May 4, 1912 
FOREST AND STREAM 
577 
Boston A. A. 
Boston, Mass., April 27. —The weather conditions were 
unfavorable to-day, it being cloudy and windy. H. H. 
Knights won the take-home trophy after a shoot-off with 
C. P. Blinn. R. A. Faye won the leg on the Barbey 
trophy. H. H. Knights won leg on Hunter trophy: 
Take-home trophy: 
H H Knights... G 50 
C P Blinn. 5 50 
L Snow. 1 48 
H Davis....... G 48 
R A Faye. 0 47 
F H Richards.. 10 47 
T E Lynch. 3 47 
T C Adams. 0 47 
S A Ellis. 21/2 4 GV 2 
\V C Brooks.... 4 45 
M Ballou . 21/2 451/2 
O R Dickey... 0 44 
Barbey trophy: 
R A Faye. 49 
C B Tucker. 47 
J L Snow. 47 
H H Knights_-.. 46 
T C Adams. 45 
T E Lvnch. 43 
S A Ellis. 43 
O R Dickey. 43 
\V C Brooks. 43 
T H North. 42 
F H Richards. 41 
Hunter trophy: 
H H Knights. 10 100 
F H Richards. 20 98 
C P Blinn. 12 97 
R A Faye. 0 aG 
J T. Snow. 2 96 
T H North. 20 95 
T E Lvnch. G 93 
L H Davis. 12 93 
T C .Adams. 0 92 
S A Ellis. 5 92 
W C Brooks. 8 92 
T H North.10 43 
F Whitney .... 10 42 
C Hutchins .... 12 42 
C B Tucker.... 21/4 4 II /2 
F H Owen. 6 40 
G H Clark. 6 40 
C E Osborne... G 35 
C P Keeler. 61/2 341/2 
C L Munroe. 9 31 
*L Greene . 0 31 
W B Farmer.... 2i/4 261/2 
C P Blinn. 40 
M Ballou . 40 
G L Munroe . 39 
L H Davis . 39 
C P Keeler. 39 
*L Greene . 38 
W B Farmer. 38 
G E Osborne. 36 
F H Owen. 35 
G B Clark . 34 
F Whitney. 30 
C B Tucker. 5 91 
M Ballou . 5 88 
O R Dickey. 0 87 
F Whitney . 20 82 
F H Owen. 12 81 
C P Keeler .13 80 
G B Clark. 12 80 
G I. Munroe. 18 79 
G E Osborne.12 77 
*L Greene . 0 69 
W B Farmer. 5 67 
C. B. Tucker, Capt. 
Jersey City Gun Club. 
Jersey City, N. J., April 27.—We had a pretty fair 
turnout to-day, considerin,^ the brand of weather that 
was served up to us, as it rained hard nearly all the 
afternoon. Harry Wells, a trade representative, and 
A. Zollinger, also a trade representative, paid us a visit 
to-day, and the boys were all pleased to see them. Zolly 
had some funny stories to tell us of his travels through 
the scrub trees of Jersey while hustling for business. 
Wells was busy hanging up the best score for the day, 
with an average of 92 per cent., and Dave Engle was 
right after him with 91 per cent. Geo. Piercy took third 
prize v/ith 88 per cent. The scores follow: 
Shot at. Broke Shot at. Broke 
Wells . 
. 175 
162 
Matthies .... 
.... 150 
107 
Martin . 
. 150 
120 
Harvey . 
.... 125 
94 
Metz . 
. ino 
66 
Zollinger .... 
.... 100 
62 
Piercy . 
. 175 
155 
Dixon . 
.... 50 
38 
Shannon. 
, 200 
164 
Jones . 
.... 100 
70 
Engle . 
. 135 
124 
Brady . 
.... ino 
55 
Williams . 
. 125 
91 
Simp . 
.... 75 
40 
Dannefelser, Jr. 
. 100 
43 
Secretary. 
Indianapolis Gun Club. 
Inpianapoeis, Tnd..—The following scores were made 
over the trans of the Indianapolis Gun Club April 22. 
The wind blew a gale and rain fell betimes: 
*Henderson ... 
Straughn . 
*Stannard . 
Wagner . 
*Taylor . 
Edmonson . 
*Professional: 
April 27.—The practice squad was favored with ideal 
weather to-day, but scores were again low, as follows: 
200 
186 
Parry . 
. 200 
164 
200 
184 
Moller . 
. 200 
154 
200 
183 
*Barr . 
. 200 
152 
200 
169 
Stoner . 
. 140 
113 
200 
177 
Alig . 
.105 
68 
200 
168 
Martin . 
. 70 
32 
Edmonson 
Shot at. 
.160 
Broke 
143 
Toland . 
Shot at. Broke 
.....100 69 
MoIIer .... 
.160 
137 
Wilson . 
.loo 
68 
Blessing .. 
*Hvmer ... 
.160 
109 
Golden . 
.100 
59 
.140 
114 
Neighbors . 
