May 5, 1891] 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



48S 



County Gun Club at Cortland, N. Y.. have been changed from 

 May 11 and 13 to May 10 and 11 in order that the affair might Tint 

 conflict wit) i other shoots. 



Everybody ill the shooting fraternity knows rosy-cheeked Will 

 K. Park, who is doing such good work with the guns manufact- 

 ured by The Wilkes-Barre Gun Company, and will he pleased to 

 know that they will meet him "around the circuit." He is now 

 in charge of the office affairs of the compaav, hut expects to go on 

 the road at an ear If date. He is now organizing a gun club in 

 Wilkes.Ba) re, Pa., and is confident of bringing it to the front 

 rank. 



The third annual tournament of the Kansas Statu Sportsmen's 

 Association, to be held at Onuncil Grove, on May IT to 20, inclus- 

 ive, promises to be a big affair. The programme is a mixed one at 

 both live birds and blueroek targets, and special events are ar- 

 ranged for those w>io are not eligible to slmot in the State events. 

 In open event No. 2 on the. third day the conditions are ten live 

 birds, $12 entry, with §33.50 added to the purse by the Council 

 Grove Gun Club. 



* * * 



Mahlon Fox is not satisfied with the result of his recent match 

 with M. H. Ruppell and offers to shoot the latter another match 

 at 50 birds for from $100 to $200 a side, 28 or :30yds. rise, 21yds. 

 boundary. 



* * * 



Billy Wagner wants ns to tell the shooters that they may be 

 assured of a "red hot. time" at Washington May 16 to 19. inclu- 

 sive. He says the members of the Capital City Gun Club intend 

 to exert themselves to make everybody feel at home. If they are 

 all as jolly as Billy the visitors need have no fear of being dull. 



Knoxville, Tenn., will be the Mecca for trap shooters on May 

 24, 25 and 26, the week following the Washington shoot, and a 

 number will go directly from the latter place. On each of the 

 three days there will be ten regular programme events at 15, 15. 

 15, 20, 15, 25, 15, 20, 15 and 15 single blueroek targets respectively. 

 The entry for the 15-bird events will be $2; for the 20-bird even! s 

 and for the 35-bird events $3. The club will add to purses #155 on 

 the first day, $150 on the second day, and $190 on the thiidday. 

 Event No. 4 each day, at 20 singles, will be for eight merchandise 

 prizes, in addition to the entry fees and §20 added money, the 

 entry being $3. There are also five merchandise prizes for the 

 best averages each day. Event No. 6 each day is at 25 single, &H 

 entry, with $35 added on each the first and second days and $30 on 

 the third day. As special inducements ten prizes, the first an L. 

 C. Smith hamnierless gun, will be presented to those making the 

 best averages in all three of the No. 4 events, and four prizes will 

 be awarded for best averages to those shooting in all three of No. 

 6 events. The first of these prizes is a hammer! ss gnn presented 

 by the American Arms Company. One year's subscription to 

 Fobest and Stream will be presented to the shooter winning 

 first place in No. 4 event on the second day. Arrangements have 

 been made by which the round trip fmm New York, including 



sleenmp 1 berth p^nh wav. will rn«t i-inl^r 1.1 «y.nntara 



M. on Monday. The route leads through Shenandoah Junction', 

 Lnray Grottoes, Basic, Buena Vista, Natural Bridge and 

 Roanoke. C. H, Townsend. 



The Tomato Can Shooting Club. 



Seven Star Tavern, Pa., Dec 25.— Dr. Tooley says that you 

 want reports of all kinds of shooting, and that I should write out 

 what our boys have "been doing. That he would send the report 

 to you. Dr.ITooley takes your paper. He told us about the shoot- 

 ing of Mr. Brewer and Mr. Fulford, and the great amount of fun 

 so many clubs have shooting at artificial targets, which sail off 

 just like birds. None of us boys ever shot at anything flyino- or 

 running except rabbits. Game has gotten very scarce here, only 

 squirrels, pheasants, rabbits and turkeys to hunt, and not manv 

 of them. The husking and apple-butter boiling have gone out of 

 fashion, so about all the fun we boys have left is pitching horse- 

 shoes, going to meetings and seeing the girls home and staying 

 with them nearly to morning. 



