62 
FOREST AND STREAM 
[Jan. 13, 1912. 
r 
South End—Haddonfield. 
Haddonfield, N. J., Dec. 6. —South End defeated 
Haddonfield here to-day, 329 to 325. The biting cold 
made the shooters at their stands shiver as though af¬ 
flicted by buck ague, when the birds sped from the 
traps, accelerated by the stiff northwester, and when the 
head wind retarded the shot so that, unless the shooter 
centered his bird, he failed to make an impression on it. 
It was discouraging to see time and again lost birds go 
right down the line of a squad, and when one succeeded 
in getting a bit off thd target he was greeted with ap¬ 
proval by his fellow shooters. When the results all 
summed up the shooters of the two clubs missed almost 
as many targets as they hit, and not a few who had an 
excelleiit Deague record had his average cut down in 
to-day’s event. 
Frank J. Hineline’s 40 was high for the day, Edwards 
missing it by one and Reidman by two. These three, 
with C. and L. Holloway, Fleming and Pechman, were 
the only ones to show anything like form. Scores: 
South End. 
Hineline . 
.40 
Edwards . 
.39 
Fleming . 
. 35 
Pechman . 
.35 
Cross . 
.34 
Johnson . 
.33 
Slear . 
.30 
Rexon . 
.29 
Firth . 
.27 
Wakeman .... 
. 25—329 
Haddonfield. 
Beideman . 38 
C Holloway . 37 
D Holloway .35 
Jas Logan . 34 
Shreve . 34 
Dungan . 33 
F Holloway .31 
J Peacock .29 
S Bergen . 28 
Eyster . 26—325 
Others who failed to qualify were: 
South End—Snagg 25, Radcliff 24, J. Anthony 23, New¬ 
kirk 20, Goodfellow 16. 
Haddonfield—Stafford 26, Bevan 26, J. W. Logan 25, 
I’edlow. 24, Remington 23, Tompkins 19, Lye 14. 
Smith Gun Club. 
A FAIR turnout of shooters braved the cold Saturday 
afternoon at the Smith Gun Club grounds. The regular 
monthly merchandize prize shoot for members only was 
the big event of the afternoon. Fifty dollars’ worth of 
handsome prizes were awarded the six leading shooters. 
The usual handicap method was used, each man handi¬ 
capping himself by the score made in the first string of 
birds. L. Trowbridge was high gun, taking first prize. 
Second went to S. Thornton; third to R. Bercaugh; 
fourth to P. Coffin; fifth to H. Sindle and sixth to W. 
Hassinger. 
In addition to the prize event, several sweepstakes were 
shot off, together with the usual preliminary practice 
shooting. Scores: 
P Coffin . 
L Page . 
W Kussmaul 
H Sindle .... 
C Day, Jr... 
R Bercaugh 
N Trowbridge 
L Trowbridge 
W Hassinger 
J Baldwin ... 
H Hassinger 
R Trimpi ... 
H C Page .. 
Apgar . 
S Thornton .. 
N Apgar .... 
L Colquitt .. 
17 
17 
18 
19 
33 
18 
15 
13 
9 
11 
26 
14 
15 
17 
12 
12 
21 
16 
16 
14 
11 
31 
18 
13 
26 
11 
34. 
14 
14 
16 
30 
14 
is 
13 
17 
38 
14 
15 
30 
ii 
19 
28 
14 
13 
22 
. , 
6 
15 
13 
23 
18 
2 
12 
13 
13 
14 
20 
. . 
23 
18 
35 
. . 
16 
20 
. , 
22 
9 
30 .. 
S. S. White—Clearview. 
Great guns win great 
events because of long¬ 
distance, close - shooting 
and hard-hitting qualities 
Our Art Catalog tells all 
about them. Write for it. 
THE HUNTER 
90 Hubbard Street - 
ARMS CO. 
- Fulton, N.Y 
Buffalo Audubon Club. 
Lehigh Rod and Gun Club. 
