B76 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



[June 16, 1892. 



Bisley Meeting. 



The spring meeting of the National Rifle Association was held 

 on the 24th ult. with Earl Waldegrave in the chair. Sir Henry 

 Halford and others spoke pro and con on various points in the 

 programme of the meeting of 1892, but on the whole general satis- 

 faction was expressed. The meeting will open on July 11 and 

 slio->iing will begin on July 12. The big volunteer shoots for the 

 Queen's prize, etc.. have this year been put into the second week, 

 and opinion is divided as to the effect of the innovation. 



Enlarging the Smith & Wesson Factory. 



Springeiedd, Mass.— At the close of the present month the 

 works of Smith & Wesson will be shut, down to permit of exten- 

 sive changes and enlargements of the plant. Several months will 

 be devoted to this work, when the re-opening will find improved 

 machinery and facilities for a larger quantity of the fine work 

 which has made the factory famous lor years. 



Turtle Bay Rifle Club. 



New York, June 9.— The weekly handicap shoot for the Jantzer 

 cup resulted as follows: 



n H Plate. . . 244 245 245+ 1-741 F Fredericks. 235 235 237+15-722 



JOchs, Jr 2*6 2ii:, 847-- S-739 H W Steffnn.232 236 244+ 7—719 



H Lingelbach 222 230 237- -40-729 W Lubeck .... 225 225 2294-35-713 

 Ualandherm.,214 219 231-L60-724 T Fitzps trick 216 216 218+50-710 



F. J. Fredericks, Sec'y. 



Heidenreich Rifle Club. 



The following scores were made June 13 at our headquarters, 

 425 W. Fifty-third street. 100ft. range, open air: Aigeldinger 237, 

 Hicks 335, Kaufman 229, Hippold 224, Busch 223, Enders 323. 



^heating* 



All ties divided unless otherwise reported, 

 FIXTURES. 



If you want your shoot to be announced here 

 send in notice like the following; 



June 13-18.— New York State Association's Thirty-fourth Annual 

 Convention, at Syracuse, N. Y. Chas. H. Mowry. Sec'y. 



June 14-16 —North Star Gun Club tournament, Minneapolis. 



June 15— Ansonia Gun Club tournament and sixth team con- 

 test of the Connecticut Shooting Association, at Ansonia, Conn. 



June 15-17.— Waver ly Gun Club tournament, at Waverly, la. 



June 16-17.— Third annual tournament of Islaud Gnn Club, 

 Wheeling, W. Va. R. B. Burt, Sec'y. 



June 16-18.— Sportsman's Association of the Northwest tourna- 

 ment, Seattle, Wash. 



June 20.— Fifty bluerock match. $3 entry, at Dexter Park. L. I. 



June 21-23.— South Dakota State Sportsmen's Association tour- 

 nament, Bresford, S. D. Professionals barred. 



June 21-23.— Second aunual tournament of Winchester Gun 

 Association, Winchester. Va. Chas. F. Neeson, Pres. 



June 22 — Brightwood Gun Club tournament, Brigntwood, Ind. 



July.— New Jersey Trap Shooter's League, sixth monthly 

 team contest and open tournament, at grounds of South Side 

 Gun Club, Newark, N. J. 



July 4.— Machimoodus Gun Club, tournament at Moodus, Conn. 



July 4.— Connecticut Shooting Association, sixth contest for 

 Keystone trophy. South Norwalk, Conn. 



July 4-7.— Atlantic City Gun Club's tournament, at Atlantic 

 City. N. J. 



July 6-8.— -Lafayette Gun Club tournament, at Lafayette, Ind. 



July (second week).— Interstate Manufacturers' and Dealers' 

 Association tournament, at Watertown, N. Y. 



July 12-13.— White House Gun Club tournament, at White 

 House, N. J. 



July 12 15.— Saratoga Gun Club's third annual tournament, at 

 Saratoga Springs, N. Y; $2,000 guaranteed in purses. Wm. Henry 

 Gibbs, Sec'y. 



July 21-22.- Independent Gun Club tournament.Plainfield, N. J. 



Aug. 9-12.— Pennsylvania State Sportsmen's Association's an- 

 nual tournament, Reading, Pa. Walter D. Eller, Sec'y. 



Aug. 10 12.— Missouri State Amateur Association tournament, 

 at L-xington, Mo. Added purses. Address G. A. Sturges, Spc'y. 



Aug. 23-26.— International tournament, Des-chre-shos-ka Island, 

 Detroit, Mich. Live birds and targets. 



