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Show ww lore- - - vf 11,- w; , 'r , , N- - roun-- - le Can Pit ,our --,,, - , . SMELTER SATURDAY, ,OF 11P131414 al Beauty, 125 ', 5, - 1 -T- M-D:38E11T 1 I - , E;bit of the Groat Opel Epics rystary aad High Adveature. ' ,r-f i'' - - -- 1 N 1 ' .) - - :'::,...,,.., ; e,'''f, iti 4 ' - ,., :: ' a.m. - k 'e 4 4.) , - ,, L. r,,,, , , e , ..:::j,' ?-- .. .7;.,.:1,:: 4"' ". '''' ' 1.: ' ' k;.' .'''' ' , I ; , O. - ' ...", ' - r ,. m.12 ji. e.k.,, y" A.!: va "': .,...41.,, , , 7 ::',4-;I-- ,',..t. ' 4 N- - 7i,- 4,,-,- t, 1,..., 41I -- ;ii.'''-!". ,, - ,, i,:, s4,- ,s--,c- ,, - i - - st - !! ". 1 I mom ;6 Lium or sairrylo &CND. - - -- lead-sliv- er - Old-time- rs ona-wor- a n. el emr-recedi- ng - OM-tie- g - - aelitiens.-end-aa,,oessalter- eal - f- arty dew-milte- d - ,, . witTlytortaisL4 1- t eett .,. 1111ilks dust-teste- 4- . - , .e., --, ' ! . . ' , '$- - - - .. ". - it ..... ,' 0c , "' l',.,;:, . ,,,,,,11,i-E ,.... :;, a' - r r:,r f ,t 1 - Al . t, ' )6 ,,.;, '', .r.- ".,.. 'i 1 , - c l .. ; ,; rr -:- i N.0--- -- .T. ,41t4 . 1,--- T , o' , .. 4 : . '.,L , , , , -- - .. - j, - ',1'''Verdr-A L...4 ' ,3 11C - . . ;,-.- ..c 1"---j511'tt- ' ;:.. ' -L .!' ,4,;0"s""...' ,A . . .- .. , . t , ttrIJA) , -- :- IN ,.. 4, .,.'0 - - 'the Ittleiee; alma tor Xephi la; moms.) ad scene. lliut s change took plao& the Over tie& sasemblad Peaks at tho river wires as a natural Canyon head. a massy cumulus to the most tugged part formed and, advancing from out corn-moti- on Ha. arsiceMe smo- - 'Pil5le. each a ens is looked at the Crater leach. de iner. miles sorthwest st Dolts. the water le edema, bellies whoa It reaches the estisto. On cold winter daps the greet haat of steam may be pees from $O SOlf111 sway. 'A ootalwitet whet the rinotintahm. War'SW, sheallar - hoopla mall the limestone boles Vert In tew, lashes saran to else trtmt several test. Seats at theme blew oat warm. dame alr esatleassahr. ad la the winter this Olt Mee se a ogler. et ataolte. gene et Pe bir:owle in - - - ' - Ann - es - a , - ed down-crush- -1 a - ' ed , -- , 'a j oar-Mi- ape. sad in those parare lt, dermathereefts. ,weri hot the-hea- h, - been considerable -- up-pil- of taw rising to bare. rugged it --- ---- - m ?" , ilia west, & multituds of long, gray Governor, Wallace ' loarrtuttea vapors Irons attracted toward C. and Ara rarringtots.'accómpanted At last it gmr to such a dizzy height that ths loftiest peak was by a number of distinindelted but as Its foundation stones. and SWAM; made a trip around the Zr Patterson, with firs land of Oahu, recently attended a jr Congreesman A. E. B. Its crest was Stephens and wife and others. The by ths talLing autumn sun. With "luau" - at in and made noon,. Partl only a short visit at It. mighty shadow ths spreading afternoon drove around the temple grounds. but from the cloud darkened tens of thousands the remarks of who took co "Mormon" temPle those to the of acres of mountain side, r.,..ting at Leta The temple itself is a .ion to express theiradmiration deep gloom over the region of a masterpiece in modern for what they had seen and beard. hundred lakes. the birthplaca of as and is being recognised architecture more every the visit was intensely intereirtIng. stream& mazy as one of the main points of Tbe temple . day A Mountainlkorm. Then followed a mountain storm., seighborhig 'heights although - flu tected us front the possible attack Ageasie yet look down on the !multi - a wild and thistle symphony, in altitude is ovar IMO. test. The of dangerous nocturnal beasts. In of the deer. There yet gleam the which- sound and motion. light and first mountain named is ot a pals a wad. save for our rifles. we lakes, and roar the streams; there darkeees. bore each an equal part.1 reddish ,bus. tha second of a dark returned to the condition of prim. the &tautly la still resplendent In-- sneer at the 3naket, Why outbr quartos kb man.the crimson and colt We sigh. Once IL as the description? great ago of stone. "There are times again it would be -TM Beautiful lakes. Ploosont to Water el Streams' once told tie when one feels the motion. the climb the heights and find there Lb. elder poets onloyed nature as Rem lie tha Grimly Sear