
A STUDY IN CLOUDS. 
carload of earth and rocks, some of the 
latter more than a foot in diameter, and 
some that would weigh 200 to 300 pounds 
each. While it is impossible to photograph 
a hole in the ground satisfactorily, yet I 
would not have been without my camera 
that day for $100. 
ss ie ng a 
lose much of their grandeur in being re- 
duced to the narrow limits of the photo- 
graphic film; yet they are always interest- 
ing subjects for a fine lens. 
Readers of RECREATION know that the 
world has frequently been startled by re- 
A eH So heme Rae peat, 
. Saag - MS a te oe aes ee Rs ey 

We were treated to some of the grandest 
exhibitions of cloud building I have ever 
seen anywhere, and I made a dozen pic- 
tures of the great banks of fog as they 
came up over the mountains. These, in 
common with the mountains themselves, 
92 
. FS dos 5 ps 
< Bee os 
" weer ~h oe eae. 
A LAKE AMONG THE CLOUDS. 
ports of the discovery, in various places in 
the West, of an ibex. We found one 
near one of our camps, among the high 
tops. That is, we found what many a man 
would have called an ibex, without making 
a thorough investigation. Here is a pic- 