.100 
57 
Britton ... 
.120 
98 
Lewis . 
. 80 
67 
Crawford . 
. 120 
100 
Hofer . 
. 80 
63 
Ahg . 
89 
Klepfer .... 
. 40 
22 
Robin 
Hood 
Gun Club. 
R. 
R. 
.^t'ATEN Island, N. Y., April 27.—The gunners were on 
the job and got wet to the skin, but that made no dif- 
‘^■■ence in their scores at the Robin Hood Gun Club 
shoot, held to-day, for the 1912 cup and other prizes. 
Event 1, 100 targets, 1912 cup, handicap: 
B Beyersdoft . 8 89 F Gerbolini . 8 84 
C Rowley . 0 79 G Hutchings . 0 82 
C Camizzio . 12 72 
Event 2, 25 birds, Du Pont trophy, handicap: 
B Beyersdoft . 2 21 F Gerbolini . 2 21 
C Rowley . 0 19 G Hutchings . 0 22 
C Camizzio . 3 13 
Event _3, 12 pairs doubles for gun case: Rowley and 
Cerbolini tied on 13 and shot off miss-and-out. Gerbolini 
missed his seventh bird and lost the case. W. Bush 
scored 11, G. Hutchings 8 and C. Camazzio 4. 
Event 4, 25 birds, team race, $5 in gold to the winning 
team. Scores: Hutchings and Bush 23, Conelley and 
Rowley 20, Gerbolini and Camizzio 20. 
G. Conelley, Sec’y- 
{For other Trap Notes see page 579 .) 
Be high man at the traps. 
Shoot the finest brush gun made. 
Mechanical construction perfect. 
Some Good Reasons 
Why You Should Shoot 
THE 
PARKER 
GUN 
Send today for illustrated eataloene. 
PARKER BROS. 
New York Salesrooms: 32 Warren St. 
Meriden, Conn. 
The Small Game 
Rifle ThaVs Big 
Enough For Deer 
Warliit 
REPEA TER 
New Model 27 
.25—20 or .32—20 calibres 
R abbit, woodchuck. Hawk, fox, wolf and 
deer fall ready prey to its high velocity- 
smokeless or black and low pressure smokeless 
loads. For target work it is unexcelled. 
Built with the famous Trombone Action and Smokeless 
Steel Barrel, unobtainable in any other rifle of its calibre. 
Its solid top and side-ejection protect shooter’s face and 
eyes, and prevent dirt from entering action. 
The desirable take-down construction and Ivory Bead 
sight cost extra in other .25 —20 and .32—20 rifles. You 
pay nothing additional for these in the 77lar/in. 
See this hard-hitting, a^ccurate shooting, perfectly, 
balanced rifle at your dealer’s today. 
Send3c in postage for new catalog showing the com¬ 
plete line of fffar/ln repeaters, rifles and shotguns. 
Willow Street, 
y/iar/cn/'irearms Co.v ■ 
9 . New Haven. Conn* 
CANOE AND CAMP COOKERY 
By SENECA 
A handy book for the guidance of campers, particularly 
for those who care for variety in. camp fare. Cloth, 
illustrated. Postpaid, 60 cents. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING COMPANY 
Maxim Silencer 
Checks 
Wonderl 
rifle prac 
threading 
calibre of >\ur ri 
interesting Catalog. teU'yai^ what you p^d, price, etc 
Maxim Sileni 
0 *^ 17 Coif's Armory 
* Uartford. Coaa. 
TRAINING w. BREAKING 
Practical Dog Training; or, Training vs. Breaking. 
By S. T. Hammond. To which is added a chapter on 
training pet dogs, by an amateur. Cloth, 165 pages. 
Price, $1.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING COMPANY 
Y OU know mallards—wisest and wariest of all 
ducks—Solomons of the air. You canT knock 
down mallards with a paddle nor can you get them 
with a gun that plasters its shots all over the face 
ef creation. 
A mallard shot is generally a long shot, and long 
shots require a hard-shooting, close-shooting gun. 
That^s why the long-headed man who goes to a 
mallard country takes a Lefever. When he svrings 
it on a towering pair of mallards he does not ques¬ 
tion the result. He know it— 
TWO CLEAN KILLS 
The reason a Lefever kills clean and sure and 
far is Lefever Taper Boring. 
But if you buy a Lefever for the taper boring 
alone, you will get more than your money’s worth. 
For instance, you will never be handicapped with 
looseness at the hinge joint. The exclusive Lefever 
screw compensates for a year’s wear by a trifling 
turn that you make yourself with a screwdriver. 
LEFEVER 
SHOT GUNS 
Sixteen other exclusive Lefever features and Lefe« 
ver simplicity and strength make the S 28 gun the 
peer of any §50 gun on the market. Upwards to 
Si,000. Send for free catalog and get Lefever wise. 
Lefever Arms Co., asMaltbie St., Syracuse,N.Y, 
