496 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[June i8, i8g8. 
Atlantic Y. C. Ladies' Day. 
SEA GATE — NEW YORK BAY. 
Saiurddy^ June II. 
The Atlantic Y. C. sailed its second race, for ladies, on 
June II, with eight starters, the courses being off the new 
club station at Sea Gate. The wind was moderate from 
•S.W.; the times were: 
Open Knockabout Class. 
Start. Elapsed. Corrected. 
Scrap, R. W. Bainbridge 3 05 50 3 11 55 3 11 55 
Impudent, Louis Boury 3 05 30 Disabled. 
Class N, Series E— Sl,oops, 25 to 30ft. 
Muriel, F. M. Randall 3 14 05 2 11 12 2 11 12 
Oriole, C. F. Larzelere 3 10 50 2 16 00 2 11 05 
Class C, Series C— Mainsail Yachts, 25 to 30ft. 
Grayling, J. S. de Selding 3 16 10 2 OS 53 Not meas. 
Dorothy, G. L. Johnstone 3 16 40 1 50 39 Not meas. 
Class T, Series C— Mainsail Yachts, 20' to 25ft. 
Qui Vive, Geo. Freeth 3 17 30 1 57 52 1 57 52 
Ethel, E. J. Bergen 3 20 20 2 07 45 2 02 24 
Impudent parted her throat halyards and withdrew. 
Oriole is an auxiliary, and towed her screw. She suc- 
ceeded in beating Muriel, a very fast boat, in Boston 
waters last year. 
Westchester Country Club* 
PELHAM PARK PELKAM BAY. 
Saturday^ June 11. 
The Westchester Country Club sailed the first race for 
its new one-design knockabout class on June ii, with six 
starters. The fleet, of eleven boats, reached City Island 
the previous evening, after a hard passage around the 
Cape from Marblehcad, some bad weather being en- 
countered, so that they were in poor condition for rac- 
ing. The course was on Pelham Bay, the wind being 
moderate from S.W. The start was made at 2:40. The 
times were: 
Finish. 
Dipper, Arthur Iselin 3 31 28 
Idle, W. H. Russell 3 31 51 
Folly, A. D. Navarro 3 36 25 
Philippine, William Laimbeer .3 37 30 
Kathama, H. O. Havemeyer, Jr; , i.i.; ; ,.3 39 28 
Ditto, H. S. Redmond 3 43 28 
YACHTING NEWS NOTES. ' 
There is very little now doing at the City Island yards, 
none of the large yachts being put in commission. At 
Hawkins' yard Vigilant and Navahoe, Quissetta and 
Amorita, are still on the ways. Colonia has been 
launched, and lies dismantled at her moorings. Bedouin 
is afloat and in commission. Some of the small yachts 
have been launched from Robertson's yard^ At Byles' 
yard the new racing cabin catboat built for C. T. Pierce, 
from a design by H. J. Gielow, was launched this week. 
She is 26ft. l.w.l., and will race in the 30ft. R. M. class of 
the Sound Y. R. A. Her lines are round and full, and 
there is no deadwood, the keel having a continuous rock- 
er, but the overhangs are moderate and she is in no sense 
a modern freak. She has a roomy cabin, with good head- 
room; the centerboard is of wood, but the rudder is of 
metal, balanced and placed a couple of feet abaft the end 
of the l.w.l. She has a fine hollow mast, made by the 
Spalding St. Lawrence Company. She will be fitted out 
as quickly as possible, and will race next week. The date 
of delivery was early in May, but the work has been much 
delayed. The yawl Aura is out at the same yard for a 
lead keel. 
At Wood's yard the new 30-footer is ready for launch- 
ing, her mast being stepped and rigging set up; when she 
goes over she will be practically completed. The 25- 
footer is decked with ^in. matched white pine, covered 
with light canvas. Her peculiar cabin house is not yet in 
place, and she will not be finished for some time. 
Barracouta, steam yacht, D. P. Reighard, arrived at 
New York on June 10 from Nassau. N. P., after cahing 
at Norfolk for coal. Barracouta sailed from New York 
on Feb. 2, with her owner and friends on board, for a 
winter cruise in the West Indies. On March 28. off 
San Salvador, her crankshaft broke, and Mr. Reighard 
and his friends left her, returning home on a fruit 
steamer. Capt. Harding took the yacht into Nassau un- 
der sail, and she has laid there ever since, a new crank- 
shaft being sent from New York and fitted. She brought 
to New York George Reno and Custo Roque Mara, the 
latter a Cuban, both said to carry despatches from Cuba 
to the Government and the Cuban Junta. 
