818 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[June 22, 1895. 
Mr. Buker, of Bockport, has a 10-gauge, and evidently lie thought it 
was bored for an 11-gauge, for he tried shooting about half-way up to 
tbe 12-gauge .'••core. Col. Irby finally advised him that he could set his 
foot against the 10-gauge peg or set it outside the gatd just as he 
liked. This re-bored the gun to 10. 
John Sumpter, of Arkansas, was in the 25 hole straight with John 
Ruble, of Chicago. Ruble missed a bird, which the scorer marked 
dead by mistake. Asked if he missed the bird Ruble said, "I'm not 
refereeing this shoot." Yet his manly thrift was not rewarded, for 
tbe bird was scored lost, Sumpter winning the $93 alone, one of the 
heaviest winnings of the week. 
For a time it was threatened that the London fashion introduced by 
Miss Vesta Tilley, of wearing bows of ribbon instead of cuff buttons, 
would break out generally at this shoot, but the scare blew over. 
Mr. McMurchy announces that hereafter all contestants for Smith 
cups in different States will be obliged to wear bloomers. This will 
prove of interest to Ed. Rike and Ferd. Van Dyke. 
At the Hotel Luehrmann a certain Bhooter could find no towel in his 
room. "Here, what am I going to do?" he said to his room mate, 
"there aren't any towels." "Dunno, unless you just keep on wash- 
ing," was the unfeeling answer. 
The first day entry in Memphis shoot was great, but it was not the 
best index to the greatness of the shoot. The second and third 
day entry made the best index for that, and proved the tournament 
really great. There was small froth on the Memphis cup. The clnt > 
actually did what, dozens of managements continually try to do and 
fail of doing. "This shoot is of some use to manufacturers' agents," 
said Jimmy Elliott, "because the shooters are staying through." 
The Memphis idea of running a shoot was out of the ordinary, but it 
succeeded. Memphis shoot was good for amateurs, and therefore 
good for experts and agents. Most managements have for years 
firmly fixed their eyes on the experts and the known or secret agents, 
and let the amateurs and novices shift for themselves. Time will show 
that Memphis is right, even if this one tournament has not proved it. 
All honor to the brains and nerve of this Southern city. It fairly 
shames the stereotyped methods of Northern shoots. 
One admires pluck wherever seen. The Memphis men had pluck. 
There is only one Tom Divine, and there isn't much of him, and the 
pattern is broken. 
Irby Bennett had a lot of fine bass given him by some of the ang- 
ling shooters, and invited the latter out to eat them, but the fish had 
mysteriously disappeared. The boys maliciously accused Irby of sell- 
ing them, which broke his heart. 
By the way, Forest and Stream was never lukewarm in its support 
of the Memphis shoot. 
With soft sawdust to walk on, a long canopy over the firing line, 
and plenty of shade and ice ten feet back of the score, the boys got 
along in spite of the heat. 
Had the whole entry shot through the programme, they would have 
shot 1(5,500 targets daily. As it was, between 13,000 and 15,000 were 
thrown daily. 
The Texas 20-bores, Guessaz and George, of San Antonio, attracted 
much attention with the ride-like reports of their pieces. These guns 
are made by Kessler, whoever he is or wherever be lives. The guns 
have cheek pieces and shoulder straps, but they took the straps off 
when they were shooting Some may not believe that it was with 
this 20-gauge that Mr. Joe George (he is now postmaster of San 
Antonio) broke 100 straight targets at unknown angles, yet such waB 
the case. Texas sent five men up to Memphis. Holzapfel, of Cuero, 
is much liked for first in Texas target matters. Miller, of Farmers- 
ville, also shot like a house a-fire, if you know how a house a-fire 
shoots. 
The "dropper" was absent. He usually is absent in so large an 
entry, because no dropping to advantage is possible. But had he 
appeared, he would very likely have heard something drop. There 
was a generally meek and subdued look about the attitude of a certain 
small element toward the Memphis management. 
The impression seems general that the Memphis Gun Club has 
whiskers and talks bass. 
Mr. Gemmett ("Reader"), of Ft. Madison, la., was one of the ama- 
teurs who intended shooting through the whole programme. Unfor- 
tunately he was taken sick and missed one event the second day, 
which cut him out of his pro rata in the $500. 
Rolla Heikes was calmly splitting kindling wood at the old stand. 
He only missed two birds Monday, and three out of 165 the first day. 
