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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55718 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55718)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Land of Enchantment: From Pike's Peak
-to the Pacific, by Lilian Whiting
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Land of Enchantment: From Pike's Peak to the Pacific
-
-Author: Lilian Whiting
-
-Release Date: October 9, 2017 [EBook #55718]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT: ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Donald Cummings, David E. Brown, Bryan Ness
-and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
-Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT
-
-
-[Illustration: PICTURESQUE BRIGHT ANGEL TRAIL, GRAND CAÑON, ARIZONA]
-
-
-
-
- THE LAND OF
- ENCHANTMENT
-
- From Pike's Peak to the Pacific
-
- By LILIAN WHITING
-
- Author of "The World Beautiful," "The Florence of
- Landor," "Boston Days," etc.
-
-
- "_The Fairest enchants me;
- The Mighty commands me._"
-
-
- WITH ILLUSTRATIONS FROM PHOTOGRAPHS
-
-
- BOSTON
- LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY
- 1909
-
-
-
-
- _Copyright, 1906_,
- By LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY.
-
-
- _All rights reserved._
-
-
- Printers
- S. J. PARKHILL & CO., BOSTON, U. S. A.
-
-
-
-
- TO
- THE UNFADING MEMORY
- OF
- MAJOR JOHN WESLEY POWELL
- THE GREAT EXPLORER
-
-Whose name is inseparably linked for all time with the "Titan of
-Chasms," the entire length of which he penetrated, revealing its weird
-and mysterious grandeur; whose fidelity to scientific survey has
-signally advanced the progress of our country; whose wise foresight in
-advocating water supplies for arid lands, whose heroism amid hardships
-and whose persistence of energy and noble purpose forever endear his
-name to every American and to all who revere the loftiest achievements
-of science,
-
- These pages are inscribed by
-
- LILIAN WHITING.
-
-
-
-
- "_The sun set, but not his hope;
- Stars rose; his faith was earlier up._"
-
-
-
-
- "_What's life to me?
- Where'er I look is fire, where'er I listen
- Music; and where I tend bliss evermore._"
-
- BROWNING.
-
-
-
-
-AUTHOR'S NOTE
-
-
-It is a special pleasure to the author to gratefully present her
-acknowledgments to Mr. W. H. Simpson, of the Santa Fé; Mr. S. K.
-Hooper, of the Denver and Rio Grande; Mr. David Cameron Mac Watters, of
-the Short Line, and Mr. Croycroft, the artist of Santa Fé, New Mexico,
-for their kind courtesies in facilitating the choice of subjects for
-illustration and for their sympathetic encouragement in the effort to
-interpret something of the sublimity and the loveliness of this land of
-enchantment between Pike's Peak and the Pacific.
-
-THE BRUNSWICK
-
- BOSTON, October, 1906
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
-CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. WITH WESTERN STARS AND SUNSETS 3
-
- II. DENVER THE BEAUTIFUL 15
-
- III. THE PICTURESQUE REGION OF PIKE'S PEAK 51
-
- IV. SUMMER WANDERINGS IN COLORADO 94
-
- V. THE COLORADO PIONEERS 157
-
- VI. THE SURPRISES OF NEW MEXICO 182
-
- VII. THE STORY OF SANTA FÉ 207
-
- VIII. MAGIC AND MYSTERY OF ARIZONA 228
-
- IX. THE PETRIFIED FOREST AND THE METEORITE MOUNTAIN 270
-
- X. LOS ANGELES, THE SPELL-BINDER 298
-
- XI. GRAND CAÑON; THE CARNIVAL OF THE GODS 311
-
- INDEX 339
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- Picturesque Bright Angel Trail, Grand Cañon, Arizona _Frontispiece_
-
- PAGE
-
- Acoma, New Mexico. Two Miles Distant 13
-
- Summit of Pike's Peak, Colorado 55
-
- Williams Cañon, near Manitou, Colorado 64
-
- Seven Falls, Cheyenne Cañon, near Colorado Springs, Colorado 66
-
- St. Peter's Dome, on the Cripple Creek Short Line 71
-
- Approaching Duffield 72
-
- Portland and Independence Mines, Victor, Colorado 75
-
- View from Bull Hill, Richest Gulch in the World 76
-
- The Devil's Slide, Cripple Creek Short Line 80
-
- Colorado Springs and Tunnel No. 6, Cripple Creek Short Line 83
-
- Gateway of the Garden of the Gods, Colorado Springs, Colorado 92
-
- Cathedral Spires, Garden of the Gods, Colorado Springs, Colorado 92
-
- The Walls of the Cañon, Grand River 99
-
- The "Fairy Caves," Colorado 101
-
- Marshall Pass and Mt. Ouray, Colorado 103
-
- The Wonderful Hanging Lake, near Glenwood Springs, Colorado 112
-
- Cathedral Rocks, Clyde Park, Cripple Creek Short Line 137
-
- Sultan Mountain 150
-
- Acoma, New Mexico 183
-
- The Enchanted Mesa, New Mexico 184
-
- Laguna, New Mexico 186
-
- Cliff Dweller Ruins, near Santa Fé, New Mexico 191
-
- Stone Tent. Cliff Dwellers, New Mexico 191
-
- San Miguel Church, Santa Fé, New Mexico 211
-
- "Watch Tower." Cliff Dwellers, New Mexico 215
-
- Cliff Dwellers. Within Twenty-five Miles of Santa Fé,
- New Mexico 215
-
- Petrified Giants, Third Forest, Arizona 228
-
- Collection of Cacti made by Officers at Fort McDowell, Arizona,
- for this Picture 232
-
- Looking through a Part of the River Gorge, Foot of Bad Trail,
- Grand Cañon 240
-
