186 



ng actual siz 

 pari an impo 



Someday « 

 tall aft, or u 

 bowls will n 

 more to awa 

 superficially 

 for awhile li 

 Should nekh 

 But for Fo 



flsh to Cry, « 



havB ralsed- 



ard— only rc 

 like that of I 

 to the instil.- 

 bulk employ 



! 

 leai [eg theli 

 There are i 

 tion its "go i 

 took alone, c 

 communil v I 

 even ridiculi 

 by the nam 



not liciiiimia size, would have rendered theirre 



lit,- 



fed of n,i-: :in,i aU other length rules, is theooa 

 .it tubby form, which lit.!; the accommodations o£ 

 i-oater loucth, lire more costly to build and 



■to sail and worthless frighll'nl hotniee'.-s in a sen.. 

 5 over and saws off her handsome fan- 



leil ,'. boal i . hun-- -bores, 111.- wa.-ii 



n thrashing 10 windward -..inch will probably do 

 e Larohtnonl V. (.'. and others to Hi- ai>M;: 



the public. Bavin 

 uic pursuitof the 

 the chaotic condi 



VW»em1*eLarchmon1 focal Olub is confronted w, 

 stera abort:. .-.-is. cheating the 80 ton overhang boat 

 ; "-big, no doubt another consultation of £ 

 lieiansv.id evolve a load line rule as their salvat 

 River Yacht Club. Whereupon iho "sharp" will rev. 

 and some out with huge overhang aft, d 

 once again swindle justice by eircmnventing length ' 

 just the opposite manner, putting clubs and comi 



quandary than ever; how to solve thi b 



'will be inaemand and lis »'good authority" availed < 

 and all bands will via with, eaoh Other with ''3 alway: 



While they are oontenl to look a fathom ahead we s 



For a while then, lei (he square stern, rolly-polly, 

 uncouth glory to the discomfiture of mean leng 

 length, load line length or length overall. Thev » 

 cure of the evil quicker than ink in these columns" cs 

 plish. Lot the ball roll on till it wears out by its in i 



i 30 ton square 

 >ut of the good 



SMALL YACHT STOVES. 



Editor Forest and Stream ! 



1 have been much interested 

 to proper .cooking 

 enced the objections to any c 

 dirt, smoke, smell and dange 

 stitute has yet bean offered? 

 to Fobest and Stiieam that tl 

 to bake and broil, and Is, in Ei 

 bly in a living picnic, -amp, wl 

 coffee or broil eggfl. The aiz 

 elearlv not adapted to liiosi.-v, 

 not understand thai Mr. Dan 

 the cost of ten dollars or over. 

 night (including tb< reservoir 

 be used in the forecastle of a t 

 cost and shape, un- 

 it is possible that so light a llui 

 so readily, can be sate in the 

 or explosion would probably 

 its inventor claims that it will 

 show that the vapor has been 



It is evident from Mr. Uanforth's letter 

 : stove described by you will not suffice 

 •i. only adapted to canoe use, or possi- 

 ire its only duty would be to make hot 



spoken of by Forest and Stream is 

 ■e duty of a cabin yacht's cuisine. I do 

 irtJi has any other size until we reach 

 ui'l then his stove is of such shape and 

 ml us upright pipe) that it could never 

 irts foot yacht, It is. therefore, from 

 . Again 1 ask for information whether 



us the Danforth oil. which vaporizes 



use it to lirst try the experim 



dents of iln-ci. .. 



stove: but it need 

 It. Tne old fori - 

 unless th 



well -in f..:.. i! (thing ■ o 



not answer to have it bel 



•f coxuhu 



I, iit.l whlcl 



■ 



/ill up until .) drowsy ski; 

 and turn up - 



pizeli." 

