May XX, 1901.J 
FOREST AND ^ STREAM. 
879^ 
Peters Cartrid8:e Company^s Tcwmament at 
Bingfhamton. 
The Peters Cartridge Company's tournament at Binghamton, 
N. Y., April 24 and 25, was a ver> successful affair. The shoot was 
given for the purpose of reviving interest in trapshooting, which 
had been somewhat lagging. 
Over fifty different shooters competed in the tournament, and 
outside of the State shoot there has not been a more successful one 
held in years. The trade was represented by Messrs. Thomas H. 
Keller, manager of the JEastern agency of Peters Cartridge Com- 
pany, and John Parker, also representing the Peters Cartridge 
Companv, from Detroit, Mich., and Messrs. A. G. Courtney and 
Leroy Woodward, of the Remington Arms Company; W. L. 
Colville, of Dupont Powder Company; E. C. Fort, of the Robin 
Hood Powder Company; J. R. Hull, of Parker Brothers, and A. 
H. Fox, of W, R. A. Company. 
The purses all paid remarkably well, and anybody shooting 80 
per cent, or better would receive more than his entrance back. 
The race for high average between W. H. Stroh, of Pittston, Pa„ 
and Windsor Morris, of Baldwinsville, N. Y., was a very interest- 
ing one, Stroh bagging 25 in last event, and Morris 22; but Morris 
won by 3 targets the handsome trophy presented by the Peters Car- 
tridge Company for high average. Thomas H. Keller, in a very 
neatly worded and appropriate speech, presented the trophy to 
Mr. Morris immediately after the last shot was fired in the last 
event. 
The shoot was very ably managed by Mr. John Parker, of De- 
troit, Mich., and complimentary remarks were heard on all sides 
regarding the successful issue of the tournament and the liberality 
of the Peters Cartridge Company in giving the shoot. 
Mrs. M. F. Lindsley, shooting tinder the name of Wanda, 
graced the tournament by her presence, and shot ia three dif- 
ferent events the last day. 
Mr. Windsor Morris, winner of the trophy, is, comparatively 
speaking, a new shooter, and under the circtim stances as regards 
weather, background, etc., made remarkably high average. 
Considering the weather, the attendance was more than could be 
expected, as it rained continually both days; but ample and 
plenty protection by tents and club house was afforded the shoot- 
ers, and the working force was a very complete and efficient 
one. Mr. W. H. Brown, of Binghamton, was untiring in his 
efforts to help the management in making the shoot a decided 
success, and shot remarkably well, considering the amount of work 
he had to do, 
Messrs. Tracy and Pumpelly, of Owego, advertised their shoot, 
which was to take place the following day. 
First Day, Wednesday, April 24. 
Events: 1 
Targets: 15 
Courtney ...,,,.,,<,. 12 
Keller 13 
Watson 8 
Stevens 7 
Hull 11 
Winchester 13 
Swiveller 12 
Dally 12 
Morris .....■•..•>.>........-4>(.-. 15 
Leroy 14 
Lewis 13 
Wheeler 11 
Stroh 13 
Catawba 13 
Byer 5 
Escrich 11 
Knapp 12 
Bailey 9 
La Boteaux 14 
Rail 12 
Graham '. 12 
Peed 12 
Brown 11 
Dr Weller 11 
Wride 11 
McCarney 15 
Hobbie 14 
Harrington 11 
Borst 11 
Kendall 12 
Mayhew , 13 
Tracy 9 
Pumpelly 
■PprlH'eford „ 14 
Pal miter 13 
Merrill 9 
McCormick 11 
Day 12 
Knox ;...Ji 9 
Snowden ......i. 
Weisabroke .. 
Bittenbender 4. 
Fort 
Dennis 
Moffat 
2 3 4 
15 20 15 
14 19 12 
11 19 11 
10 17 6 
8 11 9 
15 17 11 
14 18 13 
15 18 13 
14 19 13 
14 20 15 
11 IS 15 
14 19 14 
13 15 11 
13 IS 15 
13 16 12 
14 18 11 
13 17 12 
19 19 8 
10 16 10 
10 14 9 
15 16 12 
14 16 13 
12 18 11 
14 19 12 
10 15 10 
8 19 13 
9 13 8 
11 18 14 
10 14 10 
11 15 .. 
