March 25, 1911.] 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
469 
Northern Kentucky Gun Club. 
A few members attended the live-bird shoot held on 
March 16. The weather was pleasant, but quite cold, 
and with a brisk wind blowing most of the afternoon. 
The birds were an average lot, with enough hard ones to 
make the shooting interesting. Two 10-bird events were 
shot, and several miss-and-outs were pulled off to finish 
U P t J' le afternoon. Payne divided first with Rogers in 
the first event on a straight score, captured first rfloney 
alone in the second event with another straight, and 
finished well in the lead with 30 out of 31 shot at in all 
events. Rogers was next with a total of 23 out of 29. 
\\ alker showed better form than at Hyland, on Feb. 22, 
but was not doing his best; he killed 22 out of 31. 
Schreck missed 8 out of his 30 birds, an unusually large 
number of goose eggs for him. Gould had bad luck in 
the second event, losing his first bird dead out, or he 
would have been in a tie with Payne. Koch generally 
gets out to the pigeon shoots, but they do not come 
often enough for him to keep in practice. At the 
annual meeting of the club held on March 14, the fol¬ 
lowing directors were elected for the ensuing year; Dr. 
S. B. Shouse, John Schreck, George Walker, John A. 
Payne, John V. Dea, George Dameron, J. P. Gould, 
George Keifer and A. J. Cook. The board will meet 
on March 21 to organize. 
Event No. 1, 10 birds, $4 entrance, 60 and 40 per cent., 
all at 30yds.: 
Rogers .2111122222—10 Walker .2212022021— S 
Payne .1221211112—10 Schreck .2022220222— S 
Gould .2222222021— 9 Koch .2210011201— 7 
Event No. 2. 10 birds, $4 entrance, 60 and 40 per cent.: 
Payne, 32.2222111122—10 Gould, 31 _*212222211— 9 
Walker, 31 .. .2021122211— 9 Koch, 2S .1102220012—7 
Rogers, 32 ...2201212111— 9 Schreck, 30 ..0222020202—6 
Miss-and-outs, entrance $2 in first and third event, and 
31 in second. Gun held below elbow in third event, 
and distance 28yds. Handicap in first and second. Re¬ 
entry allowed: 
♦Walker, 29 
Payne. 31 . 
Rogers, 29 . 
Schreck, 30 
Koch, 28 ... 
Walker, 29 
♦Roger .... 
Gould . 
♦Walker ... 
♦Gould . 
♦Re-entry. 
No. 1. 
No. 2. 
No. 3. 
,1122 1 
20 —1 
0 —0 
.1122—1 
1111—4 
220—2 
2120 3 
0 —0 
120—2 
2220—3 
222—3 
10 1 
1110—3 
112—3 
0 —0 
0 -0 
O 
1 
O 
120—2 
0 —0 
Montclair Gun Club. 
Montclair, N. J., March 18.—Eleven members were 
present to-day. Messrs. E. K. Winslow and Chas. Siedler 
tried their hand at trapshooting for the first time. Hol¬ 
loway and Dinkins showed up after an absence of nearly 
a year. Messrs. Bush and Crane tied for first place in 
event 2, the first leg on the Du Pont trophy. Crane 
winning out in the shoot-off, while Frazee was successful 
in capturing event 3, the third leg on the March cup. 
The last two events were two ; man team races, with 
Messrs. Holloway and Frazee winners in event 4, and 
Messrs. Winslow and son winners in event 5. 
The Passaic County Gun Club visit Montclair on 
March 25, with their ten men team. 
Events: 1 
Targets: 25 
S G Francisco. 18 
C L Bush . 20 
H F Holloway. 14 
E K Winslow. 6 
Chas Siedler. 8 
I S Crane. 19 
E Winslow . 19 
I W England. 11 
T J Dinkins. 14 
Y T Frazee. 19 
Geo Batten . 
2 
H.25 
4 22 
4 24 
5 19 
8 14 
8 16 
4 24 
4 23 
5 16 
6 20 
2 21 
6 21 
3 
H.25 
4 23 
4 21 
5 21 
8 21 
8 21 
4 24 
4 21 
6 18 
6 18 
2 25 
6 23 
Two man pick-up team races, 10 targets per man: 
Event 4: Francisco and Batten 15, Bush and England 
14, Holloway and Frazee 18, Crane and Dinkens 13, 
E. Winslow and E. K. Winslow 10. 
_Event 5: Francisco and Batten 11, Bush and England 
17, Holloway and Frazee 18, Crane and Dinkins 13, 
E. Winslow and F.. K Winslow 19 
E. Winslow, Sec’y. 
CAST IRON MEDAL 
Elliott. H e won 
The Historic 
Cast Iron Medal 
This emblem of the 
Live Bird Champion¬ 
ship of America is 
still held by J. A. R. 
it several years ago with 
Winchester 
Shells and Repeating Shotgun 
and no one has yet been able to wrest it 
from him. Mr. Elliott has always shot 
and continues to shoot Winchester mins 
O 
and shells exclusively. There is in this 
a note of confidence which is llluminatinof. 
