April 14, 1892.] 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



S6S 



South Side Gun Club. 



South Nobhtalk, Conn., April 9.— Will you kindly note that 

 we hold forih «t the old stand each and everv Saturday, and all 

 shooters are welcome to join us at any time. Upon Fast Day and 

 Good Friday our members participate in a liye-bird shoot at 

 White Plains, N. Y. In deference to the old blue laws of the 

 "Nutmeg Slate," we are compelled in our occasional live-bird 

 shoots to take a .journey into New York State, where we can shoot 

 without fear of molestation from the "minions of the law." A 

 rumor is abroad that the New Haven Gun Club coutemplate in- 

 troducing a bill to repeal the existing law prohibiting live-bird 

 shootine. If our New Haven brethren will take the initiatory 

 steps, they may rest assured of our hearty support, and we will 

 start a petition in our city to onr polilical representative in this 

 section of the State, petitioning that this obnoxious measure be 

 repealed. Iu our shoot last Saturday Officer Ireland, of the city 

 police, appeared with a new 6%lb. 12-gauge Parker, which de- 

 molished the "crockery" in gre»c shape. Mr. Remington, a new 

 aspirant for honors "a la FtiLford," quite eclipsed himself, and 

 the rest of us as well, in the last sweep at 5 pairs, breaking 8 clean 

 —he is now ready to shoot any man in town, at doubles, for glory 

 or money. 



Scores of April 8, sweeps, 35 cents entrance, 3 moneys, 10 birds 

 (Keystone-) each event, excepting in twelfth event at 5 pairs and 

 the last event, which was a walking match at 5 birds, use of one 

 barrel only. A brisk N.W. wind blew across the traps, which 

 rendered full f cores very difficult and few and far between. 



No. 1: E. H. Fox 7, Northrup 7, Remington 6*, Coleman 7, 

 Drake 6, Ferris 5. Three moneys in this and all other sweeps. 



No. 2: Fox 9, Northrup 3*, Remington 3*, Coleman 8* Drake 9, 

 Ireland 7. 



No. 3: Fox 9, Northrup 4*, Kelly 4*, Coleman 4, Drake 8. Ire- 

 land 7. 



No. 4: Fox 9, Northrup 7*, Kelly 4*, Coleman 4, Drake 9, Ire- 

 land 8. 



No. 5: Fox 6, Northrup 3*, Remington 6*, Coleman 8, Drake 9, 

 Ireland 7, Ferris 8. 



No. 6: Fox 6, Northrup 7*, Coleman 10, Drake 9, Ireland 6, Ferris 

 ti. Ties on 6 shot off miss and cut, won by Ferris. 



No. 7: Fox 7, Northrup 4*, Kelly 1*, Coleman 8, Drake fi, Ireland 

 8, Hoyt 4*. 



No. 8: Fox 10, Northrup 7*, Remington 7*, Coleman 7, Drake 9, 

 Ferris 7. 



No. 9: Fox 8, Northrup 9*, Remington 5*, Coleman 6, Rockwell 

 3, Craw 8, Lewis 9. * Not in sweeps. E. H. F. 



Frank Post "Wins the Excelsior Badge. 



The monthly badge contest of the Excelsior Gun Club took 

 place at Pearl River, N. Y., on April 4, each man shootine: »t 25 

 artificial targets. Frank Post, the Park Ridge, N. J., expert 

 captured the badge as shown by the following figures: 



VanRiper 0110111001111111111110111-20 



Post 11111 llllllOllll 111011110-23 



Demarest 010 1 1 1 1 01111 01 1 1 10 111 11 1 1 —20 



McMillan llOuOOOOOUOOOOuOlUOOOll- 8 



J H Blauvelt 1111111111110110110101111-21 



Fi eideman 0001110011111101111100110—16 



Williams 1111001111111011010111100-18 



Jersey 010010011111 11 11101111011— 18 



Peterson 1101111011110011101000011-16 



J J Blauvelt 1111110111011110101111111-21 



The lollowirg score was made in a ten target sweep, $1 entry, 

 which followed : 



Post 1111111111-10 J H Blauvelt, Jr.. ..1111101111— _ 



Freidemau 1101U10U— 8 McMillen 0111100111— 7 



Demarest, 1111111111—10 Williams 0111111111- 9 



Jersey 0101010101— 5 J J Blauvelt, Sr . . . .1111101001- 7 



Saturday at John Erb's. 



