240 



FOKEST AND STKEAM. 



YMxi&trtng* 



Baird, Brewer & Ridgeway's 



ORIN ITHOLOGY, 



Three volumes; price, $20, Brewer's Oology (col- 

 ored plates); price, $5. Also a collection of our 175 

 species of eggs*; price. $10. T. J. WILSON, 1105 Fil- 

 bert street, Philadelphia, Pa. Nov9-lt 



CHAS. REICHE & BRO., 



IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF 



Birds and Rare Animals, 



SUITABLE FOR 



Zoological Gardens and Menageries 



55 Chatham Street, third door from North William 

 RARE AMERICAN ANIMALS ALWAYS PUR- 

 CHASED. 

 Chas. Rkiche, Henry Reiche,^ 



Sept. 21. New York. 



TT1RANK SCHOPF, DEALER IN ALL 



_LH kinds of foreign and domestic birds, 71 Fourth 

 avenue, New York. Constantly on hand a large stock 

 of cages, seeds, gravel, aquariums, globes, gold and 

 fancy fishes, mocking-birds, talking parrots, etc. 

 Also dealers supplied. All orders promptly attended 

 to. _ oct5 ly 



Zoological Garden. 



FAIRMOUNT PARK, PHILADELPHIA. 



Open ejKsry day. A large collection of Living Wild 

 Beasts, Birds, and Reptiles. Admission, 25 cents; 

 children under twelve, 10 cents. lanfi Iv 



EclTvard. J3. Conway, 



Successor to James H. Roome, 



TAXIDERMIST, 



NO. 55 CARMINE STREET, 



Near Bedford St., NY. 



Pet birds, animals, deer heads, &c, stuffed and 

 mounted to order. Bird skins bought and sold. 

 Natural curiosities always on hand. Sep7-3m 



Birds and Animals Preserved to Order jcr 



R. JU NEWCOMB, 



TAXIDERMIST, 



NO. 7 CHERRY STREET, SALEM, MAS3. 



Wading and aquatic birds of New England coast a 

 specialty. Collections or specimens furnished. 

 fnotrnction* if i veil msvSt 



TAXIDERMIST'S MANUAL.— A COM- 

 plete practical guide to collecting, preparing, 

 pre-erviug and mounting animals, birds, reptiles, in- 

 sects, &c. Illustrated. 50ets. Hunter and Trapper's 

 Guide, 30. Dog Training, 25. Of booksellers, or by 

 mail. JESSE HANEY &CO., 119 Nassau St., N Y 

 Aug. 10 §m 



Taxidermist 



NEW UTRECHT, NEW YORK, 



Dealer in ob- 

 jects of Natural 

 History, Dining- 

 Room Taxider- 

 my, Game Birds 

 on shields and 

 stands, Bucks 1 

 Heads, Antlers, 

 Carved Heads, 

 [ T a x i d e rmists 1 

 j •ninolies. Skins 

 | and eggs for col' 

 I ections, Aquaria 

 ' and stock, In 

 ects,. Chrysa- 

 lides, Coral, 

 Shells, &c. 



Agents: 



Merrel Ryder 



55 Jackson St 



St. Paul, Minn. 



and Holberton & Beemer. 102 Nassau street, N. Y. 



HURST'S 



Stereoscopic Studies 



OF 



Natural History 



FOR OBJECT TBACHING IN SCHOOLS 



And 



PARLOR ENTERTAINNENT. 



We are prepared to furnish the first sixty numbers of 

 the first series of 



Animals and Birds of North America. 



To these will be added a second series of foreign 

 specimens, and various animals and birds in grotesque 

 attitudes, never, however, violating their natural in- 

 stincts. 



We offer these views, not as pictures only, but as 

 studies from nature. One of the great moving ele- 

 ments in our modern system of education is object 

 teaching. The unerring fidelity of the stereoscope 

 transfers the animals and birds from their natural 

 habitat to the rooms of the student and the fireside 

 of our homes, where they cannot fail to have a last- 

 ing impression of the form, color, habits, and local- 

 ity of each specimen. 



An experience of more than twenty-five years as 

 Taxidermist of the New York State Cabinet of Nat- 

 ural History, and in gathering his large collection of 

 native and foreign specimens, enables Mr. Hurst to 

 combine in every view the locality of the specimen, 

 with its appropriate rocks, woods, or water, and col- 

 oring from the originals. 



Cornell University, \ 



Ithaca, March 14th, 1870. f 

 I must congratulate you upon your great success in 

 this new educational enterprise. If we can arrange 

 our amusements so as to make them impart instruc- 

 tion to trie mind, it will be a step in advance in edu- 

 cation. EZRA CORNELL. 



