NOV. 22, 1913. 
FOREST AND STREAM 
661 
Forest and Stream is an Honorary Member of the Interstate Association for the Promotion of Trapshooting. 
Fixtures. 
If you want your? shoot to be announced here, 
send a notice like the following: 
REGISTERED TOURNAMENTS. 
Nov. 27.—Milwaukee, Wis.—National Home G. C. P. 
G. Hoefling, Sec’y. 
Dec. 1-5.—St. Thomas (Ont.) G. C. W. J. McCance, Mgr. 
1914. 
Jan. 21-24.—Pinehurst (N. C.) Country Club. Leonard 
Tufts, Sec’y. 
March 17.—Chapman (Kans.) G. C. H. Wadick, Sec’y. 
May 5-6.—Dodge City, Kans.—Kansas State tournament, 
auspices of Dodge City G. C. H. L. Hubbard, Sec’y. 
June 22-24.—Billings, Mont.—Montana State tourna¬ 
ment, under auspices Billings R. and G. C. C. M. 
Ray, P.res. 
July 1.—Catasauqua, Pa.—Bryden G. C. E. C. Jones, Sec. 
July 4.—Roanoke (Va.) G. C. E. W. Poindexter, Sec’y. 
July 4.—Richmond, Va.—West End G. C. M. D. Hart, 
Sec’y. 
July 4.—Syracuse, N. Y.—hunters’ Club, of Onondaga 
County. Chas. H. Stannard, Sec’y-Treas. 
Aug. 5.—Gouverneur (N. Y.) R. and G. C. W. R. Pat- 
trick, Sec’y. 
Se^t. 7.—Ogdensburg (N. Y.) S. A. J. M. Morley, Sec’y. 
Sept., 7-8.—Roanoke, Va.—Virginia State tournament, 
under auspices Roanoke G. C. E. W. Poindexter, 
Sec’y. 
PHILADELPHIA TRAPSHOOTERS’ LEAGUE. 
Dec. 6.—Meadow Spring at S. S. White; Du Pont at 
Glen Willow; Camden at Highland, and Clearview at 
Lansdale. 
Jan. 3.—Glen Willow at Meadow Spring; Lansdale 
at Camden; Highland at Clearview, and S. S. White at 
Du Pont. 
Jan. 24.—Lansdale at Meadow Spring; Du Pont at 
Highland; S. S. White at Camden, and Clearview at 
Glen Willow. 
Feb. 7.—Meadow Spring at Highland; Du Pont at 
Lansdale; S. S. White at Clearview, and Camden at 
Glen Willow. 
March 7.—Meadow Spring at Du Pont; Highland at 
Lansdale; Glen Willow at S. S. White, and Camden at 
Clearview. 
Drivers’ and Twisters’ Trap 
A writer in Sportsman’s Review makes an excellent 
suggestion i.e.: “Why not have each shooter at big 
shoots labeled on the back with the name of his home 
town.” Let’s go further and have the name of the 
shooter on the label, for what’s the use of asking 
“whence come you” if you don’t know the name of 
him who honors that peace. 
As trap shooting grows more and more popular it 
brings out a greater grand stand, severally comprised 
of persons unacquainted with the different shooters. 
“Who’s that” says she. “That’s Mel Hawkins” says he; 
and maybe it’s Bart Lewis or John Skelly or some 
other “break ’em all” frequenter of the cracker line. 
No escort likes to be stumped and as he doesn’t know 
the shooter, can see the score sheet ana has no label 
to designate the shooter, he mentions the name of some 
one whose picture he has seen in the local paper. 
Then again new shooters waft in from ports unknown 
and even the regulars don’t know from whose family 
tree they are appended. Therefore in lieu of num¬ 
bered programs let’s have name and address, or at 
least the name, of last shooter tacked to the back of his 
“shooting coat.” 
Secretary C. F. Potts of the Sinking Springs Gun Club 
announces a big “white flyer” handicap for the club’s 
ideal shooting grounds at Sinking Springs, five miles 
west of Reading, Penna., and easily reached by the 
Reading railroad or by trolley every twenty minutes 
from Reading. The feature event is at twenty “white 
flyers” $10 entrance, price of birds included in the en¬ 
trance at not more than forty cents a pair, handicap rise 
27 to 30 yards for the live bird championship of Berks 
and adjoining (Chester, Montgomery, Bucks, Lehigh, 
Carbon, Schuylkill, Dauphin, Lebanon and Lancaster) 
counties. Shooting will be started at 10 A. M. and two 
sets of traps will be installed to accommodate the large 
crowd of the devotees of the sport assured the manage¬ 
ment. Eight hundred “white flyers” have been con¬ 
tracted for by the committee and will be fresh country 
flyers that will lose no time in getting started when 
once liberated from the trap. A warm dinner will be 
served by Steward Hainly at noon, a regular New Eng¬ 
land turkey dinner with all the palatable side dishes done 
up to the Queen’s taste. Any information or a program 
desired will be cheerfully furnished by addressing C. F. 
Potts, Sinking Springs, Penna. 
