82 



FISHERIES EXHIBITION LITERATURE. 



Hot weather injurious to fish, ii., 104, 

 105 



Houghton, Rev. W., prize essay on 

 "the Natural History of Commer- 

 cial Sea Fishes of Great Britain and 

 Ireland," x., 3-416; prize essay on 

 "the Natural History and Cultiva- 

 tion of the Sole," xi., 227-265 



Hounsell, Mr. Herbert (Bridport), re- 

 marks by, on the destruction of imma- 

 ture fish, iv., 352 ; on fish as a diet, 

 v., 157; on over-fishing, v., 184; 

 on fish manure, v., 249 



Howes, George B., his paper on " Zoo- 

 logy and Food Fishes," ii., 119-188 



Howietoun fish-hatching establishment, 

 ii., 16, 21, 26, 31, 34, 35, 41, 52, 56, 

 61, 62 ; vi., 38, 43, 54, 279. See also 

 Fish culture. 



Howitz, D., his paper on " Forest Pro- 

 tection and Tree Culture on Water 

 Frontages," vii., 263-275 



Howth, falling off in the herring fishery 

 there, xi., 116 



Hubrecht, Professor, remarks by, on 

 legislation with regard to sea fisheries, 

 iv., 430-432; his paper on Oyster 

 culture in the Netherlands, v.. 83 ; 

 xiii., 96, 97 ; his opinions as to im- 

 portance of investigations as to the 

 food of fishes, vi. , 297 



Hudson's Bay, whale fishery of, v., 35 ; 

 seal-fishery of, vii., 157 



" Huers " (watchers for pilchard shoals), 

 iv., 67 ; vi., 135 ; viii., 91, 292 



Hull, port of, smack apprentices, i., 

 16; ii., 231; reasons which induce 

 boat-owners to engage apprentices, 

 i., 1 6 ; desertions and punishment of 

 apprentices, i., 17 ; cruelty to appren- 

 tices,!., 17 ; ".,232 ; appointment of a 

 Board of Trade committee to enquire 

 into the same, i., 17; ii., 232; iv., 

 37 ; recommendations of the commit- 

 tee, i., 18; iv., 38; steam vessels 

 employed in the fishery, i., 44 ; 

 " coopers," or floating grog shops at 

 the fishing grounds, i., 45 ; demoral- 

 ising effect on the fishermen of 

 the cheap drink supplied by the 

 "coopers," i., 45 ; trawling, i., 256, 



262, 273, 511 ; viii., 334; Hull fishing 

 district, iv., 41 ; number of fishing 

 vessels, iv., 41 ; vii., 309; ix., 255 ; 

 number of fishermen employed, iv., 



41 ; casualties to fishing vessels, iv., 



42 ; loss of life among fishermen, iv., 

 43, 44, 45 ; statistics of the fishery, 

 iv. , 52 ; Hull the first port to adopt 

 the trawling system, iv. , 56 ; Nor- 

 wegian fish sent to Hull and thence 

 by rail to London, iv., 76 ; number 

 of "trawlers" hailing from Hull in 

 1863, iv., 90; loss of vessels of the 

 Hull fleet, iv., 388 ; table showing 

 railway rates for the conveyance of 

 fish from Hull, vii., 307 ; adoption 

 of the iceing and single boating sys- 

 tem, vii., 309 ; its fishing trade 

 founded by chance in 1844, vii., 314 ; 

 method adopted by Messrs. Hewitt 

 of sailing their fishing vessels, vii., 

 321 ; advantages of the single boating 

 system, vii., 321, 323 ; effects of legis- 

 lation on the apprentice system, vii., 

 325-326 ; rig of fishing vessels, viii., 

 335 > participation of Hull in the 

 herring fishery, xi., 131 ; invention 

 by Mr. G. Leach of a mode of curing 

 herrings by machinery, xi., 131 



Human body, structure and functions 

 of, described by Sir Henry Thomp- 

 son, vii., 5 



Humber, the, local statutes regulating 

 the fishing of, i., 213 ; a great fishing 

 station, ix., 5 ; the "Binks" shoals, 

 ix., 5 



Hungerford Fish Market, ix., 164 



Huningue fish-breeding establishment, 

 when established, ii., 6; mode of 

 transporting fish eggs, ii., 48; trout 

 rearing, ii., 58. See also Fish cul- 

 ture. 



Hunstanton whelk fishery, vi., 303 



Huron, Lake, salmon found in, vi., 

 64 



Huxley, Professor, P.R.S., inaugural 

 address at Conferences, iv., 3-19; 

 remarks by, on the excellence of the 

 method adopted by the United States 

 Government in dealing with the 

 fisheries question, v., 78; his paper 



