Aug. 24, 1901.] 
• : FOREST AND STREAM. 
1B9 
Aug. 22-23.— Fairmont, Minn.— Target tournament of the Fair- 
mont Gun Club. 
Aug. 23— Pleasant Hill, Mo.— Fifth annual sweepstake and mer- 
chandise tournament of the Pleasant Hill Colored Gun Club. 
T. H. Cohron, Sec'y. 
Aug. 27-28.— Northville, Mich.— Tournament of the Michigan 
Trapshooters' League. L. L. Brooks, Sec'y. 
Aug. 27-30.— Okoboji, la.— Lake Okoboji amateur tournament, at 
Arnold's Park; $400 added. For programmes, address E. C. 
Ilinaliaw. • , ^ , , 
Sept. 2.— Cleveland O.— Merchandise shoot of the Cleveland 
Gun Club. 
Sept. 2.— Ossining. N. Y.— All-day live'bird and target shoot of 
the Ossining Gim Club. C. G. Blandford, Capt. 
Sept. 2.— Ilion^ N. Y.— Amateur shoot of the Remington Gun 
Club. W. H. Grimshaw, Sec'y. 
Sept. 2.— Meriden, Conn.— Labor Day tournament of the Parker 
Gun Club. Also Bristol sheep bake. C. S. Howard, Sec'y. 
Sept. 2.— Albany. N. Y.— Bluerock tournament of the Forester 
Gun Club. H, H. Valentine, Mgr. 
Sept. 2-3.— Union City, Ind.— Tournament of the Parent Grove 
Gun Club. 
Sept. 2-3.— Portland, Me.— Maine State tournament, under the 
auspices of the Portland Gun Club. S. T>. Adams, secretary. 
Sept. 2-3. — Richmond, Va. — Second annual tournament of the 
Virgmia Trapshooters' Association. Mr. John Parker; Mgr. Mr, 
J. C. Tignor, Sec'y. 
Sept. 3-4.— Bellefontaine^ O.— Silyer Lake Gun Club's tourna- 
ment. 
Sept. 3-6. — Lake Okoboji, la. — Indian tournament, to be held at 
Arnold's Park; $S0O added. C. W. Budd, Arnold's Park. Iowa. 
Sept. 4. — Holmesburg Jimction, Pa.— Target shoot of second 
scries of Keystone Shooting League. 
Sept. 4-6.— Chattanooga, Tenn. — Chattanooga Gun Club's tourna- 
ment. 
Sept. 11.— Montpelief, Vt.-^Montpelier Gttn ClWb's tournament ; 
contest for the Robin Hood international trophy, G. B. Walton, 
Sec'y. 
Sept. 10-12. Sidney. O.— Sidney Gun Club's tournament. 
Sept. 11-12. — Warren, Ind.— Warren Gun Club's tounuunent. 
Sept. 11-13, — Canton. O. — Canton Gun Club's tournament. 
Sept. 16-17. — St. Joseph, Mo.— St. Joseph Gun Club's tournament. 
Sept. 19-20. — ^Altbn, 111. — Two-day tournament of the Piasa Gun 
Club. 
Sept. 20-21. — ^Titusville, Pa. — ^First annual tournament of the 
Titusville Gun Club. H. Pfeiffer, Sec'y. 
Sept. 24 26.— Cincinnati, O.— Cincinnati Gun Club's annual handi- 
cap target tournament; $300 added. Charles F. Dreihs, Sec'y._ 
Oct, 1-4. — ^Detroit, Mich. — ^John Parker's annual international 
tournament; three days_ targets, one live birds; .$.300 in money and 
trophies; distance handicaps. 
Oct. 9-10. — Huntington, Ind. — Tournament of the Erie Gun Club. 
Oct. 9-11.— St. Thomas, Ont. — Tom Donley's fifth annual tourna- . 
ment; live birds and targets. 
Oct. 1!>-16.— Greenville, O. — Regular annual tournament of the 
Greenville Shotgun Club. H- A. McCaughcry, Sec'y. 
Haverhill, Mass. — Series of prize shoots every Saturday, June 1 
to Aug. 31, given by the Haverhille Gun Club. S. G. Miller, Sec'y. 
Newark, N. J.- — South Side Gun Club target shoot, every .Sat- 
urday afternoon. 
