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Show 4 , j THE. SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 13, 1922. Bryce Canyon Described as Fairy Kingdom of Utah Wonderlands .i y'h ? , v l V Makes Buying NOW Worth While AtVNV S Save 33V3 Percent , j E3 Over October Prices and Then You Choose From a Much Larger Variety. a a RESERVES It is the part of wisyour S- dom to make elections We early. shall hold the garment of your choice in storfor you until age wanted, without any additional cost ARY C3 FUR GARMENT A mere $5 will RESERVE for you the piece of fur youve set your heart upon. In regard to the PAYMENTS you make now and then, well, the SIZE of these amounts will be arranged to suit YOU, YOUR purse and YOUR circumstances.' In fact, folks who never before saw their way clear to wear silky, luxurious fur garments have a delightful opportunity to clad themselves richly NOW. C3 S3 Gorgeous Coats, Capes, Wraps in every wanted fur. Only the utmost in quality furs has become a part of our stock. Whether you intend buying or 'not, we invite you to inspect ythe exceptional values. 63 ( ( r IF toward one of the tribe at the present time is to invite the exclamation of "two bits" from the subject , Borne automobiles are owned by the Indians, according to Mr Donner, but they are few, as the Indian prefers to .tick to his covv pony About 40 per cent s of the living on the reservation are living In to ees, those having built houses fiequenty abandoning them. The once stolid dignity of the Indian has given wav to commercialisms and he now dances his ceremonial dan,-ebefore spectators at so much per head for each of the usually large audience. Even the historic and sacred ' sun dance is not immune, the annual event for the past several years being open to the public, and this year even cameras were permitted to record th s greatest of dances. "It Is funny," said Mr. Donner. ' that the people don't want the Indian changed We often get requesta from towns for i in their ol party of Indians to appear garb, pitch camp, weave baskeas and old the There are traditions up keep times when we could have the entire on out such reservation trips if we wished " ork at the Indian school is progressing encourag'ngly, savs Mr. Donner, and the Indian children show a surprising talent In music and art The Indians are great poila of all kinds, the school having an excellent baseball team this year and Inst fal turning out a very It is planned creditab'e football team to Install a wire 'ess outfit at the school fbr Instruction and public purposes. Bannocks-Shoshone- Looking down Into a lake of solidified fire from a rim promontory at Bryce canyon, Utah. Top (right) The Cathedral Organ, one of a myriad of rock formations, each different from all the others. Middle (left) Queen Victoria in state robes, hewn by nature. Middle (right) General view showing a few thousand of the rock formations. Below The Tower of Ofcar. Top (left) Bryce Ranks With Most Re- markable of Wonderlands in Surpassing Splendor. Slrjce is the kindergarten of the southern Utah wonderland. It is the plaj ground where the fancy runs riot and the imagination has unlimited diversion. ,lu (sf he art gallerj, crowded to overflowing. where are assemoled the gems of natures artistry in erosive sculpture among highly colored formations. Bryce may be lacking in the wonderful variety of hues which is easily the feature of the Cedar Breaks. But it has its thousands of natural studies in sculpture, where the Breaks have thc'r hundreds. To the nontechnical mind Bryce is the completed work, while Cedar is Breaks the preliminary suggestive sketch. Grandeur Impresses. Bryce is entirely different from Zion, both in the character of the wonders and in the Impression made on the visitor. Compared with the GraPd Canvon of the Colorado, Brvce is the brilliant evanescent imagery of a Shelley as compared with the grandeur and power of a Paradise Lost" Bryce is a sweet lyric melody of some violin solo, while the Grand Canyon is the powerful diapason harmony of a mighty pipe organ. Your geologist, line as not, will try to convince you that Bryce is no wonder at all. There are only two formations d there, he will sayv Yet supposedly business men have been moved to tears by the whirl of emotions arising at the sight of that strange canyon So, too, there were several in the Union Paclflo party headed by President Carl It. Grev, Vice President II. M. Adams and W. S Bas.nger, passenger traffic Brvce canyon manager, who declared easily the climax of a trip which in the four preceding davs had taken them to the Breaks and to Zion and the Grand Canyons haid-heade- Comparisons Made. - Certainly Bryce canyon has an appeal not found perhaps anywhere else in the world. Its attraction may not be entirely