Show "X : '''14 e n r ' J' k ‘r ? “ V fc— if f ' ' ' i"- 4! f 4 v f i THE HER ALDREPUpUCAN SALT LAKE CITY UTAH SUNDAY SEPTEMBER f'i' s V k UtahRoadsIsPalmer’sflea - 1917 1G ' 5 vard compared with what It used to be The road to Zion canyon passes first little village of prettyone through thewhere of the principal Industries Is fruit canning The local to supply the cannery has the contract Union Pacific dining car ' service with preserved figs A steep grade is climbed over the fdivide' which leads to the valley of the Virgin which la the end of the auto' mobile road little agriculVirgin City isa atpretty the right The intural village this of habitants place have had many times days of uneasiness and woe in unexoften The river' rising past in the pectedly without a drop of rain immediate vicinity has had a habit of flooding' the farms along its banks unbeen en- til many fertile fields have owners have out the tlrely washed to and elsewhere been compelled They go have moved principally to Hurricane where new irrigation works have under cultivation brought the land menace of the river the frorn away : Rockdale and' Springdale are quiet little settlements supported by farms river banks Springdale Is along the From at the entrance of Zion canyon here it ia about five miles to the Wylie camp which Is the end of the automobile road' By horseback one can go still farther up the canyon past the “Angel’s Table” “Great White Throne” or "El Governor” "Cathedral Rock” “Arrowhead Cliff” and many other famous sights In one place a sawmill Is perched on the top of the plateau above the canyon and the lumber Is let down a cable 3700 feet long to supply the valley of the Virgin Still farther up the trail ends in a narrow chasm filled from wall to wall at the bottom by the rushing torrent of the river Another Interesting trip is by horseback up Parunaweep canyon a branch This beautiful cottage has just been completed at Highland Parle Utah’s largest of the Virgin under 'the guidance of Walter' Rousch of Springdale Crossrestricted homeplace times going ing the river' forty-tw- o and on the return the trip leads past It contains fire nicely arranged rooms and a big glassed-i- n and plastered sleeping hieroglyphics on' the rock where the home Cemented basement Hardwood floors electric fixporch — really a aborigines by carving the likeness of tures French doors between living room and dining rooms Study the floor plan a snake a goat a cow and other animals on sandstone left messages It has every modem feature which makes a home worth while Designed by read by their fellows architects and built of selected materials it combines the best and most economical ter Shonesburg once a prosperous vll-labut now deserted because the home-idewhich 'we have learned from ten years' experience treacherous river washed out the irrigation works and carried away the homesite terraced front Cemented sideThe location is perfect Large greater part of the farms which once new modem homes Near school and 150 Surrounded trees shade walks and by the town A little farther up supposed downtown smoke from the are the ruins of an old moonshine stllL church Splendid car service Away Before the days of local option ana prohibition “Dixie wine” made from the grapes of this and that around St George was region celebrated Its strenuous effect on 'the human for r system A few miles up the river- is a cliff Think of it—much cheaper than rent Complete price $3400 including improvedwelling In fair state of preservation ments It’s up to you to act NOW Homes likelhis will never be so cheap again Climbing the side of a hill and 'workone’s way over the rocks and along You’d better go with us and seeit Monday morning Name the hour and our auto ing a narrow ledge one comes to this cave will call in the fkce of a sandstone cliff where the first settlers built their little adobe houses Phone —Wasatch 963 Springdale a community of about 125 souls once one of the most Isolated settlements In Utah is now passing through many strange experiences Many of the people had never seen an autoxnobllo until Mr Wylie drove one through the town last FetTuary on his “Land Merchants” way to locate a camp Actual money has been comparatively little used People bartered among themselves trading one New Address 52 nild 54 Main Street commodity for another without using actual cash Accustomed to dealing Salt Lake City with each other they maintain a high code of honesty and expect similar honon the part of others esty O® who sees conditions as are and have been cannot fall to they be impressed with the courage and tenacity of the people who settled this Called there in the early days byregion church with the mission to colonizetheir the southern part of the state they crossed deserts clambered over mountains and lug thers In the winter time when the wonderful scenic attractions The more ketlng facilities will be afforded for and the the products of southern Utah and parts of tourist travel is encouraged ought out the streams Sometimes weather Is Inclement In other will be a broadening of the horithat go from Salt Lake there there was a scarcity of water the state The road to the Grand can- more - people sometimes there were other calamities to yon of the Colorado could be Improved' City and other parts of Utah to visit zon of the people of that section and will be the