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Show jr oiviiM i V '?"' TT . jC f r;u tv ma tiny fellows f5nd fnod pUscosf from hungry birds, hidtnjr under .and amorg tiio creeo. V are tc.d that1 ttrfemi effected for plactir.g trout must V be oftbe iort that continues How State Cares For Babj Trout. t l , t Planting Fry and fingerlings Attended With the Ut; " mot Caution Sou to Prevent' Pouible Loa in Transport&tion and Attack From Larger Specimens of Fumy 'Tribe How Streams of State Are Stocked With Trout by Department of Fish And Game ut&lUtfcT AKWS SATURDAY, NUVEMBtK 'rei' SVnw. would drni stranded "jteavwthetittle-fls- Air f devised the micrometer by which adjuatmeat ' of the instnitntau could to made so crfullv that in- other-nai- l had to bo xnade for the ions maker to bring ,hu end up l again, yuhofjt bothering1 to trace this history further it may be tbat-bsubsequent unpttv tnaeitti A Series ol Articles' oil the Contribution of" Scientific Research in both lenses and oca le adjustto Ufamaa Welfare inwo ment fan today read these secstruments to Wairun ond. or ths angle mads by our psn- By Prest- - F. S. HARRIS and K. L BUTT . feet Aof the Brigham Young University. How-ir- r, our bridge maker will get along well enough if til instrument Ho. 31 Development of Engineering reads tn 10 or even J 9 seconds so he need not concern himsef about hiah.Jh memetiUv Instruments. the detteste astronomer has attained Another d ff.culty experienced by tbe astronomers was tn determin- th uninitiated, ths aecnracy ends and after much curving and ms Just where the center of ths TOof the engineer seems at times twisting the two met sad coincided 'f.eld of observation was while they w ill its than a foot of error. were measuring their angles. Pi-I- n a!moi uncanny. Take, for ini tba Iioosac tunnel in Amri-cartoward the close of the savstance, tho construction of the St. es. the alignment was even more enteenth eenturv. solved this prob-exaileie ihey started to dr ve lem by adding those Invaluable aids Gothard tunnel connecting SwitfS.ObO foot tunnel from the surveyor, the spider-wezerland and Italy. This tunnel wna the ends and also from a shaft sunknotho In , j;nM crossed so that the exact beneath a to paaa for nine miles m the ddle fin one a.de th two CTIUer of the fieid t. always before mountain wh.ch rose to a b ighl of over a mile above the tunnel at one tfipneie differed five sixteenths-e-- f tt 8 ptcard, by the way. was to twist was point. The tunnel The Service of Science ntT' ty Khs. , ?- zf i&J wiw1 V5 V .,, WITH THE GREAT WRITERS DAXIE2 y- BT ALFRED LDCBOCRTfl, lf D EAR ! few ofduringtheUst plans for 'the futuis d. ct re- ceives a few words of appreciation from ous host and then we hasten on. Our Way l.ads dow beautiful Provo Canyon, through her City, tbe biggest city for its size in across and America', pasiorai Pro- - b r proper 'diLrooe at tho other wide. The ordinary Person might think -hat this twist.ng around Inside of had cr t before emergirg ?hrnre of tie earth's ?& - tunneXo READER. I have Just picture; the or giral wee painted by an Englsh artist, and ahowre an historical event, whlcfi took place at Temple Bar,1 fiB'the City -- of London, in the year 17S. In that picture there ie a 'portrait, not the one at the head ! this writing yet of the same man What a portrait ie t hut one m the historical picture! Themanstards upon a high pedestal ard looks at tis through a huge wooden frame. We aee the head and the hands only, for they emerge through open.pga in the oak. and we rSc at once that the man la placed tbere for punishment. and to be rid iu!ed and la- - rf Warden on the Job we recross Shingle Creek and make for Kamas. Here Mr. Tingey meets a game warden who gives every evidence of "being on tho Job." His report of things Soon rnn thr whto A , " rt rtk- ZZ, 1924 one-ha- dajs and are certainly encouraging. He a do'jjg that tho surrmin'ilr.g croxJ m holding tip flowers, or decorating fboTro. theretnld h actually measured all dis- - .telescopes up Prei their admiration and ! a mountain without having outside fT wai for the writer who waa thus lore, of the eighteenth re rire ofuTe "he !nmher not with a jarusikk aa jou lances, Ul1 to placed l0k tatcteS to bjm 1 would Pleasure a house or that the glass was not suitable fori brings - the au- and utter confusion, bat and game from a jho In fact, untutne street, but hv ihe aid of .nst-n- .i making lenses this Red coated soli era ments of preo sin wnifh gave the chem.sta. a Ton