480 



Index. 



Chimaera family, the, 432. 



Chinese fish-culture, 348. 



Chinese fishing, 29. 



Chinese hook, 22. 



Chowder of sea bass and clams, 107. 



Chum-spoon, 67. 



Cisco or ciscoquette, 292. 



Clams, trade in, 340. 



Clergyman's contribution, a, 189. 



Clerk (A.) and Co., 63, 179, 184, 211. 



Clubs, bassing, 69. 



Coalfish, 430. 



Coast and estuary fishes, 46. 



Coast fishes and fisheries, 319. 



Codfish, the, 328. 



Cod family, the, 430. 



Cod-liver oil, 339. 



Colquhoun, John, on moving largefish, 

 248. 



Commercial values — Squeteague, 81 ; 

 sea bass, 108; ofLake fisheries, 315: 

 of mackerel, 323 ; of shad, 325 ; of 

 menhaden, 328 ; of salt-water fish- 

 eries, 339. 



Coney Island, fishing at, 80. 



Connecticut Eiver, 49. 



Cookery for sportsmen, 445 ; general 

 rules for, 458. 



Coste, M. , French commissioner, 40. 



Crooked Lake, fishes in, 283. 



Cross-fishing for salmon, 302. 



Cruelty of fishes, 43. 



Current wheel, 419. 



Cuttle-fish, 366. 



Dace and roach, 427. 



Daniell, Rev. W. B., 28, 36, 37. 



Davy, Sir Humphry, 28. 



DeBlainviUe, M., 40. 



Diploprion, the two-banded, 424. 



"Doctor, the," fishing with, 69. 



Dogfish, the large-spotted, the small- 

 spotted, the picked (or piked), 432. 



Dolphin of the ancients, 426. 



Dressing flies, 308. 



Dried codfish, 339. 



Drops, knots, and loops, 166. 



Dudong, the, 25. 



Duhalde, Father, on Chinese fish-cul- 

 ture, 347. 



Dumeril, M., 36. 



Eagle or whip ray, the, 433. 

 Eastport fishery, statistics of, 339. 

 Eel, the common, 436. 



Egyptian fishing, 19. 

 EUzabeth Islands, 77. 

 Encampment on St. John Eiver, 222. 

 EncyclopaediaBritannica, extract from, 



31. 

 English Neighborhood bridge, 49. 

 Enoplossus, the armed, 424. 

 Estuary catfish, the, 439. 

 Etelis, the ruby-colored, 424. 

 Europe, great lake trout of, 429. 



Fecundated spawn, 390. 



Fecundity of fishes, 41. 



Feeding, times for, 44. 



Feeding young trout or salmon, 392. 

 Field, " the London, 159. 



Findon haddocks, 342. 



Finn, Mr., 30. 



Fire Island, the fishing at, 94. 



Fish-culture, ancient and modem,347; 

 in Europe in early times, SSO'j of 

 this century, 355. 



Fish propagation assisted by art, 378. 



Flatfish family, the, 431. 



Flies, artificial, 30 ; natural, for sal- 

 mon and trout, 31 ; for trout, 176 ; 

 select artificial, for trout, 1 84 ; for 

 salmon, 306 ; lly-dressing, 308. 



Florida, black bass in rivers of, 284. 



Flounder, the, 116 ; the oblong, 431. 



Fly-fishing for trout, 154 ; on Massa- 

 piqua Lake, 162 ; on St. John Riv- 

 er, 244. 



Flying-fish, 429. 



Fly-rods, 1 73 ; modem splice for, 1 59. 



Francis Francis on rods, 210 j on spin- 

 ning baits, 301. 



French commission on fish-culture, 

 359. 



French hatching-boxes, 382. 



Frog, the fishing, 426. 



Furman's hatching-race, 401. 



Game laws, 151, 467. 

 Garfish, common, 429. 

 Gaspe, horse mackerel in Bay of, 135. 

 Gay lor, Charles, 123. 

 G^hin, Antoine,fish-culturist, 24, 356. 

 Geneva Lake, Wis., cisco in, 293. 

 Gibson, Sandy, guide and gaffer, 56. 

 Gillaroo trout, the, 256. 

 Gillone's (Mi. J.) process of propaga- 

 tion, 388. 

 Gilsten, Mr.,123. 

 Glass or wall-eyed pike, 288. 