- Suwara (Giant Cactus), Salt River Valley, Arizona 267
-
- San Francisco Peak, near Flagstaff, Arizona 276
-
- Grand Cañon, from Grand View Point 316
-
- Zigzag, Bright Angel Trail, Grand Cañon 318
-
- A Cliff on Bright Angel Trail, Grand Cañon 320
-
-
-
-
-THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT
-
-
-
-
-THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-WITH WESTERN STARS AND SUNSETS
-
- "_The sun, the moon, the stars, the seas, the hills, and the plains--
- Are not these, O Soul, the Vision of Him who reigns?_"
-
- TENNYSON
-
- "_It may be that the gulfs will wash us down._"
-
- TENNYSON
-
- "_My father's kingdom is so large that people perish with cold at one
- extremity whilst they are suffocated with heat at the other._"
-
- CYRUS TO XENOPHON
-
-
-The good American of the Twentieth century by no means defers going to
-Paris until he dies, but anticipates the joys of Paradise by making a
-familiarity with the French capital one of the consolations that tend
-to the alleviation of his enforced terrestrial sojourn. All Europe,
-indeed, has become the pleasure-ground of American tourists, a large
-proportion of whom fail to realize that in our own country there are
-enchanted regions in which the traveller feels that he has been caught
-up in the starry immensities and heard the words not lawful for man to
-utter. Within the limits of Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and Southern
-California there are four centres of sublime and unparalleled scenic
-sublimity which stand alone and unrivalled in the world. Neither the
-Alps nor the Himalayas can offer any parallel to the phenomena of the
-mountain and desert systems of the Southwest as wrought by the march
-of ages, presenting unique and incomparable problems of scientific
-interest that defy solution, and which are inviting the constant study
-and increasing research of many among the most eminent specialists of
-the day in geology and metallurgy. The Pike's Peak region offers to
-the traveller not only the ascent of the stupendous Peak, but also the
-"Short Line" trip between Colorado Springs and Cripple Creek, which
-affords forty-five miles of marvellous mountain and cañon effects.
-The engineering problem of the ascent of St. Peter's Dome,--a huge
-mass of granite towering eleven thousand feet into the air, around
-which the steel track winds in terraces, glory after glory of view
-repeating itself from the ascending vistas as the train climbs the
-dizzy height,--the engineering problem that is here at once presented
-and solved, has attracted scientific attention all over the world as
-the most extraordinary achievement in mountain transportation. The
-Grand Cañon of the Colorado in Arizona, two days' journey from the
-Pike's Peak region, the Petrified Forests that lie also in Arizona,
-seventy-five miles beyond the border of New Mexico, and that Buried
-Star near Cañon Diablo, make up a group that travellers and scientists
-are beginning ardently to appreciate. Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona,
-and Southern California offer, all in all, a landscape panorama that
-for grandeur, charm of climate, and rich and varied resources is
-unrivalled. Imagination falters before the resources of this region and
-the inducements it offers as a locality in which to live surrounded
-by perpetual beauty. The air is all exhilaration; the deep blue skies
-are a miracle of color by day, and a miracle of shining firmament by
-night; the land offers its richly varied returns in agriculture, fruit,
-mining, or grazing, according to the specific locality; the inhabitants
-represent the best quality of American life; the opportunities and
-advantages already offered and constantly increasing are greater than
-would at first be considered possible. This entire Southwest can only
-be accurately defined as the Land of Enchantment.
-
- "Yet all experience is an arch wherethro'
- Gleams that untravell'd world,"
-
-exclaims Tennyson's Ulysses, and the wanderer under Western stars that
-hang, like blazing clusters of radiant light, midway in the air, cannot
-but feel that all these new experiences open to him vistas of untold
-significance and undreamed-of inspiration.
-
- "It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles,"
-
-is the haunting refrain of his thoughts when, through the luminous
-air, he gazes into the golden glory of sunsets whose splendor is
-forever impressed on his memory. Every hour of the journey through
-the Southwest is an hour of enchantment in the intense interest of the
-scenes. One must not miss the outlook when descending the steep grade
-down Raton Mountain; nor must he fail to be on the alert in passing
-through the strange old pueblos of Isleta and Acoma; he must not miss
-Cañon Diablo when crossing that wonderful chasm on the wonderful
-bridge, nor the gleam of the Lowell Observatory at Flagstaff on its
-pine-clad hill-slope, nor fail to gaze on the purple Franciscan peaks
-on which the lingering sunset rays recall to him the poet's line,--
-
- "Day in splendid purple dying."