The attendance at John Erb's on Saturday was light, an even 

 quartette of shooters being on hand, these comprising John Erb, 

 Samuel Caslle, Neaf Apgar and E. D, Fulford. There was a 

 strong wind blowing across the line of traps from the left, this 

 making some of the birds fly very fast. Four Jersey sweeps were 

 shot, the entrance in each being $3 and there being two moneys. 

 Fulford shot at 45 birds and killed them all. Castle lost 3 out of 

 45, Etb lost 2 out of 23 and Augar lost 4 out of 26. In the first 

 sweep Fulford shot Castle out of first money on the seventeenth 

 round, Erb going out on the fourth round. Fulford also shot 

 Castle out on the fourteenth round in a miss and out for first 

 money frcm events No. 2, 3 and 4. Below are the details: 



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



Fulford 1111 21211111121221111 1112 1121 2222 11112212111211 



f'astle 1111 11111H2111212110 1111 1131 1111 11111212331120 



Erb 1121 1110 1111 nil 1113 20 



Apgar 1121 1110 1110 1210 



Haggerty— Mussey. 



Chicago, April 11.— Jimmy Haggerty, or Mr. J. E. Haggerty, 

 or, as I presume we should now call him, Col. Jamts Haggerty, ot 

 St. Louis, has added another cause for the deep and undying 

 haired which Chicago has for the "town by the bridge." 



First there was Col. J. Window, of St. Louis, who wilfully, 

 feloniously and with malice aforethought did come up here last 

 year, and then and there did scoop, beat, defeat and otherwise 

 get away with two Chicago men, to wit George Kleinmanand 

 George Hofman, against the peace and dignity 1 f Chicago: never 

 said be was sorry, either. And now comes Col. J. Haggerty, also 

 of St. Louis, and likewise feloniously on purpose breaks into 

 Billy Mussey's safe, the same of reputation in the land, and then 

 and there abstracts therefrom a sum of money, to wit, A hun- 

 dred. 



Can these things be? Yea, they can, easy. They now are was. 



Col. Haggeny is a St. Louis alderman, but he would rather 

 shoot than alder. In his shooting capacity he is known well in 

 the Mississippi valley country and wider. He has contested with 

 Mr. Elliot in his day, though not successfully, and has beaten 

 many a man who classed m the upper three -fourths. 1 have 

 already mentioned how he came up here last week and trod on 

 people's coats publicly. To-day he came up from St. Louis quite 

 wlone. A stranger on a strange ground, he shot his race with Mr. 

 Mu88«y, a shooter not in the sneezeable class certainly, and he 

 won in a quiet, gentlemanly, but interesting and spirited race. 

 He did it tairly. Chicago ha» not a word to say. There may be 

 a slight tightening of the trigger on the old safe, but no lockjaw 

 will set in, and the latchstring will still hang out. It's no dis- 

 grace to be beaten by an alderman anyhow. 



At 2 o'clock this afternoon Mr. Haggerty stepped to the score. 

 He was clad in a striped bathicg suit, with a diamond as large as 

 a baseball stuck through his jersey. All aldermen wear diamonds. 

 The air was cold and clear. The wind, what little there was of it, 

 blew from left to right across the score. It was not a day whose 

 conditions would make the shooting hard. The birds were ex- 

 pected to be an exceptionally hard lot. Some of them were so, 

 very much so, but some were easy. There were a few which did 

 not start until a moment after the trap was sprung. Two had to 

 be flushed, one for each shooter. There were some incomers, and 

 also a lew soft high birds. Against these there were some 

 screamers, as hard as one would ever see. Mr. Musaey shot 10 

 practice birds, and of these 6 were as hard as any birds we get 

 here. With a good stiff wind the birds to-day would have had 

 some fun with the shooters, no doubt. As it was. neither shooter 

 got 90. and botb apparently wanted 90 or more. One feature of the. 

 shooting was the great number of low birds. Only about 20 birda 

 Dowered or went off high. 



Mr. Mussey also stepped to the score. Botb shooters usually do 

 step to tne score in a match, but I want to mention this to esiab- 

 lish the fact beyond cavil. It is about the only thing which is 

 beyond cavil in a pigeon match. Mr. Mussey wore a shocking 

 bad hat, a pair of side-bar glasses and a pleasant expression. He 

 was not in jewels, but he was in hopes. He had a license to be 

 had he shot his usual gait, but he fell a couple of birds or so below 



Mr. John Watson was chosen referee. Mr. C. E. Willard official 

 saucer. Prof. Turtle did the accumulating of dead birds for Mr. 

