.R0D> 9 GUN';J^ 



The Sportsman's Home Journal 



Forest and Stream's 

 natural history 



Columns contain so much original observation 

 of nature and the ways of wild animals that 

 they are carefully read by naturalists the world 

 over. Business and professional men of all 

 classes find in its pages the grateful odor of the 

 forest and the bright sparkle of the stream. It 

 is altogether unique in scope and character. No 

 other one agency in this country has done so 

 much as the Forest and Stream to develop and 

 establish among intelligent people a taste for 

 rational recreation with the rod and gun. horest 

 and Stream is printed for grown-ups, but it is 

 also a paper for young folks. No better read- 

 ing can be given to your boy, if you want to 

 see him grow up a manly man. 



Special Trial Trip.— -Price, 10 cents per week. All dealers. 

 or 25 cents we will send the paper for four weeks as a special 

 ial trip. 



Our catalogue of best books on outdoor sports will come to 

 >u free. Address 



FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 



346 Broadway, New York. 



LITTLE MASTERPIECES. 



A collection of books of the highest standing in lit— 

 ature. The best texts in good readable type, and on 

 ■ugh-edged paper, with photogravure frontispieces, 

 stefully bound in flexible cloth covers, gilt top (4 x 6). 

 1 this series nine independent volumes have been 

 sued : 



Poe (7) Macaulay (9) 



Hawthorne (8) Franklin (7) 



Irving (7) Webster (5) 



Carlyle (7) Lincoln, including the 



Ruskin (9) " Lost Speech " (7) 



(The figures in parentheses indicate the number of 

 lections.) 



To new yearly subscribers for 



PUBLIC OPINION 



will present a set of any three of these volumes, 

 you are not familiar with Public Opinion we shall 



glad to send you sample copies. It is an eclectic 

 :ekly that aims to cover briefly every field of human 

 tivity. Its departments are 



American Affairs Religion 



Foreign Affairs Letters and Art 



Sociology Business and Finance 



Science Book Reviews 



The American Affairs department is especially valu- 

 le, reflecting as it does the sentiment of the press of 

 I entire country. 



By reading this one paper you can be as well posted 

 though you read 3,000 each week. Our editors do 

 it for you. 



Public Opinion may be just the paper you have 

 nted for years. The subscription price is $2.50 per 

 it, $ 1.25 for six months. 



HE PUBLIC OPINION CO., 13 Astor Place, New York. 



malnut Lodge 



HOSPITAL, 



HARTFORD, CONN. 



Organized in 1880 



for the 



special Medical 



Treatment of 



Alcohol 



and 



Opium 



Inebriates. 



ELEGANTLY situated in the suburbs of the city, with 

 every appointment and appliance for the treatment 

 of this class of cases, including Turkish, Kvssian, Foman, 

 Saline, and Medicated Baths. Each case comes under the 

 direct personal care of the physician. Experience shows 

 that a large proportion of these cases are curable, and 

 all are benefited from the application of exact hygienic and 

 scientific measures. This institution is founded on the 

 well-recognized fact that Inebriety is a disease and curable, 

 and all these cases require rest, change of thevght and 

 living, etc. 



At Murray Hill Hotel, New York city, the second Tues- 

 day of each month, from 12 to 4 p.m. 



Applications and all inquiries should be addressed 



T. D, CEOTHERS, M.D., 

 Sup't Walnut Lodge, Hartford, Conn. 



A New Volume in The Great Commanders Series 



GENERAL SHERMAN. 



By General M. F. Force. A new volume in The 

 Great Commanders Series, Edited by General 

 James Grant Wilson. With Portraits and 

 Maps. i2mo. Cloth, $1.50. 



The author of this volume, a practiced writer and 

 one of Sherman's division commanders, accompanied 

 him in the Atlanta campaign and in the march to the 

 sea. It is no slight compliment to Geneial Force to 

 say that his biography of Sherman maintains the high 

 level of merit which characterizes the entire series, and 

 indicates the good jndgment of General Sheiman ir. 

 selecting him, as he did, for his biographer. Several 

 0/ the concluding chapters of the volume were written 

 by General J. D. Cox at the request of the author, 

 owing to a temporary loss of health and his desire not 

 to delay its appearance. The book contains a finely 

 engraved steel portrait of the picture that General 

 Sherman preferred, six well-executed maps of his most 

 important battlefields, and a carefully prepared index. 

 This clear, comprehensive, and compact biography of 

 the illustrious soldier contains, among other features, 

 the most accurate and complete account of the battle 

 of Shiloh, in which Sherman p'ayed such an important 

 part, that has appeared in print. 



" No library of military literature that has appeared in re- 

 cent years has been so instructive to leaders pf all kinds as 

 The Great Commanders Serirs, which is edited by General 

 James Grant Wilson." — New York Mail and Express. 



This book is for sale by all booksellers ; or it -will be sent 

 by mail, on receipt of price, by the publishers, 



D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, 



72 Fifth Avenue, New York. 



17 