-
-Like a modern Telemachus he sees "the baths of all the western stars."
-
-Between La Junta in Colorado and Los Angeles in California there lies
-a journey which, in connection with its side trips, is unequalled,
-because there is only one Grand Cañon, one Pike's Peak with its
-adjacent wonderland, and because, as a rule, elsewhere in the United
-States--or in the world, for that matter,--forests do not turn into
-stone nor stars hurl themselves into the earth with a force that buries
-them too deep for resurrection. Through the East and the Middle West
-the mountains do not, on general principles, attempt any competition
-with the clouds, but content themselves with the gentle altitude of
-a mile or so; the stars stay decorously in the firmament and are not
-shooting madly about, trying fantastic Jules Verne experiments to
-determine whether or not they can shine better from the centre of the
-earth than from their natural place in the upper air; the stars of the
-Eastern skies "stand pat," so to speak, and are not flying in the face
-of the universe; so that, altogether, in these regions it would seem
-quite evident that
-
- "The world is built in order,
- And the atoms march in tune."
-
-These exceptional variations to the established order, however,--these
-wonderful peaks and cañons and forests and gardens of gods,--all these
-enchanted things lie, naturally, within the Land of Enchantment, within
-this vast territorial expanse replete with many other attractions. From
-La Junta let the traveller journey into Colorado with its splendor of
-resources, and in gazing upon the stately, solemn impressiveness of the
-Snowy Range he cannot but feel that Nature has predestined Colorado for
-the theatre of noble life and realize the influence as all-pervading.
-Infinite possibilities open before one as an alluring vista, and he
-hears the refrain,--
-
- "My spirit beats her mortal bars
- As down dark tides the glory slides
- And star-like mingles with the stars."
-
-With the excursions offered,--grand panoramas of mountain views where
-the tourist from his lofty perch in the observation-car looks down
-on clouds and on peaks and pinnacles far below the heights to which
-his train climbs,--with the cogwheel road ascending Pike's Peak,
-the fascinating drives through Cheyenne Cañon, the Garden of the
-Gods, Ute Pass, and around Glen Eyrie, and with the luxurious ease of
-life at "The Antlers," the traveller finds fairly a new world, rich
-in suggestion and wide outlook. This attractive region is, however,
-only one of the central points of interest in Colorado. Denver, the
-brilliant and fascinating capital; Pueblo, the metropolis of Southern
-Colorado; Glenwood Springs, the romantic and fashionable watering place
-and summer resort high up in the mountains on the beautiful "scenic
-route" of the Denver and Rio Grande; Boulder, the picturesque mountain
-town, with its State University so ably conducted; Greeley, the town of
-the "Union Colony," whose romantic and tragic story is a part of the
-great history of the Centennial State, and where an admirable normal
-school draws students from all over the country, even including New
-England,--these and a wealth of other features offer interest that is
-coming to engage the attention of the civilized world.
-
-New Mexico has been more or less considered as one of the impossible
-and uncivilized localities, or has failed to establish any claim to
-being considered at all; yet here is a territory whose climate is
-simply delightful by virtue of its altitude,--cool in summer and mild
-and sunny in winter,--whose mines of amethysts and other precious
-stones suggest developments yet undreamed-of; whose ethnological
-interest, in the marvellous remains of Cliff-dwellers and of a people
-far antedating any authentic records, enchains the scientist; a
-territory whose future promises almost infinitely varied riches in many
-directions of its development.
-
-Arizona is simply a treasure land. If it offered only that enthralling
-feature, the Grand Cañon, it would be a central point of pilgrimage for
-the entire civilized world; but even aside from this,--the sublimest
-vision ever offered to human eye,--even aside from the Grand Cañon,
-which dominates the world as the most sublime spectacle,--Arizona
-offers the fascinations of the Painted Desert, the Tonto Basin, the
-uncanny buttes that loom up in grotesque shapes on the horizon, the
-dreamy lines of mountain ranges, the strange pueblos, the productive
-localities where grains and where fruits and flowers grow with tropical
-luxuriance, the Petrified Forests, and the exquisite coloring of sky
-and atmosphere.
-
-Southern California, with its brilliantly fascinating metropolis, Los
-Angeles; the neighboring city of Pasadena, the "Crown of the Valley";
-with an extensive electric trolley-car connection with towns within a
-radius of fifty miles, and other distinctive and delightful features,
-almost each one of which might well furnish a separate chapter of
-description; with mountain trips made easy and enjoyable by the swift
-electric lines,--all this region fascinates the imagination and
-indicates new and wonderful vistas of life in the immediate future. The
-vast and varied resources of the great Southwest will also, as they are
-developed, increasingly affect the economic aspects of the country.
