Sis 
FOREST AiSTt) STREAM. 
[May 3, iQoi. 
WESTERN TRAPS. 
The Pigeon Crusade in Chicago, 
Chicago, 111., April 26. — Whether we shall have a meeting of the 
Illinois State Sportsmen's Association in Chicago this coming 
rr.cnth is to-day a matter of very much doubt, If we do, it is 
entirely likely that it cannot be held, so far as the shooting is con- 
cerned, anywhere near Chicago, except upon some one of the three 
race tracks, Roby, Worth or Harlem, which might afford grounds 
suitable and accessible enough for a pinch, and which would be 
outside the city limits of Chicago. 
The basis of the action against pigeon shooting here is to be 
made a city ordinance forbidding the using of firearms inside the 
city limits. As this would prohibit the use of rifles or pistols in 
killing cattle at the stock yards, there will be introduced, and in 
all likelihood passed, at the next council meeting, Monday night, 
a special ordinance forbidding the shooting of birds within the 
city limits. This would forbid shooting at the historic ground of 
Watson's Park. It would also forbid -the Sunday duck shooting in 
the Calumet Lake region, but it is stated that this part of the 
ordinance will not be enforced. Therefore the pigeon shooters will 
be stopped of their sport, although the duck shooters will not. 
A committee of sportsmen will wait upon Mayor Harrison, and 
some members of the Council on the morning of next, Monday, and 
try to persuade them that the ordinance is one which ought not to 
be passed. At present it is in the hands of the Judiciary Commit- 
tee, and is said to be sure to pass, though that of course cannot 
be called a fact until it happens. 
The Chicago Arrests. 
On last Saturday four members of the Audubon Club, Messrs. 
John H. Amberg, Geo. R. Thorne, J. M. Sellers and N. L. Hoyt, 
were arrested at Watson's Park during the progress of the regular 
club shoot. The arrests were made ostensibly by the humane 
society of the S. P. C. A., but really by a representative of the 
Chicago American, the latter paper having pushed the war against 
pigeon shooting here, at Kansas City and at Council Bluffs, where 
the Elliott-Crosby race was shot yesterday. The warrants here 
charged a violation of a city .ordinance and also cruelty, etc. The 
preliminary hearing was held this week at Justice Biff Hall's 
court the cases being continued till May 1, the gentlemen being 
released on $600 bail each. It is quite likely that nothing will 
come of these suits, for Justice Hall is a good fellow, a sportsman, 
and withal a newspaper man who knows how much there is to 
newspaper enterprise. He will do about what is right, and the 
gentlemen thus annoyed will not be iurther needlessly annoyed. 
The actual result of these cases, however, will not be the worst blow 
which the sport will receive here. It is certain that by means of 
an appeal to popular ignorance there is going to be a hot cam- 
paign pushed against the sport on live-bird shooting in Chicago, 
under municipal regulations, until such time comes as makes it 
possible to carry it into the Legislature where a bill is almost 
certain to be introduced, whether passed or not, remains to be 
seen. 
Ohio has passed the bill prohibiting live-bird shooting, and it has 
by this time probably received the Governor's signature. It is 
said that following the Council Bluffs shoot a hard push will be 
made to kill the sport in Iowa. Under these circumstances it 
might be among the possibilities that this State also would stop 
live-bird shooting. No one knows what a Legislature, or a city 
council, may do. 
Here is a sample of the writing done by representatives of the 
daily paper chiefly interested in the crusade against live-bird shoot- 
ing in the West. The story is done by Mr. Opie Read. I know 
Mr. Read very well, and believe him to be honest, though of 
very small experience in live-bird shooting. 1 do not think he 
goes shooting very much, though sometimes he goes fishing. A 
good sample of my friend's fine Arkansas style may be seen 
below: 
"Fierce was the north wind, nearly 50 miles an hour, and at the 
springing of the trap, the birds were shot forth upon the current 
of a gale that sent them sailing like arrows. One bird, wounded 
almost unto death, took desperate refuge in a freight car. That 
natural savage, a boy, climbed in, caught the little thing, and 
with a shout of conquest pulled off its head. 
