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James Cox - My Native Land

other. This vast expanse of water is one of the best trout fishing resorts in the world. Although in a
valley, Bear Lake is so high up in the mountains that its waters are frozen up for many months in the

year, the ice seldom breaking up until well into April. At all times the water is cold, and hence especially

favorable for trout culture. Lake Pen d'Oreilles is about thirty miles long and varies in width from an

insignificant three miles to more than fifteen. It is studded with islands of great beauty and much verdure.

Close by it is the Granite Mountain, with other hills and peaks averaging, perhaps, 10,000 feet in height.

The lake has an immense shore line, extending as much as 250 miles. For fully a tenth of this distance the

Northern Pacific tracks are close to the lake, affording passengers a very delightful view of this inland

scene, which has been likened to the world-renowned Bavarian lake, Koenigs See.

The State is also well known on account of the reputation for weird grandeur won by the Snake River,
also known as the Shoshone. This is a very rapid stream of water. By means of its winding course it

measures fully a thousand miles in Idaho alone, and drains about two-thirds of the State. Near the

headwaters of the Snake River, in the proximity of Yellowstone Park, there are very fertile bottoms, with

long stretches of valley lands. The American Falls plunge over a mass of lava about forty feet high, with

a railroad bridge so close that the roar of the water drowns the noise of the locomotive. For seventy miles

the Shoshone River runs through a deep, gloomy canon, with a mass of cascades and many volcanic

islands intervening. Then comes the great Shoshone Falls themselves, rivaling in many respects Niagara,

and having at times even a greater volume of water. The falls are nearly a thousand feet in width, and the

descent exceeds two hundred feet. Many writers have claimed that these falls have features of beauty not

equaled in any part of the world. According to one description, they resemble a cataract of snow, with an

avalanche of jewels amidst solid portals of lava.

Bancroft, in summing up the great features of this State, says very concisely that: "It was the common
judgment of the first explorers that there was more of the strange and awful in the scenery and

topography of Idaho than of the pleasing and attractive. A more intimate acquaintance with the less

conspicuous features of the country revealed many beauties. The climate of the valleys was found to be

far milder than, from their elevation, could have been expected. Picturesque lakes were discovered

among the mountains, furnishing in some instances navigable waters. Fish and game abound. Fine forests

of pine and firs cover the mountain slopes, except in the lava region; and nature, even in this phenomenal

part of her domain, has not forgotten to prepare the earth for the occupation of man, nor neglected to give

him a wondrously warm and fertile soil to compensate for the labor of subduing the savagery of her

apparently waste places."

CHAPTER XXI. IN THE WARM SOUTHEAST.

Florida and its Appropriate Name - The First Portions of North America Discovered by White Men -
Early Vicissitudes of its Explorers - An Enormous Coast Line - How Key West came to be a great Cigar

Town - The Suwanee River - St. Augustine and its World-Renowned Hotel - Old Fort Marion.

Florida is the name given to one of the least known States in the Union. Ponce de Leon was the godfather
of this southeastern corner of our native land. Its baptism took place in a remote period. The day of the

event was Easter Sunday, which in the Spanish language is called Pascua Floria, which is literally

interpreted "The Flowery Festival." Almost by accident, therefore, Florida received a name which is

singularly appropriate and well chosen. From end to end, in either direction, there is a profusion of

semi-tropical beauty and of flowers, some of them entirely peculiar to the immediate vicinity. There is an

abundance of fruit as well, and frequently the blossoms on the fruit trees make a lovely flower show in

themselves.

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