15 16 10 
13 14 15 
14 18 15 
14 14 13 
14 16 12 
10 14 11 
10 13 13 
11 11 .. 
13 15 13 
.. 11 .. 
.. ,. 10 
5 6 
15 20 
11 17 
10 IS 
11 13 
9 8 
11 13 
14 19 
15 14 
12 13 
14 18 
12 19 
12 18 
34 16 
15 2b 
13 20 
11 20 
13 14 
13 15 
.. 13 
11 13 
12 15 
10 17 
14 16 
U 19 
12 11 
30 17 
13 14 
12 19 
7 8 9 10 
15 15 20 25 
14 10 17 . . 
11 13 18 . . 
12 12 
15 15 
13 13 
14 14 
13 14 
15 14 
13 12 
11 14 
15 14 
11 14 
14 13 
13 14 
13 13 
16 .. 
17 24 
18 .. 
20 23 
20 25 
18 23 
18 21 
19 23 
17 23 
20 20 
19 23 
12 
12 13 18 .. 
13 11 17 . . 
13 14 12 21 
14 15 19 21 
10 13 14 .. 
14 15 19 21 
11 10 35 . . 
14 12 19 21 
12 12 
14 17 35 13 17 22 
34 36 13 15 15 .. 
31 34 38 9 19 15 
33 35 33 32 15 .. 
33 30 32 11 20 .. 
11 16 14 13 .. 
12 
.. 11 .. 7 .. .. 
..32 7 9 33 .. 
11 13 10 12 14 .. 
. . 19 14 14 15 23 
.. 10 11 
.. .. 11 
11 
Second Day, Thursday,'^ April 25. 
Events: 1 
Targets: 35 
Courtney , 35 
333 12 
Winchester 15 
Leroy 13 
Hull .....i......^ 32 
Stroh 34 
Lewis 13 
Byef i,, 14 
Wride 33 
Catawba 15 
Pal miter , 14 
Paddleford 32 
Brown 13 
Pumpelly 13 
Wheeler 35 
Mavhew 14 
Rail 32 
Fort , 14 
Spencer . 12 
McCarney .,.,......».... 33 
Hobbie .m. ft •'••>"• ^5 
Dally 12 
Morris 14 
Knapp 10 
Graham 15 
Reed ...,„,,,,... 10 
Merrill 10 
Knox ......................4.... 8 
Parker 13 
Keller „, 11 
Kendall .a^.... 12 
Tracy ....iv..... 
Snell . m ». n'.i • . a'^ i 
Dennis 
Wanda 
2 3 4 
15 20 35 
11 20 14 
32 35 12 
15 15 34 
13 20 35 
33 37 32 
35 18 12 
31 34 9 
12 36 33 
12 16 32 
33 19 13 
11 16 14 
32 19 32 
35 38 34 
34 18 12 
33 36 8 
31 39 13 
32 37 34 
33 34 34 
33 38 34 
30 12 33 
13 09 35 
34 35 32 
33 39 14 
11 17 .. 
5 6 7 8 9 10 
35 20 35 35 20 25 
34 39 32 30 37 25 
11 18 15 12 10 19 
19 14 35 19 20 26 
14 16 14 13 18 21 
32 35 13 19 18 19 
12 19 12 15 18 25 
15 19 
33 34 
12 14 
35 19 
14 16 
14 18 
34 24 
33 35 
33 39 
33 36 
14 39 
32 35 
10 38 
34 20 
33 38 
17 18 
12 
14 
34 9 12 13 
14 13 . . . . 
33 34 .. .. 
34 14 20 25 
14 12 20 22 
33 13 17 18 
15 31 .. .. 
32 15 19 22 
32 13 18 24 
12 14 17 22 
12 13 36 2i 
12 12 17 20 
13 13 20 22 
.. 12 .. 
13 18 10 
13 15 10 
30 15 . . 