groan' whirling of our 'ardent gladness.' through in the drinking of old wins and of lakes. the IMMO' of the Weber space. Sometimes plenet one is the dreams the of cognizant and hope Provo and the youth. yet remained Cant, why did they river. the Bear. tileLake of the earth's shadow thrown out Lail.,Lake sing of Uwe human emotions? Or Ducheana lime lie a mighty arch a far-th- e Into the void. le it only praiseworthy to sing of Washington and Lincoln. and I vast cone. that of the settnent, Denver News Items to the south. the Grand. Daddy and of setutual Reecho wherewith the Puritan Milwhereof they sang mio much? The lakes, surrounded by his mang the scale. , ton measured the day and night." have thought otherwise. acendants, Through castIons of modern e (Reeda! Correspondence.) below. a hundred the streams. the In a and got without reason. we trust. same names-a- d new On from the yards down the maintain slope was DINVER, Rept 11.ThrooINknVer Among writers of English poetry unfits.' waters pass the bitter an unvisited lake. a well. ad in missionarim arrived inWthwarda are Wordsworth. Crebbe. Byron. mountains to be lost in sea. D. John Elder 'Meg- its waters were reflected the pro. Friday. Campbell, Rogers. Burns. Welter depths of trtah's inland Whitney. Idaho. Archie W. Otil, Scott and Tennison thought it not nificentl" and yet our exclamation mason of stare that passed over. of The head. the constellations, the pur. Freston. Idaho. Lnd Mies Laura Le, uttered. was but inwardly foolish to recall the scenes thin! Rue of Mated. Idaho. Thee loved. Among the 'niters of Prose writhing and twistings of those lay- pie vaultthe cradid and the sop. will Jensen b sacigned to their finds stones. ulchre of VMS. NO WHIM of olio 1U1sr. Einitalet. ers tad waves of descriptions w Ziwee ley upon the rocks for I ern not of labor within a, few dam. to the Ruskin. Tyndall. Huxley. not to The gradual upheaval. or the and awful. grindings and much of a hunter, after all. Met Ross W. Olsen has &returnedabsence mention the great historians. Upon brief field after minion the the stricken deer go weep." there the Continent, one recalls Heine. clawing which accompany tnounon account of sickness. ,Maltaa - la a thought-to-toucrt. Humboldt end building or denuding of the con.. Goethe. Of our own Eastern writ- tains ars followed by tits more -aw- It is useless to decry man's in- turned to the Zan 24ebraska, There mar tinct to hunt: from the brat he ers we have Edgar A. Pos. Berk- ful calm. The Mali club orDenver, ware of silver or nuggets has ought for game. Yet in reveins man, Prescott. Thoreau at the home of Mr. and among gard to suffering wantonly Inflict- entertained of and dust gold thorn. Cooper. Emenmonwhat Mrs. O. A. Whitaker last Friday names! Alt Tentelsdroch. the tilted. the level or twisted ed upon the timid and gentle anion enter.; , the mals. I am like unto the sensitive rrening. The commtttes and therwarerforrned your own pen turns against You strata of besides Mr. and Mrse the monsters of long ego. Bisbee Berke!, and feel as the tainment when iron laugh at the maker if a inestia Mr. Mrs. Ids. were and Whitaker There he the bones of the extinct poet c weer. I have drawn nearer deectiptiont Hem and Mr. and Ifni Ls. uncouth, Uinta thereum. the hid- to a friend or meta who. when he roy Approach the Western Mita aid evening Ina limit scaled, the tor- had once snot and brought down F. Leans. The Luncheon range from whatever quarter of the eous Dinosaurs. theclawed was sere. areatures a doe could not apply the mora- playing games. and compass we may it is impossible riblY Walked and Mr. and The guests It. tore each other in tut knife to the throat of the Mrs. V. Harrison included Mrs. not to observe its bold and com- that "fought John Jones, thaview from that wounded creature because of the M. manding forma. That trinity of the prima Ah, Newell Knktht, th Knight, bow beautiful. Bow ridge! Reed's great of appeal In her limpid eyes. Misses Gold& and Fern Rune heights. Bald mountain. , Par look But this is. as one might say an peak and Mount Assad. form the grand. how timed terrible! Ra:r, Mrs. Lowell Turner, Mr. center of endless magnificent views. away the Wasatch; farther the aside. From