Mr. Frank Cowper, well known to our readers as a 
single-hand cruiser and a writer of interesting cruises, has 
lately completed a new book, under the title of "Jack- 
All-Alone: His Cruises." The volume is a collection of 
stories of various incidents culled from the experiences of 
the author in his years of single-hand work about the 
British and French coasts. They are written primarily 
for the amusement of the reader; it will be remembered 
that Mr. Cowper is the author of the valuable series of 
five volumes of "Sailing Tours," in which the English. 
Scotch and Irish coasts, with part of the French coast, 
are described with the minuteness and accuracy of the 
best Government publications, but in these stories he 
follows a lighter vein of yachting incident and adven- 
ture. His devotion to this solitary and independent 
mode of yachting is apparent all through the book, and 
he gives very good reasons for his preference. The book 
is published by L. Upcott Gill, London. 
If yott want your shoot to be announced here send in 
notice like the following: 
Fixtures. 
June 7-11.— Peoria, 111.— Annual tournament and convention of 
Illinois State Sportsmen's Association. . t? it 
June 8.— Butler, Pa.— Butler Gun Club's tournament E. E. 
^fune^ 8^'lO.— Parkersburg, W. Va.— Second aniiual tournament of 
the West Virginia State Sportsmen's Ass9ciation. Address all 
communications to K<X O. Bower. Sec'y, Sistersville, W. Va. 
June 14-15.— Stillwater, Mmn.— TournameW: of the Stillwater 
^June'l^lB.- Grafton, N. D.— Tournament and meetinp of North 
Dakota S. S. Association. 
June 14-16.— Le Mars, la. — Le Mars Sportsmen and Shooting 
Association's tournament. E. Miller, Sec y. 
June 14-16. — Ottawa, Kans. — Annual tournament of the Kansas 
State Sportsmen's Association. W. L. Beardsley, Sec'y-Treas. 
.—Portsmouth, Va.— Tournament of the Interstate As- 
sociation, under the auspices of the Portsmouth Gun Club. W. 
N. White, Sec'y. 
June 15-17.— Cleveland, O.— Fifth annual tournament of the 
Cleveland Target Co. Bluerocks thrown free of charge. Profes- 
sionals and manufacturers' agents barred from programme events. 
June 16.— Brooklyn, N. Y.— All-day shoot of the Brooklyn Gun 
Club. John Wright, Manager. 
June 16. — Springfield, Mass. — Second tournament of Connecticut 
State League, on Sprmgfield Shooting Club grounds. 
June 17. — ^\Vellington, Mass. — Massachusetts State Shooting As- 
sociation's annual shoot. O. R. Dickey, Sec'y, 
June 16-17.— Dayton, O.— Dayton Gun Club's amateur tourna- 
ment. 
June 20-24.— Rochester, N. Y.— Annual tournament of the New 
York State Association, under the auspices of the Rochester Rod 
and Gun Club. Live birds and targets. 
June 21-23. — Sioux City, la. — Fourth annual amateur tournament 
of the Soo Gun Club. Three sets of traps. E. R. Chapman, Sec'y. 
June 23.— Corry, Pa.— No. 2 tournament of the Corry Gun Club. 
A. P. Pope, Sec'y. 
June 25.— Lon^ Branchy N. J.— Opening shoot of Hollywood 
grounds. Live-bird shootmg every Saturday afterward. 
June 27-July 3.— Milwaukee^ Wis.— Tournament of Milwaukee 
Gun Club, carnival week. Live birds and targets, fl,000 added 
money. 
June 30.— Auburn, Me.— First annual tournament of the Auburn 
Gun Club. L. A. Barker, Sec'y. 
June 30-July 1.— Milwaukee, Wis.— National Gun Club's tourna- 
ment. 
July 1. — Sherbrooke, Canada.— Grand annual tournament. Tar- 
gets. Regular sweeps, variety and merchandise. C. H. Foss, 
Sec'y. 
July 3-4. — Davenport, la.— The West End Gun Club's amateur 
tournament on targets. L. Haneman, Sec'y. 