time-aftWe' vTsittlrsmSresting place men rknS from boilt sides of facts push back the on which indirect calculations stepped in and corrected the trouble, crowd them In other words the picand still mountain ,he expect while Mr Tmgr Joncludes-unless ! W'm"how was be could made imperfect these With instruthe glass on the ture in find each other represents Daniel De Foe in rangemenu for shipping the Brook it is possible to measure die tactly the proper kind of sand waa ih P.lSnnr. the h, whither he was sent Persians jot even ths Mosaic ll1? fac-an trout M the. head waters .of ah i lrf taoees-th- at cannot be t in making it. - But even where. twu.v Provo. We see the hundreds of1' ft,,m rih !n h outcome o. such a. the distance if it eye for an eye, and a tooth for a orTgood moon the to available, tra. of ' gias. and which of little fingerlings in their cradle thi was to are be O. pumchment there tooth. yes. plenty two roThadVoprerV.Topoiar oa or that between followed by a two years' imprisonf ne racial raarmls who ought to be even though It Is trouble because the tight ride to future habitats. We wish the delation registering the vert iuZposa'biethe toearth In ment JusAnd what modern a thus sa'd punched; yet, ecn them not pass through it w.thout separthem a pleasant Journey and then j ou' level,' making at.owance for The accuracy ofgotlic-- e ca'.ciilaUbna colored the London Gazette of July 31. tice it is that debtor's prison are ' raction of the mountain for the into its component Join Mr. Tingey in a delightful 17'3 ating abolished i Thinl of ths shilling a on maure-menu of reels t bob, watching for possible depend ot making rays. One of the mathematicians everting ride to our homes in gall plum day payment. aqgiea THiseasJie done the lime demonstrated mathematiImprisoned for Writing. ths tunnel Lake City. The day has been ent errors. Expecting d ony with titstrumen's of great del- cally that thin defect oould be cor"Daniel Foe. alias De Foe, this of pleasure and profit. We have 'from the ether side of the And what of It suppose tho . This measurement New-icacy." tvpe cf tn rte of the famous miles of Interesting tend- - tain to meet , required fa'th the day stood in the Pillory at Temple Shakespeare does not repeat? Th in : rected statement particularly advan'ageoua on the to contrary. in puruanc of his sentence, same with the scriptures, but that Bar, tory and gleaned bushels of ideas" kind of faith that is basedexera structures br dee spans-JThe faith waa made a aertea of civ-- n regarding coveted trout and the knowledge. aga'nst him at the Laat ts no reason why we should not where a Ivrre en-,.-r wou!i h, in Dolland in 1793 tn which -- he found tw-on- s workings of our active state fush cised. and tbe works were wrought. of the Old Bailey, for repeat many times some declaraexperiments' both from were driven crown Tunnels and game department. flint and wr.t.cg and publishing a seditious tion of the Bard or read over some thafbyhecombining Aucient Engineering Fra (a the correct all could libel, entitled. The Shortest Wsy passages of the Book. Therefore The ancients frformed engi- glass trouble of this sort. With the Diasentors. And so ws w will repeat th old truism: neer rg feats which aometiraeiA at- light In another article, the compass, get our fret glimpse of the author Happy is th man who has found The his hfs work. Think of Daniel De tract our admiration. with the discoveries and of Robinson Crusoe, iinle tunnel bringing water together which have made it an And while we are on ths subject Foe. if you can, the author of th calculations lo Jcruaalem and the m le waier-supp- invaluable 'aid to the eng neer are of book, that rop.cture. let us look at another tunnel of Athena both of which In its original form. BY Jf. H.l PAUL, rxnr ERSITY OF IT AH. .ore In this picture we see a rough mance an which were probably built during discussed. Instruction and delight to th - YVliat Science Has Done. n Isador hlof the olden ftyde, seated old a well as the young, tho seventh century B. C., are think et seaman's a White The Cabin. Chapters 4, 7. Children to read tn- upon chest, the the are that man as first a hosier, a structure, but they It was not until after 1 TEACH re itiveiy simple no complicating scone bad taken on much of. it lomd' abore, and looking diaeon-preseand a woollen merchant; and all knowledge The Kelt Lake tw Inman and or no pre,owr.d lh aaJla f a al1P yet so D Foe was. No English refinement that eng.neer-is open to them. This