"Another pigeon, flying from the double roar of a man's ar- 
tillery, wounded, and with one leg shot away, attempted to alight. 
Twice it fell almost to the ground, but fluttered back, and on one 
foot sat there, with a death-dimmed eye turned toward its enemies. 
"Not long was it permitted to rest. It was doomed, for the 
Boston market. Sticks and stones were hurled at it. High into 
the air the poor thing flew, and dying with this last effort, fell 
at the feet of a dog. 
"It is not enough to say that the pigeons were listed for the 
market, and that they must have been -killed. It is no excuse to 
assert that it were better to shoot them than brutally to wring their 
heads off. These declarations do not remove nor soften the fact 
that they were wounded, bitten by dogs and then killed. 
"With justice and a love of mercy, we deplore the vanity of 
woman who upon her hat wears the wing of a bird. But that 
vanity of man, boasting of wing shooting skill, is called sport. 
Baker, the great hunter, was at last smitten with remorse, and in 
one of his books he says: 'You could not hire me to murder an- 
other animal.' We censure the Spaniard for bull fighting, and yet 
keep proud score on the slaughter of doves. With the Anglo- 
Saxon the craving of the stomach justifies any act of cruelty to 
animals. Rural butchers chase a bullock with dogs, round and 
round, to make the meat tender. A sportsman would call it in- 
human, and yet he would stand waiting for a beautiful bird to be 
hurled out of a trap, would break its wing, and receiving it from 
the mouth of a dog, would wring its neck. 
"The progress of man is embodied in a sentiment. Revolutions 
react and liberty-loving man, after chopping off the head of a king, 
finds himself ready to kneel at the feet of Napoleon. But in 
sentiment there is true progress, 'and sentiment in a protector of 
birds, the most beautiful and most gracious of nature's gifts. 
"Those 'sportsmen' will be placed on trial. They have not only 
violated the written law; ruthlessly, they have ignored a law not 
written, but alive in mercy's heart. They are recognized as edu- 
cated and refined gentlemen. This adds a deeper color to their 
offense. 
"Of coarseness and ignorance we might have expected such 
wanton cruelty. In their eagerness to stand as skillful marksmen 
they have given countenance to barbarity." 
Of course there is no answer to this sort of thing. It is no use 
talking to good people who see or who know only one side of a 
case, and that their own. If there were any hope of logic or fair- 
ness as weapons against this attitude which is taken by the mis- 
guided folk above mentioned, it might be well to invite their at- 
tention to the chicken lofts of South Water street of this city, 
where thousands of fowls are killed every day. It is known that a 
chicken is best to be picked while it is still alive, wherefore the 
modus adopted is this: A penknife blade is inserted into the 
mouth of the chicken, passing up into the roof of the mouth and 
sometimes into the brain, but then only by accident, the intention 
being to bleed it to death slowly, and not to kill it instantly. 
While the fowl is dying its feathers yield readily to the hand of the 
picker. By the time the feathers are removed the fowl is dead or 
nearly dead. At times fowls escape from the pickers and get out of 
the door or window. They have been seen running on the floors 
or in the street, half-picked. The blood dripped also from their 
mouths, and they suffered, we may believe, quite as much as a 
pigeon smitten with the sudden and numbing gunshot wound. 
Here is a subject for Mr. Read's pen quite as worthy as this 
other which he has undertaken. 
The same newspaper may have seen at the stock yards a half- 
dead hog swim across a tank of boiling water. In short, if it 
cares to go in for humanity, it can find plenty of serious . things 
with which to busy itself for a long time. We shall not descend to 
abuse, not ask why it picks out this particular field for its labors. 
It is its own judge as to the fitness of all that. What is most cer- 
tain is that it will find sportsmen as broad and as soft-hearted and 
as humane men as any it shall discover, search it never so carefully 
all walks of life. 