Buffalo, N. Y., Jan. 6.—Five events of 20 birds each 
were shot here to-day, which were divided into trophy 
events. The badge was worn away by Hopper with 20 
straight. W. C. Wootton was second with 19. The spoon 
will have the honor of diving into the eight club eggs 
at the breakfast table of either Smith or Hopper, as 
both broke 19. Dr. Burke and Kelcey tied at 18 for 
Scores: 
1 2 3 4 5 
20 20 20 20 20 
. 18 19 18 16 12 
. 17 16 15 17 18 
. 16 17 14 18 17 
. 15 15 19 16 13 
. 14 17 15 18 14 
Ko^cr'ers !! iii i ii i. 12 14 15 15 14 
Blackmer . 9 10 13 13 13 
.Smith . 14 15 16 19 10 
the Lambert trophy. 
Events: 
Targets: 
Wootton 
Kelsey 
Wacker . 
Lambert . 
I Reid 
Hopper 
16 20 19 19 16 
Pr -lurke . 18 16 16 13 18 
Imhoff . 16 16 17 17 14 
Smith, Jr. 15 12 13 9 .. 
HHl 14 15 15 16 12 
waidon n n 15 n .. 
No. 2 was the badge event; No. 4 the spoon event; 
No. 5 the Lambert trophy handicap. 
Bethlehem, Pa., Jan. 6. —Heil was high gun, breaking 
93 out of lOO targets. Dorn and Gapp shared second 
honors. Scores: 
Targets: 
25 
25 
26 
25 
25 
Heil . 
. 22 
23 
25 
23 
Gapp . 
. 20 
20 
18 
23 
Snyder . 
. 20 
19 
21 
17 
23 
Dorn . 
. 19 
19 
20 
23 
Sobers . 
. 19 
16 
20 
23 
23 
Miller . 
. 14 
15 
21 
20 
22 
Werst . 
. 12 
16 
Ossining Gun Club. 
OissiNiNG, N. Y., Jan. 1.—New Year’s Day brought 
fifteen trap artists out here, and some wholesome scores 
were made: 
Class A—J. T. Hyland 42, A. Bedell 41, L. Lyons 41, 
A. L. Burns 40, C. G. Blandford 39, I. T. Washburn 38, 
E. Brewerton 29. 
Class B—W. S. Smith 38, S. A. Kipp 31, W. J. 
Ktider 31. 
Class C—Wm. Holden 33, J. H. Moran 26, H. Wash¬ 
burn 21, Leon Lyon 19, J. V. Kirby 17. 
The ill wind blew good to S. S. White Gun Club on 
Jan. 7, for only seven Clearview gunners made their 
appearance. Their combined score totaled 263 broken tar¬ 
gets out of the 350 fired at, and as the League rule pro¬ 
vides that ten men must make up a team by giving each 
absentee credit for 25 broken targets, this boomed the 
Darby men’s total to 338. This score, however, was 
beaten by the Whites, who, having sixteen men on hand, 
had their ten highest to smash 438 out of their 500, a 
remarkable score, when considering the intense cold the 
gunners had to face. Scores: 
S. S. 
White. 
Clearview. 
Newcomb .. 
. 48 
Fisher . 
42 
Severn . 
. 45 
Bonsall . 
41 
Sidebotham 
. 42 
Martin . 
39 
Griffith .... 
Redman . 
36 
Cantrell ... 
Ferry . 
36 
Pratt . 
. 42 
King . 
35 
Wilson . 
. 42 
Davidson . 
34 
Powers .... 
Absentee . 
25 
Smith . 
.40 
Absentee . 
, 25 
Cook . 
. 39—428 
Absentee . 
, 25—338 
Scores made by White gunners who failed to qualify 
for their team: Lewis 41, Hamlin 39, Dr. Mathews 38, 
George 35, Robinson 36, McKean 37, Taylor 17, Hand 35, 
Fontaine 37, Heite 23, Kendall 25, Denham 35, Watson 
28, Keene W. 
Martel Gun Club. 
Glouster City, N. J., Jan. 6. —Owing to the bitter 
cold weather, the match for the big turkey was made a 
miss-and-out event. Thirty- five gunners contested, and 
Benjamin Carson, who hit 5 straight, was the winner. 
The scores: Benjamin Carson 5; J. Smith, H. Moeffus, 
B. Martel, F. Bennett, W. Sloan, J. Ross, A. Grater, A. 
Hargensheimer, E. Black, W. Bartman, W. Wakeman, D. 
