Pease, A, 3, -2- 
2 17 23 
somebody asked Pernald if he knew what the mountain was that could 
be seen from there (which undoubtedly is the one that you refer to)% 
Femald replied that you and he had worked it out the preceding year 
as Mt. Pease. Immediately Podge and I and somebody else raised the 
question that it was not at all like the top of Mt* Logan* Joe 
said that Mt* Logan could not be seen from the hotel and then he 
reminded us that from the top of Mt* Logan we could see only the 
outlying houses of Ate. A* d. M. and not all of the wharf but only 
the outer end. This prompted podge and myself to go down with 
Joe to the wharf. At the base of the wharf we could see only the 
rounded dome that was risible from the hotel but out at the tip 
of the wharf the other mountain with the perfectly characteristic 
Logan top came .into view farther to the right • This showed beyond 
any doubt in our minds that the mountain that could be seen from 
the hotel was one of the two mountaixis to the left of Logan., as we 
looked from the wharf* that is. It was in all probability either 
Pembroke or the other peak behind it. Later Bam Cote'' came to the 
hotel and we began to ask him questions about the mountain. We 
asked him particularly what the mountain was that we could see 
from the hotel and he replied very promptly Gouverte du Chaudron, 
and then he drew a little sketoh on the piazza floor and definitely 
located Pembroke, Gouverte du Chaudron, and some of the other 
mountains and streams farther to the eastward, but which I do not 
now remember as they were beyond our region* He apparently knew the 
