THE NATIVE LANDSCAPE 
that the various available areas are severally put to their highest 
uses. Some will be best for free camping, others for municipal and 
industrial camps, some 
for sanitoria, some must 
be kept untouched on 
account of their extra- 
ordinary natural beauty. 
Such questions being 
determined, the land- 
scape engineer will pro- 
vide the necessary means 
of circulation—railroads, 
automobile roads, trails, 
etc., will locate the 
various camps, hotels, 
sanitoria, will provide 
for water supply and 
sanitation, and make all 
other provisions neces- 
sary to the end that 
men, women and chil- 
dren may easily reach the 
landscapes reserved in 
their behalf and may 
comfortably and safely 
enjoy them. 
The interpretation 
of the landscape is a 
higher and more diffi- 
cult function, not to be 
fully expounded in a 
Fig. 135. One or THE MiILuions oF BEAUTIFUL 
CaNaDIAN LAKES 
paragraph. We may make use of the analogy of the musician who 
interprets the compositions of the classic masters. Thus the pianist 
Bauer is said to be an interpreter of Litzt, while anyone who has 
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