218 
climbed the trail 2,000 feet below us and a 
mile away. Fifteen or twenty ponies with 
two or three drivers and with one of the 
mine owners crawled up the steep path, a 
most interesting sight in that solitude. 
The strong-lunged leader of our party, 
making a trumpet of his hands, hallooed to 
the train and succeeded in attracting at- 
tention, with shouts in reply. Hats were 
swung, wraps and handkerchiefs shaken 
in answer to their cheer. 
After dinner each sought pleasure as he 
By A. O. Wheeler. 
Mt. Duncan Beaver Mountain 
RECREATION 
would. The men of the party loosened 
blocks of rock, pushing them over the 
edge of the cliff, then peering into the 
dizzy depths to see them make a sheer drop 
of several hundred feet, where as they struck 
the ledge they would break and become 
only fine fragments to find a rest on the 
high talus 2,000 feet below. The smooth, 
rounded mountain top was half a mile long, 
gently sloping on the one side to the crest of 
the gorge down which we had rolled stones, 
and which hung over the miners’ cabin 

THE GRAND GLACIER, IN 
Sugar Loaf Mountain 
