Through the Grand Canyon from Wyoming to Mexico, with a foreword by Owen Wister;new edition with (72 plates) from photographs by the author and his brother . =aete A NARROW CHANNEL AT RAPID DEVELOPING TESTS. A COMPANION VOYAGER 137 Smith had once seen some moving pictures of Japaneseshooting rapids, but he said they were nothing comparedto these, remarking that a bronco could hardly buck anyharder. The next rapid was just as bad, Rapid No. 14for Cataract Canyon, and Smith helped us secure a mo-tion picture. Then he prepared to return to his before leaving he explained rather apo
Through the Grand Canyon from Wyoming to Mexico, with a foreword by Owen Wister;new edition with (72 plates) from photographs by the author and his brother . =aete A NARROW CHANNEL AT RAPID DEVELOPING TESTS. A COMPANION VOYAGER 137 Smith had once seen some moving pictures of Japaneseshooting rapids, but he said they were nothing comparedto these, remarking that a bronco could hardly buck anyharder. The next rapid was just as bad, Rapid No. 14for Cataract Canyon, and Smith helped us secure a mo-tion picture. Then he prepared to return to his before leaving he explained rather apologetically,that ranchers, or others, were usually very unfriendly toa stranger coming into their section of the had heard us shooting at the ducks and he imaginedwe belonged in some of the side canyons or on the explained his puzzling attitude at our first he had any beaver skins in his pack this would makehim even more suspicious of strangers. We wished himnothing but the best of luck, and were good friends whenwe parted. His decision to make the trip alone, poorlyequipped as he was, seemed like suicide to us. He prom-ised to write to us if he got out, an
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidthroughgrand, bookyear1915