July 4. — Brockton, Mass.— All-day shoot of the Brockton Gun 
Club. Special prizes. 
July 4.— Pawling, N. Y.— All-day shoot of the Pawling E.od and 
Gun Club, at targets. Morton Ilaynes, Sec'y. 
July 4. — Centredale, R. I.— Fourth of July shoot of tbe Centre- 
dale Gun Club. N. F. Reiner, Sec'y. 
July 4-6.— Newport News, Va.— First annual tournament of the 
Chesapeake Gun Club. Geo. B. James, Sec'y. 
July 6-7. — Meadville, Pa. — Tournament of the Interstate Associa- 
tion, under the auspices of the Meadville Gun Club. Chas. Stein, 
Sec'y. 
July 7-9. — Denver, Colo. — First annual tournament of the Over- 
land Association. Open to all. Inanimate targets. Added money. 
John W. Kane, Manager. 
July 13. — ^Albany, N. Y. — Forester Gun Club's annual tourna- 
ment; targets. H. H. Valentine, Manager. 
July 15. — Poughkeepsie, N. Y. — Trophy shoot, Hudson Rivet 
Trap-Shooters' League, on the grounds of the Poughkeepsie Gun 
Club. J. B. Rogers, Manager. 
July 14-15.— Bedford, Ind.— Tournament of Bedford Rod and Gun 
Club. 
July 19-21.— Palmyra, Mo.— Eight annual tournament of the 
Missouri Amateur Shooting Association, under the management 
of the Palmyra Gun Club. Targets and live birds. Added 
money announced later. W. N. Rates. Src'y. 
July 23. — Ogden, III.— Ogden Gun Club's third annual tourna- 
ment for amateurs. Wm. McKinley, Sec'y. 
July 26.— Brooklyn, N. Y.— Tournament and clam bake of the 
Hell Gate Gun Club. 
July 26-28.— Little Rock, Ark.— Eighth annual tournament of the 
Arkansas State Sportsmen's Association. Paul R. Litzke, Sec'y. 
July 27-2S. — Meriden, Conn. — Tournament of the Interstate As- 
sociation, under the auspices of the Parker Gun Club. C. S. 
Howard, Sec'y. 
July 29-31.— Milwaukee, Wis.— Milwaukee Gun Club's tournament. 
S. M. Du Val Sec'y. 
Aug. 3-4. — Worcester, Mass. — Tournament of the Worcester 
Sportsmen's Club. Targets. 
Aug. 11.— Marlborough, N. Y.— Trophy shoot, Hudson River 
Trap-Shooters' League, on grounds of Marlborough Gun Club. 
J. B. Rogers, Manager. 
Aug. 17-18.— Waterville, Me.— Tournament of the Interstate As- 
sociation, under the auspices of the Waterville Gun Club. E. 
T. Wyman, Sec'y. 
Aug. 17-18.— Warsaw, Ind.— Lake City Gun Club's tournament. 
J. S. Campfield, Sec'y. 
Aug. 24. — Warwick, N. Y. — Special shoot, Hudson River Trap- 
Shooters' League, on grounds of Warwick Gun Club. J. B. 
Rogers, Manager. 
Aug. 24-25. — Minneapolis, Minn. — Tournament of the Minneapolis 
Gun Club. G. J. McGraw, Sec'y. 
Aug. 24-27.— Omaha, Neb.— Indian tournament, on grounds of 
Omaha Gun Club; three days targets; one targets and live birds. 
Sept. 7-S. — Kingston. N. Y. — Tournament of Hudson River 
League, on grounds of Kingston Gun Club. 
Sept. 7-8. — Haverhill, Mass. — Tournament of the Interstate As- 
sociation, under the auspices of the Haverhill Gun Club. Geo. 
F. Stevens, Sec'y. 
Oct. 4-6.— Newburgh, N. Y.— West Newburgh Gun and Rifle 
Association's fall tournament. 
Oct. 12-13. — Greensburgh, Ind. — Greensburgh Gun Club's tour- 
nament. W. Woodfill, Sec'y. 
DRIVERS AND TWISTERS. 
C/ui secretaries are invited to send their scores for publication in 
these colu?nns, also any news-notes they may care to have printed. Ties 
in all events are considered as divided unless otherwise reported. Mail 
all such matter to Forest and Streajn Publish ng Company ^ 346 Broad- 
way^ New York. 