Undoubtedly this man is a freak. He could shoot targets if he was 
fast asleep, and probably he is asleep some of the time at the score. 
There is plenty of disgusting talk among the pigeon "champions," but 
everybody agrees that there is only one target shooter in the world, 
and that is Rolla Heikes. This alone would not make a fellow love 
him, but his modest good nature does. To be decent is sometimes to 
be great, and the man who is both great and decent doesn't need to 
try to work the newspapers for any advertising. 
Shorty Bacon wore the same strap he did last year and his trousers 
remained in the same perilous condition. 
At the cashier's stand an expectant shooter called for his winnings, 
but the cashier instead collected 25 cents more from him. He left 
looking dazed. 
One kicking brother roared at the cashier's desk because he was 
scored seventeen instead of nineteen, which latter he declared by all 
the gods of war he was going to have. "But seventeen pays $2.75 
more than nineteen," remarked the cashier blandly. "Oh, does it?" 
said the shooter, rapidly tumbling down out of the air. "Well, maybe 
I did make seventeen." Human nature is a great and lovely study, 
and at a tournament you can see it some. 
AU angles were unknown, except that the Afro-American boy trap- 
pers sometimes got lazy and forgot to change the traps. Then there 
would be a threat of instant destruction from Tom Divine or Fred 
Quimby, and a resultant switch of a trap bar which destroyed many 
fond hopes of straights. 
To go straight up to twenty-four and then miss the twenty-fifth 
bird— no wonder the shooter's face looked like one of these hitherto 
unpublished portraits of Napoleon. 
The average amateur who attended Memphis shoot will go home 
and as he puts a peck of diamonds in cold Btorage will resolve to be 
there again next year. And as he looks at the photograph of the 
expert he will sniff the air and Bay, Aha! 
Speaking of diamonds, it is stated that McMurcby uses his shirt 
stud for a paper weight when he is home at the office. 
In Chicago in good society tbey say, "You fellers." In New York 
good society they always say, "Youse fellies." In Memphis they say, 
"Yo' gentlemen." 
In one notable respect the Memphis management did not resemble 
the late Miss Maud Muller. It had no rake-ofL 
Mr. Noel Money is willing to see shooters use. a hatful of E, C. if 
they like, but usually sticks to 42grs. himself. Yet when Mr. Money 
shoots targets it is as when a hired man eats lettuce. 
The amateur arose and smote the gang in the neck. 
The Memphis press boys did fine work. 
The Arkansas boys each took home enough money, to use the 
words of our friend Chimmie Fadden, "To burn a wet dog wld." 
Kansas and Missouri used to fight in Free Soil days, but here they 
stood in line together. And the Mason and Dixon's line seems lost 
forever. 
In the past the fate of the shooting amateur might have been de- 
scribed in a little newspaper story which lately went the rounds. It 
seems that the owner of a menagerie in Berlin, which included a 
"happy family," consisting of a lion, a tiger, a wolf and a sheep, was 
asked one day in confidence how long these animals had lived 
together. "About nine months," he replied, "except the sheep, which 
has to be renewed occasionally." The trouble with trap-shooting has 
been that the amateur needed renewing.so much. Are we to believe 
that it is going to be the expert hereafter who will need renewing? If 
so, let it be so. 
All of which reminds one of another newspaper story— you find such 
awfully good things in the newspapers sometimes, you know. In this 
story it appears that a belated tourist was obliged to ask for a bed at 
a farm house, having wandered far from his hotel. On rising in the 
morning. he found himself without tooth powder. Looking about him 
he espied on the mantelpiece a small box containing powder, which he 
used. When he paid for his bed he apologized to the farmer's wife 
for having used her tooth powder. 
"Tooth powder?" she queried. "We have none." 
"Yes, my good woman. It was in a small round box on the mantel- 
piece." 
"That," she screamed, "that was not tooth powder! That was 
aunty I" 
Aunty had been cremated. 
The amateur has been in the box long enough. Let us give the ex- 
pert a touch of cremation. 
They talk about amateurs not being game enough to stay. Just 
ho w true is this? The amateur gives odds of 10 to 1 against the expert 
and rejoices if he wins once in a while. When an expert is a little out 
of form, who quits quicker? The expert has too long been used to 
the best of the betting. He is not game enough to stand an even 
thing without whimpering. 
The shoot was one for gentlemen, by gentlemen and with gentle- 
men. 
