May 19, 1892.] 



FOREST AND STREAM, 



487 



ciark niimnimiooommommmiioiimioiiooiii-43 



Hamilton 1111110Uani0101010ninil01111011CaillIllllllll01-39 



Serosa 10111111110133111133131131101330101111331111113111-45 



Upson iiioimuimiimuiiiiiioioiiiimiOLiiinniu-46 



Alkire lllllHllOOOllllOUllllinOOllllOlOliJlUl 11 1111110-40 



Rushmore 11111111111111111110011111111101111111100111110111—44 



Holt 111013311011111010113033 w- 



McDouald 11101111110111111111011111111111110110111111111110-44 



Rpdwing 10111110100111111011110101110111111111111111111111-42 



Edwards 01111110111111110110111011111011111110111111111111-43 



wb loiiiioiiimimimooiioiioiiiiouoinioixiootv. 



Oam 11001111111110110111110111111111111111111101111110-43 



Dick W 011011111im00111110till01111im0111110111110H01-S9 



The cup was won by Sanford; first, money to winner of cup last 

 year, Osborn $44: second, Upson §33; third. North and Spro9S $11 

 each: fourth, McDonald and Rushmore §5.50 each. 



Following are summarized scores ot second and third days: 

 Second Day.— No. 1, 10 singles, $1: No. 2, 15 Fineles, $1.50; No. 3, 15 

 single*, S-; No. 4, same: No. 5, 20 singles, $2.50; No. 6, same; No. 7, 

 15 singles, $1.50; No. 8, same. Hard Day — No. 1. 15 singles, S~; 

 No. 2, 15 singles, $1.50; Nos. 3 to 10, same; No. 11, 6 pairs, 82: 

 Thirst Day. Second Day. 



1 $ S U 5 6 7 8 128U6789 10 11 



Alkire 9 14 15 14 19 17 14 14 15 13 13 15 14 12 10 13 14 10 



Barn ham 8 



Bellingsly 11 .. 12 .... 10 



Bennett 8 12 12 13 16 17 10 11 11 12 12 13 12 .. 13 .. 9 8 



Benscotten.... 9 10 12 .... 15 12 



Ball 8 .... 11 4 .. 8 



Baker 9.... 7.. 9 5.. 7 



Blair 4 7 



Clark 6 13 12 14 18 16 14 13 14 12 13 11.... 9 



Cain ... 5 14 11 12 .. 17 .. 12 14 10 10 12 13 



WDick 9 12 ..11... 1112 11 14 13 12 14 12 12 .. 15 . . 



Duffy 8 11 13 Jl .... 13 .. 10 10 



Edwards 9 14 13 15 13 16 12 12 13 13 11 13 8 



EC 9 .. 11 .. 10 



Fink 14 8 11 10 9 



Ballmger 12 12 .. 15 10 12 12 8 .. .. 



Duncan 10 



E WB 9 .. 9 



Floyd - . 6 



Flick 8 .. 10 13 .. .. 11 



Flowers 5 10 .. 11 .. 10 8 



Oirton 7 12 10 12 .. 17 11 12 11 14 13 15 .. 11 



Goodman 7 12 .. 12 .. 13 6 11 11 11 .. 9 12 



Greene 6 12 . . 12 . . 17 14 14 13 11 .. .. 



Hamilton 9 13 11 9 16 19 13 9 10 12 11 13 



Holt 16 15 15 11 10 12 10 U 13 12 5 



Irwin 10 .. 10 .... 10 



Jones 10 .. 13 .. 13 .. 10 



Leinmon 8 .. 13 .. 17 .. 10 



Lefever . . 8 . . 11 . . 10 7 10 13 13 9 10 12 . . 



Latham 7 12 12 10 .. 15 11 14 U 13 11 



Mason 13 11 



Mack 12 .. 15 .. 14 .. 12 .. 7 



Mosher 7 .. 10 13 .. 10 8 



MiUea 13 .. 10 



McDooald. ... 8 14 14 14 15 19 10 15 10 12 13 14 14 



North 9 15 14 11 19 20 10 10 11 13 13 12 15 14 13 13 15 . 



Osborn 9 13 14 14 20 19 11 15 14 15 15 14 15 15 13 13 '.. .. 



