882 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



(June 16, 189S. 



8 9 



10 14 



7 .. 



6 11 



7 .. 

 .. 7 



8 .. 



9 15 

 10 8 



9 15 



7 .. 



10 11 



8 13 



8 13 

 10 9 



9 14 



8 

 13 





.. 6 

 11 .. 

 14 .. 



is .. 

 n .. 



% 



"l 



14 10 





ii 





.. 9 





Id 



10 



7 



14 8 



i3 1Q 



k 5 



Hohart • 10 14 



Clark • 7 .. 



Hedden 10 11 



Dcpm 9 13 



AW Money 2 .. 



Richmond 7 10 



Breintnall 10 14 



Moore 9 13 



Van Dyke. 8 11 



Chetwood 9 .. 



Whitehead 11 



E Money 11 



J L Smith 



James 



Drake 



Hoff 



Brautingham 



Collins 



Soper .. 



Young 



Wilson 



Apgar 



Hall 



Abbett 



Wise 



Addison 



Kevitt 



Mundy 



"Vertuoral ■ .. .. 



Gummere 



Bonrum 



Blish 



Show 



Coeman 



Oockefair 



Sickles. 8 .. 



Walters 11 .. 



Hunt 7 



No. 13 was at 15 targets. No. 14 at 10.No. 15 at 15, No 16 at 10, No. 

 17 at 15, No. 18 at 10, No. 19 at 15, Nos. 20, 21, 22 and 23 at 10: 



13 lh 15 16 17 18 19 SO SI SS S3 

 .. 13 

 8 14 

 10 14 

 4 



14 

 <5 

 11 

 12 

 10 



15 

 13 

 7 15 



9 15 



.. 14 

 9 13 



Hedden 14 



Geoffrey 11 



Phillips 11 



Wilson 7 



Addison 12 10 



Shaw 8 .. 



Wise 8 9 



Cockefair 13 .. 



J L Smith 15 



Ver moral.... 13 9 



Sickles 14 .. 



Dean 13 .. 



Koegel 11 10 



Collins 10 " 



Monre 10 



Richmond 13 



Atwater 13 



Van Dyke 14 



Drake 13 



Breintnall 13 



B ranting ham 13 



Walters. 7 



Apgar 14 



Osterhout 10 .. 



Petti t 14 9 



Sigler 14 .. 



E Money 7 



Whitehead 9 



Gummere 10 



Hunt 10 



AW Money 6 



Abbett 7 



W Hall 6 



Blish 8 



Sorer 8 



Squier 8 



VanNuis 8 



Telfo 7 



Sunderman .. 1 



Boorum 8 



Fisher .. 7 .. 



Stirling 8 .. 



Coeman 11 



13 

 IB 



9 

 13 



9 13 



7 13 

 .. 9 



6 11 

 9 



.. 11 

 .. 13 



7 9 



9 



12 .. 



13 .. 

 .. 9 



12 .. 



13 10 

 15 .. 

 12 10 



10 

 10 



9 10 



7 7 



8 10 

 .. 9 



10 8 

 10 9 



. 15 

 8 15 



.. 13 

 9 14 



14 



6 



6 13 



8 .. 



6 .. 



4 .. 



9 8 



10 10 



.. 8 



8 .. 



7 6 



8 9 



12 .. .. 





7 . . 



8 6.. 



15 9 





8 .. .. 



6 10 .. 



13 . . 13 



H 11 5 10 10 9 



14 8 .. 



8 .. 8 8.... 



10 8 



9 10 10 



15 



..5 8 



9 8 5 



..9 9 



.. .. 10 



.. 10 10 



8 10 10 



WSmith 11 ..13 8 12 



Wheaton 12 



James 13 



Paul 13 



Hassinger 11 8 



Heller 11 .. .. .. .. 



Baar 12 



Youdet 12 



Shraff c 



Beam 



F Hall 6 .. 9 8 



Hobart 15 



Meyer 13 



Post 13 



Terrill 7 



B'ibbage 



Dukes 



S Hedden 



Heritage 



Hollis 



Clark 6 5 4 .. 