universal. Just as there are a few persona who find only intellectual incongruities in Shelley and others whose souls are impervious to violin music; so there may be some who get no thrill from the color effects of Bryce can- -' yon, and who find no pleasure in Identiforms familiar among the thousands fying of figures and groups of figures crowded in this strange formation. together But such men are rare. Most persons are moved to unrestrained expressions of gaae on Bryce. Few pure delight as they do indeed are they whose imagination not respond in an almost childish abandon multias these to the stimulus presented tudinous natural carvings change momentarily with each new effect of light and shadow. , Imagination at Work. sitting apart from a party of his .fellow visitors who were contemplating Bryce from a vantage Point on the rim, noted the strange combinations Mr. Basinger, of Ideas on the tongues of these unusual- business men. One dely clared he saw Queen Victoria In effigy before him. Another eagerly pointed out a toad ready to leap from the top of the pinnacle whereon it was poised. A thirl called alter t'on to a group of bear cubs and a squirrel. Eagles and buzzards, churches, old castles, obelisk. Mexican ruins, the pope, and Cfuar City taber hard-head- nacle all took their place in the lively conversation "if I did not know these men and what thev are doing," Mr. Basinger said, 1 would- -! suggests to me only one place Provo.' The railroad part;., of which the perd In preceding arsonnel has ticles of this series, had spent the night Kanab The at morning was taken up in a delightful drive by automobile along the highlands of the rim of the Great Basin. Crossing the Kanab valley the road gradually makes the climb by the water grade of Johnsons creek from the vlOO at Kanab to feet above tha divide between the Coloiado and the Sevier River basins at the west fork of the Sevier. The divide must be somewhere in the neighborhood of 9000 feet. sunsets on Great lake From Brjce an early start was made for Cedar, by way of Panguitch, Bear Parowan. Here, too, in spite of roads that are somet es rough, is an automobile trip of a few hours crowded with scenery and thrills that make the journey one of continual pleasure. A most excellent dinner was served on arrival at Cedar City. ki the beautiful home of Randall L. Jones, who had been with the party continuously since It left Cedar for the Breaks, five days before Several Cedar residents assisted in entertaining the railroad men. The latter had a brief two hours in which to see some of Cedar Cltv and to get into touch over the telephone with business that had been left behind for Forests Petrified. the few davs spared for the trip. In the evening the drive over the new early On the way up the travelers heard boulevard-like road to Lund was something of fhe traces of 'a prehistoric and there the railroad business cars made, were civilization valley and of petrified waiting to bring the party back to Balt forests there A stop was made to ex- Lake. amine the face offA huge red sandstone Indian cliff extensively marked with convolute Nature Interviewed. The curious hieroglyphics. said by some to tell of the presence of The visitors had communed with Narattlesnakes is found among these writ- ture in her wildest, grandest and most had been moods. ings, as are the cross and the serrated pleasing Enough line which President A. W. Ivins says is glimpsed amid the haste of 700 miles of automobile and wagon travel tef convince interpreted as meaning water The rancher owning the property has each visitor that a month could easily chosen this romantic spot, near the road- be spent in covering the same territory side, as a location for his stacks. A huge and each moment be just as crowded cave in the rock has been provided with with thrills and pleasure and satisfaction an enlarged entrance to form a granary as had been every Instant of the six and storehouse Otherwise it is as left happy and enjovable days spent in the by its aboriginal carver or discoverers, wonderland of southern Llah. as the case may be. Another cylindrical opening in the rock is being altered, to form a modern silo. i by some of the glorious feal t been-name- r Ja Pocatello Rotations Help Back to School Movement Special to The Tribune. POCATELLO, Idaho, Aug 1!. At the last regular meeting the Pocatello Rotary club moved to foster the "back to school" movement among the children of the city The movement has been outlined by International Rotary, which recommended its adoption by the clubs throughout the country. Statistics ssow that only S eer cent of the students in the high school come resifrom the children of foreign-bor- n dents and it will be the work of the club to try and Increase this percentage. The club plans to procure