88 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[July 11, 1896, 
A. ar;; at 9:15 startiHg RUiffor 3f5ft. claSs; at 9:20 Ptarting gun for 36ft. 
cIsbb: at 9:25.gtartiDe pun for cppn boats i)D<?eT SOft. c.l. 
•'WedneEday. Aup. IS,— The prtiimirary j vr toj)) be fired at 9 A. M,; 
at 9:15 starling gun for 40ft. class, and at 9;20 startirg gun lor 30ft. 
clasE. 
Thnreday, Aug. 13.— The prelinriDBry gun ■will be fired at 9 A, M. ; at 
9:15 Btartinfr exin for yachts above fSft. cl. ; at 9:20 stsTtitg gun for 
55ft. class, and 9:25 stBriire gun for 4(ft. clafs. The bandicBp gun 
will be fired five minutes nfter the starting gun, and when more than 
one class Btarls 1 he hardicap gun for first ciass startirg will be ihe 
starting gun for next class. 
Time.— All announcempnts and starts are based on central standard 
tim*i. 
-Rendezvous and Anchorage.— The rendezvous for anchorage will be 
inside the west breakwater, where tbeie is gocd holding ground and 
protection. The west end of west breakwater is best holding ground. 
Ferry.— A ferry will run continually between the west pier and club 
house, 
Bulletin Board,— All other announcements will be posted on bulletin 
board at club house. 
The following is the programme for events on Lake Erie in August: 
Aug. 3. regatta at Port Dover, Ontario; Aug. 6, tegatta at Erie, Pa.; 
Aug. 10-14, regatta at Cleveland. O. ; Aug. 17-20. interlake regatta at 
Put-in-Bay, O.; Aug. 24, international regatta at ToU do, O. 
Race committee': Phil P. Wright, chairman ; G. H. Gardner, W. R. 
Huntington, E. A. Overbeke, J. N. Richardson, John Bartta. 
Executive committee, P. W. Rice, chairman. 
Refreshment committee, R, S. Aikenhead, chairman. 
Entertainment committee, E. E, Beeman, chairman. 
Reception eomniittee, W. R. Huntington, chairman. 
Finance eommittep, E. W. Redder, chairman. 
Fleet Captain, W. E Huntington. 
■Centennial regatta committee: Com. Geo. H. Worthington, chair- 
man; Geo. W. Gardner, E. E. Beeman, P. W. Rice, E. W. Radder, John 
Barth. E. A, Overbeke, J. N Richardson, B. D. Munhall, W. E. Hunt- 
ington. Tbos. Robinson, R. S. Aikenhead, W. P. Francis, G. W. Luet- 
kemeyer, G. H. Gardner, Phil P. Wright. 
liarchmont 7. C. Annual Regatta. 
The Larchmont . C. this year prepared for the largest regatta 
that it has ever held, and but for one unfortunate fact the expecta- 
tions of the committee wotild no doubt have been fulfilled. There was 
present in and about the harbor a very large fleet, of which no less 
than ninety-five had entered for the regatta, all classes from the big 
schooners down to the 15ft. being represented. After a clear warm 
day on Friday, a strong breeze sprung up from the eastward about 
midnight, raising a sea oS the harbor that tumbled the largest yachts 
about with little ceremony, and drove down a pall of dense fog in the 
morning. The club steame- and committee boat were on hand with 
hundreds of ladies, racing men, committee men and general specta- 
tors, but the fog hung dense and obstinate over the whole of the 
Sound. Such yachts as came in reported the weather as worse outside 
than about the harbor. After waiting until long after noon, the re- 
gatta committee posted notice that the regatta was postponed until 
July 18, the open race already scheduled for that date being abandoned. 
The wisdom oC this decision was generally concurred in, though every 
one was disappointed. It would have been in no small degree danger- 
ous to have started so large a fleet, and composed of yachts of all 
sizes, over short overlapping courses in such weather. 
Defender and Valkyrie. 