time immemorial man June ' 1. Revers Fowles. Mtn ' the has delighted In the chase. One and Mrs.BIAIStat Then there is Mount Watson, and Dotal range. the Clitagukt. Tin-titand Yard's Whit. Marths, ). Raft river. the the Hayden and La. blotto peaks. Oquirrhs. thts nure of to the seemed nearer farther Mill Alm peaks of the Not long MN considering the age Uinta that of Mr. the mystery and Mrs. J. Morgan Ruse night. Countless Wind - River range. of mountains and their Iin there had been the lust to sell and daughters. Golds and Fern. panying Phenomena, this whole ye. mountains in the states of Idaho. are from Denver to Della& moving And gion was covered with creeping Utah. Nevada. Wyoming!: Texas, where they expect to make Color. the Ilintas themeMves. But their glaciers, Thole Wahines usuisse of neareroven home. They are msking the attempt to mats the Gorgeous were the mountains trip by motor, ice came from the Vain why stopping on their mountains could the One names? Than. color. autumnal with tres between the great amphitheaand Peaks way to visit friends In 'Una's and their bristling fronts rested upon were called by the Greeks; giants stalk the deer and yet not mime the ,Oklahoma. the moraines of rounded boulders eves yet more huge and stupid. wonder of that. nowhere in Mr. and Mrs. John R. King an which they themselves bad agreed Totuns by the gcandinevians. But Europe can onseeee among the some of their engagement we give not peroonality la the trees that abandon to glory. that ',laughkr.theFlorenok and brought down and left as to Mr. Vernon monoliths. or grouped and. modern days. - We looked on the ominous ostentation. that carnival. 1Woodruff. the marriage to take the polar infant that very aluurnalia. which piled at moraines, alongtheir sleeping lakes. the peake. may be tistin In autumncola, among the lengths or at the canyon mouths. streams: the Pine. woods. Mr. and Ifni. Sen E. Young and the number, We see the evidence of erosion on the yawning canyons. ANIOTICIIII woods. Its splendor is a Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Jorgensen Mum& , eeerY hand, the polished and fluted less review We were face to face sort of paean. a glorification. an their escuicin lathe mountains the results of Geological with the leaves and the week. slopes of the year that deep saw the anatomy of the apotheoide Nowhere Mr. and Mrs: Hamner Morten.. Do place for' sadnesa troughs of the canyons themeless. ages. we 'Mount Aussie rises above 12.600 great mountains in naked truth. the 'en of Manama. Colorado, hams red more wonderful than And what Vas the foreground? Western mountaina and among those can. turned to their tome atter-spen- de feet, Bald mountain close to 12.00e. the The compass plant among La Motto peak in round-toppare tog several weeks In Denver durd Yons and heights of tints ins granite. the height whose staple sky line makes as any. But the woods are ing the- summer. It less noticeable than some of the et Douglas spruce. a noble buck.' splendid Mr. Joe. E. Richards of Ball the sentry of the feeding herd. a doomed. Tamed Itherwood. the was in Denver WednesdaY holes draw in air, and ethers al- silhouette a stag of bronze. against haunt of Robin Heed. or the For- Like a few hours oil his return trip trona age the where melancholy Arden. ternate. giving on the uncanitY the 'white light that flamed in the Jaques moralised upon the wound- New York. feeling that the - mountain le easern skies. Elders Venus ed stag are no More legendary Mahoney breathing. Roles that "exhale" ire Molustatuo ot Steve. be than are now most of the primal ,los. L. Orr. who rs ' Unalair lined with mom.. Chimney of an Eastorn woods of our middle attain. where Fort Collins, reported working couch the tor Irtt at minion ' Rock Pass between the south imtl bowls-knif- e the With his Mohawk last the week or Denver. King! the headquarters treenail of Cedar Velly and Utah Vallelf mountaineer- - cut the reamed. I3ut noon the- mountable? They say the branch of the Churoll has a number of such hake. one whits-hair. tips from tho branch A. thousand Mrs from now and In that city is growing, crisp winter morning. 