Seven Star Tavern is about seven miles away from any town 

 Always gets a license, so most of the men from a good wavs round 

 gather there at times, pitch horseshoes for fun and drinks, tell 

 stories and talk about all sorts of things. Dr. Tooley is often 

 there. He is a great politician. We all like him. He generally 

 manages to get to Seven Stars if he has anybody sick in the neigh- 

 borhood, and it seems he nearly always has somebody to attend 

 to on Saturdays and rainy days. He beats evervbodv telling st ories 

 and saying funny things to make the boys laugh. Mr. Fox, the 

 tavern keeper, says it's bpcause the doctor is an Irishman He 

 plays a good many tricks on the boys, but nobody gets mad at 

 him. He always treats when he does something real funny. 



One day the Doctor told us that we ought to make a gun club 

 and learn to shoot pigeons flying, as there were plenty of them at 

 all the barns that we could buy for ten cents, and catch a good 

 many at night for nothing. The Doctor said we ought to have a 

 trap to throw them up, but that we could shoot at them if one fel- 

 low stood off a piece and chuek'them by hand. So we got a lot of 

 pigeons, and one Saturday we tried shooting pigeons flying. .Take 

 Wurst agreed 1o throw them. Dave Loudenslager was the first 

 one toStry. Dr. Tooley had told us to stand fifteen steps away from 

 thrower. The pigeon went up straight, then right over Da ve and 

 heldidn't shoot at all. Joe Liauver came next, the pigeon flew all 



just to see them fly away without shooting. Wurst chucked up a 

 pigeon for Bill, which scooped down a little to right of thrower 

 and sure enough Bill's gun went off. Bill said he wasn't ready' 

 The thrower was mad, said that be wasn't going to throw pigeons 

 for no such durned fools and take more chances of getting^sbot 

 than the pigeons had. Nobody would throw, so we quit The 

 crowd was pretty big. and they laughed and teased awfully.' Ju*t 

 then Dr. Tooley drove up. We told him that nobody could hit 

 pigeons flying. The Doctor said that he would try. So he took 

 Bill Auber's gun, which was the brag gun. It was marked "Man- 

 ton, Maker." Doctor said he guessed it was made in Germany 

 He loaded both barrels, and picked out a big blue rooster pigeon 

 which he said could fly, he thought, as no one would throw for 

 him. So he took it in his right hand and threw it. The pigeon 

 went up and down, right and left, and off like a bullet. Every- 

 body was hollering "Shoot!" and laughing and watching the 

 pigeon get away. Bang! went the gun, and blame me if that 

 pigeon, more than forty yards away, didn't go tumbling head 

 over heels toward the ground. Bang! went the other barrel and 

 it seemed as if all the feathers left on the pigeon after the first 

 shot flew off at the second shot. Then the crowd veiled. I never 

 heard such shouting at a bush meeting. Then the'Doclor treated 

 The boys think that the Doctor has a deal with Mr. Fox and' 

 don't pay full price; but we don't care as long as we are in After 

 old Mike Brubaker had his drink— he is always bragging and 

 grumbling— he said the Doctor's hitting that pigeon was just 

 accidental. Nobody could hit that very often, and it was all non- 

 sense wasting powder and shot. 



In the good old days when he was young, folks only shot at 

 squirrels, turkeys, deer and bear, and wanted' to be mightv sure 

 of killing. Then Peter Oberwolster told him to shut up, for he 

 knew the Doctor could hit flying, for one day he had come a 

 the Doctor hunting. The doctor had a kind of long-haired do°- 

 with spots black all over him and the rest was white. The do° 

 just went around with head away up, and did not seem to be 

 smelling for anything. After a while the dog got behind a pine 

 thicket, and when the Doctor and me found him he was standing 

 still as a sitting rabbit, with head up and one foot. Doctor said he 

 was pinting. "Pinting what?" says I. Then the Doctor walked 

 right past that dog and chased up a pheasant that went like light- 

 ning into the pines. The Doctor shot and the pheasant was aflop- 

 ping on the ground. I just know that the Doctor couldn't have 

 seen chat pheasant for ten feet before it was out of sight. The 

 Doctor said "fetch!" and that dog been standing there dumb as 

 anyfool, jumped into the thicket and brought out the pheasant 

 in his mouth and pushed ifup to the Doctor's hand. Yes sirree 

 the Doctor can just shoot flying, I guess he's a witch. That's all 

 at present, Yoney Winkxebmch. 



