201 
No. 19 . — Caique (original), or row-boat. Constantinople, 
Turkey. A pleasure boat. 
No. 20. — Stand. Model of fishing boat used near Curacoa, 
Danish West Indies. 
No. 21. — Model of punt, or scow, used for ferrying and gen- 
eral transportation purposes in the harbor of Curacoa, Danish 
West Indies. 
No. 22. — Stand. Model of fishing boat of the type used on 
the Sea of Gallilee in time of Christ. The model was made in 
Syria. 
No. 23. — Daighsa (original). Locally called “ Bumboat” by 
English sailors. Daighsas are used sometimes for pleasure, but 
generally by Jewish merchants who peddle produce and fruits 
around Maltese harbors. Hence the inscription upon the seat- 
back in the stern-sheets: “Heartily, wishing, all, sort, of, wealth, 
to, mankind, and, that, I, may, have, chance, to, live, honestly, 
with, same.” Valetta, Malta. 
No. 24. — Clinker built fishing boat (original), used in the 
cod fisheries of the Lofoten Islands. From Bodoe, Nordel, and 
Norway. 
No. 25. — Dugout, with sail (original). Colon, Colombia 
South America. 
No. 26. — Bragazza (original). A carvel-built two-masted 
fishing vessel of Venice, Italy. The sails are artistically painted, 
showing the survival of ancient Phoenician art influences among 
the Adriatic fishermen. On the foresail the inscription runs: 
“Peace to thee, St. Mark, my evangelist.” 
No. 27. — Single-masted pleasure boat (original), from Aren- 
dal, Nedenaes, Norway. Ornamented at stem and stern by hand 
carvings. Clinker-built. 
No. 28. — Stand. Wooden model of the “Santa Maria.” A 
piece of wood from each Exposition Building (except concession 
stands), erected before May ist, 1893, in Jackson Park, is incor- 
porated in this model, which is made to an exact scale. 
On the North and South Walls are hung pictures from 
the West Coast of South America, from Africa, Asia, and the 
United States — illustrating many primitive and other craft, includ- 
ing types of the highest development of wooden-bottomed Amer- « 
ican sailing vessels. 
