March 28, 1908 ] 
FOREST AND STREAM 
5>5 
^ p Ittel. 244 242 247 247 245 250 241 244 24S 246—2454 
W G Hudson... 243 245 242 248 245 246 245 246 248 244—2452 
J w Dearborn. 242 246 241 245 246 24S 247 243 245 246—2452 
Vf Baal . 244 245 242 245 241 246 246 247 244 247—244 1 
T R Geisel. 241 246 245 243 244 248 245 243 242 247—2444 
Geo Schlicht... 245 239 245 248 244 239 244 244 245 244-2437 
W Heim . 243 244 247 245 245 242 244 242 241 244-2437 
7 Kauffmann... 244 239 245 244 241 243 241 243 244 248-2432 
-J Smith . 241 246 242 240 245 245 243 242 246 241—2431 
Reynolds.... 245 243 246 243 248 239 242 245 243 246—2430 
R I Smith .. 242 240 244 240 245 241 242 241 241 242—2418 
G Hoffmann... 238 242 238 242 240 249 240 239 244 245—2417 
1 W Hessian .. 244 240 238 235 242 244 239 244 242 243—2411 
- ■ 235 237 239 237 238 245 242 245 243 244—2405 
•'40 229 241 242 235 242 244 245 243 240 -2401 
C Zettler. 
L Maurer 
G T Ross. 2397 J 
G L Amouroux. 2396 C 
P J Donovan. 2392 W 
H B Williams’. 2391 A 
L P Hausen. 2389 A 
L Reali . 2360 H 
G T Conti. 2359 H 
Zimmermann trophy, open to all, re-entries unlimited, 
two best tickets to count, three shots 25 cents. First, 
Gus Zimmermann trophy; second, $10; third, $5: 
Muzzio ... 
Altmann .. 
H Maurer. 
Allchin ... 
Heimrich 
2351 
2335 
2329 
2323 
2305 
J B eh rma n n. 2265 
RolTmann. 2261 
R. GUTE. 
Winner of Zettler Rifle Club Gallery Championship, 1908. 
First, L. P. Ittel, five 39s, and eighteen 38s. Second, 
R. Gute, five 39s, and sixteen 38s. Third, S. N. Murphy, 
two 39s. 
Bullseye target, three shots 35 cents, re-entries un¬ 
limited, best shot by measurement to count. Prizes, $25 
to $2: 
Buss . 
Laudensack . 
Dorrler . 
Gute . 
Snellen . 
Behrmann . 7 
Dearborn . 
Ittel . 
Keim . 8 
Hessian . 8 
Gus Zimmermann .... 
Murphy .'.. 9 
Continuous match, re-entries unlimited, twenty^ prizes, 
$40 to $2: Thomas, five 75s, ten 74s; Ittel, five 75s, five 
74s; Hubalek, five 75s, three 74s; Snellen, four 75s, four 
74s; J. Smith, three 75s. twelve 74s; Gute, three 75s, 
seven 74s; Buss, three 75s, five 74s; Hudson, three 75s, 
three 74s; O. Smith, two 75s, two 74s; F. L. Smith, one 
75, three 74s; Murphy,one 75, two 74s. 
sy 2 
J Snjith . 
. 9 
6 
A l) cliin . 
. 9 
6% 
G T Ross. 
. 9V 2 
6% 
C Ross . 
. 10 
7 
Amaroux . 
. 10 
7 
Hoffman . 
. 10>/ 2 
7 
H D M . 
.11 
7% 
O' Smith . 
.ny 2 
8 
Geisel . 
.h% 
8 
Roffman . 
. 12 
8% 
Muzzio . 
.12 
Providence (R. I ) Revolver Club. 
Providence, R. I.—It never rains but it pours, and the 
wicked cast about for an opportunity to entice the un¬ 
suspecting into all sorts of things which cause remorse. 
Here have we been slinging lead in a desultory manner 
at 50yds., shirking the gallery in every possible way be¬ 
cause we dislike the glare of the electric fluid, and 
taking out the Krags merely to continue the cleaning 
process and getting rid of some of the rust of the stormy 
Labor Day shoot, and along come challenges galore. 
First our Portland friends, fresh from a most interesting 
tournament wherein high scores cause us to shudder, 
and then a team match against the cracks of Wakefield, 
and that set for the 21st. The first to be 10 shots per 
man, standing. After that trimming we sit out 10 shots 
more, and after that we lie down, verily we do, for never 
have we shot at tile gallery in either the sitting or prone 
positions, but A. B. has set to work figuring up a shelf 
arrangement whereby we can gracefully repose on sundry 
bags of sawdust, take the creases out of Sunday trousers 
and wear out the knees and get spavins and further 
trimmings. 
r iOt j mo 
■ - 1 - of t 
V»T7 
he JJove-tai 
The obelisk stood firm 
Moses was a youth when the idea 
’ the dove-tail was first conceived 
by an Egyptian carpenter. The 
first dove-tail was placed under the obelisk at Luxor and forgotten, 
through an earthquake (26 B. C), which shook temples into ruins. 
The toD fastener of the Lefever shot gun is a dove-tail—“one of the keys of architecture.” 
When the shell explodes, the barrels hold to the frame in a dove-tail grip nothing can shake. 
The right principles are used in the simplest ways, on every part of these high grade 
guns. One piece does the cocking and extracting. It also checks the opening 
of the barrels so they rock open and shut without any strain on the hinge 
joint. With ten to twenty-five less pieces and our exclusive compensa¬ 
tion and take-up methods, “shooting loose” after years of use is im¬ 
possible. 
Lefever Shot Guns 
Our catalogue tells the truth about steel, about scien 
tific taper-boring and the finest hand work on all parts 
things about gun construction told nowhere else. 
It is worth sending for. 
LEFEVER ARMS CO., 23 Mnltbie St., Syracuse, N. T. 
When You Buy a Gun 
Take no chances! Buy a Good one! It pays! A 
PARKER GUN is the best built gun in America. 
Thousands of experienced shooters will tell you so. 
It will last a lifetime, and costs from $37.50 up. 
Built by the oldest gun manufacturers in America. 
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE 
Pa.rker Bros., Meriden. Conn, 
NEW YORK SALESROOMS 
32 Warren Street 
BARGAINS IN BOOKS! 
Shelf-Clearing Opportunities for Book Buyers 
Slightly Damaged Copies, Odds and Ends of Editions, 
Shopworn Books, Samples, Returned Copies, Odd Volumes. 
S OME of these books are absolutely new, some are a trifle soiled, some 
have scratches on covers, and a few have slight defeats that make them 
unsalable as new books. Many are among our best sellers and those of 
other publishers. They are all good hooks, some rare and very valuable— 
travel, exploration, hand books of sport, adventure, juveniles all are offeied 
at great price reductions. 
The list is too long to reproduce here, but we will gladly furnish it on 
application. There are nearly 100 titles marked at from a fifth to a half of 
regular prices. If the book you want is here you will sa\ e money. 
Write to-day for list of hooks and prices. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO., New York City 