Excelsior Gun Club. 



Monthly shoot at Pearl River, N. Y. : 



J J Blanvelt 1011010111111101101111111-20 



R McMUlen lmimnoiooioojiunuo— 18 



C| Peterson. . 1111111111101001110110111-20 



J H Blanvelt Jr. . . . limillllOiOllOOimilOl-20 



The small attendance was due to a match shot at Olosteron 

 May 4, between the Excelsior and Oloster teams. 



A Syracuse Man's Record. 



The picture shown in connection with this article i« an excel- 

 lent likeness of George, C. Luther, of Syrncuse, N. Y. Mr. Luther 

 was born in that city in 1855, and began his shooting career in 1S79, 

 when at the State shoot in Rochester he won the R. V. Pierce dia- 

 mond badge, defeating all the best-known experts in the State. 

 This was at live birds. Since that time he has probably won more 

 money and merchandise prizes than anv shooter in New York 

 State. 



In 1S80 he received the entrance fees ($550) in the Pierce medal 

 contest. This year he was also a member of the team that won 

 the Dean Richmond cup; won first, prize at the State shoot at. 

 Coney Island in 1881. In a sweepstake shoot, open to the world, at. 

 25 live birds, 31yds. rise, one barrel only allowed, he made a clean 

 score, shooting out Brewer and several other experts, winning a 

 Scott gun valued ot $150. In 1887 he was a member of the winniDg 

 team in the Dean Richmond cup contest at Auburn; also a mem- 

 ber of the team that won the State championship, his score being 

 20 straight. At Albany in 1888 he was again a member of the win 

 ning team in the State championship shoot. 



During the palmy days of the glass ball, now relegated to 

 oblivion, he defeated Wni. Miller in two matches at 100 each, shot 

 for $100 a side, one match at Syracuse and one at Newark. He 

 next shot a match against. Henry Gale at Syracuse, 200 glass balls 

 each for $200 a side, breaking 177 to Gale's 151. Broke 94 to Frank 

 Elliott's 85 at TJtiea for $100 a side; broke 91 to Mr. McGregor's 84 

 at Syracuse for $100 a side, balls thrown from Bogardus traps. 

 He next defeated Eddie Mann by 48 t 0 44 at 50 balls each for $50 a 

 side. At Rochester he shot at 100 clay pigeons against H. H. 

 Pleischer, breaking 79 to Pleischer's 78. At Erie, Pa., he defeated 

 J. E. Graham in a match at 100 clays for $100 a side, breaking 95 

 to Graham's H. R. E. Sheldon, of Cleveland, was his next oppo- 



fiEORGH C. LCTHEK. 



neut, each shot at 100 glass balls, Luther breaking 96 to Sheldon's 

 79. At Lyons, N. Y-, in July, 1884, Luther broke 124 out ot 125 

 glass balls and at Syiacuse the same year he made a run of 135 

 straight at composition balls. 



About this time he challenged Carver, Bogardus or any other 

 man to a match at 100 glass balls thrown from a rotary trap for 

 81 000 a side,'and had no takers. He also offered to wager S100 to 

 $500 that he could go out every day in the week and break 95 or 

 more out of 100 glass balls each day. He won the first medal 

 ever offered by the Onondaga County Sportsmen's Club. In 1888 

 he broke 100 blueroek s straight, and won the Atlantic Ammuni- 

 tion Co.'s New York State tropy. At Auburn, in May, 1891, he 

 broke 114 out of 115 kingbirds. He won the Onondaga Club medal 

 five consecutive times, breaking 116 out of 125 bluerocks, thrown 

 from five traps, unknown angles. At the World's Shooting Car- 

 nival. b°l.i in Boston, in June, 1887. he made the highest average, 

 defeating such noted cracks as McMurchy, Budd, Tiepel, E»ger, 

 Wagner and others, and winning a $150 grade Pieper hammerless 

 gun, 



Mr.Lulher is an active member of the Onondaga County Sports- 

 men's Club, and never loses an opportunity to indulge in bis 

 favorite pastime of shooting. Of a quiet, retiring disposition he 

 has hosts of friends all over the country, and is always accorded a 

 hearty welcome, 



Philadelphia and Jersey City Divide First. 



