444 
FOREST AND STREAM 
July, 1918 
THE MARKET PLACE 
FOR SALE 
20 PRETTY POSTCARD VIEWS 10c. CASTLE 
Co., 21 Locust, Hagerstown, Md. 
200 ALL DIFFERENT, REALLY FINE POST- 
agc Stamps, 23c. Dayton, East-Foxboro, Mass. 
AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE—CLEVE- 
land—will handle stock up to one inch. Price 
for quick sale, $300 cash. Angsten-Koch Com¬ 
pany, 4062 Princeton Ave., Chicago, Ill. 
CUT CORNERS IN YOUR EXPENSE BY 
Using “Smearless” carbon paper and “Wearebest” 
Typewriter ribbons. Send for samples of paper 
and price list of our products. Vacuo-Static Sales 
Agency, 350 Lawn Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. 
FOR SALE A 50 H.P. ROBERTS ALUMINUM 
4 cylinder gasoline engine, for Monoplane or Hy¬ 
droplane. Cost $1,500. Price $500. Geo. B. 
Boutelle, 324 North Eutaw St., Baltimore, Md. 
HARDY FLY ROD, NINE FEET SIX INCHES 
extra tip. Four ounces, nine drams. Never used. 
$40. At Von Lengerke & Detmold’s, 200 Fifth 
Avenue, New York. George Turner, 151 Pierre- 
pont St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 
GENTLEMEN: HEATLESS TROUSERS 
Press free, with box of fifty selected stock of 
cigars for only $5 prepaid, satisfactory or money 
refunded, Mfg*s Sales Dept., 2123 Madison Ave., 
New York. 
SPECIAL!!! $250 PHONOGRAPH $150. 
Marvelous, guaranteed. Agents, Rich Tone Phon¬ 
ograph Co., Atlan tic City, N. J. ___ 
FOR SALE AND EXCHANGE 
MOUNTED—BUFFALO, ELK, ANTELOPE, 
sheep, grizzlies, big birds, furbearers. Wanted 
fine guns in trade. Hervey Lovell, Ballston, Spa., 
N. Y. ___ 
WILL BUILD MOTORBOAT TO ORDER IN 
exchange for late model used automobile. Yacht 
Model Emporium, Liverpool, N. Y. 
GUIDE WANTED 
BEAR GUIDE—WANT TO CORRESPOND 
with a guide in a good bear and big game coun¬ 
try. Dr. A. Zetlitz, Sioux Falls, S. D. 
GUNS AND AMMUNITION 
FOR SALE—.38-CALIBER IVER JOHNSON 
revolver, good condition, $3.50; 40 No. 3 double 
spring traps, $4.50 per dozen. Floyd Adams, 
Scotia, Wash. 
FOR SALE—45-70 SHARPS BOCHARDS 
rifle $7.75, Stevens pump $19, Ithaca double $19, 
Fulton $19. All new. Shepherd Stove Co., 
Roanoke, Va. 
FOR SALE TO BEST BIDDER—1—1912—20 
GA Winchester; 1—14A 30 Cal. Remington, 1—414 
—22 Cal. Stevens Special Sights; 1—32 Long H & 
R Hammer Revolver 334”. All like new. E. W. 
Snyder, Cresson, Pa. 
FOR SALE—TWENTY, STANDARD MAKES, 
shotguns. Eight new. Description and price on 
application. A. M. Williams, Bradford, Pa. 
FOR SALE—WINCHESTER MODEL 1895, 
.30 Cal. Gov’t. 1906, fine condition, 68 hand- 
ioaded cartridges, 10 factory-loaded, 30 empties, 
Ideal shell resizer, all for $22 cash, plus express. 
Bernard Dutton, Murray, Iowa. 
MARLIN HAMMERLESS PUMP 12-30, $25.00. 
Savage 22 automatic, $12.50; Winchester 22 auto¬ 
matic, $19.00. All nearly new. Earl Gossett, 
Bannock, Ohio. 
