ANDERSSEX, FISHERY EXHIBITIOX, PHILADELPHIA, l^TG. 51 



J. — The Netherlands 



had a fiue exhibit of excelleut herring-nets, floating nets, codfish-hues, 

 trawl-nets, a model of a large herring-seine, models of fishing- vessels, 

 and boats, both ancient and modern, from A. G. Maas in Scheveningen ; 

 pickled heiTing from M. I. Snries & Co. in Rotterdam ; smoked salmon 

 from T. E. Novenhaj's in Amsterdam, and models of cotton nets from 

 Amtzenius, Jamuek & Co. in Goor. 



K. — Great Britain. 



Pilchards in oil, fresh preserved salmon, from C. Freyer and Crosse & 

 Blackwell, London ; fresh-water fishing implements from W. & J. Ryder, 

 Birmingham ; and fish-hooks from Joseph Buchanan, Glasgow. 



L. — Germany. 



Samples of nets made of cotton, flax, and hemp from ^' Mechanische 

 Netzfabrik nnd Weberei-Actien Gesellschaft," Itzehoe, Holstein, and 

 Igler, Bohemia. 



M.— Chili 



had a comparatively large exhibit of different kinds of preserved fish 

 and mollusks (12 kinds), prepared algae and sea-grass, in oil, in the 

 Spanish-Portuguese way. 



N^.— Japan. 



Models of fishing implements, fine nets of silk and flax, fish-poles with 

 the line running inside the pole, lobster and eel traps, different kinds of 

 fish baskets and boxes for keeping live fish, strongly salted and smoked 

 salmon with head and tail, sewed in coarse cloth, dried sea-weed (sea- 

 weed-tengusa), of Tvhich an insipid but cooling dish is prepared by mix- 

 ing a large quantity of sugar with it, isinglass, and prepared fish-skin 

 (shagreen). 



O. — China. 



Models of fishing implements, isinglass, dried crustaceans and fins. 



P.— Brazil. 



Isinglass, preserved fish, turtle-oil, and butter. 



Q. — Argentine Republic. 



Fish-baskets of straw and fishing-lines. 



R. — Liberia. 



Nets made of the fiber of trees (ramee). 



• S.— Cape of Good Hope. 



Fresh crayfish preserved in tin cans. - • 