"Why can't we have as pleasant a tournament in our country?" 
asked one curious, and another answered, "Somehow, we don't know 
how." 
The door was open. 
The door will be open next year, 
'Rah ! for Memphis. 
Memphis management did not offer one merchandise prize. Mem- 
phis management "pulled the leg" of no citizen. Memphis manage- 
ment has not lowered the sport of trap-shooting by beggary in any 
form, but has run an ideal shoot which shows that trap-shooting can 
be a square, self-respecling and self-supporting sport. 
The referees were admitted by all the shooters to be of the best. 
The scoring was accurate, and moreover the scores were not fiddled 
with and changed. 
Buker, of RocBport, pulled the wrong trigger once, and tried to 
claim a misfire for it, there being no shell at all in the barrel he tried 
to fire. The referee promptly spotted him and he got what he de- 
served (or part of it). ,«-,,. 
A gentleman from Cleveland found himself without a shell m his 
gun when he called "pull," and the trap sprung. "The trap went too 
quick," be explained, as he started back for a shell. But the Teferee 
could not be flim-flammed, and the gentleman got what he also de- 
served (or part of it). 
Heikes did it all as easy as chopping hash for breakfast. 
The newspaper men of the sporting and daily press were most hand- 
somely treated. Every facility was given them for getting the news, 
and getting it intelligently and easily. 
And there was news to get. 
Rike, Guessaz, Keller, Sumpter and George made the pneumatic 
tire squad. Ferd. Van Dyke, Tway, Cornett, Divine and Dick Merrill 
wanted to get into this, but were voted not round enough. 
The San Antonio team was by unanimous consent voted a holy 
terror. 
A little black chicken roamed around the trappers' bank for a time, 
till Noel Money potted it and took it home to eat. It had yellow 
legs. 
Irby Bennett got back from the pink tea at Louisville in time to do a 
lot of good hustling on Thursday. He had on new clothes, so the 
Texas gang roped him in plains fashion and pulled him in the dust. 
At lunch Tom Divine filled Guessaz's hat with buttermilk, and then 
flew for the door. Oscar led him about two feet with a fresh pie and 
caught him fair in the ear. At tournaments one renews his youth and 
general sassiness. 
Lou Ehrhardt, of Atchison, was unfortunately taken quite sick the 
second day of his stay, and was unable to shoot or come out to the 
grounds. 
A gay shooter chalked a large sign "For Rent" on the innocent 
cashier's back near the close of the last shooting. 
LeRoy Woodward has been away from home seven weeks on the 
circuit, and says it will be two months in all before he gets back. He 
goes to Cleveland shoot. 
"U. M. C." Thomas has a "system" by which he can break straights 
all through the day. He says it consists of taking care of himself and 
going to bed early. 
The negro quartette which, under the management of the Texas 
fiends George and Guessaz, rendered such sweet music in room 27 
at the Luehrmann (where averages were being figuered at 3 A. M.), did 
well enough to win recognition on the boards. 
Col. Dabney, of Clarksdale, Miss. ("Coahoma," well known as a 
Forest and Stream correspondent from the Southern country), was 
one of the spectators for a brief time at the shoot. Mr. Bobo, of bear- 
hunting fame, was expected, but did not come. The Brownsville con- 
tingent lacked Dr. Taylor. 
Everybody was there but Mr. Mason and Mr. Dixon. 
The watermillion was right in line. 
Mr. Baker, of Macon, Ga., says Macon will have a big shoot pretty 
soon and wants Forest and Stream to see it. * 
Tom Callender, of Nashville, Tenn,, the Troisdorff Southern agent-, 
says Nashville may give a shoot this year, and would have done so long 
ago had she had grounds more convenient of access. 
Mr. W. F. Allen is the best kind of a wheel horse for a tournament 
committee, Mr. Frank Poston is always cool and level-headed, and 
Fred Schmidt has full knowledge of all the intricacies of a big shoot, 
Irby Bennett is a hustler at every station, and all the shooters of the 
country know Tom Divine. It took such men to build such a Bhoot, 
and all deserve credit. 
Irby Bennett says kindly that Forest and Stream is the "Winchester 
of newspapers." 
The president of the Memphis Gun Club last year was sick and un- 
able to attend. This year he was taken down and went to bed the day 
after the tournament closed. 
Memphis may have many names, but her right and proper name is 
the Beloved City. 
Mr. Jos. George, of San Antonio, and O. C. Guessaz, of the same 
city, both say that city is discussing a big mid-winter shoot this com- 
ing winter. 
