B24 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
f June 25, 1898. 
li you want your shoot to be announced here send ia 
notice like the following: 
Fixtures. 
June 23.— Corry, Pa.— No. 2 tournament of the Corry Gun Club. 
A. P. Pope, Sec'y- 
June 25.— I^ong Branch, N. J.— Opening shoot of Hollywood 
grounds. Live-bird shooting everj^ Satiirday afterward. 
June 27-July 3. — Milwaukee, Wis. — Tournament of Milwaukee 
Gun Club, carnival week. Live birds and targets. Ji.OOO 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 Rod and 
Gun Club, at targets. Morton Playnes, Sec'y. * 
July 4.— Centredale, R. I.— Fourth of July shoot of the Centre- 
dale Gun Club. N. F. Reiner, Sec'y. 
July 4.— Geneseo, N. Y.— Geneseo Rod and Gwn Club's annual 
shoot. W. E. Lowe, Sec'y. 
July 4.— Louisville, Ky.— The Kentucky Gun Club's fifth annual 
championship shoot. Emile Pragoff, Sec'y. 
July 4-5.— St. Louis, Mo.— Open shoot, $100 added; 145 targets per 
day. Dupont Park. 
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 River 
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. Bates. Sec'y. 
July 23.— Ogden, 111.— 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 27-28. — Meriden, Conn. — Tournament of the Interstate As- 
sociation, under the auspices of the Parker Gun Club. C. S. 
Howard, Sec'y. 
July 29-3L — 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.— WaterviUe, Me.— Tournament of the Interstate As- 
sociation, under the auspices of the WaterviUe 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 q£ the Minneapolis 
Gun Club. G. J. McGraw. Sec'y. ' ■ 
Aug. 24-27. — (Dmaha, Neb. — Indian tournament, on grounds of 
Omaha Gun Club; three days targets; one targets and live birds. 
Sept. 6-8.— St. Paul, Minn.— St. Paul Gun Club's twenty-first an- 
nual tournament at Minnesota State Fair grounds during fair week. 
H. C. Lawrence, Sec'y. 
Sept. 7-8. — 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. — Greehsburgh Gun Club's tour- 
nament. W. Woodfill, Sec'y. 
Cleveland Fifth Annual. 
WEDNESDAY, FIRST DAY, JUNE 15. 
Cleyei-and, O. June 15. — The fifth annual tournament of the 
Chamberlain Cartridge & Target Co., of Cleveland, is a pronounced 
and unmistakable success. The entry to-day showed 102 different 
guns participating, and an entry of 91 showed in one event in the 
middle of the day, of which 81 were amateurs and 10 experts. A 
look down the lines shows a great many faces which are unfamiliar. 
They are shooters from Amateurdom, such as do not customarily 
appear when the "gang" is on hand. 
The "gang" was the chief subject for deliberation in the plans 
of the management for this year, the aim of that management being 
well known to be up" with or a little ahead of the tendency of the 
times. The sentiment grows, especially since the Omaha shoot 
and its wonderful percentages, that it is nearly time to call a 
halt on the game as she has been running. Old shooters say that 
a return to five traps, one man up, is not unlikely. The walk- 
around has reached its climax at the same time with the paid 
expert. 
At Omaha Jack Fanning shot three days, averaging about 93 
per cent., and he tells me he earned $8.45 in the three days. What 
an 80 per cent, amateur would have we may figure out at leisure. 
To-day at Cleveland Vale (Valentine, of Norwalk, O.) shot a 90 
per cent, gait and won $55 and a duck boat himself as an amateur. 
That is the difference between a modern "open" shoot and a 
"closed" one, such as that put on the docks by Paul North this 
year. The truth seems to be that an "open" shoot is the most air- 
tightly "closed" shoot that could be devised, and the closed 
shoot is really the open one, and the only open one which 
any middle-class amateur of sound mind, limb and brains ought 
to think of attending. It was some time ago_ that the programme for 
Cleveland shoot was arranged, but it hits in with singular patness 
in view of late events. 
To-day there were eleven different States represented. Ohio and 
Michigan sent a good quota of course. West Virginia sent 
Messrs. F. E. Mallory and S. T. Mallory, of Parkersburg; E. O. 
Bower, of Sistersville; J. F. Mallory, of St. Mary's; Mr. L. E. 
Mallory, the fourth of the brothers, comes from Bradford, Pa. 