 Any adaptation of the 



smoke, 



unobtrn 



some "inventive 



andg.i!--.- 



with u suitable ] 



start .'- i . 



ing qualities— tha 



You know, Air. E 



been found; so I pr 



iopt it, as 

 im put an 

 rood shak- 

 . In fact, 

 t of one of 

 ne; and if 



;orrespon- 

 f the ideal 

 velop 



rill i 



! do 



.he yacht first, :i 

 :ht "turn in" on 

 like Viliikins, fr 



swer very 

 : it would 



Imost the 

 jas called 

 is at that. 

 vas in the 

 mi slowly 

 ue for all, 

 cm "cold 



oal furnace to the use of yachts' foro- 

 . involve the use of a pipe to carry off 

 combustion, which cannot be called 



li i 



inllnoss and splendid cook- 

 '. wmM In progress in the right direction. 

 i much we are Suffering until the ideal has 

 ..,.. will continue your good help until ourrelief 

 comes in the shape of a stove, safe, clean, strong, easily lighted, free 

 from smoke and smell and with good cooking qualities. ' Saucepan. 



ONE-GUN STARTS. 



w : 



E are glad to ti 



across like a 

 wide-awake. 

 crews in Amur 



now at the whee 

 the subject at tl- 

 for this he has 

 brought out of I 

 custom. Those 

 Bee1 of racing cl 

 ery pap 

 terval" to stop 6 



bred ra.'.-.Vin'iii'ei 

 be made. are th. 

 who couldn't re: 



tea minutes I. 



out 01 i 



second occasion 



( favor with which one-gun Marls 

 ne the boy's play of straggling 

 y to something more manly and 

 i.itli amateurs and professional 



THAT TRACT. 



Fffi 



oil,.: : 



slmplei 





individual offit 



try over an anoi'v- 



sued at much 



i this tract. This 



wonderful sho 



i.lono! care to. li.-- 



connection wit 



bereof, is evj lenSy 



for whan ft i 



H-en able to grasp 



very f ormidab 



ing j. ist what 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



[March 23, 188& 



Nors 



"REAL" YACHTING. 



rii.i i. K. i>. Morgan, Jr., N.? 



u. la, ami will proceed to the Mi 



missehooiier. \V.' ,v. Stewart, 



up altogether I We all recollect the lizzie Yj: 

 1 Sey go) it a trifle nasty outside in a would-b 



off the Hook. Yel ; -•■.-■• are n sons so deli, 

 our light drafts "j;l in thi . 



1 ill. TIMES.— Step by step progressive ideas are making their way 

 Antipathy to depth .a j.iri;:-. has been overcome. K,-e| S arc more 

 than a fair half of the Beet. F6w yachts are built, any more withoul 

 ballast outside. All have h .using topmasts. Many have double 



vaeln 



we have ull along fores,.-, n. If we ' 

 we feel a pride In having set the ft 

 cue for many contemporaries to toll 

 with which some of theni acknO w]i ■ 

 of the times; What was ridiculed a: 

 year or two ago is now looked upon 

 It is the old school who thought 

 though they were anchor •• 

 of this journal. Imparl., 

 where To look for ideas in 

 digested long before npp. 



iggested is being acted upon in pi 



id i 



is bi 



the ancient ways of thinking we found so deeply ro 

 years ago the helm passed into oui hand 



FANITA.- -Under her new or, „-v. i , ; -; ,.,-. sloop is 

 in several respects. S!ie has shed in-: -u.\. g. sia-'l- i 

 up in modern style with double head sail this year, 

 thing Forest and Stream prides itself upon, it is the 

 tion of the double head rig' which 

 jib altogether, except perhaps in thesmallesl ••! boa 

 ter we have stood alone and opoosed by every one of 

 aries. The present popularity of cutter 

 gather to Forest and Stream, aided of fate by the 

 the cutter Madge, ami we are glad to find thatactui 

 'dorses this journal as prettv -good authority." V 

 Piatt's now schooner is to have a single jib '-for racin 

 to having smiled at this an ii is so ele: 



old school, along wilh ii. 

 schooner, that we have been at a loss to explain how 



bucolic lioiibv v. inch .-..pi.-: im.. a .-. -.-, 



from the little sailboat. If Air. Piatl will race wit 



then-try his fore-staysail, we will ua.rai:: 



the stay for any purpose at all. A single jib on a 100ft 



only extremely lubberly , bu t unmechanical as well. 