Prices; By the Dozen &3 OO 



By the Set of 5 Dozen, in Elegant Case, 16 OO 



These Stereoscopes are sold wholesale and retail by 



Forest and Stream Publishing Comp'y, 



17 f Uatham St., (City Hall gq.) P, 9, box 8833. 



1st Prize Medals 



AWARDED 



Vanity Fair", 



INCLUDING 

 VIENNA, and the latest award at Philadephia. 



U. S. Centennial Grand Medal of Merit. 



DIPLOMA. OF HONOR, 



and JUDGES' SPECIAL REPORT. 



CIGARETTES. 



There are times and places tolerant only of the 

 Cigarette; tenderly white and sweetly fragrant. 

 When made from that delicious Tobacco, 



Vanitv Fair, 



they will cause a smile that will illumine the blackest 

 of crowding cares. 



WM. S. KIMBALL & CO., 



ROCHESTER, N. T.B 



EERLESS TOBACCO WORKS. 



CHOKE-BORE GUNS, _ 



AND 



How to Load for [all ^Kinds of Game*. 



By W. W. GREENER, 



Author of "Modern Breech Loaders, Sporting and 

 Military." 



Crown 8vo, cloth lettered, $3 50. 



CASSELL FETTER «fe GALPIN, 



596, Broadway, New York. 

 Send for circular. Nov 2-5t 



ADIRONDACK GUIDE. 



NEW EDITION, WITH MAPS. 



BY E. R. WALLACE. 



Gives all possible information relative to 

 Routes, Hotels, Resorts, Outfits, Guides, 

 Distances, &c., with amended railway 

 schedules, &c. 



The only Complete Guide to the 

 North Woods. 



The instructions embrace everything that can be de- 

 sired. Taking it all in all.it is the most complete 

 book that has been published on the Adirondacks, 

 not excepting even my own— Hon. J. T. Jleadley. 



Iregardyour "Descriptive Guide"and the" Appendix" 

 as a most useful— nay. indispensable, manual for tour- 

 ists to that wonderful Wilderness. A tour in that 

 region is eminently a practical matter, and for that 

 reason I regard your "Guide" as an important, useful, 

 and timely publication.— Benson J. Lossing. 



It is the only thing of the kind that has yet been pub- 

 lished— the very thin? that has been so long wanted 

 and waited for.— Alfred B. Street, Author of "Woods 

 and Waters." 

 Sent by mail on receipt of price, $2. 



FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO., 

 (by whom the copyright is now held.) 

 Aug 10 1' 17 Chatham street, N . Y . City. 



Hallock's Fishing Tourist 



This work will be of great service at this season to 

 anglers selecting localities for fishing, either for Trout 

 or Salmon. For sale by Hamper & Brothers, or at 

 the office of Forest and Stream. Price $2. ap!6 tf 



A Sportsman's Home for Sale. 



Within an hour's ride of the City of Philadelphia an 

 excellent Farm of 164 acres, two fine stone dwelling 

 iouses, two stone barns, with necessary outbuildings. 

 Beautifully situated, and in every particular a very 

 desirable property, especially to those fond of field 

 sports. Ruffed grouse (pheasant), quail, hares, squir- 

 rels and foxes abound. A fine stream runs through 

 the property. Will be sold on very easy terms, or ex- 

 cnanged for city property. Address W. C. HARRIS 

 3 South Third street. Philadelphia. ang3 t f 



Breeeh-Loader Wanted. 



No 10 gauge, about nine pounds. Must be good as 

 new and well-known make. Give full description. 



AddK " U. S. LIVERY, 



augir-lt TJniontown, Pa. 



§uhluptuni&. 



WALLACE'S MONTHLY 



The only Illustrated Maga- 

 zine devoted to Domestic 



Animals. 



The recognized AUTHORITY on the HORSE and 



the Organ of American Breeders. 



UNCOMPROMISING HOSTILITY TO GAME- 

 LING AND FRAUD OP EVERY DE- 

 SCRIPTION. 



Thorough in the investigation and exposure of fraud- 

 ulent pedigi ees and all shams . 



Able and fearless in discussion, and the contribu- 

 tions of the best writers in the land are to be found in 

 its columns. 



Not a "Sporting Paper," but compltb in its reports 

 and indexes of all performances. 



Every Farmer who loves a good 7w?'se and fair deal- 

 ing should have it , 



THE CHEAPEST OF ITS CLASS IN THE 

 WORLD. 



Three Dollars a year in Advance. 

