310 THE WEST SHORE. of the dreaded pitfalL Sharpened stakes were sometimes wt up in the bottom, upon which any object falling into the pit was certoin to impale itoclf. The name is usually billed " Pitt," tiie mistake arising from ignorance of its origin. The McLeod, which flows along the eastern side of Mount Shasta, was named in memory of Alexander Rode rick McLeod, the leader of the first party of trappers sent by the Hudson's Lay Company into California. In the spring of 1828 the party set out from Vancouver, and passed up the Willamette Valley, through Umpqua and Rogue River valleys, and across Siskiyou Mountain, fol lowing very closely the present route of travel by land from Oregon to California. They trapped very success fully on the various streams of Northern California until winter set in, when they became snowed in on the banks of this beautiful mountain stream. Three members of the company, the celebrated Tom McKay, Joe McLaugh lin, son of the Chief Factor, and J. B. Pairroult, volun teered to go to Vancouver for supplies, an undertaking of peril in a region of which they wore entirely ignorant After much liurdsliip and privation they succeeded in reaching headquarters on the Columbia by following up the eastern base of the Cascades to the Dalles. McLeod, however, was unable to await relief, since he could not by hunting procure a sufficient supply of food. Conse quently ho made a c.vM of his furs, and with the. re mainder of his company struggled through the deep snow of the mountains and made Ids way back to Vancouver. A party went out the following summer to secure the furs, but found thorn all ruined by water, the rains and melting Bnow having caused the river to rise far above the banks it occupied when the unfortunate trappers camped there tho fall before. Among the trapjrcrs the stream was ever afterwards known as " McLeod River." Years later, when white men hod settled in this region, a well known and worthy citison, Ross McCloud, a surveyor by profession, lived on this stream, and the similarity of pronunciation in the two names lod to the common error of supposing that his name was the one the river bore, and thuB it stands upon tho maps. It is an error that should be corrected, and the name of the first white trapjer to penetrate that region should be handed down in history associated with the mountain stream upon whose banks he and his jmrty suffered bo much. The McLood River is a Batsman's paradise, teeming with the gamiest trout The forests which clothe the mountain sides abound in deer, boar ami the smaller game, while on the sides of Mount Shasta are occasion ally wvn the celebrated mountain sheep, whose agility has won for thorn such a fabulous roputatiou for leaping. Professor Muir, who has carefully studied the habits of thorn animals in their uative wilds, asserU that their rejxrted feat of Imping down precipices and lauding upon their hard and elastic horns is untrue; that their bodies an so heavy that such an effort would result in complete transformation of the animal from a sheep to a conglomerate mass of horns, bones, mutton and wooL They do, however, manage to slide down almost perpen dicular declivities, and to maintain a high rate of speed along the steep side of a bluff on a trail it would be impossible for a man to follow. Their midden disapj ance in this manner led to the stories so commonly related of them. Many tourists who visit Mount Shasta cross over to the McLeod and enjoy a few days of fishing and hunting along that matchless stream, whose seclusion from settlement and remoteness from the usual lines of travel have preserved it in its primeval condition. Near the mouth of the stream, where the stage road skirts it for some distance, the United States Fish Commission maintains a hatchery, where the spawn of several kinds of food fish are hatched and prepared for distribution. It is this establishment which keeps the Sacramento so well stocked with the royal salmon. The falls, of which we present an engraving, are some distance up the stream, nnd are among the most beautiful of the numerous water falls of the Western mountains. Worthy of the deepest admiration, their Beclusion hides them from the eyes of all, save the few lovers of Nature who make a special effort to reach them. ' . Our engraving of the Idaho, the Alaska excursion steamor, surrounded by masses of floating ice. represents one of the phases of a trip to our northern possessions. ihe traveler along the Alaskan coast has all his previous ideas of the fitness of things constantly outraged. With ice surrounding his vessel, he sees the densest of green foliage on the shore, back of which rise hicrh mountains. in whose gorges lie masses of perpetual snow and ice. Everywhere Nature seems fitful and eccentrio in her conduct, appearing to delight in setting Winter and Sum- mer together by the ears and mixing them up in a most promiscuous and confusing manner. Such quantities of ice as shown in the engravincr are not seen in Alaskan waters except in Glacier Bay, the scene of the illustra- uon, ana at other points where glaciers enter the sea, since the temperature of the wAtnr in W Wli for their long existence in the solid state. Navigation of that region is not attended by the danger from floating ice bergs, which render an nnrilmia fha nrntara nf iha Nnrtll w r TVUVVsAO VJk - v - Atlantic, The Japan Current maintains the water and i i . ... ... , uuuospuere at a temperature which quickly works tneir dissolution. In Southern Orncrnn iimt ooof tlm PnonJo Ttnnffe. lie tlie Klamath lakes, Wo large bodies of water joined i 1 1 . . . . . . . w-Kciiier vy a snort ana turbulent stream known as "1M River." This is the nmirA nt M.a Tnomofli llivar Rnolled w uu jasuujuvu - i t "Tlamath " by Fremont, Wilkes and other early explor- rs ana pioneers, that representing more accurately tlie Indian Dronunemtinti Tim i, tlie Klamaths and Modocs, the former occupying the nx.M.. 1 i . . 1 ui-psr ana me latter the lower portion, and exteuumg eastward hovniwl Ti ti. j il. t t.iu The' former were also known as " La Lakes," a title bestowed upon them by the Canadian trappers because of their resi-' dence near the lakes, and also as "Muk-a-luks" wl "Luuaini," their true tribal name. They are now gathered,