1111.011 wild, fragrant Be ea there western heights. the au. The Denver branch Relief' so.e eats ware soon seated en Chimney ends of the twisted talentsand, the them shining commenced its upon season's laid same. The ciety work be the tunin.colors may Rock. warming their,paddies" be, , of dialtstegrated tranitei His may be taking on the golf- last Tuesday. fore breakfast. in his Ifoliage and prudence were Mowwhich-wsame solendor that it wears title , Min Jun. Ray, who le 'pending - selection Desert ISMS Lite. e of the place in descendants her vacation in Denver, expects to der. when not z The 1014 life of the desert le were to pass return to her home in Salt Lake the night is it was of the primal alma Eastern forest, le soma his of abundant. time during the coming wekle. remarkably stalking upon scosidering In his method likely JO eland. recess Miss Ray has been the guest St the conditions under which mauler As must aatlered prey. it tense. In Present It Written the eirerni parties during her stay in exist. amides the coyote& wilt-ea- ts in the face of a low. overhanging was the rightfully belongs to the past. MI Denver. and range horses already men- will of grenits--th- at - Miss Florence King. when sue from friend. the mountaineer. has been tioned. there are countless carte. sheltered were we Po pima ties of birds, and illef are bad. the northerind that began to move many a year in his grave But that easement is announced. has been orients in stone. said the sued of several parties in )Is gore, rabbits. antelope, deer, lynx. scrota the lofty wart& Before us trinity Mount and honor Mountain. Reeds the Cats, and. In nom place& melteand peak few this pro during pan weeks, burned a fire of tine. tain Hone. - There are also a low rattlesnaksonot very many. TM Creek canyon. Monday afternoon. lynx-c- at is a very beautiful creait to be the ture. almost - as large as the Cana-Ma- n ettloyable time they-havbad obiritimilma .:.H. most r tyrix;- and more striktngly and were high in their forliPS of the marked. The fur la very entertainment furnished' by the -- - Five years ago IT of these an stria in song end dance. - wore trapped in one rrionth in the The", ems taken to canYoll sand bills of the Pahvant In a g bus, chartered tot Another vmy rare animal for this the Mr. occasion Chamberlain. by country is the mountain sheep. the girl serenading ths entire trip. miners report having even a Mils A feature of ribs entertainment band Of them on a number0ef waa an Indian ear dance. executed neatens. on ono of the deseft Inoue. by tho girl in native Indian cos.tains. Thor never show up except turns. and headdresses. Thu girls in times of extreme drouth..when rendered three choral selections. tbey come - down to water at sift. of Mr. Chamberlain's composition tie spring.iontitted,-"T- he Angel gong." "Mae And RighAievoicia.of the Pines." and "The Night. sic wir Inge's. The desert. seen by daylight does ttl.'- Following the program a basket have a rather beak.- - forbidding luncheon was enyed. aspect. and its beauty may be mimed by the casual ;reveler. But ' 1;1 ALWAYS TELL TEE Tarra.: by moonlight it becomes a now. t , bold. strange world. Truthfulness to an soosntial to lines are ftened. The S mental bealtb. declares Dr. Memo N em perfectly smooth and att ) longer barren. Distapt mountains as D. Wood. well known authorttl ,, seem to move up closer, and there on chIldren's problema-ian ay. Seel-m-e. less lonesome a , I. peaceful, title on the "Cu. of the School In the clear. dre air the Child's Health" in the Septembes ensiled is only a little lees brilHygeta. popular health magazine Snowliant than the daylight. 1:7 the American Medicel 1.0 published Call for Peell many peaks capped , association. miles. and the indivklual trees on is It near-b- y bills can easily be importent that the Ter ? small child not oats, loam to tett The far-o- ff chorus of the truth but to be able to risme gwrotee, the millet song of birds nise the trut4, to face facts and to end the email of greseswoot smoke ntli frying bacon will go a long interpret their significance. -DS Wood asserts. way toward giving any one a ewe Children should never be Ilsd ttl r of eomplets peace with the world. and they should not be confused The desert never will appeal to to $OIL sit Ow ars. Mrs. Oitter