1104 
FOREST AND STREAM 
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AS OTHERS SEE US 
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105 Worth Street 
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION 
TELEPHONE 4615-16 FRANKLIN 
CABLE ADDRESS,"WINGRANE.N.Y." 
a : n d CORDwIjI 
AGENTS FOR 
SILVER LAKE CO’S. 
SOLID BRAI DED- CORDAGE . 
- )<// > September 29 th, 1915 . 
Ashaway Line & Twine Itfg. Co. 
Ashaway, R.I. 
A. J. Crandall, Esquire, 
Vice-President and Manager 
Dear Kr. Crandall 
In looking over the present and past business connections 
of this Company, going baok beyond its incorporation, and to the tine of its 
first establishment in 1 S 63 , we find that the Ashavray Line & TiTina Mfg. Co., 
together with their predecessors, have been continually on our books. 
'He oan very truthfully, and we think only fairly, state, 
that during this long period the various goods of your manufacture have been 
absolutely dependable, and that we have had none but satisfied customers for 
the goods whioh you have supplied us. 
We feel fully assured under the policy established by your 
Company, and under its present management, that we can safely guarantee to 
our customers the quality and standard of goods as represented, and we our¬ 
selves consider your product superior to any other in the market. 
Assuring yotl of our high appreciation and trusting that 
our business relations may oontinue for many years to come, and with kind¬ 
est personal regards, we are. 
Yours very truly, 
D. P. WINHE COMPANY. 
By 
President 
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Here Are Six Great Killers— 
And Twenty-four Interchangeable Combinations! 
Realizing the great and well known fish-getting qualities of spinners, the Pfluegers have here 
devised a set of spinner baits, with interchangeable parts readily attachable, to enable the angler 
to meet any and all conditions of water, time of day, season of year and other causes, with a 
bait that will attract game fish under the special conditions existing at the moment. This year 
don’t start away on that long anticipated trip without having in your tackle box at least one set of 
Pflueger-Lewis” Interchangeable Spinner 
Each set contains:—Two rust-proof piano wire shafts, each with a “Jack” to 
which the blade is secured; one hollow point double hook, ringed size 1/0; one 
hollow roint Ct lifomia bass hook, ringed size 4 / 0 , with a copper baiting wire 
attached; one Wyoga bass fly. Royal Coachman pattern on a hollow point Sproat 
hook, ringed size 2/0; one hollow , point treble hook, ringed size 1/0, feathered, 
and six interchangeable spoon blades. 
If your dealer cannot supply you wo will mail you one set postpaid on receipt 
of $1.00. 
S ?Th e Enterprise Manufacturing Co. Dept. 2 1 Akron, Ohio 
NOTICE—Write for tree copy "Tips on Tackle” containing much information of interest to anglers. 
SCIENTIFIC ANGLERS MEET AT NEWARK. 
Editor Angling Department: I understand 
that the National Association of Scientific Angl¬ 
ing Clubs will hold their 1916 tournament in the 
east. Can you tell me where and on what dates? 
F. C. M., Daytona, Fla. 
The 1916 tournament will be held this year in 
Newark, N. J„ under the auspices of the Newark 
Fly and Bait Casting Club, on August 23, 24, 25 
and 26, from their platform in Weequahic Park 
lake. 
ANTI-BACK LASH REELS. 
Editor Angling Department: Are anti-back 
lash reels reliable, and as good as the casting 
reels without the anti-back lash attachment? 
J. L., Ridgewood, L. I. 
Such reels are especially good for night cast¬ 
ing, and for the angler who does not have much 
time to spend at the art. They are considered 
reliable. 
WADING FOR BLACK BASS. 
When casting with a bait rod from a boat, or 
at long distance while wading, either microp- 
terus or his big mouth relative is a pugnacious 
individual at times apparently devoid of fear of 
man. At least we conclude this from his delib¬ 
erate rushes at the bait. But, when you go to 
wading streams for them, you will find them just 
as wary, and possibly a trifle more susceptible 
to outside disturbances than trout. The slight¬ 
est muddying of the water will run them to their 
crypts. If you really want to test their sensi¬ 
tiveness to extraneous influences, just try dry 
fly casting while wading upstream dry fly water. 
Naturally black bass will not be found in abun¬ 
dance in dry fly water, but when they are found 
there and the water is wadable, just see how dif¬ 
ficult it is to approach them. The first step 
you make upstream in the pool, they come rush¬ 
ing by you with alarming speed, and your most 
delicate efforts go for naught. In fast water it 
is different. There the little warriors seem to 
revel in combativeness, and put aside their no¬ 
tions of aloofness toward man. 
BASS AND SALMON FLIES. 
More attention should be given to tying bass 
flies. There is a healthy demand for such a 
product. The tiers at present see not much of a 
line of demarcation between the heavy affairs 
for bait casting, and those that should conform 
every way to the light fly rod. Creations so far 
have been limited to large hooks, and patterns 
that resemble no fly upon which bass feed. All 
bass flies, or at least the majority of them, are 
merely enlarged duplicates of trout patterns. It 
would pay tiers of bass flies to visit the streams 
and observe what the bass chiefly feed on in the 
way of insects. They would discover that the 
willow flies and others so ravenously seized by 
bass, correspond only occasionally in pattern and 
size with what the market provides. Even the 
salmon fly tier, though he has no knowledge of 
the requirements of bass fishing, has produced 
patterns that are well adapted to bass streams. 
This is the explanation of the recent vogue of 
salmon flies among bass fishermen. 
WASTED POWDER. 
A man who never before had been duck hunt¬ 
ing shot at a duck in the air. 
“Gee!” exclaimed the amateur’s friend, “you 
got him.” 
“Yes,” returned the amateur, “but I might as 
well have saved my ammunition—the fall would 
have killed him anyway .”—New York Globe. 
