June 18, 1891.] 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



481 



MLY iUTOIATIC EJECTOR 



HAMMERLESS SHOTGUN. 



No. 250. "Diamond Quality," Highest Grade Damascus Steel Barrels, beautifully engraved locks and mounting, finest Turkish Walnut Stock, with the Deeley Patent Automatic 



Snell Ejector, equal in finish, shooting qualities and workmanship to Purdey's, Grant's or any other highest grade London make, 10, 12 and 16-gauge $275.00 



No. 150, Same action as above but plain finish and fine Damascus Barrels 175!oO 



WE AliSO CARRY A STOCK OF 



W. GREENER'S EJECTING GUNS $250.00 to $400.00 W. & C. SCOTT & SONS $275.00 to $400.00 



WE INTRODUCE THIS YEAR J. P. CLiABROUGH & BRO'S. LATEST INVENTION— A Fine Hammerless Shotgun with Automatic Ejectors and Damascus Barrels 



plain finish '.$100.00 



Same as above, Greener Crown Bolt, Fine Damascus Barrels, Pine Engraving, the finest gun they make 135.00 



We claim for these guns everything that may he desired. They are well fitted, nicely engraved, the action 

 works to perfection and can he fully guaranteed. 



THE DALY 3-BARREL IS THE ONLY COMBINED GUN IN THE MARKET. 



SCHOVERLING, DALY & GALES, 



302 Broadway & 84 Duane St, - 



L7HAN ACGELERATINfi SHOTBUN GARTRIOeE 



The "EXPERT" is charged with & 

 perforated cake of especially prepared 

 I powder, which b-drns progressively— the 

 only correct method of availing of the 

 ! power of powder in guns. Shot started 

 easily, with rapidly increasing velocity 

 and least recoih and without stringing. 

 Perfect combustion, little smoke, harmless 

 dry ash residue. Cake burns in shell; no 

 flying, heated grains to cut barrel of gnn. 

 Cakes made by machinery; greatest uni- 

 formity of pattern and penetration. JVo nitrates, decomposing, or changeable chemicals ! DetonatAna 

 impossible' Shotted cartridges, or Blanks containing powder cake only, for sale by 



LYMAN CARTRIDGE CO., 9 Chambers Street, N. Y. 

 10, IS »nd l«-6aiiKe«. J. P. DANNBFBLSSB, Selling Acent. 



The Ne w York Herald. 



JF there are any sportsmen so wise that they cannot learn 

 something from this little book, their modesty prevents 

 their fellow men knowing it. The compiler seems to have 

 thought of everything from managing fine guns to snelling 

 hooks, tying knots and skinning eels. He has chapters on 

 rifles and shotguns, hunting and trapping, fishing, camp- 

 ing, dogs, boating, yachting, camp making, cooking, surgery 

 and medicine, and one headed "miscellaneous" seems to 

 include everything which the others have omitted. His 

 paragraphs number more than six hundred. Newly fledged 

 sportsmen who go out for more than a few hours will find 

 It to their advantage to put this book in their pockets, or, 

 better still, commit it to memory before they start. — Msio 

 York Herald, Oct. 30. 



This note refers to "Hints and Points, compiled by 

 Seneca." Published and sent on receipt of price ($1.50) 

 by the Forest and Stream Publishing Company. 



DAVIES & CO., 1 Pinch Lane, CornhiU. 



Canoe and Camp Cookoifir. 



Bv "SEISTEOA." 



A piactical cook book for canoeists, Corinthian sailors and outers. Praotical because 

 the author gives explicit and intelligible directions for preparing such dishes as he has him- 

 self actually tested in camp and on a cruise. This is just where the recipes difler from the 

 absurdly impracticable dishes given in some so-caUed camp cookery books. The cooking 

 outfit is described, and numerous hints on camp economy add to the value of the work. 

 Caoth, 98 pages. Price «1.00. 



NEW YORK; Forest and Stream Purlishing Co., 318 Broadway. 



PAWNEE 



HERO STORIES AND FOLK-TALES. 



With Notes on the Origin, Customs and 

 Character of the Pawnee People. 



By GEORGE BIRD GRINNELL ("YO.") 



Cloth, 417 pages. 



Illustrated. 



Price $2.00. 



Pawnee customs and beliefs are richly illustrated by the folk-tales 

 and in the copious notes Mr. Grinnell gives an uncommonly spirited ac 

 count of Pawnee life in peace and in war. There is an account of the 

 defense of a Pawnee village by 200 sick men, cripples, old men and 

 squaws, against 600 Sioux warriors, which for sheer gallantry and in- 

 domitable pluck wUl match almost anything in military history. The 

 Pawnee warriors were ah away at the time, and the Sioux counted upon 

 an easy victory. But the Pawnee cripples and women actually beat them 

 off after a hard day's fighting, and at last so terrorized them that the 

 bold assailants fled in panic acd sustained a heavy loss. Mr. GrinneU 

 also has written a picturesque and vivacious sketch of one of the last 

 Pawnee buffalo hunts, in which the Indians commonly reverted to prim- 

 itive weapons and usages, often hunting quite naked with no other arms 

 than their bows and arrows. A particularly interesting part of the book 

 is that which treats of the Pawnee doctors or medicine men. The state- 

 ments of Mr. Grinnell show the possession by some of these men of a 

 kind of skiU in sleight-of-hand far beyond that usually attributed to In- 

 dians; some of the facts here described are as puzzhng and unaccount- 

 able as those performed by the famous jugglers and fakirs of Hindostan, while one of their 

 tricks is a close parellel to the East Indian mango feat. . . . Those who desire to learn 

 of the many other wonders done by the Indian doctors must refer to its pages for themselves 

 As it IS certainly one of the best works on Indian hfe, legend and character that has been 

 written for a long time, it should obtain a wide circulation.— iV. Y. Tribune. 



FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO., 318 Broadway, N. Y. 



Lomdon: DAVIES & CO., 1 Finch Lane, CornhiU. 



L0& CAEIITS 



AND 



HOW TO BUILD TEEM. 



By WILLIAM S. WICKS. 



This is a complete exposition of the art and 

 method of building log cabins from the sim- 

 plest dog kennel to highly artistic dwellings. 

 Everyone going into the woods and designing 

 to construct his shelter with the materials at 

 hand, should procure "Log Cabins," for in its 

 pages he wUl find a variety of designs, simple 

 and ornate, adapted to temporary shelter or 

 to permanent homes, with fuU and clear in- 

 struction and illustration in every matter of 

 detail. Sent, post free, for $1.50. 

 FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO, 

 318 Broadway, New York. 

 London: DAVIES & CO., 1 Finch Lane. 



WOODCRATT. 



By «*JSrESSMUK.» 



A book for people who love outdoor Ufa; 

 for the hunter, the angler and the canoeist. 

 The work has been of service to thousands of 

 outers, and wiU help thousands of others. It 

 is fuU of practical advice and information 

 from one who has spent his hfe in learning 

 by hard experience what he now tells his 

 readers. No camper can afford to be without 

 it. Cloth, 160 pages, iUustrated. Pr-iee f 1.00 



FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO.. 

 New York. 



Davibs & Co., 1 Finob Lane, London, Bng 



