FOREST AND STREAM 
219 
Broke 
Norfolk-Portsmouth Gun Club. 
Portsmouth, Va., August I, 1914. 
The Norfolk-Portsmouth Gun Club held their usual 
weekly shoot Tuly 30th. There was a good attendance 
of shooters and'some excellent scores. Dr. Byrd and 
Mr. Boyd tied for high in the club shoot at 50 targets. 
Dr. Byrd was decided the winner of the Hercules 
Powder Company’s watch fob trophy, by breaking 143 
of 1 to targets, a percentage of 94.66. The scores: 
Shot At. 
Dr. Byrd .- 
Boyd ... 
Richardson . 
Gallagher . 
Winchester . 
Laird . 
Ferguson . 
Hundley . 5 ° 
Talbot . 
Davis . 
Edmonds . 
Jones . 5 ° 
Linton . to 
White . 50 
Hawkins . 5 ° 
Ba-llance . 
Guill . 
Bagby . 50 
Langhorne . 5 ° 
Cromwell . 5 ° 
Tackson . 50 
Butler . 50 
Powell . 50 
Marston . 
so 
43 
50 
43 
50 
42 
so 
42 
SO 
42 
so 
42 
so 
40 
So 
40 
so 
39 
50 
38 
SO 
38 
50 
36 
SO 
37 
50 
36 
So 
34 
50 
31 
50 
30 
50 
29 
50 
29 
50 
29 
50 
28 
50 
25 
50 
25 
so 
_ 25 
E., 
Secretary. 
West End Gun Club. 
Richmond, Va., August 1, 1914. 
In the first shoot in August thirty odd men were 
out and Hotchkiss continued his good July work by 
going a 96 per cent. clip. In 450 targets in July his 
average was 91.1 per cent. The score: 
Shot At. 
Broke 
E. D. Hotchkiss, Jr. ... 
. 50 
48 
Robert G. Cabell . 
. 5 ° 
46 
T. B. Swartwout . 
. 50 
46 
W. A. Hammond. Sr. . 
. 50 
46 
M. D. Hart . 
. 50 
45 
T. H. Crenshaw . 
. 50 
44 
W. E. Nelms . 
44 
Jno. B. Cary . 
42 
P. J. Flippen . 
. 50 
42 
St. George Anderson .. 
. 50 
40 
W. H. Eanes . 
. 50 
40 
Walt Hunter . 
39 
Tohn C. Easley . 
39 
Cary B. Easley . 
. 50 
39 
Gary Sheppard . 
39 
L. Rueger . 
38 
Clarence W. Williams .. 
. 50 
38 
Chas. B. Cooke . 
. 30 
38 
Sam. P. Goodloe . 
. 50 
38 
Tack Sheppard . 
. 50 
38 
W. Gordon Harvie . 
. SO 
37 
Tohn T. Anderson . 
. SO 
37 
R. F. Coleman . 
37 
Thos. W. Purcell . 
36 
Archer Anderson, Jr. ... 
35 
S. 0 . Christian . 
. So 
34 
T. C. Tignor . 
33 
Dr. A. Freeman . 
. So 
33 
Col. B. H. Grundy - 
33 
O. F. Grady . 
33 
Sidney Smith . 
32 
Wm. Rueger, Jr. 
30 
J. Ambler Johnston - 
. 50 
30 
T. M. Carrington, Jr. .. 
28 
Thomas West . 
28 
W. E. Harris . 
28 
Robt. T. Bibb . 
27 
Robert Anthony . 
25 
T. Arthur Campbell - 
. So 
19 
Class leaders were: E. 
D. Hotchkiss, Jr. “A,” 
Robert 
G. Cabell “B,” Joseph H. Crenshaw “C.” 
Legs on Lumsden trophy cup winners: J. H. Cren¬ 
shaw. M. D. Hart, J. C. Tignor, E. D. Hotchkiss, 
Jr., John B. Cary, R. G. Cabell. 
SECRETARY. 
Birmingham Gun Club. 
Birmingham, Ala., August 1, 1914- 
John Fletcher led the shooting at the regular weekly 
shoot of the Birmingham Gun Club breaking 96 out 
of his 100 shot at and a long run of 40 without a miss. 
Only a few shooters were out on account of the threaten¬ 
ing weather. Mr. Byrd paid us the first visit in nearly 
a year and made a good score considering the little 
practice he gets. The Alabama State shoot will start 
on August 10 on the grounds of the Birmingham Gun 
Club and continue for three days, August 10th, nth 
and 12th. A record breaking attendance is expected. 