The sportsman who cuts down a bird in the field goes to it at 
once and retrieves it if he can. The sportsman at the trap should 
do as much. The failure to gather the wounded at any place is 
something which allows too much grounds for a fair charge of 
cruelty and inhumanity. The spectacle of crippled birds perching 
about on the buildings or other adjuncts of the shooting grounds 
is one which ought not to be tolerated, and Mr. Read is right to 
that extent. But this is an abuse of the sport of pigeon shooting— 
an abuse which in some sort has deserved the rebuke which it is 
getting to-day. It has nothing to do with the sport as it is 
generally and ought always to be conducted. Neither the enter- 
prising newspaper which is making this campaign, nor the able 
men it is enlisting to carry its banners therein — and we gain 
nothing by disparaging either the one or the other— can ever set 
aside the original mandate of dominion given to man over the 
animals. Neither can stop the war of beast on beast, of man upon 
man, can efface the principle of life-taking, nor, if we come to 
that, can either eradicate the sporting instinct from the male born. 
We may hope that it may be a long day before the men 
of America cease to be sportsmen, with all the love of the chase in 
their souls, and not a mere namy-pamby, so-called love of nature 
which is not all a love of nature, but merely a love of dollars. 
The outlook for the continuance of live-bird shooting here is 
bad. In time the agitation may quiet down, but the immediate 
consequences are apt to be revolutionary. E. Hough. 
Hartford Building, Chicago, 111. 
Chicago Gun Club. 
Chicago, Hi., April 26. — In the weekly trophy handicap shoot of 
the Chicago Gun Club, 25 targets, added targets to shoot at, 
Bowles was first, A. W. Morton was second and Cop was third. 
The scores were: Horn (8 added to shoot at) 18, O'Brien (28) 14, 
Bowles (7) 22, Dr. Morton (6) 16, Walters (8) 17, Cop (2) 19, 
Patrick (10) 15, A. W. Morton (7) 20, Pollard 13,. Dunbar (8) 12, 
Dr. Burckey (14) 17. 
Tie on shoot-off, April 5: Dr. Morton (2) 6 out ef 12, Waters 
(3) 7 out of 12. 
Weekly trophy, cash prize: 
Horn, 4 0111110011011000010 —10 
Bowles, 4 1111111111111111011 —15 
Dr Morton, 3 110110110011111101 —13 
Walters, 5 0111000000110111110 —10 
Cop, 1 1111110111101101 —13 
Patrick, 6 011001100001000101100 —8 
A W Morton, 4 1101010111111101111 —15 
*Pollard llOllllllllOlll —13 
Dunbar, 5 101)01011001001001101 — 9 
Dr Burckey, 8 10111000101111111101101—15 
*Guest. 
"Water town Gun Club. 
Watertown, Mass., April 19.— There was a large attendance at 
the Watertown Gun Club grounds to-day, including a number of 
ladies. The targets were thrown at top speed, so the showing in 
the 30-target club shoot was all that could be expected. Fairbanks 
was high with 23, and Thomas a close second with 22. Scores as 
follows : 
Events : 
Targets : 
Hodsdon 5 
H Philbrook 6 
W Neill 3 
Page 6 
Hill 8 
C Philbrook 7 
Emerson 5 
Sears 3 
Bui lard 9 
Wilson 1 
H Atwood 5 
Fairbanks 10 
O'Neil 6 
Perkins 4 
Evans , , , . 1 
123456789 
10 10 10 15 15 10 10 20 25 
7 6 
6 5 
9 
10 
11 
20 
13 
7 9 
5 8 
8 . 5 
7 5 
7 "9 
3 7 
9 10 
10 14 
9 
6 
8 
6 
'a* 
2 
4 
9 
10 
6 14 17 
10 
10 
'7 
7 
10 
6 
4 16 18 5 
7 
9 
12 
8 
12 10 
3 4 
11 6 
5 S 
W Atwood 4 
Fogg 6 
Thomas 5 
Cole 1 
J.ones 3 7 11 6 3 
Shirtliff 9 
Damon 8 . . .\ \2 «_• 
Williams , ,.■ 4 4 .. 5 
Vahey .... r , ... .. 3 
C Smith. , .. .. .. 5 .. .. 3 
Nos. 1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9 and 10, magautrap; Nos. 2, 5 and 8, Sergeant; 
No. 7, gun at hip, unknown pull. 