The programme of the Grand Carnival tournament, -fixed for 
June 30, and July 1 and 2, can be obtained by addressing the 
secretary, Mr. W. A. Haig, 407 Pabst Building. The first two 
days have a like programme, eight events, at 20 targets, $2 entrance, 
$25 added to each, moneys divided 30, 25, 20, 15 and 10 per cent. 
There is also ?100 grand average money, four moneys. The con- 
ditions are known traps and known angles. There are three live- 
bird events on the third day's programme, each to be 26 to 32yds. 
handicap, money divided 40, 30, 20 and 10 per cent. No. 1 is at 15 
birds, $15 entrance, $250 added. No. 2 is at 10 birds, $10 entrance, 
$150 added. No. 3 is at 10 birds, $10 entrance, $100 added. Total 
added money, $1,000. American Association rules govern all events. 
Shooting begins at 9 o'clock each day. Manufacturers' agents 
and expert shooters in order to participate in the division of 
money in target events will have to break not less than 19. Tar- 
gets 2 cents each. Live birds 20 cents each. Price of each in- 
cluded in entrance in all regular events. All ties to be divided 
unless otherwise provided. Extra events will be arranged, time 
permitting. No cfropping for place will be tolerated. Ten-gauge 
guns and black powder are barred. Entrance to live-bird events 
must be in the hands of the secretary on or before July 1, 1 o'clock 
P. M., otherwise a penalty of $2.50 must be paid up to the time 
the last man fires in the first round. Grounds open for practice 
on June 29. The National line of care go direct to the National 
Park Club grounds, Milwaukee. 
The programme of the annual tournament of the Sherbrooke 
Gun Club, Sherbrooke, P. Q., July 1, can be obtained of the 
Secretary, Mr. C. H. Foss. - The management extends a cordial 
invitation to the am.ateur trap-shooters of Canada and the neigh- 
boring states. The Rose system will prevail, 5, 3, 2 and 1 in 
four money events, 8, 5, 3, 2 and 1 in five moneys. A valuable 
list of merchandise prizes will be added. Shooting commences at 
8:30. Lunch served free to shooters. Guns and ammunition ad- 
dressed in care of Mr. C. H. Foss will be delivered on the 
grounds. Targets, 2 cents, deducted before dividing. Shooters 
may enter for price of targets. There are 15 events on the pro- 
gramme, of wh)ch six are at 10 targets, $1, the last being the mer- 
chandise event: targets thrown from two traps, unknown angles, 
18yds. rise, entrance 50 cents, re-entry 25 eents; there are six 
15 target events, $1.50, and three 20 target events, two at $2 and the 
remaining one, a team match, open to teams of five for eastern 
townships trophy, held by Sherbrooke, entrance price of targets. 
At Hazleton, Pa., on June 8, A, S. Van Wickle was accidentally 
killed -wEth his own gun at a trap shoot just outside of the 
limits of the city. The press dispatches explain that he leaned 
on his gun, which was then accidentally discharged, with 
the tragic result mentioned. Mr. Van Wickle was one of the 
millionaire coal operators of the Lehigh Valley. He was presi- 
dent of the Van Wickle Coal Company, president of the Hazleton 
National Bank, and was a distinguished patron of all healthful 
amateur sports. 
The programme is out for the Interstate Association's trap- 
shooting tournament given for the Meadville Gun Club, Mead- 
ville, Pa., July 6 and 7. There are ten events each day on blue- 
rocks, six at 15, entrance $1.50, four at 20, entrance $2. All 
purses divided 40, 30, 20 and 10 per cent. All ties divide. Guns 
and ammunition forwarded to F. G. Prenatt, Meadville, Pa., will 
be delivered at the shooting grovmds. First-class lunch served 
on the grounds at reasonable prices. Interstate rules will gover/ 
all events. Application has been made to secure reduced rail- 
road rates,- the results of which will be published later. The 
grounds of the Meadville Athletic Association are about five 
minutes' walk from railroad stations and hotels. Street cars 
bearing the signs "Valonia" or "Alleghany College" go directly 
to the grounds. Shooting commences at 9 o'clock. The master 
manager, Mr. Elmer E. Shaner, will have charge of tournament. 
