NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE 



CHESAPEAKE & OHIO RY. 



TTHE F. F. V. LIMITED is one of the finest trains hauled over any railway track in America. It runs 

 solid between Cincinnati and New York, the route from Washington being over the Pennsylvania 

 system. It has every modern convenience and appliance, and the dining-car service has no superior if 

 it has an equal. The road-bed is literally hewed out of the eternal rocks; it is ballasted with stone 

 from one end to the other ; the greater portion is laid with one-hundred-pound steel rails, and although 

 curves are numerous in the mountain section, the ride is as smooth as over a Western prairie. 



One of the most delightful rides in all the route is that through the New River valley. The 

 mountains are just low enough to be clad with verdure to the verj' top, and in the early spring every 

 variety of green known to the mixer of colors can be seen, while the tones in autumn take on all the 

 range from brown to scarlet. 



These facts should be borne in mind bj' the traveler between the Kast and the West. 



H. W. FULLER, Genl. Pass. Agent. Washington, D. C. 



CLIMB MOUNT RAINIER 



-— WITH THE MAZAMAS. 



"vr*Z 



14.532 

 FEET 

 HIGH. 



14,532 

 FEET 

 HIGH. 



IN JULY 



AND AUGUST 



this club of mountaineers of the North Pacific Coast will ascend this mountain of ice. Men and 

 women in large numbers are expected to accomplish the feat. 1 hey will remain out night on 

 the summit, among the warm ice caves there. . . .«-„«;.=.. i^nrv- nnH 



The climb is not compulsorv. Tho.se who desire can remain in camp at I aradi.M I ark ana 

 enjoy botanizing and exploring. Scientific work will be a part of the program. 



Send six cents to ^^^^ ^^^. ,^CHAS; f.; 1^,^% n,ul, Arinn.. 



For Wonderland "97 and a Mazama Pamphlet. 



NORTHERN 

 PACIFIC 