Scores were made as follows: 
Shot At. Broke 
John Fletcher . 100 96 
E. M. Cornwell . 100 91 
O. L. Garl . 100 89 
Mrs. O. L. Garl . 100 88 
Mr. Byrd . 100 87 
Dr. Sellers . 100 87 
C. J. Barr . 100 85 
Dr. Tordan . 100 82 
Mr. Morriss . 100 67 
Roanoke Gun Club. 
Roanoke, Virginia, August 1, 1914. 
The weekly club contest of the Roanoke Gun Club 
■was held on Saturday afternoon, August 1st, the weather 
was ideal and some good scores were made; the sec¬ 
retary will know how Shepherd missed enough to keep 
him from winning the spoon in his class. My friend 
The New .22 
Savage Tubular Repeater 
Pick Them Out of the Air 
with the New .22 
Y OU can do fancy shooting 
with this rifle yourself. 
It’s mot so wonderful if 
your rifle .is built for it. 
Of course it’s easier to hit 
things in the air with a big 
load of shot than with a little 
rifle bullet—it means quick 
pointing, straight holding and 
clean, perfectly timed pulling. 
You’ll need the new extra long Savage slide 
handle, that doesn’t strain your wrist or cramp 
your elbow, but lets you get your arm well out 
so you can control and -point the barrel naturally 
and perfectly. 
You’ll need the new Savage corrugated steel 
shotgun butt-plate—no sharp prongs or corners to 
catch or dig in—no smooth surface to slip, or hard 
r “bber to chip -and break—that jumps to the 
shoulder -instantly and clings as though it grew 
-there. 
And y° u '^ J>ced the new sharply curved, extra 
full Savage pistol grip—curved so much that your 
Tubular Repeater 
hand holds the butt to the 
shoulder steady as a rock and 
leaves the trigger finger abso¬ 
lutely unhampered -and free, as 
it must -be for the -delicate, per¬ 
fectly timed pulling -that snap¬ 
shooting requires. 
And the outlines and propor¬ 
tions—the shape, balance -and 
. hang—so necessary for success¬ 
ful snap-shooting are just as important for the 
most accurate deliberate work. A man struggling 
with an awkward rifle simply cannot do his best. 
The new .22 Savage Tubular has all the original 
Savage .22 calibre features, hammerless -trombone 
action, solid breach, solid -top, side ejection—no 
exposed moving parts, simple takedown device 
breech-bolt removable without tools—features every¬ 
one has imitated but no one has equalled. 
Tube magazine holds 20 shorts, 17 longs, or is 
long rifles, 24-in. octagon barrel. Weight cK 
pounds. Write us for particulars. 
SAVAGE ARMS COMPANY, 928 Savage Ave., UTICA, N.Y. 
Jones, the big fellow, is a little bit off at the present 
but there is hopes that he will come around all O. K. 
Dr. L. G. Richards winner of spoon in scratch class; 
H. R. Cox winner of spoon in Class (A); H. D. Mur¬ 
ray winner of spoon in Class (B); Dr. Sayers winner 
of spoon in Class (C); H. R. Cox winner of Stevens 
Trophy. 
Names. 
Richards, Dr. L. G. 
Cox . 
Jamison . 50 
Jones, W. S. 50 
Shepherd .. 50 
Sayers . 50 
Bloxton . 50 
Murray . 
Watson . 
Fishburne, T. T. 
Fishburne, R. T. 
Boyd . 
Fishburne, B. J. 50 
Jones, F. 50 
Barbour . 50 
Winter . 50 
Gregory . 50 
Ramski -11 . 50 
Poindexter, E. W. 50 
Robinson, Dr. 50 
Armstrong . 50 
Rutherfoord, T. S. 50 
Ferguson . 30 
Huckner . 50 
Roberts . 50 
Robinson, W. T. 50 
Jenkins, Dr. 50 
Winn .. 
.Adamson . 50 
Craig . 
Brooks . 
ILopwood . 
Eck 
Richard 
Total 
20 
18 
>t At. 
Broke. 
Per 
Cent. 