was tbe Xrall. chaptersCody IS. 17. IS. end 1 The Roman ing began to have a place in the 'hat ts vanishing below thw d slant writer. It is accord 4 to the man cision being required word of Juarez to the teachers of London of the Wild tnunl rti In ir Lakd Fucino is exact the picture Is that of who graced th Pillory tn Temple science. From Ihe Ftanc. One comment upon thj Complete. The Calf 3 4 miles long, but the Selkirk, the original of Bar, has ever surpamed P Foe la have been not ible Alexander there history message and upon that of 'bit-soLondon White Fang Complete aboit are very Iriegular. Fliny engineering feat In almost evry the power of painting fictitious Crusoe, as he was dent Coolidge on Education Week. W'ilder-Ib- y Robert Wisdom of the a!d romed events In the color of truth. Taka the sands of the t tunnel the Homan upon speaking tf but they wernrrey an experienced Writer, was: A Complete. so 40 of were the sunk for instance, that passage of the Joan shafts Kernande. old that The as can the much better, more useful education Ron.tnj'frd 11 Vol. Book. Sketch Irving where Robinson Crusoe work could progress rapidly; the tunnel mentioned.' In that 'fcotch eailor did not Imagine that narrative temalic -- ndisin be got from two years already Trait. and "Philip " with JU Uma required be-t5 ijunont in f lo ts startled by seeing th print of years " ffi vqgdsr-lsfiaesgtscu sf wtatByof seul6MAifi9,JiiftSAirt. y lilt o f men. 000 aated. of k itw So, uewwAjve efer hi t.0U; stu0gi of cost, especial y labor planted in the young by ww. Chapters , J, and 1. his Island; th reading of that The Roman tunnel offer a good gardlessWhat dent in his four years et college. , . Grinneil canering companions his expert of science has done for enee of cost. 7ndians anToday: event millions upon has startled modern and between contrast would furnish the material There is trutb in this poorly word- - Chapters I, 2 and 7. char.ee In engineering is to give, it aleast cient eng ncering efficiency. from which .romancer. would up- millions of youthful readers for efed declaration, but the writer failwith the work My Friend tho Into the McLaughlin do now. How real three centuries drtvmg the 12 k. mile Simplon ed lo Indicate what he means by dian. Chapters 4, 7. S. 9 and Ilk countless millions of over deter- hold htm-t- o th fancied event seerosl "H e . railroad tunnel through tbe Alps fort and cost. To be able Isto one This "reading of the right kind. The Prairie Chapters our of the race. Tet auch waa th ease, man Friday" he has become a Cooper dimensions mine exactly modern required engineers lack I a.m to supply. tie Foe was not to be daunted by character of th world. The 1, 2, 29. 24. 27. IS. 29. and 30. 6 1 years and tbe maximum the first requisites of economy .In hie first fright Garland The Book of the Amer- about appearance in th pillory of th savages, too, at th discharge Books For Home Reading. number of men used waa about engineering. at ican Indian. Tempi Bor, nor his subsequent of Crusoe's gun. that episode Any part of the development "Whet everyone should read is has we figure the wages This Should example 3,000. in Newgate goal. H been copied by later writers ad InThe last six books give in brief of a man for a year as 900 in of ths surveyors transit 1 only one imprisonment sufficiently set forth. I Judge, in wrote a to th Hymn Pillory." When a finitum. Simbe 14 becomes the'Cnlvers.t'y of writer No. of Bulletin the Roman and ihe among the many that might wTcoer" Im inr making Six Weeks of Home Read- for used to show the Influence of sci- and also a second political pamph popular, his fame grows like money Utah plon tunnels, the cost per mile and Garland are especially good. would be about 47,003 thou- ence on the engineer's instrument let so again the satirist was ar- that earns compound interest In a Ing" labor published by the Deseret Novel of Western Life. and imprisoned, and also bank. So hoe grown the popularity News Book Company of Salt Lake) sand dol.are for fhe Roman and 80 and tools. Tbe engineer draws from rested Books of western fiction of dollars for the Simplon all sciencre and arts. He must fined tn tbmnn of eight hundred and fame, of the story of Robinson -City. A copy of thia bulletin, if thousand in every home of the Rocky rr high grade end true to life are tunnel. This make nearly sixty have a dependable tape when he la pounds. Indeed a large sum for the Crusoe. Crusoes remorse for hi man te obtain by the use past life was that