Defender still lies idle in New Rochelle Harbor, a boom of logs hav- 
ing been placed around her ro protect her from attack by hostile row- 
boats. On .Tul.y 4 Capt. Dixon sailed from Southampton for New 
York with a crew, it is stated, to fit out Valkyrie and take her back 
to British waters. 
A. C. A. 
Membership. 
Applications for membership may be made to the purser of the 
division in which the applicant resides on blanks furnished by purser, 
the applicant becoming a member provided no objection be made 
within fourteen days after his name has been officially published in 
the Forest and Stream. 
ATLANTIC DIVISION. 
Name. Residence. 
Richard L. Riker Newark. N. J 
De Witt C. Pell Newark, N. J , 
Club. 
.Passaic Boat-Olub 
. Passaic Boat Club 
Steam Yachts and Marine Machinery. 
CojtfLKTK machinery "outfits" for boat builders, made by Maritie 
Iron Works, Chicago. Lieht draft work a specialtv. Catalogue free 
\ifle §mtge mxl §itlkrg. 
The Power of the Modern Small Bore. 
Though small bore smokeless powder rifles oE various models espe- 
cially adapted to the use of sportsmen have now been on the market 
for some time, the question as to their value as game killers seems no 
nearer solution than ever. Some hunters who have tried them con- 
demn the small bores as utterly worthless, while others of equal or 
greater experience cannot say enough in their praise. 
Nor Is this diversity of opinion to be wondered at when we see how 
the military men themselves, the originators of the weapon, difl'er in 
their judgment, and how they cite results in support of both sides of 
the argument that are just as certain of verification as they are dlfli- 
cult of reconciliation. 
On the one hand proof is given of the skulls of men and bears being 
shattered as though by some powerful explosive within by the passage 
of small bore bullets, while on the other hand unanswerable facts are 
brought forward to show that men and animals have been shot 
through and through without suffering any great inconvenience. 
It is safe to assume in both cases, however, that some important 
factor has been overlooked. 
As Lieut. Whistler pointed out long ago, the shattering effect of the 
bullet all depends on the range, for while at short distances the effect 
Is often terrific, at long ranges it is comparatively trifling. And now 
comes Dr. Enrique Pedraza, a Spanish military surgeon who has had 
experience in the Cuban war, v. ith further testimony to this effect. 
The doctor in an article to the Revista de Ciencias Medicos, of 
Havana, which has been reprinted in the Lancet, says that his pre- 
conceived ideas on the subjRct were that the small bore nickel-coated 
bullets ought to produce a "clean and minute wound with little hem- 
orrhage, easy to close on the field and therefore likely to heal rapidly 
in the hospital, more especially as the bones would be bored througn 
rather than shattered, and as there would be little chance of foreign 
matter being introduced into the wound by the projectile itself." His 
expectations were not realized by the first cases of primary wounds 
from Mauser projectiles whicli he saw at Manzanillo, and he was 
greatly surprised and disappointed. 
"With longer experience, however, he learned that the benign re- 
sults he bad expected to see do occur, but only when the enemy is 
iSOyds. or ipore distant. When the patient is shot at from 10 to 70yds. 
the destruction of the tissues is very great, and it is this that has given 
rise to the suspicion that explosive bullets were being used, especially 
as the orifices of entrance and outlet are sometimes so small that they 
can scarcely be seen. The explanation suggested is that the shock 
which the enormous velocity of the projectile produces on entering 
the soft parts causes them to behave as a fluid or semi-fluid does when 
inclosed in a box and 'shot through,' the hydraulic pressure bursting 
the sides, or, if an opening be left, driving a column of the fluid 
through it. * * * In striking contrast to such wounds are those 
produced at ISOyds. or more by the Mauser rifle! Here the entrance 
and outlet are very small, and there is but little evidence of internal 
destruction, even bones being tunneled through without fracture, and 
as aseptic treatment is poseible from the first, a rapid recovery may 
usually be anticipated. Thus, in one case where the projectile entered 
the abdomen in tiie eighth intercostal space on the right side, passing 
through the stomach and coming out three fingers' breadth on the left 
of the sternum, though the ninth rib was fractured and the patient 
suffered from vomiting, hamatemesis and fever, he very soon im- 
proved and recovered completely. In another case the projectile en- 
tered the left frontal eminence, passing out by the right parotid 
region. The patient suffered from concussion of the brain, ecchymo- 
sis of both the right eyelids, with some difflculty of vision of that eye, 
but recovered in twenty -six days," 
But why does the projectile of the small bore tear at short ranges 
and not at long ranges? Chiefly, no doubt, because of its tremendous 
rotary motion in connection with its great velocity, which imparts to 
it an erratic motion. 