Verily the South is the country for trap-shooting now. 
Memphis showed that sport can be clean and successful, and most 
successful when most clean. 
The sport that can stand on its own legs is the best sport to tie to. 
The attendance of honorable and courteous gentlemen at a trap 
shoot never did or will hurt it. Their absence can. 
Memphis sho' am a honey 1 
The magnolia blooms were out in honor of the occasion. 
There was a silver convention in progress at Memphis at the same 
time with the tournament. It is 16 to 1 the tournament entry was the 
larger. 
Sliced tomatoes and ice are good in Memphis. It is the yellow- 
legged chicken, however, let us repeat, which is the keystone, the 
foundation and the crowning pinnacle of Memphis's commercial and 
tournamental glory. I do not know of any other city where a chicken 
is all these things. 
The Memphis Gun Club is thinking of annexing Chicago and Greater 
New York. 
The mosquitoes were not there this year. 
The pits for the trappers were well arranged, but anybody but those 
trappers would have died in there when the sun got over and shone on 
that side. 
There seems to be no end nor limit to Rolla Heikes's shooting 
ability. 
When the traps broke a bird some member of the committee would 
call out, "You, niggah, what's the mattah?" After this there would 
be a muffled "All right!" and a brief display of fifteen hands before 
the bank, said hands ranging in color from old gold to blue-black. But 
the trapping was very good. 
The oldest of the tournament shooters said Memphis shoot was 
the best they had ever seen. It was truly unimpeachable. 
The percentage of those who hung round the score books and studied 
the scores was small. One does not need to name them. They are 
known all over the North. 
Of all sad words of tongue or pen, the saddest were those said by 
about thirty more men who thought they ought to have gone into the 
amateur class and had a chance at that cool §500. They said the $500 
was too cool to them. Two of these people are nearly sick with griev- 
ing 'over this. 
The shooter with the big S does not seem to be in so much demand 
in trap shooting as the shooter with tbe little front letter. The latter 
sort are all alike. When you make shooting so that all shoot alike in 
the matter of odds you will see still more shooting and shooters of 
the small initial sort. Memphis is the dial on which this forerunning 
shadow fails. 
Years ago Forest and Stream, alone in the wilderness, cried out for 
square shooting and equal odds, for no stealing, no beggary, no 
supine weakness and no unmanly dishonorableness in shooting at the 
trap. The day desired is surely coming. For one, at least, I cannot 
say enough for one tournament run as all tournaments should be. 
E. Hough. 
Trenton Gun Club. 
Trenton, N. J., June 13.— The regular monthly shoot of the Trenton 
Gun Club was held to-day. The club contest was for two badges, first 
and second; the conditions were 30 targets per man, each man first 
shooting at 15 for place; the men breaking 11 and over being in first 
class, the men breaking under II in second class. Mickel and Hicks 
tied for first badge; in Bhooting off the tie at 20 targets Mickel won. 
Taylor won the second badge. After the regular shoot a team shoot 
took place between two of the club crack shots. W. T. Taylor and C. 
H. Allan shot a race at 20 targets each with the two expert shots of 
the E wing Gun Club, V. Rose and W. Roche, defeating their opponents 
easily. Following are the scores: 
For place: 
Allen 111111110111111— U 
Mickel 111111011111111-14 
Hicks 101111110101111—1-2 
Harper 001111011111101—11 
Hutchinson . . . .100111011010111—10 
Carson 111100011 110110— 10 
For first badge: 
Allen 111110111110101—12 
Mickel 110110111111111—13 
For second badge: 
Taylor 111111111111111—15 
Williams 111101111110111—13 
Smith 110101111111111-13 
Starkey 111100111111011— Vi 
Shoot off for first badge: 
Mickel 11111010011110111110-15 Hicks 11001110111110101101-14 
Match, Trenton vs. Ewing: 
Trenton Club. 
Allen 11111101101111111111—18 
Taylor 01111111001110111111—16-34 
Ewiag Club. 
Roche : 11101010110101001111—13 
Taylor 111111110110000—10 
Smith 001111101110100— 9 
Williams 101110101010001— 8 
Grant 011111000110001— 8 
Bumbough 110101000010011— 7 
Starkey 000100110000110— 5 
Hicks 111111111010111—13 
Harper 110110000010101— 7 
Carson 111111111101001—12 
Bumbough 111110010011111—11 
Hutchinson .... 101110101111010—10 
Grant 110001010111010— 8 
Kewanee Gun Club. 
