Alexandria Bai), NX 
ADV ANTA GES 
TH6 LARCE5T AND 6E5T CONDUCTED 
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A RESORT DIFFERENT THAN OTHERS 
AND NOTED FOR ITS HIGH CLASS 
CLIENTELE. • • • 
FOR MANY YEARS OWNERSHIP 
MANAGEMENT OF 
WILLIAM tt.WAft&URTON. 
ILLUSTRATED BOOK WITH ROAD MAPS FREE 
IdealSummerVacaticns A 
KermudA 
Aar Only 2 Days from NewYork JL 
8-Day Tours-$83.00 and up 
9 Days-$88.50 and up 
Including all Expenses 
All Outdoor Sports 
Sailing, Bathing, Golf, 
Tennis, Crystal Caves, 
Sea Gardens, etc. 
Bermuda is cool in Sum¬ 
mer. Average Summer 
Temperature, 7 7 deg. 
No Passports Required 
Sailings Twice Weekly 
Via Palatial, Twin-Screw, Oil Burning, Transatlantic Liners 
S. S. “Fort Victoria” & 
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/Granadian 
Z 84 YV*' vui se s 
New York-Halifax - Quebec 
2 Delightful Yachting Cruises 
Leaving New York Aug. 4-18 
via Palatial Twin-Screw S. S. ‘ ‘Fort Hamilton 
Stopping One-Day (each way) at Halifax and Two 
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For Illustrated Booklets on Bermuda Tours 
or Canadian Cruises write 
FURNESS BERMUDA LINE 
34 Whitehall St., N.Y., or Any Local Tourist Agent 
PEC0N1C INN 
The Long Island Paradise for fishermen. 
Bass—Pickerel—Perch. 
Two hours from New York by express 
trains. 
Write for full information which we will 
gladly furnish, about fishing, rates and 
accommodations. 
PECONIC INN 
Calverton L. I., N. Y. 
B tM ..Will 
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l.Tbss Park Rind Minnows? 
Oriental Wiqqler- $12R \ j 
~ Shimmy Wiqqler-$1°° )) 
Little Eqypt Wiqqler • ••75 < f 
ShimmyetteFly Rod Wiqqler-505 
Bass. Musky or Fly Rod s 
^ Pork Rind Strips 45*f Jar. 
Mf £ - " ---- 
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Price $1.50 
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Send for Catalog. Everything fully 
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$ 100 . Others at 
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17 Jewels, guaranteed, $35; 15 Jewels 
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let - MEYERS MFG. CO. 
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F I S H I N 
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f 
L. KEEGA 
N 
Inns Quay, Dublin . 
Irish Free State 
as daintily as a girl would have blown 
the bloom from a dandelion to find 
whether she was loved or not, and the . 
line coiled out to hide itself in the 
boiling caldron of waters at the side 
of the canoe. Then I made a discov¬ 
ery that had been lost to me in my ex¬ 
citement of invading the very heart of 
the racing flow of water: 
We were laying on a rocky bar, as 
though on a riffle in the small hill 
ranch where I used to fish for bream, 
a pocket pool lay off our starboard side 
and to leeward fifteen, twenty, per¬ 
haps more, deep, swirling rocks and 
clean scoured bottom boulders, suck¬ 
ing about great obelisks of rock, hid¬ 
den from shore by the wild, leaping 
waters of the shallows that rimed it 
around. The vortex of the rapids, 
that’s what we lay above. The Indian 
had worked his guiding pole down be¬ 
tween two immense boulders and the 
canoe rested stem and stem with the 
current. He held it on the flood as 
easy as floating cork. It was science. 
It was familiarity. To Jack Cadreau 
the Soo rapids are the backyard of his 
home. 
You can not talk. You lose all sense 
of the turmoil of lashing waters. You 
are in a bedlam of frothing floods. And 
when you reach shore you are 
astounded by the lack of sound, at the 
painful jarring of common speech. 
Your ears have been so finely atuned 
to the fray of waters that silence in 
turn becomes as painful as the rush of 
waters. 
All about us that morning the 
speckled trout were leaping and roll¬ 
ing on the surface for myriads of shad 
flys. We tried all sorts of patterns, 
large and small, but not a speckled 
trout could we interest. I had them 
roll over my flies, then leave them— 
they were not raising to things we had. 
Strange, but true. These smaller trout 
were feeding on the boulder bars of 
the rapids, where the water curled 
high and choppy. 
“Let’s try the deeper water about 
the pools, that’s where they are, I’m 
sure,” the guide shouted with his mouth 
at my ear. 
We drifted like a shot and again 
there was a struggle between the In¬ 
dian and the rapids. At last, by the 
mercy of God, he laid the canoe along¬ 
side a great upright boulder and held 
it with the cedar pole. He motioned 
toward a place to my left, where the 
vicious flow roared around a massive 
boulder. I cast one of Pete’s Dreams, 
a brown hackle, tied of a deer’s tail, 
and saw it miss the black boulder by a 
hair, to fall in a lace of foam. A rain¬ 
bow of color flashed and flamed 
athwart the wild background of river. 
I sensed a terrific shock. My rod was 
torn, wrenched and bent in spasms. I 
released the line. I heard it snap 
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Page 1*61* 
