j T" " (Wl Commoner. wr . ii ' wiwiwywnwntw The i WILLIAM J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER. Vol. 4 No. "38. Lincoln, Nebraska, October 7, 1904. Whole Number 194 THE WONDERS OF THE WEST A summer trip to the Rocky Mountain re gion answers a three-fold purpose; it gives rest and recreation to those who are weary; it re pays the tourist .who is in search of the rare, the beautiful and the sublime in nature, and it fur nishes an inspiration and a moral Stimulus that the fertile prairies, the growing cities and oven the boundless ocean can not supply. A fourth reason for a mountain trip can bo found in the altitude, if one needs the tonic fur nished by the rarer air, for to those who suffer Irom any sort of pulmonary trouble the breezes of the mountains bear healing in their wings. During the past seven years I have spent three brief vacations in the Rockies and they have not only been invigorating but they have furnished to my family and to myself an opportunity to view the wonders of the west. YELLOWSTONE PARK. In 1897 we made a tour of Yellowstone park. Leaving the Union Pacific in eastern Idaho at a little station near Beaver Canon, we spent sev enteen days in making the trip to and tnrcugh the government reservation known as Yellow stone park. About Half 'way "between the railroad "and 'thev park we found, the hospitable home of Hon. A. S. Trudo, the eminent Chicago lawyer, and made a brief stop there. His commodious cottage is on the bank of Snake river which at that point is a beautiful, tiansparent stream, about waist deep. The fishing is excellent there, and the same may be said of the hunting. In one day devoted to sport we secured a number of wild ducks, and about thirty sage chickens and a good string of trout.. I say we, but my shooting was really not very satisfactory as Mr. Trude's father, a man past eighty and bereft of one eye, killed about two-thirds of the chickens. We made our next top at Dwelle's ranch, which is located near the edge of the park. Here, too, fish and game were abundant. In the park itself no hunting is allowed but fishing is per mitted, and I never saw trout caught with such ease and rapidity as in the Yellowstone river, just as it leaves the lake. Yellowstone lake is itself an object of inter est, being one of the largest of the mountain lakes. A small steamboat takes the tourist a picturesque trip around its shores. It is in the edge of this lake that the famous hot spring is located. The spring is encased in a wall that seems to have been formed by a deposit of lime and is surrounded by the water of the lake. Here, the guide boons tell us, one can catch a trout and without moving from the spot cook the fish in the water of this spring. Not far from the edge of the lake there is a mud geyser, as it is commonly called. It is a funnel shaped hole and contains several feet of thin mud. Every few moments a puff of gas com ing up from below spatters the mud against the sides of the hole and by the time the mud has fallen back Into the pit, it is again blown out. When I visited the mud geyser the campaign of 1896 was "fresh injny.mind, and the working plan of the mud geyser recalled the editorial policy of some of the opposition papers, especially the New York Tribune. The hot water geysers of the Yellowstone are to many the chief attraction. Of these Old Faith ful is the most constant though not the largest. One can not visit this section of the park, look upon these intermittent pillars of Boiling wator and thread his way among tho smoking hot pools, without feeling that in spite of tho altitude ho is close to tho infernal regions, and this impres sion is strengthened by tho names that have been given to various localities and objects of iuteiest. One place is called Hell's Half Acre, and it has earned the appelation for it not only contains, a number of hot pools and geysers, but it Is en crusted with a sediment from the hot springs that gives forth a hollow sound and makes ono feel that there is but a thin crust between him and raging fires beneath. A cave in this vicinity is called the Devil's Kitchen, while a small spring which flows at intervals is called tho Devil's Ink stand. The Devil is also the recognized owner of a frying pan, some paint pots and other articles of ornament and utility. Some ot: the 'pools -of hot water are strikingly beautiful, reflecting from their depths all the colors of tho rainbow, tho principal of these being called tho Morning Glory. In some instances the- springs issuing from tho hillside have formed terraces covering acres of ground. These