316 APPENDIX. 



the inner consciousness of the tackle-maker. For the 

 smaller streams in the Middle and Eastern States,, the 

 coachman, royal-coachman, grizzly-king, Abbey, Mon- 

 treal, Imbrie, brown-hen, white-miller, orange-miller, 

 yellow-sally, black-gnat, great-dun, queen of the water, 

 Hooker, golden-spinner, Cahill, silver-black, professor, 

 march-brown, jenny-spinner, red or dun fox, silver- 

 brown, hare's-ear or dark-fox, blue-dun, dusty-miller, 

 coch-y-bon-dhu or marlow-buzz, gray-gnat, cow-dung, 

 Beaver-Kill, grannom,Eonald's stone, brown-stone, and the 

 various colored hackles. On some waters the addition of 

 jungle-cock's feathers to the above will prove very killing. 



On Long Island waters the favorites are the cow-dung, 

 scarlet ibis, Cahill, Imbrie, yellow-sally, great-dun, hare's- 

 ear, queen of the water, black and gray gnats, golden- 

 spinner, silver-black, grizzly-king, professor. Abbey, Mon- 

 treal, and the different colored hackles. Hooks for the 

 above lists should be numbers 8 to 12. 



For the Adirondacks, Maine, and the Canadas, light and 

 dark Montreal, Abbey, scarlet-ibis, professor, great-dun, 

 brown-hen, Brandreth, cock-robin or Murray, silver-doctor, 

 Parmaeheeny belle, St. Patrick, McAlpin, Lawrence, Hol- 

 berton, Rangely, Moleehunkamunk, Mooseluck-maguntic, 

 Beatrice, !N"o. 8, Eound-lake, Bemes, tinselled-ibis, Elliot, 

 Megalloway, silver-black, Canada, blue-jay, Jenny-Lind, 

 and the hackles. Also any of the above, with the feathers 

 of the jungle-cock added. They are to be tied on hooks 

 numbered from 3 to 5, and may be reinforced by a short 

 piece of gut tied in alongside of the other and extending, 

 above the hook, making the snell double for half -an inch 

 beyond the head of the ily. 



For black-bass any of the large flies previously named 



