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Show Journey Into Wonderland ( :, ' , Z: V Al t (? IN) m volV1 Did you ever see snow fall upward? If you get to the Grand Canyon quickly, that is what you may find. Rising drafts from the warm desert on the Canyon's floor blow the snow upward. Trail parties, coming from the Canyon,' often find snow on the bottoms of their hat rims. At your first view of the Grand Canyon, the bottom seems to have dropped out of the earth, leaving a gigantic abyss surrounded surround-ed by mountain ranges and rock temples of ever-changing colors. More than 1,000 square miles of exquisite beauty await the winter win-ter or spring visitor to the South Rim. Off-season trips are increasingly increas-ingly popular travel is lighter, accommodations available, and the scenery more dazzling than In mid-summer. A trip down into the Canyon on muleback is an exciting adventure. ad-venture. From various colored strata that form the steep Canyon walls, the history of the earth may be read. The whole experience experi-ence is a photographer's dream a sightseer's ecstasy. Good" roads and direct railway connections take you there quickly. quick-ly. Hotel accommodations are as low as $3.00 single and $4.00 double, dou-ble, with children at half rate; auto cabins cost even less. Advance Ad-vance reservations will assure your comfort. Write or wire Walter D. Rouzer, Fred Harvey, Grand Canvnn. Arizona. I i j |