KU 
f When your Parker 
swings swiftly to 
your shoulder at 
the sudden whir of 
wings, it is then you ap¬ 
preciate to the full the 
easy handling and hard 
shooting qualities of the 
Send for Catalog 
Master Gun Makers, MERIDEN, CONN., U. S. A 
Regimental Team Match for the Rum- 
bold Trophy was fought out by the 
representatives of 42 regiments and 
separate organizations of the Army, 
National Guard, Marine Corps, and 
Navy. The team from the 2nd Regi¬ 
ment, U. S. Infantry took the match 
in a desperate battle with the Naval 
Training Station, West Coast. Both 
doughboys and gobs piled up totals of 
550 but the soldiers outranked the 
sailors. The match for the A. E. F. 
Roumanian Trophy was won by the 
Infantry. The Herrick, long range 
team shooting classic of the Camp 
Perry program, also went to the In¬ 
fantry with a new record score of 1789 
just nine points above the Marines. 
The Herrick calls for teams of eight fir¬ 
ing members. 15 shots per man at 800, 
900, and 1,000 yards. 
Wednesday, the 19th, the Individual 
Palma was fired. This match together 
with the Palma Team Match represent 
the individual—and team respectively, 
. championships of the world. It had 
been hoped to have teams from both 
England and Canada compete in the 
Palma Team and Individual matches 
this year. Realizing that the condi¬ 
tions calling for the service rifle of 
the competing nation automatically 
handicapped the British and Canadians 
to an almost impossible extent the N. 
R. A. of America changed the condi 
tions to permit all competing teams to 
use the Springfield or a match rifle. 
Both Canadians and British declined 
however, on the ground that no great 
nation could play the sportsman and 
still use the tools of their competitors. 
So both the Palma Individual and 
Palma Team Matches were fired with¬ 
out foreign competition. The Cana¬ 
dians be it said in passing have 
promised definitely to send a Palma 
Team to this country for the 1924 
meeting. Corporal J. R. Tucker, 
Marine, won the Individual Palma with 
the score of 224, dropping only one 
point in 45 shots divided evenly be¬ 
tween 800, 900, and 1,000 yads. Cap¬ 
tain J. T. Campbell of the Coast Artil¬ 
lery was runner-up with 223 and there 
were eight 222’s. 
The Small Bore contingent exceeded 
all expectations, so that in spite of the 
fact that the range had been moved up 
from under the apple trees on the ex¬ 
treme left of the range to a central 
location between the 200 and 600 yards 
firing points in the site selected by the 
men who have handled the small bore 
game at the National Matches for sev¬ 
eral years the accomodations proved 
inadequate to handle the large number 
of riflemen who had journeyed to 
Perry for the sole purpose of shooting 
the small bore and competing for a 
place on the Dewar Team. Tryouts 
for the Dewar Team were held on the 
Model ’99—Note the hammerless, 
solid breech. Nothing can get in to 
jam that powerful action. Built 
for .22 hi-power; .250-3000; .30-30; 
.300; .303. 
* * handles fast, holds steady 
as a rock— 
You can depend on the smooth, sure 
action of a Savage. It functions right. 
And. accuracy the most important 
thing in any rifle. You can’t beat a 
Savage for deadly, lasting accuracy. 
And it’s light—a Savage high-power 
doesn t carry an extra ounce —but it’s 
proportioned and hung to hold as steadv 
as a rock. 
This perfect balance is always the 
same. For the Savage magazine is of the 
box type—full or empty—its balance is 
unchanged. 
A Savage for every kind, of 
American game 
.22 hi-povver. The amazing Imp — 
ideal for woodchuck, fox and wolf. Ac¬ 
curate at long and unknown ranges. 
30-30. The choice of many seasoned 
hunters for deer and medium size game 
at moderate ranges. 
.303. A hard, knockdown hitter— 
has dropped deer, bear and caribou for 
20 years. 
.250-3000. An all-around rifle. Ter¬ 
rific speed and accuracy make it the gun 
for mountain sheep, goats, and deer at 
extreme ranges. 
.300. Delivers a crashing blow that 
will drop the great Alaskan brown bear 
in his tracks. Powerful enough for any 
American game. 
And the Savage .22s—the Sporter— 
the new bolt-action repeating .22—the 
gilt-edge accuracy of the finest target 
rifle built into a sporting model. Or the 
slide-action. Model ’14—every feature 
originally and distinctively Savage— 
sturdy and accurate. 
Ask at your dealer’s or write direct for 
our interesting catalog. 
SAVAGE ARMS CORPORATION 
Dept. 133 Utica, N.Y. 
Owners and operators of the J. Stevens Arms Company 
Tf? S ? vage ^Porter—bolt-action .22 repeating rifle. 
23-meh round barrel, genuine American walnut 
stock, varnish finish, pistol grip, open sporting 
sigh.s, five-shot detachable box magazine. 
Savage manufactures ammunition for every 
bavageh.gh-power rifle. Savage ammunition is 
advised for use with Savage high-power rifles. 
Savage is now also manufacturing other well- 
known cartridges. Look for the Savage Red Box. 
Page 6^9 
hi writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. It will identify 
non. 
