Evening Star Newspaper, April 10, 1921, Page 67

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TR SENDAY SEAR, WASHINGTON, Do ¢ —ROTOGRANURE SECTFION = NIRREL IO %/ When a Man’s Fancy Lightly P 9 Turns to Thoughts of Fishing A 8 | As a rule, the fisherman who fills his creel is the one who has familiarized himself with the ways of fish—their peculiar habits and haunts, their des of feeding and insect life. Such a fisherman is better equipped to locate and outwit his adversaries. The thrill that comes once in a fishing season, when the finny member is netted in the nick of time. Had he reached the tumbling water below, there would have been great danger of losing him. Most game fish haunt the edges of riffles, stumps and bowlders, and beneath over- hanging bushes and banks, difficult places for the inex- perienced angler to play his game. The trout is more diligently sought than any other fish. It inhabits a greater range of waters than The true fisherman (or fisherwoman, as the case may be) has found that it is one thing to have a fish other fish. and the speckled beauty is about the choicest morsel that ever graced a broiler accept the bait, and quite another matter to get him safely landed in the net. any

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