 



McVean 11 10 00 01 11 00 10 10 00 10 - 9 



Stewart 10 11 10 10 10 10 10 10 00 10-12 



Newton 11 10 01 10 10 10 10 10 10 10—13 



Selraltze 10 10 10 10 It) 10 10 11 10 10— 11 



St. John 11 11 10 10 00 10 10 00 11 11-12 



Sprague 10 11 10 10 11 11 11 00 11 10-14 



Walzer 10 00 00 00 01 00 11 00 00 10- 5 



Evershed 11 10 10 10 11 01 10 11 11 10—14 



Peck 10 10 10 11 10 10 10 10 11 H— 13 



Hicks 11 00 10 10 11 01 11 10 11 00—12 



No. 6, 15 birds, entrance 50 cents: 



McVean 111110101011111-12 St. John 111110110111011—12 



Stewart 1110101 11011101— 11 Smith 000101011001110— 7 



St. George ....WOOUOlOOlGOll- 7 Hicks .0101000111111 10— 9 



••Sprague OOlOlllOOOnnOO- 6 Aman 000101001000010 - 4 



Walzer 111011101011110—11 W Morris f .01 1 lOOHIllOOl — 9 



Schultze 011111111111011—13 J Morris OoOOoiOWOWOIl— 5 



Peck 010011011110110- 9 Evershed 1011010101 01101— 9 



Newton lllllO'llllllll— 14 A Morris 101110101001011—9 



K i e Is m an 01 0100010110001- 6 



No. 7, teams nf 2, 15 birds, entrance $2 per team: 



Smith 011111010 illlOl— 11 Rissenger. .001001100110100- 6 



McVean... 1101 11111010111-12-23 Borst 111111011111101—13—19 



St John . . . .011110111111011— 11 Evershed. .011101101111001-10 

 Stewart . . .101110011110110—10—21 W Morris.. OloOOllllllOlOO— 8—18 



Newton.... 1111011111 11 111-14 Peck 111001000101(01- 7 



Meyer .01011 1101 10010 - 9—23 Walzar . . . .100010011000111— 7—14 



Schultze... 001101010101111— 9 

 Sprague.. ..100100111110110 - 9—18 



Tie for first at 10 sineles per man: ~ 



Smith 1110111100-7 Newton 1111100111—8 



McVean 01U110110— 7— 14 Meyer 1001110111—7—15 



No, 8, 10 birds, entranc 75ct8 : 



McVean 1110110110-7 Smith 1111011111-9 



St John 1111011101—8 St George Mil UiiuOOl -i 



Sprague U01011100— 6 Walzer 1001010111-6 



Stewart 1110x11111—9 Evershed OIIOHOIUO— 4 



Hicks 0110111111—8 J Morris .1100000103—8 



Schultze 0011001011—5 W Morris 1100001101—5 



Peck 1111011101-8 Riehman 010111M1-7 



J Aman 1111011101-8 Newton 1101111111-9 



No. 9, 10 birds, entrance 50 cents: 



Schultze ' 1111111101—8 Walzer 0011011110-6 



Stewart 1111111111-9 Newton 1110111111-8 



Hicks 1101110011-7 St Jmn 0U1110101-7 



Smith 0101111101-7 St George 1010110001-5 



J Aman 0011010000 -3 Evershed 1010100010 -5 



sprague 1011111100-7 Rickman 1011110000 -5 



McVean 1111110111-9 W Morris 1110111111-9 



Peck 1111011111-9 Foreman 1111111000—7 



D. A. FoHEjtAjf, Sec'y. 



St. Patrick's Day Shoot at Pittsburgh, Pa. 



Editor F&rest and Stream : 



Messrs. Elmer E. Shaner, "Jim Crow" and "Old Hoss" deserve 

 credit for the manner in which i hey conducted rhs live bird 

 snoot of the Pittsburgh Guu Club on St. Patrick's Day, March 17. 

 The match was advertised to start at 1 P. M„ and at that time 

 fifty-two entries had been taken and the management ret used to 

 lake twelve or fifteen more entries, as it would have been impos- 

 sible to finish before darkness had any more been taken. The 

 match was shot in a blinding snowstorm. Among the contest- 

 ants from a distance was W. Frvd Quimby, of New York, who 

 was passing through on his way home from Chicago. Fred savs 

 it is wonderful how shooters turn out for a match at Pittsburg. 

 Following is the score: 



Ten live birds, entrance $6: 



"Old Hoss" 8010311201— 7 L?mon 2113202122— 9 



Arden 0221:201211— 8 MeOeady 0110112020— 6 



Snyder 2022222122- 9 Ross 0220210211— 7 



Huffman.... ..110102010 a- Wilkinson 0012.'02120— 6 



Anderton 10032120 w MeEarland 00210000 v 



De an 1 00110UO w Daven port 022010 i212— 7 



Burt 1120122012— 8 Quimby 0221120222- 8 



Wright 000021210W Morgan 1221120111— 9 



Scott ...1211112111—10 Denny 1231022111— 9 



Cmm 022001101w Ban'on 2131111122—10 



Johnston 2101011111— 8 Hormau 0120222110— 7 



Beazle 2201003210— 6 Loughrey 0121211220- 8 



Penn 2220222202— 8 AH King 2112120122— 9 



Peterson 1122220012— S Burgoon 1102002113— 7 



Glesenkamp 1122211012- 9 Bacon 21.21220221— 8 



Titlow 0012011321— 7 W S King 0103121201- 7 



Kt-nuer 2s210"2j20— 6 Gillespie 01101211w 



Mjler 0120101112— 7 Walter 1111112021— 9 



Cochran " . .. 120111000 -v Magaw 03100 U20w 



Crush v 0120120212- 7 Scroggs 21010111:22— 8 



Woodruff :'03ul020.v C cckelt 00201201 w 



E^mundEon 1021101201— 7 Clover 0111110212— 8 



Rail 0011012122— 7 Newberry ...2111110102— 8 



Crable 0101011111- 7 Wilson 102U00222- 7 



Hum 00011012 w Wolfe 0102000222— 5 



Riley 30003101 w Levis 2231112212-10 



