Show W tint auk Boa too our habit and than they uM Da aow nap uhabitm a haMt ehnrectee i SALT LAKE CITY UTAH SUNDAY MORNING JUNE " — 3 1934 — WHITTIER REPORTERS EN)OY CANYON PICNIC Now Take Trip iTo'— Aquarium With Betty Lu At the world’ fair hea riy every of the animal kingdom wa represented' and not to be outdone the fishdom were there inhabitants-o- t too 'Within a small white building known as the John G Shedd aquarium they made their headquarters Here were gathered the most beautiful ot all tropical fish kings and queens not by their strength for they are very small but for their incomparable beauty Supposing you come with me into a room with skylights glazed with violet-ray glass with 65 tanks containing f from 125 to 140 distinct species of tropical fish and let us look at these tiny creatures so far from home- - There are about 600 species that can be adapted to aquarium life and at one time only about 200 ot these were in captivity but today there nro double that amount Before wa see the fish themselves we had better learn a little of the queer names they all have We shall not bother with technical names tor this is a pleasure trip but shall merely learn that tit of their curious them so much better and make them to o much easier remember At one time not so long ago there a craze sudden came for tropical fish and they were shipped to this country load after load some even being brought by airplane With so many of these little fish coming names for them became the big problem Names were hurriedly given and some are even longer than the fish themselves so thus did originate Yet there were those fish that had never been seen before and no one knew the name of them co in the rush names were “thrown" on them and now the mUup Is becoming really compli-- 1 rated For instance one little fellow waa laid to be a Cichiasoma nigro- - teacher-sponso- - - ' part Tribune school reporters of the Whittier school were guests of their at a canyon party recently' The reportorial organiza-- ‘ tion at- Whittier under the direction of Mrs Rae Pugh has always been one of the liveliest and most active Tribune reporter groups in the city Each year these youngsters have enjoyed many special privileges accorded by their teachers with a special party at the end of the season’s work This year the group was taken to City Creek canyon by automobile and there they enjoyed a wienie roast hiking and a general good time Those who earned this special treat tire shown In the photograph They are left to right front row: Maurine Wrigley Jacqueline Wragg Emmett Candland Mary Larsen Glendon Johnson second row Maxine -- - White associate editor Viola Popp Raymond Hess Glen Beckstead Kent Wilson editor Dale Jensen Mary Nielsen Norita Comick Lucille Butler Jean Speckart associate editor Bill Sutton back’row the teachers who made the trip possible Mrs Rae Pugh Mrs Lydia Sessions Miss Dorothy Leon ’and Miss Mary Wood' THE KNOWLEDGE TEST Match correctly: 1 T had as lief not be as live to be In awe of such a thing as I myself”—Crabbe 2 “Tull ipany a flower is bom to blush unseen”— Jonson 3 “Not greedy of filthy lucre” — Shakespeare 4 "Hesperus entreats thy light Goddess excellently bright”— Bible S “In this fool’s paradise he drank delight”— Gray - nick-nam- Do you know: v" 6 What is a bowsprit? 7 What is a lactose prepared from? 8 What is castile goa? made from? 9 Who wrote “Lkllah Rookh?” 10 What is another name for dementia? nick-name- s I (Continued on Pass Berea) rs 11 ' - ' ' 12 13 14 15 Between what two bodies of water'is Lapland? What is another word for edifice? When was Liberia founded? What color is a "fallow deer"? What is linoleum made of? (Copyright 1934 King Features Syndicate Inc) i ‘ This Tells All About Our Sea Friends As the term is generally applied taken to mean a relatively cold blooded animal with a backbone living in the water covered with Scales breathing through gills snd having two pairs of fins -- in pises of arms and legs But there are many different kinds ot fish the great variety being almost beyond comprehension' Some of these are very tiny and others attain huge size many are of fantastic shapes and colors There are five great groups of fishes The first or lowest order resembles the eels -- It Includes the lampreys and hag fishes which ars sometimes classed even below fishes In the second group are the cartilaginous fishefc— fishes with a purely cartilaginous skeleton— and with gills fastened by the longer side like leaves in a book and with as many as five gills on a side This group includes the sharks rays and skates The outstanding characteristics of this class are the skeleton which is of gristle without bone and the peculiar skin which has no lapping scales but is naked and mottled or covered with a "fish’1 is ’ wart-lik- e projections or spines The third group consists of the double breathers— possessing both gills and lungs which enable them to live in the air under certain conditions They have peculiar fins more like legs than are those of other fishes The fourth group is made up of the armored fish or ganoids covered with enamel like Kales or rows ot In the case of tbo bony plates-a- s sturgeon Under this group are the e the paddle fish the sturgeon Fosthe bowfln and the alligator-ga- r sil fishes of this group are found irtf very ancient rocks The fifth group the modern or bony fishes Includes most of the food and game fish in fresh and salt water gar-pik- (Continued 7 on Peg Berta) |