Aug. 30 to Sept. 1.— Hackettstown Gun Club tournament, at 

 Hackettstown, N. J.; two days at targets, third day at live 

 pigeons. Address James L. Smith, Hackettstown, N. J. 



Sept. 5.— Frankfort Game and Fish Protective Association, first 

 annual tournament, at Frankfort, N. Y. 



September (second week). — Interstate Manufacturers' and 

 Dealers' Association tournament, at Auburn, N. Y. 



Oct. 5-7.— First annual tournament of the Riverside Gun Club, 

 at Red Bank, N. J. First two days targets, last day live birds 

 John P. Cooper, Sec'y. 



ILLINOIS STATE SHOOT. 



Chicago, 111., June 6.— The sun rose this morning. 



The common impression i8 that it rises every morning, but com- 

 mon impressions are often wrong. There is uothing to prove that 

 tbe sun rose at Chicago more than six times during the entire 

 month of May just past, or that it has risen more than twice this 

 month so far. This morning, however, the sun understood that 

 no more foolishness wouM go, and accordingly it rose. It rose 

 "all haired with living fire." It winked solemnly to Lake Michi- 

 gan, bitched up its trousers and proceeded to put in a good day's 

 work for the 18th central event of the earth, to wit, the tourna- 

 ment of the I. 8. S. A. This was very kind of the sun. The Gun 

 Club tent stuck its feet firmly in the mud at Watson's Park, but 

 it was only a bluff, for it knew a good puff of wiud would pull its 

 pegs out. So did its white-winged sister behind it, and also the 

 Evanston Gun Club tent, and the Montgomery Ward & Co. tent. 

 They were all scared. John Watson did not have up any sign 

 "Keep off the Grass." Grass that grows on top of 2f r. of mud is 

 able to take care of itself. Everybody kept off of it and hung to 

 the walks and the cinders, and the platforms around the shooting 

 headquarters. 



The tiusky Indians who make life miserable for newspaper men 

 in this rose-clad month of June began to drift in on J. Watson 

 his pisreon grounds, about 8 or 9 o'clock in the morning, and they 

 were makiDg trouble around there about, 6 o'clock in the evening. 

 The usual entertainment was offered. On theforninst side of the 

 hoxxse the five KiDg automatics kept folks guessing, and over 

 bevant two Bets of bluerock traps, electric triggers, P. North 

 high priest, entertained those who like to shoot, and shoot, and 

 shoot. 



It may perhaps be too much a jest to speak of plowing corn, for 

 this spring the farmers are hunting bullheads in their cornfields, 

 hut a great many would be plowing corn, or planting it, if they 

 could, and if they can't, they don't feel much like going to tour- 

 naments. Of course this affects everybody else. Then Tom 

 Laflin broke his leg, and Charlie Strawn got married. Take it 

 altogether it has been an awful spring for shooters. Last year 

 we had 123 entries in the Board of Trade badge shoot. To-day 

 they halted near by the 80 post. This event is the key to our 

 shoot. The L. C. Smith cup closed with a sullen jar at 53. All in 

 all we have a rift in our lute this year, one that you could throw 

 a cat through. The wet weather did it. This is the worst spring 

 ever sprung. 



We had eight States represented here to-day, Illinois, Ohio, 

 Iowa, Wisconsin, Nebraska and Missouri. Messrs. Pumpbrey, 

 Sanford, Young, Hamilton and North came from Ohio. Lew 

 Harrison came on from Minneapolis; George Maillet led a cohort 

 from Indiana; Messrs. Parmalee, Kennedy and Dent cam« all the 

 way from Omaha and Nebraska; Dick Merrill aud a friend or 

 two spoke for Milwaukee; Charlie Budd and H. Durant held the 

 Iowa banner and exp?cted more in to-morrow, and Jimmy 

 Elliott again trusted his life to this dangerous clime, far, far 

 away from Kansas City's clay-ribbed mounts. 



As for the shooters of Chicago and Illinois, the reader may look 

 upon them herewith, 53 of tbem, more than ever appeared at once 

 in any sporting paper, and the only collection in any way repre- 

 sentative of the sportsmanship of this Association. The faces 

 maybe seen here of those whose names are already familiar to 

 thousands who know them not personally. Forest and Stream 

 offers the first opportunity to see them all together. I am bound 

 to aay they are a gobd-lobking lot of men, and such as one need 



not be ashamed to be tangled up with. I wish every scoffer at 

 shooterdom could look on this picture and do a little thinking 

 over it. Not a dude in the lot. Every fellow a man clear through. 

