Show I. I KNOW UTAH By ALBERT L ERT F F. F PHILIPS lIe He wa was from ironi New Ne England he said whEre there ther are many beautiful pictures ot of nature He had the beauty spots of various parts or of the w world 1 he told me me a as we W stood on the grand portico o of the cap t to t. t looking over er the Sat It Lake valley alley and the the-n hi he heI exclaimed But there s nothing fn the cay a or of a I natural panorama In any part of the wor world d that car can compare I wIth h the picture that we o are now look n It 1 a a. titanic monument of natures nature rearing which with Incomparable touch a a. new picture is painted by th the same great artist every da day You rot should every da day thank the Great Giver ot of All Things Thing for tor such ma magnificent pictures as this and OU ho ld thank yourself that y live In a country that Is ri- ri aled by no other God i Is good to you It was wa jUt Just sunset and two grett ranges of mountains were seen at their best The view of oC this tourist is that of hundreds or of others others' expressed daily dati b by visitors to Salt Lake and utah Years ago in fn speaking or of the resources or of Utah and arni the same applies today Robert L L. Sloan had this to sa say In part ot of this wonderful state te It It i 13 a a. s question whether aU all the dUes in tue territory c combined with with- aU all the attractions that Ingenious artificers and the th industry or of the people have haye contributed and remarkable though the be be can an equal al the effect on the mind open to tos s the he presence ot of novelty beauty and grandeur that the mountains of th the Wasatch and its canons produce This range presents a a. momentarily picture never neer the same for for for- two moments and on which the th eye ere educated to the perception of artistic beauty can forever rest lest unwearied while the heart eart sensible to the nobility and grandeur of the Creators works drinks deep of the beyond Uie he capacity of words clearly to e press express S These mountains rise from varying to toS fl S height of feet teet the valley valle with no no- ot of foothills t to conceal or dwarf dwart their pro pro- Much or of the year they are white with snow In n wear they aU all the thc colors or of the rainbow in a succession ion as Its shrubbery Is touched more and tore more severely by the frosts In the spring only do dots Its ts lower slopes present a a. gl green n appearance On northern exposures th they Y are dark with pines The general summer hue i gra gray although the light and and color colon are as variable as the winds that play lay about the craggy summits Invades their recesses and nd in Its persistent efforts to crumble them has chis chis- led out gorges gorge in the solid rock thousands or of feet deep giving infinite variety and form and outline These hese are but surface mr ace aspects however The Interest inters Inter Inter- est s In thorn them Is ever er renewed because the they perpetually c e aus-e with the seasons or with the point of view Then he be added the rang gets a de deeper per bold of f one from from Its suggestion or of prImary force torce and plin such as had to do wIth the forming of the glo globe e itself self and are themselves with its destin des des- tin ny It seems to materialize the idea of endurance to be the emblem of strength th from everlasting to everlasting the same Yet Tet It has been gas in the ter- ter erent er- er ent heat or of the sun It has been an ocean or of liquid fire re It has been held in 1 by prImeval seas that at aid Its foundation rel relatively six miles deeper than ian they theS' noW stand The crust or of the earth was wasI when It was upraised and this enormous fault I made Lade I S S S A. A |