14 17 33 
34 16 14 
14 13 13 
10 18 12 11 17 18 
8 
33 20 13 is 16 24 
32 16 .. .. 17 .. 
14 14 12 15 17 19 
.. 19 9 12 17 24 
16 .. 10 .. '.. 
8 6 .. 
.. ..311114 
Broke. 
126 
124 
65 
52 
120 
162 
131 
154 
168 
159 
154, 
147 
163 
152 
148 
107 
114 
58 
71 
125 
141 
143 
155 
106 
149 
108 
154 
45 
37 
77 
153 
128 
135 
124 
114 
104 
33 
65 
20 
28 
49 
71 
85 
21 
11 
Broke. 
157 
136 
169 
157 
138 
160 
45 
101 
94 
134 
116 
112 
165 
160 
137 
113 
150 
155 
147 
76 
158 
148 
158 
50 
23 
137 
56 
33 
156 
100 
143 
81 
26 
14 
36 
TowDseod vs. McEIrecvy. 
O-MAHA, Neb.. April 27.— W, D. Townsend, of Omaha, shot J. E. 
McElreevy, of Nebraska City, a race of 100 targets at the gun club 
grounds to-day for the State championship and the Dickeybird 
trophy — an elaborate sterling silver cup. A strong wind was blow- 
ing right in the faces of the shooters, so the scores were very poor 
and not near up to the capacity of either shooter. McElreevy won 
the cup for the second time by a good lead. During the day 
there were a number of other shoots both at live birds and targets, 
scores of all of which are given below. 
The Dickeybird trophy will be shot for in open competition at 
the Nebraska State shoot at Lincoln early next month. Following 
are the conditions governing contests for this trophy; 
For Nebraska amateur championship; 100 targets at unknown 
angle?., nnder A. S. A. rules, except at open competition, which 
shall be 25 targets per man. Challenger to deposit the sum of ?5 
at the time of making challenge, with the W. S. Dickey Clay 
Mfg. Co., Kansas City, Mo., who will notify holder, which amouilt 
goes to present holder of the trophy; loser of match to pay for 
targets. Holder of trophy to name place and time of shoot, which 
shall be vathin thirty days from date of challenge. In open com- 
petition, 25 targets per mran, $2 entrance, amount less price of 
targets to go to holdes' of trophy. The wiii»er of the trophy bin4- 
No. 2. 
2iiii22i2i— 10 
2232223030— 8 
2222221212—10 
2121222222—10 
22212**120— 7 
2232021222— 9 
0222222212- 9 
ing himself to the Dickey Clay Mfg. Co. to comply with all con- 
ditions of the competition. 
The nominal sum of $5 charged contestants is put so low as 
to make the event a popular one, and it is hoped that there will 
be a large number of entries at the coming State shoot. 
Event 1, 15 birds, $7 entrance; 40, 30 and 20 per cent.; handicap. 
No. 2, 10 live birds. $3; 50, 30 and 20 per cent.: 
No. 1. 
Brucker, 28 023222023132222—13 
Watson, 29 02222220*121012— 11 
Terr V 27 2322222222203 22—14 
Kimbell, 30 22*222222202222—13 
Loomis, 30 222222222211212-15 
Parmelee, 31 222222*22222201-13 
Simpkins 2S 222220222220220-12 
Townsend, 29 2222222*2121212—14 
Lewis, 28 2102021''1122220-11 
Smead 
Nebraska amateur championship race for Dickeybird trophy, at 
targets ■ 
Tow-ns^d 1111330111011130003003000—15 
1111100100031111111001011—17 
0101011113131331110001011— 18 
1001100101101003010030300— 11— 61 
McEh-eew 1111110101113110311113331—22 
1311101111111101110101111—21 
11131013110101 11111000311—19 
1113011111011101111101110—20—82 
Fifteen targets, $1.50 entrance", 50, 30 and 20 per cent. : Watson 13, 
Loomis 13 Parmelee 14, McElreevy 10, Morrill 15, Simpkms 15, 
Townsend 8, McDonald 13, Metz 5. , ^ 
Same as above: Simpkins 12, McElreevy 11, Parmelee 12, Lucas 
3, Loomis 14, Watson 7, Morrill 14, McDonald 13, Townsend 13, 
Metz 4, Marsh 6. H. S. McDonai-d. 
