Private Lake and Stream 
with modern equipped house, suitable for 
Hunting Lodge. Wild Deer, Pheasants, 
Partridges. Owner bred Game Birds and 
Water Fowl. 200 acres with privilege of 
600 more. Private stocked deer park. 
BURKE STONE, Inc. 
41 EAST 42nd STREET, NEW YORK 




LONG LAKE, HAMILTON COUNTY, N. Y. 
In the Heart of the Adirondacks 
Real Accommodations for Sportsmen 
and Summer Guests. 
Record Fish Caught in 1924: 
Brook Trout, V.E. Scott, N. Y., 2 lbs. 10 ozs. 
Small Mouth Bass, Mr. MacLaren, Syracuse, 
N. Y., 3 lbs. 4 ozs. 
Great Northern Pike, N. E. White, Mama- 
roneck, N. Y., 15 lbs. 5 ozs. 

CANADA TIMAGAMI! LAKE ontario§ 
CAMP EUCAROMA ; 
“Where the Family Spirit Prevails’ 
Bring your grouch, rough clothes and fishin’ tackle— 
Let the wife bring her old duds, stout shoes and 
A camera. We'll furnish the smile and send you home 
rejoicing. 
FISHING — BATHING — CANOEING 
Send for Booklets 
ROBERT MORGAN, Owner and Manager 
529 Guardian Bldg., Cleveland, 0. 

Fisherman’s Paradise 
Largest trout ponds in Massachu- 
setts. Abundance of trout weighing 
from !4 lb. to 2 lbs. Fly fishing ex- 
clusively. Two hours’ auto ride from 
Boston. Perfect roads. MAccommoda- 
tions for fishermen. A few member- 
ships for sale. For particulars corre- 
spond with 
CAPE COD TROUT CLUB 
L. B. Handy, Mer. 
Red Rock Ranch 
Write me now for a Spring Bear Hunt in the 
Jacksons Hole country, for 1925, from May Ist to 
June 15th, with a guarantee that you will get your 
bear, Black, Brown and Grizzly. Grain fed saddle 
horses, comfortable camp and no hardship attached. 
Also summer boarders, up-to-date cabins,. Yellow- 
stone Park trips, with pack outfit, mountain pack 
trips and full hunting parties for moose, elk, deer, 
mountain sheep and bear, trout fishing guaranteed. 
RED ROCK RANCH 
CRYSTAL CREEK 
A Western Ranch Run by Western Men 
Redmond & Simpson 
Jackson, Jacksons Hole, Wyoming 
Address JAS. S. SIMPSON. Reference furnished. 
Wareham, Mass. 




Ty BEAR SPRING on Belgrade Lake 
(The Family Camps) 
For your spring outing. 18 individual Camps. 
GOOD EATS, Tennis Court, Garage. Best of 
BASS fishing, also Trout and Salmon. Rates 
reasonable. Season May 10th to October | 0th. 
(Address) G. D. MOSHER & SON 
Oakland, Maine 

CROCKER LAKE CAMPS 
On the Shores of Beautiful Lake Crocker 
Five miles north of Jackman, 
Canadian Border, one-half mile from automobile road. 
Five cabins; electric lights; with and without baths. 
Fine salmon, rainbow and square tail trout fishing. Twelve 
outlying ponds within’a radius of three miles. River and 
stream fishing. Picturesque canoe trips. Elevation 1,631 
feet. Excellent food. Telephone and telegraph connections. 
For farther particulars write 
J. B. McKENNEY, Prop. 
376 
Jackman, Maine 








Plumley’s Camp) 












| will 
a private 
ANGLERS IS SOLICITED. 












twelve miles south of the 
—— CANADA'S WILDS— 
NORTHERN ONTARIO 
TIMAGAM 
Wabi-Kon Camp 
Lake Timagami 
Ontario, Canada 
A real North Woods BUNGALOW CAMP with every com- 
fort in the heart of four million acres virgim forest—1502 
lakes. Wonderful fishing. Guides, Boats, Canoes and 
Launches. Bathing, Tramping. One night from Toronto or 
Montreal. Excellent table. Write for booklets. 
Address MISS E. ORR, 250 Wright Ave., TORONTO, ONT. 
Real Moose Country 
The Height of Land Country of Northern Quebee 
and Ontario—the last home of big trophies. Complete 
organization of Lodges, Outpost Camps and Guides. 
A few vacancies open for party or two—September- 
| October trips for immediate reservation. 
North of Nipigon Trout 
Virgin, hitherto unknown rivers—fast-water, fightin’ 
Square Tails 2 to 5 Ibs. throughout July and August, 
and on the fly. A new Outpost Camp right on choice 
pools, Complete outfits and guides; reservation now. 
Messagami Lodge 
Northern Quebec: Paradise for Canoe Trips. 
Won- 
derful live-game photography opportunities, particu- 
larly in July. Fishing for Bass, Dore and G. N. 
Pike, Guides and everything for trips out. 
Write for details and booklet 
ANUCK’S 
AMPS 
Box 393 
S. E. Sangster 
MAN.-DIR., OTTAWA, CAN. 
Excellent Bass and Pickerel Lake 
An excellent opportunity for anglers to secure week- 
end accommodations at a_ strictly private lake. Three 
hours from New York. Exclusive, well stocked waters 
where game fish abound. 
Parties limited ta three. Will take anglers directly to 
property by private auto from New York City Fridays or 
meet them at railroad station. Parties availing 
themselves of this opportunity will be treated as guests on 
estate. THE PATRONAGE OF CHOICE 

