822 
FOREST AND STREAM 
SELECT LIST OF BOOKS THAT SHOULD 
BE IN EVERY SPORTSMAN’S LIBRARY. 
No. 105—ANGLER’S WORKSHOP. 
By Perry D. Frazer. Rod-making for beginners. 
Price $1.00 postpaid. 
No. 113—CAMP FIRES IN THE WILDERNESS. 
By E. W. Burt. Treats of a multitude of things of interest and 
Price postpaid $1.00 
No. 124—PICTURES FROM FOREST AND STREAM. 
Reproductions on heavy half-tone paper of thirty-two 
full-page pictures printed as supplements in Forest 
and Stream, including Aububon bird plates, big game 
pictures by Rungius, field scenes by Osthaus, fishing 
and hunting scenes by Deming and Davison, and 
pictures of well-known yachts and water scenes. 
Cloth. Price postpaid $1.00 
No. 136—HITTING (VS) MISSING. 
By S. T. Hammond. A book for the field shooter by a most suc¬ 
cessful field shot. Price postpaid $1.00 
No. 148—INTER-OCEAN HUNTING TALES. 
By Edgar Randolph. Splendid hunting stories and invaluable to 
the man who wants to rough it with the maximum of comfort. 
Price postpaid $1.00 
No. 151—RHYMES OF THE FOREST AND STREAM. 
By F. M. Buckland. A charming series of out-door verse by one 
who is not only a good brother of the angler, but a close student 
and lover of nature in. her very mood. Price prepaid $1.25 
No. 162—WOODCRAFT MAGAZINE. 
Cloth bound 177 pages. Thrilling stories of hunting, fishing and 
camping. Price prepaid $1.00 
OUR EXTRAORDINARY OFFER. 
Your choice of any book listed above, 
postpaid .75 to $1.25 
Forest and Stream, I year . 1.00 Special Offer 
- Both for $1.50 
$2.25 
Or we will send you postpaid your choice of any book listed above 
for three new yearly subscriptions at $1.00 each. 
“LEEDAWL” COMPASS. 
Fishermen, hunters, pedestrians, motor-cyclists, automobilists, travel¬ 
ers, tourists, boy scouts, campers, sailors, woodsmen, in fact, almost 
every one appreciates a good compass. 
No. 228 
Or sent postpaid for three 
The trouble has been that good 
compasses cost too much for many to 
afford and cheap ones were "trash.” 
The "Leedawl" Compass solves the 
problem of a guaranteed compass that 
will last a lifetime and is within the 
reach of everyone. 
Its jeweled needle, untarnishable 
silvered metal dial, heavy and temp¬ 
ered steel point, screw stop (no dirt 
or moisture can get inside with this 
style of stop), white metal case(which 
cannot tarnish) and snap-in beveled 
crystal glass, are special features which 
we would call to your attention. 
Regular Price 
The “Leedawl” Compass. $1.00 
Forest and Stream, 1 year .... 1.00 
$ 2.00 
Special Offer 
Both for $1.50. 
new subscriptions at $1.00 each. 
This Jewfish Weighed 385 Pounds; Caught by 
Capt. Slaven—Largest Jewfish Ever Caught 
at Coronado Weighed 505 Pounds, Meas¬ 
ured 7 Feet Long. 
GREAT FISHING OFF THE FLORIDA COAST. 
Editor Forest and Stream: 
Just outside of the mouth of the St. Lucie 
Inlet, in the Atlantic Ocean, there has been 
keeping a school of Spanish mackerel, of a width- 
of about a mile, and over four miles long, whose 
individuals in number no one has thus far at¬ 
tempted to estimate, but nearly every fishboat,. 
cruiser and launch, for twenty miles of coast 
line, above and below the Inlet has been taking 
toll of this school, without lessening its numbers. 
The fishing has been done in motor boats with 
crews of three to a boat, one to steer the boat 
and two to fish, with lines about ten feet long, 
to which is attached a squid hook, and the work 
of fishing has been to throw out this squid, haul 
it in and take the fish off the hook and repeat, 
all day long. 
The fish run in size from one pound to five 
pounds in weight, and the boats have beet* 
bringing to the fish houses, catches running from 
900 to 2,300 pounds per boat, the catch depend¬ 
ing entirely upon the staying powers of the fish¬ 
ermen. An immense school of porpoises found 
the school of mackerel and scattered them. 
Never in the recollection of the fishermen of 
twenty-two years experience here, has such a 
large school of the Spanish mackerel been 
known along this coast of Florida. But this 
large school insures a catch of a few in the St. 
Lucie waters for weeks to come, and you can 
imagine my feelings, chained to the office, with 
important papers in a big bankruptcy case that 
had to be prepared, and no time to go fishing, 
until I got this work done, and now the por¬ 
poises have scattered the school. 
Stuart, Florida. W. F. Rightmire. 
