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Bargar . 
\V. C. WooTTON, Sec’y. 
Bon Air G. C. 
P^TTSPU-B'-,;’, Pa., June 14.—Garland shot 25 straight 
)ii a Wfi-or. The following are the scores made to-day; 
Marshall . 42 
Whalen . 3.- 
Shirling . 35 
Gray . 35 
Milh-r .. 
t! nland 
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34 
45 
35 
39 
32 
Fort Pitt Rifles. 
Pittsburgh, Pa., June 21.—Fort Pitt riflemen shot 
ia the 1000-yard match on the Highland range yesterday 
afternoon. Adverse weather conditions prevailed during 
the match, preventing high scores. First place was taken 
by T. C. Beal with the score of 47, very good, con¬ 
sidering conditions, followed by H. E. Arthurs and P. 
Paulson, each with the score of 44, Arthurs’ score out¬ 
ranking Paulson’s. Very little shooting was done at the 
shorter ranges, owing to the incessant rain. The club 
will hold two events next Saturday, 20yds. surprise fire 
and 50yds. revolver matches. The scores: 
lOOO-Yard match: 
T C Beal . 3 
H E Arthurs . 4 
P Paulsen . 4 
E B Fisher .‘•‘.4 
Dr D A Atkinson . 4 
G A Snyder . 0 
Granville Teter . 4 
James McGlashan . 5 
Dr R V Swanton . 4 
George S Bassett, Jr. 0 
Dr E A Waguaman . 2 
R S Everett . 0 
200-Yard record—Dr. D. 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 
4 
5 
5—47 
5 
5 
4 
4 
5 
3 
5 
4 
5—44 
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3 
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5 
3 
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5 
4 
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5 
5 
5 
3 
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4 
4 
4 
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4 
4 
4 
3 
3 
5 
5 
5 
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5 
3 
5 
5 
5 
5 
3 
5 
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5 
4 
4 
5 
2 
4 
3 
5 
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5 
4 
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5 
0 
5 
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4 
5 
3 
3 
4 
5 
3 
4 
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3 
2 
4 
3 
4 
3 
5 
5 
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0 
0 
3 
4 
3 
4 
5 
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3 
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5-27 
, Atkinson 
46, 
G. 
Teter 45, 
F. B. Fisher 42, R. S. Everett 40, H. E. Arthurs 40, H. 
N. Hamilton 37. 
500-Yard record—G. A. Snyder 47. 
50-Yard revolver—Dr. D. A. Atkinson, 94, 92, 89, 88, 
88, 82. 
Aggies Win Intercollegiate. 
Washington, D. C., June 21.—Massachusetts Agri¬ 
culture College, with a record of 825 out of the pos¬ 
sible 900, won the ninth annual competition on outdoor 
ranges for the intercollegiate rifle shooting championship 
of the United States from the other nine competing uni¬ 
versities and colleges. Harvard, the present holder of 
the championship trophy, finished second with 791. 
Gems from the Tombs. 
une 21. — The following scores were made to-day: 
- .jife . 25 Freedman . ' . '• 
■, halen" . 45 M. H. Miller, Secy. 
.'herling 
Holland G. C. 
Batavia, N. Y., June 14.— Tomlinson won the Du 
Pont picture, and Brugmann vvon the cut glass trophy for 
I le regular program, after a tie with Gardiner, and three 
:rings of 25 before the decision. The scores: 
Events: 
Targets 
1 
25 
. 18 
2 
15 
12 
3 
15 
14 
4 5 6 7 
25 25 25 25 
19 22 21 24 
. 23 
13 
12 
18 20 .. .. 
. 22 
13 
13 
19 22 21 21 
. 21 
11 
11 
17 18 20 .. 
Gardiner. 
New Hanover G. 
c. 
Wilmington, N. C., June 20.—The following scores 
■ ;re made to-day: 
1 
2 
3 
4 
5 
6 
Targets: 
15 
15 
15 
25 
25 
25 
1 otal. 
•li ant . 
. 12 
14 
19 
24 
23 
24 
116 
Dieher . 
. 15 
14 
16 
45 
. 12 
13 
17 
42 
. 9 
13 
17 
39 
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17 
12 
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34 
Chicago G. C. 
C: ICAGO, Ill., June 21.—L. M. Fetherston led to-day, 
ng 92 which, with his added handicap of 4, 
r-d him 96. C. F. Stenner copped second place by 
kmg 89. plus a handicap of 6, which gave him 95; 
Cannon (33) 92; J. G. Parke (15) 71. 
SEND IN YOUR SCORES. 
Continued from page 819. 
E. ' Cole, of Ossining, N. Y. He has sent in 
th- following good scores, 30 arrows at 40 yards, 
whi.h he has recently made: 30-214, 30-214, 30- 
72 '; .30-214, 30-218, 30-220, 30-226. 
With 30 arrows at 50 yards—a range at 
V . : .h he has practiced but little—he has made 
, ' 52. As yet he has done little work at 60 
y:;:c's. This is all fine work for a novice. 
■ Edward B. Weston. 
Of the making of curious epitaphs there 
is no end. A recent traveler in the Forest of 
Dean, in England, Mr. Arthur O. Cooke, has 
discovered this one to the memory of a young 
man named Yem: 
As I was riding on the road. 
Not knowing what was coming, 
A Bull that was loggered and pressed. 