all Imaginary, Mountain region, would be a safe the following: l mes as much for the Roman a making very accurate measure- daring Balch The Bridge of the Gods, the of hia pen He appear tp have or woe It from srlthln the reflex to the family and to every in the guide engineers woven yet The ments. Simplon, tape ordinary Winter The Virginian, member thereof, whether that had harder rock and likely Co stretch and they Is no suddenly wearied of politics and of some hour of X Foes? But the Simplon The Covered that is a question somewhat too in member Hough in tbe first grade tn the Wago. encountered and ktdiil fight natural material at hand which ts controversy end thrust his att-- n Curwood The Country Beyond, athey ethical, only it might be a clue Into or tn any other Which would hare filled Just suited for such a device. The tion to romantic and narrative fl public schools. spring' fulL grade, or in the high school, or in .and the Alaskan, world has learned the th workings of the authors wonthe Roman tunnel'about physicist to- tton. Tbe tie university. Nevertheless fort Gray K dors of the Purple Sage, Also In making the Simplon the metallurgist and the no on has ever exceeded derful Imagination, we mean to that by combin resnit; the writer's conscious or the average man or woman perhaps ' Wright The Winning of Barbara height of the mountain prohib- gether have foundnickel and man- De Foe, in fhe aapower of making methods of work But that ing steel with the best beginning would be that Worth. ited work except from the two ganese fiction appear absolute truth. an material Ideal almost be added these To , which is prescribed for engineering might ends. Curios tv leads us to Inquire Perhaps title literary power . wa. might haa1nt.rerd people. pe in the autumn quarter nt men The Oregon Trail, and Park- - what has happened to make men for a taps Is found. It expands due. to hia vivid imagination, and plea, cold at the university. Jer The Seats of the M.ghty, the- on Jobs of this kind 50 or 0 times and: contracts due to heat and He in cer hia skill took analysis: Its of oiiTy about with former dealing "Th early explora- as efficient as they were I90 Whig Party" qqirm FaToreJ iw.N and tain facts from the legend of AJex blessed tfEnglish the latter, with frontier life years ago. today know what they once length. It is tough, rust proof, reaander Selkirk, but transmuted stood for; we First of all. everyone whose home j tlon; under i the north, nor are fret nor can. otherwise do dependable is In tbe West should read certain those facts In the Are of hie gen- If they stood for some History of Instrument. sonable care. Rhymes of the West, and until they stand forth aa ths noble principle, peace andeacred Muir. Mills, within tbe last few years, many ius. parts of threeeuthore a Let us consider first the differto wishes The place honor be engineer and Pack. They will make him authors have essayed to write ence in accuracy, using the sur- bridge pier In the middle of a ris- actualities while Selkirk ie com- to their memory, end If not I W proud that his lot is cast tn the verses upon western life. veyors instruments as an Illustra- er and must sink a hole to bed- paratively forgotten. But such Is bare not read De Foes Controvermountains of the West, and will The following are recommended; tion. The first surveying instru- rock to get a firm foundation. He genius. sial pamphlet en that subject: but eonvfnca him of a dirty that he we have definite, w have read - Robinson Cnsu Chapman Out Wherg the WestJ7 ments of which Lrft Many Debts. water casing owes to this land to conserve iu Begins information were those used bv the could put a the watertight and know that R Is a piece of th oitf and let Let us take another peep pump rapidly vanishing forests and the, ciarke The Bun and Biddle Egyptians They were crude affairs, down, "He died in 1731, leaving behind worlds permanent literature. resources which the forests pro Leatbaa useful mainly in keeping the line the men work at the boirom. But A pyramid of hooka, so large it him many debts, and ab host of vide. ' itL measurement straight. In one experimentalists tohave found that n Trails. Clarke water works amounting to two hundred that it might be- - seen- - for many pump ths Muir Our National Parks, I a instruments is unnecessary of the old Egyptian Davies The Skyline Trail. miles could be contributed out of book filled with the beauty of ths we find perhaps the first germ of out. Air under pressure will