| OCR Text |
Show ' 1 , , . t t . " - . , I , t - ' . , , ..... . v - - ' . I 1 , - , , . ". - . , I . oo' - i ......, , 1 . .. . , . I . - . 1 ....'"'"."....." o . . lif - , , .. Ct.'''. Rog . ..t ., ,,,,- 4 ,..... ,,, ,,, . .. ii ..- .IN - r 0 -- ,,, o ..t.-,- ,' ,.f ,,, ' . ,'-- -. - ..7. 14'0 ,..: ' :11- - V.", - 4 0 .- tit;,'ts.14 ' '.-- -- ',A '- -ti .. i- .1. ' 4 ,'6,5 ( - -. - :e,"r's-- -- : ' - .. t ' I . '':.',; , . ' 7 ISe lb ; .4,-'- ,.. , - . .1 'S4 4 5 - t IP 614 $495 owl I. , . yv) test 53 , . . ' , . ,, P ',', , . i 04 vp, :, It.r...k , .....,. Moo lecodwey 4,:,,,:,., ...4 -- 3- . A . , Ovt C1 -- .4N IN, 1 N . 1 , ,.1M a 6 .., .... , . The comp in Forbidden Canyon, from which . Rainbow Bridge took off t ths - ' I . ' trek to six-mi- lo - ' -- - ' 1 S 4-4- - - - - enleliltflowee . r , P le 'T &1 'i'll - -- - '. , -4. ' ' - '.11 -- .7744t t,''' 1 . 14 .7 . ,IN 14 ik --,,, , ,e;;-- - Q.. 1 : Z 171r! t ,, --- -- .. - . , -- -- . ,f5er---F . , .14- ,---- ,,,, 1 ' ' , .. , ' Jr gik - , 't -- '''',,,.,,f , L - i- - 0 ' A e . :' AE);ak--- , : CL'o, i,1 VI1- NA !. 1 - 7- -1 - ikoe-- ; 4t . - (CX'--,Cilk" e4 )' - 7:1 V ", '''.'..taCet1'7 , I 1. v71, ii" - 1 a box of . GLADE'S chocolates D 4....,--)- et p1 . I ,,,,,, ... .. . ' (fl 017 1 51, - , - . ! 1', . 1 r I11N: !1-- teJeleltAillil 6414 I t - , , ......., . . 1 X -- , - ;0.a. c: :4,:a;,, , -- .. ........... CIO issi.WWS S.... .. .. . Amt. COD Mob) or Ws w Pa 11111""q. ill At. ' Utah's own southeast corner about the most stimulating region of all. .. .. f4, ... p 'teal& Slk ADDRI:SS 4 i g , SOS............................... I 1.p,., - Set tabs rikES tli sod& fool gob .................... 7vogos,utczi bias& to SHOES FOR ALL THE FAMILY THE AUTHOR Ramona W. Cannon, author of the exciting yarn about a woman's challenge to the mighty Colorado River, is a Salt Lake author of wide experience. She has lived In many parts of the world, but finds ' --, , :...............1 this mesa. 1111 , g. , , t Dal,sopealrelStb . . , , ' DIAMOND SHOE STORE action, but for tonight, let us accept the ieeming and take our rest. N , 23-1-- 411i viols I') In - In Mystery Canyon,' we hauled the unloaded boats over a dry sandbar, singing "Volga Boatman"; then rowed up a canyon, in places go narrow that the boats can barely.' squeeze through. In Twilight Canyon the smooth rock has walled in and topped an amphitheater,. vast' '''',. It 1 ..., n, out-rivali- . -- I 1 - nt h. i'111; r I 1:1 viidtks end sessecolday duds wearer is goat end belasse lbo body esosody. JUI01110-1ACI-S are dmoimpMe 1. '''-- ,.?' . Cblid Issebstbds cotes Ikal shoes tee film Ms someb-lehos- t yeas eid child sboad be specially. sedesdleally made is peewee schema dievelevemee md bees& while sed ',.. - . . ..... - , Sixes ' emddies It is open at one beyond all imagining. had been end, as if one flap of a circus-tecut off, to give a view of the blue sky. Here echo will come you call and a seven-fol- d back to you. In one way the nights were loveliest of alL Our first camp was in a beautiful, large cove, a little above Slickhorn Gulch, with the river curving distantly out of sight both below and above us. The mountain, beneath which we camped, supported a high mesa, with many small figures sitting on itsquat animals, knobs, gargoyles, all of stone. As night shadow gradually crept up the mountains, taking everything but the very rim, these were fantastically beautiful silhouetted against the strange, softly bright glow. , Long after the sun had set, a dreamy afterglow rested on the cliffs that surrounded us. As we settled down in the sand on our comfortable air mattresses, in a long line by the river bank, the air was balmy, and the murmur of the river soothing. This was an other' worldthe fabric of a ctreant In the light of the stars and the silver half-moothese giant peaks and weird forms, made by nature in the throes of creation, seemed to have settled like a bird, weary of flying. Tomorrow, a slide of boulders weighing tons each, might prove to us that nature is still ar breath-takin- ' 1,., 4I, ,,...1-,,A t.:Z.3 -- J I - - I .1.,,'',.,,,-- ....... Nonnozoshie Nagelid (Rainbow Arch), largest naturel bridge in America; Navajo Mountain et beck out, letting us use their hands or their feet,. for steps where natural supports were too far apart for all but the very athletic. They would give us a pull here or a hand there. especially in the steep and dizzy place or on the long treks, such is the twelve-mil- e trail to RitilibiAiilltidge and return. If they were not on hand, other members of the party were equally kind. There was always the satisfaction that they did not have to put their hands together and make a chair to carry us anywoman where as they did for awho went on one tripwhen she had to walk on the rock shore while Norman took the boats one by.one down the worst rapids. She did not take the side trips, but she took all the rest, and when she finished the exshe said cheerily, 'That was the pedition, nicest- trip I've ever had." The floor of Ridden Passage Canyon, with its enormously high walls, narrows until it is nothing but a stream bed, which we enter, walking up the rivulet In mirror-clewater that soon reaches chest-higThe stream ends in a natural diving platform in beauty, I feel sure, and pool, any Roman marble bath that the rich old city ever boasted. The diving grotto, from which the water falls into the mossy pool below, is encircled with tall, red rocks carfern, and back of it peted with maiden-hai- r the red cliffs rise hundreds and hundreds of feet into the blue sky, in a narrow, swirl- ing, pinnacled formation that is ' It( ' Amos; 111.1111;01.4bAl.....;411411111111...1.11t". lboominlOIMOUNIONSLIMEIMMAI, . ",.-,t 1 ,,, -. - - .: i.0- t.',, . S ,. - . .. ' tro,Zst::..olte..1 ., 7 - (!of.,- P ,..... , 4 .,, 64.0,4 ,.. ''."1 'ut --- -' ., it ' '' .., rtA:1 LI: s. - ,,, 44. , ' " te Sizes 2 ,,...4.1... t ' - , J ., ,, --- . ' ' '' (' -. ,a' , "or ' , r ' ... V 41o00 .., . 1, JA1YS - MP' , , -- . , r ..., 2 , ; . ,p ., , Sleet - $$$$$ 0111,11 - lilt us. ISM .111 , ,i SUNDAY, APRIL ID, 1949 7 ; . , , |