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Show I GIVE FISH NO CHANCE. v Modern Devices Bid Fair to Spoil ,1 Pleasure For True Fishcimen. (Detroit News-Tribune The ingenuity of a pood many mn -.4 '. turned toward the inventing and p-n"-v-ing of cruel and unsportsmanlike le ir- - for taking fish, and each year the shops show a greater variety of them. Th-.-hook of our daddies was a plain harti'd affair, surmounted sometimes with u. piece of tin. which was the first attempt at the artificial minnow. They casimit eood fish with it and caught them in a. decent way. If their hooks became entangled rt weeds they worked them loose or cut th--lines, and' when they went to camp at. night thev had the satisfaction of knowing know-ing that they had captured their cuffi fairly. Against the sineje wecUless hook t hep-is hep-is nothing to be said. It opposes a sin:-point sin:-point to the fish, which is fair enoi;si. Following the single hook, wepdless "f not. came the hook sanss and they r-plosives r-plosives on fish, and laws In many them against seining bass and trout, h it i there is no law against these sprinr gangs, though they are individually as f ; tal and carries often an expensive ruitfit-The ruitfit-The hook gangs are now planed on a" forms of lures and the spring sans 'lr'; Imbeded in artificial minnows, fmes. crawfish, helframites. field mite and ?'' forth. The fish are havintr a harder rim.-of rim.-of it with pach year and the use ,.; these devices goes a long way toward ej. jawing jaw-ing why certain once fruitful w:it- :s a: -now nearlv fished out. . mm ' |