Pelts, Mrs. by irregular discipline. which pun., In the piceers-k- it veryette. any , more than great, Morris. Mrs., Ads Pimp hes an act one day and ignores works of art will be appreciated by Mary Petta Mrs. A. M. Wage. Mrs. ftimbus . Comer. John M. Chamberlain. Dtradmi. Naomi Mn it the nest Promises made te can sad all people. but for those who and tlytia Me Ilse. Mina and Alma ?Bullion. Ts them should not be broken. Aside Back put themselves in tune with Its from the moral issues Involved, spirit. it will always be a WM tit and Wiens Christisaine, teens 'obsess end Merton Russell. ia-ria. ' Mit et the eider residents at the' M. Chamberlain otnti his senior class theeft practices comfits the ch114.-- e beauty, mystery ia- -r ia' Miehtit wart stern ipieste et John I of popike. at tiotary Grove. in Cit.r 1113'64a. - har- rt puiposee forwhich the temple bad been erected and eomothing of the work being accomplished within ita sacred The members of the visiting party evinced unusual in- toren. Governor Farrington him self especially as)ting more Portico' lerly about the book of Mormon which had been mentioned in the discussion. The guide explained in some detail what the volume purl ports to be and when the goownor expressed hie intention of Dm dei reading the book he wee presented with a hontleomely bound volute Which he accepted graciously. -- 4 etc-gr- coseentreted esturetten of polar-woOttes remains Of dead animals ere in the water or ascent-torahneer It- flowever. doer trom the dinky trails radlethis hole badioste that the water stiff has mem lifoldirlse Male& In pores et tit deskt there tun IL - Not all tho mountain' aro of Baste have this trpo. however. beautiful compass. where quaking cottonwood". omen. pines. as they do on the Wasatch. The height of the peak' vart.11 from a low kundrod lost above the valley Ile to over 10.044 foot above sea level. Mount Jimpoit. for is over 13.1101k foot high. It la a magoitioest rugged. grans" peak. tho highest ta tho Deep Crock nags. This range pours out an almadaaos of water. which la need Catlike, Trout oft the 1111111111100 Creek. Pleasant Vaboy. and nonfat-Thecortswasitilb am veritatile dome of the oases. or water boles. are not so pleasant.- - Range honest ',rat e. and people travn en eling by horse have to relybard-pan holm. either natural basins, or artificial reservoirs made by the sisternen for felt anti sprint watering. ' IY the middle of the rammer most et thees hole are OM eat ,the ones that are left ars tar from inviting- - Os mas's look win smaliv 'semis thirst. esteem he k actually totshalThe Is water. far pool tering low. dark proem art boiUn with WA cup-lik- lodges. , L Anis. WANT ofa - Mountains Hmrsit BALELAA interest and attraction to the .world tourists visiting these islands of the Accompanying the governor were Rear Admiral L. E. Gregory. wife and son; Congressman Herbert Brans and wife; Congressman F. F. , rod-de- er wallop LAZE. OAHU; ) he should not forget. either. Atwood's Glaciation of the Uinta Range of Mountains Jor it lencerns us the most. Tot I sin not about to writs a geological treatise nor an article about hunting. Would. however. see that I might make 'init reader the wonder of the Uinta mounor as I tains. $o doss the scientist, knew them wises following the in the company of that skilful old hunter and or& of the mounwilds. tain When we reached the plateau but few clouds were in tko sky. s golden sunlight bathed the extend thick Jungles of gresoowood to ocottering shadsoolo and salt sages Many of the mountsus sr o bare, except that the upper slopes produce good swops Of grass tor Om thousands at dump that winter there sad always itomo stunted cedars sod pinion pines grow among toast is (Special Correspondence-- ed - It ' (The Temple Beantital) 410K4t We-bar and the "CUM Stream Studies" and "North Devon" from whidb we quote boar testimony to the truth. And so the chapters or our naturalist Burroughs. At this moment I ms lommanamow , The Heart ot Nature.. "lure old companion was timer"-- -a Loathe:stocking of the we paased the Wed.. Together aftergreater put of an autumn woodnoon in climbing up a stoop, ed ravine which led from the can-Io- n bead and which finally brought us Out on the