the names of all children eligible for high school and bv interviews and explanations to the parents try and Induce them to send their children through the advanced grades. The night school which is conducted by the Idaho "Tech"durtng the winter has aided greatly in the work of educating the residents of the cltv who are foreign born or of foreign extraction, and it has also aided In inducing the parents to send their children to school. Eur. n seem to think that an jarents eighth-grad- e education Is sufficient for it la to help In eradiand en. chihh thelp that the Rotary club cating this belief back to achool" is taking up the elgn-Tor- J sea-lev- el r. Mens Full Dress Shirts at Broken Assortments of Earl Fine Makes. The trail up Red canvon this year follows the creek bed. The United States forest service will alter that, it is expected,. before the end of another season. The trail emerges on the plateau from which the water flows into both the Colorado and the Sevier. A few miles bring the visitors, now traveling through a forested area, suddenly and startlingly to the precipitous brink of Bryce. Something of the impression made by Bryce canyon has already been indicated. The party had all afternoon and evening cm the rim and the attractions received a more intensive study than had any other of the wonderlands visited. Wonders Remarked. This perhaps was fitting, for' Bryce is a mass of detail. Yet the experience only served to indicate how impossible it Is to get a thorough appreciation of any of these remarkable wonderlands In anything short of several days or even weeks Bryce canyon was witnessed by the light of the setting sun, the full moon and the rising sun. The latter is perhaps most thrillingiy beautiful of all The rich red formations under the level rays of the sun have a trick of reflecting on the glistening white statuesque pieces, giv ing the latter the appearance of trans. lueency and opalescence that in the rich delicacy of its coloring is revealed only Wilsons r i t Pique bosom and cuffs. Sizes 14 to 1$. a f The kind we sell every day for from $3.30 to $5.00; for Mondays big' sale $1.00 north-and-sou- th Trail to Be Altered. & n These are as nice as any indeed, the celebrated tra3e mark of E. & W. is a sufficient guarantee of authoritative style and comfortable fit. Plain linen bosom and cuffs. Roadway Discussed. From the divide the road passes the Junction of Asav and Mammoth creeks, forming the Sevier, and the site of the former Hatchtown reservoir. A few miles before reaching Panguitch the route turns westerly from the main highway and strikes toward Red road canyon, on the Panguitch-Tropl- c The lady from Philadelphia who had to the designated (h ..commonwealth been asked for south as "Aridzona'-ha- tt some similarly descriptive title for Utah. The Red canvon furnished the answer. Land of a Million Wonders" because "Tha Land of Vermillion Wonders." BIG SPECIAL SALE MONDAY Because of the unusualness of the price, jve suggest that you come in early. Stolid Dignity Is Rapidly i Disappearing Under the Stress of Commercialism. - . Bathing as Y ou Like It Special to The Tribune. At the times, Lo, the poor Indian, will soon be relegated to the" position occupied by the cowboy useful for show purposes only. The Indian, according to the federal agent, William Donner of the Fort Hall reservation, has abandoned the blanket except for 'ceremonial purposes and has donned the overalls of ths white man, while the feathered headdress is brought out only yhen the Indian with a few of his kind hie themselves into the hills for some ancient ceremonial, or when brought out for pay, as the "reay" American has learned that he has a valuable asset in his personality and history. Where once he shrank from the cameras of curious tourists and others seeking to record a "specimen' in his native, costume, he now seeks a place in front of the lens at so much per push of the button. To even so much as point a camera POCATELLO, Idaho, Aug. present rate of the t 12 faat-movl- in a biff, clean pool with a smooth sand beach! And the temperature to jour liking slightly warm, but still to 8V4 feet at the invigorating. The depth is from ankle-deediving tower. New bath houses. Clubhouse, sheltered tables and ball grouqd for the use of patrons. iro jwirjsr. jsr. p Drive south on the State road through the fertile Salt Lake valley. Turn west to the lakes at the point of the mountain. The famous old Bedwood road makes a return, trip with variety. DRESSING BOOM AND SUIT C3G Crystal Hot Lakes South on State 45 Minutes From Broadway STORE ROOM For rent, October 1st. Best corner in Price, Utah. Now occupied by Eastern Utah Electric Company. Write to A. G. Lee, Price, Utah, or Fred 314 Paternoster, York Apartment No. South 7th East Street. I r ' s J |