Garden City — National Gun Club* 
Milwaukee, April 29.— Editor Forest and Stream: Some time the 
first part of this year arrangements were made between the Garden 
City Gun Club, of Chicago, and the National Gun Club, of Mil- 
waukee, for a live-bird contest, fifteen men on each side, at 15 
birds each, making a total of 225 birds on a side to be shot at. 
The first match took place the first part of March at Milwaukee, 
at which time the National Gun Club carried off the plum with 
190 birds killed, to the Garden City Gun Club's 172. 
At that time it was arranged that a return match should be shot 
at Chicago under the same conditions, the same nurnber of birds 
and the same number of men, and if the Garden City Gun Club 
were successful at that time a third match should be shot on some 
' neutral ground. 
The match at Chicago took pla^e on the 27th inst., at Watson s 
Park. The Milwaukee team was very much crippled, owing to the 
fact that four of its best men— Dr. Williamson, Geo. L, Deiter, 
Richard Merrill and L. J. Petit— were unable to attend, and we 
went there with somewhat of a feeling that the game was against 
us. Nevertheless, all the boys, except your humble servant, were 
full of vinegar. 
There was consideraWe wrangling after we reached the grounds 
over a matter that we stipposed was settled long ago, and that was 
the distance. At Milwaukee we shot at 28yds. rise, and we sup- 
posed, as we had been informed, that the shoot at Chicago was 
under the same conditions; but we finally compromised on 29yds., 
and at about 1 o'clock got down to business. 
There was quite a strong wind blowing from the left quarter 
across the field, which made the riglit-quarter_ birds very difficult. 
E. E. Rogers, captain of the Milwaukee team for the day, won the 
toss and was the first man to faoe the traps. The shooting was in 
pairs, one Milwaukee man against a Chicago man; 8 birds at the 
first set of traps, then passing over and finishing his score at 
the second set, while the second shooters took the first set again, 
and so on through to the finish. Rogers was very unfortunate in 
his shooting, losing 4 birds, his opponent, Mr. Cumley, losing 1 
bird, thus giving the Garden City a lead of 3 birds on the start. 
The next pair, Mr. Crane, of the Milwaukee, and Mr. Adanr^s, of 
tlie Garden City, cut even with 13 birds each. Mr. Meixner, of 
Milwaukee, in the next pair, killed 14 to Mr. Miller's 12, giving 
our opponent but 1 bird the lead. In the next Mr. Potter killed 
13 to Mr. Pumphrey's 14, giving our opponents 2 in the lead. In 
the fifth Mr. Cantillon killed 12 and Mr. O'Brien 10, tieing our 
opponents, and thus it went, with the score very close, to the 
finish. 
Mr. Case did well with his shooting, bringing down 13 birds to 
Mr. White's 15, who was fortunate enough to be the only man to 
kill out straight. 
Mr. Meixner and Mr. Blake were the only men on the Milwaukee 
team who killed 14 each, while our opponents had five 14s. 
Your humble servant was the last Milwaukee man to face the 
traps, and I must confess now that he had several slight attacks 
of what is called up in the wooJs "buck fever." Just before being 
called he was informed that $10 was bet on him, which was not very 
encouraging, as he has always been opposed to being the means 
of losing anybody's money, and on top of that, another member 
of the club cautioned him to keep his nerve; that there was a 
chance for him to pull the team out, as they were but 2 behind at 
that time; all of which tended to shatter his nervous system. 
While he has been abje all through the Spanish-American war and 
the Filipino troubles and the troubles with China to retain his 
nerve (he being too old to enlist) and shoot fairly well, he 
was completely unstrung at this time, and lost 3 birds, thus losing 
the game. He has talked with the members of his own club, and 
has been forgiven on condition tliat he never do so again. 
There was not a minute from the time the first man faced the 
traps until the last bird was shot at that the Garden City Club did 
not know we were there, and I think they realized that it was a 
pretty close call for them. 