Beyond ISOyds, it has settled down to a regular flight, and its effects 
may then be classed as similar to those produced by the ball from a 
black powder rifle of equal caliber, such as the ,83-20, at shorter dis- 
tanoas, - ■'■ 
Leaving aside for the saoment the question of dallber, the modern 
mall bore differs from the black powder rifle {JKiefty by reason of the 
greater velocity imparted to its projectiles and their more rapid 
rotary motion. While the .45-70 U. S, Government rifle is credited 
with a muzzle velocity of l,270rt. per second, the small bores reach 
nearly double this figure, ranging from 2,000ft. per second upward, 
and while the black powder gun as made at the Springfield armory 
has one turn of the rifling for 22in. length of barrel, the twist in the 
■case of the tmokeless powder small bore sometimes approximates as 
high as one turn in 6in. 
With a pent up energy behind it double that given the older projec- 
tile, and a spiral path to travel that turns nearly four times where the 
other turned once, it is no wonder that the steel-clad bullet leaves the 
modern rifle with unprecedented viciousness. 
Reduced to a nutshell the case seems to be thus: at short ranges the 
modern small bore smokeless powder rifles have a power for tearing 
and shattering far in excess of what our preconceived ideas based on 
experience with other rifles would lead us to believe; while at longer 
ranges the projectile pierces without much shock and the effect then 
corresponds to that produced by any small bullet. 
The use of balf-manteled bullets increases the shock at long ranges, 
but when mushroomed to their greatest extent these bullets hardly 
equal the diameter of the calibers commonly used for large game, 
while their weight is considerably less. 
Cincinnati Rifle Association. 
Cincinnati, O,, June 28,— To-day was an rff day for most of the 
hoys, judging from <he scores made. A stiff fishtail wind proved a 
serious handicap. Below are the scores made: 
Conditions: 200yds., strictly off hand, standard target, 7-ring black: 
Gindele. 
7 6 10 10 6 10 10 7 10 8-84 10 10 10 6 9 9 6 8 7 8-83 
5 10 7 9 8 8 9 9 8 9-82 10 8 9 7 8 8 8 8 8 8- 88 
Lux. 
5 6 6 10 10 8 8 10 7 4—74 44 10 3 76898 9-68 
6 8 6 
8 
4 
4 
7 
6 10 
9-68 6 
5 
8 10 
8 
5 
6 
7 
3 
8- 
-66 
Roberts. 
30 6 8 
r 
9 
4 10 
6 
9 
9-78 10 
8 •S 
4 
3 
8 
9 
8 
8 
IV 
1- 
-70 
4 8 4 
8 
5 
8 
8 
7 
4 
8-64 6 
8 
4 
6 
5 
4 
5 
6 
8 
5 
-57 
6 8 10 
Weinheimer. 
8 
7 
7 
5 
7 
5 
8-71 6 
8 
7 
6 
9 
8 
6 
9 
6 
3 
-68 
5 9 9 
7 
7 
8 
5 
6 
7 
5-68 5 10 
4 
4 10 10 
3 
7 
8 
6- 
-67 
Topt. 
9 4 7 10 
4 
9 
9 
5 
5 
7—67 8 
9 
6 
4 
8 
10 
3 
8 
8 
7- 
-71 
4 7 9 
7 
8 
4 
5 10 
7 
s-e*? 5 
5 
10 
8 
4 
4 
6 
6 
6 
7- 
-61 
Payne. 