Sweepstakes at from three to ten live birds per man are daily 

 occurrences in all parts of the country; occasionally one is 



quantity. And yet in the long rnn the larger events, those running 

 from twenty to fifty birds, with entries ranging from $15 to $50, 

 are by far the cheapest for even the averaged-paced shooter. In 

 shooting small events, say three to five birds, a man may in a 

 half day's shooting, kill all or nearly all his birds, and be consid- 

 erably out of pocket. A few weeks ago at an afternoon's shoot, 

 the events being at five birds each, $3 entry, a well-known expert 

 killed 43 out of 44- birds and lost something over $14. This was 

 caused by losing one bird just when several pots had been bunched. 

 A little later another shooter, a prominent gun salesman who 

 holds forth in a Southern territory, paid about $17 for killing 42 

 out of 44. birds in a series of "Jersey" sweeps. Ties are too fre- 

 quent in these affairs to give a man any chance of coming out 

 even, much less ahead. In the larger shoots, while the entries are 

 laTger, so are the pots, and less frequent are the ties. 



A few weeks ago, during a twenty -bird sweep at John Erb's 

 "Old Stone House" grounds in Newark, N. J., a number of shoot- 

 ers, prominent among them being some Philadelphia experts, ex- 

 pressed a wish for a good big sweepstake in which the contestants 

 would have some chance of winning a pot that would bring them 

 out even. Inquiry revealed the fact, that the majority were in 

 favor of a sweep of fifty live birds, $50 entry, birds included, with 

 a division of the purse on the basis of one money to every four en- 

 tries. 



At the request of the shooters the writer undertook to engineer 

 such an affair, and after a consultation with Mr. Erb. Wednesday 

 April 27, was decided upon as the date. Positive guarantees to 

 enter were given by at least a dozen men, and when the time for 

 the shoot arrived just four of the dozen materialized. Three 

 others, men who had made no previous promise, also appeared on 

 the scene and took a hand in the sport. The day was a beautiful 

 one, the sun shining warm and clear: the air having a spring-like 

 feeling and the wind, from the right, being just strong enough to 

 make the birds feel lively, without beine- strong enough to chill 

 the shooters and spectators. A good party was present as on- 

 lookers, among whom were noticed William Taylor, the old-time 

 bird shot and boniface. of Sufferns, N. Y.; Robert ivierstead chief 

 engineer of the Newark Fire Department; Milton F. Lindsley of 

 Hohoken; Dr. J. P. Knowlton, of the Emerald Gun Club; and A 

 C Hunt, of New York. 



It was 1:30 P. M. wTien the big sweep, the first of the kind ever 

 shot in the vicinity, was started, the participants being Captain 

 Tom Jones, of Jersey City, the genial trap shooting sea captain 

 who hasmade a fine record for himself in both live-bird and target 

 events; A. "James," who hails from Philadelphia and holds the 

 title of champion of Pennsylvania, won with his favorite Parker 

 12-bore; Eddy Collins, the sandy-complected and grav-haired 

 "boy," from West Hoboken, who looks after the destinies of Fred 

 Quimby's ammunition department and incidently breaks targets 

 and kills live birds; Wm. S. Canon, Newark's well-known insur- 

 ance expert and America's one-armed champjon; John Sergeant 

 Dnstin, who sports "Harrisburg Shooting Association" on the 

 front of his silx Jersey and who has recently been Bhooting a stiff 



gait; Harry E. Smith ("you can hear me as soon as I come in 

 sight"), one of Newark's rising manufacturers and an already 

 risen shot, who has worried some of the experts within a year; and 

 last, but by no neans least, Hartford's leading journalist and one 

 of the Wooden Nutmeg State's most expert live-bird and target 

 shots, Allen Willey, he who in his sanctum wields such a facile 

 pen when occupying the silken editorial chair of tbe Hartford 

 Globe, and who in the public field makes friends wherever he. goes 

 by bis easy bearing and never-failing good nature. 



The race was an intensely interesting one from start to finish, 

 and the. birds, although a mixed lot. ran as good as tbe average 



whole they may safely be termed a "good" lot. The exception- 

 ally good birds, so far as noted, were as follows: 



Collins— 4th. 231 (lost), 383, 42d, 44th, 45th, 



Smith— 3d, 15th (a beautiful long second), 35th, 35th, 37th. 



