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Show Twenty-One Tours are Spotlighted In Utah Tourist Publicity Booklet A new full-color booklet featuring fea-turing "21 Tours Through the Different World of Utah" has been published by the Utah Tourist and Publicity Council and is now available to the public. pub-lic. D. James Cannon, director of the council, said the tours cover the entire Beehive State, but each individual trip can be taken tak-en by the average amily ln a week end. "By following the tour book, you could easily enjoy guided visits through the whole state on week ends within a year," Mr. Cannon said. Each suggested tour in the 21-page 21-page booklet is complete with pictures, maps, general description descrip-tion and "helpful hints" adding to the pleasure of the traveler. The 21 basic tours include Salt Lake City, Wasatch Canyons, the Equirrh Circle tour, Great Basin-Salt Basin-Salt Desert Tour, Pioneer Trall-Wasatch Trall-Wasatch tour, Wasatch Front, Northern Utah Circle tour, Mountain-Valley Circle tour, Mount Timpanogos Loop, Southern Wasatch Wa-satch Mountain Drives, Great-basin-Sevier Desert, Uinta Basin-Uinta Basin-Uinta Mountains. Dinosaurland Flaming Gorge, Skyline DriveSanpete Valley, Castle Country, Panorama Land-Sleeping Land-Sleeping Rainbow, Painted Cliffs, ZlonCcdar Breaks, Dixie-Pine Valley-Cedar City, Canyonlands (Moab area) and Canyonlands tour (San Juan area). Stories on each of the tours will be widely publicized during the tourist season through the wi-ekiv Hi'1 daily uress, radio and television, Mr. Cannon said. c interested in obtaining a copy of the colorful new tour booklet can do so by sending 15 cents to the Utah Tourist and Publicity Council, State Capitol, I Salt Lake City 14, Utah. |