Perry 8 12 12 11 1? 13 15 13 12 10 11 10 6 .. 



Pumphrey .. 8 12 15 11 17 16 13 9 10 12 13 7 11 16.. 9 14.. 



Profane 10 .. 10 .. 9 .. .. 



Randall 9 12 32 H . . 17 . . 10 



! 10 



Redwing 10 15 15 10 15 17 13 14 11 15 13 13 13 .. 13 12 12 ] 



Richard 6 7 12 12 .. 13 



13 13 9 12 10 . . . 



Rushmore .... 9 11 14 12 16 14 15 13 



Saft'ord 10 11 13 10 .. 15 .. .. 



Sanford 11 14 15 14 19 19 14 12 



Smith 9 13 10 13 14 17 11 15 



See 6 30 11 11 14 15 13 Li 



Sterling 8 11 . . 14 . . 16 . . 8 



Slyp 



Tug 8 14 13 11 17 17 12 10 



Teipel 9 .. 13 .. 18 .. 9 .. 



Taylor 8 14 .. 12 .. 13 .. .. 



Upson 8 13 14 14 17 .. 13 13 14 13 12 14 14 



Vincent 8 13 15 10 17 10 13 12 6 13 10 15 13 12 14 14 13 10 



Wheeling 8 . . 12 . . 15 . 9 



W B 6 14 14 10 14 14 11 U 13 13 .. 13 8 11 



Walt.... 11 15 10 13 10 i 



Young 10 13 13 13 17 17 11 13 13 13 11 14 12 14 14 10 12 11 



Stout 12 12 10 13 



13 14 14 15 15 10 14 15 . . 10 



13 12 11 11 



7 12 .. 11 10 13 10 11 



12 12 11 11 



9 8 .. H 7 



11 12 10 8 13 13 14 12 12 9 



14 .. 15 14 13 14 14 .. 15 9 

 .. 13 



The Sunflower State Championship. 



At Paola, Kan., on Thursday, May 12, W. T. Irwin, of Coffey- 

 ville, Kan., familiarly known in trap-sboottng circles as "Tramp," 

 and Abe Elwell, of Ossawatomie, Kan., shot a 100-bird race for 

 $2au a side and tte cnanipionship of the Sunflower State, which 

 resulted in a victory for Irwin by a score of 83 to 86. 



Elwell a month ago defeated the man from the "Cherokee 

 countrv" by a score of 41 to 38 out of 50 birds. Irwin played in 

 hard luck in that race, 10 of the 12 birds scored against him fall- 

 ing dead out of hounds. 



The race was witnessed by a couple of hundred "dead game 

 sports" despite the threatening weather. A heavy rain storm 

 prevented the opening of hostilities until 3:30 P. M., and occa- 

 sional showers fell during the progress of the contest. A strong 

 east wind was blowing across the traps during the race and a 

 large majority of the birds sailed swiftly off "down the wind" in 

 a right-quartering direction, and as the sky waseloc-rly the scores 

 made were good ones. Elwell was quicker to "get on" his birds 

 than Irwin, hut the old "Tramp" made some great "kills" 

 on fast birds that won for him merited applause. He was out- 

 lucked "by Elwell in the drawing of the birds by probably 20 per 

 cent. 



L. P. Perry, of Paolo, was selected as referee, E. W. Mitchell 

 acted as judge for Elwell and E. W. House for Irwin, and James 

 Whitfield was appointed official scorer. 



Irwin started off with a 71b. 8oz. Greener, but after the fourth 

 bird changed to a Parker weighing 71bs. lOoz. His loads were 

 3;4drs. of Schultze powder and U/§oz. of No. 7 shot. Elwell used a 

 91b. L. C. Smith gun. and his loans at first were SJ^drs. of Schultze 

 and lM°z- of No. 7J4 shot, but later he changed to black powder 



Elwell was first at the score and made a clever kill of a fast 

 right-quartering driver, and Irwin grassed an easy left-quartering 

 incomer. Elwell missed his second bird, a straightaway flyer 

 and Irwin followed suit, an easy incomer falling dead out of 

 bounds. He also lost his third bird, a left-quartering incomer 

 which also closed its wings just outside the distance flags. He 

 missed his fourth bird, a right-qnartering driver, clean. This 

 left the Coft'eyville sport two birds in the rear and bets of two to 

 one were freely offered against his winning. 



