FOREST 
AND STREAM 
301 
, ^ Troll x 
With This Motor x \ 
Without Altering Its Speed 
It lias five mechanical speed adjustments—a high speed, ^ 
V ideal trolling speed, neutral, slow and fast reverse Speed '' 
adjustments are secured by simply pressing a button with¬ 
out stopping or altering the speed of the motor. When the 
, - XJ Motor 
Push-Button Controlled 
Develops 
2 H P 
Weighs 
About 55 lbs 
is set at neutral, the boat stands still while the motor 
remains running. It has a high - tension, waterproof 
Magneto Enclosed in Flywheel 
giving a good, hot spark down to practically the last revoln- 
i tion. Motor can be furnished with dual ignition if desired. 
L Other Caille Features j 
Caille Silencer with cut-out. Water-tight gear hous- A 
ing. Double-seamed fuel tank. Reinforced bracket. ' 
wlk Non-kinking water tube. Heavy rubber steering 
wgk handle. Send for catalog No. ID giving full details. 
Runs 7 to 10 
Miles an 
Hour 
We nanui 
Also 
Build 
Marine 
Motors from X ' 
2 to 30 H. P. X 
Send for Catalog 
No. 24. 
DEALERS WANTED 
. THE CAILLE PERFECTION ^ 
k MOTOR CO. W 
s X 1549 Caille St. - 
Detroit, Micli. 
ceptible. It was of no regular width, and had 
no definite banks. It was choked with lily pads 
and alive with wood ducks, herons, egrets and | 
water-turkeys, and almost every log was covered 
with sunning turtles. Hawks were in the air, 
and the twitter of small birds came from the j 
enclosing cypress trees. This was the outlet j 
and gateway to Billy’s Lake. We found this { 
long lake or pond to be a mere widening of the | 
creek. Its greatest width was only two hundred ! 
or three hundred feet, while its length exceeded 
two miles. The yellow water lilies occupied half 
of the lake’s surface with their armies, and beau¬ 
tiful odorous white water lilies were in many 
places massed in the shallow water. It was a 
beautiful place. Here the friendly sun looked 
upon the water and it was glad. The slow 
summer wind barely crinkled its surface. This 
was Okefinokee’s “Field of the Cloth of Gold.” 
Here the level lists of the wild were set and 
the dragon-fly could “tilt against the field.” From 
the spire of a blasted tree, Phloeotomus Pileatus 
sent forth his clarion challenge, and clear and 
high, from the dark cypress tops, the defiant 
voice of Campephilus answered him. The look 
in Maurice’s eyes repaid me for all of the hard¬ 
ships of the last two days. 
That was before the days of the kodak. We 
could not preserve for alien eyes this slender, I 
lily-flowered ribbon. The silver green and gold j 
of water and leaf and bloom, the blue of the ! 
stainless sky and the sombre gray of the cypress 
colonnades were finer than any colors that Titian 
mixed or Raphael saw in dreams. One can only 
wonder whether, this picture, spread on the hot 
bosom of Okefinokee, rose in the memory of 
Maurice when long afterward he wrote: 
“Though I am poor, and cannot buy 
The rare time-mellowed things of art, 
God keeps an open gallery 
Of glories for the poor in heart, 
“Whose walls are hung with grander show 
Of color than old Titian knew; 
With outlines Michael Angelo 
Wronged in the best cartoon he drew.” 
Our slow movement up the lake was preceded 
by a skirmish line of herons, water turkeys and 
curlews. And more than once the matted and 
corrugated snout of an alligator parted the water! 
ahead of us. 
Near the upper end of the lake, at the border 
of a lily field, we caught two big-mouthed black 
bass, one of which would have weighed at least 
eight pounds. These were taken with sawyers, 
a species of grub found under the bark of de¬ 
caying logs. 
Jordan made good his prophecy by landing us 
late in the afternoon upon the northern end of 
Billy’s Island, at a point about a mile and a half 
south of the lake, and his declaration that this 
island was the best place in the swamp proved 
to be true. 
Though typical of the larger islands of the 
Okefinokee, this old demesne of Billy Bow-Legs, 
the indomitable Seminole chief, we found to be 
of all the islands in the swamp, the most attrac¬ 
tive and best fitted for a sylvan home. Here we 
established our permanent camp and for eigh¬ 
teen days used it as a base from which all our 
forays started, to which we always returned ere 
night-fall, and which, toward the last, became 
almost a home. 
We found many evidences of late occupation. 
Dilapidated huts, made from thin rived shakes of 
pine or cypress, yet remained, and one very good 
one, near the north end of the island, was taken 
possession of by Jordan, and here he slept, and 
here our outfit was stored. My brother and I 
preferred the open air, and having cleaned away 
the saw palmetto from beneath a group of young 
pine trees, we filled our hammocks with dry 
Spanish moss, swung them side by side, three 
feet above the ground, attached the flies over 
them, and Maurice, with outspread hands, said 
softly: “Alabama.” (Here we rest.) 
This beautiful island, not quite five miles long, 
by nearly two miles in width, nowhere appeared 
to rise fifteen feet above the level of the water 
in the surrounding cypress woods. The almost 
perfectly level surface was covered with scat¬ 
tered pines, mostly of the long-leafed variety. 
Below was a thick undergrowth of saw, palmetto, 
sedges, and a wiry grass. In many places, 
huckleberry and blueberry bushes formed large 
thickets, and tons of the finest ripe berries might 
have been gathered on the island. 
The quails, wild turkeys and small Florida 
Style with Comfort 
FOR BOTH SPORTSMEN and SPORTSWOMEN 
Outdoor Clothes must have comfort and wear¬ 
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Duxbak 
DUXBAK Clothes are made of high Grade Army Duck 
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Hunting Coats, Norfolks, Pants, Riding Trousers, Leg- 
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FREE CATALOGUE BOOK 
Send to-day for our Catalogue Book which describes with profuse 
illustrations our complete line of DUXBAK and KAMP-IT 
Hunting and Vacation Garments. 
Your copy is ready to be mailed to you to-night—drop 
us a postal now while you think of it, and be sure to 
mention your regular Dealer’s name. 
BIRD, JONES & KENYON 
7 Hickory Street UTICA, New York 
DUXBAK and KAMP-IT Garments are sold by 
leading Sport’ng Goods Stores in the United States 