hold and ten books and pamphlets." E. Lincoln The Ranch. Rather industrious Was he not? the many editions that have apfran-- it the water back; hence large air Western out.of-doon- i, set forth In Service The Spell o.f the Yukon. the modern wassurveyor's hardW debts peared of Robinson Crusoe; and choice and vigorous language. The - Service Ballade of a Cheechako. However, it developed large'v corn press. on engines are installed. And about those edge of golden crowns might be last chapter, especially, is one that to facilitate astronomical observa- From the laboratory experiments ly believe that Daniel De Foe was an com pa and Haynes Harrison, laid it from tbe money will stir the blood of Westerners. tions It was simply two rings, one the eng.neer can calculate Just how owing tbe world very largely when value around Verse, Campfire which they have representOf life. 'T course, be departed this Pack Our tanlshtng Forest Is of which had two fingers nr.rh pressure will be exerted In the a ed. What Western Literature. was He Foe might not Individuals to Fogmer pity money owng a work that tells bet could which to sight and which of ths rapidly diout the water and whether Books relatingr to thk growth. ' holding world at large, and have paid those debts of his that i n revolved In the second nrg o that tjje men can WOrk under such pres-th- e and not to tbe minishing timber supply, and indi- lan th followed him of to Aid not th grave with to owe we De Foe. cates some of the consequences of developmentliveand.ttfe which the sights had sure. The same law of the pres- what the Rocky moun-wlt- h beendistance but some of those golden coins. No the timber famine and tbe fight wbich we moved could be determined sure of gases ts used in several en- pay them, his creditor I But they are reab-terbeside his? True there are other law the floods that Must follow i tain The accuracy that could be obtaintools such os ths pneu- those Ilk the autumn leave of tbe Medea and the the destruction of the forests.. - j sought after, I fancy. If it were ed with such devices is not to be gineering mewater certain matic hammers, Mills The Mountain ?en,ly ridiculed, but these instruments ters. drills, pumps, etc. Rocky M rih-arvt would be far too crude for use in Wonderland. Read these topics: eiarl l aaetkas fence caret I aried; -In the devices ... far measuring modern bridge surveying.The Forest Frontier, Snowe works dealing chief i;T the strength f the materials with Wild Folk.1 Forest History and vfl advancement next distinct The wild life. came in condition which he builds, th engineer must ,wl'h Mountain Lakes. tbe sixteenth In pioneering episode of the through th work of Tychocentury, In addition to there threw which Brahe deal in tremendous pressure. a man who even today might be order to measure such pressures, may be read in whole or In part, of western writer favorite Th of one the the laws he of books, multiplication of some a cranky star gazer. any following tew generation ago were chiefly called by life which 'dr-a-l with the same Of clSe-- J lever, slated TJchd' Became tn en- forces rj- me Early'In with choice Miller, poetry hr related topics, may be read at Joaquin thusiastic student of astronomy. by the old Greek experimenter and time permits, taking ths parts or 9 ' Mark - Twain. - The latter, in- Considerable of his time was spent philosopher Archimedes, must be Roughing it; Tom Fawjer. Hucklo- - measuring the angles between the krtown the chapter Indicated: These same laws or used " s, berry Firm, uand Life on the MissisNot that he had in the T engineers eolleetlor. of anec- - different stars.use gave aippi. for these meas- cranes, and similar Implements. any paitcular Mill Wild Lite on tho Rockies, dotes and character that will to wished he but still urement. instruments the enBesides the any of the topics was he In demand- - Then there peruses there are many Mills Adventure of a Mature wa Bret Htrte, with the Luck of get those angle measurement woodgineer fect. He built himself a great ' others whch he uses tndrectly Guide. Several chapters. Camp, ths Argonauts, and en quadrant with a radius of 19 National Parka Roaring Jftils Tour through th bands Of specialist on western, and largely others, feet so and had that It graduated . 22 and 2L The meteorthe different science It 21, To- in with pioneer conditions. 