Reclassify Rifle Teams 
Rifle teams representing the various universities in 
the Intercollegiate Rifle League are to be re-classed this 
winter. The United States War Department and the 
National Rifle Association are responsible for the new 
classification for competing teams in the gallery shoot¬ 
ing championship of the United States. Formerly there 
were two divisions, designated as the Eastern League 
and the Western League, but the scheme has been 
changed so that now the classification will be according 
to the record of efficiency. There still remain two divi¬ 
sions, of which one will be known as Class A and the 
other as Class B. The standing of the different college 
teams at the present time under the new ruling is based 
1913 Honor Roll Still Growing 
Two More Winnings by Shooters 
of Remington:UMC Guns and Shells 
Arizona State Championship— State Champion- Louisiana State Championship Won by R. L. 
ship Medal, won by J. F. Conts, 49 x 50 , shooting Morris, 94 x 100 , with Remington-UMC Pump 
Remington-UMC Pump Gun. Gun and Arrow Steel Lined Speed Shells. 
Other Important Remington-UMC Victories of Year 
Western Handicap —Won by C. A. Gunning, 100 straight, shooting Reming¬ 
ton-UMC Pump Gun and Nitro Club Speed Shells. 
Southern Handicap —Won by Frank Joerg, 98 ex 100, shooting Remington- 
UMC Pump Gun and Arrow Speed Shells. 
National Doubles Championship —Won by Geo. L. Lyon, 94 ex 50 pairs— 
World's Record—shooting a Remington-UMC Pump Gun and Arrow 
Speed Shells. 
Nortli Carolina State Championship —Won by J. B. Pennington, 91 ex 100, 
shooting a Remington-UMC Pump Gun and the Speed Shells. 
Florida State Championship —Won by D. W. Budd, 93 ex 100, with Reming¬ 
ton-UMC Autoloading Shotgun and Arrow Speed Shells. 
Amateur Trap Shooting Championship of the United States —Won by Chas. 
H. Newcomb, 179 ex 200, with Arrow Speed Shells. 
Oklahoma State Championship —-Won by Thos. J. Hartman, 47 ex 50, with 
Remington-UMC Speed Shells. 
Georgia State Championship — Won by J. M. Barrett, 98 ex 100, with Rem¬ 
ington-UMC Pump Gun and Arrow Speed Shells. 
Kansas State Championship —Won by Frank Gray, 47 ex 50, with Reming¬ 
ton-UMC Speed Shells. 
Pennsylvania State Championship —Won by R. J. Budd, 416 ex 450, with 
Remington-UMC Pump Gun, and Nitro Club Steel Lined Speed Shells. 
Kentucky State Championship —Won by J. D. Gay, 98 ex 100, with Reming¬ 
ton-UMC Speed Shells. 
Maritime Provinces Championship —-Won by E. B. Allen, 342 ex 400, with 
Remington-UMC Pump Gun and Nitro Club Shells. 
New York State Championship — Won by J. D. Green, 520 ex 550, with Rem¬ 
ington-UMC Speed Shells. 
West Virginia State Championship —Won by J. R. Shepherd, 96 ex 100, with 
Remington-UMC Pump Gun. 
Maine State Championship —Won by Ernest A. Randall, 98 ex 100, with 
Remington-UMC Speed Shells. 
Vermont State Championship —Won by F. E. Adams, 93 ex 100, with Rem¬ 
ington-UMC Pump Gun. 
Mississippi State Championship —-Won by Ward Allen, 24 ex 25, with Rem¬ 
ington-UMC Autoloading Shotgun. 
Wisconsin Slate Championship —Won by W. J. Raup, 94 ex 100, with Rem¬ 
ington-UMC Pump Gun and Nitro Club Speed Shells. 
Connecticut State Championship —Won by W. R. Newsome, 97 ex 100, with 
Remington-UMC Speed Shells. 
Michigan State Championship —Won by M. E. Lansing, 97 ex 100, with Rem¬ 
ington-UMC Autoloading Shotgun. 
South Dakota State Championship — Won by W. H. Nelson, 24 ex 25, with 
Remington-UMC Autoloading Shotgun. 
Alabama State Championship —Won by John R. Livingston, 97 ex 100, shoot¬ 
ing Remington-UMC Arrow Speed Shells. 
Indiana State Championship —Won by C. A. Edmondson, 290 ex 300, shoot¬ 
ing Remington-UMC Pump Gun and Nitro Club Speed Shells. 
Montana State Championship- —Won by J. C. Norris, 445 ex 465, shooting 
Remington-UMC Pump Gun and Arrow Speed Shells. 
Westy Hogan Handicap —Won by L. W. Colquitt, 93 ex 100, and 17 ex 20 in 
shoot-off at 19yds., shooting Remington-UMC Steel Lined Speed Shells. 
California State Championship —Won by W. E. Staunton, 70 ex 70, shooting 
Remington-UMC Arrow Steel Lined Speed Shells. 
These winners in their choice of Remington-UMC followed in the foot steps of 14 out of 20 winners of 
Grand American Handicaps, 26 out of 35 winners of Interstate Handicaps. 
REMINGTON ARMS —UNION METALLIC CARTRIDGE CO., 299 BROADWAY, NEW YORK 
