Oct. so, 1892.] 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



S47 



Ware, of Blue Island, and other aliens met a strong eontinKent of 

 residents, and an old-time camp fli-e was held, with refreshments and 

 higb jiDte. E. H. 



TMs spring was launched from the yard of Kessel, at Devonport, 

 Eng.. a little ship, a sort of a cross between asneakboxand a sharpie, 

 having the spoon how and dagger centerplate of the former and Che 

 angular bilge of the latter. She has proved herself as handy a craft 

 for river work as it would be possible to get, and very cheap. She is 

 called Visiou. and rates only at 0.-.i8, being 12ft. on' I.vv.l. She has 

 just saded a match, the best of three races, at Exmouth, against the 

 canoe yawl Spruce, 0 41 rating, atid thev ended in a decisive win for 

 Vision.— J7/f? lUodel. Y'icht.'<iiia}i a/iid Canocisf. 



The annual election of die Waltham C. C on Oct. 10, resulted as 

 follows: Pres., W. V. Hyde; Vice Pres., J. fl. Scickuey; Treas., W. 

 M. Lucas: Sec. Arihm- Randies; Fin. Sec , O. R. iiice; C. U. Brown 

 and P. Peudlebury with the above officers constitute the Board of 

 Directors. Thirty applications for membership were received. 



THE REVOLVER CHAMPIONSHIP. 



Champion Jantzer Retains Possession of the 

 Winans Trophy- by Defeating President 

 Henry Oehl. 



Thkre was another match for the possession of the Winans 

 Trophy on Saturday evening last, and champion .lantzer was given 

 a very close call indeed by Pres. Henry Oahl of the New York 

 Pistol Club. It was a very pretty contest indeed at the Pistol 

 Club's St. Marks range, not specially brilliant as to scores, but so 

 close that at its finish not one of the dozen expert marksmen who 

 sat watching the contest from start to flaish and sav/ each target 

 as it came whirling up the range to the referee's tables, could 

 have made more than a guess as to the winner. The result shows 

 that Mr. Oehl has well gauged his ability as against that of Mr. 

 Jantzer when he made a bid for the trophy. As it was, an inspec- 

 tion of the scores shows that while Mr. Jantzer slipped tlie 5in, 

 disk entirely oa six shots of the thirty fired, Mr. Oehl did so only 

 five times, and that in each case only one full string of six count- 

 ing shots was made, and this, too, the last string, with the smoke 

 lingering in the range and the strain of a long match telling upon 

 their nerves In arms the men were even. Each used a .44 Smith 

 & Wesson with round ball cartridges and reduced powder charge. 

 Sights were the same, but with eyes fifty years old it required all 

 the experience of veteran Oehl to keep pace with the veteran 

 Jantzer. Mr. Jantzer is also an eyeglass wearer but is not 

 bothered by the difflcttlty of selecting a lense which would not, 

 while defining the sight, send Ihe bullseye into a hazy blur. 



It was a good-natured fight from start to finish, and perhaps 

 the good nature prev^alent and its manifestations militated some- 

 what against the character of the record. Certain it is that nest 

 to Oehl himself no one regretted his defeat more than did Mr. 

 Jantzer, and when Charley Zettler called out the exact record of 

 each shot as the point of the measurer told it, each stood ready 

 to congratulate his antagonist should the victory fall that way. 

 The very starting shot was enough to disconcert most marksmen. 

 The first Jantzer target came up with the bullet hole center just 

 .33 or a tiifle over '5 of an inch from the center of the disk, the 

 first Oehl target came up without a scratch, though the screen 

 showed the bullet a sbave outside the 2V^in. counting ciicle. 

 In fact, all the misses were close nippers on the disk, and it would 

 be fair to enter up each and every one of the misses as a 3in. shot, 

 certainly not more. While this may be a good every-day, cross- 

 the-street, maa-againat-man work with.the revolver, it is not the 

 sort of figure which should come into a championship match with 

 its facilities for scoring each shot down to a hundredth part of an 

 inch. 



Each shoot for the trophy only confirms us In the belief that- 

 the conditions are .iust about right. It is a man-against-man 

 test. As arms of precision the 6i^in. barrel revolver as used 

 leaves nothing to be desired. The ammunition, too, is so uniform 

 and so admirably adapted to the work that there is a mathemat- 

 ical certainty almost in each shot. It is the marksman only 

 whose eye and hand do not work in accord, and this only makes 

 it the more remarkable that such a sport with such perfect appli- 

 ances is not more popular as an indoor and outdoor sport. 