Willey- 3d, 6th, 7th, 19th (an elegant first). 23.1 ffine second). 24th. 



Jones— 3d (very fine second), lltb, 19th (long and good second.!, 



Dustin— 7th (fine long second), 16th, 22d, 42d, 4&th, 50th (splendid 

 second). 



Jarnes-4th, 8th (fine first), 16th (elegant second), 27th (ditto), 

 35th, 48th. 



Canon— 11th, 12fh, 21st (beautiful second), 23d, 36th, 45th. 



Willey 's thirteenth bird was hard hit with both barrels but 

 managed to get as far as the fence, upon which it attempted to 

 alight. Before it could gain a footing some outsider fired a shot 

 which landed the bird inside the boundary. The referee cor- 

 rectly gave the shooter another bird. Jones's 19th bird was a 

 twisting driver which fel), apparently dead, near the fence. 

 W hen the dog reached the bird it made a dying effort and reached 

 the top rail of the fence. Here it remained for an instant when 

 it marie one more supreme attempt to get away and managed to 

 get its claws on top of the fence, but before it could draw its 

 wings together it fell inside and was scored. 



Below will be. found the full score of the match, the use of our 

 copyright trap score type enabling us to show 1he direction of 

 flight ot every bird. The figure over the sign shows the trap 

 irom which the bird was sprung. 



'Crap score type-Copy righ ms, by Forest and Stream Publishing Co. 



25 5 431121 334431131 2.3 35333 

 -wle-s — >->f ->k//<_ij"->H<— e-t Te-e-Tt n,* 



Collins 1 12 2 11112 12 12 112 12 12 1 2 & 2 1-24 



(L. C. Smith, 4 3 3 4 3 2 3 5 2 3 5 1 3 3 2 4 1 3 1 1 3 1 3 8 5 

 Am. Wood.) < — jn.-^^ww-^'v* — HH-tH\\<-Hf++- 



110101ol000111121120 10 22 2-17-41 



13344134215 5 23 5 311313122 4 



..12111111101011211111111 2 1-23 

 223121335124311313 43333 5 1 

 T \/\/\->\\i-Tt7 , ^/-»/-M-\\HH\/ 



1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 0-38-46 



Smith 



(Greener. 

 Schultze.) 



Willey 



(Greener, 

 Schultza.) 



2 21352123 3 2421214 12142333 



..1 2 1 1 1 21 8 o o 1 g 21 j.8 0 j 1 1 2.2 52 J 1- 

 34113344 5 15 3 1423 3 41113131 



-23-45 



Jones 



(L. C. Smith. 

 Am. Wood.) 



3 3 5 5 5 3 3 5 5 3 5 12 3 14 4 3 5 3 2 2 13 4 

 x'HK \\-»\< — >\T\->\? 

 ..1 1 1 2 3 1 1 1 2 2 2 1 2 2 1 1 3 1 2 1 3 2 2 1 1-25 

 42313 3 5 323415 2 33231535 3 34 

 -*y" gV*->/< ^NH-^^(,h-/H-»«-\Si-) 

 111231121110 2 1 0 112101111 1-22-47 



435253114314432133 5 5 3438 3 



Dustin 0 3 1 1 0 1 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 1; 2 2 10 1-23 



(L. C. Smith, 1 4 4 1 3 3 3 5 2 3 4 3 3 3 3 4 1 4 5 3 3 3 1 2 1 

 Schultze.) H/He-4\\\\\?H-\\f-\t l ^-4-»i^-(- 



1311101012oll 2 201011 11 02 2-19-41 



3 3425233341 3 3 42333 25 2451 13 



James 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 2 2 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 l" 0 2-24 



(Parker, 531233513 2 133335133431241 

 Schultze.) ->\HW,"T->->-T/ , -'V— ->T\< — *-<-H7'\.J,H 



1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 2 i i 2 1 1 1 12 1 1 1 1-23-47 



52331314515 3253434355233 3 

 -^/•^ N,-»tf-v* \-Vi ,/\ J, \"f «-\ <- x 



Canon 12 0 112 2 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 3 1 1 0 2 2 2 1 1 1 2-21 



