INDEX. 



545 



First impressions of Honolulu, 231 



land shell described by, 431 



slain in battle ,a sacrifice, 53 

 Fish, Amber, 362 



bait 242 



bait, Method of securing, 343 



Baking, 349 



-baskets, Hawaiian, 70 



■baskets. Native, 341 



-baskets shell, 470, 451 



Blue parrot, 370 



for boiling, 349 



Butterfly, 370, 3.53 



Cirrhito'id, 374 



Common, 362, 366 



Conservation of, 3.59 



Dried, 364 



eaten raw, 35.5, 365 



fauna. Character of the, 351 



Floating, 355 



Flying, 366 



Flying gurnard, 374 



Fresh water, 37tj 



Frying, 349 



Goat, 362, 366 



Gobies, 374 



Lizard, 350 



market, Fish at the, 34S 



Moorish Idol, 370 



-moth, 403, 430 



Needle, 350 



nets, 73 



Pan, 349 



Parrot, 370 



pens, 341 



photographers (How made indicated), 

 356 



Pilot, 366 



pond, 270 



ponds. The first, when built. 27 



poison, 341 



use of, 358 



Poisonous, a, 307 



Porcu])ine, 370 



Protection of, 359 



Scorpion, 374 



snare, 242 



-spear, Doulde-jironged, 344 



Spearing, 344, 341 



Species of, 34S 



Squirrel, 362, 366 



Sucking fish attached to. 36S 



Surgeon, 370 



Surgeon, striped. 362 



Sword, 366 



-tail fern, 253 



Threail, 366 



traps, 341 



traps, Hawaiian, 70 



Trigger, 370 



Trumpet, 350 



Trunk, 374 



Wrasse, 366, 370 

 Fisherman with a throw net, 344 



Hawaiian, 472 



Fisher, Dr. Walter K. (Zoologist), 12, 4S9, 

 493, 314 



Photogarphs by, 14 

 Fishes at the Aquarium, 356 



Curious, 366, 370, 374 



Curiously shaped, 350 



Deep sea, 354 



Hawaiian (Part one), 338 



Hawaiian (Part one), 348 



Hawaiian (Part two), 374 



Fish gods. Several species of fisli arrive in 

 large numbers on the coast every year in 

 their respective seasons. The fish first se- 

 cured was always carried to the fisherman's 

 heiau and there offered to the fish god whose 

 influence, it was tliought, had driven the 

 school of fish to the land. It is suggested 

 that the natives, at some remote date, had 

 seen the fish pursued through the islands by 

 sharks and that the occurrence may have led 

 them to respect the shark as a powerful 

 god of the fishermen. 



heiaus, 50, 73 

 Fish-hooks, Bone, ivory, tortoise shell, 242 

 Fish-hooks were made of shell, bone, tortoise-shell 



and ivory ; iron was substituted in most cases 



at an early date. But few fish-hooks [he 



makau] are now made in the ancient style. 

 Fishing, 73 



Ancient method of shark, 343 



and idol worship, 73 



apparatus, 64 



at night, 242 



birds, 325^ 



equipment. Ancient Hawaiian, 339 



from sailing vessel, 344 



from the jibboom, 344 



Hand, 242 



in former times, 339 



in Hilo Bay, 352 



Eeef, 344 



Religious ceremony observed, 339 



Shark oil, 346 



with a net, 344 



Fishing torch. Torches were made of kukui nuts 

 strung on a rush, or on a cocoanut mid-rib 

 and bound together with ki leaves. They 

 would burn in almost any kind of weather. 

 The natives believed that when the torch 

 burned poorly, the fishing would be poor, 

 but if it burned bright the fishing would be 

 good. The light from the torch blinds or 

 dazzles the fish. Sometimes a fire is made 

 on the bow of the boat to aid in fishing. 

 Often the blinded fish may be killed with a 

 club. 



Fish-lice, 468 



Fish-line container, 57 

 of olona, 217 



Five-fingered morning-glory [Koali ai], 192 



Five-sided starfish, 489 



Flamboyant tree, 244 



Flame tree, 244 



Flashlight view Pele 's reception room, 170 



Flat black-scale, 391 



Flatfish, 360, 371 



Flat-worm, 490, 477 



Fleabane or Horse-weed [lliohej, 262, 287 



Fleas, 401, 419 



Flesh-colored cowry, 458 



Flesh fly, 387, 419 " 