terraces are richly colored by the various mineral deposits. The canyon of the Yellowstone is ono of tho principal features of the park. The deep gorge with its brilliantly colored, sloping walls, the falls with dashing spray, the stream which in the dis tance looks like a tiny thread of green or white according to tho rapidity of the current, and the fringe of verdure at the top of the canyon all these combine to impress the view ' upon one's memory. There are hotels at tho principal points of interest, so that the tourist can find lodging and food at convenient hours. The animals in the park, protected from danger, hare become very tame, so that it is not unusual to see both deer and bear. From a window of one of the hotete we saw a large black bear and two cubs eating the scraps from the table. They were frightened away by some horses and after waiting awhile for the danger to pass, the old bear arose upon her hind feet to take a survey of the field. The cubs followed her example and the three pre sented a picture that made me wish for a kodak. While wo entered the park from the west in a private conveyance, tho most convenient entrance is from the north. The Northern Pacific has a branch from Livingston to Cinnabar, from which point coaches make a tour of the park at rales fixed by the government. YOSEMITE. In 1899 wo made our. summer vacation include a trip to Yosemlte valley. While It is difficult to compare two things as dissimilar as Yellowstone Park and Yosemlte, it may be said of them that of intorest whilo tho latter is built upon a moro stupendous scale. Tho Yosomito is In central California and (a reached by tho S'anta Fo and tho Southorn Pacific. Leaving tho main lines of thc8o roads at Morcod, tho traveler takes a branch road to Raymond and from that point reaches the valloy by stage. Tho ride is an Interesting ono, and ono is conetantly wondering at tho magnitude of the trees. Enor mous sugar pines, some of them eight or ten feet in diamctor, line tho way and prepare on for the giant red woods of the Mariposa group, which are but a short distance from tho Yosemlte road. These aro tho big trees of California, but they aro so symmetrical that one can hardly believe his oyes or credit tho measurements which he him self takes. Tho largest of these trees is moro than thirty feet In diameter nearly ono hun dred feet in circumference Some idea of the size of tho trees can be formed when one knows that a roadway has been cut through tho base of one of tho trees and that when a four horso, three-seated, coach Is drivon through, the coach' and the wheel horses aro concealed within the tree. Tho road to tho valloy leads through a mining camp which bears the cuphomlous title of Grub Gulch. When we arrived here we found a ropo stretched across tho road and tho citizens drawn up in line They boro a banner which cd tilled to tho fact that I had carried tho precinct by a largo majority three years before and they in sisted that they were entitled to a speech from tho candidate, as a return for their partiality At Wawona, the half-way house, we stopped for tho night Tho hotel nestles in a little valley by the side of a fertile meadow and the plnc-cldd hilla which hem it In make tho spot so picturesque that we were 3orry to resume our journey About noon on the second day we reached the point where the trail leading to the rim of tho canyon leaves the wagon road. While the stage carried our baggage to tho valley, wo mounted the mules" and horsca and followed the path to Glacier Point, here tho night was spent. From this point the view of the valley Js enchanting. Looking down the walls of the canyon to the bottom of the valley, moro than three thousand feet below, one seea a picture so beautiful that it hardly seems eal. Five streams pour their waters, or ratner their spray, into the valley, for the distance is so great that the water does not fall en masse The Bridal Veil Falls greet one as he enters tho valley and tho name is not Inappropriate, for the wind sway ing the falling spray gives It the appearance of a fluttering veil. The falls of the Yosenilto, the stream which has impressed Its name upon the valley, were a disappointment, tho water at that time being exceedingly low. These falls are at their best during the early summer months, when the snow is melting. The most striking feature of tho valley i the famous promontory known as El CaplUn. It is a massive piece of granite a little more than half a mile high and considerably more than half a mite in width, without a crack or seaiiL II la 4 tm.tf.'-'- - -Jft'&kJ