328 
FOREST AND STREAM 
Two-Burner Model 
The most popular size, being large 
enough for a party of six or eight 
persons. Price complete, with utensils 
as shown, $15.50. Price without uten- 
sils, $13.50. 
Two-Burner Model — Closed 
(All Equipment Packed Inside) 
Four Party Suitcase Outfit 
A complete equipment for four persons, 
including dishes, cutlery, and cooking 
utensils, packed together with a Two- 
Burner Auto-Kamp-Kook-Kit (illus- 
trated above) in a handsome nickel- 
trimmed suitcase. 
Price, complete $42.00 
Price, equipped for six persons. .$45.00 
your ^est 
l/acaiionPal 
No more fussing and mussing with smoky 
camp fires. No more hunting for dry wood. 
Every meal an event to look forward to. 
You eat when and where you want to when 
you own an 
It is as compact as a suitcase. When closed 
it takes up less room. All equipment packed 
inside. It is quickly set up in a few seconds 
and you have a stove complete in every de- 
tail — flame regulator, grates, pressure gauge 
and warming plate. 
Auto-Kamp-Kook-Kit is made of sheet steel, 
strongly riveted, with a chocolate - brown 
baked enamel finish. Tank is of polished 
brass, with pressure gauge and fully tested. 
Has master burner and detachable key handle. 
Burns ordinary gasoline. A thirty-mile wind 
cannot blow it out, and it will quickly heat 
your tent on a cold day. 
For sale at all prominent sporting goods deal- 
ers. Send for folder showing complete line. 
PRENTISS-WABERS STOVE CO. 
General Offices and Factory 
4 SPRING ST. WISCONSIN RAPIDS, WIS. 
Representatives 
Chicago, lil. — Mr. W. Al. Los Angeles, Cal. — Mr. 
Treat. 190 N. State St. Harry M. Waterman, 
Dallas, Texas — Mr. Geo. E. 1311 S. Figueroa St. 
Vickers, 411 N. Mont Portland, Ore. — Mr. F. H. 
Clair St. Chown. 1121 Gasco Bldg. 
Denver, Colo. — Sprake New York, N. Y. — Mr. 
Sales Co., 304 Charles Chas. G. Johnston, 98 
Bldg. Park Place. 
lan— 
2I4F W' V Ui S Q S 
New York^^Halifax-^ Quebec 
The Palatial Twin-Screw 
S. S. ‘TORT HAMILTON” 
will make 4 unusually attractive yachting cruises (no freight) 
New"folk”* JULY 8-22 and AUG. 5-19 
Stopping one day (each way) at Halifax — Two days at Quebec 
Sailing through the Gut of Canso and Northumberland Straits, the broad St. Lawrence, up the 
Saguenay River and thence on to Quebec. Magnificent scenery, smooth water, cool weather. The 
ship has spacious promenade decks, and deck games, many rooms with bath, finest cuisine, etc. 
Orchestra for Dancing. 
The round trip occupies 12 days, rate $150 and up 
or one way to Quebec, 5 days, $80 and up. 
No Passports required for these cruises. For illustrated literature address 
FURNESS BERMUDA LINE 
34 Whitehall Street, New York, or any Tourist Agent 
LOG CABINS 
and COTTAGES 
By 
WILLIAM S. WICKS 
(Seventh Edition) 
Full explanations how to build and furnish 
cabins of all sizes with plans, directions, 
and numerous illustrations. Everything 
from a shack to the most pretentious 
Adironack structure, is included — 
Chimneys, rustic stairways, etc. 
Price $2.00 postpaid 
July, 1922 
heavy surges and bulldog determination 
as they swiftly plunged ahead and bored 
down, down, and down, as if to root 
the hook loose on the sandy bottom. 
I had often been warned not to get my 
hands in their mouths in landing them 
and, as I explored the mouth of one that 
lay dead, I could see why a gaff wa's 
preferable. Back in the jaw were two 
solid bony plates, above and below, filled 
with round polished teeth; a clam or an 
oyster picked up and set between those 
crushers would sure have been out of 
luck. The fishermen at the Inlet told me, 
so destructive to the oyster beds are these 
drum, that they dynamite the schools 
whenever possible. Seems as if the fish 
could be marketed for food; they are not 
so bad to my mind as some other kinds 
of fish that I have eaten ; we cut some 
steaks from one and ate them broiled — a 
little coarse, to be sure, but not at all 
unpalatable. 
ARTIFICIAL BAITS 
FOR TROUT 
(Continued from page 300) 
stream, then floated down some distance, 
to sink, then up again, darted back and 
forth in the most animated way, played 
so deftly, so delicately as to appear un- 
attached to a line, frollicking about the 
water exactly as live minnows. 
A NOTHER deadly method of proved 
success is to stand right at the head 
of a swift runway, then let the minnow 
swim down fifty to a hundred feet away, 
turning it round your reel back in short, 
rapid rodtip jerks from side to side across 
the runway. If the minnow is played 
right this backward movement is bound 
to attract a strike. Sometimes I have 
good success in fishing deep, rather slug- 
gish pools by the use of a quarter-ounce 
round sinker tied at the very end of gut 
with a twelve-inch snell tied eight inches 
above so that the minnow can be dropped 
to the river bed and pumped, or lifted, 
several times up to near the surface and 
down again. 
Another effective rig is to attach two 
minnows on the leader, the larger, two 
or even three-inch size, at the gut end 
with a small one-inch feather minnow 
on a four-inch snell three feet above. 
This rig is best fished down stream ex- 
actly in the wet style of casting: allowed 
to run ahead and worked to all desirable 
places by jerks and darts in rapid succes- 
sion. I have had them rise repeatedly, 
then turn round to follow the lures some 
distance down stream, with a hard strike 
from the side. This action of following- 
down stream is most unusual for trout 
in fly fishing, as they invariably prefer 
to run up stream and then strike, sinking 
slowly down back to their chosen place 
where they lie watching the food as it 
floats down. 
Some other effective artificial baits for 
trout are the small crawfish, shrimp, 
helgramite, grasshopper, cricket, cater- | 
pillar and caddis creepers. They may all i 
be played singly or in doubles exactly in 
the manner described for minnows. I 
have caught trout on all of them, at the 
bottom, midwater and surface according 
In Writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. It will identify you. 