 The seote of Saturday, Oct. 15, the third. lii the Wmans Trophy- 



series stands as follows: 



B. JANTZER. 



iat round. 



2d round 



'■d roun 



ithjround. 



5th round. 



.32 







.38 



,90 





".44 



I :i 22 



1.1.5 



.55 





1.70 





2.00 



1.15 



i'83 



1.95 



3h 





1.00 





1.45 



I 01 



"m 



2.or 



'i'.lO 



.91 



3.37 



1.53 



1 15 





6.45 





;5.84 



6.82 



Three beat string' 



19.1 lin. 



HENRT OEHL. 



1.80 

 1.55 



1.40 

 2.1^ 



2d round. 

 1.73 

 1.75 



1.40 



.20 



31 round. 



4th round. 



6th round. 



3.48 



1.69 



1.53 





.78 



.70 







1.52 



.88 



'.Sb 



.23 



1.93 



.n 



3.33 



.40 



1.20 



.97 





4T93 



7.78 



7.13 



Tnree best strings 19.83in. 



A mo.st interested spectator at the match was Wm. E. Petty of 

 the New York Police Force. To him belongs the honor, though 

 his modesty would lead him to at once deny it, of being the one 

 member of the more than 3,000 revolver-armed policemen of New 

 York city, who really knows the weapon, its loading and its use, 

 who'can hit what he aims at, and feel that he is,golng to hit be- 

 fore drawing trigger. In the opening shoot for the trophy, 

 Rotmdsman Petty shot, but he slipped by the prize list and now 

 he wants another go at the trophy. With the naming of the win- 

 ner came the following challenge from Mr. Petty: 



Nbw York, Oct. IB, Mr. Geo. E . Jant/er.— I hereby challenge 

 you to shoot for the Walter Winans Amateur Cbampionship 

 Trophy, subject to rules published is Forest a-Nd Strk.4.m. 



WxLLiAM E. Petty, fioundsman.Tiveuty-tirst Precinct, 



Port Chester Scores.* 



Port Chestbr Rifle Ci-ijb, Saturday, Oct. 15, 2f)0yd8.. off-hand, 

 standard Ameriea.n target: 



V Horn H 4 10 7 8 7 7 10 5 5-71 



8 (; 8 .S 4 9 10 7 7 7— 74-i4.'i 

 .1 Smith 10 0 8 3 8 8 9 8 6 7—73 



4 10 9847889 4—71—144 

 P A Bachman 1 5 3 3 6 5 10 9 5 5-58 



5 9 9 5 6 8 8 6 10 7—73-131 

 UMcNen, Jr . 5 605447 10 7 2—59 



10 67757677 10—72—131 



B Dunham a 8 8 6 6 9 7 5 7 6—67 



637665589 6-61-128 



R Rudd 3 6 8 5 6 4 9 4 8 3— .'18 



9 4 4 7 5 7 10 8 6 7-67-125 

 H Boeger 3 7 4 ^ 3 4 7 7 0 5-46 



6 3 5 3 4 6 3 4 5 7-46 - 93 

 T Kiernan 4 3 5 5 6 6 4 7 5 .3—48 



6 5 3 5 5 6 3 0 5 2—40— 88 

 R. McNeil, Jr., Secretary. 



An Unexpected Reception. 



Away back in 1883, when Gen. Spencer's Interstate military 

 ma'ch was shot at Sea Girt, N. J., a Delaware team was on the 

 ground, and it was there we first made the acquaintance of Lieut, - 

 Col (then Sergeant) Howard Simpson, who was captain of the 

 Delaware team. The genial Colonel and "us" were at that time 

 contributing to the rifle columns of the same journal, and of 

 course this fact formed a bond of good fellowship as usual when 

 newspaper "friends" run foul of one another. Besides this we 

 were both members of opposing teams and this was an additional 

 bond. Since that time we have had tlie pleasure of meeting sev- 

 eral other Wilmington riflemen, among them being .1. E. McCaf- 

 ferty. Cbas. Heinel and the Newman brothers, whom We met at 

 Creed moor in 1890, and H. B. Leeds, who took part in the rpcent 

 Sea Girt meeting. Several urgent invitations had been received 

 to visit the Wilmington Rifle Chtb and take part in one of Us 

 shoots, but first one thing, then another in the way of business 

 engagements have always interfered. 



