FISH : THEIR HABITS AND HAUNTS. 2/ 



well as of the present, are well-known as 

 fishermen. Daniel Webster was awful anx- 

 ious to get away from Washington when 

 detained over his fishing season. Presi- 

 dent Arthur has a reputation as a salmon 

 fisherman, with a fifty-pound fish to his 

 credit. It was on a salmon stream that he 

 first met Judge Gray, a fact that, per- 

 haps, had much to do with the latter's 

 recent appointment. The celebrated Rev. 

 Dr. Bethune, of New York, was an ardent 

 disciple of Walton. Dr. John Todd, of 

 Boston, passed many days in the woods ; 

 and hundreds of tired clergymen, lawyers, 

 and workers in other confining pursuits 

 look forward to their trips to the woods 

 and lakes with an eagerness hardly de- 

 scribable. 



THE ANGLER'S APPARATUS. 

 It is impossible to be a successful angler 

 without such a complete and well-arranged 