Elwell missed his twelfth bird clean. It was a hot right-quart- 

 ering twister and he shot behind him with both barrels. Irwin 

 again lost, however, a strong, straightaway bird going out of 

 bounds, although hit, hard. Elwell then struck a streak of hard 

 luck and lost his fourteenth and sixteenth chances, the former a 

 fast right-quartering straightaway, being carried out by the 

 wind. This tied the score, but Irwin lost his eighteenth, twenty- 

 third and twenty-fourth birds, and at the close of the first twenty- 

 five rounds w»3 three birds behind. 



The Osawatornie shot missed his twenty-seventh, a strong flying 

 left-quartering bird, with both loads, and Irwin lost his thirty- 

 fourth dead out of bounds, the breeze helping him to clear the 

 west flags. The o'd man then settled down and grassed thirteen 

 straight, Elwell missirig his fortieth and forty-second, both hard 

 right- quartering tailers. Irwin missed;his fnrty-eighth, a rather 

 slow flying right-quartering incomer, and Elwell shot under a 

 straightaway bird with both barrels, making the score one in his 

 favor at the close of the fiftieth round. 



Elwell's fifty-third bird was another twister that fell inside the 

 flags, but walked out before he could be retrieved, and the score 

 was once more a tie. He also lost his sixty-fourth, which was also 

 a hot one in the same direction, and for the first time "Tramp" 

 was in the lead, and held it until the seventy-third round, when 

 he shot behind a speedy right-quartering driver, after making a 

 run of twenty-four straight, which was the best of the match. 



The score remained a tie until the eightieth round, when El- 

 well lost an easy incomer that fell stone dead behind the back 

 boundary. Irwin lost his eighty -fourth, a fast right-quartering 

 driver, which also fell outside the flags, and it was "boss and 

 boss" again. Irwin then lost his eighty-sixth, a right-quartering 

 bird, "by not leading it sufficiently, and the audience, whose sym- 

 pathy was with Elwell, gave vent to its feelings with a cheer of 

 exultation. It was short-lived, however, as Elwell, who also lost 

 his eighty-fifth bird, which fell dead just behind the puller, missed 

 his eighty-sixth and eighty-ninth, comparatively easv birds, en- 

 tirely. The gray-whiskered veteran grassed the rest of Mb string 

 clean and won the race by two birds. 



It was the most exciting race ever shot in Kansas, and was any- 

 body's victory up to the last ten birds. Toward the tail end of the 

 match the birds were not as lively as before. It was a 100-bird 



race under the American Shooting Association rules, with a modi- 

 fication as to the loads of shot, and was for §250 and the price of 

 the birds, the loser thus being short on the day $300. This was 

 the largest stake ever shot for in Kansas, and was a notable 

 victory for Irwin, who was practically alone and friendless in the 

 enemy's camp. 



Elwell has challenged Irwin for another race under the same 

 conditions, which will probably be shot in Kansas City about a 

 month hence. The score, aa given for printing in the Forest 

 and Stream's famous trap-score type, is as follows: 



Trap scare type—Copyright, /S9S, by Forest and Stream Publishing Co. 



T -IT/ 1 



Elwell 2 0 113 111 



Irwin. 



! 1 1 1 2 0 1 1—23 



I20lol022l221 11 2—31 



->VxrW TW-^rlV^-Tj^i" i^<-^/T->T 

 201221211223210101112112 0-21 



H-M" -VT>->\<- T yt-N^H-H^-*-* 1 T\ N H<- 

 12o2132112211oll21111111 2—23 



T'T^^ 4iH->^T's->H^HH\^TiH/ , ->TH a , 

 1212olll3o30l 0 3 21 3 3 2 12 2 2 2-21-86 



Si w?-/-^ if \->T<-? TV H<-4. ^-s" 4- xTV^ t H 

 ..2 o o 0 1 2 1 2 8 8 1 o 11 1 1 1 0 2 1 2 1 o 0 1—18 



22222131oll32l332 



212222121111111122111202 1-24 



H^ s *HNTH^j"^-»/ , / , HT<-H 1->^->n H ->->-> 

 2 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 o 3 0 2 2 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1-33—88 



G. 