 Mussey. The boy trapper, Billy, performed a like service for Mr., 

 or, I should say, Col., Haegerty. 



Col. Haggerty shot an L. C. Smith 12gn., his load being 3Mdrs. 

 of E. C. p iwder, lMcz. No. 8 chilled in both barrels. At the score 

 his position was crouching, leaning and constrained. 



Mr. Mussey shot a Greener 12ga.. with 42grs. Schultze, lj^oz. 

 chilled 7s in both barrels. His position was erect with the left 

 arm stiff and straight. 



Durir.g the race Col. Haggerty twice discharged both barrels at 

 once and was asked to shoot another bird. This was agreed upon 

 belore the race. American rules governed, barring this and the 

 tyMZ. clause. 



Col. Haggerty shot in a very close, careful, deliberate way. He 

 shoots more like Geo. Kleinman than any man I know. He does 

 not shoot the bang— bang 6tyle, but is deliberate. His weapon is 

 a flue performer. So also iB the one uaed by Mr. Mussey, indeed 



better than that gentleman needs, for he shoots first and second 

 so quick that a gun of much wider pattern would do him as well 

 or better. 



Tu the early part of the match the exhibition of skill was fine 

 on both sides, and it was a pretty race. At 20 tbe men were tied. 

 At 40 St. Louis led by one bird, and held ahead to the close. At. 

 about his middle 20, Mr. Mussey was doing some pretty patchy 

 work. In his last 20 Col. Haggerty showed sigus of demoraliza- 

 tion, and came back several birds, Mr, Mussey finishing strong as 

 usual. 



The followine- is a new sort of score. Look at it. You can tell 

 how the birds flew. You can tell it at a glance. You can't find 

 this in any other paper on earth. Everybody reads Fobest And 

 Stream anyhow, but now everybody's friends will read it. The 

 paper with ideas and enterprise is the one the American sporting 

 public is going to buy and read and swear by. You can get all 



. pitchfork. The pitchfork 

 Fohest and Stream. Score: 



Trap score type fmpyright by Forest and Stream Publishing Co.. m». 

 J E Haggerty 221121112223021 3 012 o— 17 



1222201132310211012 2-18 



\i"->i" 1 4 t /*<-/ T 

 12211 2 1210212201112 2-18 



S 1 1 I ->/* i /" V-*." 

 * 2112 0 1111 3 221202112 1—18 



112210o032101011112 3-15-86 



W P Mussey 2 2210323220 31023223 2—17 



T ->^T 1V T^/ 1 ST 

 22222222 0 22232oo222 2-17 



32232 0 21210321o2012 3—16 



?\/ , j"^i , Ti' t T<-^t TV"*/,** 

 02022 2 20212 2 1110210 3—15 



22221230333X 3 323233 3—19-8' 

 E. Hough. 



o dead out of bounds. 



"Forest and Stream" Trap Score Type. 



We hinted last, week at a surprise in store for Forest and 

 Stream's Trap Department readers. It is presented to-day in 

 the score of the Haggerty-Mussey match. 



The Forest and Stream has devised a font of graphic trap 

 score type, by means of which to show at a glance the direction of 

 tbe bird's flight from the trap. It, is to take the place of the old 

 device of indicating the flights by initials, as R Q D for a right- 

 quartering driver. The new type does away with all that and 

 tells the story of each bird's flight admirably, adequately and ef- 

 fectively, and in a manner quite impracticable with words. The 

 succession of flights and the character of the shooting as deter- 

 mined by the directions may be followed from the first to the last 

 with a facility now for the first time made possible by the enter- 

 prise and resources of this journal. 

 The characters and their significations are as follows: 

 Regular Flights. 



t straight away. 



1 incomer. 



<— left driver. 



-» right driver. 



\ left-quarlering driver. 



/* right-quartering driver. 



S left-quartering incomer. 



Sj right- quartering incomer. 



And Irregular Flights. 



% straight away (twister). 



% incomer (twister). 



*a left d river (twister). 



y» right driver (twister). 



*< left- quartering driver (twister). 



? right-quartering driver (twister). 



£ left-quartering incomer (twister). 



*a right-quartering incomer (twister). 



The characters were devised by the Forest and Stream, and 

 have been copyrighted by the Forest and Stream Publishing Co. 

