Page:The Pacific Monthly vol. 13.djvu/183

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A THIP TO niSTOlMC ()LI» (iALK

11 IP

'The trail was a veritable 'Lovers' Lane.' "


years ago. The remains of the long rows of cabins, the saloons, and the dance halls were swept away by the great freshet of fifteen years ago. Instead of the boister- ous merriment of the saloons, the music and revelry of the dance halls, and the shouts and cries of the streets, seethed as they were by the restless stampede of

2000 men, there is naught to break the mountain quiet but the songs of the birds, the barking of the squirrels, and the chat- ter of the creek.

We armed ourselves with fishing tackle and a camera and struck up the creek. The trail we followed to the fishing grounds was a veritable "Lovers'