-
-To the traveller one fact stands out in especial prominence, and that
-is that the traditional primitive conditions in this region hardly
-continue to exist. The picturesque aspects of nature form the stage
-setting to very-much-up-to-date life. The opportunities and advantages
-already offered and constantly increasing are greater than would at
-first be considered possible. In isolated homes on the desert the
-children of the family will be found studying the higher mathematics,
-taking music lessons, or receiving lessons in languages (classic,
-or the romance languages) from some one in the neighborhood who is
-able to give such instruction. If any traveller expects to encounter
-the traditional "cow-boy" aspects of life, he will be very much
-disappointed. There is no refinement of life in the East that is not
-mirrored and duplicated in the West. There are no aspirations, no
-ideals, no fine culture in the East that have not their corresponding
-aspects in the great West. In fact, in many ways the West begins where
-the East leaves off. For instance, the new towns of the West that have
-sprung up within the past twenty years have never known what it was to
-have gas or horse-cars. They begin with electric lights and electric
-transit. Their schoolhouses are built with up-to-date methods, and
-the houses, however modest, are constructed with a taste and a beauty
-unknown in the rural regions of the East. The square white house with
-green blinds and a straight stone-paved pathway to the front gate,
-so common in New England, is not seen in the West. Instead, the most
-modest little structure has its piazza, its projecting bay window
-thrown out, its balcony--something, at all events, tasteful and
-beautiful to the eye.
-
-The journey from La Junta (in Colorado) to Los Angeles offers a
-series of enthralling pictorial effects that are invested with
-all the refinements of civilized life delightfully devoid of its
-commonplaceness. These long transcontinental trains with two engines,
-one at the front and one at the rear, with their different grades
-of the Pullman, the tourist, and the emigrant car service, are as
-distinctive a feature of the twentieth century as the "prairie
-schooners" were of the early half of the nineteenth century. The real
-journey begins, of course, at Chicago, and as these trains leave in
-the evening the traveller fares forth in the seclusion of his berth
-in the Pullman. The nights on a sleeping-car may be a very trance of
-ecstasy to one who loves to watch the panorama of the skies. Raise the
-curtain, pile up the pillows to the angle that one can gaze without
-lifting the head, and what ethereal visions one is wafted through! One
-has a sense of flying in the air among the starry spaces, especially
-if he chances to have the happy fortune of a couch on the side where
-the moon is shining down,--a midsummer moon, with stars, and filmy,
-flitting clouds,--when the panorama of the air becomes the enchantment
-of a dream.
-
-It is, literally, "such stuff as dreams are made of," and when one
-drops off into slumber, he utilizes it for his fancies of the night.
-Miss Harriet Hosmer, the famous sculptor, once related a story of a
-night journey she took with a party of congenial spirits on horseback
-between Rome and Florence. By way of "a lark" they rested by day and
-rode by night, and the beauty of the effects of light and shade sank
-into her mind so that she drew on them thirty years or more later for
-the wonderful designs in her great "Gates," which even rival those of
-Ghiberti. "The night hath counsel" and suggestion of artistic beauty
-as well, and the effects that one may get from a flying train are
-impossible to obtain under any other condition. After all, is it not a
-part of the fine art of living to take the enjoyment of the moment as
-it comes, in whatever guise, without lamenting that it is not something
-else?
-
-These splendidly equipped trains of the Santa Fé service admit very
-little dust; the swift motion keeps up a constant breeze, and some
-necromancy of perpetual vigilance surrounds the traveller with
-exceptional cleanliness and personal comfort. One experiences a certain
-sense of detachment from ordinary day and daylight duties that is
-exhilarating.
-
-[Illustration: ACOMA. TWO MILES DISTANT]
-
-Kansas City, the gateway to the great Southwest, might well claim
-attention as an important manufacturing and distributing centre; Kansas
-itself, once the bed of an inland sea, is not without scientific
-interest for the deposits of gypsum and salt that have left the
-soil so fertile, as well as for strange fossils revealing gigantic
-animals, both land and aquatic, that have lived there,--the mastodon,
-rhinoceros, elephant, the crocodile and shark,--many of whose skeletons
-are preserved in the National Museum in Washington. The prosperous
-inland cities with their schools and colleges, their beautiful homes
-and constant traffic,--all these features of Kansas, the state of
-heroic history, are deeply impressive. But it is Colorado, New Mexico,
-Arizona, with which these pages are chiefly concerned, and the
-especially picturesque aspects of the journey begin with La Junta.
-
-Entering Colorado, the plateau is four thousand feet above sea level,
-and constantly rising. This altitude renders the climate of New Mexico
-particularly invigorating and delightful.
