WMR describes Winchester magnum (.22 cal.) rifle ammo, however I have successfully fired all types of short, long, long-rifle and even "rat caps" .22 ammunition from my bolt-action Marlin 883. Other than .22 WMR magnum bullets, all others must be fed into the breach of the barrel from the open bolt, not withdrawn from the magazine. The empty shell casings will be extracted and ejected by the bolt, no problem, however. Since this rifle is robust enough to handle magnum .22 rounds, I see no problem "hand feeding" anything else through an open bolt. Be careful, and don't forget to point downrange when loading!
By the guide I use, Marlin made a "Model 18 Baby Slide-Action Repeater" from 1906-09. It was a .22cal. LR, Long Short. The tubular mag held 14 short cartridges. It had a 20" barrel that could have been round or octagon. My book lists them from $180 in good condition to $350 perfect. Hope this is what you were looking for.
The s-l-lr, Stands for Short, Long, Long Rifle. So it is a 22Cal.
Yes, it says on the barrel, .22 S, L, LR. They will feed from the clip as well. Mid 80's Marlin Model 25 will as well. Post '88 Marlin Model 25N rifles will not feed them from the magazine. Just read the barrel if you are not sure which model you have.
50-150
$100
10-90 usd
MSN is short for Micro Soft Network.
I have a marlin little joker i will sell for parts
Yes of course!
Micro- meaning microscopic. Too small to be seen with the naked eye. Short for Microscopic. There are micro organisms in this forest environment.
. In drumming, a fill is defined as a "short break in the groove--a lick that 'fills in the gaps
The emporers new groove