No. 24, 10 singles: Moore. 10, Koegel 10, Meyer 10, W Smith 10. 

 Richmond 9, Hobart 9, Whitehead 9, Van Dyke 9, Soper 9, Atwater 

 9, Telfo 8, Walters 8, Apgar 7. 



No. 25, same: Richmond 9, Moore 9. Breintnall 9, Meyer 9, 

 Hague 8, Post 7, W. Smith 7, Atwater 6, Koeerel 5, 



No. 26, same: Moore 10, Post 10, Hobart 9, Richmond 9, Hague 

 9, Telfo 9, Sigler 9, Terrill 9, Atwater 8. 



13 



South Norwalk vs. Bridgeport. 



The teams of the South Side Gun Club, of Srauth Norwalk, 

 Conn., and the Park City Gun Club, of Bridgeport, Conn., met at 

 South Norwalk on the 11th, with 12 men a side, and the day ended 

 with a victory for the Bridgeport men. The men shot at 25 Key- 

 stones each, from 5 traps, the scores running: 



Park City Club. 



Wilson 20 



W Wheeler 20 



Blakeslee 23 



Lewis 13 



Longdon 19 



A Wheeler 16 



Dean 19 



Stead 14 



Hubbard 20 



Hamilton 18 



Smith 22 



South Side Club. 



Hendrie 20 



Coleman 18 



Seymour 22 



Fox 17 



Drake 19 



Sanford 22 



Lockwood 16 



Northrop 13 



Richards 10 



McHugh 31 



Ferris 17 



Thomas 21—235 Remington ...18—213 



The team shoot was made a 50-cent sweep, with four even 

 moneys. The third of the series will be shot at Bridgeport, upon 

 grounds of the Park City Gun Club. Each club now having won 

 a race, the final is looked for, at a future date not yet arranged, 

 with great interest by the shooting contingent of each club. 



Kansas City Foresters. 



Kansas City, June 11.— The Forester Gun Club held its regular 

 monthly medal shoot yesterday. The weather was pleasant and 

 the birds an except'onally good lot, resulting in the scores being 

 rather below the ordinary. V. W. Floweree and F. Holmes tied 

 on 12 for the first medal, and the latter leaving before the sh^ot- 

 off, Floweree was declared the winner for the second consecutive 

 lime. J. P. Knoche. F. S. Groves, F. K. Hoover and J. W. Jones 

 tied on 11, and the latter won in an exciting shoot-off, killing 17 

 straight. The score: 



OF Holmes 12 N Scarritt 8 William Barton.... 8 



John Knoche 11 VW Floweree 12 J W Jones 11 



F C Groves 11 D Snowflake 7 F K Hoover 11 



C A Young 9 Frank Graham... 9 Vaughn w 



L S Mohe 9 



Stockyards Gun Club. 



Kansas City, June 11,— The Stockyards Gun Club held its reg- 

 ular weekly shoot on Monday and there were fourteen contest- 

 ants for th" club medal. R. J.Monroe won the club trophy on 16 

 out of 25 bluerocks. The club, is composed generally of novices, 

 but they are showing a marked improvement. The score: 



fiilliam 11 Trower 10 Col Gillett 10 



Mills 7 Olander 11 Geo Hock well 11 



Nutfpr 5 Monroe.. 16 Keeney 6 



CP Baldwin 11 Snuff 13 Johnson 6 



BF Baldwin 6 L Peters 14 



Shooting at Utica. 



Utica, N. Y., June 10.— Oneida County Sportsmen's Association 

 shoot, at 25 kingbirds: 



Hunter 23 Gates 20 F N Maynard 17 



Kallies 22 Harris 23 Gilmore 20 



Kilbourne 22 Knowlton 22 Salisbury 18 



Eliott 22 Mayhew 22 Wheeler 21 



Smith 22 Booth 22 Smith 21 



Pfeiffer 20 Parker 20 



Shoot for club prizes: 



Smyth 25 Smith 16 Kilbourne 22 



Gates 22 Knowlton 25 Wheeler 22 



Booth ....24 Elliott 25 Lane 15 



Hunter 24 Parker 22 Salisbury 21 



Pfeiffer 23 Mayhew 23 Cummings 21 



Millspaugh 23 Gilmore 21 Dexter. . 24 



Harris 23 French 19 



A Challenge from New Haven. 