For interview, write Box A 125, Forest and Stream, or 
phone Mansfield 0861. 



“Six Years with the Texas 
Rangers”’ 
Real Frontier Days in Texas 
By CAPT. J. B. GILLETT 
A book that will grip and hold you from 
start to finish, dealing with vivid realism the 
life of those hard-riding, straight-shooting, 
keen-eyed guardians of the Texas frontier, in 
the days of the wild Indian, the buffalo herds, 
the cattle rustler, the “bad man” and all that 
made up the old-time frontier. The author's 
description of the great gun fight that wiped 
out the Sam Bass gang is a masterpiece—as 
thrilling a tale as has ever been told. 
332 pages. Illustrated. Cloth, $2.50 
Hounds and Beagles 
Their Training and Handling 
By A FOX HUNTER 
It tells how to develop the young hound 
into a high-class fox, coon or rabbit dog, an 
active, intelligent searcher and a true, steady 
driver on the trail. Instructions are given 
for correcting common faults such as bab- 
bling, ‘loafing and back trailing. Instruc- 
tions are given for developing a pack and 
the subjects of field trials, care, condi- 
tioning, handling and treatment are ade- 
quately covered. Every man who loves a 
hound should have this book. 
This book fills a long felt want. It is the 
first and only book solely devoted to the 
training of hounds. 
219 pages. Illustrated. 
Reliable Pheasant Standard 
By F. J. SUDOW 
A practical guide on the Culture, Breeding, 
Rearing, Trapping, Preserving, Crossmating, 
Protecting, Stocking, Hunting, Propagating, 
etc., of Pheasants, Game Birds, Ornamental 
Land and Water Fowl, Singing Birds, etc. 
Valuable Recipes for Poultrymen. “The 
Secret to Make Hens Lay: in Winter.” 
95 pages Paper, $1.00 
FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO. 
221 W. 57th St. New York City 
Cartridge, $1.00 
Colored Illustrations 

In writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. 

}them only in the mouth and by taking 
‘them off with wet hands and handling 
‘them tenderly, I believe we have almost 

Tt will identify you. 
¥ 
When the big trout struck, the boy ine 
stinctively released the brake, increas. 
ing the strain and the trout went off 
with the leader. 
All this fishing was done on a stretch 
of water not exceeding five hundred 
yards. During my various trips I ob- 
served many anglers from my secluded 
spot, generally by them unseen. Some 
caught fish but most of them went 
through my favorite places as though 
pursued. To the casual angler it was 
but indifferent water, and yet what 
sport it could afford if you but learned 
its secrets. They can be acquired only 
by camping on the stream. 
Bass in the Back Yard 
of New York 
(Continued from page 833) 
surface of the bucket and from the 
sopping wet minnow net, got them all 
home alive. I put the bucket in the 
kitchen sink, turning a small stream 
of water into it, and an hour later they 
were decidedly lively. I decided to try 
to keep them alive to show them to the 
negro servant when she arrived in the 
morning. I like her because she tells 
me I am a great fisherman. She is 
never through with her flattery—which 
means, of course, that when we go for 
cod, she gets the biggest we catch! 
BOUT three o’clock the next morn- 
ing I was awakened by a terrible 
clatter, and when I finally mustered 
enough courage to go downstairs to in- 
vestigate, I found that my fish had 
loosened the lid of the bucket and got 
out. Two were on the floor, two in the 
sink and the fifth had fallen from the 
sink into a dishpan that was sitting 
atop the fireles cooker and it was his 
flopping, in the empty pan, that had 
brought me to the rescue. I got them 
back into the bucket, turned the water 
on them again, and the next morning 
they were all alive—no worse, appar- 
ently, for the experience. 
Three things we have done in fishing 
these little lakes that have been more 
or less peculiar to the situation: | 
1. Because in one of them few bass 
are large enough to take, we use the 
greatest care not to get the hook beyond 
the mouth of the fish. We never give 
‘the fellow time to gorge the minnow. 
Yes, we do lose a good many by this. 
frule, and it is hard to make my small 
son see the point of it, but by hooking 
never killed one of the little fellows. 
2. In fishing here, because of the 
number of little fellows, it has been) 
lots of fun to file the barb off the hook 
and so take them without injury. Only 

