May 17, 1913 
FOREST AND STREAM 
r)33 
Western Pennsylvania Trapshooters* League. 
Pitcairn, Pa., May 6.- 
held to-day, the following: 
R T Gumbert. 104 
J \V Sherrer. 109 
J R Zinkham. Ill 
J H Humes. 96 
Dr A H Aber. 112 
Robt Bradshaw . 107 
Ad Hickman . 118 
A H Rigsby. 118 
J F Calhoun. Ill 
Dr \V C Heisel. 115 
Dr H S Ballard. 104 
F E Meredith. 89 
W A Cornelius. 97 
J A Sword (90). 56 
F D Smith. 108 
\V R Hill. 115 
.1 W Allen. 85 
C B Ashbaugh. 85 
J E Penrod. Ill 
C C Irwin . ID 
S M Crothers . 118 
A S Bishop . 96 
R J West . Ill 
-At the one-day league event, 
scores were made: 
C J Vitous.110 
John Slater . 
A C Gumbert. 
C G Peterson. 
J K Lawson... 
J I Morrison_ 
George Marker ... 
J \V Gribble. 
A H King . 
S Granger . 
N A Calhoun .... 
T Wilson . 
A W Whalen. 
D W Baker . 
G A Seifert. 
L W Duff. 
L A Fowble. 
M T Brendlinger. 
H E Brooks, Jr.. 
C Foley . 
H E Coss. 
J E Wampler. 
107 
99 
96 
114 
90 
87 
90 
90 
97 
90 
102 
105 
98 
94 
100 
103 
109 
L G McMillan. 97 
C Gulland . 97 
M Rosenkeimer. 103 
A G Johnson . 73 
D M Young. 116 
H G Gillespie. 109 
E Murray . 97 
G J O’Brien. 97 
E N Gillespie. 112 
L W Cannon. 109 
A. L. Bwrns High Gun. 
A VERY interesting shoot was held at the White 
Plains Gun Club on Saturday, May 10. While the wind 
was very strong and deflected the targets in all direc¬ 
tions, nevertheless soime very good scores were made. 
A. L. Burns was high gun for the day with a total of 
88. W. B. Ogden, of the New York Athletic Club, was 
high gun for the visitors, and T. Davis, of the Winches¬ 
ter Arms Co., was high gun for the professionals. Bums 
also won a leg on the Schieffelin trophy. J. T. Hyland 
was high gun in the 25 double-target event with a total 
of 34. There were twenty-seven shooters who took part 
in the contest. 
numbered 
among whom were 
three 
ladies. The ladies did 
exceedingly well, considering the 
difficult targets they had to 
contend with. Scores: 
Shot at. Broke 
Shot at. 
Broke 
A L Burns. 
100 
88 
*C von Lengerke 100 
67 
H 0 Allyn. 
100 
87 
Valentine . 100 
6b 
W Ogden . 
100 
87 
E S Schieffelin. 100 
60 
I H Finch. 
100 
86 
W McCormack.. 100 
57 
Dr G H Martin. 
100 
83 
H M Ferguson.. 100 
56 
G F Pelham. 
100 
83 
Dr A W Currie. 100 
53 
E Carpenter ... 
100 
82 
Miss Boles .100 
43 
Z C (jffutt. 
100 
81 
Miss Brown ... 100 
37 
F F Rodgers.... 
100 
81 
Mrs Rodgers .. 100 
32 
T H Lawrence.. 
100 
80 
M Kreps . 75 
63 
T T Hyland. 
100 
80 
I De Nyse. 75 
41 
♦T Davis . 
100 
78 
W Beckley, Jr. 50 
41 
T De Nyse .... 
lOO 
72 
A D Scovel.... 50 
21 
M Guggenheim. 
100 
71 
Froiessionals. 
Beideman G. C. 
Philadelhpia, Pa., May 10. —Two silver spoons were 
awarded as prizes to-day, one for high in the first fifty 
going to Brogan, who broke 38, and the other for high 
W Murphy . 
J R So wash. 
J T Atkinson. 
G L Pearson. 
S F Barson.:. 
A J Fetzer. 
C A Miller. 
B D Mathews. 104 
W M Beck.105 
J H Bruff . 102 
A S Anthony. 117 
E C Fullick. 85 
C Grail (35) . 30 
C R Anderson.106 
G E Painter.114 
G Cochran . 113 
E H Ridgway . 86 
M D Ullery. 96 
J T Bartram.103 
W H Denman. 98 
R R Bennett . 102 
A I Ittell. 97 
J A Curry. Ill 
F F Cotter. 98 
E J McGinley. 76 
C K Nichols. 76 
G S Esler. 87 
J H Chilcott. 64 
A M McCutcheon. 88 
C S Walter. 80 
F O Hill. 76 
C H George. 94 
E Miller . 100 
A L Iseman . 92 
Wm McClearren. 103 
R B Thompson. 92 
K A O’Brien. 57 
L B Fleming. lOi 
*W Henderson. 122 
*George Hassam . 116 
*L W Cumberland.Ill 
*C F Moore. 104 
*James Lewis . 109 
yy 
81 
57 
South Jersey, winning 
scores: 
it, 
breaking 79 out of 100. 
