284 
JUNE, 1917 
FOREST AND STREAM 
Various Headaches A Remedy for Pain 
“It is necessary in order to treat headaches prop¬ 
erly to understand the causes which produce the 
affection,” says Dr. J. W. Ray of Blockton, Ala¬ 
bama. Continuing, he says: “Physicians cannot 
even begin the treatment of a disease without 
knowing what causes give rise to it, and we must 
remember that headache is to be treated accord¬ 
ing to the same rules. We must not only be par¬ 
ticular to give a remedy intended to counteract 
the cause which produces the headache, but we 
must also give a remedy to relieve the pain until 
the cause of the trouble has been removed. To an¬ 
swer this purpose Anti-kamnia Tablets will be 
found a most convenient and satisfactory remedy. 
One tablet every one to three hours gives comfort 
and rest in most severe cases of headache, neural¬ 
gia and particularly the headaches of women. 
FOR S1CK-HEADACHE 
If a patient is subject to regular attacks of sick- 
headache. he should take two A-K Tablets when 
he feels the least sign of an oncoming attack. These 
tablets are prompt in action, and can be depended 
upon to produce relief in a very few minutes. Such 
patients should always be instructed to keep their 
bowels open. 
Influenza or La Grippe 
It is Quite refreshing these days to read of a 
clearly defined treatment for Influenza or La Grippe. 
In an article in the "Lancet-Clinic.” Dr. James 
Bell of New York City, says he is convinced that 
too much medication is both unnecessary and in¬ 
jurious. 
When called to a case of La Grippe the patient 
is usually seen when the fever is present, as the 
chill which occasionally ushers in the disease has 
generally passed away. Dr. Bell then orders that 
the bowels be opened freely with salts, citrate of 
magnesia or other laxative. For the high fever, 
severe headache, pain and general soreness, one 
Anti-kamnia Tablet every two hours is quickly fol¬ 
lowed by complete relief. 
The efficiency of any drug," says Dr. C. P. 
Robbins, "is known to us by the results we obtain 
from its use. One of the principal symptoms of all 
diseases is pain, and this is what the patient most 
often applies to us for, i. e., something to relieve 
his pain. If we can arrest this promptly, the patient 
is most liable to trust in us for the other remedies 
which will effect a permanent cure. One remedy 
which I have used largely in my practice is Anti- 
kamnia Tablets. Many and varied are their uses. 
I have put them to the test on many occasions, and 
have never been disappointed. I found them espe¬ 
cially valuable for headaches of malarial origin, 
where quinine was being taken. They appear to 
prevent the bad after-effects of the quinine. Anti- 
kamnia Tablets are also excellent for the head- 
aches from improper digestion; also for headaches 
of a neuralgic origin, and especially for women 
subject to pains at certain times. One or two 
Anti-kamnia Tablets every two or three hours give 
prompt relief." 
Acute Rheumatism 
In the hands of one observer we find that a cer¬ 
tain drug has been used with the utmost satisfac¬ 
tion; others have found the same remedy to be a 
great disappointment. All physicians however agree 
that every method of treatment is aided by the 
administration of some remedy to relieve the pain 
and quiet the nervous system, and Dr. W. S. 
Schultze expresses the opinion of thousands of prac¬ 
titioners when he says that Anti-kamnia Tablets 
should be given preference over all other remedies 
for relief of the pain in all forms of rheumatism. 
They are also unsurpassed for headaches, neuralgia 
and all pain. 
Indigestion Dyspepsia 
Are you distressed after eating? Do you have 
nausea when riding in the cars, or on the train or 
boat? Take one A-K Tablet and get relief. 
When to Take Anti-Kamnia Tablets 
As a Pain Reliever— In headache, migraine, coryza, la grippe and its 
after-effects. 
As an Anodyne or Sedative —In indigestion, gastralgia, dyspepsia, hysteria, 
insomnia, car-sickness, sea-sickness, worry and sight-seer’s fatigue. 
As an Antipyretic —In intermittent, puerperal and malarial fevers, bron¬ 
chitis, pleurisy, etc. 
As an anti-Neuralgic —In acute or chronic neuralgia, facial neuralgia, ear¬ 
ache, toothache and pains of sciatica. 