 Not one who hasn't got ou a shirt and collar. Comparisons are 

 needless, and one hasn't time to point, out all the especially beau- 

 tiful ones in this galaxy of beauty. To me, however, the sweet, 

 retiring grace of Mary J. Eich will ever have a subtle charm, and 

 I cannot evade the attractiveness of the smile evinced by Charlie 

 Burton, or by Fred Donald. The winsome face of Sister Thomas 

 is also hot stuff, and one cannot too much admire the calm dig- 

 nity displayed by Col. Cooney Cahoon, in the southeast corner of 

 the rosebud garden. The serene features of Brother John Klein- 

 man are set in a peaceful, but firm renose, as who should say, "I 

 fear no yellowleg chicken upon earth." Col. Felton, to the right 

 of the sweet thing in glasses, is doing the title role in Blackhawk, 

 the Indian Chieftain, but he isn't cross, and neither is Billy 

 Wells, nor Mr. McFarland. It's only a bluff. It's too bad about 

 the bald-headed men, but then you never can tell what a bald- 

 headed man is going to do, even in a picture. On the whole, it is 

 thought that this plate will offer a pleasant study to those who 

 know or read of these Chicago and Illinois men. This is an en- 

 largement of tbe plate which appeared in the Association's pro- 

 gramme, under Forest and Stream copyright. It's just a little 

 Forest and Stream idea. Nobody ever bad it betore. Read 

 Forest and Stream, and you will find these ideas every once in 

 a while. Read the other papers, and you will find the methods of 

 the past. The past is not good enough for Forest and Stream. 



In the past when sportiDg papers had little news and had to 

 pay for it, the custom arose of printing all scores in detail. 

 Everybody accepted as correct this sort of score, even when its 

 raison d'etre, as the office boy says, no longer existed. In the 

 past, therefore, the "dead, lost, one naught, naught-naught, 

 naught, naught-one" sort of report went. In the modern report, 

 or the one which soon will be modern, there is nothing extenu- 

 ate, hut there is no naught set down in malice. The record, the 

 character, the features, those are the things of most importance 

 in the estimate of any sporting event, and useless detail must 

 not envelope these in this age of the world. To-day I hired a man 

 to copy target scores in full while I sat on a fence and whistled. 

 In .the afternoon he came running to me. 



"^ire;" said he, "alas, I have fallen down and spilled the de- 

 tails." 



"Son," said I to him. "behold what carelessness will do. Nev- 

 ertheless you are forgiven." 

 In fact there had arisen a desire to show those who read about 



Abner Price, President, 1891-92. 

 (Found more illegal game than all his predecessors.) 



tbe 18th annual tournament of this great body of sportsmen less 

 about the exact points at which the gentlemen punctured the 

 atmosphere, and more about how they look and act and do. 

 There are a good many things whi ch have often been spokeu of 

 in these columns in a jeering, flippant way which ought to be 

 presented as they actually are. For instance, there was Billy 

 Mussey's safe, that receptacle which has figured so largely in the 

 match shooting which harsh aliens have thrust upon Chicago. 

 That safe has gone bounding down the ragged slopes of history, 

 but, nobody outside of Chicago knows how it aetuallv looks— ex- 

 cept Mr. Elliott and Mr. Fulford and a few others. The Forest 

 and Stream special artist has prepared from sketches on the 

 spot a truthful representation of 'his historic safe as it appeared 

 just after the latest Eastern raid on it. and now everybody can 

 see just how it looks. It works free on the hinges, and the 

 mechanism of the trigger, simple, yet positive in action, is shown 

 perfectly. Come and see it. Drop a nickel in the slot and see it 

 work. 



Br'er George Kleinman, a tall sick-looking fellow, has long been 

 one of the features of Chicago trap shooting, and the old horse 

 and buggy by means of which he transported home his winnings 

 in the several hard-fought battles wherein he upheld so gallantly 

 the eagles of Chicago— that old horse and buggy have been written 

 of so often that they belong to the public almost as much as 

 George himself. But who knew how they looked until the special 

 artist depicted them? And who knew how George's famous prize 

 machine gun actually appeared? 



I found fault with the artist about this picture. I didn't see any 

 use in making a burlesque of a thing, and I told the artist he had 

 no right to draw George's feet in any such exaggerated style, for 

 it wasn't true to nature and wasn't right. 



"Whose drawin' them feet?" asked the artist, "me or you? " 



"Well, I won't have it," said I. 