At the time of shooting the neturn match, which will probably 
be on May 18, at Racine, we hope to regain our lost' laurels. 
Our treatment by the Garden City Gun Club and the Chicago 
people in general was of the best, and not one thing during the day 
came up to mar the harmony and good feeling that existed between 
the two clubs. Lindley Collins, 
Sec'y Nat. Gun Club. 
Itbaca Gun Club. 
Ithaca, N. Y., April 27.— The opening matinee shoot of the 
Ithaca Gun Club was held under very auspicious circumstances 
at Ithaca, N. Y., to-day. 
The shoot was very well patronized by local shooters and also 
by trade representatives, who had come from Binghamton and 
Owego. The trade was represented by Messrs. Keller and 
Parker, of the Peters Cartridge Company; Colville, of Dupont 
Powder Co.; Messrs. Louis and Claude Smith, of the Ithaca Gun 
Company. The Ithaca gun was very much in evidence, nearly 
every local shooter using an Ithaca gun. 
The shoot was managed by Mr. John Parker, of Detroit. Every- 
thing passed off pleasantly, and the shoot will have a tendency 
to boom trapshooting in this locality. The opening of the base- 
ball season kept many of the students away, as there was a game 
between Cornell and Columbia. 
Events : 
Targets : 
1 2 3 4 5 
10 15 10 15 25 
6 10 38 
8 10 19 
7 8 16 
7 11 20 
8 12 18 
11 .. 
7 13 
U 20 
Merrill 6 12 
Stroh 6 14 
Bobs 5 31 
Swiveller 4 11 
L Smith 6 11 
Crandall 5 11 
Burns 6 8 
Hughes 6 12 
Bostwick ., .. 7 
Keller 6 11 
C Smith 5 12 
Moller 4 5 
Tisdel 11 
Tubbs 7 
Parker 12 
L Merrill 7 
Rumsey , 4 ... 
Moses 4 .. 
Hanford 4 .. 
McCormick 7 11 18 
Egbert 4 8 .. 
Schutt - 7 17 
Speed. .. 9 12 
Puff , .. .. 8 
9 
6 
6 
7 
9 
4 
7 
4 
9 12 21 
4 5.. 
8 9.. 
6 6.. 
6 8 14 
6 7 8 
10 15 25 
7 10 38 
6 32 20 
6 10 17 
6 10 19 
6 11 18 
7 7.. 
4 .. .. 
7 9 16 
31 18 
11 16 
7 13 
9 .. 
8 12 18 
4 7 
9 12 18 
3 5 .. 
4 7.. 
.. 10 .. 
4 .. 
3 12 .. 
5 5.. 
.. 9 .. 
Broke. 
87 
95 
80 
88 
89 
41 
47 
87 
12 
91 
53 
44 
27 
11 
93 
24 
21 
15 
48 
46 
16 
39 
31 
17 
The Forest and Stream is put to press each weelc on Tuesday. 
Correspondence intended for publication should reach us at th^ 
latest: by Monday and as much earlier aa practicable. 
Pigfeon Shooting:, 
California,— £rft7<j»' Forest and Stream: I read with satisfaction 
your exhaustive treatise, "Pigeon Shooting at the Traps,"_ in 
Forest and Stream of April 20. You have collected and put into 
concise, logical form a great deal of sound information that is the 
very best kind of reading for any one, and particularly for the well 
meaning btit notoriously incompetent contingent that is always and 
everywhere preaching the prevention of many evils, but that rather 
encourages than prevents, because it is mainly made up of 
impostors — impostors because they pretend to knowledge they do 
not possess, or undertake duties they do not perform. 
Our land is full of societies for the prevention of all sorts of 
things, and notably for the prevention of cruelty to childen and 
animals. The land groans with the evils that they volunteer to 
correct, but how seldom do we bear of any great good accom- 
plished or of systematic effort made? When such impostors go 
afield to teach humanity to sportsmen they usually present a 
pitiable picture of incompetency and ignorance. 