No shooter can expect to win 
any great success unless he 
has entire confidence in his eun 
and shells. Mr. Elliott’s work 
shows that Winchester guns 
and shells can be depended 
upon thoroughly. 
J. A. R. ELLIOTT 
Hyde Park Gun Club. 
Some good scores were made at the shoot on March 18. 
The attendance was smaller than at the previous week’s 
shoots, eight men facing the traps. Tarbell made a 
good start, getting them all in the first event, and this 
proved to be the only straight made during the after¬ 
noon, and finishing in a tie on 92 with Holoday. Welsh 
is still sticking to it, and when he gets settled down to 
one gun, will make them go some to beat him. He 
finished second with 83. We were glad to see Joe 
Block again. He used to be one of the regulars at St. 
Bernard, and his score to-day shows that he hasn’t for¬ 
gotten how to point. He promises to come out often 
through the summer. Smith got into a couple of 
events and started in well, but couldn’t keep up the 
pace. Huttersley will be with us this summer, and is 
going to improve when he gets a little more practice. 
De Mar was missed to-day, and will have to pay his fine 
next week before he shoots. Rhodes did his best work 
in the third event, when he broke 84 per cent. We hope 
he will not let the attraction of tennis keep him from the 
firing line this summer. Frohliger went for them in 
earnest in the first event, striking an 88 per cent, gait, 
but the pace was a little too rapid for him to maintain, 
as he had other things to look after. A bunch of the 
Morrow (Ohio) shooters will visit here on March 25, 
and an interesting team match is scheduled. Another 
attraction (or two of them) will be the presence of Fred 
Gilbert, and Luther Squier, both well known and popu¬ 
lar trade representatives. A big crowd will be on hand 
to welcome them. 
Targets: 25 25 25 25 Total. 
Tarbell . 25 22 23 22 92 
Holaday . 21 24 24 23 92 
Welsh . 21 20 20 22 83 
Block . 19 23 20 20 82 
Frohliger . 22 17 16 15 70 
Rhodes . 17 17 21 IS 63 
Hattersley . 20 19 19 .. 58 
Smith . 19 17 .. .. 36 
Yale University—Larchmonf Y. C. 
Travers Island, N. Y., March 18.—One of the finest 
exhibitions of trapshooting for the season was given here 
to-day by Yale gunners and the Larchmont Y. C. team, 
in their annual trap shoot. Firing at 100 targets each, 
the totals of both five-man teams were tied at 448. Un¬ 
fortunately for the collegians, they failed to maintain 
their fiigh form in the shoot-off at 25 each, and the Yacht 
Club boys won the tie and match by 119 to 101. 
R. L. Spotts, of the victorious squad, and G. E. 
Dimock, Yale’s captain, tied for the high gun honors 
with 95 out of 100. Tallies were as follows: 
Yale University. 
L S Morrison .. 
OO oq 
23 
23—91 
S Biddle . 
23 
23—91 
H Emmett . 
.. 18 24 
23 
22—87 
L H Thompson. 
.. 18 23 
20 
23—84 
G E Dimock. 
.. 23 24 
23 
25—95—448 
Larchmont 
Yacht Club. 
K R Hooker. 
99 
21 
22—86 
S Scott .. 
.. 25 24 
21 
22—92 
E A Wilson. 
.. 21 22 
21 
22—86 
G Lembeck . 
.. 22 19 
24 
24—89 
R L Spotts. 
.. 23 24 
24 
24-95-448 
Shoot-off: 
Yale. 
Larchmont. 
T. S Morrison .... 
. 21 
K 
R Hooker.. 
....23 
S Biddle . 
. 19 
S 
Scott .... 
.... 24 
H Emmett . 
E 
A Wilson 
.... 23 
L H Thompson... 
. 22 
G 
Lembeck 
.... 24 
G E Dimock. 
. 20-101 
R 
L Spotts.. 
.... 25-119 