Chicago and Western Traps.! 



Chicago, 111., May 14.— List week I felt like apologizing for 

 getting down to Kansas City Saturday morning, after the shoot 

 was over. A week late is pretty late for a paper which is pub- 

 lished 1,000 miles further east than its esteemed contemporary, 

 and which must therefore, counting both ways, add at least three 

 day 8 to that week before it can lay down its story upon the 

 tbreshhold of said esteemed contemporary and thus give the 

 latter a chance to get a story for itself. Under these circum- 

 stances a scoop seemed rather hard to get. Yet owing to the 

 generous and considerate conduct of the said e. c, in not making 

 any effort to get the Kansas City shoot reported in the week fol- 

 lowing the tournament, and also to the energy and hustle of 

 Forest and Stream it seems that a scoop for Forest and 

 Stream was after all not only possible, but actual. Forest And 

 Stream has the Missouri State tournament report one week 

 ahead of all rivals. Say, fellers, this is dead easy. For Chicago, 

 Kansas City, all Missouri points, the great West, the Southwest, 

 the Northwest, and the East in its entirety also, I can't see any 

 use in buying any paper hut Forest and Stream. 



Not unless one wants his news a week or more older than For- 

 est and Stream gives it. 



News is something which does not improve with age. E. c's 

 please note this; it is useful. 



One thousand miles (1,000) is no handicap when a paper has its 

 hands out of its eyes. 



Let nobody ever raise the mistaken cry that "Forest and 

 Stream is an Eastern paper." It is an Ameiican paper. It is 

 located about two weeks closer to Kansas City than its good- 

 natured contemporary, which is geographically and journalistic- 

 ally over 3,500 miles nearer, and which comes out a day earlier in 

 the week. Forest and Stream is published further West than 

 any shooting paper in America. It is also published further East. 



Newspaper work in a field shared with courteous and obliging 

 contemporaries who insist on giving the news a couple of weeks 

 later is what may be called a perennial snap. 



It is dead easy. 



Mr. J. E. Pumphrey, of Columbus, O., writes me tc-day in re- 

 gard to the Ohio State tournament just concluded at that city, 

 the scores of which have gone on direct: 



"Our tournament was a grand success in every way except 

 weather. The days were dark and cold, making targets difficult 

 to see. 



"Like a chump, I tried the experiment of using a new (Greener) 

 gun that I had just purchased. It was quite straight or high at 

 comb, and hurt my cheek so that I flinched and lost control of 

 myself the second day as my cheek became more tender. I should 

 have staid with my old gun until after the meeting. I did well 

 the first day. m , 



"Had over fifty entries in some events. Threw 20,0:0 targets in 



til 1*66 dclVS* 1 ' 



Mr. G.W. Rexroat, of Virginia, 111., writes the following pleas- 

 ant little account of his last race with Capt. Bogardus under the 

 10yds. circle rule mentioned earlier: 



"Capt. Bogardus and myself had another race at Lincoln, 111., 

 April 30, conditions same as in our Vig'nia shoot of two weeks 

 ago. The weather was fine, but the wind blew a perfect gale, and 

 the birds being all good strong flyers and going down wind, they 

 went with such speed that bird after bird, hard hit, would be car- 

 ried out of bouuds. Nearly all were left-quarterers. It is saying 

 enough in regard to the birds to state that Bogardus and myself 

 each missed 6 birds in succession. Our scores are sorrv-looking 

 affairs, but here they are— Bogardus 32, Rexroat 39. Both had a 

 number of dead outlof bounds, and I had one killed inside the 

 lOvds. circle around traps. Don't laugh; you ought to have been 

 there and seen them go." 



The Northwestern Indiana Shooting Association held a pleasant 

 little target, tournament at Crown Point, Ind., Thursday and 

 Friday of this week. Crown Point has always been exceptionally 

 strong in inanimate shooting. 



The Iowa State programme, nicely illustrated with portraits of 

 prominent, members of the association, is now broadcast. May 

 24-26 will be busy days in Des Moines. 



From far away Canada comes the Keystone Gun Club's pro- 

 gramme, Windsor, dates of May 24-26. Usually there are several 

 shooters from this Western region who go across the line in 

 search of a little of Queen Victoria's tournament money, but I 

 do not know of any going to this shoot from Chicago. 