6 7 9 10 
5 
4 
5 
t 
9 
8-70 8 
8 
9 
5 
9 
4 
6 
7 
9 
5- 
-70 
8 5 8 
5 
8 
5 
6 
6 
8 
7-66 4 
5 
4 
5 
9 
8 
7 
7 
6 10- 
-65 
Trounstine. 
7 7 4 10 
r* 
1 
7 
8 
5 10 10-75 5 10 
7 
4 
7 
3 10 
8 10 
6- 
-70 
7 8 3 
7 
8 
9 
8 in 
6 
9-78 8 
5 
4 
6 
5 
6 
5 
8 
7 
9 
-63 
8 7 10 
Ppeth. 
8 
8 
7 
7 
6 
9 
10-80 8 
8 
9 
9 
8 
10 
7 
8 10 
7- 
-84 
5 10 7 
7 10 
8 
8 
6 
9 
8-78 10 
9 
9 
6 
5 
9 
5 
5 
8 
7- 
-73 
Brumback, 
5 10 9 
6 
7 
7 
9 
7 10 
9-79 4 
9 
4 
5 
3 
4 
4 
7 
7 
5- 
-52 
7 9 7 
5 
7 
4 
1 
9 10 
9-68 9 
5 
7 
6 
6 
6 
7 
3 
6 
0 
-64 
Randall. 
9 7 7 
7 
7 
6 
7 
7 
9 
9-75 6 
4 
5 10 
8 
6 
9 10 10 
8- 
-76 
6 8 10 
7 
8 
6 
5 
9 
5 
7—71 7 
7 
6 10 
5 
5 10 
6 
8 
7 
-71 
Drube. 
6 9 7 
5 
7 10 10 
5 
6 in-73 5 
6 
5 
7 
7 
7 10 
9 
9 
8- 
-69 
7 8 6 
4 
9 
5 
8 
6 
7 
9-69 7 
0 
7 10 
9 
9 
5 
4 
7 
4 
-68 
* Hake. 
4 4 4 
G 
3 
6 
8 
3 
6 
6-50 6 
6 
4 
8 
1 
5 
5 
7 
8 
6- 
-56 
4 9 3 
5 
6 
6 
6 
5 
7 
8-54 
S rickmeier. 
5 4 5 
5 
3 
8 
9 
9 
8 
4-60 4 
4 
4 
7 
t 
6 
1 
9 
6 
7- 
-59 
6 5 3 
6 
8 
5 
7 
6 
4 
6-55 6 
Hasenzabi 
8 
4 
8 
5 
7 
7 
4 
3- 
-54 
8 6 9 
8 
6 
7 
8 10 
9 
R-77 6 
6 
9 
8 
9 
8 10 
6 
8 10 
-80 
6 9 9 
9 
8 
s 
8 
6 
7 
6-T6 9 
5 
8 
7 
9 
5 
7 10 
rf 
1 
6 
-73 
* Miliiary. 
Presque Isle Rifle Club. 
The presque Isle Rifle Club champion cup shoot was held at their 
range Saturday, July 4. The severe rain storm interfered with the 
making of any large scores. The cup was won by Mr. Germann with 
a total of 223 out of the possible 300. Conditions: 200yd8 , Standard 
American target, 7 ring black, off hand. The following is the official 
score: 
J G Germann 97885976 10 8—77 
9 10 10 867864 7—75 
866399686 10—71 
JStidham 66879 10 975 8—75 
7 6 8 7 7 G IQ 6 10 6-73 
7 6 10 6 7 5 10 10 7 5-72 
W F Treiber 9 8 10 6 7 5 7 6 8 6-73 
698 10 66369 8-71 
4699 10 7759 4—70 
W J Leyer 6 8 10 6 6 10 8 7 8 6-76 
10 2 10 665866 9-68 
4 10 6 7 6 5 8 9 5 3 63 
J R Brown 565 10 88778 7—71 
5 10 5795668 7-6'< 
64945 in 10 86 5-67 
Dr Strangways , 8 7 7 4 0 6 7 10 10 9-68 
8779T9665 4-68 
6 5 5 10 5 5 4 10 10 7-67 
J Bacon 988784694 7-70 
9669 10 7566 5-68 
967955577 3-ti3 
WBPatton 10 10 5 5 5 10 5 3 8 6-67 
10 665 10 8556 1— 6i 
fi2 10 74657 10 2-59 
J F Leyer 655646997 9-66 
544786489 9- 64 
4725 10 5796 6-62 
Dr Wheeler 6 5 9 5 7 6 8 6 7 9-68 
48847 10 484 4-63 
365866666 8-60 
Dr W R Hunter 6 7 8 6 7 9 6 5 10 S-QB 
564665756 9-59 
674577733 6-55 
GCRahn..,. 99s847393 5-61 
764567995 1—59 
431967479 6-58 
If you want your shoot to be announced here 
send In notice like the foUowlne;: 
FIXTURES. 