Prize match, 30 singles — 15 magautrap and 15 Sergeant : 
Fairbanks 111111111111011001110011100111- ft 
Thomas 111111101110011011100111011011—22 
Bullard 111001111011000100011111110100—18 
Page 011001011111010010101110011011—18 
O'Neil 111110011111000011101111100000— IS 
Jones 01101011101 1111101010011010000—1 7 
W Atwood 111101011111110010001000001101—17 
Fogg 010110101111000101011001111000—16 
Hodsdon 101111100000111101000010111001—16 
H Philbrook 111111000111100010000001011110—16 
H Atwood ....111110010111001000100000001101—14 
Hill OOOmOllOlOlOllOlOlOlllOOOOOO—14 
C Philbrook 000100010101010001001010110111—13 
Emerson 000011101000001000100101110001— 11 
Wilson IIOOIIOIOIOOIOOOIIOOOOOOOOOOOO— 9 
Cole 001000010010000010110000100000— 7 
Osslnlog Gun Club. 
Ossining, N. Y. — To-day, April 26, the main event was for the 
bi-monthly cup, 25 clay birds, handicaps misses as breaks. Bland- 
ford at scratch tied with Washburn, who had an allowance of 3. 
On the shoot-off, same conditions, Blandford won with a score of 23 
to 19. For a consideration the cup was again put up, and was 
this time won by Com. Rohr with a score of 23, including his 
allowance of 10. The wind was blowing strong straightaway, and 
it was only by shooting in fast time that any sort of average could 
be made. 
During the month of May, probably, there will be considerable 
shooting for the medals, the entries for which close May 30. I. 
T, Washburn is first with ten scores of 15 straight; C. Blandford 
second with 7 straight scores, while E. D. Garnsey is third witli 
3 straights. The others who have straight scores to their credit 
are M. Dyckman, D. Brandreth, W. Hall, A. Bedell. This is 
anybody's race yet, for entries are unlimited, and many of the 
shooters have made marked improvement, while their handicaps 
remain the same. 
First cup shoot, 25 clays: C. Blandford (0) 22, T. C. Barlow (3) 
16, I. Washburn (3) 22, A. Rohr (10) 19, W. Coleman (4) 18, W. 
Smith (9) 20, E. Garnsey (5) 18, W. Fisher (3) 19, Dr. Sheehan (7) 
19. Shoot-off: C. Blandford (0) 23, I. Washburn (3) 19. 
Second cup shoot, 25 clays: J. C. Barlow (3) 16, 1. Washburn 
(3) 19, A. Rohr (10) 23, W. Coleman (4) 18, Dr. Sheehan (7) 18, 
Hans (8) 17, A. Bedell (0) 17, M. Dyckman (4) 17 
Other events: 
Targets: 10 10 10 25 25 25 25 
E D Garnsey 5 7 6 
A Bedell 7 .. .. .'. .1 
C Blandford 5 7 
I Washburn 9 7 
W Reed ... 3 ., .. 
J C Barlow 7 5 . . 13 
W Coleman 9 7 4 
A Rohr 3 
Dr E F Sheehan .. 4 5 
A Aitchison 5 
Hans 4 6 8 18 
M Dyckman 7 6 
Dr Snow , .... 4 3 , 
W Fisher 5 
C. G. B. 
7 21 18 17 23 
10 19 17 20 16 
Pawtuxet Gun Club. 
Pawtuxet, R. I., April 19.— A number of the members of the 
Pawtuxet Gun Club met on the club grounds for a little practice. 
The weather was good, as the scores show. The first regular shoot 
will be held the first Saturday in May, when a series of shoots 
will begin for club prizes, and also a handsome challenge trophy 
will be offered, representing the championship of Kent county. 