WANTED A COLT AUTOMATIC 45—MUST 
be in good condition. Armstrong, Box 45, Forest 
and Stream, 9 East 40th St., N. Y. City._ 
WANTED—REMINGTON PREMIER GRADE 
automatic. H. Gordon, 315 Hagerman Bldg., Colo- 
rado Springs, Colo. 
MAGAZINES WANTED 
WANTED—IN GOOD CONDITION, COPY OF 
Forest & Stream, Volume LXXXI, 1913. No. 1— 
July 5th. Address Stating price. R. W. Tower, 
American Museum of Natural History, 77th 
Street and Central Park West, New York City. 
magazines wanted 
WANTED—IN GOOD CONDITION, COM- 
plete volumes of Forest & Stream as follows— 
Volume 80-81-82—also all issues January, 1913 to 
June, 1914. Address O. Delbe, Periodical Division 
Library of Congress, Washington, D. C. 
MISCELLANEOUS 
LEARN YACHT DESIGNING, ALBUM 51 
Yacht Designs, 25c, Yacht Model Emporium, 
Liverpool, N. Y. 
MY POLICY IS QUICK SALES—SMALL 
Profits. The following are now ready for sale. 
Every dog a bargain—name your choice and I’ll 
surprise you on the question of price. Two Broke 
Pointer Dogs; Two Pointer Dogs just started; 
Two Broke Pointer Bitches; Two Setter Dogs 
nicely started; One Setter Dog and Three Set¬ 
ter Bitches ready to start in; One Litter of Set¬ 
ter Pups registered; One Litter of Pointer Pups 
registered. Dr. E. E. Burdick, Huron, S. Dakota. 
NATIONAL POST-CARD EXCHANGE COV- 
ers the world; three months’ membership, 25c. 
Wallace, Box 585-F, Erie, Pa. 
THEORIES ADVANCED—LITERATURE IM- 
proved. Valuable guaranteed information 25 cts. 
Charles Dial, Granite City, Ill. 
WANTED—FIREARMS OR HUNDRED DOL- 
lars for U. S. Patent 1016662 Toy Series united 
tumbling blocks; nothing like ever before patented, 
simple, inexpensive, stamp for particulars. Chas. 
Wilson, inventor, Edgewood, Ill. 
YOUR WATCH REPAIRED FOR ONLY ONE 
dollar unless too badly broken. Henry Dietrich, 
watch maker, Malinta, Ohio. 
MOTOR BOATS 
FOR SALE—20-FOOT MOTOR BOAT, CEDAR 
hull, cypress deck, bow, cabin, Bridgeport engine, 
clutch whistle, manganese bronze fittings; used 
eight weeks, like new. W. LT. Brower, Box 157, 
Chrome, N. J. 
MOTORCYCLES 
MOTORCYCLE BARGAINS. USED AND 
Rebuilt Indians, Excelsiors and Harleys; prices 
very low; everyone absolutely guaranteed; shipped 
on approval; send for free list. Clymers Motor¬ 
cycle Garage, largest motorcycle garage in West, 
Greeley, Colo. 
PATENTS 
BELT FASTENER, FILTER, NATURAL ICE 
Making, patents for sale or on royalty. E. Seavey, 
359 Pearl St., New York. 
CASH FOR INVENTIONS AND PATENTS. 
Write Fisher Mfg. Co., 2195 Railway Exchange, 
St. Louis, Mo. 
GASOLINE 2c PER GALLON. LET US 
show you the “evidence”; three years’ practical 
tests; exclusive county rights; sells to every mo- 
otorist on land or water. “Carbonvoid,” 7th Ave., 
Bradley Beach, N. J. 
INVENT SOMETHING. YOUR IDEAS MAY 
bring wealth; send postal for free book; tells what 
to invent and how to obtain a patent through our 
credit system. Talbert & Talbert, 4762 Talbert 
Building, Washington, D. C. 
WANTED—SOMEONE (NOT INTERESTED 
in another machine) to finance or buy the Brew¬ 
ster Voting Machine; simple, accurate: has one 
advantage over any. For particulars address Box 
525, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. 
PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES 
FILMS DEVELOPED 10c. PRINTS AND 
Postcards, 3c.; 8 x 10 Enlargements, 25c., five for 
$1; work guaranteed. Emil H. Sprauer, Hamil¬ 
ton, Ohio. 
KODAK-ERS, SAVE 35c, EXTRAORDINARY 
offer,, our beautiful Art-Style Prints, brilliant, 
artistic.^ different; trial order developing film roll, 
5c.; prints, 2c. each; $5,000 equipment; 27 years 
art experience. Malden Art Co., 20, Cincinnati, O. 
PHOTO TYPE FOR MARKING NEGATIVES, 
rubber stamps, Catalogue 15c. Walter H. Kar- 
staedt, Dayton, Ohio. 
(Continued on page 446) 
adopted habitat. Mr. Keil reports that 
specimens weighing a pound have been so 
taken in Tuxedo Lake—but they are only 
bottle babies! The flesh of the chinook, if 
mature and iced for a week, is unexcelled 
as a delicacy among flsh foods. He who 
has tasted the roseate steaks cut from royal 
fish fresh from Western inlets may be par¬ 
doned for his inability to attach pronounced 
gastronomic merit to the flavorless bant¬ 
lings of our Eastern lakes. 
The Massachusetts Commission has for 
a number of years experimented with the 
propagation of Pacific salmon, which are 
now taken in several ponds and lakes of 
that state, including Lake Quinsigamond of 
Worcester where many small fish have been 
caught, and Long Pond, Plymouth. The 
growth of these salmon in twenty months 
from fingerlings to 6 and 7 lb. fish is phe¬ 
nomenal. Through the politeness of Com¬ 
missioner George H. Graham of Springfield, 
I am enabled to quote to you from a letter 
of Mr. Homer W. Hervey’s, an attorney of 
New Bedford, dated November 16, 1917, re¬ 
garding the Pacific Salmon and their game 
qualities in Long Pond, Plymouth. Mr. 
Hervey reports a series of extremely inter¬ 
esting facts in re 13 specimens taken by him 
last October and November, and represent¬ 
ing a plant made in the pond less than two 
years before—all chinooks except one, a five 
pound silver salmon. The largest chinook 
weighed 7J4 lbs., and all the fish wore black 
spots. The contents of the stomachs were 
partially digested smelts, with which the 
pond is stocked, and in one instance a ball 
an inch in diameter of green oak leaves. 
The reproductive organs were wholly want¬ 
ing or very much undeveloped. 
In regard to the method of capture, Mr. 
Hervey writes: 
“I started out to fish by trolling in 
the approved fashion, and spent several 
days at it. I tried smelt, preserved min¬ 
nows, and a number of artificial baits, 
but had no success although the pond 
was fairly alive with salmon, breaking, 
not in play but for food. I then deter¬ 
mined to try out a theory that had grad¬ 
ually developed during the summer in 
my mind. I had examined the pond 
quite carefully and having selected 3 
place which seemed to fit in with my 
ideas, I anchored my boat and went to 
fishing with live shrimp. I used a regu¬ 
lar fly outfit, but substituted in place 
of the fly a No. 6 hook baited with a 
single shrimp. This I cast as far as I 
could from the boat, and let the hook 
sink very gradually a few feet under 
the surface. Fishing in this way, I was 
very successful and have taken thirteen 
salmon ranging from two and a half to 
seven and three-quarters pounds in 
weight. It requires some little knack to 
get out the line without losing the 
shrimp, and this method of angling is not 
so far inferior to fly-fishing itself. 
“I do not think I have caught enough 
chinook salmon to say whether they are 
gamer than the Sebago, but they certain¬ 
ly gave me great sport and had recourse 
to several manceuvers that were new to 
me. They had a way of coming just 
to the surface of the water and then 
spinning round in a circle as though on 
an axis, apparently shaking their heads 
and whole bodies at the same time, send¬ 
ing a peculiar sensation along the rod 
to the wrist. Several of them broke 
