228 
FOREST AND STREAM 
Fishin’ De Luxe! 
There’s a new joy to fishing: — a new 
“e-fish-ency” — when your boat is Evinnule- 
powered. No long, tiresome row to take 
the edge off the day’s sport. Yon reach 
the best fishing grounds early, and you're 
fresli and fit when you get there. You’ve 
set up your tackle on the way. 
The E\inrude is now made in two models. 
Standard and Lightweight. Both motors 
are the same in design, power and speed. 
The Lightweight is more portable — due to 
judicious use of aluminum, it weighs just 
50 pounds complete. 
See the Evinnide motors at your sport- 
iiig goods or hardware dealer’s. Ask him 
about the Built-in-flywheol Magneto, 
Tilt-up attachment and other Evinrude 
features. Or write for catalog and new 
prices (recently cut to pre-war level). 
EVINRUDE MOTOR CO. 
662 EVINRUDE BLDG.. MILWAUKEE. WIS. 
DISTRIBUTORS: 
69 Cortlandt St. 440 Market St. 
New York. N. Y. San Francisco. Calif, 
780 Commonwealth Ave. 211 Morrison St. 
Boston. Mass. Portland. Ore. 
EVINRUDE 
DETACHABLE MOTQRLS FOR 'WATERCRAFT 
A REAL MINNOW 
I At The Eod Of Year Lme Can Da No More Than One Of Onr 
“AHNA THOROUGHBRED LURES' 
I Write Now For Free Literature — You Won’t | 
I Regret It — Live Dealers Wanted Everywhere. 
I STANDARD BAIT CO., 530 MonnmentSq., RACINE, WIS. 
Since 1879— World’s 
Finest Watercraft 
Let US quote you delivereil 
lirices on canoes, rowboats 
or motorboats of any type. 
We give you all the distinc- 
tive Canadian features at 
no extra cost. Excellent 
•rvice to tourists. 
Peterborough 
Canoe Co., Lid. 
Peterborough, 
Canada. 
W HERE'VER there’s water, 
there lies the trail for an “Old 
Town Canoe.” It will float loaded 
in the shallowest streams. You can 
push it with ease across a wind- 
swept lake. “Old Towns” answer 
every movement of the paddle. 
Added to Indian precedent is the 
skill of “Old Town” craftsmen — a 
combination that makes “Old 
Towns” the lightest, fastest, steadi- 
est, and most rugged canoes made. 
They are the lowest priced, too! 
“Old Town” models are built on 
Indian speed lines. $54 up from 
dealer or factory. 
Write now for new catalog — all leading 
“Old Town’’ models shown in full colors, to 
help you choose. It is free, 
OLD TOWN CANOE CO. 
295 Fourth Street 
Old Town 
Maine, U. S. A. 
§Ideivwn Caned, 
CANOES 15, 16, 17 and 18 ft. long. 
SOME ALL WOOD, OTHERS CANVAS COVERED 
ROWBOATS-FISH BOATS-HUNTING BOATS 
ROWBOATS AND CANOES FOR OUT- 
BOARD MOTORS. 
Special model for lake use. 
2 H. P. and 3 H. P. OUTBOARD MOTORS 
MOTOR BOATS for lakes, river, shallow 
water and weeds, 16, 18, 20 and 24 ft. long. 
CATALOG FREE— ORDER BY MAIL 
Prices Based on Selling Direct to the User 
Please state what you are interested in 
THOMPSON BROS. BOAT MFG. CO. 
921 Ellis Ave. PESHTIGO, WIS. 
CANOES 
I “Safest to Vse” 
! Because the “Tumble Home 
t makes them so. The dotted line ! 
\ here is the “Tumble Home” • 
of ordinary canoes.the heavy 
\ line of the Kennebec. / 
' “Tumble Home” is the 
bilge of a canoe 
I “hould get onr 1922 illustrated book telling all about I 
J tnle wonderful feature of the Kennebec. Sent postpaid. I 
(KtHNEBlC BOAT HID ONOE CO, 22 R. R. SQUARE. WATERVIllE. HAINL I 
i 
May, 1922 
ten-mile current with the speed of a tor-; 
pedo boat. 
A LITTLE later come the halcyon 
days of the fly- fisher — air-tinged 
with the warmth of early June, water 
warm enough to destroy the fear of an 
occasional "slopped” boot or even of 
complete immersion, and with every eve- 
ning a hatch of some sort to make life 
worth living for both trout and angler. 
This is the time for the dry-fly man to 
limber up his casting arm, but even then 
the follower of that method exclusively 
may come home with an empty creel, 
whereas his more fortunate brother has 
something more than the ancient excuse, 
"They weren't rising !” Such a fisher- 
man will start the day with his dry-fly, 
hut after an hour's futile attempt to get | 
a rise in rift, pool or still-water, he will | 
wisely shift his cast to that of two, or 
even three, wet-flies, fished at or near 
the surface. If, after due trial and strict 
examination, he is still unsuccessful, he 
will remove the dropper flies and fish the 
tail fly sunk as previously suggested. 
Again failing, let him try the spinner. 
Then, as evening approaches and he notes 
the occasional rise of a feeding fish, he 
may change swiftly back to his dry-fly 
and enjoy one of those hours that live 
in every true fisherman’s memory. In 
any event, should the rise fail to mate- 
rialize, as a result of his earlier efforts, 
he will not he fishless at the end of day. 
Again, towards the end of the season, 
with the water extremely low and clear 
and the weather sultry, the trout rarely 
come into the shallower water to feed 
until darkness falls, but lie in the pools 
or where cooling spring-runs enter the 
main stream. To raise a trout in one of 
these deep holes with a dry-fly is often 
an impossibility ; in fact, at any season 
of the year I regard such water as prac- 
tically unfishable with any great hope 
of success with the surface fly, for such 
pools are generally preempted by an 
ultra -large trout, who will not rise 
through six or eight feet of wate’r for 
such an insigTiificant morsel of food. 
Least of all will he do so late in the sea- 
son, when any sort of food is taken list- 
lessly and when a minimum of effort is 
required to secure it. For such water, 
the single sunk fly fished deep, or the 
fly-spinner, is prescribed. 
N ATUR.A.LLY, no hard-and-fast rule 
for taking trout under any and all 
conditions can be formulated, but the 
man who has several methods at his com- 
mand has, at least, his chances of success 
increased and is to a certain extent in- 
dependent of conditions of weather and 
water. Merely as a suggestion for such J 
versatility, and with the idea that it may 
be considerably modified (as indicated by ' 
experience) to meet local conditions, an I 
all-season plan of campaign may be sum- ^ 
marized in the table on page 204. ji 
In lyriting to .Idvertisers mention Forest and Stream. It will identify you. 