July 16.— Elieabeth, N. J.— All day shoot of the Elizabeth Gun 
Club, commencing 9:30 A. M. Sixth tournament of the New Jersey 
Trap-Shooters' League at 2 P. M. 
July 21-22.— Hot Springs, Ark.- Sixth annual meeting and tourna- 
ment of the Arkansas State Sportsmen's Association; $165 added 
money. All purSes divided on equitable system. John J. Sumpter, 
Jr., Sec'y, Box 111, Hot Springs, Ark. 
July 22-23.— Portland, Me.— Interstate Association's tournament, 
under the auspices of the Portland Gun Club. 
July 29-30.— WoROBSTER, Mass. — Tournament of the Worcester 
Sportsmen's Club. Targets. For programmes address A. W. Walls, 
Worcester, Mass. 
July 30, 31.— Goshkn, Ind.— Midsummer tournament of the Goshen 
Gun Club. 
Aug. 4-6.— Chicago, 111.— Tournament of the Du Pont Smokeless 
Powder Company. E. 8. Rice, Mgr. 
Aug. 5.— Sandusky, Ohio.— Annual tournament of the Sandusky Gun 
Club; $100 added money and $100 in merchandise prizes. 
Aug. 11-14.— Detroit, Mich.— Jack Parker's sixth annual inter- 
national tournament. Fuller detaUs later. 
Aug. 26-27.— Burlington, Vt.— Tournament of the Interstate Asso- 
ciation, under the auspices of the Lake Side Rod and Gun Club. 
Sept.— Buffalo, N. Y.— B. F. Smith's tournament at Audubon 
Park. Live birds and targets. 
Sept. 2-4.— Buffalo, N. X".- Tournament at Audubbn Park. Targets 
and live birds. B. F. Smith, Manager. 
Sept. 7.— Marion, N. J.— Sixth annual tournament of the Endeavor 
Gun Club. Targets. J. A. Creveling, Sec'y. 
Sept. 8-11.— Harrisbitrg, Pa.— Annual tournament of the Pennsyl- 
vania State Sportsmen's Association, under the auspices of the Harris- 
biu-g Shooting Association. 
Sept. 15-16.— Kansas City, Mo. — Third annual tournament of the 
Sohmelzer Arms Company; £750 added money. 
Oct.6-8.— Indianapolis, Ind.— Autumn tournament of the Limited 
Gun Oiub. Open to amateurs only. Two days, targets; ooe day, 
plgeonis aad sparrows. Royal Robinaon, SecV' 
Oct. 7-9.— Newburgh, N. Y.— Annual fall tournament of the West 
Newburgh Gun and Bifle Association; targets and live birds; added 
money announced later. 
1897. 
March 23-25.— Nkw York City.— The Interstate Association's fifth 
annual Grand American Handicnp at live birds. 
June (third week).— Cleveland, O.— Fourth annual tournament of 
the Chamberlin Cartridge and Target Company. 
The Syracuse *' Herald's" Tournament. 
Thb Syracuse IIerald''s shooting tournament was, held in Syracuse 
June 29-July 4, on the State fair grounds. The scores which follow 
show the character of the work accomplished: 
FIRST DAY, JUNK 29. 