W H Sheldon 1001111111111111111111011—22 
1101111111111111111111011—23 
• 1111111110101111111110111—22—67 
J Armstrong 1111110001111111111101111—21 
liiiOHiioiiiiiiimmio— 22 
1101011011111111100111011—19—62 
W Monteith 1100001100010111101111100—14 
1111011101111011000000101—15—29 
H Avers 000110000111011110110001—12 
1001011110111011101100001—15—27 
J R Sheldon... 1110111111111101010111111 -21 
W. H. Sheldon, Sec'y. 
The programme of the Sistersville. W. Va., Gun Club for its 
spring tournament on May 9, provides fourteen events, three at 
10, ten at 15, and one at 20 targets; entrance $1, $1.50 and $2. All 
shooting will be from the 16yd. mark. A magautrap will be the 
medium for throwing the targets. Shooting commences at 9:30. 
Purses divided, 40, 30, 20 and 10 per cent. Messrs. J. McNaught 
and Ed. O. Bower will manage. Lunch served at noon. Loaded 
shells can be obtained on the grounds. 
The Big Nebraska Meet. 
April 22»25. 
Omaha, Neb, — What was probably the best and most successful 
meeting and tournament of the Nebraska State Sportsmen's As- 
sociation _ has been held at Omaha the past week. The features 
contributing to -this end are primarily good location and manage- 
ment, and incidentally, the newly awakened interest in trapshoot- 
mg which is sweeping this year like a tidal wave throughout the 
VV est. 
Omaha has one of the finest shooting parks in the country, of 
which Mr. H. S. McDonald is the presiding genius, backed tip by 
the entire shooting fraternity of the community, with an accord 
delightful to behold. The park is on the Iowa side of the Mis- 
souri River, five minutes' ride from hotels, and lacks no item of 
equipment and convenience. 
The programme called for 170 targets for each of the four days, 
beside the State event, comprising six 15 and four 20 target races. 
To each of these the Association added $12.50, making a total of 
$500 for the week. Division of purses was under the percentage 
plan, four moneys in 15 and five in 20-target events. Targets were 
thrown Sergeant system from two sets of fast expert traps. 
Preliminaries. 
The twenty men comprising the advance guard spent Saturday 
and Monday afternoons at the park, and participated in on im- 
promptu 100-target programme. Saturday Burnside scored high 
with 98 and a run of 82 straight. Gilbert and Spencer were second 
and Crosby third. Monday Crosby was high with 97, Townsend 
second with 93, and Gilbert, Badger and Hirschy each scored 91. 
The scores are here given in detail : 
Events : 
Saturday. 
1 
2 3 4 5 
Broke. 
Garrett 
, 20 
IT Jfi 19 18 
90 
Crosby 
, 19 
19 19 19 19 
95 
Gilbert ... 
, 20 
19 19 20 19 
97 
Burnside. . 
20 
20 20 20 18 
9<S 
Riehl , 
12 
16 15 19 18 
so 
Spencer . . , 
, 19 
IS 20 20 20 
97 
Morrill 
, 15 
19 17 18 18 
88 
Wettleaf . . . 
19 
19 19 20 .. 
Young 
, 13 
Rogers 
, 16 
19 16 16 IS 
85 
Rucker 
, 17 
Goodrich. . . 
16 
17 13 13 15 
74 
Fogg 
13 
18 17 16 . . 
McDonald. 
15 
17 . . . . iy 
Townsend.. 
17 
17 19 17 17 
87 
19 
Kimball . . 
18 15 19 IS 
Hopkins , 
. . 13 7 . . 
18 .. .. 
, . , , 15 14 
Monday. 
1 2 3 4 5 
20 20 19 19 19 
18 20 17 19 17 
17 17 17 18 20 
19 15 20 19 18 
.. 17 20 18 18 20 
...18 
14 18 20 18 16 
Events : 
Crosby . . 
Gilbert ... 
Burnside. . 
