62 
FOREST AND STREAM 
July 13, 1912 
Resorts for Sportsmen. 
Maine. 
RIPOGENUS LAKE CAMPS 
HX/JVTIJVG, FISHIJVG. *R E C E A TI O JV 
A Big Country is here opened up for Sportsmen just half way down the “West Branch” 
Canoe Trip; 40 miles by steamer from Greenville to Northeast Carry; twenty miles to Ches- 
uncook by canoe, twenty miles more to camps by motor boat or canoe. Another route by 
canoe from Norcross, Maine. Another overland by team from Lilly Bay (Moosehead Lake) 
to Caribou Lake, thence by canoe or motor boat 12 miles to camps. Home Camps com¬ 
fortable with spring beds, etc. Back Camps and Lean-tos cover a great tract of 
Wilderness, for Sportsmen desiring to go far back in the woods. Good living ever j - 
where. Grouse, Ducks and Black Bear. We guarantee to give you Trout Fishing 
that is unequalled and Moose and Deer Hunting that is unsurpassed. Choice 
of the sportiest quick water in Maine, for the stream fisherman, or the most placid of pond 
and lake fishing for those who prefer it, where brook trout rise to the fly all summer. 
RALPH BISBEE - Kokadjo, Maine 
THE BELGRADE 
CHARLES A. HILL & SON, Props. 
T HERE are two kinds of fishermen—the 
man who fishes for fish regardless of 
conditions, and the 
man who fishes for 
fish and fun. 
^1 We cater particu¬ 
larly to the latter, and 
to his family, 
fj Trout, Bass and 
Salmon are more 
abundant here than 
elsewhere in Maine. 
Perfect hotel ac¬ 
commodations, with 
golf, tennis, boating 
and other amus.ements for your family while 
you fish. Handsome booklet free upon request. 
Best black bass fishing in the world 
Belgrade Lakes ... - Maine 
BELGRADE LAKE 
is the best bass lake in Maine, and Thwing Bros. Camps 
is the best fishing resort on the lake. 
We caier to fishermen and their families 
Individual camps with bath—excellent table, spring water, 
fine beds and personal attention of the management— 
trout and salmon fishing unexcelled. 
THWING BROS., Belgrade Lakes, Maine 
MACHIAS LAKE CAMPS, Ashland, Me. 
Finest July, August and September fly-fishing. Machias 
and Musquacook regions of Maine. Largest trout, togue, 
and salmon. 
Don’t Wear a Truss! 
Brooks’ Appliance is a new 
scientific discovery with auto* 
matic air cushions that draws 
the broken parts together and 
binds them as you would a 
broken limb. It absolutely 
holds firmly and comfortably 
and never slips, always light 
and cool and conforms to every 
movement of the body without 
chafing or hurting. I make it 
to your measure and send it to 
you on a strict guarantee of 
satisfaction or money refund¬ 
ed and I have put my price so 
low that anybody, rich or poor, 
can buy it. Remember, I make 
it to your order—send it to you 
—you wear it—and if it doesn’t satisfy you, you send it back to 
me and I will refund your money. The banks or any responsi¬ 
ble citizen in Marshall will tell you that is the way I do busi¬ 
ness—always absolutely on the square and I have sold to thou¬ 
sands of people this way for the past 30 years. Remember, I 
use no salves, no harness, no lies, no fakes. I just give you a 
•traight business deal at a reasonable price. 
41 E. BROOKS,1^ (JO State St., Marshall, Michigan 
Property for Sale. 
Salmon Club Share For Sale 
I have one share to dispose of in a most ex¬ 
clusive and carefully run salmon fishing club. 
Season, June i-Aug. 15. Easily reached; 125 
miles east of Quebec. Forty miles of club fish¬ 
ing water. Comfortable cottages on premises. 
This is a rare opportunity. Particulars from 
Box A - - - Forest and Stream 
Great Opportunity 
Trout Lake, club house and 1500-acre fishing 
and hunting preserve. Greatest chance in the 
State for club or private owner. Address: T. W. 
WESTON, care of Forest and Stream. 
SALMON FISHING FOR SALE. 
Outright ownership. No license fee to government. 
Annual expense nominal. Accessible location, North 
East Branch of Marguerite. Short drive over good road 
from Tadousac on lower St. Lawrence. Fine large camp 
fully equipped. Fish abundant and large. Season last 
of June to middle of August. Price, $18,000, including 
land, buildings and full equipment. Apply to H. W., 
care Forest & Stream. 
Ask your club to subscribe for another copy 
of Forest and Stream, so you won’t have to 
wait for it. 
Efficiency 
In Many Men is Due to an 
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Many a man outdoes his fellows by 
simply conserving his nerve force. 