-
-The most romantic and poetically enchanting regions of the United
-States are entered into on this journey, in which easy detours allow
-one to visit that mysterious "City in the Sky," the pueblo of Acoma,
-near Albuquerque in New Mexico; to make excursions to Montezuma's Well;
-to the mysterious ruin of Casa Grande; to the Twin Lakes (which lie on
-a mountain crest); and to study other marvels of nature in Arizona. The
-splendors of Colorado, with the myriad mountain peaks and silver lakes,
-the mysterious cañons and deep gorges, the rose-flushed valleys lying
-fair under a sapphire sky in the luminous golden atmosphere, and the
-profound interest inspired in the general social tone of life in its
-educational, economic, and religious aspects, invest a summer-day tour
-through the Land of Enchantment with all the glory and the freshness of
-a dream.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-DENVER THE BEAUTIFUL
-
- "_I will make me a city of gliding and wide-wayed silence,
- With a highway of glass and of gold;
- With life of a colored peace, and a lucid leisure,
- Of smooth electrical ease,
- Of sweet excursion of noiseless and brilliant travel,
- With room in your streets for the soul._"
-
- STEPHEN PHILLIPS
-
-
-Denver the Beautiful is the dynamo of Western civilization, and the
-keynote to the entire scale of life in Colorado. The atmosphere seems
-charged with high destiny. "I worship with wonder the great Fortune,"
-said Emerson, using the term in the universal sense, "and find it
-none too large for use. My receptivity matches its greatness." The
-receptivity of the dwellers in this splendid environment seems to match
-its greatness, and expand with the increase of its vast resources. As
-Paris is France, so Denver is Colorado. Hardly any other commonwealth
-and its capital are in such close relation, unless it be that of
-Massachusetts and Boston. Colorado is a second Italy, rather than
-Switzerland, as it has been called. Over it bends the Italian sky; its
-luminous atmosphere is that of Dante's country; at night the stars hang
-low as they hang over the heights of San Miniato in fair Florence;
-the mountain coloring, when one has distance enough, has the soft
-melting purple and amethyst lights of the Apennines, and the courtesy
-of the people is not less marked than in the land of the olive and the
-myrtle. Then, too, the light--the resplendent and luminous effect of
-the atmosphere--is like that of no other state. The East is dark by
-comparison with this transparency of golden light.
-
-As the metropolis of the great West between Chicago and the Pacific
-Coast, Denver has a continual procession of visitors from all
-countries, who pause in the overland journey to study the outlook of
-the most wonderful state in the Union,--that of the richest and most
-varied resources. To find within the limits of one state resources
-that include gold, silver, copper, lead, zinc, coal, and tin mines;
-agriculture, horticulture, stock raising, manufactures, and oil wells,
-sounds like a fiction; yet this is literally true. Add to these some of
-the most beautiful and sublime scenery in the world, the best modern
-appliances, and the most intelligent and finely aspiring class of
-people, and one has an outline of the possibilities of the Centennial
-State.
-
-Denver is, geographically, the central city of the country, equally
-accessible from both the Atlantic and the Pacific coasts, from the
-North and the South. It has the finest climate of the continent; its
-winters are all sunshine and exhilaration, with few cloudy or stormy
-days; its summers are those in which oppressive heat is hardly known,
-and the nights are invariably cool. It is a great railroad centre; it
-has infinite space in which to extend itself in any direction; it has
-unsurpassed beauty of location. No city west of Chicago concentrates so
-many desirable features, for all this wealth of resource and loveliness
-of scenic setting is the theatre of noble energy and high achievement.
-Denver is only twenty-six hours from Chicago; it is but forty-five
-hours from New York. Although apparently a city of the plains, it is
-a mile above sea level, and is surrounded with more than two hundred
-miles of mountain ranges, whose changeful color, in royal purple, deep
-rose, amber, pale blue, gleams through the transparent air against the
-horizon. The business and hotel part of Denver lies on a lower level,
-while the Capitol, a superb building of Colorado marble, and all the
-best residential region, is on a higher plateau. The Capitol has the
-novel decoration of an electric flag, so arranged that through colored
-glass of red, white, and blue the intense light shines.
-
-The Denver residential region is something unusual within general
-municipal possibilities, as it has unbounded territory over which to
-expand, thus permitting each home to have its own grounds, nearly all
-of which are spacious; and these, with the broad streets lined with
-trees, give to this part of the city the appearance of an enormous
-park. For miles these avenues and streets extend, all traversed by
-swift electric cars that so annihilate time and space that a man may
-live five, ten, or a dozen miles from his place of business and call
-it all joy. He insures himself pure air, beautiful views, and an
-abundance of ground. If the family desires to go into the city for
-evening lectures, concerts, or the theatre, the transit is swift and
-enjoyable. They control every convenience. These individual villas are
-all fire-proof. The municipal law requires the buildings to be of brick
-or stone, thus making Denver a practically fireproof city. Both the
-business blocks and the homes share the benefit of the improved modern
-taste in architecture. The city of Denver covers an area of eighty-nine
-square miles, and these limits are soon to be extended.
-
-The Capitol has an enchanting mountain view; it also contains a fine
-museum of historic relics found in Colorado from cliff-dwellings and
-other points. A million dollars has been offered--and refused--for
-this state collection. The City Park, covering nearly four hundred
-acres, with its two lakes, its beds of flowers and groups of shrubbery;
-its casino, where an orchestra plays every afternoon in the summer,
-while dozens of carriages and motor cars with their tastefully dressed
-occupants draw up and listen to the music, is a centre of attraction to
-both residents and visitors. This park is to Denver as is the Pincian
-Hill to Rome, or as Hyde Park to London,--the fashionable drive and
-rendezvous. Great beds of scarlet geraniums contrast with the emerald
-green of the grass, while here and there a fountain throws its spray
-into the air. Far away on the horizon are the encircling mountains in
-view for over two hundred miles, the ranges taking on all the colors
-of fairyland, while a deep turquoise sky, soft and beautiful, bends
-over the entire panorama. From this plateau four great peaks are in
-view: Pike's Peak, seventy-five miles to the south; Long's, Gray's, and
-James's peaks, all distinctly silhouetted against the sky, rising from
-the serrated range which connects them. During these open-air concerts
-in the park there is a midsummer holiday air over the scene as if all
-the city were _en fête_.