 They will be employed from time to time in reports of important 

 matches. 



We have set out to lead the world in trap reporting. We are 

 leading. 



DRIVERS AND TWISTERS. 



The Paul North system of handicapping, which was fully ex- 

 plained in the account of the Auburn shoot published in last 

 week's Forest and Stream will be used at the bluerock tourna- 

 ment of tbe Albany Gun Club next Tuesday and the writer feels 

 justified in saying that it will be a "go." Tbe Albany people know 

 a good thing when they see it and are not slow in l- catching on. " 

 ** * 



Anent the above system it will also be introduced at the blue- 

 rock tournament of the Onondaga Gun Club, to be held at Maple 

 Bay, Syracuse, N. Y., next Wednesday and Thursday. The Onon- 

 dagas have oiie of the most picturesque locations of any gun 

 club in America and expect a big influx of shooting men. 



* * * 



Al Heritage has enlisted the aid of the genial Fred Quimby in 

 managing his tournament to be held at Marion, N. J., on April 28 

 29 and 30 and this of itself should make the affair a grand success! 

 The first two days' shooting will be at bluerock targets and the' 

 thira day at live birds. The live bird events are expected to at- 

 tract an immense crowd of competitors. 



There will be a grand two days' shooting tournament at Sar- 

 dinia, N. Y., on April 21 and 22, at live birds and targets, Ameri- 

 can Shooting Association rules to govern, lj^oss, shot allowed 12- 

 gauge gun. No shooters barred or handicapped. Sardinia ts 

 thirty miles south of Buffalo on W. N. Y. & P. R. R, All purses 

 divided 40, ?0, 20 and 10; S5 in gold will be given to the shooter 

 making best average in all programme events, §2.50 to second. E. 

 Andrews is the manager. 



* * * 



E. D. Fulford will shoot against J. A. R. Elliott, at Kansas 

 City, Mo. , on April 30, for possession of the American Field cup. 

 Each man will shoot at £0 live pigeons, under London Gun Club 

 rules. A great deal of money will change hands on the result 

 big odds being offered in favor of Elliott, who has never been 

 beaten on his own grounds. Fulford is not in his old form 

 although he is confident of giving the Kansas City man a hot 

 chase. Until he shoots better than he has for a month past he 

 will not be "in it" with Elliott. 



*** 



The three days' tournament to be held at Marion, N. J., on 

 April 28, 2U and 30, under the management of Al. Heritage and 

 W. Fred Quimby, is exciting considerable attention. Bluerocks 

 will beustdon the first two days and live pigeons on the thiid 

 day. On the first day the events in order will be as follows- Ten 

 bluerocks, %\ en'ry; 15, $1.50; 10, $1; 20, $2; 15. $1.50; 10, $1; 15. $1.50- 

 10, SI; 15, $1.50; 10, $1.50. Second uaj: Ten, $1; 15, $1.50; 20, $2; 25 

 $3.50; 10, $1; 15, $1.50. 10. $1; two-men teams, 15 targets per man, 84 

 entry per team; 10, $1; 10, $1. On the first day two prizes of $5 

 each will he presented to the heaviest and lightest man shooting 

 in all programme events. On the second day $4 will be given for 

 the best individual score in the team shoot and $3 for the second 

 best score. A prize of $3 will be given for the best; score in the 25 

 target event on the same day. One year's subscription to Forest 

 and Stream wtll be presented to the shooter who, taking part in 

 all events during the two days, breaks an aggregate nearest to the 

 figures contained in a sealed envelope held by Mr. Quimby, Sat- 

 urday, the third day, will attract live-bird experts trom all over 

 the country. The events in order will be 4 birds, $4 entry; 8 birda 



$6; 10 birds, $10; 7 birds, $5, and 8 birds, $6. A special prize of $5 

 will be given for the best position at the score iu any of these 

 events. 



»\ V 



The return match at 100 live birds each for $150 a side between 

 C. E. Morris and C. Detlefsen. to take place at West End, Coney 

 Island, on April 21, is likslyto draw a big crowd, owing to the 

 close finish in the first match, when the score was 85 to 84 m favor 

 of Morris. The battle was nip-and-tuck to the last round, when 

 Detlefsen missed his bird. 



