378 
FOREST AND STREAM 
June, 1918 
ROW 
and 
SALM O N 
Waiting for You 
in the swift-running streams 
and rivers of 
Nova Scotia and 
New Brunswick 
Experienced guides who 
know the haunts and 
habits of the fish, and the 
needs of the fishermen. 
NO BETTER FISHING 
GROUNDS ANYWHERE 
Further particulars gladly given by 
A. O. SEYMOUR 
General Tourist Agent 
Canadian Pacific 
Railway 
MONTREAL - CANADA 
CAMP LINGERLONG 
CLEMONS, N. Y. On Pine Lake, including 500 
acres of wildest Adirondack Mountains : Hunt¬ 
ing, fishing, swimming, canoeing, tennis, and 
dancing. Tramping, and horseback riding to 
surrounding mountain peaks, Lake George and 
Lake Champlain. Excellent cuisine. Spring 
water. Cabins $16, tents $14 with hoard. Ref¬ 
erences required. Mgr. F. D. ROBINSON, 101 
West 85th St., N. Y. City. 
VISIT THE BIG GAME COUNTRY 
WHERE TO GO—To Van’s Kamp in the 
Rockies. Now for a bear-hunt, later for a horse¬ 
back trip through Yellowstone National Park and 
Jackson Hole Country, a summer’s vacation for 
sight seeing and fishing, and in the fall a hunt 
for big game in the country just thrown open. 
Write for particulars, references, Dr. W. A. Gra¬ 
ham, Powell, Wyo., and Mr. S. C. Parks, Sho¬ 
shone National Bank, Cody, Wyo. Address Mrs. 
C. P. Thurmond, Cody, Wyo. 
TROUT FISHING IN TOE 
ADIRONDACK MTS. 
One of the finest Trout fishing grounds in the 
country. Boats and guides for the asking; excel¬ 
lent board; rates, $10.00 and $12.00 per week. 
BEEBE AND ASHTON 
CRANBERRY LAKE, N. Y. 
Ye WALTON INN 
“1000 ISLANDS” 
CLAYTON,NEW YORK 
On the State Highway overlooking the St. Lawrence 
Centrally located. 
Boating, Bathing, Fishing and many other 
forms of recreation. 
Write for further “Xcellent” Garage. 
information 
West Point House 
Prout’s Neck, Maine 
Broad piazza, overlooking Saco Bay. Modern 
plumbing. Steam heat. 
Own garden and cows. Fireproof garage. 
Bathing, boating, deep-sea fishing. Good roads 
for automobiling. R. R. JORDAN, Prop. 
Accept the season’s greetings, 
We wish you goodly cheer, 
And may a rich prosperity 
Attend you through the year. 
When you take your Vacation, come to the 
NINIGRET HOUSE 
Open May 25. Crescent Beach, Conn. 
Send for Booklet. 
Among the Pinei 
in tent, log cabin or modern 
hotel in a country of scenic 
beauty where fishing, hunt¬ 
ing, kodaking, canoeing are 
at their best. 
Highlands of Ontario 
offers you and all the family the 
outing of your life. The Grand 
Trunk Railway will help you plan 
your stay at Algonquin Park, 
Muskoka Lakes, Georgian Bay, 
Lake of Bays or Timagami. Write 
or call for literature. 
J. D. McDonald, 917 Mer¬ 
chants Loan & Trust 
Bldg., Chicago 
F. P. Dwyer. 1270 Broad¬ 
way, New York 
W. R. Eastman, 294 Wash¬ 
ington St., Boston 
A. B. Chown. 506 Park 
Bldg.. Pittsburgh 
CAMP BONNIE DUNE 
ON CAPE COD 
A Summer Camp for Young Boys (8-14 yrs.) 
Let your boy learn early the Lure of the Great Out Doors. 
We will give him Loads of Fun in 
The right place, with the right climate, the right care, the 
right equipment, the right companionship. 
For full information address 
DWIGHT L. ROGERS, JR.. Director, South Dennis, Mass. 
If you want the best fishing trip you ever had, 
Send for Our Booklet 
Zella Isle Camps 
On BIG FISH LAKE 
McNALLY BROS, Prop. Ashland, Maine. 
ALSO CAMPS ON 
Big Machais Lake 
HILLSIDE RIVER VIEW 
A summer resort, located in beautiful 
Sullivan County, in the midst 
of Nature’s splendor. 
