White. 
Relchelm, 
1-P-Kt 
a— Kt-K 03 
8- i-Bl 
14-P-Q KM 
P-t? B;i 
6— One' lea 
T-Kt-KrS 
8— P-K Bl 
®— P-tJI 
lU-K-it 
White. 
Relchelm. 
I ‘J— Kt ika 0 Pi 
1 12— n Iks R 
4-B.ukes Kt P|«-Kl 
0— Kt K B3 I ?5~r tKs Kt 
1— Castles 
8— P-Q3 
9 — B rfts (a) 
10— KC-K5 
_ Black. 
Dr K . 
11— R tks Kt 
12— K tks B 
W-K-Kt 
ll-K'-K B3 
Jfces-.^wa ^ 
(a) Upon B- Whl-e p, 1J§ Kt-B^T 
* “no <tMy lor” imu^urs. 010,9 ,0ro “ «™« on-mnd, and I, 
WtL n Z°L K , D ™“ ■" Hue. 
Oau,o No. IO.-QUEBN KNIGHTS OPENING. 
White. 
F irrow. 
1- P-Kl 
2 — Kt-(£ B3 
8— U K< 
4— P-UI 
6- P-K R3 
e-Kt-Bl 
7- Cus lea 
8- K-Ri 
9 — P rk< P 
In— p-K Ktl 
11 -K H 
12 — K K Kt 
18— Kt tks P 
11-P-B1 
lo— ft tks Kt 
Black. 
Jacobsen. 
1-P-K4 
2 -P 03 
8-P-K B4 
•I— K' K B3 
S-U Kt 
8— Castles 
7-y.-K 
S-Ci KC3 
9— b tka Kt 
10 - P-K R4 
11 — P tks P 
12— B-Qi 
1 1 — 3 cnecks 
ll— Kr tks Kt 
lO-c^-Bi 
White. 
Farrow. 
10- Kf-Ki 
1T-Kt-Kt5 
11- B tks u 
19- Q-K B 
20- 0 Kt3 
<1 — K-Kt 
22— P tks Q 
21- K-B 
24-U-KI 
20 — K-K 
20-B-K B 
27-B-B2 
28 — II Q [ 
29-K Us B „_ K , 
B ack mates next move. 
Black. 
Jacobsen. 
iu-ic-b! 
17 — B tks Kt 
13— It- ft 
19- 0 Ikt ft 
20- B tks O u|i 
21- K-KtO 4 
2® — H tks Q ch 
23— Kr-Qj 
24- H-IC R 
20 — K-fts ch 
26— B-BC 
27— K .38 
28— B Iks R 
29 — R tks Q B 
STREAM. 
Jeet report very rough weather Thn 
8.000 lb, Wifi*# ** SUE 
-Neill, of the Danbury iff??™?!™ 09 ; . 
that paper entitled, “ The Shadow of a n ‘, ere9tln * aerlal story for 
brilliant chess player. “Shame.” g ooc i tor Nelli, the 
amusement, is defeitiliViUlTOmer^ftr mT “ nd and - m an 
Paris, eh ? * °° mera a8 far 88 Heard from. Send him to 
~ o f f C im??fn t f > ,.nn y an U9elL ‘ ss m °ve 
A -kB f >i eque “ ce ' vl| l prove- 
ShRu n player design 
fep—ISlo 
asS# . 
With°ho U 1 ? U mao '* "aste to take 
An I !vo L '. ye your men survey 
asking „s for lSo^u Ju 'in feg^d to onr*!* 0 maaycomn,QnlC8 ‘l°n8 
b lack bass, grl.se and salmon rSd 8 we have tr ° Ut ' 
subject, which we shall take^^T E * ClrCDlar ° n the 
We keep on hand all grades, tbepnees of Ij? g t0 any address. 
We put our stamp only on the beat in order . ^ r “ nge fr ° m 815 t0$l6 °- 
l0 ™ !‘Z° ‘ rUo,9) 
’ ' Ud v - ABBgy * 89 Maiden-Lane. 
<§ e * and | fiver fishing. 
fish in season in march. 
SOUTHRBN WATERS 
D?ry wo ^n/ u iss^. 
8 or Rocka9hi n ° cc ' ia 
yx^- ATch *«"i'" 
Snaooer. /. Bl8Ck (a *ss, ilicruyterus ttolmoide • 
”i gncans. 