For further information address Chas. Stein, secretary Meadville 
Gun Club, Meadville, Pa. 
"Billy" Crosby is doing good work out West for the Baker Gun 
Company, whose gun he is shooting well to the front. His latest 
achievement is a startler. At the Illinois State shoot at Peoria 
last week he won the Board of Trade diamond badge, indicative 
of the live bird championship of the State, with a score of 98 
straight. There were 104 entries, each man shooting at 10 birds. 
Thirty-four men tied on 10 straight. On the shoot-off Crosby 
ran 88 straight, winning in the S8th round of the ties. He 
used Winchester factory-loaded ammunition, with 44grs. of E. C. 
and I140Z. of 71/2. The week previous to the Illinois tournament, 
he tied with Charley Budd for high average on 95 per cent, at 
the Piasa Gun Club's shoot at Alton, 111. Geo. Roll is the man 
who forced such a long finish to the ties in the diamond badge 
contest. Roll missed his ^th bird of the tie, thus making an 
extraordinary run, close up to that of the winner. He used 
Du Pont powder in a Leader shell. 
Under date of June 8, Mr, L. M. Gilbert, 1128 Palmer street, 
Philadelphia, writes us as follows: ''The Hollywood Qun Club 
opens Wednesday, June 15, with the Hollywood preliminary. 
Shooting commences at 2 o'clock. Conditions made on the 
ground. Saturday, June 18, will take place the West End Han- 
dicap, 15 birds, entrance $10, ties at 3 birds; 50 per cent, to winner, 
30- per cent, to second and 10 per cent, to third. Sweeps after- 
ward. Shooting commences 11:30 o'clock. Ship gruns and car- 
tridges to Hollywood Gun Club, Hollywood, N. J. Shooting 
every Wednesday at 2 P. M. and Saturday 11:30 o'clock until 
Labor Day. I expect to furnish first-class birds for all events this 
season, Mr. Fred Clark will manage the grounds." 
The third annual tournament of the Ogden Gun Club, Ogden, 
111., June 23, is for amateurs only. Event A, at 7 blue rocks, 75 
cents, is the Gold Dust Powder Company's event. Event E, 7 
blue rocks, 75 cents, is the E. C. and Schultze Powder Company's 
event. Six other events, 10, 15 and 25 targets, $1, $1.50 and $3, 
complete the forenoon programme. In the afternoon the first 
event, C, is the King Powder Company's event, 10 blue rocks, 
$1. D is the Schultze Powder Company's event, 7 blue rocks, '75 
cents. Six more events, 10, 15 and 25 targets, $1, $1.50 and $3, com- 
plete the afternoon programme. No bang, no bird. Ten gauge 
guns and black powder are not barred. Shooting commences al 
8:30 o'clock. Wm. McKinley, secretary. 
The fourth annual toiu-nament of the Soo Gun Club, of Sioux 
City, la., Jui-ie 21 to 23, will be on targets, of which there are 
ten events each day, each event being 15 targets at a uniform 
entrance fee of $1.50, excepting No. 7, the Gold Dust Powder 
event and championship gold medal, on the second day, 75 
cents entrance. Ihe grounds will be open for practice on June 
20. There are cash prizes for the ten high averages, .$15 to first, 
$14 to second, and so on $1 less to the last. All purses divided 
35, 30, 20 and 15 per cent. Professionals and manufacturers' 
agents are barred. For the five low averages made each day 
merchandise prizes will be awarded. E. R. Chapman, Secretary. 
When such records as 99 and 98 out of 100 can be made by one 
squad on inanimate targets, it begins to look as if something 
ought to be done to make shooting harder for the experts. The 
above feats were performed by the "E. C. and Schultze" squad at 
the Nebraska State shoot, in events No. 6 and No. 4 respective- 
ly, on May 26. The squad was made up as follows; Heikes, 
Leroy and Dickey, with E. C. ; Fulford and Glover, with Schultze. 
Heikes, Leroy, Glover and Fulford ran straight in both events, but 
Dickey lost one target in No. 6, and two targets in No. 4. 
The act of Jack Parker in giving up his successful summer tour- 
nament to insure the success of the Michigan Trap-Shooters' 
League shoot, to be held at Detroit in August, as mentioned by 
Mr. Hough in the report of the Grand Rapids tournament, is 
one of open-handed generosity of great rarity. But then it is 
just about what Jack Parker would do when any sacrifice was to 
be made. 
