Feb. 12, 1910.] 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
277 
when the handicaps were added enough to make the win. 
Scores as follows: 
Targets: 
Cole . 
Hassam .. 
Richardson 
Parker .... 
Sibley .... 
Darton ... 
Clapp . 
Clarke .... 
Pennington 
Burnes ... 
Jordan _ 
Kirkwood 
15 15 15 15 15 Broke. Hep. Total 
12 13 13 13 12 
15 14 14 13 14 
12 12 10 7 12 
12 12 11 13 12 
11 14 12 15 13 
12 14 13 13 12 
10 10 8 10 10 
14 13 11 14 10 
11 12 12 11 10 
9 13 10 9 12 
8 8 10 9 7 
.13 12 
63 
10 
73 
70 
0 
70 
53 
15 
68 
60 
8 
68 
65 
0 
65 
64 
0 
64 
48 
15 
63 
62 
0 
62 
54 
8 
62 
53 
8 
61 
42 
4 
46 
25 
0 
25 
*Rtfle 'Range and Gallery . 
Fixtures. 
F e b- 7-12.—Pittsburg, Pa.—Twenty-two Caliber indoor 
championship match, under auspices of Iroquois Rifle 
Club. J. Lewis, 619 Smithfiela St. 
Feb. 22.—Brooklyn, L. I.—Annual 100-shot Greater New 
York championship match of the Cypress Hills Rifle 
Association. S. Squibb, Sec’y. 
March 12-19.—New York.—Zettler Rifle Club fourteenth 
annual indoor championship match. F. Hecking, Sec’y. 
United States Interclub (Indoor) Rifle 
Shooting League. 
Washington, D. C., Jan. 29.—The second round of 
matches between the rifle clubs composing the league 
was shot on Friday night. The results as received by 
telegraph and tabulated in the office of the National Rifle 
Association of America, show the winners to be: 
Warren (Pa.) Rifle and Revolver Club defeated the Fort 
Pitt Rifle Club of. Pittsburg, Pa., by four points; the 
Italian Rifle Association, of New York, were victorious 
over the Los Angeles (Cal.) Rifle Club by 29 points; 
the Winchester Rod and Gun Club, of New Haven, 
Conn., were winners from the Seattle (Wash.) Rifle and 
Revolver Association by 51 points; the Birmingham 
(Ala.) Athletic Club Rifle Association defeated the 
Tacoma (Wash.) Rifle and Revolver Club by 24 points; 
the Rocky Mountain Rifle Club, of Butte, Mont., buried 
the Triangle Cadets (Y. M. C. A.) Rifle Club, of Los 
Angeles, Cal., by 271 points; the Myles Standish Rifle 
Club, of Portland. Me., had a close finish with the St. 
Paul (Minn.) Rifle and Revolver Association, winning 
out by eight points. The top score turned in was from 
the Winchester Rod and Gun Club, of New Haven, 
Conn., their 970 being highest score so far made in the 
league matches. The score of the different clubs and 
the standing to date is as follows: 
. Score. Won. Lost. 
Winchester Rod and Gun Club. 970 2 0 
Rocky Mountain Rifle Club. 950 2 0 
Warren Rifle and Revolver Club. 914 2 0 
Birmingham Athletic Club Rifle Assn. 904 2 0 
Myles Standish Rifle Club. 922 2 0 
Fort Pitt Rifle Club. 910 1 1 
Italian Rifle Assn, of New. York. 883 1 1 
St. Paul Rifle and Revolver Assn. 914 0 2 
Los Angeles Rifle Club. 854 0 2 
Seattle Rifle and Revolver Assn. 919 0 2 
Tacoma Rifle and Revolver Club. 780 0 2 
Triangle Cadets Rifle Club. 679 0 2 
It looks like a fight between the Winchester Rod and 
Gun Club and the Rocky Mountain Rifle Club for the 
pennant. 
Feb. 1.—It took less time to get the Inter-club League 
going smoothly than the Intercollegiate League. By 
noon op Saturday last every club had reported their 
scores in the Inter-club League, and this is only the 
second contest, whereas several of the teams shooting 
m the Intercollegiate League had not reported up to 
Tuesday morning. The result was that the scores in 
the Inter-club League, were published broadcast in 
Sunday’s papers, and it is hardly likely that any re¬ 
sults of the school shoot will be published in the daily 
papers at all. 
. The Birmingham Athletic Club team is so proud of 
its two wins to date that they have already had their 
picture taken. . It shows a bunch of very fine looking 
shooters, and if they shoot as well as they look they 
ought to come out near the top. They have yet to meet 
the crackerjacks, and their pride may be humbled. It 
looks now as if the fight would be between the Win- 
1 es t? r R°d and Gun Club, of New Haven, Conn., and 
the Rocky Mountain .Rifle Club, of Butte, Mont., whose 
sc prcs appear to be in a class by themselves. 
There is no doubt that the starting of these two 
leagues has aroused considerable interest in shooting 
among the clubs of both classes. Since the shooting 
began, seven civilian rifle clubs have sent in their ap¬ 
plication for membership in the association. They are 
the Cuvahoga Rifle Club, of Cleveland, Ohio; Hastings 
(Col.) Rifle Club; the Park Club, of Bridgeport, Conn ; 
Santa Ana (Cal.) Rifle Club; Adrian (Mich.) Rifle 
Club; Danbury (Conn.) Rifle Club and the Tarrytown 
(N. Y.) Rifle Club. Among the colleges clubs have been 
organized and joined the National Rifle Association 
from the Oklahoma Agricultural College; Pennsylvania 
State College and the University of Tennessee. A rifle 
club has also been elected from the Odgen (Utah) High 
School. 
The proudest boy in California to-day is fourteen-year- 
old Ernest Williams, of. the Harvard School, of Los 
Angeles, who succeeded in winning a junior marksmen 
outdoor medal by making 39 standing and 42 prone on 
the Glendale range at Los Angeles, on Jan. 22. Young 
Williams is only 14 years old and weighs only 85 pounds. 
Why the 
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This is a collection of papers on different themes con¬ 
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