llow-Traveller.--The Bell-Mare.--Pelouse
Fall.--Red-Fox Road.--Early Californians.--Frying-Pan
Incense.--Dragon-Flies.--Death of the Chief Seattle. 93
CHAPTER VII.
Port Angeles Village and the Indian Ranch.--A "Ship's
_Klootchman_."--Indian _Muck-a-Muck_.--Disposition of an Old
Indian Woman.--A Windy Trip to Victoria.--The Black
_Tamahnous_.--McDonald's in the Wilderness.--The Wild
Cowlitz.--Up the River during a Flood.--Indian
Boatmen.--Birch-Bark and Cedar Canoes. 109
CHAPTER VIII.
Voyage to San Francisco.--Fog-Bound.--Port Angeles.--Passing
Cape Flattery in a Storm.--Off Shore.--The "Brontes."--The
Captain and his Men.--A Fair Wind.--San Francisco Bar.--The
City at Night.--Voyage to Astoria.--Crescent
City.--Iron-Bound Coast.--Mount St. Helen's.--Mount
Hood.--Cowlitz Valley and its Floods.--Monticello. 124
CHAPTER IX.
Victoria.--Its Mountain Views, Rocks, and
Flowers.--Vancouver's Admiration of the Island.--San Juan
Islands.--Sir James Douglas.--Indian Wives.--Northern
Indians.--Indian Workmanship.--The Thunder-Bird.--Indian
Offerings to the Spirit of a Child.--Pioneers.--Crows and
Sea-Birds. 137
CHAPTER X.
Puget Sound and Adjacent Waters.--Its Early
Explorers.--Towns, Harbors, and Channels.--Vancouver's
Nomenclature.--Juan de Fuca.--Mount Baker.--Chinese
"Wing."--Ancient Indian Women.--Pink Flowering Currant and
Humming-Birds.--"Ah Sing." 151
CHAPTER XI.
Rocky-mountain Region.--Railroad from Columbia River to
Puget Sound.--Mountain Changes.--Mixture of
Nationalities.--Journey to Coos Bay, Oregon.--Mountain
Canyon.--A Branch of the Coquille.--Empire City.--Myrtle
Grove.--Yaquina.--Genial Dwellers in the Woods.--Our Unknown
Neighbor.--Whales.--Pet Seal and Eagle.--A Mourning
Mother.--Visit from Yeomans. 165
CHAPTER XII.
Puget Sound to San Francisco.--A Model Vessel.--The
Captain's Relation to his Men.--Rough Water.--Beauty of the
Sea.--Golden-Gate Entrance.--San Francisco Streets.--Santa
Barbara.--Its Invalids.--Our Spanish Neighbors.--The
Mountains and the Bay.--Kelp.--Old Mission.--A Simoom.--The
Channel Islands.--A New Type of Chinamen.--An Old Spanish
House.
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