In f ome way or other, the fact reached Col. Simpson's ears that 

 Forest and Stream wotild send its representative to the trap 

 shoot of the Wilmitjgtnn Rod and Gun Club, find he conceived 

 the bri'liant plan of corraling said representative and compelling 

 him to pay the long promised visit to the rifle range. Cnnse- 

 quently, upon arrivmg at the trap grounds almost the flrst person 

 we met was J. E. McCafferty, who informed us that he had been 

 constituted a committee to do the aforesaid ' corraling," and that 

 unless we pledged ourselves to take part in an afternoon shoot 

 with the Wilmington Rifle Club the members would be mortally 

 offended. 



This of course clinched the argument, and we promised te he 

 on hand on l''riday afternoon when the trap hustle would be 

 about at an end. Previous to the coming of Friday, however, we 

 had the pleasure ot meeting some of the club members in the 

 person of E. J. Darlington, the wpll-known expert pistol.'shot, 

 and H. B. Sporrell, a vvell-known rifleman. Col. Simpson we met 

 "up to his ears" in business, btit still able to "run out and try 

 some raws." 



After dinner on Friday we were taken la hand by the genial 

 Colonel, who has done some faithful work in developing rifle 

 practice in Delaware, and escorted to the rifle range, just beyond 

 the Pullman car shops, near Brandywine Creek. Here we met 

 Chas. Heinel, H. B. Sporrell, H. B. Leeds, W. Poole, Dr. Smith 

 and J. E. McCafferty, all of whom were plugging away at the 

 standard targets, 200vds. distant. 



The rifle club has a neatly-arra,nged club house, about 20x35ft., 

 one story in height, provided wi'h loading tables, racks, rests, tel- 

 escopes, etc. The shooting is all done on the Hinman standard 

 target with an Sin, black, the targets working on the slide side 

 system. The marking is done by the aid of a dial and spotting 

 discs. 



After making new acquaintances and renewing several old ones 

 we were persuaded to try our hand with the Schalck .32 of Mr. 

 McCflfferty, as clever a shooting rifle as one would wnsh to handle. 

 There was just about light enough at this time to All out one 

 string, bttt as all hands were anxious to shoot we were obligPd to 

 follow the lead and shoot a double string. The markitjg on this 

 range, despite the fact that only one target is used, is equsl to 

 anythiog we have seen, there being no tedious delays of any kind. 



We were informed that the regular weekly practice of the club 

 is held on Saturday afternoon and that the gathering on this oc- 

 casion was purely a complimentary one to the reprepeniative of 

 the greatest sporting journal on earth. We duly appreciate the 

 honor and hope to be able to "retaliate" in the near future. The 

 shooting waskeptiup until the target was indistinguishable, when 

 th" party started for the town to discuss their evening repast. 



After supper according to agreement we strolled down to the 

 establishment of Col Simpson, where we again met Messrs. 

 McCaiferty, Sporell, Darlington, Hetnel and Newman and 

 ■were also introduced to the genial president of the club, Mr. 

 Bell. After a pleasant chat a stroll was sugeested, the stroll ter- 

 minating in the dining room of one of Wilmington's famotis 

 hostelries, where we were compelled to undergo the delights and 

 agonies of once more being banqueted, this time on oysters served 

 in abont every style known to science,, We tried to do our duty 

 with the bivalves btit must acknowledge that after "Bilder- 

 bach'a" banquet on Thursday night and three big meals at Willis's 

 on Friday we were rather handicapped on Friday night. How- 

 ever, the evening was passed in a very pleasant manner, and when 

 train time came and we were obliged to say goud night, it was 

 with sincere regret at having to cut short our visit, and at having 

 to leave behind us the genial boys of the Wilmington Rifle t lub. 



The scores made during the afternoon shoot are here given in 

 detail: 



J E McCafferty 10 6 7 8 6 10 8 9 10 7-81 



9 10 5 8 8 10 7 6 6 8-77 



CH Townsend 7 



4 



HB Sporrell 7 



g 



E Heinel 7 



6 6 9 8 8 10 7 10 9-80 



867588 7, 6 8-67 



6 7 9 8 9 9 10 9 5 



6 7 9 9-76 



H B Leeds 9 



4 



W Poole 5 



6 



Dr Smith 3 4 7 4 10 9 



7 8 9 



8 5 30 

 7 7 4 

 7 8 10 

 7 7 8 



10 5 



6 7 9 6- 

 497 H-64 



7 7 6 10-68 



4 10 6 4-67 



5 7 6 S— fi4 



6 4 7 8-62 

 6 5 3 5—55 



C. H. Townsend. 



St. liOuis Sharpshooters. 



