Nov. 16, 
FOREST AND STREAM. 






UNITED STATES CARTRIDGE CO., 
U.S. A. 
LOWELL, MASS., 
> 44h 
ian 
AMMUNITION . 
The proof of the Cartridge is in the shooting. The United States Army, 
by careful tests, have proven the VU. S. Cartridges to be the most 
accurate and reliable. 

MANUFACTURED BY 
Agencies: 497-505 Pearl St. 35-43 Park St., New York. 


Events: 1 2 3 4 5 6 i 
1 Wat VO a ia ee 5 Nae Bg et We 
® Greifl .scnccos 22 045 022 021 02% 022 020 
> F Pelham..... 22 450 221 220°223 325 222 
* W Billings... 21 244 119 122 119 221 221 
> J O’Donohwe. 21 2438 117 119 119 2 20 216 
Fanning ..... 20 042 02 024 022 024 024 
S Sutphin.... )5 1040 516 2... 2 2. ee we oe oe 
> R Robinson.. 14 640 322 320 -32 rye eae 
P Date eet case 10 1029 513 518 518 512 5183 
S Dickerson.... 438 223 122 118 222 223 
SrA EW ee nan ae 446 218 224 120 221 2 24 
) Wagner ..... .. HOM) 1 1G 0.14 Pree OLS | ike 
eo Kuchler ... .. 6 3 Cpl SEL Sas Dao sae ee 
veo Bechtel ... .. 650 222 220 220 319 314 
Sa?  Fveld ne. cievtenh oe CTE ATR CDs TET NG 6 Viti a It ees 
% Mulford ..... Meth 184 piel woll. ove0's Olé 

WESTERN TRAP. 
In Other Places. 
Luling, Tex., young men who have the shooting fever 
jiave organized a gun club with O. K. Lipscomb, Presi- 
lent; and L. A. Ridout, Treasurer, and much rare sport 
ls being hed. The business men have donated prizes for 
» contest amcng members. 
Comparatively few members were out, with the bad 
veather as a drawback, on Thursday last, the regular 
ay for the Laurel Heights Gun Club, San Antonio, 
Cex. Mrs. Topperwein used a new gun and broke 9% 
yut of 100. Scores at 50: J. B. Webb. 45, W. Prescott 
‘5, Tom Frost 38, John Frost 42, Joe Frost 44. 
Officers of the Hawaiian Gun Club met last Friday for 
he purpose of forming rules to govern the shoots for the 
1ew cup that will be put up for future weekly contests. 
The recently organized Nature Fakers’ Gun Club, of 
“harlotte, Tenn., held the first practice shoot. On their 
jext appearance at the traps, the monthly trophy shoot 
vill be started. 
The tournament scheduled for last week by the Cum- 
|verland boys, at Davenport, Ia., was postponed owing to 
he impossibility of getting the new traps set in time. 
Chas, Webber, George Roustadt, Dr. Purcell, George 
ulian, Kid Wilding, George Martin, W. B. Moore, John 
3teigler and Harry Smith were the members of the Tuc- 
on, Arizona, Gun Club, who attended the shoot at Doug- 
as. In the two-man team shoot they took second, third 
n the three-man event, and third in the four-man event. 
\ll participants were well pleased with the treatment re- 
seived at Douglas, and all feel confident of being present 
vhen the annual meeting occurs, as it will at El Paso. 
Club scores made at Rice Lake,.Wis., Sunday last, at 
5 targets: g 
i, Joe Bartos 6. 
Dr. Carman A. Newcomb is making an effort to form 
| gun club in St. Louis, to be composed entirely of phy- 


