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A WONDERFUL MARKSMAN.

A marvellous marksman (nays an exchange) has arrived at New York. His name is Dr. Carver, and ho is supposed to be the most wonderful rifle shot ia the world. He was carried off when a child by the Dakota Indians, and lived with, them sixteen years. At the age of nine he began to shoot birds on the wing with a rifle, and subsequently became so expert at shooting that the Dakotas regarded him ns superhuman. He rarely missed a shot at a bird, even when on horseback, and killed buffaloes and deer shooting from his hip, never raising his rifle to his eye when shooting at sitting or standing game. After leaving the Dakotas he shot in matches at San Kranoisoo and elsewhere, and his wonderful exploits “ electrified the Pacific ooasa.” One of his most extraordinary feats was breaking all but seven glasss balls out of 2000 with a rifle at ten paces. This feat was performed at Oakland, Californio. On another occasion ho broke fifty successive glass balls while riding a horse at full speed. . The horse was a “green animal” from a livery stable, from whose back a gun had never before been fired. He prides himself especially upon his fancy shots. Prom the hip he claims to be a dead shot at anything stationary within a reasonable distance. A ball being thrown twenty or thirty feet in the air, before it falls he will fire at it and reload his gun twice, breaking it on the third shot. At from twelve to fifteen yards he will break as many balls as one man can keep in the air, thrown as high as possible, reloading at every shot.. Ho shatters a ball thrown straight at his head by a man thirty yards distant. He shoots right and left with a man on each side throwing the balls in the air. At the crack of the rifle the balls are cracked. He throws two balls in the air at once, breaking one, loading his rifle and shattering the other before it reaches the ground. At Logansport bet hit with a rifle bail seventeen successive trade dollars thrown over a tree. He shoots at half dollars and dimes, tossed in the air, and knocks the spots out of nickels. He declares that he has broken glass balls while ho was mounted and his horse was in the act of leaping a fence four feet high. Dr. Carver assorts that he can shoot by sound almost as well as by sight. Ho has appeared on the stage blindfolded, and sent the ball through a bell rung behind him. He can give no explanation of his skill, but states that “it comes natural.”

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTIM18780902.2.28

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

New Zealand Times, Volume XXXIII, Issue 5439, 2 September 1878, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
456

A WONDERFUL MARKSMAN. New Zealand Times, Volume XXXIII, Issue 5439, 2 September 1878, Page 3

A WONDERFUL MARKSMAN. New Zealand Times, Volume XXXIII, Issue 5439, 2 September 1878, Page 3

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