Nov. 29, 1913. 
FOREST AND STREAM 
69J 
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. 
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. J_. Hubbard, Sec’y. 
June 22-24.—Billings, Mont.—Montana State tourna¬ 
ment, under auspices Billings R. and G. C. C. M. 
Ray, Pres. 
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, bec’y-Treas. 
Aug. ;.—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. 
Oct. 6-7. — Medford, Okla.—Medford Gun Club. I. V. 
Hardy, Secretary. 
Drivers’ and Twisters’ Trap 
If you fellows have any respect for the feelings 
of a trap editor you will hike your scores along so 
they will hit this office Monday morning and avoid keep¬ 
ing said trap editor up all night. Our forms close 
Monday night, instead of Tuesday as of yore, and 
we do not want your event to be omitted—too many 
people want to know what you are doing. Have your 
score pulled in duplicate and send me the “doop”—I’ll 
do the rest. C. Q. D., S. O. S. or help is spelled in 
this appeal—Do you get me? 
Note that Archduke Francis Ferdinand, heir to Aus¬ 
trian throne, has challenged King Edward of England 
to a pheasant match. The King is said to be handier 
with the scatter gun than is the Duke, who is a rifle 
expert, so that if the dope works right it will be in 
order for Happy Hammond to write King Edward to 
shoot him for Delaware State championship. 
W. G. BEE-CROFT. 
Annual Meeting Interstate Association 
Pittsburgh, Pa., November 20, 1913. 
Editor Forest and Stream Publishing Company. 
The annual meeting of the stockholders of 
the Interstate Association for the encouragement 
of trap shooting will be held on the fourth day 
of December, 1913, at 10 o’clock in the morning, 
at the office of the association with the Corpora¬ 
tion Trust Company, 15 Exchange Place, Jersey 
City, New Jersey, for the purpose of electing a 
board of directors, receiving and acting upon re¬ 
ports of the officers, and for the transaction of 
such other business as may properly come before 
the meeting. 
E. REED SHANER, Secretary. 
Dwight Gun Club Shoot 
Dwight, Ills., November 21, 1913. 
Dwight Gun Club held another successful shoot. 
While a large number of local members were unable 
to attend owing to husking being under way still quite 
a number of visitors from other towns were present and 
some very good scores were made. Chas. McWilliams 
carried off the honors for the day with high score of 
94 out of 100. M. Knuessell of Ottawa was second with 
93 while S. Hoge of Morris took third honors with 92. 
Scores of those who shoot threw the regular pro¬ 
gram : 
C. D. McWilliams, 94; M. Knuessell, 93; S. Hoge, 
92; Mat Mathisen, 90; A. J. Stauber, 88; Tom Pershcnik, 
83; F. A. Graper, 84; II. H. Criter, 85; Fred Seaman, 
80; F. Martin, 77, J. Skinner, 72, and A. Skinner, 71. 
A club shoot will be held Thanksgiving afternoon 
beginning at one o’clock. 
Repeating Big Game Rifles 
No need to tell you, Sir, what your needs are in a big 
game ride—ease of handling, dependability, accuracy; 
repeating mechanism simple and positive in action; the 
balance and “feel” that all but snaps the ride up to the 
should'er of its own accord. 
But on the question, How can I be sure of getting these features, we 
have a word or two of counsel to offer. In brief, it is—Get a 
Remington-UMC. 
If you want a slide action repeater—Get the new High Power Slide 
Action Remington-UMC. This new Remington-U MC model origi¬ 
nated with the suggestion of a group of big game hunters, and several 
hundred are already in use. It is made in .25, .30 and .32 Rem. cali¬ 
bres—Remington-UMC ordnance steel barrel and standard Remingmn- 
UMC slide action specially designed for heavy service. 
Or if you prefer the autoloading principle—you should certainly know 
the Remington-UMC Autoloader. Five-shot repeater, operated by the 
recoil. Always a shot ready for the emergency—for the cripple, for 
the deer that is getting away, or charging beast that threatens to be 
troublesome if you don’t get him quick. 
Whether your arm is a Remington-UMC or any other standard 
make, whatever its calibre and the load you need, you want Rem¬ 
ington-UMC metallics—not because they are necessarily stamped 
with the same name as your firearm, but because they give more 
accurate results. 
This Company has been making ammunition for fifty years. We 
produce metallics for every standard make of arm—and every 
Remington-UMC cartridge is tested in the arm for which it is made. 
Remington Arms-Union Metallic Cartridge Co. 
299 BROADWAY, NEW YORK 