7- ars of age, keeps a modest co^y Kl ThVjTm ^ 
15,000 land-stocked salmon in the tributary streams 1, 7 
S^m 
Pen-nsyi.vanxa — Williamsport, Feb 19 r ,, c » t 
party spent two weeks flshimr at Ttniot^ ~ , 1 . June 0ur 
lliree dozen as line trout as ran hi ? a,8t . 0 ?' and took tweuty- 
The average weight was two nmin?^ *? ® 0Un,ai “ waters, 
lbs.), the small S.Tcourse we r^f, ? n< L ,hree ^'arters (2} 
streams in the vicinity of RaIm^ 6 rtlu ^ dt °the water. The 
There are many for Ay-Ashing, 
just the places for evening fl 9h ™ “» ni J lu | re oascadef, 
a remarkably fine one At nn7 of ° i blrd da y 0,11 was 
from camp, at the first oast I po ° l3, tt, *out four rods 
of the eas cad e I too^cme whic hrh oH p ° u n d ? r - At the foot 
(3) pounds. The sport here and fi,?' ? U frac . l,0D over three 
Should any of our ?por£men ^me £* t Z ' 9 '"tX «" nd - 
accommodations at the Ralston trLr , W|M find Aoe 
Fine sport can he ^yer, 
si rTams 1n 3 mher^ms W of^’ the^Stat^f ^ 6 Jh ^ to ^he 
berland river and £ WbitariS Sp ° rtl -l be Cimi ' 
Hty, (being entirely Jl"®" ° f ' bis 
with nets and set lines have virtnoii 6 i P ? t flshermen who, 
mate sport with the rod! They keen tL^S e . d lhe le ^ ili - 
supplied with such fish os thehnfroJ'd market P rel, y well 
occasional sturgeon, but at the cosfof ’t^T < ? t * ltab ,' aud an 
mt-nf. Very little aitpnfion k C09t °‘ ^ 8 P or tsman s amuse- 
ture in tbb^Kl mV iuhiueh somff been paid 10 flab «ul- 
menced it. ’ ® some few persons have corn- 
trout (lS) fiSng 2 LpoM?bir ea Bu^and§n Wa ' erS m,lke 
out of the river, wligh^tm £*£>& ^SST^ 
n Ya l. 
uraylinq Grounds in MioniGAN nr t xr 
2--- Coa the line of the Grand Rapids ondTndUna 
Railroad), mentions what is known as the “ Hni„ r . ... i 
stte “[us® ° De ° f h thebeSt pounds in the 
comprise^^ 
hoL 7; r;: h dce . p hoiM in the bed ° f «» “ 
fish f A 3 U3 ’ erally 8warm with tbe3e attractive game 
fish. Last August the writer, ia company with A D 
Leavenworth and C. M. Conant, three in a boat took^S 
The net he ^ ^ Gsh ' WS ' wbicb wei ^ hed 3 00 pounds 
be net result of two days' work was GOD pounds of grayling 
NdM C e U le D f 8 h UPPl7 “ Way t0 a Camp of twenty ^nen.' 
S! ' r achievement of the party was the shooting of a 
5 essed e Th W1 T mg tbG 8tre “ mS ’ WbicU wei S hed ‘ 410 pound8 . 
“ d ‘ The / rau 'Stee is mainly a rapid, foaming river, in- 
terspersed with pools of still water. 
countered In casting wfth a Meek. arU *‘ oa '' ° r "ac winch u 0 en- 
Now, afn-r the treat of reading the •» r« , .. 
*rl»d In recommendation and praise of thar , , ' av,, no “ ®tc to 
11 19 llkt ‘ly to produce In mlnSof *“ , “ atlon of 11 because of the prejudice 
“bd because of that dn ”evorv .»« '»** W "° haVe never Sl ‘en the reel 
m^ea”gnodiiiingdiMoveri” ‘ ° We “ hla breth,ea to pro I 
Every caption containing Jl, , ... 
“ aa ’ a fye > and the article l« almost . "T ' ca,che8 “ Kentucky g,^. 
bass la th f game tlsh of Kentuckian., hi t " T flrS ' r ‘ U ' 1 ' f0r ,hc black 
angers- .pecial-iea; nor ** ore Kentucky 
declare himself as profusely B raS,i, ‘ T (,0csa ' 1 nohe.iu.Jngl> 
reel as was Sancho Pauza to the man wh ' ! #ek ,0r tne lnv ent on of his 
Brother Shufeldt pays a nter'ln trl , ° VCnU " alee P- 
manship and flnlah,” but condemns l^rap^J'of' " SQ 1 Wr,orlty ®f work- 
exasperatlng confusion" in which ho J " c,lon ".'Cause of the 
casting for bass ft will pnzzi® a 8tM „ ^ q,u ' D,ly f ®unU his line after 
angling in which Bn., s. Dud, that ■•portwijff "?!?* ‘ he,d,l<l0 *Mel. 
