Mr. Liebeler. There was nothing outstanding about that that you can remember now?

Mr. Davis. I was more or less mad when I went down there, because someone was shooting at the wrong target.

Mr. Liebeler. Did you observe these two gentlemen leaving the range on the 17th?

Mr. Davis. No, sir; I sure didn't.

Mr. Liebeler. Have you had experience with the sighting in of rifles?

Mr. Davis. Yes.

Mr. Liebeler. You are quite experienced in that field, as a matter of fact, are you not?

Mr. Davis. Well, I have taught myself in the past 5 months of operation of that gun range to where I can usually sight one in within 8 to 10 shots pretty close. Mr. Price is a gun enthusiast and he is real good at it, and he has been doing it for a long time.

Mr. Liebeler. If a man purchased a rifle from a mail-order house that had a telescopic sight mounted on it, would you have any opinion as to what the accuracy of that rifle would be without it having actually been sighted in by actual firing of the rifle?

Mr. Davis. If the gun was anywhere near accurate, it would have to be an accident, because the slightest jar can knock a scope 2 or 3 foot out of balance, and there is no way that you could ship a gun and carry a gun around a little bit and make sure it being accurate. That is why your deer hunters practice and shoot their guns in every year before they go deer hunting. And I have saw them waste almost five boxes of shells trying to get them accurate down there after having sighted them in the year before.