Juza 15, B. Shelton 14, Fonocok 11, Otto Paul” 
sicians, There are many good and enthusiastic shooters 
among the profession there, and he should have no 
trouble to get them in line. Grounds have been secured, 
and the shooting will not be delayed on that account. 
At a meeting of the Fountain City Gun Club it was 
decided to hold a shoot or series limited to members 
only. There were rules adopted, and a fine gun will be 
the prize that will go to the highest score. 
The last of the series of summer shoots held by the 
Benham, Tex., Gun Club, was contested last week, and 
George Tucker proved the winner with a score of 31 
out of a possible 32. Mr. C. Rowley won second place 
with 28 and. Mr. L. J. Lockett third with 27. ? 
Wildberger won from Kullman, score 22 to 20, on the 
shoot-off at the Metropolitan Gun Club grounds, St. 
Joseph, Mo. 
Henry Geise broke 20 straight in the medal shoot at 
the South Side Gun Club, Quincy, Ill. However, the 
medal was won by Mr. McCoy, a club member, with a 
score'of 19 out of 25. 
The Grosbeck, Tex., Gun Club held a shoot last week, 
and G. N. Groves won over H. C. Carter, with 24 out of 
25. R. J. Jackson was present and made 95 out of 100; 
Noble Groves 96, and H. C. Carter 94. 
There was to have been a club shoot last week at the 
Grosbeck, Tex., Gun Club between the home team and 
the Mexia, but the, latter team failed to show up. 
When the members of the Ballard Washington Gun 
Club met last week George Poersel won the Moore cup, 
scoring 20, and A. F. Bethe took the second cup with 
224. The reporter states that other members were in 
poor form and did not come close up to the two high 
men. 
A tournament was held last week at Marquette, Kans, 
The Camp Markley Gun Club has been organized at 
Belvidere, Ill., with Frank Early President, and L. 
Garrett, Secretary. 
The tournament at Shelby, Ia., Tuesday was well at- 
tended. H. C. Wilson, of Audubon, a man over seventy 
years of age, carried away. first money. Oliver Dear, of 
Portsmouth, second, and Will Holts, of Shelby, third. 
Henry Anderson was on hand to attend the shoot at 
Marquette, Kans. The time is not so far in the past 
when ‘‘Hi’ attended almost every tournament in the 
Middle and Western States. 
Although trap contests for the Board of Trade badge, 
Chicago, was up Saturday last, it did not decide the race, 
as the samé must be won three times in succession. 
Barto, after two wins, was beaten on this occasion by 
George Roll with 47 to his 44. Young was second with 
0. 
In the face of a high wind, which made shooting at 
the traps difficult, nearly a half hundred shooters turned 
out to take part in the shoot of the Chicago Gun Club 
on Sunday last, the attraction being the Fred Stone cup. 
The event was won by F. P. Stannard, who shot from the 
18yds. line, and lost but 2 out of 50, with George Eck 
only one more to the bad. Others were: Earl 46, 
Barto 46, Stone 45, Thwait 45, Hollenbeck 45, Groeneke 
44, Fricke 44, W. D. Stannard 44, Fairbauld 44, Flewellyn 
114-116 Market St, San Francisco 



43, Steenberg 43, Miller 43, Anderson 43, McGuffy 43, 
Myrick 42, Skinner 42, Vietmeyer 42, Deal 41, Clancy 41, 
Young 41, 
In the opening event Sunday last at the Chicago Gun 
Club, Fred Stone, W. D. Stannard and Johnson made 
clean scores. F. P. Stannard, Dr. Bosbe and Flewellyn 
each broke 24, while Anderson, Myrick, Gromke and 
Tucker broke 23. Handicap event at 50 targets: Thwait 
45, Flewellyn 44, Johnson 43, Stone 42, Wolfe 42, Myrick 
41, Eck 41, Hofer 41, Earl 42, Clancy 42, Barribal 42. 
Somewhat above the average scores were made by the 
Panther City Gun Club, Fort Worth, Tex., Saturday last. 
Lem Day reclaimed the trophy after a shoot-off. One 
of the features of the shooting was that of B. K. Michael, 
a one-armed man, getting 33 out of 50. Scores made at 
50 targets: Dr. J. M. Furman 37, W. F. Schroeder 36, 
C. J. Sutton 37, C. L. Moore 39, E. M. Mason 32, Lem 
Day 39, Steward Moore 39, H. S. Porter 36, T. P, Wilkes 
32, F. H. High 33, G. W. Blue 38, J. W. O. Groyn 382, 
B. K. Mitchell 33, J. H. Cheatem 33. 
Rifle Range and Gallery. 

At Shell Mound. 
San Francisco, Cal., Nov. 1.—The Pacific Humane 
Society Revolver’ Club shot at the Shell Mound range 
Jast week. F. S. Bernhard made a score of 50 out of a 
possible 50. This is the more remarkable because the 
organization is a comparatively new competitor for shoot- 
ing honors, having been in existence only two months. 
The scores were as follows: F. S. Bernhard 50, O. W. 
Lundquist 44, F. J. Kane 44, H. A. Deline 44, F. F. 
Engle 44, M. Edwards 42, G. N. Franklin 41, C. B. 
Wilcox 40, F..C. Bordenave 39, R. E. Carlisle 39, V. S. 
Sutherland 38, M. Edwards , H. A. Hird 36, L. Havard 
32, F. W. Delventhal 30, Frank Moss 28, D. Small 27, 
A. Hunter 27, J. White 26, F. Johnson 26, L. Kent 26, 
R. Richard 26, M. Kelly 25, B. Dickson 24, F, Shears 22, 
M. Darth 20. : 
The Austrian Military Club shot early in the morning 
on the same day, but no record was kept of the results. 
This is a new club, and the shoot was its first. En- 
couraged by the showing, a regular shooting section will 
be formed and will hold forth at the Shell Mound ranges 
once a month, 
Henry Harris, who cleaned up the English marksmen 
at the recent Bisley shoot, has gone to Los Angeles, 
and will remain there two weeks. Immediately on his re- 
turn the Shell Mound Rifle and Pistol Club will hold its 
annual banquet and distribution of prizes, and Harris 
will be the honored guest of the evening. 
The San Francisco Turner Schuetzen Section will hold 
a public prize shoot at the ranges Nov. 10 