ZXZSX ^ c “ tln * ls « neces.ary fea re of th'o ^ whlcU 
tnat confusion" of line as «iir« m ’ ,rer 11,0 "-oof a reel ami 
aBtorthebas, Be certain, y^d ^aZ? 1 far ° ,,,,rTOrta, i 
R we coaid and any objection to tho M^H “ ,C t0 ,ro,ll "8r 
reeling In a Osh the rapidity ..faction i* U WOu, « l "" ‘"at In 
“slender tenure.” or ro CD l irge^;uL^^'° I ,ear " l0 from a 
hook, that a gam oy fellow gaining U iMnoh or »! I'.I llp-ma,Ie by ‘he 
himself loose. As n». n o __ or ttro of Hao can easllv 
reeling ,n a dsh we conclude ° f “ M "' k la 
ST aua are ,he more 8lirprl8cj that A not "ZTZZZ°L)'i 
to a caTelJaTira^ardiaS ° r . foull,1 « of ‘he line 
more than one Impatient half hour in the •• I* ^ ' f ° r w,: ll4V0 a Peut 
“ the rewar " of an effort to pZ l 1 ° Q " of " llr «"• 
an accomplished companion ; bat a few 27, beyoncl ‘"e of 
‘hat practice which generally in^ureacomml of' “* ** MUnul «*> >' a to 
n the possession of a Frankfort reel which ' ’‘ n(l “ 
‘bat of the boy with his n r „ whl.tl siU °°™ par,kbl e ""'7 wan 
and adopted braided llhen and silk it <a r rT dlacttrae < 1 lines 
tangle the line, and if it occurs the faint iu y ° Ur mtt,rortuno ,0 eu- 
We are by no mean, SJf \* " 0t ,hM of >"« reel, 
have acquired .bat command Sf J^v^U " y pracllc8 
cast a minnow much further than w.. » ° m n h < ‘ U " 1 '' 9 08 t0 easily 
heu that the game has*oS the ‘ tr,kl> 8a„ s : 
‘o place the same minnow much beyond the noin? eiI,cr *°‘ ucy “rises 
excellent New York balance reel .Ul thir.I h ? W ° L ' an rCacl1 wlt " ou 
anred that If Brother 8. wliSSeJl L" g eQUal ' W ° feel 8 
and the rubber tempered or cntroT h„ roe1, Wlth the ^lo 
aeon acquire a control of his b.ckle winch wm Wlt " “‘ S ll,umb he w “ 
Japanese and bamioo°ca^M— u8MlVnluc r oc^^n n || r °^ 8 aDd r,g 1,1 
feet-and inconvenience ourselves to cirri U.em f 0 7 aud twelve 
It inconvenient, which Is rarely the case wi l . ^ “ Car ' lf we n,,d 
would not exchange onr solid rod fn?.V ' " ° avo1 ls by r ““ we 
wlih which wo e .urn be tempted m ° at exqulslte 8 i ,Ut bamboo 
come and entertainment,^ '*"» “ rord.ai wci- 
bass angling which •• lays In the shade" th. ** ““ "T 0 b,Bck “'"iKr'-'en 
vlnce him or the .npertoriSof ISS lake ““* 1 "'H. «=” a 
was ever cost to a L » “f w " lbb • 
"• KHstOCKUN. 
MI«up3KC(l 
c4/>halu». 
Snapper, Lutjanu » caxus. 
» to 35 
3o ; -mackerel, 15 to 25 ; Southern shad 50 ccntMol? 
from Fortune Bay N^S Jth’ C ' SCOeS ’ W ' AmenCHQ turbot > 
pcan turbot), 20. N ‘ ( neareSt approach to tk e Euro- 
or expose°for sail, o^ have Tnlifs or her' -860 *- 2 °' N ° perBon 8baU 
been killed, any speokled trout a her possession, after the same has 
the am a,y 7 :zivr: \ r * tiom i,,e flm day ° f ^ » 
Uoilars for each flah. (Amlnded C^4U, taMolS?" "* tWemy ' fl?e 
eac°h!'7srF^Sc e o fir3t f0Ur “ ° f tbe Seas0Q brou S ht 910 
W7 M ZTli?\f7i 7 RZ EfTR0PB - T Eetween October 22. 
to Europe SSRS 
at prices ranging from $5.50 to $7 per barrel. ' * 
BLACK BASS FISHING in CANADA. 