the extension of activities which canmake crops a failure but still they by of the government and this section the greater ' material lines With not fall to redound to the benefit wlone not Is development along At Rockville they sometimes the people of Arizona This clung mar- - morally and materially better to the saw the river rise to wipe transportation Improved tourists to easier make for It out whole farms and leave the owner on his neighbors ‘ In other dependent places almost' the entire community lost all Still they clung and raised their its fami-lie- s many of whom after they grew up remained close to their birthplaces liv- - ' Ing the lives of their fathers and mothers Large numbers of them have never been to Salt Lake while ‘others have Practitioners of Spurious and Unauthorized Drugless Schools of Healing Are Merely to manhood and grown Quacks Imitating Osteopathy Who Cannot Meet the Educational Be-without getting so far as Stwomanhood George Seeing the river rapidly quirements of the State Laws upon their farms many of encroaching the settlers up the Virgin put in three seasons of the year raising crops on the land they already held and In the winter time on a ditch to water new working near Hurricane The ditch has land In which ' the spirit of life not merely ' familiar with the names now under the name of house A T STILL evolved of a few bones muscles nerves veins been completed Winding its way along dwells a wholly DRnew “osteopathy” and arteries but In my early days In wind-swemust know them sysa steep ledge much of It cut through and original therapeutic to all as found In you the latest standard tem or school of medicine —using the Kansas I had devoted myI attention the rock From all the neighboring ' a became authors the study of anatomy: term “medicine” In Its broader and robber regions people are coming to Hurricane Yes name scienceof The human body is a machine run in 'the more now meaning accepted commonly based to take up land where they will be free of one the unseen force called life and of vultures those to be I — by the grew Is a upon that system from the inroads of the river floods and It may be run it is dead studied and that that the the which new of scalpeL principles applicationare the the little town Is making great headbenefited The necessary that harmoniously of common heri- the living might beman there be In themselves liberty la to dissect blood nerves and arteries from the mankind for diagnosing the abest way to study way of tage were the generation point to destination few bodies My subjects cause (etiology) and nature of dis- bodies Hurricane Is on the route to ' the exhumed from the Indian Osteopahty proper Is not a set of ease the prevention (prophylaxis) of Grand canyon of1 the Colorado While but a system of principles gravea In the quiet of Ithe frontier “methods” disease and the alleviation or cure surrounded the road-- ' to the canyon beyond Hurrias Immutable as the laws of nature Nature shall I prosecuted and disease by of ' (therapeutics) cane is reported to be In tad condition more zeal upon which they are founded The with of my anatomy as an study system how that Independent In many places fifteen cars a ' week more satisfactory results than I field of discovery will never be exa new interpre- and done It gave to the world known hausted for the careful osteopathic at college under- had have been passing through on their way tation not hitherto Z improved my store In anatomical finds two diagnostician rarely if ever to the Wylie camp at Bright Angel stood admitted or practiced by any cases are was familiar I that alike until knowledge quite exactly of or school healing trail existing system — One of the great fundamental printhe human body every bone In bonAs true and It is susceptible with The road to St George leads through If such—isthen ours has of the science is that when the of of The these ciples undertake to ever study I will of proof me I love human body is In perfect mechanical Leeds and Harrisburg boom towns to been fascinating and his followers and Still show that when the Silver Reef order when every tissue Is enabled to the study and have always pursued do district were—and It the adherents of osteopathy Its work without mechanical “Inter zeaL A thousand experiments with close at hand was one mining of the liveliest out In are beetlll maintaining ference health will result I bones were The until right made the with ' and mining camps in the west Silver Reef welfare to the of regard safety came quite familiar with the bony special nerve centers and principles Is celebrated as the only place In the human of the public and of suffering by which remedial effects are secured standards possi- structure world where silver Is found In sand1 spent much time In the study of In this practice were discovered by highest beingsIn—the the application of these stone Millions of dollars were ble Doctor StllL and are neither recogchemistry and physiology the for anatomy and practices nor understood by any other truths principles of nized out In the early days and Silver taken winter During mineralogy Reef which he and his associates so long 1878 and 1S79 I treated partly by school teemed with life But the ore deposits and courageously contended For many years and even centuries as In other days but also gave either became exhausted