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Show 845 through those, we couldn't make these turns, we would run out on the banks and in the gravel and stick, get out and push it back in, and get in and row on; maybe two or three times a day we would not those aloes, and even where there was no rapids, and the water looked fairly smooth and good, we would run on to bare. " There were certain channels that would let a boat through if you followed them and could follow them; we would have to get out and find them; many times we would stop there, and everybody wade out across the river boat and forth to find the best place to go through. There sometimes half an hour or more, and we would decide what place to run through, probably get through all right; may be have to drag the boats a little, or push them: then for a few miles we would have good water, nice, smooth water, deep enough, and then we would come to these conditions again, every few miles, all the way through Glen canyon, and the upper canyons, above Cataract canyon, through the Green river." R. 1993- 1994. ( Testimony concerning Green River ordered stricken a he was not on the Green until the following year R. Vol. 11- p. 1994.) Those same conditions were in Glen canyon all the way down from Crescent creek." R. 1994. They stopped at Hite for several days, as Mr. Stanton had made arrangements to meet some mining people there; to look over claims owned by Case Hite and they stopped to sample them claims. R. 1994. Mr. McDonald and he did most of the sampling, and the samples were taken out by Mr. Holdridge, general manager of the B.& M. Railroad |