(L. C. Smith, 3 3 5 5245543 3 5 5 4 5 524344332 3 

 Am. Wood.) /|/*\->1\tT*iT*-N-»*'\\-m — 



2 2 1 2 1 1 0 2 0 22 0 2 1 2 2 f 



SO So HO U5 50 



IS 20 24 27 29 33 37 41 



'" 18 23 27 33 " 



17 32 27 31 



15 20 25 30 a5 „„ 



13 18 23 27 30 34 37 41 



10 15 20 24 29 33 37 43 41 



12 16 21 28 29 33 38 42 



9 13 

 13 



37 42 46 

 36 41 45 



38 43 47 



2 2 1 1 0 3 1 1 2-31-42 

 The following changes show the changes in positions on every 

 fifth round: 



10 15- 



Collins 5 10 



Smith ..5 



Willey 5 , 



JoDes 5 10 



Dustin .8 



James 5 



Canon 4 



During the day the 'following sweeprtakesTwere shot^the'flrst 

 three preceding and tbe last one following the big sweep The 

 conditions in each were 5 birds, $5 entry, with three moneys in the 

 last and two moneys in each of the other events. In No 1 first 

 money was divided; Dustin drew his prorata of second and Collins 

 won the balance by beating Jones on shoot-off in No. 2. Both 

 moneys from No. 2 were carried over to No. 3, the curious feature 



ha, nr. H, n *- +V.^v.~,.-. .r. V. ^ .0. ..'1 i j_ \T _ .-. , . 



t" . CJ x n >vaD ncumeu uj- a miss auu out, tne last two rounds 



being shot at 33yds. rise. Ou the fifth round the birds were all 

 shot and the six "slayers" divided. The scores: 



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



Collins 11220-4 11121—5 20112-4 



Smith 01002-2 11212-5 Hllo-4 



Willey ...21211—5 11112-5 01111-4 



Jones 11101—4 11110-4 11111-5 



Castle 21111—5 11111—5 20111-4 



Dustin 01111—4 22220—4 11111—5 



James 11210—4 11111—5 



Loegel 



Canon 



Lindsley 



Hedden 



No. 4. 



Ties. 



12212-5 



11211 



11112—5 



21112 



21100-3 





11112-5 



11121 



11111-5 



1110 



11110-4 





11111-5 



11111 



12221-5 



21212 



10211—4 





21222—5 



.11113 



11210-4 



C. H. T. 



Live Birds at Doylestown. 



Dotlestown, Pa., April 28.— The following scores were made in 



Her st 0 



Rupell 101 



Apgar 201 



Warford 0 



Kelly 10 



Jones 



Garner .. 



Nos. l and 2 were $2 m... 

 each, gd entry, two moneys; second money from No. 3 wa<< carried 

 over to No. 4, and won by Apgar and Ruppell. 



1223 



1210 



1110 



20 



1110 



0 



0201-2 

 1021-3 

 1210- 3 

 1121-4 

 1110-3 

 2000-1 



No. 4. 



No. 5. 



Ties 



0012-2 



0122-3 



11 



2101-3 



1110—3 



10 



2101—3 



1101-3 



20 



1121-4 



1211-4 



0010-1 



1201-3 



10 





2201-3 



11 



Ruppell Outshoots Fox. 



Appended is the score of an interesting match shot at Milford, 

 N. J., on April 2, between Mahlon H. Ruppell, of that place, and 

 Mahlon Fox, the shooting blacksmith" of Trenton, N, J. The 

 original agreement called for 50 live birds per man, 30yds vise 

 21yds. boundary, stake $50 a side, but as birds were scarce the 

 race ended on the forty-fifth round. W. C. Apgar, tbe well 

 known boniface of Frenehtown, N. J., was referee and scorer 

 The birds were a splendid lot of flyer?, and were helped aloha bv 

 a strong wind. Score: 



Ruppell 211111111 201o'oirillo0012— 19 



2012220lollool020211 —13-32 



F ox 22220121222o221122g0o2222 -20 



201ol20012010020()U0 -10-30 



On the last day of the Heritage tournament Mr. Heritage 

 offered a prize of §a to he awarded to the- shooter making the best 

 appearance at the score. This was awarded to Mrs. M. F Linda- 

 ley ("Wanda"). The award met with general approval, 