Chicago, 111.— Garfield Gun Club's live-bird trophy shoots, first 
and third Saturdays of each month. Grounds. West Monroe street 
and Fifty-second avenue. Dr. J. W. Meek, Sec'y. 
CONTESTS AT INTERSTATE PARK. 
Interstate Park, Queens, L. I. — ^Two miles beyond Jamaica, on 
L. I. R. R. Trains direct to grounds. Completely appointed 
shooting grounds always ready for matches, club shoots or private 
practice. Cafe and hotel accommodations. 
~ Interstate Park, Queens, L. I. — ^Weekly shoot of the New Utresht 
Gun Club — Saturdays. 
Sept. 10-13.— Interstate Park, L. I.— New York State shoot, under 
the auspices of the New Utrecht Gun Club; $750 added; valuable 
list of merchandise prizes. Walter F. Sykes, President, 85 Water 
street. New York. 
INTERSTATE ASSOCIATION CONTESTS. 
Elmer E. Shaner, Manager. 
Aug. 21-22. — ^Auburn, Me.— The Interstate Association's tourna- 
ment, under the auspices of the Auburn Gun Club. L. A. Barker, 
Sec'y. 
DRIVERS AND TWISTERS. 
Clui secretaries are intiited to send their scores for publication in 
these columns, also any news notes they may care to have, printed. Ties 
en all events are considered as divided unless otherwise reported. Mail 
all such matter to Forest and Stream Publishing Company y 346 Broad~ 
way. New York. 
The programme of the New York State tournament, which is 
to be held at Interstate park. Queens, L. L, Sept. 10 to 13, in- 
clusive, under the auspices of the New Utrecht Guii Club, is ex- 
ceptionally sterling in the conditions of the competition which it 
offers to the trap shooters, both in respect to the open and State 
events. The competition arranged for the two classes of shooters — 
that is, that of the open and State events — is alike in each, with 
the exception that in the latter, |20 is added to each event. The 
sweepstakes for the first and second days, State and open events 
respectively, are four events at 15 targets, ?1.50 entrance; and one 
at 20 targets, $2 entrance. The third day provides six events at 
15 targets, $1.50 entrance; and the merchandise event, which 
contains a valuable list of prizes of sterling worth and. special 
fitness for the use of sportsmen who shoot or fish. A Lefever 
gun, Smith gun, Parker gun, Winchester Repeating rifle, Marlin 
rifle, revolvers, rods, reels, gun cases, shell cases, etc., form 
a part of the list. There are a number of objects of art, which 
will be offered for special events, which will be arranged as time 
a.llows. On each of the first three days there will be a handicap 
by distance, 14 to 25 yards, at 100 targets, $7 entrance, targets 
included, $100 added to each. No percentages are taken from 
the purses, although there is $750 added money. The handicap 
events make $300 of added money appropriated for the open com- 
petition, to which tlrere is a further appropriation 01 $75 for the 
high averages in the entire open sweepstake programme, divided 
as follows: First, $25; second, $20; third, $15; fourth, $10; fifth, 
.$5. The State events also have high average prizes, as follows: 
First, $25; second, $15; third, $10; fourth, $5. High guns govern 
the division of the moneys in the handicaps and the Rose system 
in the sweepstakes. Targets 2 cents. On the fourth day there 
are four live bird events, 7, 10 and 15 birds, $5, $7.50 and $10 
entrance, respectively, class shooting. The State Convention will 
be held on the evening of Sept. 10, at 8 o'clock, at Interstate 
park. The programme contains the Long Island R. R. time 
table. Send guns and ammunition to Interstate park, prepaid. 
Mr. Elmer E. Shaner, famous as manager and expert, will man- 
age the tournament. For programme and further particulars, ad- 
dress Mr. W. F. Sykes, president of the New Utrecht Gun Club, 
85 Water street, New York. The programme is attractive and 
generous. Big so-called added money on the one hand means 
nothing in the way of added money, if it is taken out of the 
purses, or made by charging a higher price for the targets. The 
merchandise list also is the result of purchase or club contribu- 
tions, and, therefore, is free of moral sandbagging. 
Programmes are out for the seventh annual Labor Day tourna- 
ment of the Parker Gun Club, Meriden, Conn., Sept. 2. The 
competition is open to all. Ten events are on the programme, at 
15 and 20 targets, alternately, $1.30 and $2.40 entrance. Grounds 
open at 8:30 A. M. Programme shooting starts at 9:30 A. M. 