Kewanee. 111., June 10.— Inclosed are scores made at the Kewanee 
Gun Club's summer tournament, June 4 and 5. A very high wind ac- 
counts for the low scores: 
Special team race, $6 per team, 25 targets per man: 
Sheffield. 
Alexander , , SI 
Humphrey 24 
Battey 16 
Kloek ai 
Reider 17 
Neponset No 1. 
Norton.., ....20 
Lyle 2d 
CSturrt." 18 
Snow 19 
V Studley 15 
Kildow 16—115 Robinson 21—115 
Neponset No. S. 
Miller 18 
LaFrinier 12 
Mclntire 17 
Kopp 19 
F Bowen 16 
Galesburg No. 1. 
Hickey , 24 
Marsh 17 
Hodge 10 
Henry 18 
Harris 18 
Livingston 18—100 Breckwall 17—1 1 0 
Princeton. 
Skinner 20 
Hopkins 14 
I Stuart 20 
Powell 18 
Priestley 15 
Wagner 17—104 Kellogg 
Kewanee No. 1. 
Baker 20 
Bannister 15 
Huckins 22 
Crain 19 
Sharp 15 
Galesburg No. 2. 
Harrington 11 
Phillips 11 
Gardt 19 
Harris 19 
Hodge 18 
18—109 
Kewanee No. 2. 
W A Bowen 16 
McClure 17 
Faull 18 
Day 19 
White 18 
Pierce 21—109 Henry 17—103 
First Day's Scores. 
Events: 
Targets: 
1 2 3 4 5 
10 15 10 ISO 10 
6 16 9 
4 18 10 
6 12 8 
7 16 10 
6 9 6 
6 17 9 
7 20 
5 15 
S 
9 
12 8 
8 14 6 14 10 
9 7 17 6 
11 8 
5 
7 
8 Is 
6 12 
Baker 9 15 
Wagner 7 11 
Skinner 5 11 
Alexander 8 15 
Bannister 9 13 
J R Stuart 8 11 
C Stuart 9 14 
Huckins..., 8 11 
V Studley 10 12 
Sn ow 
Kellogg 
Sharp , , ,, 
Cady , , ., , 
Long 
Clark 10 13 
Kopp 8 IS 
Day 
Hickey . . 12 
G Bowen 6 7 
White 6 11 
Lyle 9 13 
Robinson 9 11 
Humphrey 13 
Norton 4 9 
Crain 5 IS 
W A Bowen 3 12 4 16 
Harrington 10 6 14 
Pierce ,. ..11 5 15 
Hodge 9 3 16 
Harris 9 3 .. 
WF Bowen 7 12 
1 10 
6 18 
4 16 
12 8 14 
4 18 
.. 19 
.. 11 
4 16 
6 17 
5 15 
.. 15 
4 14 
3 .. 
16 10 
6 
Klock 7 
Williams 7 
13 
9 
6 7 
15 SO 
8 18 
8 17 
11 14 
11 18 
12 12 
10 14 
9 11 
10 20 
10 15 
9 13 
10 13 
12 .. 
12 15 
7 17 
11 18 
12 14 
14 19 
12 16 
12 .. 
9 13 
9 15 
13 18 
8 .. 
8 9 10 
10 15 10 
7 
9 
7 
5 13 
7 11 
7 11 
8 11 
8 11 
8 .. 
8 .. 
10 14 
9 .. 
4 .. 
8 
9 
10 
8 
5 11 
4 14 
8 12 
8 .. 
.. 9 
8 13 
11 15 
8 16 
8 .. 
11 .. 
11 
o 
6 
"i 
P ... 1. I L| 4 
9 
9 
16 
5 
9 
'5 
13 
6 
13 
7 
*J 
13 
11 
12 
7 
"0 
11 
i ... 'Jfty 
9 
6 
12 
8 8 .. ... .. 
r .. . .?<., e .. 
-s ... -if.^ v 
3 
Powell , 
3 
'6 '7 
7 
13 
Events 3 and 6, unknown traps, balance — known angles and traps, 
four moneys in all events: 
Second Day's Scores. 
Events: 
Targets: 
Cady. 
Long. 
Snow 
Studley. . . 
Sharp 
Day 
Brock . . , 
Lyle 
C Stuart. 
