May 25, 1907.] 
JESIGNERS OF 
STEARNS <& McKAY, 
Marblehead. Mass.. U. S. A. 
fAVAL ARCHITECTS AND YACHT BUILDERS. 
Designs to suit any requirements. 
Send 10c. stamp for illustrated catalogue. 
MANHASSET 
Shipbuilding & Repair Co. 
PORT WASHINGTON. L. I. 
NEW YORK 
Yacht Supplies 
Marine Railways 
B. B. CROWNINSHIELD 
Naval 
Architect 
BOSTON 
P RANK BOWNB JONES 
29 Broadway, New York 
fachls of All Types For Sale and Charier 
Descriptions on Request. 
ITACHT AND MOTOR BOAT 
— INSURANCE — 
Best Forms. Lowest Rates. 
Write or Call for Particulars. 
McNEAR (& WILBUR 
elephone 2367 John 
34 Pine Street, New York 
When writing say you saw the adv. in “Forest 
nd Stream.” 
aao« a.nd BoaJ Building. 
A Complete Manual for Amateurs. Containing plain 
nd comprehensive directions for the construction of 
anoes Rowing and Sailing Boats and Hunting Craft. 
7.. V y- Stephens Cloth. Seventh and enlarged 
iition. 264 pages. Numerous illustrations, and fifty 
lates in envelope. Price, $2.00. y 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
louseboats and Househoatin^ 
BY ALBERT BRADLEE HUNT. 
volume devoted to a new outdoor field, which has for 
its purpose three objects: 
‘ rst— To make known the opportunities American waters 
afford for enjoyment of houseboating life, 
econd—To properly present the development which 
houseboating has attained in this country, 
hird—To set forth the advantages and pleasures of 
houseboating in so truthful a manner that others 
may become interested in the pastime. 
The book contains forty specially prepared articles by 
Wnei -r ,® nd . des 'S ner s well-known houseboats, and is 
rautifully illustrated with nearly 200 line and half-tone 
productions of plans and exteriors and interiors. A 
ost interesting chapter is devoted to houseboating in 
ngland. 
The book has been carefully prepared by Mr. Albert 
radlee Hunt. 
The work is printed on extra heavy paper, and is 
Jund in olive green buckram. The price is $3 net. 
1 ostage 34 cents. 
| FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
WILLIAM GARDNER. 
S&val Architect, Engineer, and 
Yacht Broker. 
(a. 1 Broadway, Telephone 2160 Rector. Now York. 
SWASEY, RAYMOND (& PAGE 
OF BOSTON 
VIOTOR AND STEAM YACHTS 
rHE PIGEON HOLLOW 
SPAR CO. 
The Oldest Makers and Most Reliable Hollow 
Spars Made. Write for prices. 
16 Condor Street, East Boston, Mass. 
and Charlie. 1 he latter two whiled away the 
time by continuing the pinochle game of cards 
that had been started on the steamer that night, 
while the others smoked for what comfort it 
gave them to disobey the sign of no smoking 
that was posted over their heads. As soon as it 
was light enough to see the bricks along the 
sidewalks of 1 hames street the four men made 
their way down the four blocks (it was really 
about fourteen) to the ship yard, only meeting 
one man awake in the town. The dinghy was 
dumped out, launched and still rubbering at the 
many 30~footers hauled out here as if never in¬ 
tending to go into commission this summer, the 
crew were rowed out to Tanya. Shore clothes 
were carefully stowed away and the most dis¬ 
reputable lot of Chatham broadcloth put on until 
they would all pass muster as—well it would be 
an insult to the fishermen to compare them to 
that hard working class of men. Blue shirts, 
woolen shirts, sweaters, watch caps, golf caps, 
automobile caps and yachting caps, sheepskin- 
lined coats, rain coats and oilskins all were in 
evidence. 
As soon as a hot breakfast was safely stowed, 
sail was made with a two reef mainsail and full 
jib, mooring cast off and the good little sloop 
Tanya began her second lap at 7:15 A. M. The 
wind was fresh from the north and this being an 
off. shore wind the water was as smooth off 
Point Judith, which was passed at 8:45 A. M., 
as one would ever have the good luck to find it. 
There was only one thing not favorable and that 
was the tide. Down the long sandy strip of 
beach to Watch Hill, at a gait of fully eight 
miles an hour, Tanya went a-roaring, meeting one 
after another and sometimes in bunches of three 
or four a fleet of two- and three-masted coasting 
schooners coming east with the wind equally 
favorable for them. 
[to BE CONCLUDED.] 
Yacht Sales. 
The 64ft. cruising sloop Pleasure, built by the 
Herreshoffs in 1900 for Mr. H. O. Havemeyer, 
has been sold by Mr. Theodore C. Zerega, New 
York Y. C., to Mr. Robert A. Fairbairn, through 
the office of Stanley M. Seaman, 220 Broadway. 
New York. The new owner intends installing 
an auxiliary engine and using her for cruising 
on the coast. 
The same office has also sold the crusinig yawl 
Tamerlane for Mr. Frank Maier to Mr. Daniel 
Bacon. Tamerlane is famous for having won 
the Lipton cup in the Bermuda race last year. 