top ot a broad level plateau which lay to the south of the canyon and was thickly covered with deep, luxuriant grus and thickly dotted with clumps of pins and aspen. A beautiful park of nature's own making. it stretched to the tiouthwar4 far As the eye could reach whilst around us wars clustered th& great Uinta peaks and stood upon debatable dome& ground. It was a vantage place to look into the heart of the range. are Screened by watched the deer, the antlered stag and the graceful do& pass from glade to glade and the- spotted fawn wanton by. its mothers side. All on that high plateau arse instinct with life and sylvan beauty. said the Rector of Evereley. half olutterl ago. Thor is no better method of giving a living Picture of a whole country than by taking some one feature of it as & guide and bringing all other observations Into harmony with that original key. Itightl Ars net the words as true this day? Hugh Millers "Old Red gendstone," Edwin Forbes in his work on 'Glaciers:" berwin's tho Beagle;" Tyndall's "Voyage "Hours of Exercise in the Alps;" Beclu's "History of a Mountain;" Thoreau with his "Walden Pond;" Hamerton's "Unknown River." and Etcher's "Voyage of Discovery." the So - Ai es where' here sad there eableunt lbspsh overlooks a deeerich a town as Geld raDobbes indomitable still et man; In Deep Creek vadey. tar Gunn on the desolate waste. a , sad a school bowls snood out I hold rdbrf. Ous ea the wide eremite when a man "builds a Dap. jaek- it le serious businase, sea ass advertionnent tor paweeke f1E.We Jesse, le not, oloatedi"-Daddy le Jest behind the camera. , e. climbed heav- & le told desert home men that end MM.:WM story BENNION, later, By of the old days, ily up from the spring and started mt." a . is the spell et the &a, mos oneprospector rood. In his hand day passing by Saud back down the TEIS Motintain. and concluded to climb the roan carried one of his boots Rolf re4 half mystic. somothing up and examine the expoeed ledges. full of water tor his partner. out northwest on the Vet. lying tincotuicious In about the great -- emu space in- - An unusual period ofsome of the the shade of a broken down wagon. lriSties the Imagination and leaves winds bad swept bare ridges and passes ordinarily buried There are litany such aortas. and whet the thirst tor adventure. and each deep. Tim prospector discovered some of them do not end 90 hapEach dry water-cours- e ra trail is a partly opened book encouraging indications. and pres- pity. There are also starts. told to wids romance. valley is ently came across an exposed vein illustrate another phase of desert Every Of ore. ftte. Riverbed has the reputatio& new land to explors. and every of very high grade mountain treat is a challense to He Itake4 out his claim, took sam- locally, of being the coldest place in the world, at night. The clear. and set for out the lies county ples. see come and what beyond. Boma, of course, will always rook seat to have his find recorded. dry air radiates the beat sO quickly des-le-ts When he returned. the prevailing that the nights are always colde upon the desert as an utterly teasta place to ts avoided. southwest wifids had again begun levee in July a person sometimes But those whom eyes are open to to blow, and be could find no trace has to limber up the waterbed in of the vain. Landmarks he had the early morning by banging it the finer works of the Great Art-to noted were now buried. And 1101'4, over the wagon wheel. In winter ist. whom souls are tuned true ones Were uncovered. He the weather may suddenly become strange. in of any Nature vast the splendors tell how every foot of "mowed bitter cold. mood whatacm'er will always find bunted over never found his mine. sometimes the stage would come but a new thrill in gating. mayhae ground. on winter No foundation doubt has into the on deSimpson Springs some the story from high point. mon to go there now, nights with the lines tied to the it spread out in biretta payers- - and sand a in the and driver passon booming whipstock, ma.; or they will follow eagsrly hi the sight and the storm. he would probaby boar the gees lying unconscious the ' track that leads through baav lug- - restless spirit of the old prospec-as coach. to tar