■w DOWflUl 10(1,) 
poad, l tot 8 fr sift Es ft, a** 
Conoiio. 
for the E we K e rTuc°udI?i„r?rom w KET - -Tfie fishing arrivals 
last, and bringing the Newfmmrif° I !3 ,l | ne B,ly ’ reUirnm S in ba >- 
to a close. The g husinn J f ? ,md ti and he 7 ,ng season practically 
combination of the Newfoi^lS 11 ^. faUure > owio « 10 tbd 
tng by American vessels and rh« m. ? sbe ™ e “ t0 prevent flsh- 
eslimate their loss a t fl» n e ma9te rs of the several vessels 
which sums a claim for VS2 U8a S d d ?, Iar8 per ^hooner, for 
treasury auihorities at WHoh- mnity W1 ^ ^ be mnde through the 
jnaking unusualhrlon^ trin^for f 1°°’ Tbe Bank fle ^ aya 
wook ^ ^ e , 
A Stratford correspondent, who visited the little town of 
Longnal which is sixty miles from Ottawa, on the south side 
of the Ottawa river, writes that he found there rare sport 
with the black bass : 
FlpRnVb selectedfor tba camp was what is known as the 
Flat Rock, one mile and a half up the range river Ti.f 
pom was reached by canoe, carriage being nfee^ry aUhe 
rapids. The new railroad built upon tue north shore of the 
river runs within a few yards of lhe fishing groups ^ The 
river here has rocky banks, and is of no great width but is so 
hemmed in that it runs more like a sluice than a river Them 
arc no falls properly so-called, but the whole river is a con 
Donation of tremendous rapids, which dash through the rock 
gullies, forming the bed of the river. The scenery along the 
river is grand, some of it majestic, and the best time to fee U 
on lhe len PnDg Th ,n ^ al, » when a11 the autumn tints are 
h T hG 'Tf r V- e8 in tbe Laurentian mountains 
and flows for its whole distance through the gullies and 
canyons of these hills. It is deep, cold g and clef r and Se 
home of many species of the finny tribe, but more eapeciall v 
of the black bass. The sport is good at almost any lime J u y 
;r. gtb : f S r mer mon ™ s - The bass bite well, and are most of 
m fhi^Iif* rge A 8IZ i e ' TbC . Sport is exc ellcnt, aud lhe fi-h game 
to the last. As long as they keep in the pool of still water 
they are not difficult to handle ; but if, as frequenily huppens’ 
vlr^nee 0 ? T 1 'T the ? wift 8,ream . “ takes patience, p^rsel 
ES%S £ g00d caut,on 10 
Au OADBLB. 
KENTUCKY NOTIONS ABOUT BASS 
FISHING. 
Thb Mkek Riel and the Pbopbb Bass Rod. 
Editor Forest and Stream : Stanford, Ky, Feb. U, 1878. 
In your Issue of the 7th Inst. Mr. Geo. A. Shnfeldt. In his article on 
"The Bass Rod," takes issue with Mr. HsUock lu his commendation of 
the Kentucky , Frankfort, or Meek ml, In " Gazetteer,” in casting for 
FISHING NOTES prom EAST FLORIDA. 
The uncertainty which prevails wh „ 0 ?*v ,P ‘ lX lNtBT ' Feb ,T - I8T8. 
fng.r “ eXt USI1 W *“ WC,Fb oae or 
age. who was w.th me, hookeS bTSSch w«. TT , lWclve y,w of 
ahan.lline. The dsh was nnarivo. . 111 ' ve| g"ed f..rty pounds, on 
Usherman. he piuyi-u it till Its strenvtifSl^ 6 ^ ‘ ,Ut ' beln * “ sWlir “I 
SHS— 
brook trout, which the whin mr m.. a h North °alt tackle for 
Ka-sSr'- 
wmmrnm 
the hoods of fresh water k.l. the oysters and the 
a verydeucateand savory mollnsk peculiar to these InTi, 
the Mlnorceau of St. Augustine, Langeronl. * 9.0 C* 
Whifh Tn * ,, -- Thla tr “P Has certain pecallarftles of make 
which cah the attention of gentlemen who desl.-e aa excellent anoo- 
ratus for throwing glass b 4 „ a . Tno springs are of doubC! ed sfoct 
wire and are n -t only light, bat wonderfully powerful and enduring 
The manufacturers guarantee any of their traps for six months The 
range of the balls thrown from ,he Huber trap can be «o arranged at 
to throw t.iem at varying speeds and distances. \ ball may be sent 
140 feet at an elevation of twenty-ave or thirty feet, or a drwlog Sftd 
cbu be Imitated with the ball, the rise not being over seven fee t * 22 
trap Is well and solidly built on an oik frame an.l thnrn.i„hi T 6 
and boiled. It can be ead.y turned I ^ 
packed for shipment lu a small compass Th» ’ “ UJ ,uay be 
this trap la the best criterion of Z LZJ { Lr ^ « 
anJ flsh ^ 
this offlce.-Md rab ‘ e opportQalty by “Idxessing Game, 
