Yarns the Missionaries Tell 49 to bring the Gospel and its ideals to the attention of these young people faring forth on new paths. It can readily be seen how God is bringing together these different classes of workers, and giving to a work which formerly depended only on the good will and Christian generosity of the whites towards the Indians, the incentive of taking care of what is really a group of our own people; our very own, for at the close of one service in a northern cannery, the visit- ing minister who preached the sermon (not the writer) found two young women from his own church in the city. Salmon Trolling Stations. A feature of the fish- ing industry that has come to the front in the last few years on the Pacific Coast has been the taking of salmon by means of trolling. Years ago, it is true, this sort of fishing was done, but at that time only by canoe and row-boat. Since the advent of the gasoline engine, this feature of the fishing industry has been enormously enlarged. Boats equipped with as many as four and six lines, operated by one or two men, travel miles back and forth over the fishing grounds. Many and varied are the boats used. Here, it is only an overgrown row-boat, so to speak, that has been fitted up with a small gas engine. At night a piece of canvas is stretched over one end to form a shelter for the fisherman, or it may be the man who uses this type of boat has a cabin on land in which to spend the few hours left for sleep. Again there are other boats, larger and