blue ,motmtnia, mamma tor. tapping smells the ledge Utah has &desert, all its ewe. It he bunted tistin for the lost mine. Other parts at the old stage toed Vanished Waters. Mende& much et the treaters pert Such a IFS Of unusual tuterest. Of lb Kate. ant. as &merle go. it made The Sevier riven which place I. Overland canyen. in the ' , most interesting. carved Creek between Callao the has sand desert, Deep range. possible Perhaps the mon uneenal part out a romantic history of Ns wanThis is a typical des ef this desert region Is the Salt dering op its way from the high and,Itspah. sit canyoa. The sides are steep Lake Desert. stvetching out between plateaus of southern Utah down sad smooth. exoept where the Emelt, and Wendover, On th oast to tho Great Salt Lek& Prom of rock ars exposed- - The, hide --- and the wog low Mils mark the where the river cut through ths bottom of the canyon le S deep . flat. but to mountains at Leamington. It flow- -: dry, gravel wash, up.' whiob the litnita of the dsad-lovthe north snd touth it sterns to et ward cross tbs wide. level present road goes... The stage toed streteh away to faints distance. tralleY. depositing sand and silt it may still be sees., between the ' Low, steep. deport mountains rise bad. carved out of tha mountains noth bank of the wash and ths abruptly at intervals. - like peeks higher up. Near the west Edo of mountainside. but floods have caved of submerged ranges. valley it turned earth. through is the banks until the roe& le int' the Phantoms. Inks& the "Narrow- s- between' Met and passible. The only vegetation eon., Ti. the (summer tints tide eitateli Indian mountains. and then wound slats 'of brush along the bot-- 1 ot country is a mast of phantom Its way across the desert. emptY- torn andjoin. a few scrub cedars and, nth,. beautiful. fantsatie of lakes, ing into ths lake near where the pinion pines on the upper slopes! ages. Mountain ranges in appari- - Lincoln highway pauses the north Right In the narrow part of thel tion stand high in thienztjierfect- end of Grenits Mountain. canyon there is a thin wall of rock It Aepcsitsd be much material: on the south adds'. riming about 11: ly reflected in the at their base. Theme phantom enures west of Idaming-- hundred feet above thirerash. Tito, Wong its lakes spread ever the land on ten that it dammed off its own out- weather. has worts nuárierous snag enes to almost every ride. corning let, and found a new channel holes throut'h the wall near tbC test. The road is leading perpet- pouthwani into what became Sevier top. It is said that Inciters used the down to where the water is Lost by to hide behind the rock. and when lak& ually shore. It is a remaritabli sight to sinking' and by evaporation. The the- tags Timm along they would see automobiles, groteseptets tall. old river valley dried up and shoot down upon it from the port the Ne- hence we have the Indian name.' holes of 'their natural 'fortress- .-0011111( epeeding-throu- gh ater." throwing Clouds of dust! W- - ou'll HMI knoll. lust where the meaning 'vanished - - - is se Pahvant, aan of , aters. " Thit great stretch , road enter the canyon. there still, level that the water runs whichs. Fisosse Istoessitsb.rensain the ruins of Canyon ever way the wind blows It may 11;-.01-4 A obsonoti-oabOno :building was elroubms sd River . ' Tiln through the itighwelf nalverts about-1feet in and one direction one day. and it lasd. la as fatuous a landmark in isaSe of stone. Thediameter. back thmusit them the the Great Raabe as Powder river Intact,. In still etendirsir:wall. almost pouring Froet.this That and Is lientana. neart-:,- -, Jet,Wyeming Title Vika Ot the- desert is old Overland Stairs rest creams nosititm one Ma an almost unbrokdevoid of any the moat nearly en- Riverbed Just north of the' Nar- -, en view of the road for many Miles the And with Yet, ing thing. Mess The flat, eastward.. to the ea its way across the desmirk Nero eeption of that part in the vicinity mountains and wort. rt. the channel is half a Fish Springs , of Salduro. frequent bunches of mils ward, up-- : Overland canyon, to wide sad about tee feet salt weed wage a fairly successful demi the where water widen out Into in earVIA the eitt,SennavMs