Badger . , . 
Hirschy .. 
Dominie 
Spencer 
Heer 18 18 20 
W r ettleaf .. 19 19 18 ... . 
Bray 20 18 19 ... . 
Miller 17 15 
Townsend.. 17 19 18 20 19 
Illian 18 19 18 .. .. 
Riehl 13 18 18 17 18 
Simpson... 17 . . 15 11 16 
Garrett .... 14 20 16 18 20 
Shemwell.. 9 14 13 13 .. 
Lewis 7 15 .. 
Broke. 
97 
91 
89 
91 
91 
86 
93 
84 
88 
Opening Day, April 22. 
To have to sit down on the ground while at the score to avoid 
being carried off your feet is certainly a novel experience, yet this 
is what happened with several of the contestants in the opening 
quarter stretch of this four days' programme. Old citizens of 
Omaha said they never before saw anything like it. The wind 
blew like some mad thing, and carried with it such flurries of 
Missouri River sand that it was at times impossiolc to distinguish 
the figure of a man at seventy paces. It speaks much for . the en- 
thusiasm of Nebraska sportsmen that fifty-seven men endured this 
physical discomfort to participate in the programme, and forty- . 
six stuck through the day. Three events were finished without 
a clear score, and at no time during the day did over half of the 
shooters in any event finish inside the money. Yet a few stood 
up wonderfully well. Billy Crosby lost but 16, Fred Gilbert 17 
and Guy Burnside and White 21 targets each during the day. 
Several big purses were captured by good work in some one event. 
The reader will find much to interest him in a careful perusal of 
the following scores: 
Events : 1 
Targets : 15 
Riehl 9 
Loomis 11 
Gilbert ! 10 
Burnside 11 
Grant 14 
Dominie 11 
Bray 13 
Spencer 13 
Heer 13 
Illian 12 
Cunningham 9 
Capt Monev 10 
H Money 13 
Gottlieb ■ 9 
Townsend 9 
White 11 
Wettleaf 14 
Hinshaw 10 
Kleine 13 
Duncan '. . 10 
Hirschy 12 
Budd 13 
Badger 14 
Cowan 8 
Kimball r ■. 11 
Crosby 12 
Fanning 14 
Waddington 10 
Elliott 12 
McDowell 13 
Burke 10 
Saunders 10 
Simpson 12 
Roberts 14 
M T Miller 12 
Morrill 13 
Moore 12 
Lynch 8 
Lard 9 
, Garrett 12 
Shemwell 12 
Wiggins ., 13 
Norton 8 
McDonald 11 
F Miller 10 
Seviers » 10 
Goodrich 6 
Forney 8 
Fickel 5 
Matson 3 
Simpkins . . . , , 7 
Carter , H 
Parker 11 
Taggert ., • 
Fogg , 
Baldwin 1 • 
Tamne 
Burmeister ... 
Dwork 
2 3 
15 20 
13 11 
8 11 
15 18 
14 18 
12 16 
8 14 
14 20 
13 17 
15 18 
10 13 
11 17 
11 12 
10 11 
15 17 
8 9 
13 16 
11 14 
12 20 
14 17 
13 14 
15 16 
12 16 
13 15 
11 15 
10 14 
14 17 
15 13 
15 8 
12 16 
12 12 
9 14 
12 16 
13 16 
11 8 
13 13 
11 12 
14 16 
12 15 
10 9 
15 11 
12 15 
6 15 
12 12 
9 18 
13 15 
10 15 
9 11 
7 15 
.. 11 
11 6 
14 13 
15 10 
9 11 
.. 11 
4 5 
15 20 
11 10 
8 15 
14 IS 
15 17 
13 15 
12 17 
13 15 
13 14 
12 15 
11 16 
13 14 
12 13 
12 16 
14 IS 
5 7 
15 18 
14 14 
14 17 
13 17 
14 16 
14 IS 
15 18 
10 14 
10 .. 