•viucial in its conception. The schooner will not be as 



ding bag at the bowsprit end. nor will she lay hM 



never learn anything and the Aiadge, the Regina, 



scores of others, all sailing better with double heads. 



a certain class of old log 



inveterately than over. Forest and Stream has neitJ 



sympathy with such. 



THE KVA.— Editor Forest and Stream: Some veai 

 NOW York Yacht Club left (den Cove for Xew London 

 east and staid there -with the nine lives of acat, 

 power of a woman in a njulinery store." 

 topmasts were lions.-.], and Borne ••( the boats began t 

 bpr, the Vindex hud liou-..-d he,- l.ipuiasi. and was ,., 

 lighls. But the guests were ea«ng their ditfner as us 

 a nice breeze for her. and everyone was in high gli 

 tune the Eva had lowered lier'foresnil. and arias- I 

 As the owner said afterward: ■•The sea, washed up 'u 

 fore it could gel oul. along came another one, and ^ 

 up." So mut-ti for wide and powerful boats, and '. 

 the most powerful of her kind ; but, poor thing, he has 

 at last, and gone to the bottom For a smooth- water 1 

 rivalled. Think of the day when she heat the Magic, 

 .Now for the moral. Do no; Bacrifiee all for speed t 

 but put in less beam, and more depth.— Yetkhan. 



BULK WANTED.— In "Hunt's .Magazine,'' for Mai 

 following editorial: But though the new Y. R. A. rule 

 lished, we hope only for a time, as we look forward. 

 tance, to see sonic plan devised whereby the depth of 

 taken into consideration, for it is a very important 

 calculation of size, and therefore of stability and sr. 



If the)' 

 rapid ii: 



i smooth 

 3h, we f 



fulness this improvement 

 mem of future favors. 



SEE-SAW . — l-'i i -:-t it v.a- 

 hang, then it dwindled do 

 load line, and soon it mf 

 Circle of quackery will be 

 isiic.l forever. 



HORSE SF.XSE.-The 

 ideas. It lives in the day 

 the new cutters buffcllnj 

 tieet of them before long, 



YAWLS.— A continual;. 

 Isab.-l. James, and Oapric 

 letters from the public, 

 tunity. 



nean length, then it was one-third over- 



lo Onfi-fifth, overhang, then it shrunk to 



pop back to mean length, and then the 



• mpletcd. and length measurement abol- 



York Hi 



aid i- ■ 



lent i 



■ ii v:: wis. with illustrations of 

 i, is. left over lill uevi week, with numerous 

 rhich will be published at, earliest oppor- 



J$fe and j$rap ^hooting. 



• 



FOREST AND STREAM TOURNAMENT 

 The above tournamenl svillbeshoj at the Zettler Rifle (iallery. 2n7 



meeting of the captains, lodr.iwfor shooting positions and I i make 

 final arrangements, will be held at the Zettler Gallery, on Saturday 

 evening, March -23, at 8 o'clock. 



MILITARY REVOLVER 



THE importance of the revolver as a .nilita: 

 appivc. in European :uik; 



ould be i 

 ithout one of the: 

 Iter at home than! 



•i of the 

 Bbei n i-- 

 storieB of 



columns, 



In Canada the Ontario Ritle Association promises to put on 

 volver matehamong the contests ot the nexl August me.'iing, -. 



force sooner. Al if the French gai 



there seems to be ii. toIpistolpraaUce, though-M 



a short time ago that the Russian government i,'av.j au order t 



cow and Toula oonteaci e artillery and 



Cteuoasian Oassacks. The Ontario Ritio Association are therefore to 



I velum e: -. 



evolvera ■ 



■natter which 



whether -long" or ''short, 

 ••pull off." 



