IMIM.IOI'III'CA IMSCA'I'OI^IIA. 91 



the Kcmiehec, Penobscot and Si. johii liN'crs. with a new and 

 correct map of tlie I /ike region. Boston, iJiSo. 10' . 



Camp life in tlic wilderness. A laughable and exciting 



story ot sporting and adx'eiilnrc <it the Richardson and Kange- 

 ley lakes. i.SSo. 12". 



Eastward, Ho ! or adventures at Rangeley lakes, con- 



taining the amusing experience and startling incidents con- 

 nected with a trip of a party of Boston boys to the Wilds of 

 Maine. A story foniuled on fact. Boston, 1880. 16". 



Fawkes (Francis). Ntv Thkockitiis. 



Fayle ( I-'rank ). A day's angling on the Almond. Pxlinburgh 



[ printed], Mcn/ies ; Gla.sg<)w, Murray. [1860.] pp.54. 16°. 



[ Tlie chapters arc lieatlcd tliiis : '• H<nv wc set about it." " How 



not to ilo it." " How to do it." " How we did it." " How Roger 



did it." " How it did Ro^er."] 



Feddersen (Arthur). Faerskx-andsfiskeriet. Med 44...Afbild- 

 niiiger. Kjobenhavn, Philipscns. 1873. pp.iv. 114. 8°. 



Feith ( H. O.) Brief van Prior Petrus aan Johan van Ewsum, 

 over de zwanen, de visscherijj en/ te Roden. 1559. 



Fennell (Greville). iSVf F. ( Greville ). The rail and the rod. 

 1867, etc. 8". 



Curiosities of angling literaiure. ^ec Pennhll ( H. 



C.) Fishing gossip, etc. i8bb. 8"". 



The book of the roach. London, Longman. 1870. 



pp. viii. 1 18. 8*-'. 



Ferriere ( — de la). Le menage universel de la ville at des 



cham})s, contenant I'utile et I'agreable, ... chasse, peche, etc. 



Bruxelles, (n. d.) 8". 

 Fibigius (Go.) Exercitium juridicum de jure venandi, aucu- 



pandi et piscandi : respondente S. Scheffcr, Gorlic. Jense, 



1038. 4°. 



Field. The Field, the farm, the garden. The country gentle- 

 man's newspaper. Ill protrress. London, 1853, ^/c. fol. 



[ The leading clironicler of the field and manly sports of the day. 

 The editor in chief is the redoubtable "Stonehenge" (Mr. John 

 Henry Walsh), and Mr. Francis Francis has for many years 

 conducted the angling department to the satisfaction of his numer- 

 ous readers. Though not originally established by him, The Field 

 owes its position to the energy and judgment of the late Serjeant 

 Cox.] 



The field book, or sports and pastimes of the United 



Kingdom, compiled from the best authorities, ancient and 

 modern, by the author of " Wild sports of the West.'' \i.e. 



