8B8 



B'OHEST AND STREAM. 



(Nov. 'M, 1885. 



HUMPHREYS' 



I Manual of all Diseases, 



ByF. 1IUMPHREVS,M. D. 



EICHLY BOOTID IN 



I CLOTH and GOLD 

 Mailed Free. 



ilSTOPPSINCIPAIiNOS. OTHES. PRICE. 

 1 Fevers, Congestion, Inflamiaations. .. .25 

 3 Worms, Worm Fever, Worm Colic S5 



3 Crying Colic, or TeetMng of Infants. .25 



4 Diarrliea of Children or Adults 85 



Dysentery, Griping, Bilious Colic... .25 



6 Ciiolera MorljUB, vomiting 25 



7 Conghs, Cold, Bronchitis 25 



8 IVeuralgia, Toothache, Faoeache 25 



9 Ueadaclies, Sick Headache, Vertigo.. .25 



HOMEOPATHIC 



fRADE" 



BRAI DED FI S HING LIUES, 



Tlie great supei-iority of a properly braided line over a twisted or laid line, has increased the demand for 

 braided lines enormoasly. This demand has induced a number of manufacturers, entirely unacquainted with the 

 requirements of anglers, to put on the market a quantity of perfectly worthless goods. Many of these lines are 

 undersized and short -of marked length; nearly all of them are made of poor material aud on old-fashioned 

 machines. Anglers will please take notice that all of our best braided lines— cotton, linen, raw silk, dressed silk, oiled 

 MARK, silk, enamel, and polished waterproof tapers—are labeled with our full firm name and trade mark, except the euamel 

 ^ fly lines on cards, which bear only our trade mark and the name of the Empire City Braid Co., whose agents we are. 



If your dealer does not keep our goods in stock, or will not'order them for yon, send us .50 cents for our 180-page 

 folio illustrated catalogue. 



Dyspepsia, Jiilious Stomach 2(F 



§uppressed or Painful Periods .35 



Wflites, too Profuse Periods Mt\ 



Croup, Cough, Difficult Breathing 85 



Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Kruptions.. .35 



Rlieumatisni, Kheumatio Pains .25 



Fever and Ague, Chills, Malaria 50 



Piles, Blind or Bleeding. 5(| 



Catarrli, Influenza, Cold in the Head. .50 

 Whooping Congh, Violent Coughs.. . .SO 

 General Debility.Physioal Weakness .00 



Kidney Disease 50 



l^ervous Debility l.OO 



Urinary WcaKness.Wetting Bed SO 



Diseases of llie Heart, Palpitation.. 1 .CO 



SPECI FICS. 



Sold by Drugeists, or sent postpaid on receipt of 

 price.— lllMPHllJiYS' MEDICINE CO. , 100 Fulton St. N.y. 



M OLLER'S 



NOd- 

 WECIAN 



COD-LIVER Oi l 



FOR 

 Greneral 



Debility, 

 Scrofula, 



Rbeumatiam 

 or Consumption, 

 is superior to any m de- ^ 

 lioacy of taste and smoll, 

 medicinal virtues and purity. 



Londan, European and New 

 York phyBieiaiiB pronouuce it the 

 purest and beg+* Sold by Druggists. 



W.H.SchieffeIin&Co.(^rrntc^r.. 



I NewYork 



ABBEY <fe IMBBIE, 



Manufacturers of every description of 

 18 Vesey Street (Fourth door from the Astor House), New York. 



Gruns, Ammunition Gun Implements. 



51 to 55 Court Street, near City Hall, Brooklyn. 



Established 24 Years. 



sent by ex- 

 25-pound 

 Decap- 



pomhiiiPfi 10 r-to • KTr,^",r!i"iK"„r„''"""Q^'' ^""j"""^,?' "^^-jt-F^'Oi ^"--j luau, lu i;ts. iiiug j!jX'.ra,ccors, o CIS. ; Dy mail, i CCS. anoc ana rowtter Measures 

 Ca«ridff^ BPl?fh^lfc thi.ll^n^- ^o^- P^^'der Flasks 25 cts : by mail. 30 cts. Shot Pouches with lever charges, 50 cts. ; bv mail, 65 cts. Canvas Good.s:- 

 bfeeclflladi^tJlnnl ?n^i^^ .L^nilt T^^n ^^^'^"sSS cts. ; by mail 30 cts. Cartridge Bags for holding fifty shills 50 cts. Gin Covers with leather handle for 

 ma^^ orl; pft?n -J:,""? '^^'^"^ ^^.^ ! 60 cts. Leggins, $1.45; by mail, $1.60. Caps, with one peak, 50 cts.; with two peaks, 75 cts.; by 



ni^stra^^^d Catafogu^and Prfce Li"t ^^'^^ ^^-^O; by mail, 25 cts. extra. Game Bags, 12x14, 50 cts.; by mail, 60 cts. Send 3-cent stamp for 



QpEK Evenings J. F MARSTERS. 51 to 55 CoTirt St,, near City Hall. Brooklyn. 



T. H. CHUBB'S 



mmmmm^ 



'*Henshall" Split Bamboo Bass Rod. 



This cut represents our "HeDshall" Split Bamboo Bass Rod 

 length, 8 feet 3 3-10 inches; weight 8 oz. This rod has extra tip 

 ligrht wood hand-grasp whipped with cane. Metal reel seat, or 

 reel bands, as preferred. Hexagonal cap feriules, with welt, no 

 dowels, anii-fnciion tie guides. Tliree-ring tops, nickel plated 

 tfl-immmgs fastened on. These rods are all ready lor use, with 

 the exception of winding and varnishing, for $7,60. This rod is 

 made according to the dimensions given us by Dr. Henshall, and is 

 indorsed by him as a "Standard Henshall Rod." Above rod 

 with German silver trimmings, instead of nickel, $9.25. Send 

 for catalogue of Trout and Bass Fly Rods, also Amateur and Rod 

 Makers' Supplies, to 



T. H. CHUBB. Post Mills, Orange Co., Vt. 



i^'°Me7ition this paper. 