or the silver are nu- drugs treatments osteopathic principles hare been emIn a class by themselves osteopathic bace mixed with base metals such as offthe the alleviation of human in not discredited do to take and would I knew merous it ployed spurious copper which did not yield to the metbut It remained for Doctor from osteopathy and medicine shingles of hope (medicine) off the suffering shoots such 8tlir to discover and bring together or combinations of both which claim afflicted all at once I felt that allurgical methods known In those nrnclnle of to be independent systems by using a move with my knowledge of cause the underlying days Finally the camp was abandoned and to apply such principles as the basis for the " and effect would be calamitous pathy the “splneof their Buildings fell Into ruin' or disappeared in the prevention methods To various In 1875 I went to Kirksvllle (Mo) scientifically cures plication entirely more particular and found some three or four thinking and of diseases” these I lsh toI direct Now however as other western minThe fundamental principles of th mention prominently: people who welcomed me and ipy baand attention science are the common property o ing camps have been reincarnated (2) napravlt or (1) chiropractic: byIn “Osteopathy” in the history r spondylo-therap- y to 1836 went Wadesborough humanity developed I through changed conditions Silver Reef (2)' spondylo-therap(f) Clinresea rc) anatomical and y Mo at treated I physiological (5) county may enter Into another life A group HenryHolden Harrison ville and other There Is chiropractic new claimed fo ton nothing men of mining neuropathy Including several Salt these physiological principles excep work became so plenFinally Lakefs have rounded up the principal From the “Autobiography” of Doc- placea attosome that they areclaims newly Isset forth All th tiful I decided I must remain tor 8till the founder of osteopathy I one me osteopathy properties in the camp and developcome let' and applicatfo patients place the following: a eclenee built So In 1SS7 I gave up traveling and of those principles the quote ment and metullurglcal work Is In by sclentlf! is As osteopathy AlexColbath Adair with In county manipulation in Kirksvllle progress a ma- remained charge principle tothat man ia attenupon thewill Because of the efforts of the' tir Mo to teach and treat and build up St George capital of Utah's “Dixie” draw have I chine your ' trained and unskilled to foist then an institution is 'perhaps better known to fame than the I began to the fact that study tion ex- elves the unsuspecting public God and upon no but authors I quote 1855 to In continued and of machinery any other of the southern cities because various professions especial 1876 (Page 102) In May 1853 my Serlence (A T Still’s Philosophy and the of Its many unique characteristics those professions dealing with Principles) wife and I moved to the Wakarusa Nevertheless comparatively few peoof the human body the sta I worked alone with my Investiga- has assumed Mission Kansas occupied' by the the constitutional rial results ple from the centers of population of fation until about 1892 I The There with tribe my Shawnee ever to exercise police power over Its cit had than were better the state have visited it Situated In a far falL all Indians doctored the I ther sens and sav to those who wish t dreamed or reasoned I could obtain delightful valley with picturesque apThe erysipelas fever flux pneumonia me follow certain trades occupations to numbers In came Ingreat People the with old and cholera prevailed among proaches quaint buildings I all tried Paul Like “you must show yoursei professions treated to be diene with the- newer strucmingling and equipped and ot trained a bad till and properly few 1864 new A good In of was things It had the spring War had left months tures showing modern progress with to have the moral character Dr William when good by pased appeared enemy occuto follow came to Its vines and its fig trees Its cotthat Scotland of particular Smith right Edinburgh when but the my family unharmed: or And is It me and learn with proflssion” ton and cane English walnuts and alto talk house pation right hovmy dark wings of land spinal meningitisto se- something of the laws of cures by that this should be so out of protecmonds and an occasional ’palm it parit seemed ered over the are not always and was curing dis- tion to the public who ones for Its prey Surely which I had curedmedicine takes somewhat of the elements of lect my loced In all ages able to determine the qualifications of on which eases God to men Invoke Divine of tne with southern California yet it is thoroughthose to whom they appeal for aid in failed Aid and men skilled In scientific re- had a time of sickness to sons ly different from any other place In I good wanted get my ones saved be would loved search my world' realized the I science of the stood was knowledge when I It ' ' gazingall upon The people of Dixie have earned doctor was fully qualified OwteogatMe physicians ( gait dead that the them of my family three members and as he wanted to Lakei to teach much They crossed board desert from the disease spinal meningitis HOUGHTON DR soon we ALICE struck up to myself the wastes from Salt Lake City to colonize study osteopathy that I propounded Ml McIntyre Rldg and in two