HELVETIA RIFLE ii.i B Thi I illowineat She acorea for the 



first series of precision shooting. 3tl .shots each si, 



So 1 i*i--i. "- — ... .193 



:; Weirtmanii \du™~™ 



DrChas RroscU 218 



a G Qeitez aia I i. ■ . 



L Dreyer 



B I'ah-r eiq i fa I 



Beo Keinl 804 V l.o-n- 



Time taiootjng (2 minute 



. I i'u 

 -i-'d 





Shots. J I its. Point-'. 



...10 



T Eubi r id 



s Buzsini 10 



K l-'aber II 



C ilattmann \:l 



Dr Ohas Grose h VI 

 C F Rimge 13 



■Z[ 



}3 



13 

 10 



18 



64 



s-: 



11 AI Don-l.-r ,., 



■ ed IS 



IS AGHellwig 15 



SO ili-nii W 



.-- ■ ,.;., 



'■"' R '-' • : iinuun US 



58 I, Dreyer .'I 



41 Al ill ileiiwig .:.'! !.. 



h IS. isss;._ r i.- s | ii;,e of second series i reciston shooting: 



AtJU-llwig loiiroux ...1!)1 



JIM Hellwig 300 .\ i, i .,,..,-. :-, 



SBuzzini.. ■:■• i ; Runge lffi 



RWeidmanu i;i; . i 



DrCGrosch mr, 



Tine.- Sho, .mi.. 

 Shots, iii'.s.l'oii.t.s. Hits. Points. 



fjAAmourOux.. 9 U H Slluzzini . ...IS 111 no 



ChasFRmige...i3 10 «9 io Gediz is 13 57 



P Ooerr l\i 3 13 M M Hellwig... -.'1 18 88 



-it Walnut Hill. The sun was obscurcc. 

 good light, but the waul blew from the 

 :iinl very erratic, despite which, howe 



IT B Bixby 

 BQ Harris 

 A C Adam: 



T Baxter 

 K Burleigh 



.1 n Mas 

 W William 



- of ten bulls, thereby c 

 us the week previous. 



Crecdmoor Match 



:, r, r, :, r, : 



.: -i ,-- :, : .- 



'. o-5'> 



5 r, (8 



3 i ir 



D Appleton.... 

 -i a Cobb . .. 

 P D Bates ... 



j :< -l :j I 1 fj 1 l 3 -3H 



S3 4.4 4 4 8 8 4 0-88 



Novelty Best Match. 



•I H Max - 10 7 9-88 



•HI Miller !)S 10 5 C i !) 8 30-33 



liAiison -1 r> 3 8 9 8 8 Id in 8-82 



JACobb 7 8 9 I V i 5 7 10 8—73 



D Roberts (I r, 7 8 S S U (i 0—68 



Badge Match. 



ACGould B 5 ■• 4 r, 1 r, 5 S 5— « 



J B Fellows 5 4 15 4 5 5 5 5 5—47 



G C Archer I 5 4 A 5 5.5 4 4 5—115 



B Anson :, I -1 5 I I g I -1 5—1! 



Sedgwick 5 -*4 5 5 4'4 a 4 0— U 



ciNt.'iNNATl. March ii.— A' the regular shoot oi c-lio Cincinnati 

 Rille Association at am yard off-hand, the sere stood as follows: 