As an Anti-Rheumatic —For the pain in acute or chronic rheumatism and 
gout. 
All genuine Anti-kamnia Tablets bear the AK monogram. At all 
druggists in any quantity or in 10c and 25c packages. Ask^for A-K 
Tablets and insist on getting them. 
$2 to $500 paid for hundreds of coins 
dated before 1895 
Keep all your old money 
and send 10c. for New Illus¬ 
trated Coin Value Book, size 
tx7. 
— You may have coins worth 
many uonars premium. Get posted. 
CLARKE COIN GO., Box 97, LeRoy, N. Y. 
WANTED —Sportsmen and bird dog fanciers 
to know that they can see the big All America 
Trials in the movies. Why not have field 
trial night at your local movie theater? 
Birds in the air, famous dogs pointing and 
ranging, camp scenes, prairie life, and the 
famous handlers and their dogs just as they 
appeared at the All America Trials. For full 
information write WM. CORCORAN, care 
220 Third Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
Get a Copy of 
GAME LAWS 
IN BRIEF 
Revised to January, 1917. 
A book which every sportsman should 
have. 
Price, Postpaid ... 25 Cents 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO. 
118 East 28th St., NEW YORK, N Y. 
COLOR AND THE ARTIFICAL FLY 
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 249 ) 
ing rod as sold in the shops is built to a 
great extent for convenience sake, and this 
is its ruination. To do this trick we must 
have a fishing rod with no unyielding fer¬ 
rules, to break the transmission of force 
and mar the continuity of its spring, from 
the reel seat to the point of the tip. You 
can not make this rapid strike successfully 
from the tip of the rod; it is next to im- 
posisble to do it with a rod in which the 
continuity of the spring is broken up by 
unyielding ferrules, every point wriggling 
on its own responsibility, the culmination 
of erratic movement condensing itself in 
the tip. 
I wish to impress upon you that the 
quality of the rod, and the skill of the an¬ 
gler in its manipilation, are of supreme 
importance in the fishing under considera¬ 
tion in these articles, l^f I am unable to 
find a rod in the market that will suit, I 
will make a model of one that will fulfill 
every indication required. As this is pure¬ 
ly a mechanical job, we can then surely 
find workmen who can exactly duplicate it. 
Later, we will consider the minute points 
of its construction. We will also place on 
our casting lines the appropriate flies. 
For we are the anglers of Forest and 
Stream; and we will allow no imperfec¬ 
tions in our material to enter into and de¬ 
stroy the pleasure we all experience in a 
successful day’s fishing. 
W E have dealt largely with dry de¬ 
tail ; to relieve its monotony, I will 
tell you a story of the Rod and the 
Flies. 
Some years ago, I invited the manager 
of the Bank of Nova Scotia, at St. An¬ 
drews, and my son to accompany me on a 
fishing excursion. On our arrival at our 
destination a shower came up; we sought 
shelter in a house on the river’s bank. At 
the cessation of the rain, I sat at a win¬ 
dow intently watching the stream, a 
stretch of which was in full range of my 
vision. 
Instantaneously, it was rippling with 
rises; judging from the energy and fre¬ 
quency of the splashes, it seemed fairly 
alive with fish. While my Micmac paddler 
was launching the canoe and preparing it 
for our reception, I stood on the shore 
and hooked and landed a beautiful fish. I 
was not long finding out the peculiar con¬ 
dition of the fish; and for once at least I 
caught the salmo fontinalis napping. A re¬ 
sponse came to every cast, and it was not 
long before I had my proverbial two 
dozen which is my limit in the creel. I 
had returned to the water all fish I judged 
to be under a pound in weight. 
Laying aside my rod, I took a glance at 
my companions in the game. The trout 
were rising to their flies in the selfsame 
manner they had to my own, fairly jump¬ 
ing clear of the water in their pursuit. 
Notwithstanding this, they had not hooked 
a single fish; nor*yet did they, during the 
entire period of our excursion. 
At sight of this wild jumping and the 
inability of my associates to hook a single 
fish, the sporting blood of the Indian guide 
fairly bubbled and rose to the boiling point. 
With convulsive grasps on my arm he 
fairly shrieked: Oh, Doctor!—look at 
that! 
I did look at it, and it made my fingers 