-
-The architectural scheme of Denver's residential region harmonizes with
-the landscape. The houses are not the palaces of upper Fifth Avenue
-and Riverside drive, or of Massachusetts or Connecticut avenues in
-Washington; but there is hardly an individual residence that has not
-legitimate claim to beauty. The tower, the oriel window, and the broad
-balcony are much in evidence; and the piazza, with its swinging seat,
-its easy chairs, and table disposed on a bright rug, suggest a charm
-of _vie intime_ that appeals to the passer-by. Books, papers, and
-magazines are scattered over the table: the home has the unmistakable
-air of being lived in and enjoyed; of being the centre of a happy,
-intelligent life, buoyant with enterprise and energy, and identified
-with the social progress of the day. On the greenest of lawn a jet
-of water or, in many cases, a fountain plays, the advantage of an
-irrigated country being that the householder creates and controls
-his own climatic conditions. The rain,--it raineth every day when
-irrigation determines the shower; roses grow in riotous profusion on
-the lawn, and the crimson "rambler" climbs the portico; lilies nod in
-the luminous gold of the sunshine, and all kinds of foliage plants
-lend their rich color to these beautiful grounds that surround every
-home. To the children growing up in Denver the spectacle of dreary
-streets would be as much of a novelty as the ruins of Karnak. The line
-that divides the past from the present is not only very definite, but
-also very recent, as is indicated by the question of a five-year-old
-lad who wonderingly asked: "Mamma, did they ever have horses draw the
-trolley cars?" The mastodon is not more remote in antiquity to the
-man or woman of to-day than was the idea of horses drawing a car to
-this child. Between the nineteenth and the twentieth centuries the
-gulf of demarcation is almost as wide as between the fifteenth and the
-nineteenth.
-
-The streets of Denver are very broad, usually planted with trees, and
-the smooth roads offer an earthly paradise to the motor-car transit
-that abounds in Denver. One of the happy excursions is that of
-motoring to Colorado Springs, seventy-five miles distant, a constant
-entertainment. With the splendid electric-transit system, annihilating
-distance; with the broad streets paved after the best modern methods;
-with the wide and smooth sidewalks of Colorado stone and the almost
-celestial charm of the view, city life is transformed. Telephonic
-service is practically universal; electric lighting and an admirable
-water system are among the easy conveniences of this section, which is
-not yet suburban because of its complete identification with all other
-parts of the city.
-
-The universality of telephonic intercourse in Colorado would go far to
-support the theory of Dr. Edward Everett Hale that the time will come
-when writing will be a lost art, and will be considered, at best, as
-a clumsy and laborious means of communication in much the same manner
-that the late centuries regard the production of the manuscript book
-before the invention of the art of printing. In few cities is the
-telephone service carried out to such constant colloquial use as in
-Denver. The traveller finds in his room a telephone as a matter of
-course, and there are very few quarters of an hour when the bell does
-not summon him to chat with a friend, from one on the same floor of the
-hotel to one who is miles away in the city, or even fifty or a hundred
-miles distant, as at Greeley, Colorado Springs, or Pueblo.
-
-"How are you to-day?" questions the friendly voice. "Did you see
-so-and-so in the morning papers? And what do you think about it? and
-can you be ready at eleven to go to hear Mrs. ---- lecture? and at
-one will you lunch with Mrs. ----? the entire conversation to be in
-Italian? and could you go at about four this afternoon to a tea to
-meet an Oriental Princess who will discuss the laws of reincarnation?
-and will you also dine with us at seven, and go later to the Woman's
-Municipal Club that holds a conference to-night?" All those lovely
-things fall upon one with apparently no thought of its being an unusual
-day--this is Denver! This is twentieth-century life. This is an
-illustration of what can be done when the non-essential is eliminated
-from the days and that which is essential is felicitously pursued.
-
-When the Denver woman remarked to the Eastern woman sojourner within
-the gates that she was unable to be away that autumn on any extended
-absence, as the campaign was to be more than usually important, the
-wanderer from the Atlantic shore irreverently laughed. Her hostess
-endeavored (unsuccessfully) not to seem shocked by this levity
-regarding serious subjects. She remembered that there were extenuating
-circumstances, and that the Eastern women had really never had a fair
-chance in life. Their part, she reflected, consisted in obeying laws
-and abiding by whatever was decreed, with no voice allowed to express
-their own preferences or convictions. She remembered that a proportion
-of the feminine New England intellect consecrates its powers and
-its time to extended researches in the Boston Public Library and in
-the venerable records of the Massachusetts Historical Society, in
-a perpetual quest of information regarding its ancestors, who are
-worshipped with the zeal and fervor of the Japanese. The Boston woman,
-indeed, may have only the most vague ideas regarding the rate bill, the
-problem of the Philippines, the Panama Canal, or the next Governor of
-Massachusetts; but she is thoroughly conversant with all the details
-of the Mayflower and her own ancestral dignities. Recognizing the New
-England passion for its ancestry, a leading Boston journal offers a
-page, weekly, to open correspondence on the momentous question as
-to whether Winthrop Bellingham married Priscilla Patience Mather in
-1699 or in 1700, and a multitude of similar questions concerning
-the vanished centuries. The Denver woman realized all this and was
-discreetly charitable in her judgment of her friend's failure to
-recognize the significant side of the political enfranchisement of
-women in Colorado. For despite some actual disadvantages and defects
-of woman suffrage in the centennial state, and a vast amount of
-exaggerated criticism on these defects, it is yet a benefit to the four
-states that enjoy it,--Colorado, Utah, Idaho, and Wyoming.