Jersey crockery breakers will flock to New Brunswick to- 

 morrow to take part in the third team contest of the New Jersey 

 Trap-shooters' League. The Independent Gun Club, of Plainfield, 

 won the two previous events, but whether it will repeat its victory 

 to-morrow is an open question, as some of its strongest men will 

 be at the Interstate Shoot, at Staunton, Ya., until Thursday night, 

 and may possibly be unable to reach New Brunrwick in time to 

 shoot on the club team. However, there will be members enough 

 on hand to pull out a strong aggregate. The entry list will prob- 

 ably show the names of ten or more teams, each comprised of five 

 men. In addition to the team contest a choice programme of 

 sweepstake events will be arranged by the Brunswick Gun Club. 

 The team contest will begin promptly at 13 o'clock, noon, this to 

 be preceded and followed by the sweepstakes. The traps will be 

 in order for business at 9 o'clock A. M. 



* * * 



The Missouri State Fish and Game Protective Association has 

 published an elaborate programme for its fifteenth annual con- 

 vention and tournament, to be held at Kansas City, Mo., on May 

 2 to 7, inclusive. The convention will be held at the Midland 

 Hotel, corner Seventh and Walnut streets, on Monday, May 2 and 

 delegates are requested to assemble promptly at 8 P. M., in parlor 

 S. Each club in the State is entitled to five delegates. All recog- 

 nized clubs are invited to send delegates to this meetiDg and also 

 to enter teams for the State shoot. The roll now shows the names 

 of thirty -four clubs. 



The programme of live bird events is one of the mo«t attractive 

 ever published, there being eleven regular events, numbers 1, 3, 

 4, 7, 9 and 10, each at ten live birds are open to the world. No. 8 

 at five pairs, 26yd*. rise, ground traps is also open. In No. 10 the 

 entrance is $10, and the association offers a guaranteed purse of 

 $500 to be divided 50, 25, 20, 15 and 10 per cent. Event No. 3 is open 

 to two-man teams from any association club, ten live birds per 

 man, 28yds. rise. $15 entry per team. No. 5 is the State Associa- 

 tion medal shoot, open only to one team of four men from each 

 club. The previous year's medal winners will get $100 out of the 

 pof. Each man shoots at fifteen live birds, the entry fee being 

 $20 per team, birds extra. No. 6 is the St. Louis Gun Club medal 

 shoot, for State Association members, ten birds per man, $10 

 entry; the hist prize is a grand gold medal, the entry fees, less 

 cost ot birds tn go to last previous winner. No. 11 is a special 

 event, open to Sta r e Association members only, ten biids each, $5 

 entry; first prize being a Lefever hammerless gun, valued at $175, 

 donated by the E.E. Menges Sporting Goods Company; second 

 prize is a Parker hammerless gun, $80 grade, donated by J. F 

 Schmelzer & Sons; th rd prize, $50 cash, donated by Kinuan & 

 B°nneti; fourth prize, 50 per cent of entrance money; fifth prizt-, 

 50 per cent of entrance money. Inanimate targets will also be 

 shot from two sets of five traps each. 



An even half dozen shooters visited Weidenmayer's Park 

 Newark, N. J., on April 6 and had a pleasant afternoon's sport in' 

 shooting at bluerock targets and live pigeons. The premier event- 

 was at 10 bluerocks each, in which Hedden took first money along- 

 with Young, while second went to Kramer. In the fecond event 

 Hedden and Young took first, and second was captured by Smith" 

 a,nd Kramer Then came a match at 10 live birds each between. 

 Sehrafft and Smith in which each killed straight. They started 

 to settle the tie with a miss and go home, which latter they were 

 obliged to do when each had kilhd six birds, it being too dark to 

 see. Previous to this Hedden and Smith had shot three miss and 

 out events, the former winning on 5, 4 and 7 kills respectively. 



To-morrow will be a big day on the grounds of the Colt Hammer- 

 less Gun Club (below Colt's Armory), Hartford, when the Connecti- 

 cut Shooting Association will hold its fourth team contest for the 

 Penrose trophy, donated by H. A. Penrose of the Standard Key- 

 stone Company. Clubs from every part of the State will send 

 teams and great sport is anticipated. The teams will comprise 

 three men each and each man will shoot at 30 keystone targets 

 under the rapid firing system. 



* * * 



The Independent Gun Club, of Plainfield, N. J., will hold a one 

 day shoot on their grounds April 20, at 300 live birds and blue- 

 rocks (o traps), commencing at 10 o'clock sharp; Charles Smith, 



The Williamsport Rifle and Gun Club, not wishing to be placed 

 on record as doing anything to detract attention from the Inter- 

 state tournament at Pittsburgh tbe first week in May, have 

 decided to hold their tournament on May 9, 10 and 11, the week 

 following the Pittsburg tournament. This will catch all the 

 shooters as they return from Pittsburg. 