battle against the unfavorable con- bottom. The sides hove eroded Clifton Platt, beleold the anthuelt ... . carets are stillabneut per' toss questing crow the eourttrr-- .. somewhat. butFollowing A VOW nit of tbo old probably impelled by the same me. pendicular. comes onto thc A 'very ens Of bit wag history tire that send tourists ever' the tragic edge of that great water mums: enacted at this station same ground. the almost without warning meets the days of the stage 'machduring and pour N ame way that sac comes saddoelY . Soldiers guarding- the morals ' Another place that bee 'Picini in view of the Snake river., along route had killed ot Indians' - intarea 11 tlin finall anal-- bind rol its course in western Idaho. The In the Fish Springs moustatim Millard sue gush counties. about first intersesion given by Ittntrbsd parestly without Just cause. Other of Eureka. The I. that hers omits great tragedy has bodkins la miles Southwest to wreak vie. - sand moved front tho- riel:mil octurrod. The river has been so they .carefully Waimea aothward Over Band dammed Mt and a great. fertile lease. executed as and en Cartes attack ' Mountain and out ammo the rue swap bas bedoess a barring. silent tation.The six sues there had toward lb Tint it waits. ,: , mike , for Mawr left their guas in the bunkhouse .n. ........... 11....... esustry. Th. OVUMa ars IMO INTO Then Is :::..7"C,711:7:: ..:t.. and were satin breakfast in - that in some in modem bun- isi when the radians surprised dugout endow allobt bs built smear them ,Tiley" 1171478 "are'leatt'74 thous. Sveti an was killed sad' sad It "11M Set 1111.1.5 661 Say sufhwteut and narrow weeps. trem co The Indium, ,teek the Comma away. The mod is elms death fer the want of ewer. Sous treat their victims. stole ScIthial tresmirlirbit. '.111 lad gm" of those Wes bort boon banded ths boron land everything elea of at-It, ....011' te III 111,w"11702," and burned the elation to dews treat "early dela" but tidal ors ormiterroorotoorecenttoo tor0000rialn. : moot arti'mwoortswwintesa"rtatmeetwouirt'"eleetatir7owatia A tow of the Indians sad souse follswitut of the white MOO who . the thole osutart is filled with a, . those stints' days , stilt thrones . . w""611g- tor tok. streaming . to tall the- tale. bit moat of yowls ee cloud of suet The only water te a swat stretch It,, thick that ens Sam see &terns them have "gone weer to a lead is at ghapees Springs, of a toot ahead ad can steroelyjpst of country east now sad. so detail, happier 11of the tweeds, at breath enough to beep aim 0111 41tHalialr day wises ' leeks ate whirled up over goad Riverbed. ems ViiiirDesart hagil. ' a shimming owes in the ever. the desert ?atenista sing deposited man worth the The thwart is a series el alter. a oder Medal atm growing desert ternmed. The go the dunes hes moored the riding up the read es sating valleys end Mountain,. The mid d horse. Rig eyes were valleys ars uesaltr wide ald almost os be easterly elopes ' thickof 4,1ars irwolwas and Ids tomtits lord; deli the mountatus are say. of Maple Mounts. sad the tress bulging nutria hamar of are being dearly- buried dem wider I lea lis Ms metith. The bores roer. MOP that was on es laid plumped down the ha to,the water ripared.- Itasseteee West Molt of the muld , Sa nd the smith In labs boloe and the Pisa half slid. half the vialers,ars coveted whit steno .i. feted tar to . .. likasseviAs Iv the derierriverd tell int the lies". Mall as bout ,sert el dash growth. nosibut Irma - - laie' Olathe BB trpper Canyost of gateway of the waiters Vint& range. Much of the region remains in undisturbed ocihsion. unvisited sat yct by num and toward its deep recesses.. the startled denizens of the neigh boring mountains have at JIM retre&ted. There are still the wildthe high cat and the timber-wol-f. for ptaures prove safeand reoorts "the grim herds of wart dean mann anchoriti taciturn bear. the grind?. of the deport." the savage Yet lolls his unweildy bulk in the mar. lake tall. nio, ist grass- owthe - - ., - 4i fillt ., n .' - - ,.- A 44 - 2 ( , Le , t.., , AIX. 'e-- - TEMPLE , -- -,s - - -;.4- !:,---- !, ; '411. ;',., beIA ',9, .:: , z, ';'1" . r-11, ,1 1 . .4;;;P? : .., .. 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