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strain which saps other men’s vitality. 
The energy which others waste is 
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Thousands of men have thus learned 
a secret which you ought to know. 
Write for our book about the O-P-C—the scien¬ 
tific suspensory, famous for 20 years. 
It tells of a comfort which saves weariness, 
saves vim and vigor, keeps men at their best. 
A man who wears it 30 days will never go 
without it. Write us now. 
All druggists guarantee you satisfaction with 
an O-P-C. No. 2, Lisle, 75c—No. 3, Silk, SI.00 
Mailed direct from 43 25th St., Chicago, if your 
druggist will not supply you. 
Bauer & Black Chicago and New York 
more deftly than Skipper Dennis, on board 
Elena, but it meant lots of work, for the spin¬ 
nakers were being swapped from port to star¬ 
board and back again every few minutes. 
In the last five miles Irolita jibed four times 
and several times was a quarter to half a mile 
off the straight course. Half a mile from the 
finish she was just far enough ahead of Elena 
not to get blanketed and slipped across the line 
by 3s., winning by 2m. 37s. corrected time. 
Princess, Muriel and Taormina fought out 
a fine sailing battle in light air and Princess 
managed to win for the first time since the cruise 
started. In the first division the sloops Avenger 
and Shimna indulged in several luffing matches 
on the run to Old Man Ledge, the former getting 
the lead and holding it to the finish. Tammany 
scored her first victory in the cruise in the third 
division of schooners, while Dorello won again 
in the second division of sloops. 
There was a jollification meeting on the 
after deck of Irolita when the committee tug 
blew the three blasts which always greet the 
leader in each division. The rest of the fleet 
had a hard struggle in the light air around the 
Old Man, and it was nearly dark before some 
of the smaller yachts reached the finish and 
late in the evening when all were anchored in 
this harbor. The fleet will spend most of to¬ 
morrow visiting friends in the western Penob¬ 
scot, but will assemble again at night. 
In the competition for the cruise prize of¬ 
fered by Commodore Paine for the best total 
corrected time in this division, Elena was lead¬ 
ing to-night, with a total of 13I1. 28m. 45s. and 
Enchantress third, with a total of 13I1. 34m. 8s. 
The yachts have three more races to sail, one 
on Monday, a second on Wednesday and a third 
on Thursday. It is expected there will be more 
or less windward work in these remaining con¬ 
tests. The struggle between these three big 
schooners is much keener and considerably closer 
than last year. The summary: 
First Division—Schooners—Start, 10:25. 
Irolita . 
Elena . 
Enchantress 
Elapsed. 
Corrected. 
3 39 46 
3 42 23 
3 47 55 
Second 
Princess . 
Muriel . 
Taormina . 
Division—Schooners—Start, 
. 5 09 30 
10:20. 
4 41 59 
4 44 53 
5 01 24 
Tammany .... 
Vagrant . 
Shylesia . 
Third Division—Schooners. 
. 5 59 55 
. 6 26 07 
. 6 17 45 
5 42 34 
6 11 44 
6 17 45 
Avenger . 
Shimna . 
Doris . 
First Division—Sloops. 
. 4 45 34 
. 4 52 00 
. 5 41 25 
4 44 59 
4 52 00 
5 36 29 
Dorello . 
Alice . 
Sakuntala . 
Second Division—Sloops. 
. 5 57 21 5 54 20 
. 7 35 19 7 32 02 
Nahant (Mass.) Dory Club. 
Another leg of the champion cup series of 
the Nahant Dory Club, of Nahant, Mass., was 
sailed on the outside course on July 6, the course 
being from the steamboat landing around the 
Nahant buoy and to Deer Island buoy, nearly 
ten miles. There was a stiff westerly wind blow¬ 
ing that made the beating to windward a tough 
proposition. Commodore Foster won the leg. 
The summary: 
Elapsed. Elapsed. 
Humbug . 2 02 32 Bugaboo . 2 11 45 
Spider . 2 03 51 Brownie III.2 19 20 
Weivell . 2 06 55 Stinger . 2 20 33 
Midge . 2 07 04 
Riverside Y. C. 
The number of starters in the twenty-fourth 
annual regatta of the Riverside Y. C. was small 
last Saturday. Only fifteen yachts crossed the 
starting line off Little Captain’s Island. 
R. Halliday Nexsen and Harry L. Follett, of 
the race committee, postponed the start until X 
p. m. to give the other fifty yachts which en¬ 
tered an opportunity to reach the line. 
Of the six Larchmont inter-club boats that 
started, Lewanna, with L. G. Spence at the tiller, 
was first away in the weather berth. 
The course was five miles to windward and 