Thirty-two shooters took part in the 16 events Scheduled for to-day. 
A wind that blew strongly militated against good scores, still the 
boys rolled up some big totals at times. Fulford made the excellent 
score of 24 out of 25 in event No. 7, the conditions being 15 singles, ex- 
pert rules and 5 pairs; Fulford lost his 11th bird in the singles. 
As stated elsewhere, four sets of traps were used, four events being 
decided at each set. Nos 1-4 in the table given below were at known 
angles and were shot at No. 1 set of traps; Nos. 5-8 were shot on No. 
2 set and were all decided under the expert rule. Nos 9-12 were shot 
on No. 3 set of traps and were at unknown anglet ; No. 13-16 were 
shot on No. 4 set of traps and were also unknown angles: 
Events: 
1 S: S U 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 U 
10 
Targets: 
R Hunter 7 
J Winston 8 
Arno 9 
JHerrman 5 
Glover 8 
McMurchy.... 9 
Goodrich,,,,, 7 
Lef ever 5 
Holloway 4 
C Wasner 8 
F D Kelsey 6 
Partiss 2 
G Mann 7 
Van Patten 4 
ED Fulford 8 
O Tuttle 9 
J Carr 
Wheeler , 
Frantz 
Fanning . . 
Courtney 
Clark 
Watts 
Brown , 
AMS ; 
Larned 
Swiveller 
Morris ., 
Boyd 
Hebbard.. .., ;, 
Fleck 
15 20 10 15 20 25 15 
14 18 9 10 .. 16 .. 
13 19 10 11 19 19 13 
12 13 .. 11 
10 15 20 10 
9 13 13 9 
9 12 .. .. 
.. 17 
14 16 
13 ,. 
13 .. 
11 13 
12 16 
13 17 
7 13 15 20 12 
8 9 19 20 13 
7 .'. 
8 14 .... 11 
8 13 18 18 13 
8 12 17 19 13 
5 
10 11 19 9 
10 13 17 9 
10 
9 7 .. .. 
4 14 15 .. 
8 14 16 9 
10 15 15 7 
13 Ik 15 16 
10 15 20 10 
8 15 . . 9 
8 13 . . . . 
7 
5 
7 14 19 9 
10 12 18 10 
.. 10 .. .. 
-4 
10 14 17 5 
5 15 18 10_ 
13 16 7 
8 
12 18 9 13 17 24 13 
13 16 10 .. 14 21 13 
14 17 0 12 .. ..15 
9 
.. .. 6 
19 13 
2i 10 
9 14 16 9 
8 12 18 9 
6 12 15 5 
10 14 19 
8 12 18 
7 13 16 
6 .. 9 
15 19 8 
14 IS 10 
.. 17 
14 18 
30 ,. 
10 .. 
13 15 
8 .. 
10 .. 
9 .. 
8 .. 
10 11 
15 6 14 15 
6 .. .. 
SECOND DAY, JUNK 30. 
Good scores were the rule to-day, although there was quite a breeze 
blowing. In No. 4, 10 targets, unknown angles, the ''Fulford squad" 
did some good work, breaking 56 out of 60, Kelsey dropping the 4 tar- 
gets by the squad, all the rest going straight, Fulford again broke 24 
out of 25 in No. 7, this time losing the first target of his last pair; the 
conditions were: 15 targets, expert rule, and 5 pairs. The programme 
to-day was the same as on June 29. Scores: 
Events: 1SSUS6789 10 11 IS 13 lU 15 16 
Targets: 10 15 20 10 15 20 25 15.10.15,80 10 10 15 20 10 
Ingersol -4 , .. 
Arno ■ 7 13 19 
Swiveller 8 . . . . 
G H,M 8 
RBH 6 
WE H 8 
Hookway 7 10 
Herrman , . 9 12,, 
G Mann 7 12 .'. .... 13 .. 10 
Wagner 9 15 19 9 14 17 Ul 35 
Wayte , 5 .. ,, 5 .. ., .. 
