all about, who did not end up as members, and some of them were to become the real builders of the future; Glydon Willis, a young potato dealer from Kensington; Lloyd MacCallum of Marshfield; Charlottetown druggist, Leigh Semple; automobile dealer Ivan Horne; businessman, Howard Douglas; and a young man working with his father in the office supply business, Hugh Simpson. The Club was also recharged, late in the season, with the return to Prince Edward Island of Tam Gillies, who lost no time in getting back into skeet shooting.

In the Maritimes, there was a new momentum visible in clay target shooting, and credit for most of it can be related to one individual. Canadian Industries Limited had sent to Halifax, as its Maritime representative, a young man, named Duncan G. Morrison, who would have a major impact on the sport for the next decade. As part of his work, related to promotion, Morrison accepted the position as Secretary of the Maritime Trap and Skeet Association, an office he would hold for many years. His efforts were more aligned to a General Manager, as he organized, and ran competitions at almost every Maritime Club. Perhaps his greatest contribution came in the assembly of shooting averages. The secretary of every club in the

DUNC MORRISON

Maritime Association submitted shooters' averages

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