New Haven. Conn., June 11.— I hereby challenge Messrs. C. H. 

 Burbidge and Allen Willey, of Hartford, Conn., to shoot a match 

 with two New Haven men for $200 a side at 100 inanimate targets 

 per man. thrown from 5 trap3, either expert rules or known 

 angles. Match to be shot on any of the following gun club g' ounds 

 in this State, viz., Aisonia. Willimantic, New London, Bridge- 

 port, Wallingford or Bristol, on or before July 4, 1892. Inclosed 

 find check for $35 forfeit. H. H. Bates. 



[Dheck for $25 received]. 



CORRESPONDENCE. 



The Forest anu Stream is the recognized medium of entertain- 

 ment, instruction and information between American sportsmen 

 The Editors invite communications on the subjects to which its pages 

 are devoted. Anonymous communications will not be regarded. 

 The Editors are not responsible for the views of correspondents. 



SUBSCRIPTIONS. 



Subscriptions may begin at any time. Terms: For single copy $4 

 per year, $2 for six months. Bates for clubs of annual subscribers: 

 Three Copies, $10. Five Copies, $16. 



Remit by express money-order, registered letter, money- order, or 

 draft, payable to the Forest and Stream Publishing Company. The 

 paper may be obtained of newsdealers throughout the United States 

 Canada and Great Britain. 



Foreign Subscription and Sales Agents — London : Davies & Co. ; 

 Brentano's; Sampson Low & Co. Paris: Brentano's. Foreign terms : 

 $5 per year, $2.50 for six months. 



ADVERTISEMENTS. 



Inside pages, 30 cents per nonpareil line. Special rates for three 

 six and twelve months. Seven words to the line, twelve lines to one 

 inch. Advertisements should be sent in by Saturday previous to 

 issue in which they are to be inserted. Transient advertisements 

 must invariably be accompanied by the money, or they will not te 

 inserted. Reading notices $1.00 per line. Only advertisements of an 

 approved character inserted. 



Address all communications : 



FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO., 



Wo. 818 Broad wf»y. New York Oiiy 



SAVE YOUR TROPHIES. 



Write for Our Illustrated Catalogue 

 "m>*na iuft nnnwo u 



It gives directions for preparing and preserv- 

 ing Skins, Antlers, etc. Also prices for Heads 

 and Rugs. Birds and Fish, and all kinds of work 

 in Taxidermy. 



WARD'S NATURAL SCIENCE ESTABLISHMENT, 



ROCHESTER, N. Y. 



THE SALMON FISHER. 



BY 



CHARLES HALLOCK. 



CONTENTS : Distribution of the Salm on . 

 Life History of the Salmon. Technology of Sal- 

 mon Fishine. Salmon Fishing in the Abstract. 

 Luxury of Salmon Waters. Itinerary of the 

 Salmon Rivers. 



A book to read now; and to he put in one's 

 pocket for reading again in camp. 



Cloth, 126 pastes. Price $1.00. 

 FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO., 

 318 Broadway, New York. 



SOME anglers labor under the false impression that 

 large dealers and manufacturers charge more for 

 their goods than the keepers of small shops. A glance 

 at our new Illustrated Catalogue and Price List for 

 1892, which we will mail on receipt of 6 cents to cover 

 postage, will show how much they are mistaken. 



ABBEY & IMBRIE, 

 Manufacturers of All Grades of Fishing Tackle, 

 18 Vesey Street, New York. 



REPAIRING CUNS. 



We employ the most experienced gunsmiths that we can find; 

 no apprentices. 



Extra fine work can be safely entrusted to us. Remodeling, re-bor- 

 ing, choke-boring, intelligently executed. 



Parts for leading guns, rifles and revolvers usually on hand. 

 Charges must invariably be prepaid on goods sent us for repairs. 



111 bo 116 M'cb'gap fltfe., Grplcago 



