272 
FOREST AND STREAM 
THE BED WITH THE PAT.SAGEESS SPRING 
MATTRESS FABRIC AND PRESSED STEEL FRAME 
NO'S 
AUTO-CAMP 
gave your hotel bill and add the Joy of camping* to the pleasure ot 
touring. — Use the tonneau of your car for a dressing room and step 
through the door into a double bed ns big and comfortable as the 
one at home, made possible only by our Sagless Spring Mattress 
Fabric. Bed on each running board makes sleeping quarters for 
four people. 
For strength, comfort, compactness nod price, the SCHILLING 
Auto-Camp is not equalled.— ’Write for new catalog. 
THE L. F. SCHILLING CO. Dept T Salem, Ohio 
FOLDING PUNCTURE-PROOF CANVAS BOATS 
Light, easy to handle, no leaks or repairs; check as baggage, carry by 
hand; safe for family; all sizes; non-sinkable ; stronger thaa wood 
used by U. S. and Foreign Governments. Awarded First Prize 
Chicago and St. Louis World’s Farrs. We fit our boats for Outboard 
Motors. Catalog. . . ,, . m;«u 
ii i net Fnldina Canvas Boat Co.. 428 Harrison St.. Kalamazoo, Mich. 
Attach this Motor 
to 
Your Boat 
New pleasures are open 
to the man who attaches a 
Lockwood-Ash Row Boat 
Engine to his row boat. 
It saves those long, hot, 
back-breaking pulls to the 
fishing or picnic grounds 
or the camp. 
It is simple, economical 
and practical and takes 
but a few minute* to 
Install. 
Ask for our booklet 
and learn about the 
30-day trial plan. 
Lockwood-Ash Motor 
Company 
2003 Jackson Street 
Jackaon, Mich. 
(69) 
For Outdoor Sport or Work 
Duxbak and Kampit are primarily clothes 
for rough outdoor work or hard play in 
any kind of weather. They combine good 
sense, style, economy and service. 
Duxbak is rainproofed. Kampit is lighter 
*OOt 
i 
IMPORTED HOSIERY S 
For Golf, Tennis and Sport Wear 
IN ATTRACTIVE DESIGNS FOR 
MEN AND WOMEN 
No. 15 
* AFinestScotch WoolTenuis Socfes in white, 
liOeXUpray, green, black, heather and 1 CQ 
white, with colored clocks, a pair * 
M 1 C Men’s Finest ScotchWool Golf Hose, 
lO in green, gray, brown and O CA 
heather (without feet $3), a pair •••••• 
lyi AA Women’s Scotch Wool Stockings, in 
1NO* white, white with colored O AA M 
clocks, Oxford green and heather, a pair . . U 
Complete line Golf, Tennis and Sport equipment. 
Mail Orders given prompt attention. 
Stewart Sporting Sales Co. 
. 425 FIFTH AVE., at 38 th St., N. Y. M 
$080* KOBO* JUOB&2S 
“SAFEST TO USE 
A New York customer writes : — 
1 Last season I purchased 
a 17 ft. Kennebec model 
canoe, used it continu- 
ously throughout the 
summer with two other 
fellows, went camping 
with it every Saturday 
and Sunday and spent 
our two weeks vacation 
paddling up the Hudson ( 
It is lighter and swifter 
than any other make 
and has won many 
friends.” 
TheIdeaiCanoe| 
forVacation 
and Campings 
Trips. 
Write for the Free Book today. 
Kennebec Boat <fe Canoe C’o, 
22 R. R. Square, Waterville, Maine. 
Knit your 
own fish 
nets 
All kinds of fish nets, hammocks, etc., may be 
easily and quickly made, with my illustrated m- 
structions before you. 21 photographs show you 
how. Also gives you more information about tne 
use of nets than has ever been published. Com- 
plete instructions, wire ne’tting_ needle, mesh blocks 
and 4 balls of twine, for $1.50 postpaid. 
Clayton Net Company. 
43 N. Main St., Altoona, Kans. 
May, 1920 
ways endeavor to keep it as nearly at 
right angles to the line as possible, for 
no greater calamity can befall a fisher- 
man than to break a tip while on the 
stream. 
There are fly-casters who seldom or 
never fish anything' but trout streams, 
declaring that trout fishing is the only 
piscatorial sport worth the candle. While 
there are others equally loud in their 
praise of the black bass and men of 
wealth who will cheerfully spend two or 
three thousand dollars for a few days’ 
recreation on a good salmon or grayling 
river. Both the salmon and the grayling 
may be dismissed with a word of regret 
that such royal sport is not within the 
means of the ordinary pocket-book more 
than once in a life time, but the brook 
trout and the black bass, like one’s poor 
relations, are always with us, and because 
of fish culture there is now scarcely any 
portion of this great country of ours 
without one or more sti-eams where a 
poor man can cast his flies at compara- 
tively small expense. 
Many other species of fresh water fish 
will also, take the fly and the versatile 
angler will find it to his pleasure to court 
the crappie, calico bass, rock bass, wall- 
eyed pike, red-eared sun fish, white bass, 
yellow perch, fall fish, common chub, and 
pickerel when he desires a pleasant day’s 
outing and the brook trout and black bass 
are not biting. Some will take the arti- 
ficial fly with a rush, some gingerly, while 
as pan fish they are not so inferior to 
trout as to be entirely ignored. 
JAMES ALEXANDER 
HENSHALL 
(continued from page 247) 
Georgia boys, who was quite hard of 
hearing, said he both felt and heard it, 
but thought it was only Ben snoring. 
The raft of logs being finished, one of 
the Georgia boys returned to Eau Gallie 
with their two yoke of oxen, and the 
other sailed their boat to the same des- 
tination. We were sorry to part with 
them but after a few days we also broke 
camp and sailed for St. Lucie river, the 
largest tributary of Indian river. 
The boys left the camp on the Se- 
bastian with some regret, as at the head 
of the North Prong, deer and wild tur- 
keys were sighted whenever that sec- 
tion was visited. We were well-supplied 
with venison, turkeys, ducks, snipe and 
plover, to say nothing of fish. We saw 
several flocks of parrakeets at the head 
of the West Prong, feeding on palmetto 
berries. There were two settlers on Se- 
bastian Bay from whom we got sweet 
potatoes, oranges and bananas, without 
money and without price. My medical 
services were often in requisition, _ and 
some aching molars were extracted, 
which proved a quid pro quo. 
Sailing down Indian river a few miles 
we came to Barker’s Bluff, quite an 
eminence, on the west shore, where there 
was a settler. Opposite was Pelican 
Island which we visited. On our ap- 
proach the old pelicans hovered uneasily 
around, while a rookery of egrets, cor- 
morants and man-o’-war hawks on a 
small mangrove island adjacent was the 
