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ceeder bark they have an abundance of unclear and pounded bags full of sammon and ?aps of it on the shores they have a nomber of small canoes and have a nomber well looking horses high clifts of rocks ?ar on each side of the falls. we found the falls to be about blank feet of a perpinticular ?tch and filled with solid rock cut in many channels. a mist rises continually from the falls. we found that we had to take a portage of about 3/4 of a mile on the Star.d side so we went to carrying the baggage by land on our backs. hired a fiew horse loads by the natives so we got all the baggage below the falls this evening and camped close to a high range of clifts of rocks where the body of the river beat against it and formed a large eddy. the natives sign to us that it is only about six miles below to the next or other falls we saw several sea otter unclear about these falls. the natives are troublesome about our camp. we had went about blank miles before we came to these falls. these natives sign to us that some white people had been here but were gone four or 5 days journey further down the perpinticular clifts at our camps blank feet high Wednesday 23rd Oct. 1805. a clear pleasant morning. we took an eairly breakfast in order to undertake getting the canoes by the unclear about 8 oclock we all went with Capt Clark