Ernie Fish is on hand from Eau Claire, Wis., and E. K. Tripp 
from Indianapolis, with Elmer Neal, of Bloomfield, same State. 
Mr. G. S. Wride is from Rochester, N. Y. ; Mr. J. Nichols from 
Georgetown, Ky. ; Messrs. W. Weidebusch and W. H. Stroh from 
Scranton and Pittston, Pa., respectively, while Messrs. F. A. and G.. 
Nesbit came from Wilkes Barre, Pa. All the way from Portland, 
Me., are Messrs. J. W. Coleman and E. A. Randall. Mr. J. T. 
Miner, of the Gold Dust Powder Co., comes from Kingsville, 
Ont. Mechanicsburg, O., sends in one delegation Messrs. D. D. 
Gross, C. W. Phelps, E. W. Patrick, R. B. Guy, and S. P. 
Morgan. Ralph Trimble and a few lines of brothers are on from 
Kentucky; and so it goes. If you will look at the clientage of 
any other recent shoot, you will hardly observe so wide a section 
covered. The war horses may all be there, but the plain lamb 
whose face isn't a household word will be conspicuously at home in 
the bosom of his family. 
A separate stall was provided for the war horses here at Cleve- 
land, where they could cavort around by themselves. As in the 
past they have partaken abundantly of the substance of the amateur, 
so now they were asked to contribute thereto. This they did by 
putting up 25 cents for each event, or $2 a day, for the benefit o'f 
amateur average piu-ses. Ten experts or' manufacturers' agents 
were thus classified as professionals. Messrs. McMurchy, of the 
Hunter Arms Co.; Jack Fanning, of the Gold Du5rt Powder; A. G. 
Courtnev, of the Remington gun; W. F. De Wolf, of the Le- 
fever gtm; W. K. Park, of Sporting Life; R. S, Waddell, of the 
Hazard powder; W. L. Colville and J. T. Miner, both of the Gold 
Dust powder; W R Crosby, of the Baker gun (?), and Ralph 
inrntile of the Wmchester? Nice men, all of these war horses, 
and able to display their goods handsomely, but they had to 
look over the bars and watch Chan. Powers and Denny Upson 
eating choice corn with the bits out of the bridle. These two 
'swxft amateurs and one or two others were willing to take ad- 
wantage of the privilege offered in the programme of putting up a 
double entrance and allowing the score to count in the experts' 
.class also, but as no more expressed a willingness to do this the 
iproposjtion was declared off, and the line between amateur and 
•expert remained drawn sharply as above. Of course, this created 
;no feehng whatever, as the war horses all knew the situation in ad- 
vance as well as anybody. No average money was up for the 
amateurs to-day, but high men were: Vale, of Norwalk, O.; Upson, 
James and Prechtel, of Cleveland, tied on 90 per cent. Second gun 
•was Powers, .892, and in the third class were Fanning and Red- 
wing; .885. 
This is the second season of the present club grounds of the 
Cleveland Gun Club, which are now located on the opposite side 
■of town from the former grounds. The site is at the top of a high 
and breezy bluff, and the wind had a good swing at the magautrap 
food. The club house is large and amply commodious, and num- 
bers of tents and a good lunch table pieced out the accommoda- 
tions. Two scores, and two busily revolving magautraps, kept a 
load in the air all the time, and by 6 in the evening the programme 
of 140 targets was run off nicely, in spite of the heavy squad rolls. 
The cash office was handsomely kept by R. C. McConaghy, brought 
up from Cincinnati for the purpose. Mr. J. E. Brocklesby was 
■chief score-keeper, and this work also was done perfectly. At 
night a completely tabulated set of scores was handed to each 
newspaper man, who was thus allowed to press his virtuous pil- 
low at night instead of sitting up with an electric light playing 
■tag with his ebullient brain. The newspaper man who wouldn't 
say a good word for a management hke that must be a very new 
one, not acquainted with the past, and not open to a sense of grati- 
tude. In short, Paul North, who was hustler-in-chief, and Mr. 
Webster, of the Cleveland Target Co., who was hugging himself 
because he wasn't behind the cash window this year, should be 
highly complimented for running a shoot as usual up to date, or 
.3. little ahead of it, and one plumb full of good sporting principles 
of fair play and fiood horse sense. 
Following are the scores and percentages of the day: 
Events: 12345678 
Bluerocks : 15 15 15 15 20 20 20 20 Broke. Av. 