The artist then apologized. "The fact, is," said he, "I was 

 drawin' along ou the feet, you know, an' I sort o' got fascinated, 

 an' went on longer'n I meant." 



I also pointed out to the artist that he had drawn the horse in 

 such a position that only a fraction of it showed. I told him he 

 ought to have made the picture on a sideways view, so as to give 

 the horse a chance. As it was, it looked as if he couldn't draw a 

 whole horse, anyhow. 



"I can draw a whole horse all right all right," said the artist, 

 "but I'd rRther Dot." This I looked upon as insubordination, and 

 so discharged him. 



I believe something has been said about Col. .las. W. Sheahan's 

 smile. It is a smile that deserves perpetuation. Col. Sheahan's 

 smile is shown herewith, in all its spontaneous loveliness. He is 

 liable to do it any moment. No bad man could smile that way. 

 Youmay search high and low, far and wide, and you wilt not find 

 in any sporting paper nor any other paper, nor in any collection 

 of actors' photograph's nor any other sort of photographs, so real 

 and genuine a smile as this. Indeed, it is the photograph of a 

 smile, and Col. Sheahan did not know when it was taken. 



But. we digress. The following are the scores: 



The Board of Trade badge shoot began at once in the morning, 

 but was not shot down to the first tie and will be finished to- 

 morrow. Accordingly only target events were decided. 



Second contest for the L. C. Smith cup, emblematic of the indi- 

 vidual State championship at inanimate targets, the winner 

 of the cup this year to receive sixty per cent, and the club of 

 which he is a member forty per cent, of the contest at next year's 

 tournament, the winner to execute a bond in the sum of $500 to 

 guarantee the production of the cup uext year. Twenty Peoria 

 blackbirds, entrance $5. Illinois State rules. First prize, tbe L. 

 C. Smith cup, value $500; second prize, cash and merchandise, 

 $109; third prize, cash, $75; fourth prize, cash, $50: 

 A Boss. ...11100010110111101001-12 Corbin . . .00110101111111011101—14 

 E Gardner 1111110110110100 w Church . . .lllllllOllOOllOOUll— 15 



R C Whitell0101001U011011111-14 Mosher. . .11111111111011111111-19 

 T Taylor.. 01011111110110101110-11 Fortier. ... 011111111101 l0101111-16 



RSolemanOl 110101 111101001100-12 Barto llOOllOOniliiOOOlOl— 12 



J Schick. .00111111010111000011-12 Kees 00000010101 000000001- i 



KleinmanlOUllOlIl 111111 1110-17 VVooster. .111101 101 1 1111110110—16 

 Brahm. ...10011101101101101110-14 England. .UlOOllOlonoilinilO— 13 



ABabcockOlOOlOllitOlOOw Eich 01111111111111111111-19 



CairBcr'se01101110U0011101100-12 Hale 010001 11011101000001- 8 



EBabcocklOllOlOl 100010001110-10 Adams. ...01111111111111116100-16 

 Kiefer. . . .01111101111101100111-15 Peasley . . .10110011011111000000—11 

 Heikes.. .11101101111110111111— 17 L WillardllllOllllllllOlIOllO— 16 



Phillips.. 000111111101111 w. Booth 1011011100101111111-15 



Britton . . .11111110101001101011-14 O WillardllOllllOlllllOlOHOO— 14 

 Hickey....l 11111100100101 w. Robinson lllllUOllOOllOlllll— 1« 



Skelton .00011000110100001100— 7 Lamph'relllllOllllllOlllllll— 18 

 Wadsw'thCOlllllOlOOOlllllOOl-13 Harris.. ..01111111111111111111— 19 

 Sherman. 01101011001100111111-13 Heilman..lllO010111OO1111110O-13 



Harbaugblll0lll010101l00110I-13 Wolf OOOOinoOllOlLllOOOlO- 8 



J Lewis. . .10111011000101011100-11 Plattner . . 11000110110101111001—13 



G Airey . .000111111tllll010111-15 Feck 10011111110110011100—13 



Barr 0 ■ 101 1 10110011030010—11 Palmer.. .10111011101001101111-14 



Dicks ... .11111110011111011110-15 Hall. . . . .00111100111101011101—13 



Steck OOOlOlllllllOlOOOlOL-11 Fogli 01010101111010 ' 10101-13 



Westfield.limmmil011in0-18 EkhnstfckOQlII 100110100111111- 13 



Purvis .. 0111 01 V 001011110111-14 Stone 11011101111110011010-14 



Bingham .11111 100110111111111— 17 Turtle. . . .00101001111010U0111-12 

 Atwater.. 11 111111011011111110-17 Wilde. . . .10111100100001101000-10 

 Ties on 19: 



Mosher 01100-2 Eich 01110-3 Harris 11101—4 



Mr. Gib. Harris of Chicago, won cup. The 60 per cent, money for 

 next year was by agreement divided by Messrs. Mosher, Eich and 

 Harris before tbe tie shooting was begun. Ties on second, third 

 and fourth were divided. The L. C. Smith cup was won last year 

 by Mr. R. C. White, of Geueseo. 



