326 
FOREST AND. STREAM 
July, 1922 
Kampkook 
No. 3 
The most popu- 
lar size. Price in 
the U. S. $7. 50. Also made with brass case 
at $9.50. Larger size two burner Kamp- 
kook $8.50. 
Kampkook No. 12. Three burners. 
For large parties and summer cottages. 
Price $12 .00. 
It’s All Inside. Kampkooks fold up like 
a miniature suit case when not in use, with 
all parts packed inside the case, protected 
against loss or breakage. 
Why Most Motor 
Tourists 
and Campers 
Cook the 
Kampkook Way 
T he Kampkook is the one satisfactory solution of the 
camp fire problem. Compact and handy to carry, 
always ready for service, easy to operate, remark- 
ably efficient, the Kampkook enables the motor tourist 
and camper to prepare his meals anywhere as quickly, 
conveniently and economically as in the home kitchen. 
The Kampkook makes and burns its own gas from the 
same grade of gasoline you use in your car. No smoke, 
soot or odor. Set up and going full blast in less time than 
it takes to gather fuel for a wood camp fire. Substan- 
tially built for hard service; wind proof and safe. 
The Kampkook 
folder, sent on re- 
quest also describes 
the KampoveUy 
Kampkook Kit- 
chenette and 
Kam pkook 
■fnl ding fry 
Genuine American Kampkooks are easily 
identified by the brass nameplate. Sold by 
dealers in sporting goods and camp equip- 
ment everywhere. 
American Gas Machine Co. 
832 Clark St.« Albert Lea. Minn. 
AMERICAN 
KAMPKOOK 
THE IDEAL CAMP STOVE 
PeMOlN 
( TOUR TENT J 
RE you taking a trip by auto 
• this summer? Get a genuine 
DeMoin Tour-Tent— a camp 
home for your party; a shelter 
for your car wherever you park. 
Easy to carry. 
Whatever make your car, wher- 
ever you plan to go, whether 
you park at the outskirts of the 
city, in the mountains, atong 
the country roadside, at the 
lakeshore—the DeMoin Tour-Tent is 
your outdoor home, your garage. 
WRITE TODAY for full partic- 
ulars of this moat popular of 
tour tents. 
De» Moines Tent and Awning Co. 
939 Walnut St., Des Moines, Iowa 
Easily carried 
in the car. This 
bag, 12x^, is 
famished free 
iiritb each equip- 
ment. 
Your choice of 
Olive Drak or 
Khaki canvas, 
mildew and wa> 
torproof . N o 
poleauaad. Put 
U Id 6 minutes. 
Campins apace 
la additioD to 
ehriter for car, 
*7Mwlde. 
Positively No Flies or 
Mosquitoes when using 
FLY TERROR 
the only Fly Repellent on the mar- 
ket. Used with satisfaction by all 
Sportsmen, Hunters, Anglers, For> 
esters, Surveyors. Prospectors, etc., 
wherever Flies or Mosquitoes 
abound. 
It is effective as well as agree- 
able. Absolutely harmless to the 
skin. 
You cannot go in the bush with- 
out it. You will need it. You will 
appreciate it. 
Ask your Dealer or write to : 
THE FLY TERROR r“/gS; 
7 Notre Dame Sq.» Quebec, P. Q. Canada 
Out-of-Print and Rare 
nAAFC ON BIG GAME 
DUUIlU HUNTING AND FISHING 
New Catalogue FREE; 
Also General Literature Catalogue 
E. R. SEELEY. Inc 
222 Huntington Ave. Boston, 17 Mass. 
fished the surf again that night and one 
small channel bass was taken, enough to 
whet our appetites for more. Ted’s 
brother Joe arrived around midnight 
from Ocean City; he had missed con- 
nections in some way and had to hoof 
it in the pitchy dark, with a heavy pack 
on his back, across the long bridge — 
some job, as you who know the locality 
may vouch for. 
A FTER breakfast the next morning 
all but Charlie and me took the 
skiff up the inlets to investigate the eel 
pots. Charlie helped me erect my little 
tent and then he and I set off on a long 
hike to Sea Isle City for the boots that 
I never used after I did purchase them. 
The bass fishing that June was a boat 
proposition or one of standing in waist- 
deep water, so flat was the beach. When 
we returned, we fished for fluke and 
never in all my days had I such easy 
picking. We’d lay flat on the little walk 
back of the cottages, scoop up a crab 
net of minnows, bait up, cast out, and a 
fluke, big as a barn door, would fling 
himself on that luckless killie. I never 
saw fluke anywhere else the size of those 
fellows. 
“We’d better troll around the bridge 
to-night,” said Charlie, “if you come out 
toward evening you will hear the rock 
fish, as they call the stripers down here, 
breaking all over — well, come on, it’s 
lunch time and here come the fellows.” 
Such scarecrows, mud from the creeks 
covered them from head to foot, but eels 
they had by the basketful. What with 
the fluke and the eels it had been a good 
morning’s work. Too tired to get our 
own meal, we broke rules again, so, -after 
a swim and wash up, we again tried to 
eat Wittcamp out of house and home. 
After lunch, the boys decided to attend 
to their fish business, so Charlie and I 
spent the afternoon trolling the sod banks 
of the Inlet for striped bass. We used 
large striped minnows, called rock killies 
by the local anglers, on a long-shanked 
hook with a spinner above. We had 
strikes aplenty, but landed, due to all 
kinds of bad luck, not one single fish. 
The trestle seems to be the favorite place 
— the huge stripers seem to lurk above 
the pile work ready to dart out now and 
then upon the small fish. How the cur- 
rent does rush through those arches. I 
cannot see how a large fish can be landed, 
hut many are caught from that trestle 
just the same. 
Several channel bass were taken dur- 
ing the next few days by anglers at 
Wittcamp’s and we were getting gloomy; 
we angled patiently, but no luck attended 
us — the bass were not for us, but we did 
get lots of other good fish to keep us 
going. 
Nearly all the channel bass were taken 
at the mouth of the Inlet from boats, 
hardly a one was caught from the beach, 
no one could fish from it that season; 
it was so flat that one had to wade a 
hundred yards or more out into the water 
in order to reach a slue. Once in a while 
we would forget, when on the outer bar, 
that the tide was making and the inner 
slue filling, then rod in teeth we’d have 
to swim for it — that is why I did not use 
my new boots. 
In Writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. It will identify you. 
