An Angler's Paradise. 13 
further, that unless the hatching and distribution of young 
salmon is continued at these stations, either the canneries on 
these rivers or the salmon in them will become a thing of the 
past. “Very truly yours, 
“LIVINGSTONE STONE.” 
The result of acclimatizing and cultivating various members 
of the Salmonide, as well as other fish, on some parts of the 
Continent, notably in Germany, has been decidedly successful. 
Trout are now grown there in large numbers, both for the market 
and also for stocking waters, and their angling localities are 
already being advertised in British newspapers. But in our little 
islands strides are also being made in fish-cultural departures, as 
I shall endeavour to shew in my next chapter. 
