266 WHERE, WHEN, AND HOW TO CATCH FISH 



Same work, page 91. No Illustration. 



SAME LIST BY HUGH M. SMITH. 



" Albula vulpes (Linnaeus)." 

 "(Lady-fish; Bonefish.)" 

 "Very rare. Reported by Professor Baird in 1871, and since 

 observed only once or twice. None seen for many years." 



U. S. FISH COMMISSION REPORT, 1899. 



Page 54. No Illustration. 



" Check List of the Fishes of Florida, Evermann & Kendall." 



" 84. Elops Saurus (Linnaeus)." 



"(Ten-pounder.)" 



Cape Cod to Florida (Holbrook, 1860); St. Johns River (Bean, 

 1880); Pensacola (Jordan & Gilbert, 1882; and Bean, 1883); Key 

 West (Jordan, 1884a); Florida Keys (Jordan, 1884d); Tampa Bay to 

 Punta Rassa, and Little Sarasota Bay (Wilcox, 1886); Marco 

 (Henshall, 1889), Key West and Tampa (Henshall, 1894); and St. 

 Johns River at Welaka (Kendall Coll., 1897)." 



"85. Albula Vulpes (Linnaeus)." 



"(Lady-fish ; Bone-fish.)" 

 Same work, page 55. No Illustration. 



"Pensacola (Stearns Coll., Bean, 1883); Key West (Jordan, 

 1884a; and Jordan & Evermann, 1896); Florida Keys (Jordan, 

 1884d); Garden Key (Grampus Coll., Kendall, 1889); Key West, 

 Pavilion Key, and San Carlos Pass (Henshall, 1889); New Smyrna 

 (Lonnberg, 1894); Key West and Tampa (Henshall, 1894); and 

 Biscay ne Bay (McCormick Coll., Smith, 1895.)" 



FISHERIES OF PORTO RICO. U. S. FISH COMMISSION, 1900. 



B. W. EVERMANN. 

 Page 81. 



The. illustration is of the Lady-fish or Bone-fish of the Florida 

 fisherman and sportsman. 



"GENUS 20. Elops, Linnaeus." 

 " Body elongate, covered with thin, small, silvery scales. Dorsal 

 fin slightly behind ventrals, its last rays short, the fin depressible ; 



