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Show UTAH HUNTERS WILL BE SHORT OF SHELLS j Utah hunters and clay target shooters experience difficulty in! getting sporting ammunition, have one consolation. The shells usually available on the market are being put to excellent use by the army and navy. That use is the training of aeri-' al gunners for the armed forces. This training according to announcement an-nouncement by Remington Arms Company, operators of the Utah Ordnance plant, starts with a full curriculum of shot gun instruction. More than 3,000 shot gun shells, it 'is estimated, are required for the average sportsman to become a good shot. The average gunner today needs less than one third this amount of amunition to become a better-than better-than -average wing shot in a very short time. It was pointed out that me.ny that many youngsters entering enter-ing the army and Navy have never nev-er before fired a gun. But after la brief course in shot gun train-I train-I ing under supervision of famous I prof essional and amateur trap shooters, they soon gain skill with heavier weapons of war, such as machine guns and airial cannons. The shot gun acquaints them with gun fire, verses them in the necessity of properly leading moving mov-ing targets, and teaches coordina-of coordina-of mind, eye and mucle. . I |