274 
FOREST AND STREAM 
June, 1921 
Mo<:-A-WALJ l<5 
Give^our Feet a Vacation 
They are as flexible and comfortable as Indian moccasins with a 
sturdy sole that gives long wear and full protection. Just the thing for 
1 r YKf# vacation wear. Ideal for camping, hiking, canoeing, golfing, and all 
my outdoor sports. Light and cool for summer. Finest qualityaone 
ja . _ _ wBk- piece upper, leather or Neolin soles; hand sewn, madein either 
chocolate or black. Send your shoe size and choice of color 
/ |« vJvJ and sole with your money order today. Boys’ sizes, 2 to 5, 
$4.35. Men’s sizes, 6 to 11, $4.95. Full satisfaction or money 
____ back. Writefor our illustrated broadside. “Moc-a-wauks — 
POST PAID For All the Family.” Address Dept. F-6 
The Moc-a-wauk Co., 364 Congress St., Boston 9, Mass. 
Make Your Row Boat 
Into a Power Boat 
By means of this dur- 
able Lockwood -Ash 
motor every row boat 
is easily made into a 
power craft economi- 
cal to operate. 
It is designed for fishermen, hunters, 
boat-livery men and vacationists. 
Our 30-Day Trial Plan is Explained 
in Our Booklet. Send for it. 
Lockwood Ash Motor Company 
2103 Jackson St. Jackson, Mich. (80) 
lOCKWOOD-ASH 
'“ 33 MARINE rucTuct 
ENGINES 
FOR SALE 
SPORTING PROPERTY 
Province of Quebec, Canada 
This property situated in Canton Neigette, 
County Rimouski, Province of Quebec. 1,875 
acres, covered by Letters Patent, including 3 
rods reservation around each lake. Seven lakes 
on property; 3 lodges on main lake, stable ac- 
commodation 4 horses, garage, work-shop, ice- 
house, etc. Roads good for motor vehicles and 
horses. 11 miles from railway station, Canadian 
National, St. Anaclet Station, County of Rimou- 
ski, P. Q. 17 miles from town of Rimouski, 
Province of Quebec. 10 hours from Montreal, 
24 hours from New York. 
Main Lodge — hard wood floors in living and 
dining rooms. 
Fishing Leases — 15 years, all paid in advance 
to 1934. Fishing boats on all lakes. 
Speckled Trout — Varying from 1 pound to 4 
pounds in different lakes. 
Timber — Official valuation 43,903 cords of 
pulp wood, 12,000 cedar railway ties, not in- 
cluding hard wood. 
NET SALE PRICE $150,000. 
For further information communicate with 
Major General Sir Eugene Fiset, Deputy Min- 
ister of Militia, Ottawa, Canada. References — 
The Consul General for United States of Amer- 
ica, 26 Wellington Street, Ottawa, Canada. 
WHY NOT W,°«i 
Summer and Fall gathering 
butterflies, insects? I buy 
hundreds of kinds for col- 
lections. Some worth $1 to 
$7 each. Simple outdoor 
work with my instructions, pictures, price list. 
Get posted now. Send 10c (NOT STAMPS) 
for my Illustrated Prospectus. Mr. Sinclair, 
Dealer In Insects, Dept. » Oeean Park. Cal. 
I r. ll'riting to 
ttjjjg 
JOE WELSH’S 
CELEBRATED 
TeleranaNova 
LEADER 
A Leader that is 
well named A 
LEADER. A LEAD- 
ER of Leaders. 
A Leader that has LED the largest trout 
and salmon to their death this past sea- 
son. Do you know the largest trout was 
landed in Colorado, 10)4 ll>s. by M. Pawls 
of Meeker on a No. 2 Joe Welsh leader? 
The largest salmon, 41 lbs., landed by 
Judge Osborne on a No. 2 Joe Welsh Leaa- 
er. The largest trout in So. Calif, 32)4, 
13 lbs. 3 oz., was landed on a No. 3 Joe 
Welsh Leader by Joe Welsh himself. 
0. S. Taylor says in the American Field: 
‘‘The only Leader I found to stand the 
fishing in the Soo were Joe Welsh Lead- 
ers.” Dixie Carroll, of national fame, 
says they are par excellence. So does a 
score of our best known writing anglers, 
Think of a knotless, invisible, strong 
leader in all lengths up to 9 ft. in 6 
sizes with breaking strains from 2)4 to 
30 lbs. All quality. Make the weakest 
part of your tackle the strongest. 