1 minute he ceuid-rea- d of angles Mills Spell of the Rockies, furnishes rain, frost and new senes charac is ologist a there Is that about that the angle Wealth of Weeds, Insects, Dr. terlxed by appreciation and under mlcroscopisr studies 'be made by the diameter wind data, the R ood pecker, The ktaker of Scen- - jEtHdlny. not alone of westers peo- - would s'ructnre and looks for of a lead pencil 76 feet away This the minute tT The Fate of s Tree Seed.. p)e of the pioneer type, but of the was th most accurate instrument the causes of the deterioration of Muir 4tep Trail. Chapters 4, 5.J western the made to far and with it Tycho rtiarenals , of construction; us th works. of nature es piled up such a mass o4 depend-a- phmist studies the expansion and Muir Mountains of California. give wet aa those of man. They deal concerning the heav- contraction of the various metals Chapters I, 3,I J. and 11- : natural thing as they are seen enly figures bodies that Kepier was able used, and the astronomer keep Muir The Yoeemlte. Chapter 6 with more who those truly. perceive to discover th law of th pianet-ar- y track of the magnettq, pole for by 7, 8. 9. and 11. more fully, that , movements which later led to h tn r. Pastimea blendlnVg of man and Roosevelt nature, which Newton s famous law Thu we see that the engineers Chapter 1, 2. 8, 4, and 5. )a but apprehended by.th wholly After Tychos observations had instruments are. almost Roosevelt A Book Lovers Holi- average dimly seman. which but Is the led to such wonderful results, there adaptations from the different days in the Open. 1, 2., 8, 7, 8, 10. cret of superiority In a great al e- success is dewas acThe a Mil! desire National of for the engineer Yard Book gres'er the finest literature of the past. curacy but that was so close as pendent upon h.s ability to do with Parks. Chapters 10. 21, 22, sad 13. of What one should read after he the could bk read with the one dollar whot a could angles Life. Indian and Pioneering has read works dealing with hit naked eye. Fortunately, however, somehow accomplish bungler wtlh two dol- p2 er -- -- j tw , f. moun-eovere-- r i Books for Western People baby trout crown BT D. W. rARRATT. was In Jane of this year when made the trip here referred to .a few dare after the streams had been thrown open to fishermen. On the opening day all of the nearby streams were literally ... lined, with anxious men, women and children .and all night, cans on roads were alive with restless sportsmen speeding lo more distant nooks "where llveth the finny tribe.'' We had longed for Just such a trip and whilea discussing thia problem received telephone call from D. H. Madsen, our stale fish and game commissioner, who said that his chief deputy. Mr J. H. Tin gey, was going to. the headwaters of the Provo river and invited us to Join the party. We gladly accepted the invitation and all met at the appointed time to begin the Journey. In a few minutes we are in Parley a canyon and before long are - descending towards East canyon We follow the Park City road almost to the old mining town and then branch off to the east. Our automobiles continue their steady buss up hill and down, around curved, and along grades toward Heber City. Finally, however, we come to a road sign pointing the way to Kamas. This we follow and presently see the little forming community some distance ahead of us. Our course takes us through this 01age and then up Beaver up ranyon JusCbeyond. The road the canyon la In fine shape so in a . little while we reach Shingle creek., On Shingle Creek. . Hera we pause form few minutes and Mr. Tingey explains that the creek gets its name from an old ahingle mill built on the streamsat-in esrly days He also calls our tention to the straight channel" tn which the stream is running. This, he explains, is an artificial course leading to the Provo river. Dams diverge a short distance up the water Into cither channel, sc- cording to the plans of the water master. W are much interested in this bit of unusual geography,outbut to must hot forget that we are learn of trout and their habits. ex-In Mr. Tingey this connection. plains that trout raised in the Provo river might go up Ehlngle creek to spawn and. on coming down, find they are obliged to go Into Beaver Creek and thence on Into the Weber river. He als adds in that fish batched or planted Shingle creek above the dame natand stream urally work down eventually find their way into either of these two rivers. Our guide gives signal to resume the Journey and soon we are glidcanyon. ing down Into upper Provo with its Up this beautiful canyon, n quaking-aspeand plno and fir