Contents 



PAGE 



short Orthogenesis Law of Vertebrae 



Northern fishes develop more segments 



Quaint diversions Gains and losses 



CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE 252 



1. "Ei, ei, das Bier sehr mundet mir" A dry 

 town The carven tables A courageous com- 

 mittee Rigid ruling Meyer now strong for 

 milk shake Self-government initiated Debt 

 to Clark 



2. International Fisheries Commission Bound- 

 ary waters Rathbun's work Truly inter- 

 national First setback Prince succeeds 

 Bastedo Knox succeeds Root The Maine 

 law Grand Menan The Thousand Islands 



To Gainesville A rich feeding ground 

 The creeping pound nets A fine discovery 

 Lake Huron Sault Ste. Marie Lake Supe- 

 rior Rainy River and Lake of the Woods 

 Unprotected sturgeon Kenora Winnipeg 

 The gold eye A boundless wheat field Asul- 

 kan Glacier Selous Salmon unequally dis- 

 tributed In Puget Sound Nass River and 

 the steelhead Prince Rupert Father Hogan 



Clan MacDonald and "Blade Jack" Speedy 

 reform First Legaie 



3. Prince and Gisborne Bryce and Muir Fatal 

 delay Appeals by constituents Spring-Rice 



Not a lobbyist Michigan fishery laws 

 Treaties national only Unequal enforcement 

 of law Study of Saginaw Bay "My Lady of 

 the Snows" The sane Canadian boundary 

 "Mild Reservations" Puget Sound Canada's 

 refusal to confirm Present state of boundary 

 fisheries A valid objection Staple species 



Important localities Salmonoid fishes of the 

 Great Lakes A most useful volume Adee 

 Provincialism What is a "Western" man? 

 A new type of hearer Parental anxiety 



n xii 3 



