IBS 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



[March 18, 1886. 



SECOND ANNUAL TOURNAMENT 



Chamberlin Cartridge 



COMPANY. 



No Pro-Rating. No Uncertainty. Open to the World. 



CONTEST — ONE HUNDRED SINGLE RISES. 



OhLamberlin Cartridge Co.'s Rales to Q-overn. 



PRIZES WILL BE DIVIDED AS FOLLOWS: 



$1,000 divided 50, 30 and 20 per cent, to those 

 whose scores are 90 or better, with $200 added for 

 the highest score in this class. 



$850 divided 50, 30 and 20 per cent, to those whose 

 scores are eighty or better, and less than 90, with 

 $150 added for the highest score in this class. 



$700 divided 40, 30, 20 and 10 per cent, to those 

 whose scores are 70 or better, and less than 80, with 

 $100 added for the highest score in this class. 



Those who made scores of 90 or better in our tour- 

 nament of last year, are barred this year from the 80 

 class. Those who made scores of 80 or better, and 

 less than 90 in our tournament of last year, are barred 

 from the 70 class this year. 



All scores made of 90 or better will shoot in the 

 ties at Cleveland to decide the division of the $1,000 

 prizes in the 90 class. 



All scores of 80 and less than 90 will shoot in the 

 ties at Cleveland to decide the division of the $850 

 prizes in the 80 class. 



All scores of 70 and less than eighty will shoot in 

 the ties at Cleveland to decide the division of the 

 $700 prizes in the 70 class. 



The additional prizes for the highest score in each 

 class will be decided (if there are ties) by the scores 

 made in the regular tie shooting of each class. 



For Rules and. Conditions -A.cicli-os»s 



THE CHAMBERLIN CARTRIDGE CO., Cleveland, Ohio. 



Or TATHAM & BROS., Eastern Agents, 82 Beekman St, New York. 



"FOREST AND STREAM SERIES." 



DEER HUNTING. 



BY JUDGE JOHN DEAN CATON. 



BY and by it will 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 had 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 

 perfecttetorehouse of information and entertainment. The first 

 edition was sold by the Boston publishers at $4. Price $2.50. 



WOODCRAFT. 



BY "NESSMUK." 



A COMPACT pocket handbook of condensed, boiled-down, 

 concise, clear, comprehensive, sensible, practical 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 te learn from "Nessmuk" 

 than from Dame Experience. We should not be surprised if 

 "Woodcraft" completely revolutionized the methods of camp- 

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

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

 Price $1.00. 



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— all three turned up 

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

 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 leisure 

 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 of Limicolo?, 

 with a description of each species. V. Localities — 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 temed 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 written 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. 

 216 pp., cloth. Price $1.00. 



ALLCOCK'S 



Celebrated Fish Hooks. 



May be had from all Fishing Tackle Dealers 

 In any part of the world. 



One Good Hook is Worth 50 Bad Ones. 



185 R-E.B. m 



Strong Spring Steel vg 



LIMERICK HOOKSi 



S . Alleoek & Co. §§ 



RlibDITCII. ?jg 



Ringed. 100. 



The Largest Manufacturers of Fishing 

 Goods in the World. 

 All best goods bear our name and trade mark. 

 WORKS, REDD1TCH, EiNGLASD. 



AND 



Silk Worm Gut Factory, Murcia, Spain. 



WHOLESALE ONLY, 



The Celebrated ** UKTIO]V 



m 



First target represents 10 consecutive shots made by Otto 

 Jaeger, June 10, 1885, at Wheeling, W. Va., 200 yards off 

 hand, with some wind, using a No. 6£ Off-Hand, .32-caliber. 

 It counts 94 on Massachusetts Decimal and 117 on Massachu- 

 setts Target. The cut is one-half size. 



Second target represents 5 consecutive shots made by J. D. 

 Marks, June 24, 1885, at Springfield, Mass., 200 yards, with 

 rest, using a Union Hill, .32-caliber. The entire five shots 

 are inside of a lf-inch circle. The cut is full size. 



This style or Bollard Rifle and the "Off-Hand" are the standard guns for target shooting, carrying off nearly all the prLzea. Send 

 tor Catalogues THE IHAUL1K FIRE ARMS CO., Sew Haven, Conn. 