The 
100 
Slear . 
. 87 
Pierson . 
. 53 
100 
Hitchcock . 
. 63 
Lawrence . 
101 
Brogan . 
, 73 
Dougherty . 
.... 73 
88 
Clending . 
. 38 
Gilbert . 
. 56 
81 
Kling . 
73 
Von Nieda . 
.... 65 
112 
105 
104 
98 
99 
Fort . 
Hineline . 
. 68 
. 79 
Dorp . 
. 73 
The scores made 
sionals, did not figure 
by 
in 
Slear and Lawrence, 
the prize awards. 
profes- 
as you sit on the beach in August, and so damdon- 
pleasant when you holler pull, ogle down the blue steel, 
pull the trigger, look for the fragments and find the 
rock sailing along 40yds. away and two yards above 
your line of fire, was here to-day—some sentence 
that. However, M. H. Torney, either outguessed or 
outgeneraled the rest of the bunch, including the “I’m- 
here-to-prove-it” outfit, with the exception of George 
Kreger, who was there for 140, or 3 more than the upper 
amateur. Among those present were twenty for a 
division of the swag, and four demonstrators. Five thou¬ 
sand rocks were thrown. Scores: 
Any Old Hundred Straight! 
BY GEORG W. PECK, JR. 
Every blooming amateur believes that, soon or late, 
he’s going to shoot up the horizon and run his hundred 
straight. Sometimes it’s only 75, and again it’s 98, and 
then he dreams of the shoot to come, when he’ll run that 
hundred straight. How he longs for that dainty medal— 
that precious bit of loot, which calls for 100 even, at a 
registered tournament shoot. It’s a clever stipulation, 
for the man on the other side—the man who peddles 
the attractive medals that appeal to the shooter’s pride. 
’Cause yo.u know those registered tournaments are limited 
in the their scope, and the lads are few and far between 
who get in on the medal dope. Now, if the amateur is 
worth a cent to the man who runs the mill, he’s worth 
rnuch more, and a perfect score should open the medal 
till. No matter when he makes it, if he shoots it on the 
scpiare, and has shot your stuff, it’s quite enough, sor 
why not treat him fair? Where is the loading company 
that’s strictly up-to-date, that will start this medal music 
for any old hundred straight? [Some one named Taylor 
says this seditionist is original of Peck’s bad boy.— 
Editor.] 
Sikeston Gun Club. 
SiKBSTON. Mo., May 9. —Out of 50 clay pigeons the 
following scores were made to-day: W. H. Tanner 47, 
H. A. Smith 43, (Jlem Marshall 42, C. H. Yanson 33, 
Dr. D. E. Sawyer 33, Alf. Carr 29. 
We hold practice contests every Friday at 1 P. M. 
Visitors welcome. Wm. H. Tanner, Sec’y. 
F F Chladek. 
H K Stilwell. 
*Geo Kreger 
A M Shaw... 
J J Burns... 
*G A (Dlson. 
Tyndall G. C. 
Tynd.ael, S. D., May 17. —Those zephyrs, so pleasant 
■•^H G Taylor... 
R D Trombley. 
L A Krall. 
133 
C 
F Baker. 
... 104 
121 
T 
A Hutchinson.... 
... 103 
130 
1 
J Fleming. 
... 107 
140 
M 
A Forney. 
... 135 
115 
S 
A Barton. 
... 110 
116 
E 
L Cantwell. 
... 119 
128 
F 
F Srstka. 
...100 
114 
E 
H Day. 
... 86 
115 
C 
A Ferguson. 
... 132 
133 
E 
T Meyers. 
... 127 
102 
C 
E Ellis. 
... 115 
. 67 
B 
Hanson. 
... 132 
DEM 
GTON 
TAe Man Who Sells You 
Arms and Ammunition 
A re you interested in him? You should 
be, for selfish reasons. It is to your ad- 
^ vantage that he keep abreast of the 
times—in his ideas, in his stock. 
Much depends on your interest in him 
and his in you. 
Is he one of the alert thousands who are 
specializing in Remington U.M.C.? 
Does he keep his assortment complete? 
Can he give you the loads you want for the game 
you are after, in the Remington ammunition you 
ought to have ? 
If he is a leader, he specializes in Remington U.M.C. 
—take that for granted. For reasons of uniform quality 
and because it is the ammunition that flatters any make 
of gun. 
The question for you is, is he giving you the bene¬ 
fit of the full Remington service—the biggest thing in 
ammunition circles today? 
Remington Steehlined Shot Shells 
and Metallic Ammunition 
Remington Solid-breech Hammerless 
Repeating Shot-guns and Rifles 
Remington Arms—Union Metallic Cartridge Co. 
299 Broadway, New York 
