ANGLING, FISHES, AND FISH CULTURE. 85 
“Ang. 18.54.3 Jackson, John, of Tanfield Mill. The practical fly- 
fisher; more particularly for grayling or umber. 3d ed. 
London, efc. 1880. 8° pp. (4),57+. Wdcts. and 10 
col. plates. 
Biographical sketch, pp. 45-46. 
This work is dedicated to T. H. B., i.e. T. H. Barker, who completed it 
after the death of the author. 
Ree Ist edition, 1854. 
_ Ang. 17.18 ([Jacob, Giles.] The compleat sportsman; in three 
est parts. 1. Containing the nature and various kinds of game, 
_ with the best methods of taking the same. 2. Of the best 
situations and methods of erecting and management of 
: parks, &c., of hunting the buck, doe, &c. 3. Of fish and 
" fishing; the most successful methods of angling, the only 
proper baits, tackle, and seasons for taking all sorts of fish, 
etc. [London.] 1718. sm.12° 
‘* Fish and fishing,’’ pp. 114-152. 
Ang. 48.12 Jacobi, Stephen Ludwig. Lettre sur la fécondation arti- 
— ficielle des ceufs de saumon et de truite. Wdct. (Appended 
| to COSTE, J. J. M.C. V. Instructions pratiques sur la pis- 
ciculture, 1853, 12°, pp. 130-139.) | 
Written in 1763 to the editor of the Hannoverisches magazin. Other 
articles on fish culture by the same author appeared in this magazine. An 
English translation of one of them was published in London in 1778, signed 
S. L. Jacobs, and is said to be the first notice in English of fish culture. 
Ang. 49.11 James, William Powell. From source to sea; or, Glean- 
ings about rivers in many fields. London. 1884. sm. 8° 
‘They are treated successively as physical phenomena and geological 
agents, as elements of picturesque scenery, as the seats of vegetable and animal 
life, and as connected with the history, religion, and industry of man. Finally, 
a slight contribution is made to the difficult task of determining the meaning 
of their names.’’—Preface. 
3 Ang. 47- 28.3 Jardine, Szr William, dart. The natural history of 
fishes of the perch family. Edinburgh, e¢c. 1835. Port. 
of Sir Foseph Banks, engr. title-page, wdcts., and 34 plates. 
(Jn his Naturalist’s library, 1835, 16°, [xxxviii.].) 
. ‘¢ Memoir of Sir Joseph Banks,’’ pp. 17-48. 
ae The engraved title-page and all of the plates but two, are colored. 
This is called ‘‘ Naturalist’s library. Ichthyology. Vol. i.’ 
The same. [With an appendix.] Edinburgh, 
etc. 1882. Port. of Sir Foseph Banks, engr. title-page, 
wdcts., and 35 plates. (/n his Naturalist’s library, 1852, 
16°, xxxviii. ) 
‘‘ Memoir of Sir Joseph Banks,’”’ pp. 15-48. 
The engraved title-page and all of the plates but two, are colored. 
The appendix consists of extracts from Walton’s ‘‘ Complete angler ’’ con- 
taining observations on the perch, ec. 
49.47 