The three davs' tournament g'ven by the St. Louis sharp- 

 shooters, at Creve Coeur Lake, which closed Oct. 2, will long be 

 remembered as one of pleasantest festivals ever held at the lake. 

 The officers and members of the club had spared no pains to make 

 the affair a success, and the rp suit proved how thoroughly they 

 had done their w^ork. The donated prizes were many and valu- 

 able, and no one failed to get a prize. All of the local clubs were 

 well represented, Dom Wiget, of the South St. Louis Club, win- 

 ning first prize on the ring target, with a score of 69. Mr. R. aic- 

 Bean left Chicago Saturday night, dreaming of "red flags," btit an 

 unfortunate accident on the road delayed the train six hours, and 

 when he arrived the shooting was all over, the tournament clos- 

 ing at 1 o'clock Sunday. Mack is too good naiured to let a little 

 thing like that worry him, so he stayed over to see the boys and 

 girls, leaving for Chicago Monday night. 



Ring Target. 



Dom Wiget B9 Wm Bauer 53 Mueller 41 



Jos Stiffen 63 F Erdmann 58 H Schneidewend ..18 



John Moy 61 Phil Scbuck 52 A Kottseiper 37 



SGDownau 62 L Priestor 52 AMende 35 



Emil Schottlander63 F Knapp 51 J Rudi :-i5 



F Knapp 58 A Yunge 50 G W Alexander . . . ;33 



Franz Lindi 08 J Hoff 49 P Hanet 31 



WmTell 57 C Meisbaeh 49 Busch.. 31 



J Wiget .57 C Baptis 49 R Bethmann 30 



IlSchnidewend ...56 L Sic her 48 C G Peck 29 



L Frank f6 H Rinider 48 G Roth 27 



CKDunkerly 56 C Stlttner 43 A Schihmacher .. .24 



O Sf breeder m Dr Worth 43 J . L Matties 83 



MKaen 56 H Pins 43 F Oertli 21 



Theo Ropp 55 CB«itz 43 G Graty 19 



L Schwe]ehoeler...^4 FPohlman.... ...43 Wm Frank 16 



Chas MnePer 54 OKamm 43 Buschmuller 15 



CVogel P Kurka 41 Peck, Jr 5 



T Stutt .53 



Man Target, 



EdBeity 94 S G Dorman 86 C Meisbaeh 81 



John Morf 91 M Kacer 86 R Bethmann 81 



DSchneidewind...89 J Wiget 84 H Vogel 79 



LFrank 87 Dr Wirth 83 A Yunge 79 



F Kui-ka ,87 F Knapp 83 P Schuck 77 



L Sohwinghoefer.,8r Chas Dunkerley, . .S3 WmTell 75 



Chas Mueller 86 Louis Sicher 81 



Field Target. 



L Schwinghoefer. .59 S G Dorman 53 C Meisbaeh. 40 



D Schneidewmd....36 JMo'-f 51 E Schottlander....40 



F Kurka S5 Wm Baun 49 0 Mueller 40 



M Kacer 53 P Schuck 46 WmTell 40 



D Wiget 53 EdBeity 45 LFrank 40 



Point Target. 



SGDoru^an 846 L Schwingboefer.333 C Schot.tlander. . .234 



D Schneidewind . . 520 C Stettner 320 A Nunde 307 



WmBaun 407 M Kacer 278 PSchuck 192 



Chas K Dunkerly.335 D Wiget 266 J Hoff 184 



Namrod. 



South London Rifle Club's Revolver Champion- 

 ship for 1893. 



On Sept. 29, the weekly shooting day of the South London Rifle 

 Club, at Staines, it was A^ery windy and wet; in tact the weather 

 seems to have broken up and no more good revolver scores are 

 likely to be made during the remaining four weeks the club shoots. 

 None of the leaders shot but some of those low down in the list 

 improved their scores a point or two. 