PIEPER 



9 ^^^^^^^^9 



Tliere is Nothing Else in the World Like Them for the Money. 



Mr. W. K. Haynie, Cbappell Hill, Texas, writes under the date ot Aug. 21, 1885 : 



"I have given the Pieper Diana gun you sent me a thorough 

 leading fine makes both English and American. I have broken 

 down two deer, one vpith the right and other v^ith the left barrel 



aU my friends." ' 



IP YOUR DEALER HAS N3NE, DON'T BUY TILL YOU INSPECT THE PIEPER. SEND FOR PIEPER CATALOGUE TO 



SCHOVEIRLING, DALY & GALES, Sole Agents. 



Wholesale Dealers in Guns and Gun Goods. 



84 & 86 CHAMBERS ST.. NEW YORK. 



The DAIiY HAMMBRLE8S 



The NEW MARGIN .32 and .38 Rifles, JK^hs., kill twice as far as any other of same calibers. 



captured the Illi nois Diamond Badge agam this year. 



"FOREST AND STREAM SERIES." 



DEER HUNTING. 



BY JUDGE JOHN DEAN CATON. 



BY and by it wiU be time to hunt antelope and deer. It is 

 always time to read about them. Judge Caton's book 

 on the antelope, elk, deer, moose and caribou of America 

 discusses in a readable way the life history of these animals 

 and the methods of their capture. It is the work of an 

 enthusiastic sportsman who has nad a wide experience and 

 has devoted the leisure of years to studying these interesting 

 game animals. The volume is very fully illustrated, and is a 

 perfect storehouse of information and entertainment. The first 

 edition was sold by the Boston publishers at $4. Price $3.50. 



WOODCRAFT. 



BY "NESSMUK." 

 COMPACT pocket handbook of condensed, boiled-down, 

 coiiCise, clear, comprehensive, sensible, pi'actical camp 

 gumption. "Nessmuk" has been "in the woods" in Michigan, 

 New York, Pennsylvania, and South America, and this is a 

 book for outers, wherever they kindle their camp-fire. The 

 author believes in "'smoothing it." He has learned how; now 

 he tells others. It is much easier to learn from "Nessmuk" 

 than from Dame Experience. We should not be surprised if 

 "Woodcraft" completely revolutionized the methods of camp- 

 ing out. If you ate going to the woods, read "Woodcraft" 

 before you go. It may add to your trip a hundred fold. 

 Price $1.00. 



A 



DOG TRAINING. 



BY S. T. HAMMOND. 



HE was a promising puppy, and when you turned him over 

 to the breaker to be educated, you thought he was 

 bound to make "the best dog in the world." And you'll not 

 soon forget how disappointed and disgusted you were when 

 the dog, the breaker and the big bill— aU three turned up 

 together, and you saw that the animal's spirit was broken 

 and it would take a steam calliope to make him mind. Now, 

 this could not have happened if you had been wise enough to 

 buy a copy of Hammond's book, and in your odd leisiire 

 moments train the dog yourself instead of having him 

 broken by some one else. We are selling edition after edition 

 of this book, and it is revolutionizing the system of preparing 

 dogs for work in the field. Price $1.00. 



SHORE BIRDS. 



A PAMPHLET for those who "gun" along the shore. Tells 

 of: I. Haunts and Habits— Where the bay birds live 

 and what they do at home. II. Range and Migration— Where 

 they go to breed and where to spend the winter. III. A 

 Mornmg Without the Birds— An episode of shore shooting. 

 IV. Nomenclature— A list of our American species otLimicolce, 

 with a description of each species. V. Locahties— Where to 

 go to shoot them. VI. Blinds and Decoys— How to shoot 

 them after you have reached the grounds. 45 pp., paper. 

 Price 15 cents. 



ANGLING TALKS. 



BY GEORGE DAWSON. 



AS a political writer of conceded power, Mr. Dawson 

 wielded a trenchant pen; when he terned from the 

 conflict of parties to the praise of the favorite pastime of 

 "simple wise men," his essays, limpid as the crystal streams, 

 are aglow with the soft summer sunlight and melodious with 

 the songs of birds. When angling was the theme, he wrote 

 from a full heart and in closest sympathy with the scenes and 

 pursuits described. These "Talks" are brimful of manly, 

 wholesome sentiment; there is in them all not a particle of 

 cant. Their sincerity and overflowing spirit at once win the 

 reader, and he perforce shares the author's enthusiasm. The 

 effect is magical, like that of the mimic players in Xenophon's 

 Memorabilia: he who reads, if he be an angler, must go 

 a-fishing; and if he be not, straightway then must he become 

 one.— Extract from Publishers' Preface. Cloth, price 50 cents. 



CANOE "AURORA." 



BY DR. C. A. NEIDE. 



A CHARMINGLY writteu and always entertaining account 

 of a canoe cruise from Lake George, New York, down 

 the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers to the Gulf of Mexico, by the 

 Secretary of the American Canoe Association. To read the 

 cruise of the "Aurora" is the next best thing to having made 

 it ; and the reading is decidedly more pleasant than would 

 have been participation in some of the misadventures related- 

 316 pp., cloth. Price $1.00. 