 WALLACE'S MONTHLY, 



Nov 2-8t 17o Fulton St., New York City. 



in Florida. 



By CHARLES HALL0CK, 



AUTHOR OF THE FISHING TOURIST. 



Published by Forest and Stream Pub- 

 lishing Co., 



No. 17 CHATHAM STREET, NEW YORK, 

 And for sale by all booksellers. Sent by mail, post- 

 age prepaid, on receipt of price at offica of publica- 

 tion. 

 THE AMERICAN NE WS C OMPANY, AGENTS. 



THE 



American JSaturalist; 



A POPULAR ILLUSTRATED MONTH- 

 LY MAGAZINE OF NATURAL 

 HISTORY AND TRAVEL. 



Announcement for 1877. 



This journal of popular Natural Science will con- 

 tinue to be published by Messrs. U. O. Houghton & 

 Co., Riverside Press, Cambridge, Mass., under the 

 editorial management of Or. A. S. Packakd, Jr., 

 wi'h the assistance of eminent men of science. 



Since January, 1876, the amount of matter given in 

 each number has been increased over former volumes. 

 The typographical dress and illustrations which have 

 heretofore given character to thiB magazine have been 

 improved, and it is of a tboroughly popular nature, so 

 as to interest the general reader as well as well as 

 the young naturalist. It will continue to be a journal 

 of science-education and for the use of science-teach- 

 ers. 



Its Features for 1877. 



In 1876 the latter half of the magazine wa« entirely 

 remodeled, and a department of GEOGRAPHY AND 

 TRAVEL added. The department of BOTANY will 

 be edited as formerly by Prof. Ci. L. Goodale, of 

 Harvard University. That of MICROSCOPY will be 

 edited as heretofore by Or. R. H. Ward, Troy, N. 

 Y. Arrangements have been made to report the 

 PROCEEDINGS OF SCIENTIFIC SOCIETIES with 

 great promptness. A digest of the CONTENTS OF 

 FOREIGN SCIENTIFIC JOURNALS AND TRANS- 

 ACTIONS will also be given each month, together 

 with the L\TEST HOME AND FOREIGN SCIEN- 

 TIFIC NEWS. 



The attention of publishers and teachers is called 

 to critical notices of scientific books, to which especial 

 attention will be given. 



Articles for Vol. xi., 1877. 



By Professors Asa Grav, J. D, Whitney, N. S. 

 Shaler, W. G. Farlow, G. L. Goodale, of Harvard 

 University: Professors O. C. Marsh, A. E. Verril, of 

 Yale College; Mr. A. Agassiz, Hon. Lewis H. Morgan, 

 Col. Theodore Lyman, Mr. L. F. Pourtales, Mr. S. 

 H. Scudder; Professors E. D. Cope, F. V. Hayden, 

 A. Hyatt; Drs. Elliott Coues, W. H. Dall. C. C. Ab- 

 bott, Rev. S. Lockwood, J. A. Allen, H. Gillman, C. 

 C. Parry, R. E. C. Stearns, O. T. Mason, and other 

 leading naturalists, are either in hand or promised. 

 Notes from abroad will occasionally be contributed 

 by Mr. Alfred W. Bennett, the distinguished English 

 botanist. 



Terms: 35 cents a number; $4.00 a year, postage 

 fjee. Bound volumes, $5.00; vols. I.X., $40.00; 

 unbound $30.00. Back numbers supplied. 



Remittances by mail should be sent by money- 

 order, draft on New York or Boston, or registered 

 letter, to H. O. Houghton & Co., Riverside Press, 

 Cambridge, Mass. 

 H. O. HOUGHTON & CO , cor. Beacon and 



Somerset Sts.. Boston. 

 HURD & HOUGHTON, 13 Astor Place, N. Y. 



Xlie Riverside Press, 



CAMBRIDGE. Nov. 9 



fynyowder. 



MANNING'S 



ii m 



FOR 1876, 



Club Edition, cloth and gilt edged $2-00 



i Club Edition, morocco cover, with case S.50 



' SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THOMAS MANNING, 318 

 BROADWAY, N. Y. 



MANNING'S YACHT AGENCY, Office of "MAN 

 NING'S YACHTING ANNUAL." 

 A large number of yachts for sale* Particulars fur- 

 nished <h application . tf 



The Hazard Powder Co., 



MANUFACTURERS OF 



Gunpowder. 



Hazard's "Electric" Powder. 



Nos. 1 (fine) to 6 (coarse). Unsurpassed in point of 

 strength ana cleanliness. Packed in square canis- 

 ters of 1 lb. only. 