F E Mallory 11 13 13 13 16 10 16 20 118 .842 
S T Mallory 13 10 9 14 17 18 11 17 112 .800 
Dade 12 11 11 13 17 17 15 14 UO .785 
J F Mallory 10 13 14 14 17 18 14 18 118 .842 
L E Mallory 12 12 11 14 15 14 15 20 113 .807 
F, E Neal 13 14 12 14 19 17 16 14 119 .850 
Tripp 11 12 14 13 16 15 16 17 114 .814 
Fish 14 12 14 12 IS 15 18 13 116 . 828 ' 
G S Wride 12 9 11 6 17 15 12 11 93 .664 
Burke 8 12 12 8 17 14 14 15 100 .764 
Burton H 10 9 11 16 17 17 17 108 .771 
Bibbee 13 12 13 12 18 16 IS 18 120 .857 
'G L Alford 10 9 10 13 15 18 17 17 109 .778 
Hull 13 12 12 10 14 15 15 16 107 . 764 
J Nichols 11 14 11 13 18 17 16 19 119 .850 
Thompson 11 8 13 13 15 15 12 16 103 .735 
McQuaid 11 1115 11 18 17 15 17 115 .822 
Hopp 11 15 13 11 17 14 15 16 112 .800 
Kelsey 15 13 13 12 16 18 18 17 122 .871 
Powers 12 14 15 14 18 15 18 19 125 .892 
Adolph 13 12 10 14 18 15 17 18 117 .835 
Stroh 10 12 10 14 14 16 14 19 109 .778 
F Howard 8 10 0 7 8 8 8 12 67 . 478 
A Nesbitt 12 11 12 11 13 14 16 15 104 :742 
G Nesbitt 14 13 12 13 17 15 15 16 114 .814 
Gardner 11 10 12 9 15 16 17 16 106 .757 
Vail ... 11 14 15 13 20 20 18 15 126 ,900 
D A Upson 13 13 12 15 17 17 19 20 126 . 900 
Perry 12 14 13 14 16 18 17 17 121 ,864 
Alkire 11 11 14 13 17 16 17 16 115 .822 
Murrey 11 11 8 12 42 ,700 
Wills 7 13 9 13 15 13 15 12 97 .692 
No. 9 12 10 11 13 14 14 18 19 111 .792 
Guess 11 8 10 9 14 12 17 17 98 . 700 
L B Fleming 12 13 14 13 16 16 18 17 119 .850 
Gross 14 10 11 10 17 16 14 18 110 .785 
Phillis 12 14 12 15 20 18 16 17 124 .885 
Patrick 12 12 11 11 17 19 13 18 113 .807 
Guy 9 14 14 9 14 12 ... . 72 .720 
Morgan 7 7 9 9 10 10 16 10 78 .557 
Byers 8 11 10 13 14 16 12 17 101 .721 
Spross 14 11 9 10 19 18 15 17 114 .814 
Hammond 12 12 14 13 16 17 15 15 114 .814 
Allen 12 10 11 12 14 15 17 14 105 .750 
E Trimble 14 14 13 14 19 16 17 16 123 .878 
Grant 11 9 13 13 18 19 19 13 115 .822 
Goss . . . .• 12 11 11 12 17 16 16 18 113 .807 
Red Wing ....1..... ....... J, J 13 13 15 13 20 18 18 14 124 .885 
James 14 14 14 12 20 10 19 17 126 .900 
Dale- 10 12 10 12 16 15 17 16 107 .764 
Jenkins 13 13 11 11 14 17 15 IS 112 .800 
Evans 9 7 13 11 IS 15 18 17 108 .771 
T Limbe .. ..4^. ,/.>...*.. 13 9 12 12 16 18 16 15 111 .792 
Fisher 12 9 12 12 IS 18 19 16 116 ,828 
W M Thompson 13 11 13 14 15 19 17 15 117 .835 
Scott 11 11 12 9 15 13 13 15 99 .707 
H H Hess 11 13 12 9 14 16 19 14 108 .771 
B Talsma 13 12 11 12 15 19 16 16 114 .814 
Andrews 10 10 10 13 13 16 .. .. 72 .720 
Nutt 9 7 13 10 12 14 .. .. 65 .650 
Rike 12 12 14 13 18 17 17 18 121 .864 
Bessemer 12 14 14 10 15 17 19 20 121 .864 
Pills 9 14 10 13 10 15 17 20 107 .764 
F M Kiser 9 13 9 13 17 19 11 11 102 .728 
C L Slayton 12 11 12 10 13 14 16 11 99 .707 
Chic 9 13 10 11 14 10 16 17 106 .757 
A Forrester 13 14 13 10 13 16 12 20 111 .792 
T A Prechtel 14 14 11 12 18 19 19 19 126 .900 
Lane 13 14 12 11 18 16 16 18 118 .842 
Bascom 14 11 11 10 15 61 .762 
E A Randall 7 10 9 11 16 17 15 13 98 .700 
J N Coleman .....r 11 10 12 8 10 18 18 18 105 .750 
Speer 5 7 .. 12 -400 
Watts 10 10 10 9 39 .650 
Bacon 11 12 9 11 16 16 16 14 105 .750 
A C Berger 10 12 12 9 13 13 .. ,. 69 . 690 
C I Bodefield 16 16 .800 
Lead 9 9 .450 
Atkinson 14 13 17 18 62 .775 
Doolittle 10 10 .. .. 20 . 500 
Pillow 15 17 13 17 62 . 775 
Snow 18 17 35 .875 
EXPERTS AND TARGETS. 