Preparations go on for the great tournament of the Illinois 

 State Association. Now, there will be a shoot for you. Nobody 

 knows how big it will be this year, for last year it ran ahead of 

 all reasonable expectations. E. Hough. 



Trap in the Sunflower State. 



Hutchinson, Kansas, May 3— Trap shooting is becoming very 

 popular in the West, and our State tournament will be the largest 

 ever held we»t of Kansas City. What 13 the matter with Fulford 

 in his recent match with J. A. R. Jim Elliott? I guess our Western 

 atmosphere here does not agree with him. I had the pleasure of 

 attending one of the nicest little tournaments that I have been to 

 this -rear, at Chase, last week, Chase is a nice little town of 500 

 or 600 population, in Rice county. They have a large gun club of 

 good shots. The shoot was managed by W. R. Fisher, the club 

 secretary, and reflects great credit on both him and the boys 

 especially, for the way the visitors were entertained. Shady. 



(The following are the scores of the Chase tournament, as kindly 

 sent in bv our correspondent.) 



No. 1, special, 10 single bluerock? , 50 cents entrance, 2 moneys: 



McCulley 6 Hicks 8 Watson 7 



Eldred 8 Bowman 9 Hedges 5 



Fisher 10 



No. 2, special, 10 singles, 5I entrance, 3 m<mevs: 



McCulley 8 Hicks 7 Watson 8 



Eldred 9 Bowman 9 Hedges 8 



Fisher 8 



No. 1, 10 sinele bJucrocks, $1 entry, 3 moneys: 



Andas 9 Hicks 7 Eldred s 



McCulley 6 Bowman....... 7 Watson ' t; 



Hedges 6 De Tar 8 Bacon! 5 



No. 2, 6 singles and 8 pairs, $1.25 entrance. 4 monovs: 



Andas 110111 01 10 00- 7 Fisher llllll 11 01 11—11 



Young 311101 11 00 11— 9 Bowman 111101 10 H 10— S 



Eldred llllll 10 10 (XI- 8 Hicks 110101 00 11 11- 8 



Watson 011100 10 1111—8 DeTar 101H1 11 11 00— 9 



McCulley 011111 0110 11-9 Allen 110111 10 00 00 - 6 



Hpdges 111111 11 10 10-10 Bacon 010110 00 10 10- 5 



Eldred won fourth in shoot off. 



No, 3, 15 singles, $1.50 entrance, 4 moneys: 



Young 111111111111101—14 Bowman 100001110110010— 7 



DeTar 101010111111000— 9 Hedges 1003ini0l011<U— 10 



Eldred 01 11103 333 3 '31 3-1 3 Watson 110101 110001100- K 



Fisher llOOUllluOlOOl- 9 Audas 11101 1101 110111—12 



Hicks 010110111001111—10 Godshaw OOIOOOIOOCOOOOI— 3 



McCullev 101110110111110—11 Allen 011111011001010— 9 



No. 4, 10 singles, entrance $1: 



Eldred 9 Bacon 8 Chisholm. . . . .4 



Fisher 8 Gockstetter 8 Luck 8 



Hedges 9 Andas 9 McCulley H 



Bavington 6 Hicks.. 8 Allen 9 



DeTor 5 Young 9 Wetland 6 



Wateon 7 Bowman 9 



No. 5, 10 singles, SI entrance; 



Bavington 7 McCulley 8 Youug 9 



Andas 7 Hedges 7 Wfilard 5 



Watson 6 DeTor 7 Jale Link 7 



Thisholm 7 Allen 7 John Link 6 



Hicks 6 Gockstetter 5 Bacon 7 



Fisher 10 Eldred.... 6 Bowman 8 



No. 6, 10 singles, $1 entrance: 



Hedges 7 Bowman 8 Bovington 5 



Andas 8 Young 8 McCullev 6 



Allen ...9 DeTor 0 Chisholm 5 



Bacon 6 Fisher 10 Gockstetter u 



Jule Link 6 Eldred ... 7 



No. 7, 5 live birds, entrance $2 50: 