SEND FOR BOOKLET 
E. B. FERDON, Prop. Rosooe, N. Y. 
TRY BILL EARLEY’S CAMPS 
Best of fishing—salmon, bass and trout. 
Boating, bathing, tennis, croquet. Good 
table. Own cows. Plenty of eggs. Good 
garden vegetables and berries. Guides, 
boats, the best of trolling, plenty of bait. 
Booklet. 
W. L. EARLY Guilford, Me., R.E.D. No. 3 
COES MOUNTAIN HOUSE 
Fifty sleeping rooms. Electric lights 
and modern improvements. Rates, $ 2.50 
and up per day; $ 12.00 and up per week. 
Brook Trout Fishing, Bird and Rabbit 
Hunting. Auto Livery. 
Address for particulars O. R. Coe in Catskill Moun- 
tains, Windham, N. Y. 
MOUNTAIN VIEW HOUSE 
No section popular alike with the sportsmen and the 
vacationer is so accessible as the Rangeley Lakes Region. 
At the head of the chain and most beautiful of all is 
Rangeley, or Oquossoc Lake, and at its lower end is the 
Mountain View House. 
Rangeley has been famous for years for its big fish, both 
trout and salmon. The Mountain View House has easy 
access to all the best fishing grounds. Not only are these 
lakes close at hand, but numerous ponds are scattered 
hereabouts, so that an abundanqe of both bait and fly 
fishing is afforded. 
The fishing season opens when the J?e leaves the lakes 
and' closes October 1st. The season for bird shooting 
begins September 15th. Send for Boooklet. 
Express Office L. E. BOW LEY 
Oquossoc, Me. Post Office, Mountain View, Me. 
A WANDER-LUST AND 
WHAT CAME OF IT 
(continued from page 335 ) 
hair-raiser—it nearly amounted to a falls. 
When the canoe shot over the lip and I 
looked down my heart turned a hand¬ 
spring into my mouth! “Hold tight!” I 
squeals to Clem. His answer was a groan. 
At the foot of this slide was a mammoth 
boulder three feet above water. The canoe 
was headed straight for it! I didn’t like 
the idea of splitting a nice, big, symmetrical 
boulder like that in two specially when it 
had never done anything to us, so I poised 
my paddle ahead ready to push the canoe 
to one side. 
J UST before the bow struck I jammed 
the canoe blade against the rock and 
gave a mighty shove. What followed 
is not quite clear to me. 1 guess the canoe 
paddle must have skidded or something. 
Anyhow overboard I went kerslop into 
the current! I had my mouth open when 
I went under and swallowed a couple of 
quarts of water before I could get it shut. 
I had a sense of being rolled swiftly and 
violently along under water, then suddenly 
everything was calm about me. When I 
bobbed up and looked around the first 
thing I saw was Clem swimming ashore 
for dear life. The next thing I saw was 
the canoe overturned near me. Grabbing 
it I started for shore. Climbing out I stood 
beside Clem who was leaking like a sieve 
—so was I. After we had coughed up a 
pailful or two of water he shook his fist 
under my nose and hisses: 
“Say, wot in - (naughty word) did 
you do it for?” “Do wot for?” I gurgles. 
“If you’d kept your - (another bad 
word) paddle to yourself we’d have come 
through like a couple of corks!” sputters 
Clem. “Yeh,” says I very spiteful, “you 
mean like a couple of corpses!” “After 
steerin’ the canoe through that mess of 
boilin’ water,” Clem goes on, “you had to 
butt in at the last minute and spill the 
After swimming ashore Clem and I talked 
frankly to each other for quite a spell. 
beans!” “Look here,” says I bristlin’ up 
like a porcupine, “if I hadn’t pried the 
bow away Irom that rock you’d have 
smashed the canoe and splattered our 
brains out!” “Not your brains, I wouldn’t,” 
jeers Clem; “you ain’t got no brains to 
spatter! Besides, I saw that boulder all 
the time and I’d have swung the canoe 
off!” “Oh, of course,” I sneers very sar¬ 
castic ; “why, you big simp, you was scared 
so green you was paralyzed with buck- 
boulder-fever! This is the thanks I get 
for saving your worthless life for you!” 
Thus we stood smelling each other’s fists 
and exchanging compliments until we both 
got so cold that all we could do was stut- 