Sporting Life 10 9 8 10 15 15 19 15 101 .721 
Minor 9 13 9 9 14 16 13 Ifi 99 .707 
Crosby 13 14 11 11 18 19 15 16 117 .835 
Fanning , 14 14 14 12 17 18 18 17 124 .885 
R Trimble 12 14 13 13 18 17 17 17 121 .864 
Stuart 11 9 20 .666 
De Wolf 9 10- 7 6 9 13 18 13 85 .607 
Courtney 12 14 11 15 17 18 16 19 122 . 871 
Swiveller 13 12 10 10 10 14 15 18 102 . 728 
McMurchy 14 15 11 14 19 17 19 14 123 .878 
Waddell 9 10 16 16 16 11 78 .624 
Speer 6 .. .. 12 .. .. 18 .511 
Mrs Meyers 11 .. 14 25 .714 
A Heitzman 14 15 14 12 55 . 687 
Mr Meyers 11 11 .550 
Cline 15 14 17 15 61 .762 
Whine 15 .. .. 15 .750 
Lead "... 12 . . 12 .600 
G C Powers 7 .. 7 .350 
SECOND DAY, THURSDAY, JUNE 16. 
The second day is the test. At the "open" shoot, which is the 
closed shoot to the amateur and the inexpert, the first day is usu- 
ally enough to satisfy the man who pays his own freight, and he 
packs his gun and goes home. At tliis shoot the second day was 
good as the first, 99 guns going to the score, and the squad roll 
of the regulars remaining almost unchanged. It is likely that 
a large number will shoot through the programme, in which case 
average money, large and ingeniously compounded as it is, will 
not make any one man rich. To-day was marked by no special 
incident except the steadiness of the rnachine, which was now 
running like a clock. Even the weather was perfect, and the scores 
took a big jump upward. 
According to the programme the 90 per cent, men of yesterday 
were required to pay $4 extra to-day. These men were Upson, 
Vail, Tames and Prechtel, and $16 thus dropped mto the amateur 
till. The 85 per cent, or better men of yesterday were Neal, Bibbee, 
Kelsey, Powers, Perry, Fleming, Phellis, E. Trimble, Red Wing, 
Rike and Bessemer. These eleven men paid in $2 each extra, or 
$22, also for the amateurs. Thus $38 was raised to go toward the 
programme average money. Meantime 50 cents each had been 
withheld from the purses of 75 amateur entries the day previous, or 
$37.50 in all. This was thrown into the cash box, which little Jack 
Horner will bust open Friday night. In addition to this was $40 
received from four advertisers at $10 a page in the programme, so 
that $115.50 was already in sight. Two days more will swell the bank 
so that perhaps the fund will be divided among all the amateurs, pro 
capita, for those who finish the programme, the allotment to the 
fifteen high guns, as originally proposed, being in that case 
abandoned. This point is not yet determined. 
The experts did not shoot for sweeps to-day, but only went through 
the motions of going down the line, not trying to get each other's 
money. Their target money, $2 a day each, a nominal charge, will be 
lumped m with target money from the amateur class, and saved 
up to. $50, at which point a handsome diamond watch charm will 
be purchased, one for each class. Thus may be seen how ingenious 
and careful have been the plans of the management, and how thor- 
oughly conversant must have been the latter with all the possibil- 
ities of the shooting game. So perfect have been all these plans 
and their execution that the first complaint has yet to be heard. 