areas patches, we travel until we came to Spring Creek. Just 5 miles from Salt take City. Here we come to the end of tho road. A for6 of men and teams, however, is busy and doblasting, plowing, scraping, to build ing other necessary work of the canyon. the road to the head some 1 or IS Thia we are told is miles-furthon. We learn the - constructing the government road and that It may eventually extend over Into Bear River candown to Evanston. yon Wyoming. It will passofthe wonderthe Provo ful lakes at the head canyon and come within a short distance of the famous Granddaddy lakes st the head M the Duchesne river. The foreman of the road builders is Mr. Morgan Park. He is also for this part the head forest ranger interested in of the country and is both inmaking tho forest reserve pubtho to accessible teresting and man for whom Mr. lic. He Is the short Tingey Is looking. In very time we find that both of these officials are anxious to have streams and lakes of this new country prove attractive te sportsmen and other at once pleasure seek era Theyrelative to enter into discussion ith habitats stocking the fish quail, tes of fry mad finger-tingToo source tributaries and it upper lakes of tho Provo River, for would seem, ere Ideal places ' such planting. Mr. Tingey explains that the state which be represents Is department ' now ready to stock the lakes and says that a number of them are Brook especially suited to Eastern trout. All the lakes, so we are told, were formed by glaciers in age and the nearest of toe lot is eleven milesno'from where road lead-- i stand There ll taken teg to them SO that any fish will bar to be carried on pack IT er I- nca lib-ar- al e. rr. one-thi- id world-renown- iy 1 horses or hauled In wagons along the rough, rocky trail. Mr. Park, however, tells us that a wagon cannot make the steep distance unless men and teams go ahead to remove boulders, ent trees, end alter certain aide slopes. And then, when these obstacles are removed. It will the to take a good half-da- y - lakes. Muse 'Have Clear Watren'""'- The remark causes the chief deputy to advise that Eastern Brook trout will not live In streams containing muddy water during thawing and rainy seasons. They- live only in lakes, large and deep' enough to assure areas of constantly clear water. With this in mind Mr. Tingey asks for definite assurance that the wagons, If started, could go right through to the lake. Any serious delay would endanger the ltvea of the baby fish for they would suffocate in the cans or else the man In charge would bo obliged to set them loose iu the nearby and at times, roily streams. This explanation arouses our curiosity and we soon learn that to transport tho ona hundred thousand flngerllngs now ready for planting wilt require two hundred fifty ten gallon cans. The cans with fish and water will each weigh from seventy-fiv- e to eighty pounds and twenty-fou- r of them will make a load. The water In the cans must be kept aerated or else the fish soon die. Ordinarily the splashing and dashing of the water caused by the Jolting and bouncing of the wagon or truck is enough to whip sufficient 'sir into the water. The water, however, becomes poUuted by the fish and in consequence must be changed at least every five or sot hours. From what he says we readily estimate that with ioltv roads and steady driving, cans of fmgerUngs can be brought safely to w here we stand from either the Murray 01" SpringviUe fish hatcheries, bit we fail lo see how they can be carried for another half day to the lakes. Again Mr. Tingey has a 1 y. Ha explains that an experienced hatchery man wiil accompany tho fish all the way from tho hatchery to the lakes. Spring Creek will be reached by evening and there the cans under his direction will be taken from the trucks and laid on their sides in the shallow stream with tbe top and of ths cans up stream. Tbe lids will be perforated with small holds and through these a constant supply of fresh water will circulate during the night. Early the next morning, the-- owns - will be- - lifted into-th- e wagons ready for the rough ride to tho lakes. Every Precaution Tklew. As an extra precaution the man front the hatchery will bring a long wire screen box with him.'In esse all the fish cannot be taken on the first wagon trip, the surplus will be cared for In this box. The box. of course, will be placed In tho stream with the steady flow of cool water running through It. In this tho fish will remain until the following morning