Is not every city full of inhumanity to men, women, children 
and animals to which these societies and philanthropic individuals 
may well devote themselves if they are sincere? Ii by concerted 
effort they establish a reformatory that really reforms, endow a 
charitable institution really charitable, or it they look to the 
welfare of homeless cats and wandering dogs, or if they would 
only abolish the barbarous and senseless check reins that torture 
thousands of horses throughout the years, they should be worthy 
of recognition and praise. 
While reading the treatise I hoped it would touch more ex- 
plicitly upon the subject of propagation — a theme that is doubt- 
less treated of in books, but that is not often considered in general 
discussion. It would perh.ips simmer to the old, old problem, the 
survival of the fittest; but the old problem has not been settled. 
It is a good one for preventionists and reformers to study pro- 
foundly. Is it nobler to propagate children for whom we do not 
provide, or pigeons for which we do?.- The science of propagation, 
in my opinion, from frog farming to the expansion of empires 
and the mission of flags and constitutions has been neglected. 
I witnessed a pigeon shoot on the grounds at Ingleside, San 
Francisco, a few days ago. I was never fond of trapshooting, and 
do not like to see creatures killed. I have for various reasons, 
nevertheless, killed a great many wild birds and animals. The in- 
cident, death, is the shadow over sport with the rifle, gun and 
rod, but it is the shadow over all the life of the world, and who 
shall say that our dread of death is not more a perverted notion 
than a natural instinct? Pain is another matter. Neither gentle- 
man nor sportsman ever finds pleasure in the torture of any 
creature. 
Several club members, gentlemen, participated in the shoot at 
Ingleside, where 75 pigeons were snot in a couple of hours, the 
largest number I have seen killed at the trap. I did not enjoy 
looking on because the birds were being killed; but I did enjoy 
the methodical, skillful and clean process of the shoot. 
The grounds are beautiful, overlooking the Ingleside race course, 
pavilions and stables, and to the southwest the broad green fields 
sloping to the ocean. The afternoon was bright and breezy. The 
five traps were complete with the latest improvements, opening 
from_ a roomy, covered trench, in which the trappers and supply 
of birds were invisible from the stand. The traps were spi-ung by 
the ingenious contrivance by the use of which no one knows 
which of the five will be sprung for the shooter. The bii*ds ap- 
parently flushed from the grass, and were m the main quick and 
hardy. 
The three shooters were men who could afford to pay about $60 
for their couple of hours' shooting, and they were as decent, 
methodical, quiet and graceful in their art as the dancing or fencing 
master is in his. Nearly all the birds were killed instantly and re- 
trieved by a pointer dog that did his work as cleanly as the gun- 
ners did theirs. If a bird was not killed by the shot it was so 
quickly retrieved by the dog and laid at the feet of his master 
that its neck was wrung before it could have possibly recovered 
from the shock of the shot. 1 do not conceive how the same num- 
ber of birds could have been killed in a more humane manner. 
They were afterward drawn and crated for the market. 
The deportment of the shooters, the beauty of the surroundings, 
the complete equipment of the grounds, the elegant, well kept 
guns used, and the wonderful work of the dog rnade up a com- 
bination that was truly complimentary to the best kind of sports- 
manship. Pigeons doomed to die could scarcely do it in a more 
fitting manner. They doubtless owed their existence to sportsmen 
and they paid the debt unwittingly and without suffering. Seven 
or eight birds that flew straight away and escaped beyond 
boundaries nearly all circled about until shot bv the keeper of the 
grounds. These I thought should have been allowed to live. The 
shooting was more satisfactory from a humane point of view than 
cculd be the shooting of the same number of wild birds, because 
the latter would be shot under differing conditions and many 
cripples would surely escape to suffer. 
I left the grounds feeling that 1 should like to be a member 
of the rijght kind of a gun club and participate in such shooting 
as that which I have described. I believe 1 would rather be such 
a shooter than be president of some of the prevention societies 
that neither seem to know what to prevent nor how to go about 
it if they do. Humanity is rarely served by good intentions 
ignorantly or affectedly professed. So much for a snap shot. 
Ransacker. 
Tracy — Pumpelly Tournament. 
Owego, N. Y,, April 26.— The tournament given by Messrs. 