The experiment, if anything so obviously sensible and practical 
could be called an experiment, has proved itself out to be a 
success. Paul North said to-day that he would never again hold 
a shoot on the old open plan. It is generally conceded that this 
shoot is the most successful of the ones held here in the past five 
years, in which many different sorts of plans were tried in order 
to make the shooting fair alike to the amateur and the paid pro- 
fessional. This success is especially gratifying to the manage- 
ment because it was prophesied by many, experts who stayed 
that the shoot would be a failure. It may be that the trap 
game has swept on a stage or two beyond the old one of many 
paid experts and few paying lambs. Naturallv this sequence is 
bound to come some day, and the singular and illogical proposition 
of mixing business and sport, professionalism and amateurism, will 
be permanently abandoned. 
To-day the experts gave good exhibition of high-class goods 
in the hands of high-class men. They were in the firing line, and 
their results at the score were as closely followed and as well 
known as though they had been in for the money, only at the 
close of the event they did not march up to the desk and take 
in all the money. Jack Fanning tied top score of the dav, .971 
(which also was made by Powers in the amateurs). McMurchy 
was next, .928, on the day; Swiveller (ColviUe) third, .885; Crosby 
fourth, .878. 
In the long roll of amateurs two men forged swiftly to the front 
and began to attract attention by their neck-and-neck run: Chan. 
Powers, of Decatur, 111., and Denny Upson, of Cleveland. 
Powers hit a great gait, grinding his birds into dust in mechanical 
regularity, and only dropping 4 in tlie day. He was first alone, 
.971; Upson was close up, losing 6 birds, scoring .957. Third guns 
were W. M. Thompson, of Canton, 111.; E. M. Fish, of Eau Claire, 
Wis, .935. In fourth hole were J. F. Mallory, Spross, and Ham- 
mond, .928. All of which shows that the skillful shooters win the 
money, even under the most liberal management, which of course 
is right and just, for when a man has paid his money to learn 
how to shoot, and paid his expenses to get a chance to shoot, he 
ought to win something when he defeats less skillful shooters. 
This principle ^Jiould hold good up to the point where the skill- 
ful shooter begins to do nothing but shoot, or to make practically 
an occupation of it, in which case he is really not meeting on 
even terms the man who does not shoot for an occupation or 
as a regular thing. Without this evenness of terms the principle 
of fair play is gone, and without the ancient and adorable principle 
o^ fair play no sport can be a sport or can endure. All of which 
seems to have been in the mind of this management when the 
present tournament was planned. , 
Following are the scores of the day: 
Events: 12345678 
Bluerocks: • 15 15 15 15 20 20 20 20 ' Broke. Av. 
F E Mallory 14 14 12 15 19 19 19 16 128 .914 
S T Mallory 13 14 12 14 18 19 19 18 127 .907 
Dade 13 11 14 14 19 16 16 18 121 .864 
J F Mallory 14 12 15 14 19 20 18 18 130 .928 
L E Mallory 12 13 12 13 17 17 16 17 117 .835 
Neal 13 10 10 14 15 16 12 20 110 .785 
Fish 12 15 15 14 19 19 18 19 131 .935 
Tripp 14 13 15 12 18 18 17 17 124 .885 
Wride 10 9 10 12 17 14 13 11 96 .685 