when a second Journey will be made by enough wagons to properly trans port them to their future home. i are told that eomo or these lakes already contain native trout and that these are ever ready to eat small fish of almost any sort. In consequence of this, the Brook flngerllngs will be planted In ahal. low water among weeds, cress, and grass where tbe large Natives seldom frequent Here tbe Utile fellows grow until they become big enough to care for themselves when they Into the open, deeper parts of the lake. By the time the new government road is opned and people take advan-ta- g of this hew and wonderful drive, these trout will be ready for the sportsmen and his Inrtng flies. We heard Mr. Tingey make fins) arrangements with tbe forest ranger. Men will go up the canyon the next day to make the trail ready and early the following morning five teamntera. ten horses, and live wagons will be at Spring City ready tor tho Journey. We almost wish we could, go with them but our host is obliged to hasten to (be hatchery to complete arrangements for tbs shipment. As as glide around tho curves of the aow roadway down the can- yon, our attention is directed to place after place suitable for plant- --, ing baby Rainbow trout. We obthat all contain shallow, slow- flowing water and . considerable quantities of cress B.g treat and birds are the baby trout's worst enemies Big trout are alost never seen in shallow stream and the reh re-0- e tele-uP- ttls-mak- sr, 7- nt 1 liair-apLtti- J mi-coun- ug - d Fda&vrt J sf ralh-plac- 1 Park-freshm- id 1 lB.T I out-do- Orare-Grow- ' ed , out-do- or ! -t- nef , . 1 Jack-screw- rs , rs. bl Out-Doo- es White chanters. Th Forest. , Several own ' region and indicated Icier. people, may be a Dutch spectacle maker. Lipper-shey, at this lime waa experiment Ing with two --Jen vs and dtscov. ered that distant object could b magnified so. that they appeared closer to tho oyo. G&lileo the -- lars. It is because he make use of th exact sc.er.ces that he Is ablebetter reults than the avt0 nersert. The better the en- j(rmMq. lhe more he can see in the nractjcal application of th newer i Mem cop in 1609 whteh magnified the murt "ot- - however. Jit. engineer heavenly bodle. three times, which lh rdlt for tb" marVei is about the magnification g.ven he accomplish.. He by some qf our toy spyglasses to- ou th.ngs should recognize the fourdot'on day. such ia.d pioneer scientists a by This magnification made It Kepler, and the ofher that our pencil 7 Of ret away could 'Trcbo Brahe. n erg!? forgo, en work- be moved to three times that dieers who each added his bit to belt tance, or. an ange oa third harness the. force of our world,' large could be read. These quiet' Invest'gators did not Today Instruments. direct returns to Instruments to measure these as a rule reap and we are prone to small angles became difficult to their labors, mm largeiv by their practiadjust, especially when the radius Judge of the quadrant was not so large cal accomplishments, but the fruit and cumbersome oa that of Ty- - time of industry would not have rPt for th worlt cho. Then along cam another b'n scientist In 1431 and devised theiof tho-- who planted the seeds of vernier by which the divisions of, research and left oher generations the scale could be accurately made, and other workers to reap the resold still later another on who enlts of their plantings. , Break aold Right Upwwith Pape's Cold Compound e Take Papes Co.d pound every two hours until three dose are taken. Th first doss nostrils and air opens clogged-u- p passages of bead; stops noee runT ning. relieve headache, dullness. Com-serv- feverishness, sneezing. and third d!oes usually break op the cold completely and end aU grippe misery. Pape's Cold Compound, is the quickest, surest relief known and oosts only thirty-fiv- e cents at drug vtores. Tastes nice. Contains no Tbe second quinine. Insist upon Pap' Adv. P"1' MOTHER ! ' Fletcher's CasfSna is a pleasant, harmless sub stitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drop and Soothing Syrups, prepared for Infants in arms and Children all ages. . It has been in use for more than 30 years to safely relieve ' To Sweeten Stomach Wind Colic Constipation Flatulence ' Diarrhea ., Regulate Bowels Aids in the assimilation of Food, promoting Cheerfulness, Rest and Natural Sleep without Opiates To ivold imitations always look for the signature o! Proren directiors on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend -- V r iS-- 3. J |