198 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



[Sept. 80, 1886. 



■"p Tf 1^ 



Atlantic Ammunition 



COMPANY, 



(LIMITED.) 



291 Broadway, New York, 



CHAMBERLIN CARTRIDGES, 



Fixed. -A-ixxixxxj-xxitioix fox* Slxot^xixxs. 



Under the Chamberlin Patents. 



To fiirnisli the trade of New England States, New York, New Jersey, Eastern Pennsylvania, Delaware, 

 District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia, North and South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. 



The IKIost ConvGxiienf and Best Ammunition. 



Loaded by machinery. Every cartridge perfect. Every one alike. Wadding of uniform thickness, and placed 

 squarely upon the powder and shot. Rammed with uniform pressure, sufficient to obtain the best result. Beau- 

 tifully and securely crimped. 



ALL. DANGER FROM HANDEINa POWDER IS AVOIDED by the use of these cartridges, and they hre 

 the safest form in which ammunition can be carried In stock or transportation. 



Highest scores on record have been made with Chamberlin Cartridges. Persons who use them in the 

 field are constantly speaking in their praise. 



SOLD BY PRINCIPAL GUN DEALERS THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY. 



SMALL YACHTS. 



Their Design and Construction, Exemplified by the 

 Ruling Types of Modern Practice. 



The roBEST and Stream Publishxng Company takes pleasure in announcing the publication of a magnificent quarto volume, bearing the above title. This book covers the 

 field of Small Yachts, -with special regard to their design, construction, equipment and keep. The- opening chapters are devoted to a consideration of the model and the draft, their 

 relations to one another, and the purposes which they subserve. Full directions are given for producing the plans of a yacht with reference to the chief points in design, and the method 

 of taking off the lines of a boat already built is likewise described in detail. 



All elements entermginto design, such as Eesistance, Stability. Balance of Rig, Handiness, Displacement, etc., are dealt with in separate chapters. The rules necessary for the 

 mathematical computations, and a review of theory and practice close the first division of the book. 



The second portion comprises the description of the Plates, covering the whole range of type in small yachts, from the shoal catboat and American centerboard sloop to examples 

 of the narrowest and deepest British cutter yet built. These yachts have their lines, build and fittings depicted in the Plates, which are drawn to scale. With their aid aad the specifi- 

 cations presented, the reader is placed in possession of accurate information concerning the mould, accommodations, rig and characteristics of all styles of yachts which have received 

 favorable recognition. Sporting boats, combination row and sailboats, and various examples of special form are introduced. 



The third division offers a comprehensive review of single-hand sailing, to which small yachts are especially adapted. Directions are given as a guide in selection of type and sail 

 plan, and subsequent equipment and proper management. , , . , x . •■ -r^ , ^ . 



The iron work of yachts, their gear, yawls, stearing apparatus, boat building and much other closely related matter is entered upon, ihe new international Kules of the Road, 

 Signal Service, and a Bibliography appear in the Appendix. 



The work is profusely and handsomely illustrated with 150 illustrations inserted in the text, besides the sixty-three plates. 



A folio (size of page 14^x12^ inches), printed on paper specially manufactured for it, and with great beauty of execution and finish m every detail, making a volume vastly 

 superior to any other work of the kind ever published. Pages 370, with 136 plate pages additional, or a total of more than 500. Price, postpaid, $7.00. 



LIST OF PLATES. 



I. The Sloop Yacht Schemer. 

 II. The Nuckel. 



III. The Windward. 



IV. A Newport Catboat— Portable Catboat. 

 V. An Eastern Catboat. 



VI. Keel Catboat Caprice. 

 VII. Caprice — Sail Plan. 

 VIII. Keel Catboat Dodge. 

 IX. Catboat Dodge— Sail Plan. 

 X. Open Boat Cruiser. 

 XI. The Cruiser— Sail Plan, 



XII. Open Boat Trident. 



XIII. A Skipjack. 



XIV. The Cfenterboard Sloop Qleam. 

 XV. Gleam— Sail Plan. 



XVI. The Centerboard Sloop Midge. 



XVII. Light Draft Cutter Mignonette. 

 XVIII Mignonette— Sail Plan. 

 XIX. Single-Hand Cruiser. 

 XX. Light Draft Cutter Carmita. 

 XXI. The Dart. 

 XXII. The Boston Sloop Neva. 



XXIII. The Boston Sloop Nyssa. 



XXIV. Keel Sloop Columbine. 

 XXV. Columbine— Sail Plan. 



XXVI. The Keel Sloop Alice. 

 XXVII. The Gannet. 

 XXVIII. A Compromise Sloop. 

 XXIX. The Itchen Cutter Daisy. 

 XXX. Daisy— Sail Plan. 

 XXXI. The Cutter Vayu. 

 XXXIL The Cruising Yawl Windward. 



XXXIII. Windward— Accommodation Plan 



XXXIV. The Windward-Sail Plan. 

 XXXV. The Cruising Yawl Aneto. 



XXXVI. The Single-Hand Yawl Deuce. 

 XXXVII. Deuce— Sail Plan and Construction 

 XXXVIIL The Cutter Petrel. 

 XXXIX. The Petrel- -Sail Plan. 

 XL. The Cutter Merlin. 

 XLI. The Merlin— Sail Plan. 

 XLII. The Cutter Rajah. 

 XLIII. The Cutter Yolande. 

 XLIV. Yolande— Cabin and Deck Plans. 

 XLV. A Single-Hand Yawl. 

 XLVL Single-Hand Yawl— Cabin and 



Deck Plans. 

 XL VII. S. H. Yawl— Rig and Construction. 



XLVIIl. The Cutter Mamie. 

 XLIX. The Mamie— Midship Section. 

 L. The Mamie— Sail Plan. 

 LI. Six-Beam Cutter. 

 LII. Six-Beam Cutter— Sail Plan. 

 LIII. The Cutter Surf. 

 LIV. The Cutter Surf— Sail Plan. 

 LV. The Cutter Surf— Midship Section 

 LVI. The Cutter Surf— Cabin Plans. 

 LVII. The Cutter Spankadillo. 

 LVIII. The Cutter Madge. 

 LIX. The Madge— Ironwork. 

 LX. The Schooner Gaetina. 

 LXI. The Nonpareil Sharpie. 

 LXII. The Cynthia. 

 LXIII. The Cruising Sneakbox. 



New York; FOREST AND STREUM PUBLISHING CO.. 39 Park Row. London: SAMSON, LOW, MARSTON & CO., 188 Fleet Street. 



