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1.
R. J. Ederer Company, 540 to 548 Orleans St., Chicago, Ill. : Cotton Trap Netting, Cotton Seine Netting, Purse Seines, Haul Seines, Royal Chinook Linen Gill Netting, Royal Chinook Salmon Twine
2.
Type of pen used in determining the rate of growth of the scallop. The sizes ranged from 40 to 400 square feet. The posts were made of 2 by 3 foot joists, fixed in the soil and placed at sufficient intervals to hold the netting firmly in position. Wire netting (1 1/4-inch mesh) and old seines of a suitable height were stretched around the posts
3.
Gill netting operation showing boats, nets and men working on a dock with fish catch, Oregon, ca. 1900
4.
Two men in mining camp, one with mosquito netting on his head, Seward Peninsula, ca. 1907
5.
Man wearing hat with mosquito netting, standing in stream with gold pan, location unknown, ca. 1899
6.
Man wearing hat with mosquito netting, panning for gold in stream with gold pan, location unknown, ca. 1899
7.
March 11, 1911 Page three
St. Patrick's dance
Indian lecturer to return
Judicial district unchanged
Met with serious injuries
Wire netting for fish traps
8.
April 16, 1910 Page four
Busy day along the water front yesterday
Wants more bonds for state school funds
Washington street is to be improved< br>Wire netting for fish traps arrived yesterday
9.
1912 Mountaineers Summer Outing to Mount Rainier, July 20-August 10
10.
Quinault men netting & spear fishing at low tide, mouth of the Quinault River, Washington, in drawing made 1886
11.
Clallam pole for netting ducks, in front of Mount Rainier, Washington, in engraving made 1792
12.
Clallam poles for netting ducks, Port Townsend, Washington, in engraving made 1792
13.
Fishermen dip netting smelt on the Cowlitz River, Washington, n.d.
14.
Fishermen dip netting smelt on the Cowlitz River, Kelso, Washington, n.d.
15.
Grayling Angling in England
Netting the Grayling
16.
Rearing ponds at Boca de Quadra Hatchery. Poles are placed across to sustain netting which prevents depredations of birds
17.
Trolling and gill netting for king salmon at mouth of stikine river
18.
This style of basket rake is used at Edgartown and Nantucket. The whole rake is made of iron, no netting being required, as thin iron wires 1/3 of an inch apart encircle lengthwise the entire basket, preventing the escape of any marketable quahaugs, while at the same time allowing mud and sand to wash out. This rake has 16 steel teeth, 1 1/2 inches long, fitted at intervals of 1 inch on the scraping bar. The depth of the basket is about 8 inches. Short poles not exceeding 30 feet in length are used, as the raking is carried on in water which does not exceed 25 feet in depth. Only the iron framework of the rake is shown.
19.
Basket rake covered with fine meshed wire netting, used at New Bedford and Fairhaven in the capture of the small seed quahaugs in the Acushnet River.
20.
Scallop Pusher.--This implement consists of a wooden pole, from 8 to 9 feet long, attached to a rectangular iron framework, 3 by 1 1/2 feet, fitted with a netting bag 3 feet in depth. The scalloper, wading in the shallow water, gathers the scallops from the flats by shoving the pusher among the eel grass. The photograph shows the correct position of the pusher in operation. Only a small part of the pole is shown
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