R Hunter 6 .. .. 8 .. 15 .. .. 
E D Fulford 10 13 20 10 12 18ti4 13 
McMurchy 10 14 36,10 15 16 22 14 
Fanning 8 14 18 10 12 18 19 12 
Glover 8 15 20 10 14 18 20 13 
Kelsey 10 14 15 6 14 18 17 12 
Winston 10 15 16 30 13 16 17 13 
Haddock 31 15 . . . . 16 . . . , 
AMS... It 17 .. .. 17 .. .. 
Burnette 11 .. 9 ., 
Borst .. 11 14 6 
Wilson l4 ..• .. .. 36 .. .. 
Duiguid 13 
Holloway 14 8 .... la 12 
Mosher ', 18 8 .. ., .. .. 
Morris 15 
Dan 8 .. .'. 
Crane 4 ii 8 6 
Courtney.....; in .. .. 20 11 .. .. 17 9 .. .. 19> 8 
Wheeler 7 10 .. 7 11 ,. 
WPR 9 13 .. .. 18 
Lane , 9 .... 21 14 
11 .. 
11 .. 
13 17 
6 .. 
11 15 
12 19 
9 39 
13 19 
14 .. 
11 17 
13 19 
9 .. 
10 16 
'9 
13 .. 
8 10 
.. 36 
13 14 
10 
. 9 .. 
. 6 .. 
. 8 11 
9 10 13 
5 4 .. 
,. 7 14 
9 10 13 
10 8 15 
9 6 14 
10 9 15 
8 10 15 
9 10 14 
,. .. 12 
. 12 
7 8 
7 11 
,. 11 
. 13 
,. 11 
.. 9 
18 9 
.. 7 
26 '8 
20 9 
18 9 
19 10 
18 10 
80 10 
16 .. 
17 .. 
.. 7 
.. 8 
.. 6 
15 
9 
16 
SCORES OF JULY 1. 
1 
10 
9 
10 
15 .. 
15 9 
Events: 
Targets: 
Fulford 
Kelsey 
Whitney 7 
Glover in 
Wagner 7 
Arno 10 
Fanning 9 
Hunter.,.. 8 
Van Patten 7 
Herman 8 
Forsyth 9 
Dalley 5 
Murray. 9 
McMurchy 10 
Hebbard 8 
R Hunter 10 
Parkiss 7 
Maple 
Kendall .. 
Mosher 
Lefever 
Holloway 
Hookway...., 
Hobbie , 
Larned , , 
Mann ,. 
Baker 
Courtney 
Winston 
Richmond....,,.,,.' 
Brown 
SCORES OF JULY 2, 
Events: 1 3 
Targets: 15 20 
Fulford 13 
Kelsey 13 
Wagner., 13 
Glover 15 
Richmond 13 
Arno 12 
Hunter 15 
Kendall 13 
McMurchy 20 
Winston 
Baker . . 
Mosher , , . 
HolloWay. 
Brown , , 
Hobbie.. , ., .. 
Jutten , , . , . . 
Lefever. , , ,,!,,,,,,,> ,, ,, 
J^^Wm f 1 1 »»f • • ( MM ( (Mtt 1 1 1 M t • 1 1 » t M If 
8 
3 
4 
5 
6 
7 
8 
9 
10 n 
15 
20 
10 
15 
W 
10 
go 
10 
15 «5 
34 
17 
10 
12 
18 
10 
20 
10 
13 24 
15 
20 
9 
13 
16 
9 
19 
9 
35 22 
15 
19 
8 
15 
17 
10 
17 
9 
11 25 
34 
18 
10 
13 
20 
30 
19 
14 33 
15 
9 
10 
18 
.. 23 
36 
39 
.. 20 
20 
30 
14 
13 
.. 18 
13 24 
6 
12 
11 
a 
13 
10 
13 
9 
IS 
12 
15 
5 .. 
8 10 
7 19 
9 17 
10 lit 
16 18 
19 .. 14 18 .. 19 
18 
.. 11 
14 l.T 
.. IS 
. . 22 
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