* * * 



M 1 , 9; 1 H K M - 0 , w I ry ,5' rit , e811 ? th , at tne Onondaga County Sports- 

 men's Club will hold a two day's tournament on their grounds 

 at Syracuse, N. Y, on April 30 and 21. Bluerock targets, with 

 Paul North's expert traps and electric pull, will be used. 



* * * 



A shooting match at 100 clay birds took place at Red Bank, N. 

 '?'V Ap ^ n 8 - on tue grounds of tbe Riverside Gun Ciub between 

 John Cooper and James Cooper, Jr. John won, the score being 79> 



C. H. TOWNSEND. 



Club Elections. 



Onondaga County Sportsmen's Club.— At the regular meeting-of 

 the Onondaga County Sportsmen's Ciub, Syracuse. N. Y, April 5 

 the following officers were elected: Pres., Charles H. Mowr\ • 

 Vice-Pres., D. M. Lefever; Sec'y, John Steadman; Treas Harry 

 Ayling. Executive Commitiee, \Vm. Prettie, Nicholas Avers 

 and A. C. Qinty. J 



Garfield Gun Club.— At the annual meeting of the Garfield Gun; 

 Club, held at ihe Grand Pa-ific Hotel, Chicago, 111., the. following 

 officers were elected tor the ensuing year: Pres., M. R. Bortree-- 

 Vice-Pres, F. S. Biird; Sec'y, Geo. H. Brown; Treas., Thos.P..' 

 Hicks. Board of Directors, M. R. Bortree, F. S, Baird C P 

 Richards. S.M. Me^k. J. W. Meek, Thos. P. Hicks and Geo'.H. 

 Brown.— Geo, H. Brown. 



Old Reliable Rod and Gun Club.-The regular annual meeting of 

 the Ola Reliable Rod and Guu Clnb was held at the-offlce of the 

 secretary, 22 Monroe avenue, Detroit, April 1. The following 

 officers were elected for the ensuing year: Pres., W. H. Smith: 

 Vice-Pres., W. P. Hutchings; Sec'y-Treas., W. G. WoodworthI 

 Directors, F. H. Beard, T. E. Reeder and R. C. M. Judge. Capt., 

 F. C. Percival; Lieut., Harry Burt. The club holds weekly shoots 

 at its grounds, adjoining the Exposition grounds, every Saturday 

 afternoon.— F. H. Beard. 



Red Hook Gun Ciub.— Red. Hook, N. Y, April 7. -At the annual 

 meeting ot the Red Hook Gun Club, held April 6, the following 

 officers were elected for the ensuing year: Pres., Geo. H. Cramer* 

 Se. ., Robt. J. Carroll; Treas., John W. Bain.— Robt. J. Carroll! 

 Sec'y. 



Johnstoum Gun Club.— Johnstown, N. Y.— At the annual meeting 

 of the Johnstown Gun Club, April 4, the following officers were 

 elected for 1892: Pres., Geo. Yost; 1st Yice-Pres., L. F. Northrup- 

 2d Vice-Pres., Wm. F. Chapman: 3d Vice-Pres., J. A. Banta; Sec. 

 F. W. Partiss; Treas., Alvin Walrath; Executive Committee— L 

 F. Northrup; Lucian Hillabrandt, Jos. W. Fulton; Field Captain' 

 Jas. Pierson; Lieutenant, John Timmons; Official Scorer Wallace' 

 Yost. 



Herron Hill Gun Club— Pittsburgh, Pa., April H — At the annual 

 meeting of the Herron Hill Gun Club the officers elected were- 

 Pres., J. B. Jom s; First Vice-Pres., Geo. Lowen; Second Vice- 

 Pres., Chas. Richardson; Sec'y-Treas., Fred Ppstre; Field Can- 

 tain, A. H. King.— Fred Pastre, Sec'y. v 



The four full-page pictures, Young Mountain Sheep, American- 

 Elk, Group ot Elk, and Forest and Stream's Grizzly, form the 

 "Forest and Stream Animal Series," handsomtiy printed on heavy- 

 paper suitable lor framing. The set of four (in tube) will be sent 

 for ten cents (stamps will do). 