OPEN TOURNAMENT. 



Fourth contest, 10 bluerocks, $3, 4 moneys*: 



Paul North 7 BC Brahm 7 C W Budd 8 



RO Heikes 9 England 9 Fahnestock ti 



Sanford 10 Schick 6 G Kleinman 7 



WHHale 8 R Merrill 9 F E Adams 4 



John Lewis 6 C Keifer 4 Ambrose 5 



Young 9 Kuowles 6 Wadsworth 9 



WoosteT. 8 Church 3 A W Reever 2 



W Westfield .10 A Otts 6 Taylor 7 



Mosher 9 Dukhart 7 A E Peasley 7 



RSolemon 9 Sprague 9 C Kees 3 



E M Gardner 6 G Airey 8 A J Atwater 9 



M J Eich 9 A Babcock 9 



*AU ties in target events throughout tournament divided. 



Sixth contest, 15 bluerocks, $5, 4 moneys: 



E Bingham 13 R Merrill 15 P North 15 



Sanford 13 Young 14 Heikes 14 



G Kleinman 11 Budd 11 England 12 



Kennedy 12 Jones 12 Parmalee 15 



Ambrose 12 Woo3ter 13 Gardner 11 



Bob White 15 B--ahm 11 Schick 11 



Westfield 15 GBeck 8 Partington 12 



JABElliott 14 M J Eich 12 Keifer 10 



Taylor 14 Soleman 11 White 12 



Barr 12 Sprague 13 



Seventh contest, 9 singles and 3 pairs bluerocks, §4, 4 moneys: 



North ...10 Sprague ...11 Parmalee 12 



Budd 12 Heikes 14 Jones 12 



Bingham 12 Sanford 15 Young 11 



Ulliott 10 G Kleinman 11 Mosher.. 9 



Soleman.. 10 Taylor .12 Harris 11 



Merrill ..13 Westfield 13 Hale 9 



Partington 13 Schick 12 England 9 



Kennedy 13 Gardner 11 Eich 11 



Oairncross 9 Fortier 7 Knowles ....9 



G Tait 3 Booth 10 Hickey 9 



Extra sweep, 15 bluerocks, $4, 4 moneys, 47 entne=: 



P North 14 Sanford 14 Brahm :. 9 



Ynung 12 G Kleinman 12 Taylor 12 



Lewis 9 Church 7 Skelton 9 



Barto 8 Sprague 11 Lamphere 9 



Ambrose 13 Parmalee 15 Budd 14 



Kennedy 11 Jones 14 Booth 11 



A Harris 14 Adams 13 J J Smith 7 



M Corbin 8 Harbaugh 9 Soleman 9 



Elliott 15 Sherman 9 Dekhart 7 



Fahnestock 14 Heikes 13 England 13 



Mosher 11 Fellows 10 Partington 15 



FTalt 9 Schick 13 Westfield 15 



Merrill 13 Ott 14 Eich 13 



B White 15 Taylor 11 FB 10 



Bingham 15 Wooster 11 Porter 6 



Fortier 11 Bartlett 9 



Extra sweep, 15 bluerocks, $3: Young and Westfield div. 15; 

 England, Merrill, Schick, Blattner, Partington, Heikes, Bingham, 

 Bartlett and Fahnestock div. 14; North Kleinman, Sanford, Har- 

 baugh, Ambrose, Budd, Jones, Harris, Taylor, Elliott, Fortier, 

 Keifer, Willard and Pumphrey div. 13. 



Extra sweep, 15 bluerocks, $3: Elliott, Budd, Ott and Buck div. 

 15; England, Bingham, Taylor, Heikes and Harris div 14; Merrill, 

 Parmalee, PumpUrey, Partington. Blattner and Kleinman div. 13. 



Extra sweep, 15 bluerocks, $3: Budd, North and Westfield div. 