Hazard's "American Sporting." 



Nos. 1 (fine} to 8 (coarse). In 1 lb. canisters ant. 3 J lb. 

 kegs. A fine grain, quick and clean, for uplaLd and 

 prairie shooting. Well adapted to short gum> 



Hazards "Duck Shooting." 



Nos. 1 (fine) to 5 (coarse). In 1 and 5 lb. canisters 

 and 6J and 12* lb. kegs. Burns slowly and very 

 clean, shooting remarkably close and with great 

 penetration. For field, forest ana water shooting 

 it ranks any other brand, and it is eqaally servicea • 

 ble for muzzle or breech loader. 



Hazard's "Kentucky Rifle.'' 



FFFG, FFG, and "Sea Shooting" FG, in kegs of 25 

 12*, and 6± lbs. and cans of 5 lbs. FFFG is also 

 packed in 1 and \ lb. canisters. Burns strong ana 

 moist. The FFFG and FFG are favorite brands 

 for ordinary sporting, and the "Sea Shooting" FG 

 is the standard ffijle powder of the country. 



SUPERIOR MINING AND BLASTING POWDER. 



GOVERNMENT CANNON AND MUSKET POW- 

 DER; ALSO SPECIAL GRADES FOR EXPORT 

 OF ANY REQUIRED GRAIN OR PROOF MAN- 

 UFACTURED TO ORDER. 



The above can be had of dealers, or of the Compa- 

 ny's agents in every prominent city, or wholesale at 

 our office 



88 Wall Street. New York. 



GUNPO WDER. 



Dupont's 



SPORTING, SHIPPING AND MINING 



POWDER 



DUPONT'S GUNPOWDER MILLS 



(Established in 1801), 



Have maintained their great reputation for 75 years 



Manufacture the Celebrated 



EAGLE DUCKING, EAGLE RIFLE, AND DIA 



MOIVD GRAIN POWDER. 



The most Popular Powder in Use. Also, 



Sporting-, Mining, Shipping and Blast- 

 ing Powder 



Of all kinds and descriptions. 

 For sale in all parts of the country. Represented 



F. L. KneelancL 



1>7 



Feb 10-ly 



70 Wall Street, New York. 



Orange Sporting Powder. 



OKANGE LIGHTNING POWDER, 



The strongest and cleanest Powder made. Nos. 1 

 to 7, packed only in sealed 1 lb. canisters. The coarser 

 sizes (higher numbers) especially are recommended 

 to owners of fine breech-loading guns, giving great 

 penetration with very slight recoil. 



ORANGE DUCKING POWDER, 



For water fowl. Very strong and clean. Nos. 1 to 

 5. Packed in metal kegs of 6i lbs. each, and in canis- 

 ters of 1 and 5 lbs. 



ORANGE RIFLE POWDER, 



The best for rifles and for all ordinary purposes. 

 Sizes F.g. FF.g, FFF.g, the last being the finest. 

 Packed in wood and metal kegs of 25 lbs., 12* lbs., 

 and 6£ lbs., and in canisters of 1 lb. and I lb. 



All of the above give high velocities and less resiciU' 

 um than anv other brands made. 



BLASTING, MINING, AND SHIPPING POW- 

 DER OF ALL GRADES AND SIZES PACKED IN 

 WOOD OR METAL KEGS OF 25 LBS. 



SAFETY FUSE AND ELECTRICAL BLASTING 

 APPARATUS. 



LAFLIN & RAND POWDER Co,, 



26 Murray St., N. Y. 



Sole proprietors and manufacturers of the celebra- 

 ed ORANGE brand of GUNPOWDER. Recom 

 mended and used by Capt. A . H. BOGARDUS, the 

 'Champion Wing Shot of the World." 



CHALLENGE" 



The undersigned is prepared to prove all the supe- 

 ior qualities he claims for his powder. 



Safety, Cleanliness, Strength, Little 

 Recoil, Little Smoke, Small Report, 

 Less Heating of the Barrel in Rapid 

 Firing, and its Regularity in Shooting. 



He challenges all riflemen to shoot against him with 

 black powder, 200 rounds, without wiping; 100 rounds 

 off-hand, at 200, 500 and 1,000 yards respectively, and 

 100 rounds in any position at same distances; the 200 

 founds equally divided at the three ranges; sighting 

 •hots extra. 

 Will shoot for money if desired. 

 The powder is also well adapted for shot guns. 

 Inquire for the "Dittmar Powder" of your dealer, 

 address the 



DITTMAR POWDER MANFG CO., 

 Nsrowsx. JUM* 