Mooney, T. Fullam, W. Gallagher, W. Anderson, J. 
Hudson, W. Shindle, J. Dolan, G. Victor, W. Rox, 
T. Owens, 4 each; F. Butler, W. Murray, M. Monohan, 
F. Sampson, J. Madden, J. F. Curran, 3 each; S. Prick- 
ett, James Brennan, R. Shimp, J. Roden, W. McGinnis, 
2 each. 
Indikn&polis Gun Club. 
Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 
ture and a high wind the 
made the following scores 
Shot at. Broke 
Hickman .... 
... 225 
209 
Edmonson .. 
... 225 
198 
McGinnis .... 
... 225 
198 
Moller . 
... 225 
191 
Lewis . 
... 225 
173 
Britton . 
... 150 
131 
1.—In spite of zero ternpera- 
regulars and a few beginners 
on New Year’s day: 
Shot at. Broke 
Grey .150 129 
Irvm .150 128 
Diggs . 150 91 
Rice . 60 49 
Appel . 50 28 
Jan. 6.—In the regular weekly practice, Edmonson was 
again high gun and beat the spoon handicap: 
Shot at. Broke 
Moller .... 
. 125 106 
Kdmonson 
. 100 93 
Barr . 
. 100 91 
Carrol .... 
. lOO 81 
Shot at. Broke 
Layman . 100 36 
Dixon . 45 31 
Ford . 40 29 
Hoover . 40 29 
R. R. 
Speedway Gun Club. 
Newark, N. J., Jan. 3.—As a special feature at the 
weekly shoot of the’ Speedway Gun Club yesterday after¬ 
noon, there was a 50-bird event for professionals, who 
shot for the Bernard M. Shanley prize. The trophy 
was won by H. S. Welles,' who made 46. Stevens was 
second with 44, Neaf Apgar third with 43, and T. A. 
Davis fourth with 31. 
H S Welles. 
N Apgar . 
Stevens . 
T A Davis . 
William Hassinger .... 
L Colquitt .. 
Peter Bey .. 
ll'm Stengel . 18 20 
following scores were 
made: 
20 
17 
22 
20 
20 
17 
24 23 
19 
17 
19 
23 
17 
20 
2,1 
22 
25 
21 
19 
23 
. 25 
23 
22 
21 
22 
. 22 
23 
23 
21 
20 
15 
20 
17 
14 
22 
24 
21 
22 
23 
23 
. 22 
23 
24 
20 
24 
25 
13 
13 
11 
15 
. 18 
20 
Smokeless. 
Englewood Field Club. 
The Gunners of the Englewood Field Club held an 
interesting shoot at clay targets, Jan. 6. The handi¬ 
capping had been so well done that three tied for first 
place. These were Dr. J. N. Teeter, Emmett Schulz 
and Dr. George D. Hamlen. Each was credited with a 
score of 25 out of a possible of the same number. In 
the shoot-off Dr. Teeter won, with 10 straight kills. 
Essex County Country Club. 
Orange, N. J., Jan. 6. —B. M. Shanley, shooting from 
scratch, won Saturday cup with 22 out of 25. Mr. 
Shanley won also a leg on Heller trophy with 23; a 
leg on January trophy went to P. Hauck (5) 25. A. R. 
Coffin took a leg on B. M. Shanley cup. 
The shooters were very scarce because of the illustrated 
picture of winter presented in the Orange Mountains. 
IRafll© aimdl RstoItcit 
Inter-Collegiate Rifle League. 
The schedule for 1912, which opened Jan. 6, promises 
to be most interesting, with twenty-one non-military 
colleges and universities shooting a schedule lasting 
until March 16. The schedule follows: 
The shooting dates of the Eastern League are: Jan. 
6 , 13, 20 and 27; Feb. 3. 10, 17, and 24; March 2, 9, and 16. 
The shooting dates of the Western League are: Jan. 
13. 20 and 27; Feb. 3, 10, 17 and 24; March 2 and 9, 
The conditions governing the matches are: 
Eligibility.—Open to teams from university and col¬ 
lege rifle clubs affiliated with the National Rifle Associa¬ 
tion and in good standing. Members of teams to be in 
