FURNESS 

RMU 
(Bermuda Gov’t’s Official Contract Steamers) 
BERMUDA 
Playground of Eternal Springtime 
(Average Yearly Temperature of 70°) 
pay 2 Days from New York 
Sailings Twice Weekly 
From N. Y., Wed. & Sat. 
Fastest Steamers on the 
rae Bermuda Route. Lands 
ay its passengers and their 
j\~ baggage on the dock at 
Hamilton, avoiding four 
miles’ transfer by ten- 
der with its consequent 
inconvenience and delay. 
Via Twin-screw Oil-burning Steamers 
S. S. “FORT VICTORIA” and 
S. S. “FORT ST. GEORGE” 
Each 14,000 Tons Displacement 
No Passports Modern Hotels All Sports 
including Golf, Tennis, Sailing, Bath- 
ing, Horse Racing, Fishing, Riding, 
Driving, etc. 
ST. GEORGE HOTEL _ St. Georges, Bermada 
Finest Cuisine and Service, Tennis, 
Golf, Magnificent Tiled Swimming Pool 


West Indies Cruises 

Delightful cruises to the Gems of the 
| Carribbean Sea. Sailingsevery14Days. | 
For illustrated Booklets on Bermuda or 
St. George Hotel or West Indies write 
FURNESS BERMUDA LINE 
| 
| 
34 Whitehall St., N. Y. | 
or Any Local Tourist Agent | 





May lst to June 15th. 
With a Guarantee. 
Spring Bear Hunting, Black, 
Brown and Grizzly. 
Spring Mackinaw Trout Fishing. Yellowstone Park 
pack trips and mountain pack trips given special 
attention. Most wonderful trips fully equipped. 
Summer boarders, with saddle horses and guaranteed 
service. Summer pack trips are full of good trout 
fishing. Also near and at the ranch we have ex- 
cellent native trout fishing. 
Fall hunting parties, Elk, Moose, Deer, Mountain 
Sheep and Bear with a guarantee. Sept. 15th to 
Noy. 15th. 
Rur by Western men and a Western Ranch. 25 years 
in the business. Any reference as may be requested. 
Can accommodate 20 people at one time. 
REDMOND & SIMPSON 
W. P. Redmond Jas. 
Red Rock Ranch 
Jackson, Teton County, Wyo. 
Address: 
JAS. S. SIMPSON, 
Jackson, 
Teton County, 
Wyoming. 
S. Simpson 



THE BINGLETON 
HACKETTSTOWN, N. J. Tel. 6R4 
In the heart of the Trout country, 57 miles 
from New York City, with one of the best 
trout streams in the East running through 
the property. Also furnished cottage and 
tent on river bank to rent by day or week. 
Just the place for fishing parties. Write for 
booklet. 

FOR SALE 
HUNTING LODGE 
About 8,000 acres—water front 
—North Carolina—-cheap— 
wonderful duck shooting. 
67 Liberty St. Inc. Cort. 
N. Y. City 0744, 
Sole Agent 
In writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. 
RMUDA 

Catch em 
when the ice goes out 
in Maine 
Salmon - Trout - Bass 
IN HUNDREDS OF LAKES 
AND STREAMS 
Over night from New York 
Half a day from Boston 
For folder and information write 
State of Maine Publicity Bureau 
41 Longfellow Square, Portland, Maine 









The well known authority on | 
everything pertaining to the 
Woods and Streams of Maine: 
“In the Maine 
Woods-1924” 
Bigger and better than ever 
FISHING —CANOEING 
CAMPING — HIKING 
deep in the solitudes under 
the shade of Mt. Katahdin 
Easily and comfortably reached 
— dining and sleeping cars 
GET THE BOOK 
“In the Maine Woods 1924’’ It’s illustrated, 
conrains many new features including colored 
sectional maps—a list of the principal waters 
—how they may be reached, distances from 
R. R. stations—camps and hotels — rates for 
guides—in short it anticipates all one wishes 
to know. 
Mailed for ten cents anywhere 
Address Vacation Bureau Dept. J 
Bangor & Aroostook R. R. 
BANGOR, ME. 
Geo. M. Houghton, Gen’! Passenger Agent 





TROUT FISHING 
in the heart of the 
ADIRONDACKS 
PLUMLEY’S CAMP 
Long Lake, Hamilton Co., New York 
Best accommodations for a limited num- 
ber of sportsmen. 
Separate cottages if desired. 
Registered guides arranged for. 
Write for Particulars 


It will identify you. 
Touring with Raymond 
Spears 
(Continued from page 217) 
Francisco to Bakersfield, and down to 
San Diego and Tia Juana, Sierra 
Madre and Imperial Valley “scenic 
routes,” national park observation 
tours, and the like. 
During the war, young women were 
taken into many kinds of work here- 
tofore regarded as men’s own. This 
means competition as well as oppor- 
tunity. There are many licensed women 
chauffeurs who make long trips with 
passengers and freight. We saw sev- 
eral of these in the Sierra Nevada 
country. 
Just what encouragement to give 
any one contemplating earning his way 
across country on an automobile tour 
—or for that matter on a hike—is 
problematical. One man can drive his 
car across country; on him all the 
burden of repairs will fall. Two men 
halve, four quarter the expense of 
travel, nearly. I suppose each 150 
pounds adds a certain expense to the 
cost of running’ a car—each passenger 
adds to the cost—but in no such pro- 
portion as the individual expenses are 
reduced. Thus a car may go from five 
to six cents a mile, all cost and depre- 
ciation counted, but the five cents a 
mile may be reduced, by three pas- 
sengers, to two cents a mile each. But 
at a certain point, cars become over- 
loaded, and then repairs, tires and 
other expenses mount. 
A good salesman with a good article, 
or articles, to peddle, or a party of 
salesmen, might make a “go” of earn- 
ing expenses while touring. Commer- 
cial travelers, more and more, avail 
themselves of the automobile trans- 
portation. I know of one district sales- 
man, handling a proprietory line, who 
drives 60,000 miles in a season and 
sells off his car, wholesaling enough 
to make him a very considerable in- 
come. He covers several eastern states. 
The would-be tourist may find himself 
approaching business responsibility 
and development in his undertaking to 
earn a living as he goes. 
Repairing machinery, as agricultural 
equipment, has led some garage men 
to specialize in this line, as_ they 
wander along. The tractor demands a 
certain expertness, and tractor drivers 
are in demand for certain periods in 
the country’s work, in countless forms, 
from ditching to hauling. 
To sum up the country opportunities 
for those who would earn their way 
while on the adventure, regarding the 
work as a part of the experience and 
pleasure, there is not much difference 
between “out yonder” and “around 
home.” Forced migrations, on account 
Page 250 
