GUNS Magazine January 1962

GUNS Magazine January 1962

'Illest ill tlJe 'i,etl'IIIs Field SlIIIIWaL .~W CIIATRB.D·TAYLOR ORDER ANY OF HY HUNTERS GREAT NEW GUNS $5 DELIVERS ANY GUN 100% GUARANTEED . BY MAIL ON THIS PAGE THE LATEST IN SUPERIOR FIREARMS FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD • ALL NEW MINT GUNS! NEW! 22 CALIBER M1 CARBINE! $49.95 .22 Long Rifle Cal. 8-shot, semi·automatic. SPECIAL SALE Complete with one magazine Extras: 16·shot Qver-and-under magazine, $6.00. 4·power telescopic sight and mount, New All Steel Automatic $12.50. Compensator, $4.00. Pistols. Milled, hand honed. Mint! PANZER MODEL BOLOMAUSER .22 LONG MACHINE PISTOL RIFLE CAL. AUTOMATIC $49.95 Finest Blue .22 Long Rifle Cal. 8-shot, semi-automatic. .22 Long Rifle Cal. Semi-automatic 8-shot, Steel Finish Complete with one magazine. Extras 7 1h" barrel. Extras: 12" barrel (manually (shown mounted): 16-shot over-and-under interchangeable), $12.00. 16-shot over-and· Chrome finish, $29.95. Chrome engraved magazine, $6.00. 4-power telescopic sight under magazine, $6.00. Special pistol finish, $32.95. Capacity, 8 rounds. and mount, $12.50. Compensator, $4.00. scope and mount, $14.95. BLACK -POWDER SHOOTERS SPECIAL SALE REMINGTON MODEL 1863 .58 CAL. RIFLE STUKA MODEL .22 SHORT A modern shooting reproduction of the Civil War Workhorse. or LONG CAL. The most accurate military rifle of its day. Sale price $84.95. AUTOMATIC FAMOUS Finest Blue ORIGINAL Steel Finish Chrome finish, $28.95. Chrome engraved ~~~~ii~~~:;;~.~~~~ finish, $31.95. Capacity, 6 rounds. FRONTIER : Authentic Sh:t~~ r:~d~~~~f~: gun that won the West. Original full size, 40 ·oz. solid steel working parts. .22 S., L., L. R. 5 1h" bbl. $39.95 .22 Magnum 5 1h" bbl. $39.95 1 .45 Colt Cal. 5 / Z " bbl. or 7'/z" bbl. .$69.95 MAXIM 1 1 .357 Magnum Cal. 5 / Z " or 7 h" bbl. $74.95 MODEL .44 Magnum Cal. 5lfz" or 7 1h" bbl. .$79.95 .25 CALIBER AUTOMATIC Finest Blue Steel Finish ~~ Chrome finish, $26.95. Chrome engraved STINGRAY finish, $29.95. Capacity, 8 rounds. .25 CALIBER AUTOMATIC $22.50 A special small deadly accurate automatic for camping, home protection. Capacity, 6 rounds. '---";)-'~""'1\ \ MILITAR MODEL HY CHICAGO CUB .~._.....".__ AUTOMATIC HUNTER'S FOLDING TRIGGER Finest Blue REVOLVER ) ORIGINAL FRONTIER Steel Finish $47.50 A big 24-oz. ultramodern military style Finest blue $16.95 finish DERRINGERS automatic in your choice of .32 or .38 cal. Chrome finish, $49.95, chrome engraved 6-shot revolver of 1890's era in .22 short Exact shooting replicas of the 1800's over· finish, $54.95. (8-shot cap.) or .22 L. R. caliber. A unique collector's item never and-under Frontier Derringer. (lO-shot cap.) before offered. In chrome finish, $19.95. .22 sh, L., L. R. Blued finish $16.95 .22 sh, L., L. R. Deluxe chrome $19.95 .22 Magnum, blued $21.95 .22 Magnum, Deluxe chrome $24.95 .38 Special Deluxe chrome. $39.95 TO ORDER: HY HUNTER Send check, cash or money orders. $5 deposit brings you any gun, Firearms Mfg. Co., Inc. Shipped F.O.B. Hollywood. EASY PAYMI!:NT PLAN. Just $2 down, up to a year to pay. DEALER INQUIRIES INVITED. 301 HUNTER BLDG. DEPT. 310 8255 SUNSET STRIP HOLLYWOOD 46, CALIF. book. It is well written and amply illus· trated; it is full of the too often neglected complete know-how, and if the reformed case does not come out the way it should, Capt. Nonte cannot be blamed for it. He covers not only the tools and how to use them, what brass to use and what this particular brass can be converted to, but there is also a com­ plete and lengthy list of case forming. data. This last section alone is worth the pnce of THE PISTOL SHOOTER'S BOOK the book, and I personally am very glad to By Col. Charles Askins have this volume handy at my loading bench. (Stackpole Co., Harrisburg, Pa., 1961. $8.50) Gun bug, l1an'dloader, wild catter-whatever First printed in 1953, this is revised and 'your leanings, this is the book you should brought·up·to-date edition of a popular text­ have.-R.A.s. book for handgunners. Charles Askins is a former National Pistol Champion, winner of PARKER: America's Finest Shotgun hundreds of medals and trophies in national By Peter H. Johnson and international competition, and an officer (Stackpole Co., Harrisburg, Pa., 1961. $6.50) with extensive experience as a sbooting in­ From pre-Civil War background and Civil structor and coach in civilian, law enforce­ War use, to and through Remington take­ ment, and military programs. But this is over and production, this is the story of more than just an instruction manual; it is Parker guns and gun making, including num­ good reading. Written in the breezy Askins bers made in each ,grade, prices of models style with which GUNS readers arc so famil­ when offered, and a chapter on buying and iar, it could hardly be otherwise.