Mr. Seaman also reports the sale of the race- 
about Jolly Roger for Mr. T. Bache Bleecker to 
Mr. J. A. North. She will be raced in the handi¬ 
cap class on Long Island Sound this year. 
Commodore F. H. Waldorf, of the New 
Rochelle Y. C., fired the first gun of the season 
when colors were made at sundown on Satur¬ 
day, May 18, the formal opening day of the club, 
and all hands repaired to the dining rooms where 
the waiters and house committee had their hands 
full to feed about a hundred hungry yachtsmen. 
The dinner was followed by music and recita¬ 
tions and songs from a quartet of negro min¬ 
strels, hut the star attraction was the “Little 
Professor” Krieger. His slight of hand card 
tricks had everyone guessing and one member 
who tried to pick the tumbler that held the ball 
is still wondering how he got a lemon instead. 
The harbor was well dotted with yachts decked 
with flags, though many are not yet overboard. 
The center of attraction being Commodore Frank 
Maier's new yawl Hyperion, a Bermuda race 
candidate, that was given her initial trial in the 
afternoon and seems to foot quite fast. 
The club’s coming season bids far to be a 
banner one. 
* « 
Mr. Louis M. Josephtal’s 90ft. twin screw 
motor boat was launched recently at the yard of 
Purdy & Collison and the same firm launched 
this week Ailsa Craig, Soft- waterline Bermuda 
power boat candidate. 
* * * 
Hansen, at City Island, is putting the cabins 
on the two little Mower designed 15-footers. 
825 
ARTHUR BINNEY. 
(Formerly Stewart & Binney.) 
Naval Architect and Yacht Broker. 
Mason Building Kilby Street. BOSTON MASS. 
Cable Address, “ Designer,” Boston. 
BURGESS PACKARD 
Naval Architects and Engineers 
131 State Street, 
Tel. 4870 Main. 
BOSTON. MASS. 
Cable, “Burgess,” Boston. 
MARBLEHEAD OFFICE AND WORKS: 
Nashua Street. Marblehead, Mass. 
YACHT BUILDING. STORAGE AND REPAIRS 
10-ton Steam Shearlegs, Large Storage Capacity. Ship 
Chandlery and Machine Shops. 
Largest Railway in Marblehead (21 feet of water) 
.Little Haste.”—Champion 21-footer. 
..Outlook.”—Winner of Quincy Cup. 
, Pellegrina.”—40-rater. 
“Mercedes.”—Fastest 60 Rating Automobile Boat afloat 
25 yp miles. 
^Pineland.”—103-foot Gasolene Passenger Boat, 19 miles. 
Elizabeth Silsbee. * 135-ft. Auxiliary Fishing Schooner. 
Fastest and most powerful on the Atlantic Coast. 
Boston Hospital Ship.—Steel, 600 tons. 
“Gleaner.”—Auxiliary Wrecking Schooner of Chatham. 
..Corinthian,”—Champion of the Pacific Coast, 1905-’t)6. 
Cricket.”—40-footer. Champion of Gulf Coast. 
Orestes. —Winner of Lipton Cup for 1906 and Champion 
22 -rater. 
HOLLIS BURGESS. 
Yacht Broker. General Marine Agent. Insurance of all 
£. m - ds - Agent for the purchase and sale of Gasoline Engines. 
Main Office,lOTremont St. Tel. 1905-1 Main. n , i >, 
Branch Office, 131 State St. Tel. 4870 Main. DOStOll, MSSS. 
C. Sherman Hoyt. Montgomery H. Clark. 
HOYT (Si CLARK. 
NAVAL ARCHITECTS AND ENGINEERS. 
YACHT BROKERAGE. High Speed Work a Specialty. 
17 Battery Place, New York. 
| HENRY J. GIELOW 3 
$ Engineer, Naval Architect 3 
| and Broker 3 
S* 50 Broadway. - - New York 2 
Telephone 4673 Broad m 
CHARLES D. MOWER, Naval 
29 Broadway, New York. Architect 
COX STEVENS. 
Yacht Brokers and Naval Architects, 
68 Broad Street, - New York. 
Telephones 1375 and 137* Broad. 
Marine Models 
OF ALL KINDS 
THE H. E. BOUCHER MFG. CO 
* ; 91 Maiden Lane, New York 
Canoe Cruising and Camping, 
By Perry D. Frazer. Cloth. Illustrated. Price, $1.00. 
Full of practical information for outdoor people, 
whether they travel in canoes, with pack animals or 
carry their outfits on their own backs. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Hints and Points for Sportsmen. 
Compiled by “Seneca.” Cloth. Illustrated, 244 pages. 
Price, $1.50. 
This compilation comprises six hundred and odd hints, 
helps, kinks, wrinkles, points and suggestions for the 
shooter, the fisherman, the dog owner, the yachtsman, 
the canoeist, the comper, the outer; in short, for the 
field sportsman in all the varied phases of his activity. 
“Hints and Points” has proved one of the most prac¬ 
tically useful works of reference in the sportsman's 
library. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