Mr. Walt«r Winans has now praottoally woa the championship. 



but the silver and bronze medals for the next two highest scores 

 are not yet so certain for Mr. Andrews and Maj. McMerrell, as 

 several others are running ihem close. Mr. Varley, a new mem- 

 ber, is averaging scores of 37 and SB and may yet give them 

 trouble. Below are the scores for the revolver championship to 

 date: 



W Winans.... 43 41 41 41 40-205 F E Varley 37 36 ., ..— 73 



H Andrews... 39 38 ?8 s!8 37-190 E W Keen 38 38 ,. .,— 61 



RMacMerrell 41 W 36 3ti 37-186 D Hunt 32, 26 .. ..— 58 



C F Lowe ... 36 36 R8 36 36-180 A W Carter,, 27 23 . . ..— 50 



T W Heath... 37 :i5 33 33 31—169 E Howe 35 .; .. ..— 35 



.1 Wellman 37 86 .36 33-141 Malschinger. . ..24 8 .. .32 



Mortimer 34 34 25 25-118 C Smith 27 — 37 



.1 P Hope 31 .38 26 25-110 Ayers...... 26 — 26 



Rensselaerwyck. 



Albany, N. Y.. Oct. 13.— The lollowing scores were made to-dny 

 at Rensselaerwyck Range by members of the Third Brigade Rifle 

 Association; weather conditioos favorable; shooting was at 

 300yds., standard American target: 



Off Hand. 



Col WmE Pitch 9 8 6 10 5 5 9 6 4 7— 69 



5 9 6 10 6 8 9 10 9 7— 79 



7 8 8 7 9 5 9 9 9 9— 78 



6 6 8 8 7 9 7 5 6 7— 69 

 Wm C Gomph 8 10 9 10 9 10 10 7 9 7 - 89 



5 8 8 4 9 7 9 10 9 9— 74 

 Chas P Frey 4 3 8 7 8 8 10 9 3 7— 61) 



8 5 9 9 4 8 7 8 6 7- 71 



Rest. 



Stephen Schrieber g H 7 10 10 8 7 9 9 10— 89 



12 10 8 9 9 12 9 12 13 11—10* 



9 9 1-i 9 11 10 9 B 9 9- 96 

 Wm Gomph 10 10 9 9 9 9 9 12 9 11— 97 



6 11 13 9 10 11 8 10 9 8- 94 

 C P Frey 9 9 9 9 7 9 9 10 13 10 - 93 



^nt^ ^hooting. 



All ties divided unless otherwise reported, 

 FIXTURES. 



If you want your shoot to be announced here 

 send in notice like the following: 



^Oct. yi.— New Jersey Shooting Club tournament, at Claremoni, 



Oct. 21.— Philmont (N. Y.) Gun Club tournament. 

 Oct. 31.— Riverview Gun t'lub tournament, at Amsterdam, N.Y. 

 Oct. 24-25 —Charter Oak Gun Club tournament, at Charter Oak, 

 Iowa. 



Oct. 25-26.— Interstate Manufacturers' and Dealers' tournament, 

 at Mc^flus, Conn. 

 Oct. 35-36 —Orlando (Fla.) Gun Club tournament. 

 Oct. 36-28.— Omaha (Neb.) tournament. 



Oct. 37.— Reading (Pa.) Shooting Association, sparrow tottrna- 

 ment, at Black Bear Ion. 



Oct. 37.— Maplewood (N. J.) Gun Club open tournament, com- 

 bined with tenth team contest of N, J, Tr"p-Shooters' League. 



Oct. 37-28,— West Newburgh Gun and Rifle Association tourna- 

 ment, Newburgb, N. Y. 



Oct. 27-29.— Fulton Gun Club tournament, at Atlanta, Qa.. 



Nov. 23-26.— Milwaukee (Wis,) tournament, targets and live 

 birds. 



May 2o.25, 1893.— Knoxvllle Gun Club tournament, S1,000 addert 

 to purses. Also v.-iluable merchandise prizfs. 



Nov. 34.— John A, Hartner's sixth annual tourrament. Bishop's 

 Driving Park, Baltimore, Md. 



DRIVERS AND TWISTERS. 



Abigshoot will be held at Newburgb, N. Y. on October 27-28 by 

 the newly organized West Newburg Rifle and Gun Association. 

 Both live birds and Keystone targets will be used On the first daj 

 the program will comprise four 10-target events, two at 15 eacli, t«o 

 at 20 each, one event at 5 live birds and a team race for S-men club 

 teams at la targets per man. Second day.— Five events at 10 targets 

 each: two at 15 targets each; three at 30 targets each and one event 

 at 10 live birds. 



The members of the Spring Hill Gun Club held their monthly dia- 

 mond medal shoot at Blauveltville, N. J., on Oct. 12, each member 

 shooting at 50 bluerock targets, fine traps, unknown angles. The 

 medal won by J. H. Richmond with the tine total of 47 breaks; F. G. 

