Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI)

 - Class of 1938

Page 18 of 36

 

Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 18 of 36
Page 18 of 36



Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 17
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Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 19
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Page 18 text:

Page sixteen sin waters. Fifteen years Inter the authorities realized it was a mistake and attempts were made to remove them. The removal of carp has been continuing ever since without much success until recently. Large fish are removed by means of large nets during the fall and spring: small ones are taken by the use of small seines, traps and fyke nets all the year. When the carp are taken, other rough fish are also removed. Small carp are easier to capture than adult ones because the adults are wiser. Over sixty million carp have been removed from Wisconsin waters. The small carp are of no commercial value, but they can be canned and make useful food for mink. fox. and other fur-bearing animals raised in the state. Also they can be used as food for fish in the hatcheries. A canning factory, therefore, has been established for this purpose. Smelt is a new Wisconsin fish that first appeared in streams emptying into Green Bay several years ago. but today it is well known in Wisconsin. The smelt is a small delicate silvery fish, soft of flesh and weak of bone, but delicious food. They live in deep water, and although their teeth adapt them to feed on fish, they seldom do, but live on water insects and worms which inhabit the bottom of Address of By HAROLD WEINCOLD. fPO our Superintendent, Faculty. Members and friends: In behalf of the class of 1038. I wish to welcome you to the sixty-eighth commencement exercises. We feel the honor of being the first class to be graduated in thin fine new building. Now that we think of this as the last day of our school life, we wonder where we shall be at this time next year. It is hard to leave friends whom we have known for many years; with whom we have played and worked. We feel that the ties of friendship are no longer made of thread, but of steel. We shall enjoy with you this great moment which will never happen in our lives again. We appreciate your interest in us. The class of 1938 welcomes Colonel John The Tattler lakes. When spring comes, smelt migrate to shallow water in rivers bordering on Green Bay to spawn. They are easily caught then. The smelt has remarkable reproductive powers. The female spawns when two years old and produces 30,000 eggs. That is why the smelt seem to be increasing every year instead of decreasing, though caught by thousands of fishermen. Carnivals and jamborees have been organized for the smelt runs of the early spring. At these a smelt king and queen are crowned with due ceremony. Brilliant bonfires are made; newsreels taken, and radio addresses made to record and broadcast the progress of the night’s catch. Wisconsin is blessed with a great variety of fish and with lakes anti streams where they can live. In the raising and distribution of fish Wisconsin now surpasses any other state. The distribution is not made in the hit or miss way of the old days. Lakes are carefully studied to determine how much and what fish life they can support before they are stocked extensively. The stocking is done by experts from the fish commission. In a few years Wisconsin should once again have fishing like In the good old days of which old fishermen delight to tell. Welcome the President of the cU»» Hannan, the president of the Board of Control. We are glad to see him again for this school, having been under his guidance for many years, has but recently been transferred to the Board of Education. We are sorry in one way, but we feel that the school may find advantages under the new regime. Mr. John Callahan. State Superintendent of Public Instruction, has taken the place of Col. Hannan as our chief executive. We are huppy to have him with us for all wish to have the opportunity to become acquainted with him. Mr. Leisman. President of the Wisconsin Association of the Deaf is an alumnus of this school, and we are proud to welcome him as one of the speakers of the evening. Again we bid you all a hearty welcome.

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Nineteen thirty-eight Pagefifteen Fish and Fishing By HAROLD WE1NCOLD WISCONSIN has numerous lakes and rivers that have long contained a great abundance of Hah. As a fishing state, it ranks among the best in the United States. Its streams and lakes attract thousands of people every year. Millions are spent in the state by tourists largely lured by the fishing. In recent years the number of fish decreased rapidly. The people of Wisconsin became alarmed at this growing scarcity. They not only desired good fishing for themselves but they also knew that, when the tourists found no fishing in Wisconsin, they would naturally turn to other slates. This meant the state would lose hundreds of thousands of dollars. Natural reproduction can not now be depended upon. Modern civilization has brought too many factors destructive to fish life, so fish hatcheries were established by the state and proving their worth as the years went by. more and more were built. Today there are about thirty-five hatcheries in Wisconsin scattered all over the state at suitable sites. In these millions of fish are raised which are transported and planted in the waters of Wisconsin. Since 1935 this work has grown in leaps and bounds. In 1935 the distribution increased from around 80 million fish a year to over 500 million. Last year over a billion fish were planted in Wisconsin waters. This year as many or more will be distributed. Muskellungo has been the most highly prized game fish in Wisconsin because of its size and its fighting qualities. Many people come here just for the muskellunge fishing. The legal size limit is 30 inches. By studying the scales of the fish, it has been found that it takes from five to six years for a muskellunge to reach the legal size. Wisconsin, of course, wants to maintain ami increase the supply of muskies in our waters in order to give the pleasure of catching these fresh water tigers to as many people as possible. The raising of muskies in hatcheries is something which many states have attempted with indifferent success or failure. Wisconsin has succeeded and in 1936 distributed nearly seven million young muskies. Muskellunge rearing hus been a very difficult problem as the eggs are not easily handled and the feeding problem is a hard one but the difficulties have been conquered so we can look forward to more and better musky fishing in many Wisconsin waters. Bass, large and small mouth, brook, rainbow. and brown trout, wall-eyed pike and great northern pike are fish that are widely distributed throughout the state and which are eagerly sought after. All are raised by the millions in the state hatcheries and placed in its lakes, rivers and smaller streams. In Lake Winnebago is caught the armor plated sturgeon of which Longfellow wrote in Hiawatha. This fish grows to great size, but is scarce. It is caught through the ice in winter in I ake Winnebago. The state has many panfish such as perch, sunfish, bluegills. bullheads, crappies and rock bass. Del van Lake was long famous for its bluegills. Beaver Dam Lake once swarmed with bullheads. There is a story that when the early settlers around Beaver Dam wanted fish they removed the tail gate of their wagon box. backed the wagon into the lake until the water filled the box. Then they replaced the tail gate and drove home with a wagon load of bullheads. Besides all these game and food fish Wisconsin has other species called rough fish. The principal rough fish, native to Wisconsin, ure the bufTalo. suckers, red horse, sheephead, eel-pout, dogfish and garfish. The carp is not a native but millions of them are in Wisconsin waters. Rough fish are destructive to game fish. Garfish, dogfish, and sheephead are cannibals and destroy many desirable fish, nevertheless, the carp is the worst enemy though it is only a vegetarian. It stirs up (he mud which then blankets gamefish eggs that soon suffocate and die. Also waterfowl suffer on account of the carp that both eat and destroy aquatic plants, one of the principal food of wild ducks and geese. The history of the carp is interesting. They were imported from Germany in 1877 by the United States. Some were planted in Wise on-