Purses will be divided by the Rose system, four moneys, 5, 4, 3, 
2. Price of targets, 2 cents, included in all entrances. Shooters 
may enter for price of targets only in all events. Take electric 
cars to Hanover Park. Cars leave depot every fifteen minutes. 
Loaded shells for sale at club house. Guns and shells shipped to 
C. S. Howard, prepaid, will be delivered at club grounds free of 
cost. A Bristol sheep bake. Dinner will be served on the 
grounds, consisting of baked lamb, sweet potatoes, Irish potatoes, 
fried sweet corn. etc. Tickets, 50 cents. Apply to the secretary, 
C. S. Howard. Interstate rules govern. 
The Montpelier (Vt.) Gun Club announces its tournament for 
Sept. 11, commencing the programme at 9:30 o'clock. There are 
eleven events, at 10, 15 and 20 targets, and extra events will be 
shot if time permits. Targets, 1 cent, included in entrance. Any- 
one mav shoot for targets only. Rose system. Lunch and am- 
munition can be obtained on the grounds. The secretary, Mr. 
G. P.. Walton, writes us as follows: "The Union Gun Club has 
accepted the challenge made by the Robin Hood Gun Club, for 
the Robin Plood International Trophy, and the contest for the 
same will be held on the grounds of the Montpelier Gun Club 
on Sept. 11. All friends are cordially invited to attend the tourna- 
ment. Both the Robin Hoods and Unions would be pleased to 
have other teams enter the contest for the trophy." 
Mr. C. G. Blackford, captain of the Ossining (N. Y.) Gun Club, 
informs us that his club will give an all-day live bird and target 
shoot on Labor day (Sept. 2). rain or shine. The holiday shoots 
of this club arc nopular and always well attended. Ossinmg is 
thirty milee from New York City, on the N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. 
The shooting will be sweepstakes. Refreshments on the grounds. 
The brochure issued by the Indians, the tribe of chiefs which 
holds a sun and target "dance at Lake Okoboji, Ta., Aug. 27-30, 
and which, in pleasing verse, treats poetically of the members and 
the forthcoming tournament, is from the pen of Mr. F. C. Riehl, 
of Alton, 111., who is known as Chief Piasa, and holds the oflice 
of Chief Scribe. It may- be obtained on application to him. 
Mr, John Parker's annual international tournament will be held 
at Detroit, Mich.. Oct. 1 to 4, three days of which will be devoted 
to target competition and one day at live birds, and .$300 will be 
added in money and trophies. It will make a three weeks' 
circuit with Cincinnati, O., and St. Thomas, Ont. There will be 
distance handicaps. 
The programme of the all-day shoot of the Portsmouth, N. H., 
Gun Club, to be held on Saturday of this week, has twelve events, 
at 10 and 15 targets alternately. Events 5 and 6, a total of 25 targets, 
constitute the team match. Targets Vfz cents. Lunch served free. 
Loaded shells for safe. All shooters are invited. The president is 
W. E. Storer; the secretary is W. I. Philbrick. 
Mr. W. P. Markel, of the Markel Shot and Lead Works, St. 
Louis, Mo., was a vi.sitor in New York for several days in the past 
week, and made many friends for himself and his company. The 
latter has become a member of the Interstate Association, America's 
most national trapshooting Association. 
The Hudson Gun Club, of Jersey City, N. J., will offer some 
prizes for competition at the club shoots, which will be competed 
for in distance handicaps, and among the members who are men- 
tioned for the back marks are Messrs. Dudley, Schorty, Duke, 
Bock, Hausman and otliers. 
Mr. R. A. Welch is shooting at the great international tournament 
at Namur. On July 24, at 29 meters, |ne-half meter back of tlie 
famous Mackintosh, with whom he divided, Mr. Welch killed 21 
straight. He and Mackinto.sh divided 3,000 francs. There were 
fifty-one. contestants in this event, the Prix de Creppe. 
Mr. John B. Mosby, chairman of the tournament committee, has 
issued a circular letter calling attention to the first annual handi- 
cap tournament of the Cincinnati Gun Club, to be held on Sept. 
24, 25 and 26, and inviting shooters to participate. Mr. Mosby's 
address is 115 E. Second street, Cincinnati, O. 
K 
Mr. H. A. McCoughery, of Greenville, O., announces that the 
Greenville Shot Gun Club, of which he is the secretary, will give 
its regular annual tournament on Oct. 15 and 16. 