DeTor 2211o-4 Webb 10o22-3 



Bovington o0201-2 Hedges 12o01— 3 



Eldred lol02-3 M^Culloy lOCol— 3 



Young 22112— a Watson 3o312— 4 



No. 8, team shoot, 10 singles per man, ent ranee §25: 



D« Tar 0100010011-4 EidTed .1111111110-9 



An d as 111111001 1—8—12 Bacon OO0O0UO1O-3- 13 



Young. . ; 1101111101—8 Bavinglon 1001010DO— 5 



Allen U01111 101- 8—16 Hedges 1111013010-7—13 



Fisher 1111113011-9 Hicks 1111303301-8 



Goekstetter 1110110011—7—16 Watson 0100111100-5-13 



McCulley 1011 11 nil— 9 



Bowman 1110111101—8—17 



No. 9, 10 singles, SI entrance: 



Young 8 Fisher 9 Andas 8 



DeTor 7 Allen 8 Link 6 



Eldred 8 Bavington ..7 McCully 6 



Hedges 7 Gockstetter 7 Hicks 5 



Watson 8 Bowman 9 Bacon 8 



No. 30, 6 singles and 2 pair, entrance $1: 



Young ..8 Bavington 7 Hedge3 8 



De Tor 9 Bowman 7 Eldred « 



McCulley 7 Allen 5 



Fisher 6 Andas 8 



No. 11, 10 singles, unknown angles, SI entrar ce; 



DeTor 6 McCullev .....8 Fisher. . S 



Hedges 6 Barington 8 



Bowman 10 Andas 7 



Maple Bay Shots. 



Syracuse, N. Y., May 16.— The local paper reports the match at 

 Maple Bay last Thursday as the "regular handicap medical con- 

 test." The. only medical flavor is the ability of defeated shooters 

 to "take their medicine" with grace and grins. There is a sharp 

 neck-and-neck race between Messrs. Mowry and Hailoway each 

 has won four times, and on the 20th they will shoot to win and 

 lose. Each man shot at 50 kingbiids, thrown from 10 traps at un- 

 known angles. Hailoway won Class A medal, hiving a handi- 

 cap of one bird over Mowry. Ginty won Class B medal. The 

 score follows: 



Class A. 



Hailoway 00111111111111111131111111110111111110111101110111-44 



*Mowry " 31111313110111] llOllllllllulOilllOlillllOlllllllll— 44 



Courtney; llllllinOllllllOlllllllllOillllllOloOJlOllll 1 1331-43 



Hookway 101011011111inOUllllU11110111111110iOlll0111111-43 



Lansing vv: v. n: .:: im>; m."..!-!'": 



Luther 33noU103millll011110illlOliOOimilllllll01111-41 



C Walters 11000011111111 11111101001111111111131)1111111111101-41 



Ashton 1111111103.11 110111111101110101U001001111110100111-8S 



Huweii onoiooiioiiooiniiiuiinnooinioiGooi iiiiiiiioi— 36 



Chase OlOMUllllOlllOlllOllllOlOlOOUOOllllllOllllCOOi . - : 



* Handicapped one bird - 



Class B. 



Ginty 33331111111111111111111011111111111110001101111111-45 



Williams 1111111111111111 iioiioiimiiimimimooimiio-44 



Sanford 11110011111111011111111111101101111111111110111110-43 



Kellar 33101111111101111110101011100111011111111111011111-41 



Ay ling 01111111113011111111111111011100111011100101110111-40 



Mann 11110101111101111011111111110111111111111100110101— 41 



Duguid 10111101111110110101101111011100011111110111111110- 38 



D Wallers 11111 HlOlOlllOimoiOlll] 110111 UllOlOlw. 



Frazer imoiooiiimmninnimiiiiioioiiii w. 



Hamilton Gun Club. 



