no 



FISHERIES EXHIBITION LITERATURE. 



53 ; number of seals taken in recent 

 years, v., 233 ; advantages of restric- 

 tion discussed, v., 233 ; payment of 

 crews of sealers, v., 234 ; xiii., 53 ; 

 substitution of steam vessels for sail- 

 ing vessels not advantageous, v., 234 ; 

 disposal of seals captured, v., 234 ; 

 extent and value of the herring fishery, 

 v., 235, 236; its salmon and lobster 

 fisheries, v., 237; total annual value 

 of its fisheries, v., 237-238; its re- 

 sources and the staple character of its 

 commerce, v., 238-239; its popula- 

 tion and revenue, v. , 239-240 ; neces- 

 sity for railway development, v., 

 240-246 ; area of the colony and 

 review of its condition, v., 241-245 ; 

 Captain Temple's paper on the seal 

 fishery, vii., 156-168; Mr. Ridley's 

 remarks on this fishery, vii., 169; 

 effect of fishery bounties upon the 

 development of the colony, ix., 185 ; 

 fishermen at one time forbidden to 

 settle there, ix., 186 ; repeal of 

 this law, ix., 186 ; gigantic cuttle 

 found off its coast, ix., 367, 368; 

 a large proportion of the population 

 engaged in the fisheries, xiii., 49 ; 

 value of the fisheries, xiii., 50, no ; 

 prosperity of the fishermen, xiii., 50 ; 

 plan adopted for curing the cod, xiii., 

 50 ; kind of vessels employed in the 

 cod-fishery, xiii., 52 ; modes of 

 capture, xiii., 52 ; disposal of the 

 different parts of the fish, xiii., 52 ; 

 value of the cod fishery, xiii., 52 ; 

 the seal fishery, xiii., 52 ; descrip- 

 tion of vessels, employed, xiii., 53 ; 

 varieties of seal taken, xiii., 53 ; pro- 

 ducts of the fishery, xiii., 54 ; the 

 herring and other fisheries, xiii., 54 ; 

 condensed report on the fishing indus- 

 tries of the island, xiii., 378-383 



Newark and Muskham Fishery Asso- 

 ciation, iii., 159 



Newark Bay (United States), clams for- 

 merly found there, v., 44 



Newbury and District Angling Associa- 

 tion, iii., 123 



Newcastle-on-Tyne, the Newcastle 

 "kipper," ii., 222; xi., 131; its 



participation in the herring fishery by 

 means of trawlers, xi., 131 



New Ground Bank falling off in supply 

 of turbot, iv., 344 



New Hampshire, Fish Commission 

 formed, v., 13; statistics of its fish- 

 eries and their value, v., 24, 25, 29, 

 31 



Newhaven (England), casualties to fish- 

 ing boats, iv., 42, 43 ; loss of life 

 among fishermen, iv., 43, 44 



Newhaven (Scotland), celebrity of its 

 fishwives, ii., 196 



New Haven (United States), its im- 

 portance as a fishing port, v., 5 



New Jersey, statistics of its shad and 

 alewife fisheries, v., 41 ; its valuable 

 crab fishery, v., 50; statistics of its 

 general fisheries, v., 24, 25, 29, 31 



New London, an American fishing port, 

 v., 5; fishing for the swordfish car- 

 ried on there, v., 52 



New Orleans, a local centre for the 

 Gulf of Mexico fishery, v., 19 



Newquay (Cornwall), the pilchard fish- 

 ery carried on there, vi., 137; its 

 harbour capable of extension, ix., 25 



New Providence (Bahamas), general 

 description, v., 372; its value as a 

 sanatorium, v., 392 



New Richmond (Canada), the cod fish- 

 ery there, v., 121 



New Shoreham, an American fishing 

 port, v., 5 



New South Wales, principal features of 

 the collections from this colony at 

 the International Fisheries Exhibi- 

 tion, v. , 307 ; apprehensions enter- 

 tained there of the exhaustion of the 

 sea fisheries, xiii., 24 ; small number 

 of persons engaged in these fisheries, 

 xiii., 24 ; periodical visits to these 

 coasts of large shoals of mackerel, 

 xiii., 25 ; vessels used in the fisheries, 

 xiii., 25 ; tinned fish, xiii. , 25 ; oyster 

 fisheries, xiii., 26 ; seal fishery, xiii., 

 26 ; the dugong, xiii., 26 ; condensed 

 report on the fishing industries of the 

 colony, xiii., 384-390 



Newton Weir, salmon ladder there, ii., 

 329 