Doughman n) II m !l l:.' u' r.' 1 1 II in m pi ID ID I)— 157 



Fei r II II 7 10 13 S! 18 1110 1110 8 11 I'd 



Stickles 7 9 13 10 [2 ID 9 ID I) H> 1) 18 13 10 . 148 



Gableman (0 7 10 7n n 10 11 ;) 11 id 8 8 11—148 



Bandle HI 9 1)10 9 in 9 ID 8 p) 12 10 8 pi 9—148 



Forbis 9 1;} 10 811 7 10 til" S 9 13 10 7 18—141 



...In It II '.i II 8 3 10 I" 8 8 10 10 B— 140 

 ...11 10 ■.' II I. 18 > ! 7 9 10 10 18 10 B— 138 



9 3 8 10 B 7 9 P 12 10 ID 7 9 II 10—137 



HKieman 7 10:10 3 ig .; io 9 8 3 8 11 8 7— lflQ 



nelwig 8 7 S '.) 8 BU U ti 8 8 18 \ 11 IE -188 



Drube 10 10 7 8 8 il 8 10 12 6 1011 9 11 8—184 



.Stevens 11 9 9 1112 D S 7 18 11 9 9 (i 8 (1—133 



Weinheimer 10 9 8 5- 11 9 fi S 7 9 31 9 10 ri— 191 



Craig 910 2 B 7 11 8 II 10 9 32 7 5 lfi— 115 



Topf 11 -1 K ii It 18, !) ('. 5 4 7 9 10 9 9-115 



Lorraine 



T Nieman 8 fl B 



Paris 3 9 7 10 



Wood r. 5 8 



s Nieman 7 



Doughman won the Ballard rifli 



I'oiirlli lime. ( ia.'hli. r.i-ni '.von the SI 



and t'r.-iig the ttiir-i class medal ii 

 Medal of Gindele. 



Car 



!) (i I! 9 7 9 ! : i 5 ■ ' 



9 (I 8 5 7 8 10 8 8 M 12—110 



8 7 ID ID 1) 9 5 5 7 (i 8—107 



first lime. Westa 



of the 



tlitions; ?t i 

 hand, using inch 

 'ill tell the story 



R. 



0. 



G F Ellsworth 98 



A .Mathews 81 41 



SLeon Walker -■ 89 Ii 



SB Hildreth 79 44 



(J R Pratt 73 48 



ti L Gordon 70 41 



(.' .-.Iiiiiir.vnv 1)7 43 



It P Adams 07 45 



CO Merrill 55 43 



V Kimball 55 '- ; 



i-si, and its members, are alfyoung men 



162 

 168 



90 



id 



i 



SSSKLAliRWYl 



!i v as shot at Rei 



137 



038 «7 



180 85 



108 82 



i November 6, 

 ntj 



if good young 



c shall have a 

 oae wiki wishi 

 . For full par- 



titton of the Maynard 



t Thursday aft .-, 



triflementhave 

 hough it is t*x- 



.Il I". LVe • i 



. . as follows- 

 i Off-hand 



..5 5 4 4 4 1 

 ..4 4 4 5 8 5 



I S 5 5 5 15 



I 5 



5 -1 5 4 



15 1! 



5-43 



5—14 



3—44 

 .-, ;,_ 14_*1— « 

 4 4—43 J l; 

 I ff-86 



- Handicap. 



SPRINGFIELD, MASS.— The Bod and Hun Club ■■' HpringQeUl, 

 .,-. -i a team forglat 

 a commodious house upon theh' g, onn-i.-. which is fitted with every 



-. ■■■■ - ■-. ( i i Hie 



Dorth side of the building tb 



deep, -which not on] - : ,oter, but 



• fter an ex- 

 h.uistive trial, the club have ►■elecled the Holdeii trap, as cecmh-nig a 

 greater degree of skill to ma . r hat they 



have tried. Tliev me,.. ..... >k, and we ehall expect to 



1 they have hart a little practice. The 

 i- been at-rangi J .ml w ill uo doubt he 



■ii" is are capital shots. The 



following season mate 



sharply contested, as n 



i.: ■..■!•• ..'.-. 



li. 80 al each w.-eklym.. 



is a 13-gauge Colt club gun, presented by Mr. E. S. Bradford. Th* 



I., ii iii. The Hi 



tr !•: .-S Urn.ifr.i-.l Tl,^ 