 Moore broke 40; J. M, Baker 39; D. Kittle 3T and M. Hammond 36. 

 This was the second shoot for the medal, the flrst having been won by 

 D. Kittle. 



The tenth and final shoot of the New Jersey Trap Shooter's League 

 will be held on the handsome and wt-ll appointed ground.s of the 

 Maplewood Gun Club on October 37. The Maplewood club will also 

 hold an all day tournament in connection with the above. 



Philmont, N. Y. vviU be the scene of a tournament of the Eastern 

 New York League on October 21, when kingbml targets will be 

 used. The program comprises .seven lO-target events and two 15- 

 target events. 



The Clareraont grounds wifl be the scene of some lively work at; 

 live pigeons and artificial targets to-morrow when the New Jersey 

 Shooting Club will hold an all-day tournament. 



The Orlando (Fla.) Gun Club has a fine lot of merchandise prizes to 

 be distributed at its shooton October ,25 ,36. 



O, H. Townsend. 



Traps at Watson's Park. 



Oct. 6.— Score made here to-day by the Fort Dftarborn Club, 16 

 live pigeons each under new Illinois State rules for club medal: 

 G Kleinman... 11311111 1121111-15 D H Williams.231003312300211— 11 

 G Airy 113110200133121—12 



Same cltn same day, for bluerock medal, 30 bluerocks ea,eh- 

 Geo. Kleinman 11, Geo. Airy 9, 1). H. Williams 7. 



Oct. 7.— Chicago Shooting club at 20 live pigeons each for club 

 mtdal under new Illinois State rulps, small sweep added: 

 Wads- Tnomas . . 20231333801310133102—16 



worth... 03138221323121121113-19 Watson. ..2131300221131013^130— 16 



Rock 23131201030311111331—17 Stevens. .21123i02003111101132— 16 



Hamline . 12210120023131101 131—16 Atwater . .33211110303311111111—18 

 Kleinman20121200^21003312240-14 



Guests: 



Decks . . . .12011120100011110021-13 Hoffman..0202213110111g0318ll-lti 

 Barlow . . .00030102001120110013-10 Adams . . ..00130020001003110000- 7 

 O'Brien... 01221201201220213001— 14 Kniskern 33llU0l033w 

 Cairncr's8l20111333112<!33n311— 19 Northrup 31102i3101w 



Wadsworth won the medal and oivided first money with Calrn- 

 cross; Atwater second and Rock third. 



Oct. « — Pullman Gun Club vs. the South Chicago Gun Club, 10 

 men a side, 15 live pigeons eacr , new Illinois State rules; 



Pullman Club. South Chicago Club. 



W T)allyn,302220210200001— 8 L Willard.310213110203110— 11 



M Wolf. . .120021112132113-13 B I Reevegl31032330 101220- 11 

 Williams. 232002010332133— 11 Templet'n 132020102011121—11 



G Watson002002010000000— 3 Dr Larkin013233333823003 -12 

 Bumstetn.202230120101220— 10 Ben Fogli. 201200001020203— 7 

 M'ConnelI000220233310120- 9 P Millet.. 101111032201020-10 

 JP Wats'n 312320132230213-13 J Watson. 10321201?000101- 9 

 Scbuttler.0003012300U0001— n Ed Marsh. 010123212011131— 12 



Kantzler..003003000000010— 3 F Willard,2032301312C0133— 11 



J Turner.. 001103320033012- 9- 84 A Reeve 8.111211310111010-13— 106 



Three or lour of Pullman Club's best marsksmen failed to show 

 up, or the match^ would have been closer. Ravblrtgg. 



Lynchburg Gun Club. 



Lynchburg, Va., Oct. 13.— The Lvnchburg Gun Club held its 

 last meet of the season yesterday. On and after the 15th the field 

 will engage their entire attention. Below find scores shot: 



No. 1, 10 singles: Dornin 9, Nelson 9, Richards 9, Cleland 7, Tom 

 Christian 7, 



No. 3, 9 singles and 3 pairs: Dornin 13, Nelf on 11, Cleland 10 

 Tom Christian 9. Terry 9, Smith 9. 



No. 8, 5 traps, 30 singles: Dornin 29, Nelton 35, RiohareslO, Clel- 

 land 34, Tom Christian 81, Terry 13, Smut 13. Stearns 34. 



No. 4, 10 singles: Dornin 10, Nelson 9, Cleland 7, Tom Christian 

 3, Terry 7, Smut 6, Steams 8. £), 



