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123
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Lake Front Fishing, Uptown Chicago
We would walk down to Montrose Harbor and buy our bait from "C. Berry for Bait," an old green shack on the northeast side of the harbor. All of our fishing equipment came from there. We could buy a one piece 16 / 18 foot cane pole, a two piece 12/14 foot, or what us professional guys used, a three piece 14/18 footer. One of our prized possessions was an official C. Berrry Bait Can, which was in reality an unused paint can with 6 or 7 nail holes punched in the top.

It cost us a quarter and we had it forever. Styrofoam hadn't been invented yet. A mandatory piece was our Coleman Gas Fired Lantern. For a nickel's worth of white gas at the gas station, we could fish all night. We tied a length of clothesline to the handle of the lantern in order to lower down to the water, usually about two feet above. This helped attract the perch in to our poles, and gave us light when baiting our trolley set ups.

For bait, the Lake Michigan shiner was the best, followed by fat heads, peelers, or softshell crabs, which were really cray fish. We would rip the tail off, peel away the shell, and impale the white meat on the hook. Sometimes we would use small pieces of shrimp. Worms never worked that well on the horseshoe.
I would fish all night, come home in the morning with a stringer of 50- 60 perch. Our tackle box was for the most part an old cigar box.

We would scrounge all of our gear and rarely bought any. I invented a type of hook-dragging device which was an old clothes hanger cut and bent into a circle with 10" lengths of hanger with bent hooks at the end, alternating with one hook up and one hook down until I had 10 lengths. I would throw this out into the lake and let it settle to the bottom, then slowly retrieve it back, snagging anything it came in contact with: hooks, line weights, sun glasses, and a few rods and reels. mother of the groom dresses with long sleeves

A neat old guy named Mr. Service used to come out at sunup with his cart, "HOOOOT COOFFEE," and rolls; then at lunchtime he sold sandwiches and pop. I went to school with his son Jim and always felt sorry for him that his dad had to sell hot coffee for a living. Today I would love to have that concession. When Jim went to high school his dad bought him a car.

The water level on the lake always fluctuated, as far as I can remember, then when Harold Washington was mayor, there was high water and flooding going on along Lake Shore Drive. Some of the lobbies in buildings and LSD was flooded.

The mayor convened a committee to figure out how to keep Lake Michigan from flooding the City. So experts said we had to open the locks and drain the water into the Mississippi; the people down south said if you flood us we'll sue. Another said if we drained a billion gallons a day it would take 10 years to get the level down.

Now mind you, no one was asking the real experts, the Lake Front Fisherman. The following week the water level returned to normal, all the "experts" went home, and no one had an answer as to why.
God and Nature handle things pretty well; all we have to do is stay out of the way. It's a system that has been working up to now.

Bill Matteson