Scores of May 9. Medal shoot, rapid Bring system, 25 singles: 



Parker 111030330i(J101 10101 101011-10 



Crooks 1H0311011303303310111101-19 



W Stroud 30110100101110111m 11111— 19 



H Smith lllllOllimmilCOlOlllO— 20 



.las Hamilton 3111101111101011111111111—22 



Kaiser 1101100110111111001101111-18 



Bowman 10mi011imm.ll3301131-32 



J Stroud 3011101111110101100011010-16 



Hunt, niOlllOOOllllOllllllUOO -18 



Jno Smith llUmillOUllloOllOOlll— 20 



A Smi th 11111011111111 01111111111— 23 



Clifford iumioiiommoiimoo-20 



Bawron 3301110111101101111001111-19 



W Henry 0111111111011111111010111—21 



Toe Smyth 110010010111101111011001,0—14 



D Smith milllllllOlllOOllimoi— 2] 



Ebey 1131110101111101111111101-21 



Wilson im03330ni3111111113031- 22 



Sweep, 30 birds, unknown angles: Wilson 9, W. Siroud 9, Parker 

 4, James 8, D. Smith 8, Bowroh 6. 



Sweep, 10 birds, unknown angles: Hunt 6, Bowman 8, Kaiser 6 

 J. Smith 6, J. Stroud 4, H Smith 6. 



Ties: Wilson 3, W. Stroud 2. Bowman 2, Smith 2, James 5. 

 Second tie: Wilson 4, W. Siroud 3. 



Trap at Watson's Park. 



Burnside. 111., May 13.— The Gun Club, 15 live birds, Illinois 

 State, rules, for c'ub medal: 



Hamiline 212212222212122-15 Foss 311233033121111-14 



Same day, 10 live birds, for the birds: 



H A Foss 0121111111— 9 L M Hamiline 2222112232-10 



May 1L— The Pullman Gun Club, 10 live birds, ntmois State 

 rules, for club medal: 



C Eunstein 0102200222- fi C Scleeth 3110111121— 9 



J K Finn 01123200^2— 7 L Picket 2032232200— 7 



J Cox 2002231212— 8 A Schotller 0010011010— 4 



J Turner 2102312012— 8 S W Warpole 1000120212— 6 



M Wolf 2012022012 - 7 C Williams 1121022O20— 7 



W Dallyn 1112203213- 9 1 Watson 2222222232-10 



Same day, Pullman Gun Club, 15 Peoria blackbirds: 



M Wolf 110011111111111-13 O Scleetb 11111 0111111 m -34 



A Schoitler. . .11010111111 1011—12 W Dallyn 001011111 mill— 13 



T W Warpole. lOOOlOUOOllIOlO— 7 J 3 urner Omi 3000000003— 6 



C Williams.... 030000311110100- 7 I Watson lolllllimnoi— 13 



Same day, 10 Peoria blackbirds: 



W Dallyn UOlOllllO— 7 C Scleeth 0031110110—6 



MWolf 1111111101-9 A Schotller 1110111100-7 



C Williams 0111111110-s J Turner 30O33331O0-6 



R Runstein 0100310110—5 I Watson 1001133333— 8 



R AVELRIGG. 



On the Northwest Coast. 



Portland, Oregon, May 7.— Shoot for the Dudley diamond 

 medal, being the first match on cur new grounds. The day was 

 fine; 



W L Dudley lOlllllllllOHOlOlll 10 00 11 11 11—22 



C E Hoxsie lOtOlinillOllllOOll 11 11 01 11 11-24 



W A Story 0111111101 Hill Hill 11 00 11 10 01—24 



A Millard 00111011111111111011 11 01 01 10 10-23 



W J Riley lllOlllOlllllllllOU 10 10 00 00 10-20 



f! E Hughes llOlllllOlllllimil 10 00 10 10 11-23 



J J Evana llOillOllllimomi 10 11 11 11 00-24 



F Thorn liimnmioiioiooi 10 11 11 il 10— 23 



J S Bubb Ill 11 IOOOl 10000111 11 01 10 10 10 10—10 



T Birdsell 01 10001 10 1 01 iMDl 1010 10 10 00 11 U— 16 



Wheeler lOillOllllllll llllll 10 11 10 10 10-24 



Ties for medal: 



Evans 10110 10 1130-7 Hoxsie 11110 10 10 10-7 



Wheeler 01111 10 10 11—3 Story 11111 01 10 1O-8 



Second tie: 



Story 11110 01 01 11-8 Wheeler Ollll 11 10 11-9 



M. L. G. 



A Book. About Indians.— The Forest and Stream will mail 

 free on application a descriptive circular of Mr. Grlnnell's bock, 

 "Pawnee Hero Stories and Folk -tales," giving a table of contents 

 and specimen illustrations from the volume.— wide. 