Burton 12 13 11 13 18 18 17 19 121 ,864 
Alford 11 14 12 14 14 19 13 18 115 .821 
Bibbee 13 14 13 12 19 18 16 20 ^125 .891 
Slayton 9 9 12 13 15 14 12 15 99 . 707 
Hull 9 15 13 11 17 20 16 19 120 ''.857 
Kiser 13 10 13 12 18 18 14 16 114 .814 
Snow 14 15 13 14 18 19 18 14 125 . 891 
Rike 15 14 15 13 16 17 20 19 129 . 921 
Adolph 11 13 14 14 18 17 15 19 121 .864 
Stroh 12 14 13 15 18 17 17 18 124 .885 
A Nesbitt 14 11 13 9 19 17 19 18 120 .857 
G Nesbitt 11 15 13 13 18 17 18 20 125 . 891 
A Forrester 10 13 11 15 17 17 13 20 116 .828 
Gardner 13 13 14 12 17 19 17 17 122 .871 
Upson 13 15 13 14 20 20 20 19 134 .957 
Perry 12 15 14 13 19 18 18 18 127 .907 
Alkire 13 13 ll 15 17 19 19 19 126 .900 
McQuaid 13 14 11 13 18 17 18 17 121 .864 
Powers 15 15 15 12 20 20 20 19 136 .971 
Kelsey 15 14 14 14 20 16 17 17 127 . 907 
Hopp 11 12 13 14 19 18 16 IS 121 .864 
Gross 12 9 12 10 14 14 .. .. 71 .710 
Phellis 13 14 13 15 17 18 15 17 122 .871 
Patrick 14 14 12 14 18 IS 19 18 127 .907 
Guy 12 15 14 33 18 18 19 17 126 .900 
Chic 12 14 10 12 19 13 19 19 118 .842 
Allen 15 13 14 12 18 18 19 16 125 .891 
Spross 15 13 13 15 20 18 18 18 130 .928 
Hammond 13 14 12 14 20 19 20 18 130 . 928 
Te Limbe 13 14 10 11 12 15 16 15 106 .757 
E Trimble 15 13 9 14 19 17 16 17 120 .857 
Grant 11 15 13 13 20 20 18 18 128 .914 
Goss 13 14 13 13 16 20 16 IS 123 .878 
Dale 13 15 15 12 19 18 18 39 129 .921 
Red Wing 13 14 13 13 19 19 17 19 127 .907 
James 12 13 11 15 18 14 17 20 120 .857 
No. 9 11 11 14 13 16 19 16 17 U7 .835 
Guess 32 14 32 32 19 17 16 16 118 .842 
Fleming 12 12 11 10 15 15 18 15 108 . 771 
Fisher 31 14 14 12 17 18 17 17 120 .857 
W M Thompson 11 14 15 14 19 19 18 38 131 .935 
Burke 14 15 11 12 18 18 16 17 121 .864 
Mingo 12 12 13 13 19 14 15 17 115 .821 
Vail 13 14 14 15 18 19 17 17 327 .907 
Prechtel 13 14 13 13 19 18 16 19 125 .891 
Nichols 13 14 12 13 16 18 17 17 120 .857 
Bessemer 15 14 15 1.5 17 17 16 16 125 .891 
Jenkins 11 15 14 12 16 18 17 18 121 .864 
Evans U 13 11 13 15 15 12 15 105 . 750 
Black 10 14 10 13 17 16 16 16 112 .800 
Coleman 13 11 13 13 18 15 16 18 117 .835 
Randall 11 14 13 12 19 18 19 19 125 .891 
Pills 12 13 12 11 16 18 16 13 111 .792 
Hess 9 11 12 11 11 11 17 16 98 .700 
Lane 14 14 14 13 17 20 18 18 128 .934 
Byer 14 13 10 10 17 18 15 14 111 .792 
Atkinson 13 13 11 14 14 17 ... . 82 820 
Pillow 11 15 12 12 18 19 .. .. 87 .870 
Talsma ; 13 14 13 9 17 17 15 16 114 .814 
Bascom 10 11 21 .700 
J C Thompson 13 11 10 11 13 13 ... . 71 716 
Lead 9 9 .600 
Wills 7 .. 13 .. 14 .. .. 34 .680 
Freeland 12 12 .800 
Watts 15 11 15 13 . . . . 54 . 771 
Holt 14 34 .700 
Morgan 16 16 32 .800 
EXPERTS AND TARGETS. 
Courtney 13 11 10 10 19 17 18 14 
Swiveller 12 12 14 14 15 20 17 20 
McMurchy 14 15 14 14 18 19 18 IS 
Howard 7 9 12 9 14 13 12 18 
R Triw-ble 11 12 13 12 18 18 15 37 
De Wolf S 9 8 9 14 10 12 14 
Sporting Life 12 32 8 33 14 17 11 16 
Crosby 13 13 14 9 19 19 17 19 
Fanning 33 35 14 15 20 19 20 20 
Le Fever 12 13 12 13 17 18 . . 17 
Miner 11 10 9 4 15 15 ... . 
G Freeland 12 11 .. 12 17 .. .. 
Shearer 10 13 11 13 15 15 14 .. 
Heitzman ....11 7 8 8 8 11 10 15 
Speer 9 7 g 
Lead 9 H , 
112 
124 
130 
94 
116 
84 
303 
323 
336 
102 
64 
52 
91 
78 
25 
20 
.800 
.885 
.928 
..m 
.828 
.600 
.735 
.878 
.971 
.850 
.640 
.800 
.758 
.557 
.566 
,666 
I 
