Dec. 20, 1913. 
FOREST AND STREAM 
797 
Forest and Stream is an Honorary Member of the Interstate Association for the Promotion of T rapshooting. 
Nemours (Ladies) Gun Club. 
Wilmington, Delaware, December, 11, 1913. 
The bleak, wintry atmosphere of Wednesday after¬ 
noon did not keep eleven enthusiastic women shooters of 
the Nemours Gun Club from taking their places at the 
traps on the Du Pont Gun Club grounds. 
The shooting by Mrs. O. B. Clark was the feature of 
the day—she was high gun, scoring 19 breaks out of 25 
targets shot at. Her good work showed that she is again 
assuming her old form after the discouragement she has 
experienced since changing guns some weeks ago. 
Mrs. Clark captured Class A prize, a beautiful hand 
painted ivory fan, donated to the club by their honor¬ 
ary member, Mrs. Adolph Topperwein, the greatest 
woman shot in the world. 
With her handicap Mrs. Clark also won the Ramsay 
Trophy for the second time. So far, she and Miss 
Hammond are the only members of the club who have 
held the medal for more than one week. The final shoot 
for this trophy will be held • the last Wednesday in 
December, and as there are three more shoots and 
several other members of the club have already held 
it for one week, there is a possibility of there being 
a number in the shoot-off for final possession. 
The B Class prize, a beautifully bound volume en¬ 
titled “Book of Sport,” which Mr. Fred E. Pond, 
editor of the Sportsmen’s Review, donated to the club 
was won by Mrs. E. L. Riley. 
Mrs. Harry White with her usual happy smile 
despite the fact that she was obliged to use a strange 
gun that did not quite fit, carried off the Class C prize, 
an embossed Fabrikoid pillow top, given by Mr. W. 
J. Pumphrey, of the Fabrikoid Department, of the E. 
I. Du Pont Co. 
The beginners who came out Wednesday afternoon, 
Mrs. D. R. Rutter, Miss J. F. Duncan and Mrs. C. A. 
Stiles astonished every one by the way they handled 
their guns and they promise to make mighty good shoot¬ 
ers in a little while. 
Scores with handicaps follow: 
Mrs. O. B. Clark . 
Miss H. D. Hammond . 
Miss J. P. Hirst . 
Miss M. R. Woodman . 
Mrs. J. R. Bradley . 
Mrs. F. W. Wilson . 
Mrs. Harry White . 
Mrs. E. L. Riley . 
Beginners: 
Miss T. F. Duncan . 
Mrs. D. R. Rutter . 
Mrs. C. A. Stiles . 
Score. 
Hdc 
. Totai. 
• 19 
14 
25 
S 
21 
II 
21 
12 
23 
• 9 
4 
13 
1.3 
! 9 
• S 
16 
21 
• 7 
14 
21 
Broke. 
Shot at 
•• 3 
14 
10 
•• 5 
13 
Youghiogheny Country Club. 
McKeesport, Penna., December 8, 1913. 
Saturday afternoon proved a beautiful day for trap 
shooting at the Youghiogheny Country Club. A number 
showed up early and indulged in some practice shoot¬ 
ing before the regular 50 bird event. 
T. W. Wilson carried off the honors in the practice 
shoot, dividing with N. W. Good as a second to Dr. 
Heisey in the regular 50 bird event. 
Practice shoots resulted as follows: 
1st Event: 25 Birds—N. W. Good, 15; J. W. Wilson, 
19; W. A. Cornelius. 10; E. S. Cooper, 10. 
2nd Event: 25 Birds—Cornelius, 14; J. W. Wilson, 
19- 
3rd Event: Good, 14 out of 24; Cornelius, 11 out of 
22; J. W. Wilson, 12 out of 25; E. S. Cooper, 2 out 
of 25. 
4th Event: Cornelius, n; Wilson. 24; Harry Clay, 
11; Wm. Clay, 15; Sword, 1 out of 5; Heisey, 10 straight. 
In the so Bird Contest. 
ist Event. 
2nd Event. 
Total. 
Dr. Heisey . 
25 
47 
J. W. Wilson _ 
17 
38 
N. W. Good . 
. 17 
21 
38 
Wm. Clay .. 
. i8 
19 
37 
J. A. C'. Sword .. 
18 
34 
H. N. Pendleton .. 
15 
3i 
Dr. Jordan . 
16 
29 
W. A. Cornelius .. 
14 
28 
Jas. Simpson . 
. 15 
13 
28 
H. C. Clay . 
10 
24 
E. S. Cooper . 
. 7 
6 
13 
Waukesha Gun Club. 
Waukesha, Wis., Dec. 7.—Following is the result of 
the regular weekly shoot of the Spring City Gun Club 
at Waukesha Beach to-day, out of a possible 25: Merkle- 
stone, 15, 18, 15, 13; Wolf, 14, 17; Frizz, 18; Jackson, 11, 
12; Williams, 16, 17; Smith, 12, 14. The weather man 
took the lid off the winter weather. Thank the Lord, 
it’s off. ’Nuff said. 
HOMER E. WHITE, Secretary. 
If you could reach every possible customer 
with one advertisement—and if people didn’t for¬ 
get, and if competitors weren’t constantly bidding 
for business—there might be no object in “keep¬ 
ing everlastingly at it.” 
Advertising enables the corporation, the 
manufacturer or private individual to take their 
cases directly to the public, and to secure the 
public’s judgment on their policies, or their char¬ 
acters, based purely upon their respective merits. 
C70R your boy’s Christmas, Mr. 
Sportsman, a .22 Repeater and 
let it be a Remington-UMC. 
Now, at the start of his rifle shoot- 
ing, is the time to establish his standards in arms and ammunition. 
It is the time to teach him respect for a fine rifle—to show 
him that the signs of thoroughbred character in a rifle are 
accuracy, balance and “feel , workmanship, the Remington-UMC 
dependability for the work the rifle is designed to do. 
The Remington-UMC .22 Repeater is slide action and hammerless 
—solid breech— safe. It shoots .22 short, .22 long and .22 long 
rifle cartridges. 
For heavier service, there is a new Remington-UMC .22 Repeater 
—the “Special” model. It shoots a special cartridge, with great penetra¬ 
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And in single-shot rifles, there are two Remington-UMC models, 
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Look for the dealer in your community who displays the Red Ball mark of 
Remington-UMC, the sign of Sportsmen’s Headquarters. He specializes 
in Remington-UMC Rifles and Metallic Cartridges—the sure-fire metallics 
with the Red Ball Mark on every box. 
Remington Arms-Union Metallic Cartridge Company 
299 Broadway, New York, N. Y. 