-
-In a majority of the states of the entire nation there is a conviction
-(and one not without its claims) that women are adequately represented
-and protected in all their rights, as things are, and that it is
-superfluous to increase the vote.
-
-The anti-suffrage argument suggests many reflections whose truth must
-be admitted, and this side of the controversy is espoused and led by
-some proportion of men and women whose names inspire profound respect,
-if not conviction, with their belief. Still, the fact remains that
-when woman suffrage is subjected to the practical test of experience,
-the advantages are so obvious, its efficacy for good so momentous,
-that their realization fairly compels acceptance. In the entire nation
-there has never been a man or a woman whose clearness and profundity
-of intellect, moral greatness, and sympathetic insight into the very
-springs of national and individual life exceeded those of Lucy Stone,
-the remarkable pioneer in the political emancipation of women, whose
-logical eloquence and winning, beautiful personality was the early
-focus of this movement. Mrs. Stone surrounded herself with a noble
-group,--Mary A. Livermore, Julia Ward Howe, Thomas Wentworth Higginson,
-and others whose names readily suggest themselves, and with whom, in
-the complete companionship and sympathy of her husband, Dr. Henry B.
-Blackwell, she successfully worked, even though the final success has
-not yet been achieved. Other great and noble women--Susan B. Anthony,
-Elizabeth Cady Stanton--consecrated their entire lives and remarkable
-powers to the early championship of woman suffrage. The present ranks
-of women workers--the younger women--are so numerous, and they include
-so large a proportion of the most notable women of both the East and
-the West, that volumes would not afford sufficient room for adequate
-allusion. In Denver the leading people are fully convinced of the
-responsibility of women in politics. Although the ballot has not been
-generally granted to women, the very movement toward it has resulted
-in their higher education and their larger freedom in all ways. The
-situation reminds one of the "subtle ways" of Emerson's Brahma:
-
- "If the red slayer think he slays,
- Or if the slain think he is slain,
- They know not well the subtle ways
- I keep, and pass, and turn again.
-
- "Far or forgot to me is near;
- Shadow and sunlight are the same;
- The vanished gods to me appear;
- And one to me are shame and fame.
-
- "They reckon ill who leave me out;
- When me they fly, I am the wings;
- I am the doubter and the doubt,
- And I the hymn the Brahmin sings."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Apparently, the principle of woman suffrage has "subtle ways" in which
-"to pass and turn again." It has recently turned in a manner to compel
-a new and more profound revision of all opinion and argument.
-
-Colorado presents a most interesting field for the study of woman
-suffrage, and from any fair and adequate review of its workings and
-results there could hardly fail to be but one conclusion,--that of its
-signal value and importance as a factor in human progress. One of its
-special claims is of a nature not down on the bills,--the fact of the
-great intellectual enlargement and stimulus,--aside from its results,
-which the very exercise of political power gives to the women of the
-state. It is seen in the higher quality of conversational tone and
-the tendency to eliminate the inconsequential and the inane because
-great matters of universal interest were thus brought home to women in
-connection with their power to decide on these matters. This result
-is perhaps equally seen among the women who rejoice and the women who
-regret the fact of their political enfranchisement. For in Colorado,
-as well as in other states, there is a proportion of women who do
-not believe in the desirability of the ballot for themselves. They
-sincerely regret that it has been "forced," as they say, upon them.
-This proportion in Colorado is not a large one, but it includes some
-of the most intelligent and cultured women, just as an enthusiastic
-acceptance of the ballot includes a much larger proportion of this
-higher order of women. However, welcome or unwelcome, desired or not
-desired, the ballot is there, and so the women who regret this fact yet
-realize its responsibility and feel it a moral duty to use it wisely as
-well. And so they, too, study great questions, and discuss them, and
-fit themselves to use the power that is conferred upon them. All this
-reacts on the general tone of society, and the quality of conversation
-at ladies' lunches, at teas, and at clubs, is of a far higher order
-than is often found in other states among the more purely feminine
-gatherings.
-
-Among the women who have successfully administered public office in
-Colorado was the late Mrs. Helen Grenfell, whose record as State
-Superintendent of Public Instruction was so remarkable that both
-political parties supported her. A Denver journal said of her:
-
- "Mrs. Grenfell's term has lasted six years, the last two years
- having been under a Republican administration, although Mrs.