Mr. G. G. Williamson, of Muncie, Ind., informs us that the 
dates of the Erie Gun Club's tournament have been changed to 
Oct. 9 and 10. 
Beekabd Waters. 
Dusted or Broken Targfets. 
Since the liiatter of scoring or not scoring to the credit of the 
contestant a dusted target was discussed in Forest and Stream 
much intere.st has been manifested in both by individuals and the 
press. As was to be anticipated in a subject presented from an 
unusual viewpoint, it evoked quite opposite opinions. There was 
the firm conviction of the man whose beliefs were established by 
the long hab'it of thinking over the same thing in the same man- 
ner, under the same conditions, year in and year out; the man 
whose veneration for the thoughts and rulings of his predecessors 
or contemporaries prevented him from having an independent 
thought for himself, and last but not least, the man who was sure 
that there is such a radical difference between a dusted target and 
a broken target that only the latter is worthy of being scored as a 
merit, while to dust a target is the same as to miss it. 
Mr. Will K. Park, trap editor of Sporting Life, while generally 
very sound in his views, particularly on all matters of which he 
writes, in reviewing our comments on the subject, seems to have 
been hasty and superficial in his examination of the matter, for 
surely he cannot fail to perceive on more careful consideration the 
fallacy of his contention. Referring to our comments, he says: 
"The writer then goes on to ask, 'Why shall not a dusted target 
be scored to the shooter?' The reason that the target should not 
be .scored to the shooter is because the prevailing rules say that it 
shall not be. These rules were made years ago by the leaders in 
the sport of clay-pigeon shooting at that time. Afterward the 
Interstate Association appointed a committee to revise the old 
rules and make a set conforming to all occasions of the present 
day. This learned body of practical trap shots decided that a 
shooter, to have a target scored as 'dead,' should break a percep- 
tible piece from it. The Interstate Association made these rules 
for use in their tournaments, and other clubs can adopt them or 
let them alone, or issue a set of rules of their own." 
In reply to the foregoing, it may be cited that a number of 
scientists some centuries ago agreed, that the earth was flat; that 
the sun moves; that witches were a common product, etc. The 
only way in which the world progressed in matters of fancy which 
contravened matters of fact was by changing the matters of fancy, 
for the reason that a fact is eternal. Now, while it is true that 
rules were made years ago by the leaders in the sport, it also is 
true that they have been added to, amended, and changed, and the 
fact, which Mr. Park urges, that "the Interstate Association ap- 
pointed a committee to revise the old rules and make a set con- 
forming to all occasions of the present day," is rather against the 
compliment which he evidently intended to pay the men who were 
leaders in the sport years ago. Continuing, he says: "This learned 
body of practical trap shots decided that a shooter," etc. He 
overlooks the point that the older leaders in the sport had decided 
this matter, and that the committee of the Interstate Association 
did not decide it, but adopted what it considered decided. It is 
hardly to be expected that the Interstate Association or its com- 
mittee considered that its rulings were beyond criticism, or that 
they were to stand imaltered through all the ages. 
In Forest and Stream of last week a member of that com- 
mittee indorsed our views on this point. 
"Any one can make gun club rules, and many clubs have ground 
rules to govern themselves quite different from those in general 
use. In Schuylkill county the rules in live-bird shooting' are 
different from those of any other section. If a club holding a 
tournament decides to give shooters dusted targets, they can do 
so by stating it on their programmes. Then the cry will be 
heard: "Say, referee, I knocked dust from that bird!" just as you 
hear it now: "I got a piece off that target." 
Granting all the foregoing, we fail to perceive what bearing it 
has on a matter of fact. A target is hit or it is not. The rules 
which some club may have on live-bird shooting are not relevant 
or material to the fact. As a matter of every-day shooting ex- 
perience the majority of onlookers at a tournament will agree on a 
target being dusted, whereas there are the most opposing state- 
ments in respect to a perceptible piece, an inaccurate statement 
in itself, for the rules mean a visible piece. A piece may be 
"perceptible" to the sense of touch or smell or taste as well as to 
the eye. He further remarks: 
"In order to govern any sport there must be fixed rules, and the 
one covering dusted targets is a good one. If dusted targets were 
allowed to be scored in the shooters' favor many men would take 
advantage of it bv using a lo34 which wowl4 4«5t the targets even 
if it did not break them. By using l%oz. of No. 9g or 10s, a quick 
shot should dust or break every target thrown for him, while a 
slow .shot would be in exactly the same boat he is in at the present 
time." 