Lewis 
Richards 
Pierce 
Robson 
Dunbar 
G Bo wen 9 
Spickler 6 
HI aynard 3 
Kopp 
1 
55 
3 
4 
5 
6 
7 
8 
9 
10 
11 
12 
13 14 15 
10 
15 
10 
m 
15 
15 
10 
15 
15 
10 
10 
10 
10 
10 10 
7 
8 
8 
9 
12 
12 
5 
15 
11 
8 
10 
9 
8 
7 8 
5 
9 
6 
7 
9 
12 
4 
10 
18 
6 
14 
6 
6 4 
10 
10 
9 
10 
11 
9 
4 
12 
11 
8 
11 
8 
'6 
7 7 
9 
io 
5 
10 
12 
12 
7 
10 
13 
9 
11 
8 
7 
8 6 
8 
14 
10 
9 
14 
IS 
8 
13 
13 
9 
12 
9 
7 
7 9 
10 
6 
8 
11 
12 
5 
9 
13 
9 
13 
9 
6 
8 C 
6 
9 
13 
14 
6 
11 
12 
7 
12 
8 
5 
.. 10 
7 
9 
8 
10 
10 
6 
7 
5 
,. 9 
'9* 
ia 
6 
7 
11 
10 
6 
io 
5 
., 5 
6 
11 
9 
S 
10 
7 
■4 
11 
5 
9 8 
5 
11 
7 
9 
13 
14 
6 
14 
8 
8 
13 
7 
11 
14 
14 
14 
18 
9 
6 
11 
11 
*3 
18 
10 
7 
10 
9 
11 
14 
12 
9 
11 
11 
9 
11 
8 
8 
13 
8 
12 
10 
8 
12 
9 
ii 
12 
4 
10 
9 
12 
6 
10 
9 
8 
Me3 
8 
11 
6 
8 
'9 
5 12 6 
8 ,. 
11 11 
.. 9 
9 
11 14 
11 7 7 3 6 
10 
6 
Hodge 
Marquis. . . 
Pyle 5 
Martin 
Eddy 
Events 7 and 13, 3 pair, 3 moneys; balance— known 
4 moneys. 
8 7 5 6 .. 
12 6 
..7 6 9 8 
4. <- .. 6 
8' 
6 
traps and angles; 
L. C. Huckins. 
Hollywood Futurity Handicap. 
Tub Hollywood Futurity Handicap, under the management of Mr. 
John S. Hoey, is an assured success. The date set for the close of reg- 
ular entries is July 1. yet seventeen entries were made three weeks 
prior to that date. The event will be shot on July 6 at "Hollywood," 
West End, N. J., shooting commencing at 10 A. M. The boundary is 
about 21yds.; handicaps range from 25 to 31yds., Fred Hoey being 
taken as the scratch man. 
The conditions of the event are as follows: Regular entries close 
Monday, July 1 ; $25 to be paid in on entering, which is forfeited if the 
subscriber Is not present up to 11:30 on the morning of the contest; $25 
additional at the post; post entries will be received up to close of sec- 
ond round on payment of $75; 25 birds each; ties at 5 birds; 50 per 
cent, and cup to the winner, 25 per cent, to the second, 10 per cent, to 
third, b per cent, to fourth, with 10 per cent, to the club. 
The handicaps that will be awarded the following shooters, should 
they take part in this event, are as follows: 
Thirty-one yards: Fred Hoey. 
Thirty yards: George Work, J. P. Knapp, L. S. Thompson, J. G. 
Messmer. 
Twenty-nine yards: R, A. Welch, H. Yale Dolan, Capt. A. W. Money, 
Louis T. Duryea, Edgar G. Murphy, Chas. Macalester, Thorne. 
Twenty-eight yards: F ; G. Moore, J. S. Williams, W. Wynn, W. G. 
Brokaw, 
Rose 
, O111011111O0U1O0O01-13-25 
son, 
McAlpii 
Twenty-seven yards: W. P. Thompson, Jr., E. L. Post, W. S. Edey, 
J. O'H. Denny, Phil. Daly, Jr., Hoyt, N. E. Money, Wolatencroft, L. 
Finletter, B. R. Kittredge, W. G. Murphy. "Zellner," E. B. Knowltoo, 
"J. L. M., Jr.," Grant, H. R. Sweny, C. M. Chapin, "Cnauncey," 
Green, H. M. Levengston. 
Twenty-six yards; A. E. Watrous, W. M Downing, George Gould 