After me came a-running. 
He with his logger did me strike. 
He being sore offended, 
I from my horse was forced to fall. 
And thus my days were ended. 
“Logger,” it may be noted, is a block of 
wood attached to an animal to prevent it 
breaking through hedges; such may be often 
seen worn round the neck of an old ewe. 
There seems a fairly obvious connection with 
“loggerhead.” 
In the old Norman churchyard at Har- 
row-on-the-Hill, England, a stone has been 
erected to the memory of Wiliam Port, who 
was fatally injured in a railway accident, in 
1847. He seems to have been a commuter, 
as witness these lines: 
Bright rose the morn, and vigorous rose poor Port, 
(lay on the train he used his wonted sport. 
Ere noon arrived a mangled form they bore. 
With pain distracted and o’erwhelmed, with gore. 
Ere evening came to close the fatal day 
A mutilated corpse the sufferer lay. 
— Harper s Weekly. 
The Kind of Game He Meant. 
A young man in Kansas City was invited 
out to dinner the other evening; a spur of the 
moment invitation it was that caught him fifteen 
minutes before dinner time. However, being a 
hungry young man and knowing his host too 
well to stand on ceremony, he went. The host 
met him in the front hall, smiling expansively. 
“Awfully glad we caught you. old man.” 
he said, grasping his hand: “we wanted you 
particularly, you see. because we are going to 
have a little game this evening.” 
“Why—er—that is-” gasped^^the guest; 
“to be frank with you. I've only got 49 cents 
with me—if you’d let me know-” 
The host roared. 
“No. no. you goat.” he said. “I don’t mean 
the kind of game you do—it’s wild duck, and 
it’s waiting to be carved.”—Kansas City Star. 
X 'm --L.Ieiv;. . 
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Box “F” 
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are well adapted to Earicrn iv.i; , Try stocj rt. 
some of the nice yearling, ■ 1 fry -om our hatchci v .d 
you will be pleased with . .'•esults. 
PLYMOUTH ROCK TROUT COMPANY, 
Colburn C. Wood, Supt., Plymouth, Mass. 
Small-Mouth Black Bast 
We have the only establishment dealing in young small- 
mouth black bass commercially in the United States. Vig¬ 
orous young bass in various sizes, ranging from advanced 
fry to 3 and 4 inch fingerlings for stocking purposes. 
Waramaug Small-Mouth Black Bass Hatchery. 
Correspondence invited. Send for Circulars. Address 
HENRY W. BEEMAN - - New Preston, Conn. 
BROOK TROUT 
of all ages for stocking brooks 
and lakes. Brook trout eggs 
in any quantity. Warranted delivered anywhere in fine 
condition. Correspondence solicited. 
THE PLYMOUTH ROCK TROUT CO.. 
Plymouth, Mass. 
SPECKLED BROOK TROUT. 
Adirondack trout of all ages and sizes for stocking streams 
and lakes. We deliver to your station and guarantee con¬ 
dition. Correspondence solicited. 
DRUMLIN TROUT HATCHERY, Barneveld, N. Y. 
TROUT FRY FOR SALE. 
For immediate delivery. Orders will also be received for 
fingerlings and yearlings, for October and November 
delivery. Orders must be booked by July 15th. Address 
M. G. CRAFT, Bevans, Sussex Co., N. J. 
Wants and Exchanges. 
WANTED— Live Cranes, Herons, Swans, Geese, 
Ducks, Loons, Shore Birds, Game Birds, Etc. 
When you have any of the above-mentioned birds, please 
write, stating variety, number, condition and price. I 
do not make offers. I am the oldest established and 
largest exclusive dealer in land and water birds in 
America. Birds bought and sold from all parts of the 
world. G. D. TILLEY, Naturalist, Darien, Conn. 
J. KANNOFSKY, 
PRACTICAL GLASS BLOWER 
and manufacturer of artificial eyes for birds, animals and manu¬ 
facturing purposes a specialty. Send for prices. All kinds of 
heads and skulls for furriers and taxidermists. 369 Caneti 
Street, New York. 
Please mention “Forest and Stream.” 
Never Sick! Readers of the | 
Health Culture Magazme I 
Teaching the : ! ,;ii building and pro- ' 
serving healf '-i thouT the ui-: c f .irugs. t 
Edited by Eh -.-r Lee, M.D , one uf iiie fi 
brightest and .■\:,iiadvauced v.-riV ; ■; va | 
the Art of Liv . ' ho-e feacMngson the f 
causes of disc, es a.; ‘ Irugkfs methods af | 
treatment are d lciing wide-spread at- E 
tention. Th Rel.ydaj to HcrJlii of Food, !) 
Air, Ezercise, -c.'. is Considered. Its aim * 
is to make its .'cader-- de . cr Phyiically, 
Mentally ani Mo; i;: ,■ to save the lives 
of children, addin,; to I :n; length of life, 
and the cure of disease by the use o' 
drugless methods. Opposed to t -.s aie of dregs, vaccinatiOB I 
and serums, and needless surgical op rations. There ir. -'■) cthe. j 
just like it. $1.00 a year; l.xi:. a iminbei-; 0 monlhi I 
“ On ' Trial” only 25c. Money Pack 11 desirod. I 
Tl^e Health Culture'Co., 11331 B>o;^d way^N e-.v York . | 