-E.B.M. collecting Parker guns today. If you ow~ a Parker or want to own one (as who doesn t), CONFEDERATE ARMS here i~ a thorough evaluation of what you By Wm. A. Albaugh III and have or what you can get. If your interest is Edw. N. Simmons only in the general story of gun develop­ (Stackpole Co., Harrisburg, Pa. $12.50) ment, here is a hitherto unwritten chapter I am tremendously impressed with the of that story, and a valuable addition to any quantity of difficult research that must have "arms library."-E.B.M. gone into the preparation of tbis large, hand­ somely illustrated and printed volume. It , WILDERNESS COOKERY would need a better Civil War buff than I to By Bradford Angier "pinpoint" it (though some doubtless will; (Stackpole Co., Harrisburg, Pa., 1961. $3.95) I have never seen a gun book-or even arti­ 'From ,pooch in a pouch to roast muskrat, cle-that was completely safe from the crit­ ftom crow-or better called rook in this case ics), but certainly every Civil War buff will -to fish dinners and stews, from pan broiling have to buy it, and so, I suggest, should to the secret process of making Brunswick many others whose interest is more general. stew, it is all here in one handy volume. Worth the price to anyone interested in reo Bradford Angier knows more about wilder­ search is the extensive (83 pages) Directory ncss cooking, preserving of meat, fruit, of "makers, gunsmiths, dealers, men, places, vegetables, and bread than' any other man and items connected with Confederate ord­ alive and he tells the innermost secrets of Handle shell only 3 nance." It is my opinion that the gun world being a camp cook in simple terms, so times! Easy swing­ is deeply indebted to the Stackpole Company simple in fact that anyone can understand down front loading; for its many contributions to the literature of and follow the directions, even if they can't Jam·proof shot our interest-of which this book is certainly hard boil an egg at home. ' Even if you only dispenser; No heat­ not the least.-E.B.M. carry a couple of sandwiches afield, Angier sizing needed; has certain ideas on, this subject too, and One-stroke adjust­ YOUNGER BROTHERS for those of us who cook in camp, the book able crimp By Carl W. Breihan is as important 'as 'a container of salt and re-sha pes and (The Naylor Co., San Antonio, Texas. $5.95) some matches.-R.A.s.' Carl Breihan, who is a well-versed writer re-sizes shell to fit -of western history, has done a very fine job THE CONVENIENT COWARD with the history of the Younger brothers. , By,Kenneth Shiflet all guns. The author has carefully explored the history (The Stackpole Co., Harrisburg, Pa. $5.95) of the time, and the flavor and pace of the With 220 members of the Seventh United wild west is strongly apparent. So strongly, States Cavalry dead on the Little Big Horn in in fact that it becomes difficult to put the "the 'most complete defeat the American book d~wn. On the whole, a very fine history Army ever experienced," the American public of the notorious Younger boys' that should (,md particularly the newspapers) needed a appeal to many readers, not only to the scapegoat. Somebody had blundered. Custer? western history buffs;-R.A.s. Perish the thought! He was one of the dead, an'd aren't men who die in battle always EXCEL, INC. 9375 Chestnut St. I CARTRIDGE CONVERSIONS ,heroes? Custer's second in command, Marcus Franklin Park, III. I By George C. Nonte, Jr. A. Reno, was the most "conveiIient" culprit, Please rush my Xl-333 loading Press with dies for I (Stackpole Co., Harrisburg, Pa., 1961. $7.50) and the newspapers branded him "coward." loading gouge shells. I As the name of the book implies, this is a, Told as fiction but with the ring of history, o Enclosed is my check ·or money·order for $89.95 I technical work. Captain Nonte is a ballistics this is the story of Marcus Reno before, so that I will receive my Xl-333 postpaid. I expert and handloader, and has been fasci- ' during, and (too briefly) after that battle. o Send my XL-333 C.O.D. lor $89.95 plus postoge. I nated by the subject of cartridge conversion Like it or not, accept it or not, your picture Nome' -'- _ I for many years.

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