months he opened “In sickness has God a trade question: this section" in the face of handicaps AIREY a course in anatomy with a class DR GRACE STRATTON Guess world of In up man a left guessing? Still after year 507 Scott Uldg year a email house sixteen they in continuing or about ten to matter? What the is give? what uno the railroad twenty-twfeet which 1 erected DR A I VINCENT struggled' on' far from And guess the result? And dead by 425 Felt Bldg purpose til they produced In this section the where he goes? I decided then for that guess To be qualified for a profession you DR MARY GAMBLE God was not a guessing God but they used One that majority of the things for 517 perby thorHis works - must have complete training the state as a God of Truth And all of the Important steps m McDowell Templeton Rldg science the understand sons who harmonlml are material and a whole to make Is the further ' Im004-5spiritual Scott llldg and who know how to teach It DR JOSEPH I AMUSSKN oub His law of animal life was ab- oughly provement of the road to Zion canyon be must You God a acquainted So had' thoroughly wise solute certainly 416 Felt Rldg is meant by anatomy — eliminating some of the grades and placed the remedy within the material with all that covering some of the sand stretches -—— swwww— This nav be done bv the convicts workTo-querv- llle - - : ’ ‘ " - : ' - - f : -- Your Meal of a Hom-e- k : six-roo- m - to-b- e - ge as 50-fo- ot $30 a month will buy it 1 E R Palmer has returned from an automobile trip taken wltb Mr Palmer to Zion- canyon and Utah’s' Dixie The trip was made from Salt Lake City over the Arrowhead trail to the Junction with the state and government highway to Zion canyon and again over the Arrowhead trail onthe state highway system to St George with Various side trips The subjoined ‘article gives some Impressions of what a Utahn may ' see of hie own statejln house thriving cities and villages miles off the railroad mines of the present past and future great Irrigation works Impressive scenery 'and semltropical “Dixie” with its figs cane and sometimes cotton All these may be seen and much more on the trip by automobile The Journey from Salt Lake City to Nephi Is the more conventional part as It Is close to the railroad and the more settled districts'" Beyond Nephi Is the Levan ridge cradle of Utah dry farming The rich agolden fields of wheat the way of picturesque historical huraised without drop of water except manitarian and material by taking the natural rainfall are an eyeopener ' to those who may ’think that agriculthis trip ' ture In this state Is successful oiJy vlvld-hued In the shadow of the through Irrigation A little below-Juaa few miles bepeaks and crags of Zion canyon one of the early settlers along I Virgin TYPICAL SOUTHERN 'UTAH SCENES yond Levan’ the road crosses the Sevier bridge dam" which is one of the river stopped the other da under a AV: greatest pieces of irrigation constructree In the ‘grove where nestles the tive in the west On account of the tion sexploitation fby the Salt Lake distance from’ the railroad' and the Wylie camp' He h&d'just finished dead- fact that there has been no an this has Route' year brought and load of a systematic supplies livering vance guard of ' visitors to exploit It this dam Is not so effort team rest and with to his chat stopped - By -- rail and by- - auto - stage the - can-yo- u as many other enterprises W W Wylie host at this new tourist can be reached from Saif Lake of far less magnitude It backs up the ' Mecca of Utah City in about eighteen hours By au- Sevier ' river Into a lake extending for tomobile from Salt' Lake the trip can miles The water 'thus Impounded Is To you know Mr Wylie he said be made 'comfortably In two days let out during the summer season to “I was born on the Virgin a little way For those whose time Is limited the irrigate thousands of acres of land from here and have lived here all' my rail and stage r trip is advisable1 but now under cultivation and will later life X have seen these rocks every for those who can proceed In a more bring Into production many additional here' never thought leisurely -- manner particularly ' Utah thousands of acres to add to thewpalth day but we people much about them until the road was people who wish to learn more about of Utah and the nation The ' massive opened up and people began coming their own state the trip by automo- works the great controlling gates and down here this year and talking about bile over the Arrowhead trail and the the expanse ' of water form an impres: them we never thought they were state highway all 'the way from Salt sive 'sights ' much different from other rocks But Lake' City is far to be preferred Scipio the next town ' reached is a I’ve been looking at them a whole lot : Zion ‘canyon with all of Its attrac- farmin community typical of old Utah and now I want to say to you tions becomes an Incident in the all- with a- few modern touches such as the lately they’re mighty fine” way automobile trip' Important Inci- sprinkling of automobiles The city I see Thus even among those In dally con- dent' though it may be For those who dweller of today even though he knows tact with this unique section of Utah wish to go etlll further and brave something of the history of the state where there is danger of the contempt some bad roads across "the Arizona may forget ' that the old farming sec-to so much of familiarity there Is steadily grow- line the K&Ibab forest and the Grand tions whldi now contributewere settled wonderous of the of the can Colorado of the the an bev taken canyon support city appreciation ' ing ' ln-- on' the same tour But by elim- when it wM ' inadvisable r for the of Zion canyon beauties t live- on their farms Fear Previous Inaccessibility has kept the inating the trip below Hurricane ’to the entire distance from hostile Indians was a principal people of Utah from realising whatliesa the Grand canyon over roads ranging cause for huddling together and a furmay be traversed Interesting region unique and of Now to the with from good fair but always passable ther reason rwasthe desirability within Its borders for social Intercourse vent of the automobile and with re-Is Insomev of the' far sections' of the close association state penetrated hundreds of persons Utah Is not a state of vast ranches but cent Improvement of the roads all have never seen a locomotive and other rather one of small farms This has iehanged to Convicts got the road from the main hundreds never say an automobile be- made it possible for the farmers and An ' reside honest Into Rather fore this river t the year 'together Virgin atate highway up the kindly- hospitable people they are Fine cultivate their tracts of land without ?air shape last ofwinter This with and farms- old forts built for protection having great distances' to travel' to the Wylie camp establishment ' Jts excellent accommodations and ac- - from the Indians Utah’s first state- - andThefrom their homes' ' Holden leadsthrough highway Into Fillmore the first capital of the territory of Utah The town shows evidence of progress and prosperity The presence of Leland Kimball of Salt Lake and a corps of Sevier River Land Even an expert cannot & Water company engineers brings ' home the fact that the canals of this looking ' at varnish whether it is" company reach almost to Fillmore The adulterated That is why it is so most extensive Irrigation development In the state is In progress In Millard that you should always important Beaver lhe county seat of Secounty' : a with vier county has its own Individuality guarantee buy varnish v While it Is surrounded by rich fields ' formula "7 which are busy scenes of haying and of threshing it has many other signs Industrial activities Near by in Beaver canyon Is the hydro-electrplant of the Beaver River Power company furnishing electric light and power for a wide region - There are many points of interest In Beaver county one of them being old VERNOSITE-SffiKKStf- a Fort Cameron at the edge of the town where John D Lee' was tried for parMeadow PALE INTEMORVARNISH ticipation - In the Mountain D J to massacre' Mayor According FLOOR Frazer this fort was built In 1877 at a cost of' approximately a quarter of For outride work and all surfaces a million dollar a” About five years or Vemcsite It use water to tposed so later it was sold by the government rain or from 'white ill not turn for 36000 The picturesque old buildsleet and the sun will not blister is ' occupied by Murdoch ing Is at present ' old parade ground ''"Tor inside woodwork where ex---and the academy' : is now the campus J tremely transparent varnish is re- rIt equired use Pale Interior Through Paragoona' the road leads Cedar to Parowan seat of the natural beauty of the In Iron Parowan’s rival is and great won't City wood is hard to mar one of the liveliest of the and county 'scratch white ' '''7' censtate a In is the cities It smaller 'For alljloors use 'Marble Floor' ter for sheepmen the supply headquarFinish It waterproofs the wood ters for a large area and all the traffic passes' through here to and from 'and enables it to withstand : the ' the railroad at Lund "and the " Dixie severest wear and - tear without With coal in the neighborv y7 country maiTine 7f 7' hood and the greatest undeveloped Iron You can depend on these three varnishes because 'J deposits In the United States close at reason to hope for Cedar Clt has v the ' 7 guarantee formulas on the cans prove that they 7‘ hand a before railroad branch many more 7 7 have been properly aged and that they are absolutely 777 years have passed by From Cedar City on dhe travel la 7 v free from rosin and other adulterants heavy Freighting by teams canvas-to- p 7' Never take 'chances '(with'yaniish auto and autos of all kinds 7- " pass moretrucks v and besure frequently here than in any other part of the trip The road leads over Black 'ridge- This was formerly almost impassable the pioneers finding ' 7 NEW YORK CHICAGO it necessary to take their wagons apart Founded In New York in 1754 The eldest manufacturing concern In the United States and let them down in pieces over cliffs Now the state road runs along a dug-wa- y which Is cut up to some extent J l1 by heavy' travel but which la a boul-- J - - - L a 7 ‘ well-know- n 1 - - ‘ - : - - - col-oni- zts - ' - - : - : ' 5 - The exact formula on every can ’ tellby ' ' - -- ic FINISH MARBLE t-- pre-serv- es Iron-count- - ' : - -- Get-Devo- e 7-’- DEVOE & RAYNOLDS COv Inc - ' t ' - - V-- ‘ t - Jf - Kimball & Richards - 7 - - IP lon - - ©sfceojpfflflBay tSa? :Oirfiginal - pt - - - - ' h—-vlatio- n na-propat- hy: - - v - - 1 di-eas- es - - - - ' - - - - J - - serious -0 — V -- |