Dec. 14, 1882.] 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



899 



Monthly Issue. To Sportsmen. 



Place this advertisement iu y 

 t-ine of fifty-five years of both 

 ami the trade generally, 



MANUFACTURED BY 



THE SHELTON AUXILIARY RIFLE BARREL COMPANY, 



P. O. Box 715, New Haven, Conn. Send Stamp for Circular and Price list. 



RELIABLE AND STANDARD 



CIGARETTES AND TOBACCO. 



UNBO.UALI.KD FOR PUBITY AND EXCELLENCE. 



Manufactured by fljy, $ MtUl & M>$8£SFTSZ2& 



w line Goods: Hntablistied 1846. Twelve FmsT Prize Medals. 



Fragrant Vanity, Three Kings, New Vanity Fair, Oriental*. 



Peerless Tobacco Works. Sold 



l Par- 



F. \Y.)J 



8 John St., near Broadway, N. Y. 



MANUFACTURING JEWELER, 



Medals and Badges 



A SPECIALTY. 



Special designs furnished on applica- 

 tion free of charge. 



V 



Canada and the United States. 

 Published monthly by 



f G. VEOTOR, F. G. S. 



Bee— No. 310 St. James Street, 



MONTREAL, CANADA. 



>...-i iptiou $1.00. Single copies 10 cents. 



N. M. MUZZY 



45 South Canal Street, Chicago, III. 



Of the old firm of HITCHCOCK £ MUZZY and 

 MUZZY & CO. in 18K. -Having increased my facil- 

 ities for the business of learning out gun barrels, I 



beg to off. 

 unsatisfactory sin 



la-^uiiariv uiy owe 



- :■'. lli\ f.H 



•ban by th.- old 'ch 

 1 invite special a. 



111... i .■.,. ;, ':: ■,.ij 



.vhvii desired. G-u 

 livered by express. 



to those owning . .. 



qualities. alv system is 

 are no shoulders, aud will 

 wing to shoot more even 

 .yste'ur, in every Distance, 

 u to my method, and the 

 ronials will be furnished 



be sent, auii will be de 



1881 EDITION 



■^ isms- 



= g 3 r 3o| OF THE 



BlPlr? Hurllngham and London 



"=T.-|| >° I ttUN CLUB'S TRAP SHOOTING RW.ES 



So jjflJ' » Foi' sale at this offlee Price twenty-five cents. 



FOR TOWN AND C0UNTRY.-1883. 



The year now drawing to a close has been with the Forest and Stream one of most 

 gratifying progress. Early in the year by an important mechanical improvement, the 

 typographical beauty of the paper was greatly enhauced; and in August, with the beginning 

 of the tenth year of publication, it was 



Permanently Enlarged to Twenty-eight Pages. 



There has been an eqia.l growth in other important respects. The patronage accorded 

 to this journal by the intelligent reading public has never been more cordial than it is at the 

 present time. Sustained thus heartily, the publishers are prepared to maintain in 1883 the 

 Forest and Stream prestige as the 



Representative Field Journal 



of this country, at once entertaining, useful and influential. As the exponent of the 

 highest types of field-sportsmanship the paper will be adapted to the tastes of all men who 

 use the rod and gun as means of pleasure and recreation. Broad in its sympathy with all 

 that is legitimate in field sports, free from any entangling alliances with cliques, having no 

 interests to serve save those of its constituents, aud never hesitating in its criticisms of 

 whatever may be inimical to these interests, the Forest and Stream's highest ambition 

 will be to preserve in the future the approval won by its course in the past. It will persist 

 in its efforts to awaken in the public mind a fuller appreciation of the importance of ttie 

 proper protection of game in the breeding season, and of due moderation in the destruction 

 of game at other times. This it considers a matter of prime importance, not so much to the 

 man whose wealth and leisure enable him to make extended tours to favored game countries, 

 as it is to that already very large and constantly increasing class of business and professional 

 men, whose favorite relaxation from the routine of employment is found in brief vacation 

 trips to the woods and fields and brooksides. 



The enlarged form of the Forest and Stream enables its editors to present each week 

 in the several departments a large and varied supply of reading. In the columns of 



The Sportsman Tourist 



Will be found sketches of travel and sport. Coming from many different writers, and 

 widely separate parts of the country, these sketches always have the chami of novelty, and 

 they are sure to be read with interest by sportsmen, because their writers see things through 

 sportsmen's eyes, and describe them from the sportsman's standpoint. 



Natural History. 



This department will not deal with fossils nor with the monsters of African jungles. 

 Quite on the contrary, it will treat of the animal life of land and water in our own country, 

 the habits and ways of American fur, fin and feather, in which American sportsmen are 

 presumed to take an intelligent interest. 



Game Bag and Gun. 



In addition to the numerous accounts of hunting and shooting excursions, necessarily 

 varied and interesting — as such accounts must need be— these columns will be found of 

 special value to amateur and veteran alike, because of the frequent interchanges of experi- 

 ence in all matters pertaining to game and shooting. 



Sea and River Fishing. 



The angler will find in the pages of the Forest and Stream the best angling literature 

 of the day, in quantity more than is contained in all other publications put together. This 

 journal has inaugurated a series of angling tournaments, the initial meeting having been held 

 iu the Central Park of this city; and it is believed that others of equal success will follow in 

 other years. Meanwhle, the man who loves to go a-fishing may find in the Forest and 

 Stream all the year around a great deal that must be to his liking. 



Fishculture. 



The columns devoted to this important subject furnish a complete resume: of cuweu 

 .enlevements and progress in this important work. 



The Kennel. 



This department has won the confidence of dog owners. Its reports of field trials, bench 

 shows and other events are recognized as impartial, honest, and the most able published 

 The recent series of papers by its editor, entitled "Training vs. Breaking," have been pub 

 lished in book form, aud have had a very large sale. Other papers of equal importance will 

 be published from time to time. 



Yachting and Canoeing. 



The editor of this department being a practical naval architect, and thoroughly familiar 

 with every branch of the subject, will continue the same intelligent treatment of yachting 

 and canoeing that have already won for the Forest and Stream esteem and confidence. 



Its editors aim to make the Forest and Stream a medium for the interchange of iufor 

 mation, entertainment and amusement among sportsmen. Sketches of field excursions, 

 shooting and angling trips, original observations in natural history, and other like contribu- 

 tions are respectfully solicited. Secretaries of clubs and associations are urged to send us 

 reports of their transactions. Expressions of opinion upon any subject within the scope of 

 the paper are invited and will be given place in our columns. 



We beg to suggest to the friends of the Forest and Stream that they bring the paper 

 and its merits to the attention of others whose tastes and sympathies are iu accord with it= 

 spirit and aims. Free specimen copies will be cheerfully furnished upon application. 



The weekly issues of the Forest and Stream form two volumes each year, of twenty 

 six numbers, or 500 pages each, and the files constitute a library of permanent wort!: 

 Eighteen such volumes have already been published. U T e furnish handsome file binders 

 (price SI. 25) which hold twenty-six numbers. 



Subscriptions may begin at any time. Per year, Si; $2 for six months. Remit by post- 

 office money order, draft or registered letter. Give name, town, county and State. Address 



Forest and Stream Publishing Co., 39 Park Row, N. Y. 



