158 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[July 23, 1910. 
Erected at Sands Point, L. I. for 
Mrs. HELEN K. GOULD 
Eight Rooms 
BUNGALOWS 
Portablet*ndJ*ermanent 
We erect them or ship 
K. D. All sizes and 
kinds. The one shown 
is built of “ Asbestos 
Cement.” 
Billings-Stevens Co. 
4 East 42d St., New York City 
Send for Catalogue. 
"Resort* +or Sportsmen. 
A GUARANTEE 
OF SERVICE 
We ran the Roosevelt expedition—let us 
run yours. 
Every Sportsman should visit East Africa, 
the home of the Lion, Elephant, Buffalo, 
Rhinoceros, Hippopotamus and countless 
species of Antelope. 
•J No other firm in theivorld has our experience in 
African Sport, or our facilities for handling an 
expedition into the heart of Darkest Africa. 
<1 We were the sole agents for the outfitting 
and organization of the Roosevelt Expedition. 
A letter or wire to us will bring you all 
the information you require. 
t| If you use us as your agents you will be re¬ 
lieved of all hurry and worry. Delightful 
sport and complete satisfaction assured. 
CJ Estimates given covering everything from New 
York and home again. Our illustrated booklet is 
a work of art. Free on application or direct to 
Forest and Stream Pub. Co. Brought right up 
to date with latest game law changes. 
NEWLAND TARLTON & CO. Ltd. 
166 Piccadilly, London W., ENGLAND 
Cable Addresses: 
WAPAGAZ1, London and SAFARI, Nairob 
RIPOGENUS LAKE CAMPS, MAINE. 
Cover a grandforestareaof 250square 
miles. TROUT will rise to the fly all 
summer. MOOSE, DEER, BEAR 
and GROUSE in the Fall. 
Special reduced rates for 1916. For 
iliustrated circular and other informa¬ 
tion, address REG. C. THOMAS, 412 
Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Or 
direct to RIPOGENUS LAKE 
CAMPS. Grant Farm P. O., Maine. 
HUNT IN MONTANA. 
Take a big-game hunting trip through the grand and 
scenic mountains surrounding the Yellowstone Park. 
ELK, DEER, SMALL GAME. BEAR, SHEEP. 
We have well-known bear dogs, experienced guides, 
old-time hunters, complete pack outfit and gentle saddle 
horses. Special accommodation for ladies. Private phy¬ 
sician furnished if desired. 
WILL B. SHORE, Gardiner, Mont. 
KONRAD SCHAUER 
Mombosa, British East Africa 
The well-known firm of specialists 
for organizing and fitting out 
Hunting and Scientific Expeditions 
as well as planning trips for 
TOURISTS 
Practical preserving, packing and shipping 
of trophies — many years’ experience. 
fil/’TTAD'P LITT T 9 9 A splendid health resort in the African 
IkUADL Highlands—“A Sportsman’s Home.” 
The largest dealers in live animals and African 
curios. :: Literature sent free on application. 
NEWFOUNDLAND 
Excellent Salmon and Trout Fishing; also Caribou 
Shooting. Tents, guides, boats provided. Write 
BUNGALOW, Grand Lake, Newfoundland. 
I can arrange for sportsmen for hunting trips to the 
Sierra Madre Mountains, where game is abundant and 
sport guaranteed. Last party killed 5 lions and 3 bears in 
12 days’ trip. Everything provided excepting rifles and 
liquors, including good dogs, which are a necessity for 
success with lions. Terms moderate. Apply MEXICO, 
care Forest and Stream. tf 
THE ANGLER S GUIDE 
1910 
How, When and Where to Fish. 
NOW READY, 
It tells not only where to fish with fair pros¬ 
pects of success, but how to get there and how 
to fish. It covers the whole of the United States 
and Canada, and is so handy that no fisherman 
can afford to be without it. 
It is newly revised and brought up to date 
Beside the best available information on fishing, 
it is full of useful hints on camp equipment and 
sites, cooking, game law information and a whole 
lot of “How tos” that are worth while. 
Postpaid, 50 Cents. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
My Friend The Partridge. 
