



































FORESJVAND STREAM: 

[JULY 13, 1907. _ 

Few Parts 
Great Strength 
an Imported Gun 
Perfect Balance 
Quick Handling 
Place a genuine A.H. Fox 
gun beside the finest 
im- 
ported gun and compare them. 
In material and workmanship. dis- 
played the Fox is equal to the imported 
gun. 
In simplicity and strength of parts, 
directness and power of actién, the Fox gun is 
immeasurably superior. 
Put both guns to actual proof for perfect balance, ease of operation and 
reliable shooting qualities, and you proclaim the Ansley H. Fox Gun 
“THE FINEST GUN IN THE WORLD.” 
Every gun shop keeps the Fox—ask to see it. 
A. H. FOX GUN CO.,4670 North 
18th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 
fe 2 

The Best High Power Rifle Extant. 
8mm. (315 caliber), 9mm. (354 caliber) 
Killing Range 3000 yards, - 
Rifles fitted with telescope - 
SCHOVERLING, 
; Point Blank Range 300 yards, 
$50.00 
$100 00 
DALY @ GALES, 
SOLE AGENTS, 
302 @ 
304 Broadway. New York. 
The Marlin 16 gauge is the only light-weight repeating shot- * 
gun in the world and is the: handiest gun made for all sorts of game 
up to geese and foxes, 
The Harlin 16 is an exact miniature of the famous HZarZén 12 
gauge—built in all the working parts of drop-forged steel; barrel of “‘Special 
Smokeless Steel,’’ bored for both black and smokeless powders; stock and 
fore-end of sound, handsome walnut, and all put 
together by expert experienced gunmakers. 
f you are a shooter of quail, woodcock, 
grouse, teal, mallards, squirrels or rabbits, you 
need this gun, 
Send six cents in stamps for catalogue de- 
scribing in detail the whole MZgzrZén line of 
shotguns and rifles. 
27 Willow St., 
lhe Marlin firearms ©, XY 
y 
Mp 
Blackfoot Lodge Tales. 
The Story of a Prairie People. By George Bird Grinnell. 
Cloth. 300 pages. Price, $1.75. 
Mr. Grinnell has for years been on terms of intimacy 
with two of the three tribes which made up the great 
confederation known as the Blackfoot National, and hav- 
ing the confidence of the braves and wisest of the old 
atc Be has penetrated deep into the secret history of 
the tribe. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
- New Haven, Conn. Y 4) YY 


VY, 
j 
Meili 
Hunting Without a Gun. 
And other papers. 
iHustrations 
Price, $2.00. 
By Rowland E. Robinson. With 
from drawings by Rachael Robinson. 
This is a collection of papers on different themes con- 
tributed to Forest anp STREAM and other publications, 
and now for the first time brought together. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 


Ligger—Same as kelt. 
Lammasmen.—Sea trout on the autumn migra: 
tion. 
Mack or mark.—Same as kelt. 
Moffatmen.—Same as kelt. 
Moorged.—Same as black-fin. 
Morgate—Same as black-fin. 
Mort.—Sea trout—sometimes wrongly appliec 
to three-year-old salmon. . 
Moudie trout——Same as harling. 
Old soldier—A male salmon at 
time. 
Orange fin—Young of sea trout. 
Parr.—Same as black-fin; so called from the 
dark vertical “parr” or finger marks on the sides 
of the fish at this stage. 
Pea-fish.—A gravid female fish. 
Peal.—Sea trout (in Ireland used 
grilse). 
Phinnock or phinok.—Sea trout. 
Pink.—Same as _ black-fin. 
Rack-rider.—Same as black-fin. 
Rawner.—A gravid fish in spring. 
Red-fin.—Sea trout. 
Red fish—Same as old soldier—so called fromm 
its reddish color; sometimes so called when on 
the redds or spawning beds. 
Salmon.—Generally so designated on its seconc 
and subsequent returns from the sea. 
Salmo salary —Specific name of the salmon. 
Salmo trutta—Specific name of the sea trout 
Salmo cambricus or eriox.—Specific name ol 
the bull trout. 
Salmon fry.—Same as black-fin. 
Salmon spring—A smolt or young salmon de- 
scending to sea’ 
Salmon trout.—Popular name for sea: trout. 
Salmon peal or salmon peel.—A sea trout in 
the grilse stage under 2 pounds in weight or a 
grilse proper (Yarrell). 
Salmon pink—The young of salmon or ever 
sea trout just before assuming silvery scales. 
Salmon pollan—Pollan (Coregonus) of Lough 
Neagh, and elsewhere—wrongly so called. 
Samlet—Same as black-fin. 
Scad.—Same as _ black-fin. 
Scurf.—Sea trout. 
Sea trout—Salmo trutta. 
Sewin.—Sea trout (Welsh). 
Shed.—Same as _ black-fin. 
Shedder—A salmon with 
spawning. 
Shiag.—A salmon that has spawned. . 
Silver gray or silver white—Applied to the 
young of sea trout. 
Skarling, skerling, or skirling—Same as black- 
fin. 
Skegger.—Same as black-fin. 
Slat—Same as kelt. 
Smelt—A smolt—wrongly so called. 
Smelt sprod—Applied to the young of sea 
trout. | 
Smolt—A young salmon, when it has assumed 
its silvery coat to migrate seawards. 
Spawn.—Same as black-fin. 
Spent fish—Same as kelt. 
Sprag.—Same as _ black-fin. 
Sprat—The fry of salmon (Ireland). 
Spring fish or springer—A _ spring-running 
salmon. 
Sprod.—Applied to the young of sea trout, 
Streamer.—Same as sprat. 
Summer cock.—Same as gib fish. 
Tecon.—Same as black-fin. 
Truff.—Same as sewin. 
White fish.—Sea trout. 
White trout—Sea trout. 
Whitens.—Sea trout in the grilse stage. 
Whitling.—Sea trout in the grilse 8tage. 
Whiting.—Applied in the Tweed district to 
adult sea trout. 
Yeld fish—A barren fish (Scotch). 
Yellow fin—Sea trout. 
The stages in the life of the salmon generally 
recognized are, in ascending order, alevin, fry, 
parr, smolt, grilse, kelt, salmon.—London Field. 



spawning 
instead o: 

spawn, or after 























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