Show I 1 Utah Featured As Tourist Playgrounds Uta e featured featured In the September r Issue i if t as u having Undeveloped tourist playgrounds which will provide the state with a big share chare of ot its Jt income In Income In in- come ome In 14 the future The magazine carries carrie three article and SI 51 photographs t covering 2 22 32 pages to depict Utah's economic and cultural development and outline Its potentialities ties tIel In industry mining and the tourist business The cover of ot the Utah Issue is a wood by Artist Bernard Brunei Smith s showing Brigham Youngs first first- party arriving on the site alte of Salt Bait Lake City According to the publisher the magazine will be read by more than five million persons t i f J Articles on tho the state and Its Ita people Cople and on Salt Lake City were written by b Wallace fonner teacher tit at the University of ot Utah Samuel W W. Taylor well-known well Utah author contributed i the article In Our Lovely ly Deseret the tory story of his family His IU father f er w as 1 JohA Tob W W. Taylor who had six alx wives and thirty thirty- six children I In discussing the tourist Industry the magazine points out that Salt Lake City and th the parks parka and monuments monument without parallel eLsewhere already elsewhere already accommodate thousands thoua nd of ot visitors annually an an- However the magazine adds Off Ott the and highways highways and moat of ot Utah Is fe off oft th the highways there highways there are literally dozen of places place as ae spectacular as 81 f lori and Bryce but off oft the highways the visitors are aro counted only In ln hundreds That Tha scenery the article notes es the bizarre and col colorful and fantastic scenery is la of ot a superlative kind and nad t great treat wilderness areas still left lect leftIn In m th tj state te were made to be bo tourist playgrounds M IThe i iThe The magazine continues The rhe ho state has Ilm limestone on c caverns colored canyons canyons canyons- alpine pout taina and porno pome of ot the the best beat iS ing ingin In hi the West Mule deer rl range by thousands s nd in alt al all the high plateau and mountain tIn forests forets Streams Streams' and lakes in the Wasatch the and the high plateaus are full of trout I In virgin waters the native cutthroat trout oan CI still be caught i But these scenic 1 reserves vei for lor the future are paralleled by the undeveloped undeveloped mining resources that promise to make Utah the logical site alte for development of Western heavy industry the magazino magazine maga maga- zine zino says Bays By Dy the end of the war it notes industry outranked both mining and agriculture in ln the states state's economy tho the Federal Government having spent ft II cool billion dollars on plant construe construe- tion Utah's planners are determined I 1 to make mako factory smoke rise beyond our the article adds q Hounding Hounding- out oat Its Ita appraisal appraisal of ot the states state's economy the magazine points out that Mormons still rely ehl chiefly on agriculture small mAJI a self suf lf sUf as u possible Id the peak eak f year IOU 1044 Mormon diligence grew products c worth it says say In an estimate of the character of Utah's Utah citizens the tho author author- haf has this to say The Tae T e sobriety thrift and neighborliness neighbor neighbor- liness of the old days have survived i longer in Utah than In some lome places placed It ItIs Itis Itis is an absolute fact which can be tested again and again that the ga station gas station attendants waitresses motel operators and clerks whom a a. tourist meets in Utah are aro likely to serve him 81 as if they had lad a a concern for his hi welfare as well as asfor for his hla dollars I have been broken down downor or stuck atuck many times on back roads InI in I B Southern Utah and have be been n pushed pulled worked wo over over and rep repaired by bypassing bypassing pa passing Mormons but I never yet sucCeeded succeeded succeeded suc suc- in paying a dime for any of that help Wo We live In this this' country they will tell you When you live around here you never know kJ when youre you're going to need a hand yourself In a discussion of the State Capitol t the e magazine says aay it is one city that almost lives lives' up to the slogan of ot its boosters the boosters the most moat beautifully situated ed city in America The article continues It is a continental continental continental con con- city a provincial capitol insulated insul maul from the fevers of ot both coasts coasts' and the feeling of ot sanctuary which recommended recommended mended the valley fo to the Mormon pioneers of ot 1847 Ian still hangs banes over It It Most Moat of ot the illustrations accompanying accompany accompany- ing the articles are In color A double doUble- page spread of Gf Escalante Mountain near opens the portfolio and other scenes depicted are ore near Vernal Vernal in Ogden Canyon Big I wood d Canyon Canyon Can Can- Alta in the Arc yon near ea National Monument Monument Valley VaHey Mount ment Pleasant Cedar Breal National Monument l j ment Jr Et Etyce ce National Park the Henry Mountains Great Salt Lake I Geneva American Fork lo in Utah county Strawberry Reservoir Reservoir- and Fruitland i J Provo Canyon Heber City Uinta Springdale Spring Springdale Spring Spring- dale dalti and Salt Lake e City |