S. T. Hammond. A delightful reminder of crisp 
autumnal days in the covers. It tells of sport with the 
noblest of game birds, the habits and habitat of the 
ruffed grouse, with just the right touch of reminiscence 
and personal experience. Cloth. Illustrated, 150 pages. 
Postpaid, $1.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
"Resorts fer Sportsmen. 
CAMP ROSSIGNOL 
Caledonia P. O. 
Queens County, Nova Scotia 
The best TROUT and Salmon fishing, the best 
MOOSE, bear and small game hunting, and the 
most picturesque scenery in Canada! Comfort¬ 
able log cabins, canoes, motor boats, tents, 
livery and guides furnished. 
Camp Rossignol offers $10.00 in gold for the 
best photograph of camp; $25.00 in gold for big¬ 
gest trout caught; $50.00 in gold for biggest pair 
of Moose horns obtained; $100.00 in gold for best 
painting of camp. Terms, $2.00 per day. Fare, 
$15.00 round trip from Boston. Joe Patterson, 
Head Guide, Caledonia, Queens County, N. S. 
A JUDICIAL OPINION. 
A catfish convention attended by about 
40,000 delegates assembled to-day in the vicinity 
of the Des Moines River dam, and trouble has 
already begun. It may be far reaching in 
human circles. Fish and game wardens, 
lawyers, judges and citizens are already talking 
of carrying the matter before the next legisla¬ 
ture. It all grew out of the fact that Clarence 
Wallace, a laborer, sat on the bank in the dusk 
last night and interfered with the convention. 
Early arrivals were even then nosing about 
the west bank of the river looking for the sleep¬ 
less worm. Wallace had it; in fact, he had sev¬ 
eral of them strung on numerous hooks at¬ 
tached to two fine fishing poles. Naturally Dr. 
M. M. Wilson, new assistant State fish and 
game warden, was invited to the convention. 
He was at the dam when the first arrivals came 
in. The result was that Clarence appeared in 
police court to-day and paid a fine of $7.50. He 
says he never caught a fish but had a lot of 
dandy nibbles. 
In a heated argument in the police station cor¬ 
ridor after the trial, Clarence demanded the re¬ 
turn of his $23 worth of fishing tackle. Dr. 
Wilson refused and delivered an oration on the 
State fish laws on the spot. 
“It seems to me,” declared Judge Stewart, 
who chanced to be passing and got into the 
argument, “that the laws are mighty queer on 
this matter. What they need is a general over¬ 
hauling at the next session of the legislature. 
Why a man don’t dare to fish within 300 yards 
of the fislnvay at the dam—the very place where 
the best fishing is to be had. Every man who 
goes fishing ought to take a wheel barrow load 
of law books and an attorney to interpret them 
for him.”—Des Moines Tribune. 
EXPENSIVE CHUM. 
There are days when the land-locked salmon 
will not take any fly, whether it be a Seth- 
Green, Jock-Scott, Parmacheene-belle, queen of 
the water, moose-fly, professor, butcher, grizzly 
hackle, or palmer; it will turn up its nose, if 
it could do that, at a tempting minnow, a juicy 
bunch of earthworms, or the gaudiest lure. 
Rangeley Lake has an angler who has spent 
forty years in fishing, twenty-five of them in 
Maine. He is the one man who can catch the 
gymnast fish when others fail. Does he alone 
know the secret? Does he alone have hold on 
truth? He is a modest man, who says he is a 
plain fisherman, without frills, simple enough to 
know that the salmon has as many moods as 
an impulsive woman. One man, who fished 
near him one morning, near enough to see in 
the early dawn what he did, said this is the 
secret of his success, or the secret on that day: 
The man threw over, as one would throw over 
chum to weakfish, powdered egg shells, that, as 
they slowly descended, sparkled in the first rays 
of the morning sun. When he sifted enough to 
cover and make a good-sized space around the 
anchored boat he baited his hook and fished. 
The shells sparkled like little fish in the water. 
That man always had a salmon for breakfast, 
and it was not taken out of a water-box either. 
—Times. 