Iracy and Pumpelly. at Owego, N. Y., under the auspices of the 
Uwego Gun Club, the day following the tournament at Bingham- 
ton, was a very successful affair. Tlie grounds are beautifully sit- 
uated on the top of a high hill commanding a beautiful view of the 
village and the Susquehanna River. 
The shoot consisted of twelve 15-bird races, and was a strictly 
amateur affair. John Parker, of Detroit, managed same in hia 
usual effective manner, and taken all together it was a very 
pleasant affair. 
Messrs. Tracy and Pumpelly were complimented on their 
cordial and courteous treatment of the visiting shooters. The 
shoot was finished early in the afternoon, and visiting shooters 
left for home, some going to Ithaca to take part in a tournament 
there Saturday, the 27th. 
The trade was represented by Messrs. Thomas H. Keller and 
■a Parker, of the Peters Cartridge Companv, of Cincinnati; 
A. G. Courtney and Leroy Woodward, of the Remington Arms 
Company.; J R. Hull, of Parker Brothers; W. L. Colville, of 
Dupont Powder Company, and A. H. Fox, of the Winchester 
K. A. Company. Ihe scores: 
Events: 1 23456789 10 11 12 
„ targets: 15 15 15 15 35 35 15 15 15 15 15 15 Broke. 
Hull 9 12 12 10 10 9 13 11 33 9 15 12 133 
Courtney 33 33 13 15 13 11 13 11 13 13 14 15 158 
Leroy 14 15 13 15 15 13 15 15 32 15 12 14 368 
Winchester 14 35 34 14 35 15 15 14 15 15 15 15 
Swiveller 13 33 13 13 9 9 12 13 13 12 32 12 
Kendall 13 13 12 12 32 15 10 15 10 11 11 10 
Parker 14 11 13 12 13 12 13 14 34 13 35 14 
Brown .'. 30 34 12 10 14 34 14 31 30 12 IS 14 
Dally ,,. 33 15 14 15 35 32 13 33 32 13 11 15 
Morns ...t.,., , 11 14 13 11 15 13 32 13 31 12 10 15 
-Hobbie 10 13 14 11 34 12 10 33 12 15 7 12 
Stroh 10 14 11 9 14 34 12 33 13 9 12 13 
Reed 9 12 13 31 9 30 10 30 .. 32 33 11 
Pumpelly 11 14 34 33 32 12 14 15 13 33 11 13 
Rail 10 12 35 9 14 12 32 10 11 32 9 11 
Ward i... 12 .. 13 10 .. 9 9 34 .. 11 8 
Montayne 10 11 33 11 9 .. 13 13 .. 6 9 6 
Knapp 9 8 8 10 .. 12 15 9 
Knox 32 32 10 10 .. .. 8 11 .. 
Tracy 11 14 13 13 13 12 13 13 32 JO ii 12 
Keller 13 14 12 12 13 12 13 12 12 32 10 14 
Day 9 .. 13 1 11 .. 14 13 9 14 ..32 
Hewett 11 11 11 12 11 10 12 12 13 9 
Ripley .10 .... 6 .. .. 
Smith 5 8 6 8 ." 
T Smith -: 6 .. 
Barton 10 13 's " ".i 
176 
342 
344 
158 
148 
161 
150 
142 
144 
318 
353 
337 
84 
101 
71 
63 
345 
149 
96 
132 
36 
27 
6 
31 
Richmond Gun Club. 
Silver LAXE. Staten Island, May 4.— Following are the 
made to-day at the shoot of the Richmond Gun Club: 
Events: 123456789 10 11 12 
Targets: 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 5 
A A Schoverling...lO 9 8"-- 
scores 
G Bechtel... ....... 976 
F Schoverling. . . . . 9 6 5 
Duke 10 9 8 
Fredericks ,„,,,,.■ 9 6 5 
8 8 8 
6 6 6 6 
8 9 6 6 
8 8 8 8 
9 6 6 
Shot 
at. 
Broke. 
115 
93 
115 
75 
115 
80 
115 
92 
115 
81 
A- A. S., Captain jR. Q, C 