It is well known that No. 9s or 10s are inferior for target break- 
ing, particularly on windy days or in summer when the weather is 
warm and the targets consequently tougher. We do not believe 
that any target shooter in America can use 9s and 10s and perform 
up to his average, even if he cotints both the dusted and broken 
targets broken with them. They will neither dust nor break them, 
to the degree asserted in the foregoing. Even if a quick shot of 
the skill assumed in the foregoing statement were to break every 
target thrown for him (wholly an assumption, by the way), in what 
manner would it be different from the accepted method of scoring? 
The expert practically breaks all, anyway, and very rarely dusts 
one at that. 
"To count dusted targets would be like scoring live birds dead 
when the feathers were knocked out of them; but in live-bird 
shooting a boundary line settles the questioti, and a bird is scored 
lost even if killed stone dead a foot over this line. By the same 
rule a bird is scored dead if gathered within this liiie, even though 
it has but a single toe shot off, and is otherwise strong and 
healthy." 
The foregoing paragraph contains more fallacy than all the rest 
combined. Taking the average of shoots, probably five out of ten 
birds are gathered without being killed. There is no question of 
knocking the feathers off or even a feather. A visible or a. per- 
ceptible piece is in this relation not considered. If one shot tips 
the wing of a bird, it is so crippled that it cannot fly, and the con- 
testant is allowed two or three minutes to chase it about and 
gather it. 
Indeed, there is no question at all under most rules concerning 
whether it was hit at all. The sole consideration is that it be shot 
at when it is ou the wing, and is gathered within bounds. It is 
rather an tinfortunate argument with which to bolster up a con- 
tention for a thoroughly broken target. 
A dusted target is not necessarily one which is hit on the edge 
by an outer jiellet of shot. Any one can go over the grounds after 
a totirnament and pick up numerous targets, well hit, with from 
two to ten shot, and yet which are unbroken. 
The area of a target' presented to the shooter is a variable <ltial»- 
tity. It may be the edge or a large part of its surface; thus it 
may be a matter of chance under such circumstances whether the 
target is dusted, broken or missed. 
The consistency of the target varies with the temperature. What 
is a dusted target in summer might be a broken target in winter 
under precisely sintilar conditions of being hit. 
But, say some of the anti-dusters, the dusted target is not well 
hit, and should not be allowed to score as hein^ equal to the one 
which has a perceptible piece knocked off it. 
Granting that contention for the sake of argument, then the per- 
ceptible piece should not score as bein^ equal to the target which 
is smashed to atoms. If the piece is better than the dust, then 
the .smash must be better than the piece. 
The ruling works a special hardship on the great army of trap- 
shooters who shoot in slow time. 
In conclusion, let any one take 100 cartridges loaded with No. 10 
shot, in a cylinder bore gun or any other gun, shoot at 100 tar- 
gets and report on their advantages. 
Utica, N. Y., Aug. 18. — You seem to doubt that targets cannot 
be dusted purposely. I will wager $25 that I can furnish a man 
who can score 90 or better in 100, if you couttt dust, and not 
break over 50 per cent. ; inclosed find $5 forfeit. It is not really 
fair, for it is a sure thing. 
In last week's issue you call me to account for saying "If it is 
right to score a dusted target, it is right to score a feathered 
pigeon," and call it an unfortunate referepce in support of my 
argument. I mean exactly what I say. If it is right to score 
a dusted target, it is right to score a feathered pigeon. 
At best target shooting is only a makeshift for field and pigeo^i 
shooting, as I will prove by the following: 
When the game season was closed and the shooters had shot 
vip all the old bottles and tin cans they could get a Mr. Buzzy 
resurrected what was known as the gyro pigeon, that was wound , 
up and flew a zig-zag course, and when hit hard would fall as a 
wounded bird would. Then came in at near the order named: 
Tin pigeon, glass ball, Payne's feather-filled ball, Ligowsky 
pigeon, Knoxville black bird, Peoria black bird, blue rock. Key- 
stone pigeon, king bird, dickey bird, bat, red bird, and coast 
pigeon, and what the above inventors claimed for their product, 
Mr. Cadi, was that they as nearly as possible represented pigeon, 
and field shooting; and whoever heard of bagging a prairie 
chicken, quail, partridge, snipe, or duck, by getting a feather? 
