Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The west shore. (Portland, Or.) 1875-1891 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 1, 1884)
48 THE WEST SHORE. Klamath bike, Tulo Lake mid the Lava Beds, tlie rcihm iiiikIu famous 1V Captain Jack nml his Spartan lillllil I if MmllM'H. SCCNl almost at (inr foot To the east tho hillM nml valleys f the Nevada linHin stretch out to tii.i lioriium liiix. At our way fuel, und dwarfed into the merest ant hill, in thu Black Butte, or Little Mount Shasta, n pigmy iiiit4rtrt of the groat mountain, its . .1 ? i i ii .!. ... it.- hlack, harri'ii hwos uirown into imhu rouei against um 1 1 I . I 1.'.... U Tim INICKgroiiilll in Kifrii juiim mil iiiiiiiuiiil; ju iiro imrau- bianco iii contour is wonderful, mid suggests the little uiodi'U wo see. in tint 1 nu'iit (Illicit at ashington and the groat onginoH of which they are the image. A little further to the northeast is Sheep Rock, nrounc which the old emigrant trail iwcd to wind, and just bo yoiul stands the (loose Nest Thin is n cak that rises to r height of more than H.IHKI feet The top is barren of timber, mid nt the extreme iijh'X is the crater of a huge extinct volcano, fully a mile in width, and tilled with per petual snow. lTom Shasta alley the depression, with it white lining, ho closely resembles the downy interior or n nest, that the name seems peculiarly appropriate. From our high iiositioii we L'azo down into this snowv crater, and think how all things have changed since its now frown interior blazed with vulcanic heat What n sight it must have Imm-ii when the hundred craters now within the scojm ot our vision were belching forth lire, smoke and burning lava! Pilot Hock, in the Siskiyou .Mountains, on tne imrder line between California and Oregon, oitches the eye, and Scott and Shasta vallevs wiuieu in i.y mo encircling niountiuns, are smiling am iH-nuuuii, hko sai kling gems 111 n massive setting. The courses f the Sacramento and Klamath, with theii leaning trihutarios, can Ik traosl with dilliculty. It is now ten o'clock, and wo think 1 if nm hut i.tuM ney m to lterryvalc; but before going , py our rwpeet to the monument on the extreme nNx, erected in b.. by the rit,sl Static (Wt Survey. It weighs (HK) .umU, is cylindrical in form, nixteen f,t high and three ammeter, and is made of U.ilor in.n. It is surmounted by . MUI,H ,llof HishtH, lHIU,i)ositi(m tlmt K& - n,,, can Ih sm. with H,werful glass nt Then, re two way. of descending. One is to plod V ' l"" ou,,,r K'w down the f " m,nr,y n can be had. . anj uvh luiiea can 1 li rr":r,1-thetin,..rline,n2elS - uu ins 110 0 under bin . . 1 1 from v ew I nuuter .11 ' 6 llsmr8 the jyio Kiid mi ,1 E,rUr. tnU " firra WJ ing my eyes like the drivings of a storm. The ridge is soon passed and then the speed is terrific, giving me the sensation of falling through interminable space. It i8 a wild, excitins ride, and before I can imarine it nonai'M, t rench the point where the pnow disnnnenrs in fya timber Gazing up the great mountain down which I came in as many minutes as it took hours to ascend, I for the first time realize the immensity of the journey. Feeli in,, . . "O WJ self all over to see if pieces of my anatomy have' not been scattered along the route, and finding myself sound in body and mind, there comes over me an almost in-Aai'cK ble impulse to go up and try it again. The journey to Berryvale is soon accomplished, and refreshed with . - '"I (ft hearty meal we recline under the trees and rest our weary limbs. When the railroads now beins extended uVmll ,, formed a junction at the Oreson and f!filifr.rn;n w j vuu tuiOj VUO route will pass through Strawberry Valley, and Shasta will then be more accessible to tourists than any other mountain peak in America. It will be on the main line of the grand circuit made by all those who come to the coast by the Northern route and return by the Central or Southern. Hundreds will visit it evei'V HI! mm or or,A uuu spend a few days in the mountains at the many inviting resorts. The headwaters of Sacramento, McLeod, Pit, Shnsta and Trinity rivers abound in mountain f,t perfect paradise for the angler, and the dense forests, with their deer, black bear and an ofleftsinnnl rrr,, Ja n ... . .. . cuiu California lion, offer exciting sport to the huntsman. Harry L. Wells. Quinine from Gas Tar. The last contribution of modem n is the production of quinine from gas tar. Professor Fischer, of Munich, has succeeded in obtaining from dis tilled coal a white crystalline nnwW hu regonls its action on the humnn Hvcfm , vniiiiu tJJ uiDbiil- guished from quinine, except that it assimilates even u.u.e rencuiy witn the stomach. Its efficacy in reducing fever heat is said to be remnrlcnhln use of ice unnecessary. The im,wnn r u . j: uuva vuuvo j outju a inn covery as this consists not so much in the actual fact ntmevea as in the stimulus given to scientific research lilt 41lV v . opeumg up of a new channel of investigation. Ihe romance of cas tar i 7 adllition to the sweetest scente, the most oruiiant dyes, the most nowerfnl rllainfonfn j prussic ac4 are some of the numerous and wonderful wu.ia 01 xxb aecompoSition.-1ScJef(io American. m The Painter, of f!Wl,l ru; ' .. . """"I KJUIKI, (XIIUCS Ul US LO10 Z t r-R great Pvement even upon its usual neat ana artistic ap,earance. A handsome cover, artistic "lustrations and nwt tm, 1 ;.. 1 ji'onpuy renaer 11 very aiirao- 7 Whlle its instrctive articles on the art of painting and decornt.Vm j- , .. .. . ul oil ; . . . " ciiftxungiy interesting 10 ou U 1 mteresW m such subjects, as thousands of our pwple are. Anion-... :.. ndrm i wing rapidly educated in an, Wd ne of 1116 instructors is the Painter.