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Nineteen thirty-eight Page seventeen Beauty Spots of Wisconsin Bjr GENEVIEVE PERHAI HUNDREDS of millions of years ago Wisconsin was very hilly. Erosion slowly wore the hills down and glaciers covered it and ground the hills lower still. Various kinds of soil such as gravel, sand, and mud were brought and dropped here and there. River valleys were filled in places so that the water was backed up to form numerous marshes and lakes. The largest lake in Wisconsin is Lake Winnebago, thirty miles long and ten miles wide. There are thousands of others. The Driftless Area is that part of western and southwestern Wisconsin which the glaciers did not cover. Valleys and hills here give us a very good idea of how the whole state looked before the glaciers came. Castle Mound near Black River Falls is one of the fantastic rock formations found in the driftless area which reminds one of Wyoming scenery. Two natural bridges are in this area— one at Rockbridge, which is an arch spanning a stream and the other near Iceland in Sauk County. The gorge of the Mississippi along the western border of the Driftless Area furnishes the most rugged and interesting scenery to be found in Wisconsin. The charm of green ridges and grassy narrow valleys broken by deep, uneven’coulees in middle western Wisconsin, has been given everlasting life in descriptions by Hamlin Garland. a famous author and native of western Wisconsin. In an effort to preserve and make accessible to its people the beauty spots in the state, Wisconsin has built a system of state parks which protect some of the scenic areas and a few places of special historic interest. The Dell's Region of the Wisconsin River is one of the most wonderful scenic places in Wisconsin. Today it is a vacation land, widely advertised and highly commercialized. Thousands of visitors come from ull over the United States to see the Dells. One of the most beautiful places in the state is Copper Falls state park, four miles from Mellen, Ashland County. A small stream named the Bad River, throws itself sixty-five feet down into a rugged gorge forming what is called Copper Falls. The spray from tumbling water on shiny rocks looks like a rainbow when seen from a point on a pine-covered hill at a bend lower down the river. The Bad River is very interesting in spite of it not having great depth. Many forest trails lead through the nine hundred twenty acres included in this park, showing splendid views of the river’s gorge. Rib Mountain, an ancient landmark about six miles from Wausau is now a state park. This mountain, the highest point in Wisconsin, rises eight hundred feet above the Wisconsin River. On the top fresh, cool breezes cheer the summer visitors. A good road leads to the top of the mountain and hundreds of people drive up this highway to see the beautiful and glorious sunsets. Devil's Lake State Park in the rocky Bara-boo range shows true mountain scenery. Devil’s Lake lies in a gorge which was cut by the Wisconsin River before it was changed to its present course by glaciers many thousands of years ago. This jewel-like mountain lake with its rocky shore line attracts geology classes from many universities who spend several weeks each year in the park and surrounding area. Forests and Indian Mounds also attract interest to the park which has become a famous recreational area. Peninsula State Park in Door County, the thumb of Wisconsin, is very interesting. On the way one passes through forests of cherry trees which have become famous as the “Cherry-land” of Wisconsin. One has fine views of Green Bay from the park, particularly the view of Eagle Island from Eagle Bluff. There are many kinds of trees in this park. Beautiful roads and trails lead through the three thousand four hundred acre tract. Three bluffs make picturesque cliffs rising high above the waters of the Bay. Pattison Park which is twelve miles south of Superior is a favorite place for travelers, who stop there for camping, swimming, and picnicking. Manitou Falls in this park is just a beauty. It plunges one hundred sixty-five feet down dark rocks. It is Wisconsin's chief

Suggestions in the Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) collection:

Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

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Wisconsin School for the Deaf - Tattler Yearbook (Delavan, WI) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

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