FISHERIES EXHIBITION LITERATURE. 



and Tweed, iii., 632; Treatyse of 

 Fysshynge with an Angle, iii. , 566 ; 

 611 ; True Art of Angling, iii., 610; 

 Universal Angler, iii., 594 ; Vayne 

 conseytes of folysche love undyr 

 colour of fysching and fowlyng, iii., 

 563; Waterside Sketches, iii., 632; 

 Young Man's Companion, iii., 612; 

 Young Sportsman's Delight (1712), 



"i., 538 

 Worms, found in great numbers in 



black mud of sea-bottom, vi., 277 ; 



very destructive to timber, ix., 88 

 Worship of ponds of fish, and certain 



rivers, in West Africa, v., 442 

 Wrasses, anatomical, details, i., 147; 



ii., 150; varieties, i., 148, 149; 



habits, i., 150 

 Wounds inflicted by fish, frequently 



poisonous, viii., 32 



Wright's submerged wave-action hatch- 

 ing box, ii. , 82 

 Wycombe Angling and Preservation 



Society, iii., 123 

 Wye, River, law of time of George I. 



establishing close time for salmon, 



iv., 206 ; appearance of salmon 



disease, vi., 5 ; its polluted condition, 



vii., 40-42 

 Wytheville, United States America, 



hatching station, v., 68 



Xiphias (sword-fish), csecal appendages 



in this fish, vi., 274 

 Xiphida (sword-fishes), i., 119; vi., 



274 



"Yagers" (Dutch steam-carriers), ii., 

 263 



" Yair-fishing," ii., 218 



Yangtsze, the river, provision made for 

 lighting it, v., 171, 175 



Yarmouth, Great, one of the principal 

 English fishing ports, i., 9; descrip- 

 tion of vessels employed in drift net 

 fishing, i., 284; mode of working, i., 

 285 ; description of the work con- 



nected with fishing for herring, ii., 

 218, 219 ; the principal seat in Eng- 

 land of the herring fishery, ii., 219; 

 xi., 129, 133; boats used there, ii., 

 220 ; xi., 133 ; mode of payment of 

 crews of fishing vessels, ii., 221 ; 

 modes of curing herring, ii., 222; 

 discovery by Mr. Bishop of the 

 bloater-cure, ii., 222; " kippers, "ii., 



222 ; number of vessels employed in 

 the Yarmouth herring fishery, ii., 



223 ; Yarmouth trawlers, ii., 231 ; 

 one of the principal ports on the east 

 coast of England for trawlers, iv. , 90 ; 

 increase in the number of vessels em- 

 ployed, iv., 90; division of profits 

 between owners and crews of fishing 

 vessels, iv., 163; social condition of 

 fishermen, iv., 173 ; growth of trawl 

 fishery there, iv., 313; bull-trout 

 caught there, vi., 185 ; number of 

 vessels employed in trawling, vii., 

 308; fisheries carried on there, viii., 

 335; vessels employed, viii., 335; 

 system of apprenticeship not gene- 

 rally followed, vii}., 335 ; wages of 

 boys, viii;, 335 ; failure of the mack- 

 erel fishery, viii., 335; necessity for 

 formation of deep-water entrance to 

 harbour, ix. , 5 ; importance of Yar- 

 mouth as a fishing port, ix., 255 ; 

 antiquity of the herring fishery at 

 this place, xi., 134 ; Yarmouth "free 

 fair," xi., 135, 137; discovery by 

 Peter Chivalier, a Yarmouth mer- 

 chant, of a method of curing herring, 

 xi., 138; quantity of fish annually 

 delivered there, xi., 160 



Yarmouth luggers, number of nets used 



by them, xi., 133 



Yarmouth, U.S.A., a fishing port, v., 5 

 Yarrell, extracts, &c., from his work 



on British fishes, i., 413, 416 

 Yeddo. See Tokio. 

 Yelk, or umbilical sac in fish, vi., 276 

 Yellow-tail, the, a fish of the Austra- 

 lian seas, its habits, v., 323 ; its 

 value as bait, v., 323 

 Yellow trout fishing, ii., 375, 378, 383 

 Yerseke oyster beds, first steps to- 

 wards prohibiting public fishing at, 



