HOOKS. 2t 
a smaller scale more appropriate to trout-flies, the very import- 
ant question of over- and under-draft in these hooks. 
Cc C 
FIG. I, FIG, 2. 
FIG. 3. 
Fig. r.—Original Turn-down eyed hook, with draft-line below true plane 
of hook-shank. 
Fig. 2,—Turn-up eyed pattern, with draft-line above the plane. 
Fig. 3.—New Patent Up-turn Shank and turn-down eyed hook—correct 
draft-line. 
The general changes in construction between the old and 
new forms of the hook will perhaps be most readily understood 
by contrasting some of the smaller sizes of each, including the 
sneck-bend form, in which the patent is also manufactured of 
the sizes shown. 
LULL 
OLD PATTERN OF TURN-DOWN EYED « PENNELL-SNECK’” HOOKS. 
(Patent U.S.A.) 
wybub be bb 
coo 00 O 
NEW PATTERN DITTO WITH UP-TURN SHANK. (Patent United Kingdom, 
and U.S.A.) Made both with ‘ straight’ and ‘twist ' points. 
