Page:Thirty-One Years on the Plains and in the Mountains.djvu/305

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A GRAND SIGHT.
233

ladies, which he knew I would not repeat the half of, for he knew that there was not another man in San Francisco that hated to try to talk to ladies as much as I did. If we had not jarred loose and rode off I suppose we would have been there all day, and we would have had enough word to carry incur heads, that had it been written, would have made a book that Webster's Unabridged Dictionary would be small compared with it, and again shaking hands we waved our hats at the many soldiers standing around and rode away.


CHAPTER XVII.


DISCOVERY OF INDIANS WITH STOLEN HORSES. WE KILL THE INDIANS AND RETURN THE PROPERTY TO ITS OWNERS. MEETING OF MINERS. IN SOCIETY AGAIN.

On our return trip we took the divide between the Klamath River and Yule Lake. I had told Col. Elliott before starting that I intended to pass west of the snowy butte instead of east of it, as we did coming in.

This butte has since been called Shasta Mountain, and it is one of the grandest sights that ever the eye of man beheld. It flouts the skies with its peaks of everlasting snow, gleaming like a vast opal under the sunshine, or