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Show 657 estimate of these things, the shoals or the rapids, where we said it was easy, was with reference to the rapids above, which we had gone through, which we considered difficult; when we got into a place we didn't have difficult rapids, we called them easy. " Q. I am coming to the rapids in a minute. I think you mentioned now some rapid water, something that you referred to as a rapid in Glen Canyon? " A. Yes. " Q. Where was that? " A. As nearly as I recollect, it was all the way along above that rapid I speak of below San Juan, there were apt to be shoals and what we called little rapids. " Q. I call your attention to page 287 of Exhibit 13, that being your book entitled the Romance of the Colorado, in which you say, about the middle of the page ( reads): "' All through Glen Canyon we found evidences of Puebloan occupation: house ruins, storage caves, etc. The river was tame' -- " A. From our point of view. " Q. The river was tone, though the walls, about one thousand to sixteen hundred feet high, were beautiful, and often, in places, vertical.' " Now, you do not, so far as I observe, make any additional explanation in your book defining your use of |