So 
49 
98 
50 
47 
94 
50 
47 
94 
So 
46 
92 
50 
46 
92 
50 
46 
92 
50 
45 
90 
So 
45 
90 
50 
45 
90 
50 
41 
82 
50 
4 i 
82 
50 
41 
82 
so 
40 
80 
50 
40 
80 
So 
40 
80 
50 
40 
80 
50 
39 
78 
50 
38 
76 
So 
36 
76 
50 
35 
70 
50 
35 
70 
So 
34 
68 
So 
34 
68 
So 
31 
62 
50 
33 
66 
50 
31 
62 
50 
29 
58 
50 
27 
54 
50 
24 
46 
50 
23 
46 
SO 
16 
36 
So 
12 
24 
JONES, Secretary. 
Lewis . 
Shot At. 
Broke. 
Smith . 
63 
1 tuinter . 
Firing . 
Meyer . 
64 
Luty . 
'Juinter . 
45 
Hainly . 
43 
Wengel, Jr. 
45 
Kofroth . 
40 
Eisenhower . 
45 
Schell . 
44 
45 
(iundy .. 
Newman . 
37 
Wenzel . 
39 
Richard . 
Augstadt . 
Bowman . 
21 
17 
Weidner . 
Eck . 
19 
Mustorf . 
24 
23 
Wenzel . 
Wortman . 
I 9 
17 
Strieker . 
Ludwig . 
M. F. KOFROTH, 
19 
15 
Secretary. 
Independent Gun Club. 
Reading, Pa., August 1. 1914. 
I herewith send you the scores of our annual -target 
shoot; first was the team shoot between the Independent 
Gun Club and the Elm Leaf Gun Club, ten men to 
each team and 25 targets per man. 
INDEPENDENT TEAM. 
P. Quinter . 21 
A. Fromm . 21 
J. Lewis . 20 
M. F. Kofroth . 20 
H. Weidner . 20 
O. Mustorf . 20 
J. Firing . 18 
J. Hainly . 18 
M. Etoo . 10 
Strieker . 19 
Total . 187 
ELM LEAF TEAM. 
Fick . 24 
Luty . 23 
Seeling . 22 
Eisenhower . 22 
Schell . 21 
W enzel . 21 
Wenzel, W. 20 
Armstadt . 20 
Central Ohio Trap Shooters League. 
In one of the biggest meetings of the Central Ohio 
1 rap snoot ers Aissiociaifrion theLd on. our grounds at the 
Linneman farm, over one hundred members, expert 
marksmen, competed. The high winds prevented any 
phenominal results. However, the scores were good 
considering the breeze the marksmen had to contend. 
High amateur score was copped by W. F. Bippus, 
with 93 out of 100. C. A. Young won first in profes¬ 
sional work, cracking 97 out of 100. Lon Fisher, of 
Lakeview, a member of the Lima Club, tied for sec¬ 
ond place with I. M. Markham, C. T. Stevens, H. E. 
Smith, in the amateur class. Their score was 92 out of 
100. 
The regular program was carried out with 97 regular 
entrants, while others took part in fancy or special 
shooting. Mrs. Randall, a vaudeville actress, who is 
spending the summer in Lima, took part in the shoot¬ 
ing yesterday, and was the only woman to compete. 
A chicken dinner was served a-t noon by the local 
club to the visitors. One more meet will be held this 
year by the association. It will be held at Dayton a 
few days before the Grand American meet. 
The scores made, each out of a possible 100. follow: 
SCORES. 
J. M. Markham 92, J. A. Smith 90, H. C. Downey 78, 
D. L. Sherwood 80, J. W. Blackburn 74, W. F. Bippus 
93, R. Folkerth 83. F. C. Koch 90, B. R. Dickey 91, H. 
W. Heikes 88, William Poole 84, C. E. Winkley 85 
Bill Downs 82, M. L. Blanchard 79, A. B. Shobe 91! 
R. O. Heikes 91, C. F. Moore 90, C. T. Stevens 92, J. 
R. Taylor 96, W. J. Spangler 85, W. B. Darton 94, S. 
L. Dibble 83, T. W. Taylor 88, L. S. McAfee 83, J. S. 
Young 91. V. R. Smith 89, C. Young 97, H. E. Furnace 
81, K. P. Johnson 90, C. O. Carothers 85, H. D. 
Duckham 86, F. Schindewolf 87, C. H. Wagner 84, W. 
W. Coffman 76. B. Wing 86, R. McGregor 84, R. W. 
Clancy 90, C. E. Zint 75, J. L. Holder 58, Roy Camp¬ 
bell 87, W. A. Smith 73, R. J. Coton 76, W. H. Longer 