Same thing as scoring dust from a target. 
A man who can br^k 20 straight should be protected froin any 
inexperienced referee, by gunning wads for pieces, dust or imag- 
inary dust, and let men show him honor of first place by making 
a target that flies the distance, or beyond a certain boundary; 
say 35 yards from trap, lost, regardless of small pieces of wads, 
dust, or imaginary dust. 
When Paul North was endeavoring to supplant the king bird 
at the New York State tournaments, the chief argument used by 
him in favor of the blue rock was that it was necessary to get 
the blue rock inside the killing circle of the gun to break it, 
while the king bird could be broken by a single pellet. 
The ultimate result was that the king bird had to go and the 
blue rock has the field to itself, showing which bird was best 
appreciated. _ E. D. Fulford. 
LMr. Fulford ignores the fact that a dusted target may be, and 
often is, well hit. A dozen shot may pierce a target, in different 
places within its circumference, and still show only dust as the 
result. Supposing a chunk as large as a half dollar knocked 
off the target's edge, and that- in one case it is a solid piece, and 
in the other case it is ground to dust, wherein is the merit of the 
one hit better than that of the other? 
Supposing, now, that Mr. Fulford's unknown can score over 90 
per cent, by counting dusted targets, he thereby has no advantage, 
tor the reason that 90 per cent, is well within Mr. Fulford's own 
capabilities, when counting smashes as pieces. In a sweepstake, 
his friend would need the extra concession, if such it be, to equal 
Mr. Fulford's abilities. Again, if Mr. Fulford's unknown were to 
perform the feat, would it not prove thereby that it could be 
done quite as well without a bet, as with one. Why doesn't he 
do it? 
That the firs*- attempts at trap shooting were in close imitation 
of field shooting is conceded ; but there came a time when it 
ceased to imitate, and became a specialty by itself. When the 
first railroad was devisevd and installed, the cars were tsuilt in 
imitation of coaches. The evolution of the coach to tlie modern 
Pullman has been so great that they are now quite distinct, though 
the general principle of using wheels remains the same. Still, no 
one would claim that railroading is a close imitation of coaching. 
Yet, there is in its relation just about the same relationship as be- 
tween field .s-hooting and trap shooting. The latter was evolved 
from the former, and is now a distinct specialty in itself. 
With due respect for Mr. Fulford's opinion, there is no analogy 
whatever between feathering a bird and dusting a target, for the 
reason that one pellet which pierces the very middle of the target 
might produce dust o.nly, while if the middle of the bird were 
pierced in like manner, it would be killed. 
We maintain that there is no similarity between pigeon shooting 
and target shooting on the one hand, and field shooting on the 
other, excepting that a gun is used in each, and we would be 
pleased to discuss the issue on that basis with Mr. Fulford, if he 
will state his affirmative data.] 
Sfaefburne Guq Clob. 
Sherburne, N. Y., Aug. 15.— The shoot of the Sherburne Gun 
Club was not well attended, as it rained all the afternoon. Events 
7, 8, 9 and 10 were shot from the 21yd. mark: 
Events: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 
Targets: 10 15 10 15 10 10 15 10 10 10 
Brown 10 13 S 14 9 9 13 9 10 10 
Wheeler 9 14 10 13 9 7 13 8 9 8 
Paddelford 10 12 10 14 9 9 12 8 8 9 
Palmiter 7 11 9 IS - 8 8 13 9 9 8 
Kendall 9 13 8 11 8 8 14 8 8 8 
Lewis 8 15 8 ll 7 10 12 7 9 9 
Bonney 9 10 9 10 8 9 13 9 10 8 
P Adams S 8 6 10 7 5 U .. 8 10 
J Adams S 9 3 U 7 6 .. .. 6 7 
Dally 8 15 9 9 14 9 8 % 
Stevens 8 9 5 9 10 9 7 & 
Peet 9 12 9 14 10 8 9 
Stanton S 10, 5 6 .. 
Ciuttendon 3 8 6 7 3 10 10 6 3 ,. 
Plumb ,., .. .. 7 7 9 
Smith >, I f ^ ...> ■ ■ ■ . . : . . , . . , 8 \ \ 
J, F. Pacbblforo, 