SPECIAL OFFER — I will send you a 3-ft. Leader 
for 25c — 6-ft. Leader for 50c — 9-ft. Leader for 
75c as samples only; also a sample card showing 
all sizes. 
JOE WELSH 
Pasadena, California 
Distributors for U. S. 
and Canada 
Dealers can make good 
profits by handling this 
popular leader. 
HERE’S THE ENGINE FOR 
YOUR SMALL FISHING BOAT 
The New 2-H.P. 
FOUR CYCLE 
REGAL 
Can be throttled 
to slow speed and 
is built like the 
large engines. 
Weighs 125 lbs. 
Other Sizes up to 50-H.P. 
REGAL GASOLINE ENGINE COMPANY 
10 GRAND ST. COLDWATER, MICH. 
twi ultumiimim 
ukAa&n 
Since 1839, 82 years, the Milams 
have been making the celebrated 
“KENTUCKY" Reel in the same 
location, and all the knowledge gained 
by these years of experience is put 
into their reels today. 
Let us send you our booklet 
B. C. MILAM & SON 
Main Street Frankfort. Kv. 
“No Admittance”; “Positively No Fish- 
ing”; “Dangerous”; and, as if to kick 
a man when he is down, “No Smoking”! 
Has the fisherman’s trip been in vain? 
Has he come to Rome only to find the 
city barricaded? Is he back in “verbo- 
ten” Germany? Not so; for who are 
these privileged characters, casting so 
hopefully? He ventures on. Nobody 
bayonets him. Au contraire he is evi- 
dently welcome, and greeted with pro- 
fuse fellowship and tobacco smoke. One 
clearly becomes a member of the East 
Outlet Dam Elect without effort. For 
the minatory signs are meaningless. 
As the fisherman looks about him he 
finds himself snugly ensconced upon a 
kind of fortress, with a glacis, appar- 
ently, and scarps and counterscarps 
enough to delight the heart of Uncle 
Toby. The place is, indeed, a very 
triumph of the lumberman’s art. He 
forgets the signs and casts his first fly 
into the Kennebec. The thunder of the 
stream is in his ears ; villainous to- 
bacco smoke issues from his lips, the 
tang of Maine air is in his nostrils; his 
fly skims lightly on the eddies; he ex- 
pects a rise; and, in brief, he is pro- 
foundly happy. 
B-z-t-t! a tautened line! A brown 
something at the surface, twisting and 
churning a tiny segment of the pool 
into brandy-like foam. Suddenly a 
gleam of orange, a tawny ventral fin 
uplifted, for all the world like a flag 
of distress. A three-pound squaretail! 
But there is no complacence on the face 
of the fisherman; only a ludicrous ex- 
pression of anxiety, for suddenly he 
has heard the high-pitched whine of a 
reel, hard-pressed, and has seen an 
ominous bending of his rod-tip. 
The trout has rushed under the dam. 
Staccato cries fill the air. “He’s gone”; 
“give him line” (this accompanied by 
invocations to well-known deities) ; and 
“No! he’s on.” And ten minutes later, 
by the aid of a landing-net, as long- 
handled as a French cavalry lance, the 
beauty lies on the dam, looking with 
fierce, but dimming eyes at his captor, 
who surveys him as the first Indian 
surveyed his first fish, with triumph 
and unrepressed joy. 
The supreme hours on the dam are 
at evening. Then the dark comes down, 
not with “one great stride” as in the 
South Seas, but softly, like the mantle 
of Erebus, sung by the Greeks. In the 
blurring light come myriads of brown 
moths, fluttering over the dam like an 
ancient plague of locusts, till th« air 
seems dusky with them. Down they 
float, after their brief instant of life, 
to the darkened water below, where 
they find a prompt death. A gulping 
splash, another, and then another. The 
trout rise, literally in hundreds, for 
their evening meal. Alas! their only 
one, as many a fisherman finds to his 
sorrow. 
Brown moths the trout will take — 
and nothing else. Treacherously simi- 
lar lures are cast, but the trout are un- 
deceived. They rise serenely to the 
real moth; at the brown fraud they 
lash scornful tails. Can it be done? 
Can they be caught? They most cer- 
Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. It will identify you. 
