[221]J. J. Leclercq, La Terre des Marveilles. An excerpt containing this story is in Mercer Cook’s Portraits of Americans (New York: D. C. Heath and Co., 1939), pp. 47-8.

[222]John Muir, The Atlantic Monthly, LXXXI (Jan. 1898), 15.

Edwin J. Stanley’s Rambles in Wonderland describes conditions as of that time.

[223]P. W. Norris, Annual Report 1880, p. 584. See also Elno’s “The Lord of Hard Luck,” Dillon Examiner, June 12, 1940.

[224]Heister D. Guie and L. V. McWhorter, Adventures in Geyser Land, p. 71.

Texas Jack served as a guide for the Earl of Dunraven in 1874.

[225]Jones Bros. and McGill of Cody and Hougan and Phillips of Salt Lake City, along with many others, conducted tours varying in duration and cost. The fee varied from five to ten dollars a day per person.

[226]C. S. Walgamott, Reminiscences (Twin Falls, Idaho, 1926), II, 78.

[227]John Muir, The Atlantic Monthly, LXXXI (April, 1898), 515.

[228]Alice W. Rollins, “The Three Tetons,” Harper’s, LXXIV (May, 1887), 876.