Kamon Fish shop owner of Ebisu, Ryotsu Town, comes to Kanazawa Village ever day to sell fish
- People
- Time
- Owner Organization

Ebisu coastline street in Ryotsu. The Minato Taxi office in the front and Hatoya tobacco shop in the back still stand today
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

August, 15th Year of Taisho, fireworks to celebrate the start of the boating season at Ryotsu Town. The crowd cheers the spectacular colors
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

People purifying their bodies in the waterfall basin of the nearly 40 meter-high "Hourikiwako Falls," located upstream of Waki River in Ryotsu Town
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Elementary school students lined up for a picture near Shiizaki in Ryotsu overlooking beautiful Kamo Lake
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Drying shrimp fishing nets on the shore of Lake Kamo in Ryotsu where sea water enters freshwater lake. It is also a place for oyster farming
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

MONOMANIACS 5: THE REGULATOR: The word regulator normally applying to a type of machine, may wall also be applied to the individual above. One finds in Paris, said to be the most spiritual town in the most spiritual country in the Universe, several dozen particular men whose sole intellectual occupation is to regulate, each day, their watch on the shot of midday from the canon of the Royal Palace. Here, gunpowder makes those happy who will never set the world on fire
The National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo
Union Catalog of the Collections of the National Art Museums, Japan

Parisian Freebooters 12: The Crocodile: This has to do with a variety of species of Crocodile, which was known to the ancients under the name of Tantalus and which a Gymnasium naturalist of our time has called the Gastronome without money. This voracious whale-like creature is most commonly found in the localities of Merchants of Eatables. His teeth are pointed and very long from lack of exercise, since he uses only his eyes to devour. When he has had the perseverance to remain for a whole day static in front of his prey he sometimes ends up by having the luck to catch... a crick in the neck. He feeds himself only on desires and vain hopes, he is also remarkably thin. Very different from other fish of his species that swim in open water, this type of Crocodile is always in the dry
The National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo
Union Catalog of the Collections of the National Art Museums, Japan
Last Updated: 2021-03-14
Uploaded: 2026-03-25