 15; Bingham, Parmalee, Merrill, Young, Sanford. Elliott, Wooster. 

 Taylor, Ott and Kleinman div. 14; Ambrose, Eich and Schick div, 

 13. 



Tuesday, Second Day, June 1. 



The sun rose again. So did the silken-winged zephyrs of the 

 south. If anybody has an accurate knowledge of about how 

 merry a marriage bell ever gets he can tell how things went here 

 to-day. John Watson's dairy lunch was a dream. 



It was late in the afternoon when the ties were concluded in 

 the great badge shoot. As usual, these ties were spirited, that 

 for the badge, itself and the State championship exciting. They 

 were shoo at 5 birds each, and at the close of the first round only 

 four men remained in, vour uncle Abner Price, sister Mary J. 

 Eich, Mr. C. Reese and Mr. Wooster, Mayor of the city of Amboy. 

 Your uncle Abner got loo hot. a one out of No. 1 and that clinched 

 his resolve of resigning the presidency. Mr. ReeFe likewise 

 ceased to trouble and only the mayor and the gold-toothed phan- 

 tom from the West Side remained in. The mayor man got shaky 

 with his right. Mary J., she wasn't shaky. She was pasting 'em. 

 She kept on pastin', and I believe could have kept on all day. 

 Down went the last bird in the third tie, and amid a big shout 

 the two-time winner of the big badge was carried into the club 

 house. 



Mr. Eich is the only man who ever won the Board of Trade 

 badge two years in succession. His victory is a popular one, 

 aud moreover it is a deserved one. It is not generally known, 

 but for the past two months Mr. Eich has been in regular train- 

 ing for this shoot, taking arm, shoulder and neck exercise, and 

 otherwise getting^ himself into perfect condition. He is the only 

 amateur shooter I ever knew to take such wise precautions, and. 

 it is a pleasure to think that his deliberate patience and ambi- 

 tion have won their reward. Following are the scores in full of 

 this event: 



First Contest.— For the Board of Trade diamond hadge, emble- 

 matic of the individual championship of the State, the winner of 

 the badge tim year to receive the proceeds of next year's tourna- 

 ment. Teu live birds, entrance $10. First prize, the diamond 

 badge, value $500; second prize, cash. $100; third prize, cash and 

 merchandise, $83; fourth prize, cash and merchandise, $54; special 

 prize, second best score iu tie shoot for medal, merchandise, $6: 



A Tokinton, Pullman 2211201222— 9 



O H Porter, Gun Club 2211111212—10 



Geo Kleinman, Fort Dearborn 2211012111— 9 



J Gottbart, Mud Hen 0122113201— 8 



R J Purvis, Uvanston 2111212010— 8 



A W Reeves, South Chicago 2221222221—10 



W Dallyn, PuUman 2222222202— 9 



C O Williams, Pullman 0012022122— 7 



W J Edhrooke, Lake County 2221210201— 8 



A Reurobin, Lake County 1022111210— 8 



EM Gardiner, Chicago 2222222222—10 



Geo Airey, Eureka 2112212221—10 



C Burmeister, North End 00H101111— 7 



A Price, Forester 1111111121—10 



M J Eicn, Chicago 1221121212—10 



Wm Skelton, West, Chicago 0020020111— 5 



F A Barr, Genesee... 0120121121— 8 



J E Price, Audubon 3222320221— 9 



Wm Harbough, Genesee U10011211— 8 



F E Adam, Evanston Prairie 1011220211— 8 



J J Smith, Evanston G O 1100110110- 6 



T J Fortier, C City 2020201001— 5 



F Mosher, C City 0121111111- 9 



W Westfield. Mt, Pulaski 2U0222212— 9 



V E Brahm, West Chicago 1020100111— 6 



J Church, Douglas 0202000001— 3 



A D Cairncross. Amboy 22O221H10— 8 



C Kiefer, Amboy 0221211321— 9 



R O Heikes. Chicago 1122232111-10 



J C England, Mt Pulaski 0211221220- 3 



R B Organ, Chicago 2:02211233— 9 



A J Atwater, Chicago 1211101122— 9 



J Schick, Mt Pulaski 0U0U2221— 8 



W H Hale, Amboy 2122201012— 8 



T Laflin, Geueseo 1011122030— 7 



Ben Dicks, Audubon 1022311113— 9 



B Barto. Douglas 2322022022- * 



W E Phillipps, Gun Club 3222022022- 9 



G W Franklin, Evanston 3121110001— 7 