High squad scores have come into season, and th^re is some 
curiosity manifested as to the conditions under which the high 
scores were made; that is, to say, whether the targets were thrown 
with a special view to being broken, or whether they were 
thrown in the ordinary manner. On this very important point 
our reports are silent, and on this very point they should be ex- 
plicitly clear and full. 
At the Peoria tournament Mr. Ed Bingham, of Chicago, gathered 
to himself a win of the Smith cup, one of the valued trofihies of 
the Illinois State Sportsmen's Association, and much desired by 
the contestans in the Association's competitions for many 
years. Eddie pins his faith to Leader shells and Hazard or Du 
I'ont powders. 
The communication of Mr. W. C. Hadley, concerning the tour- 
nament of Uie New York State Association at Rochester, N. Y., 
published in another column, sets forth the earnest purpose and 
painstaking care of the Association in the matter of its forthcoming 
tournament. A good support should be accorded it. 
The squad score record of 124 out of a possible 125, five men, 
namely, Messrs. F. E. and S. T. Mallory, Leroy, Ed. O. Bower 
and F. M. Kiser, made at Parkersburg, W. Va., is something ex- 
traordinary in the annals of trap-shooting. 
Keep in mind that the watch shoot of the Boiling Springs Gun 
Club takes place on the first and third Wednesdays of each 
month. The E. C. cup shoot takes place on the second and 
fourth Wendesdays. 
The annual tournament of the Forester Gun Club, Albany, N. 
Y., will be held on July 13. Magautrap and blue rocks will be 
used. H. H. Valentine, manager. 
Under date of June 6, Mr. L. Haneman, secretary, writes us 
as follows: "The West End Gun Club, Davenport, la., will 
hold an amateur tournament for targets only on July 3 and 4," 
The Brockton Gun Club will give an all-day shoot on July 4 
on its grounds at Brockton, Mass. 
The South End Gun Club, of Reading, Pa., will hold its aijaual 
tournament on targets July 4. 
The Elgin National Gun Club will hold a shoot beginning June 
25. 
Bellows Falls Gun Club. 
Bello-ws Falxs, Vt., June 8.— We have organized a gun club 
here, and now have sixty members, which makes us one of the 
largest, if not the largest, in the State. We have shoots once a 
week, and on holidays we make it quite an event. We have built 
us a nice cottage, with a 12ft. piazza on two sides. We are now 
preparing for a tournament July 4, and expect to offer some very 
nice prizes, and as soon as we get out our programmes shall be 
glad to send you one. Below I give you a list of the officers: 
President, M. H. Ray; Vice-President, Dr. E. W. Knight; Sec- 
letary, C. H. Gibson; Treasurer, E. A. Norwood; First Captain, 
Dr. M, L. Morrison; Second Captain, C. H. Taggertt; Executive 
Committee: H. D. Aldrich, J. H. Blayley, C. E. Capron. 
Below I give you the score of our last shoot: 
Shot at. Broke. 
J^RHull 50 47 
Dr M L Morrison... 50 40 
M H Ray 50 37 
E A Norwood 50 33 
H E Bidwell 50 31 
Dr L A Newton 50 29 
R Wier 50 27 
D Meany 50 27 
H H Fassett 50 25 
Dr E W Knight 50 24 
L S Eddy 50 24 
C Russell 50 24 
C F Whitehouse 50 23 
G A Dow 50 21 
C H Gibson 50 21 
M Vasser 50 16 
E Underbill 50 14 
F Moore ....50 12 
G B AUbee 50 12 
C Taggertt 
C E Isham 
Dr G H Russell 
A J Blake 
F Duffy 
F Howard . . 
Jas Bvrne . . 
W B Hill ... 
W D Damon 
F O Isham . 
D Webster ... 
H E Bean .... 
T Short 
J H Blakley .... 
C. H. GiBSOH, Sec'y. 
)t at. 
Broke. 
.,50 
10 
...50 
8 
, ,45 
27 
..45 
17 
..40 
17 
..35 
13 
..30 
4 
19 
.,25 
11 
.,25 
9 
,.25 
8 
. ,25 
8 
.25 
8 
T 
..25 
S 
..25 
2 
. .25 
1 
3 
