Chapter VII. 



We aie able also to reproduce Stuhlmanu's ])hotogTaph 

 from the same point of another moinitain which he believed 

 to be adjacent to, and to the south of Mt. Stanley, the 

 mountain which he had called Weismann and which, as we 

 have seen, corresponds to Mt. Baker. In reality, this 





MOUNT LUIGI DI SAVOIA SEEN FROJI THE UPPER BUTAGU VALLEY. 

 (After Ihc jihotoijritphfii/ Dr. F. Sh'hljiititiii.) 



mountain was completely hidden fn)m his sight by the southern 

 spurs of Mt. Stanley, and the mountain in his plate must be 

 the Mt. Luigi di Savoia, the very same which he had called 

 Moebius. 



The first description of the appearance of the mountains 

 from the east is given by Moore, who seems to have been the 

 only one before H.R.H. to have seen the mountains from the 

 Wimi Valley. Moore had, however, a far better opportimity 

 for obsei'vation because, being obliged to descend towards the 



L'lO 



