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CHAPTER V.
PAGE.
Fish breeding.
29
What should be done to replenish American waters.... 32
CHAPTER VI.
35
Hobbies and some of their riders..
Rarity of salmon anglers in the United States..
Some of the experts of New Brunswick..
38
40
CHAPTER VII.
44
46
Realization of a long.deferred hope....
Whom I went with.....
Salmon fishing outfit..
How we reached the Cascapedia.
Scenery en route..
Arrival and reception......
Salmon habits...
Do salmon feed in fresh water.
The largest fish of the season breaks off...
The weight of some of our fish.....
78
81
82
Shot at a moose.
End of our first season..
83
112
The angling advantages of preserved waters..
The attractions of forest solitudes.
113
CHAPTER XVI.
116
117
A pleasant morning..
Courtesy and self-sacrifice.
Judge Fullerton as an angler.
The Judge's first salmon....
Dun trying to reel in a fifty-ton bowlder
120
121
123
CHAPTER XVII.
126
128
129
Difference in the play of fish..
A pleasant disappointment...
The wisdom of judicious commendation..
Instances of mistakes in gaffing
How to treat leaping salmon
The music of the reel-click..
130
131
132
CHAPTER XVIII.
The attractions of fly-fishing
135
168
170
Going up the river
A thunder storm
Our champion match-lighter
The early morning fishing theory discussed...
Running the rapids..
171
172
174
196
198
Leaving camp..
A bit of rhapsody
Forest life not adapted to all temperaments
A primitive people
Homeward bound
201
203
204
CHAPTER XXVI.
207
209
Trout fishing in the Adirondacks in 1873..
The best times to fish...
Trolling as a pastime.....
The North Woods as a State park
Why anglers avoid a crowd...
210
211
212