8 16 
15 19 
13 18 
9 17 
10 14 
11 16 
13 15 
13 9 
10 12 
12 13 
12 13 
13 17 
12 12 
15 15 
12 14 
12 16 
12 12 
8 13 
10 10 
10 15 
12 13 
11 17 
12 12 
12 13 
6 7 
15 15 
13 9 
8 11 
14 14 
13 13 
14 12 
15 9 
14 14 
13 14 
14 13 
13 14 
13 10 
11 11 
14 13 
10 12 
7 10 
14 13 
13 15 
14 13 
5 11 
14 13 
14-9 
14 12 
13 11 
14 \2 
15 13 
15 11 
10 9 
13 12 
11 10 
12 8 
13 13 
13 11 
12 8 
12 11 
9 13 
11 14 
13 9 
12 7 
11 15 
11 10 
11 14 
9 .. 
12 12 
10 11 
10 11 
10 10 
6 .. 
8 9 10 
20 15 20 
15 11 14 
11 11 12 
19 14 17 
18 12 18 
15 11 IS 
17 14 16 
18 12 12 
19 12 19 
IS S 14 
17 11 15 
15 9 20 
13 8 14 
18 13 17 
14 12 14 
10 9 7 
20 11 18 
17 13 17 
19 12 16 
14 8 14 
17 7 14 
18 13 15 
15 11 17 
16 13 20 
.. .. 16 
16 10 17 
15 11 20 
16 13 IS 
16 .. .. 
19 11 16 
19 11 16 
15 12 14 
13 11 18 
14 8 15 
17 7 14 
14 6 14 
14 11 11 
15 12 12 
15 9 12 
14 .. .. 
19 10 17 
16 13 15 
14 10 14 
16 "8 16 
17 10 16 
14 11 18 
12 11 14 
Broke. 
116 
106 
153 
149 
140 
133 
145 
147 
140 
132 
131 
115 
137 
135 
81 
149 
142 
147 
129 
132 
144 
141 
139 
128 
154 
146 
i.35 
131 
120 
128 
125 
117 
120 
124 
130 
123 
138 
128 
118 
127 
127 
127 
112 
12 9 7 11 17 6 11 
13 13 10 8 10 10 18 
12 15 13 11 16 12 13 
11 14 12 
12 11 10 13 12 9 10 
. , 13 8 10 15 10 
12 12 8 7 11 9 , , 
... . 11 15 9 17 
7 12, 
12 12 
91 
116 
128 
April 23, Second Day. 
All trace of the storm was past Wednesday morning, except a 
skim of ice left on the surface of open water. The sun shone clear 
and warm, and it proved a very pleasant day; so much so that the 
entry list jumped ten names, to sixty-nine, and all averages were 
much higher. Gilbert finished first, Crosby second, Badger third 
and Wettleaf fourth for the day. Scores follow: 
Events: 1234567S9 10 
Targets: 15 15 20 15 20 15 15 20 15 20 Broke. 
Loomis 12 12 12 13 17 10 12 14 12 18 132 
Riehl 12 12 12 10 20 15 14 20 14 19 158 
Gilbert 14 15 18 15 20 14 14 20 15 19 164 
Burnside 13 15 17 14 18 14 14 20 13 19 157 
Kimball 14 13 16 13 17 12 13 17 15 18 148 
Dominie 10 9 16 13 16 13 13 IS 12 18 138 
Brav 13 13 18 15 16 12 14 17 11 18 147 
'Spencer 12 14 17 15 IS 15 12 20 15 20 158 
Heer 13 15 17 15 17 14 13 17 14 16 151 
Illian 11 15 13 13 15 5 15 18 12 15 132 
Cunningham 14 11 17 13 13 14 12 19 14 18 145 
Capt Money 9 10 17 13 17 14 11 16 10 17 134 
H Monev 11 14 18 14 19 14 13 19 15 19 156 
Slob ." 13 12 17 12 15 12 13 15 10 19 138 
Townsend 12 11 16 15 16 14 13 19 12 18 146 
White 11 11 17 15 15 15 13 19 14 18 148 