- Grenfell is a Democrat. Her most notable achievement has been in
- her conduct of the school lands of the state, making them valuable
- sources of revenue. Her policy from the first was against the sale
- of the school lands, which comprise some three million acres. The
- income from such sales had been limited, as the investments were
- prescribed, and the interest rate rather low, as Western interest
- goes. The leasing system was inaugurated under Mrs. Grenfell's
- direction, and the result was an increase of school revenues of
- nearly two hundred thousand dollars a year, with no decrease in
- the capital. The Land Department of the state shares the credit
- with the state superintendent of public instruction, as they have
- administered her policy wisely, but the policy was hers alone."
-
-Judge Lindsay of Denver, giving an official opinion as to the
-desirability of woman suffrage for Colorado, said:
-
- "Woman suffrage in Colorado for over ten years has more than
- demonstrated its justice. No one would dare to propose its repeal;
- and, if left to the men of the state, any proposition to revoke the
- right bestowed upon women would be overwhelmingly defeated.
-
- "Many good laws have been obtained in Colorado which would not have
- been secured but for the power and influence of women.
-
- "At some of the elections in Denver frauds have been committed.
- Ninety-nine per cent of these frauds were committed by men, without
- any connivance or assistance, direct or indirect, from women; but
- because one per cent were committed by women, there are ignorant
- or careless-minded people in other states who actually argue that
- this is a reason for denying women the right to vote. If it were a
- just reason for denying suffrage to women, it would be a ten times
- greater reason for denying it to men.
-
- "In Colorado it has never made women any the less womanly or any
- the less motherly, or interfered with their duties in the home,
- that they have been given the right to participate in the affairs
- of state.
-
- "Many a time I have heard the 'boss' in the political caucus object
- to the nomination of some candidate because of his bad moral
- character, with the mere explanation that if the women found him
- out it might hurt the whole ticket. While many bad men have been
- nominated and elected to office in spite of woman suffrage, they
- have not been nominated and elected because of woman suffrage. If
- the women alone had a right to vote, it would result in a class
- of men in public office whose character for morality, honesty, and
- courage would be of a much higher order....
-
- "People have no right to judge woman suffrage in Colorado by
- the election frauds in a few precincts. The election frauds in
- Philadelphia, where women do not vote, were never used as a reason
- why suffrage should be denied to men....
-
- "With women, as with men, it requires more or less public sentiment
- to arouse them to their civic duties; but when aroused, as they
- frequently are, their power for good cannot be overestimated.
- Again, the very fact that the women have such a power is a
- wonderful reserve force in the cause of righteousness in Colorado,
- and has been a powerful deterrent in anticipating and opposing the
- forces of evil.
-
- "It does not take any mother from her home duties or cares to spend
- ten minutes in going to the polling place and casting her vote and
- returning to the bosom of her home; but in that ten minutes she
- wields a power that is doing more to protect that home now, and
- will do more to protect it in the future, and to protect all other
- homes, than any power or influence in Colorado.
-
- "I know that the great majority of people in Colorado favor woman
- suffrage, after more than a decade of practical experience,--first,
- because it is fair, just, and decent; and secondly, because its
- influence has been good rather than evil in our political affairs."
-
-Judge Lindsay's words represent the general attitude of the
-representative people of the state.
-
-The Hon. Henry M. Teller, senior senator of Colorado, is one of the
-most interesting men in the Centennial State, and the traveller who may
-meet and talk with him is impressed with his quiet sincerity, with the
-sense of reserved power with which he seems endowed, and the refinement
-and directness of his methods. He is by birth an Eastern man, and a
-graduate of Harvard; but his mature life has been passed in Colorado.
-As a lawyer his law office claims much of his time and thought,
-even with all the great tide of national interests with which he is
-identified. He is a thorough and, indeed, an astute politician; not
-in the "machine" sense, but with a very clear and comprehensive grasp
-of the situation and a large infusion of practical sagacity. Senator
-Teller is in no sense an enthusiast. He is responsive to high aims and
-high ideals; he knows what they are, so to speak; he recognizes them on
-sight; he never falls into the error of under-valuing them; but he is
-not a man to be carried away by an ecstatic vision, and he would have
-no use for wings at all where he had feet. He would regard the solid
-earth as a better foundation, on the whole, than the air, and one more
-suited to existing conditions.
-
-Senator Teller has had more than a quarter of a century's experience in
-political life and in statesmanship. For two years he was a member of
-the Cabinet. For twenty-seven years he has been in the Senate, where,
-with Senator Hoar of Massachusetts, he shared the highest honor,
-and the most absolute confidence, in both his flawless integrity and
-conspicuous ability, that the Senate, and the nation as well, can give
-to him.
-
-Senator Patterson, the junior senator from Colorado, is a man whom, if
-he encounters an obstacle does not grant it the dignity of recognition.
-He instantly discovers the end,--the desired result,--and declares, per
-saltum, "It is right; it should be done,--it shall be done." Senator
-Patterson is a man of very keen perceptions and one with whom it is
-easy to come into touch instantly; he is responsive, sympathetic,
-full of faith that the thing that ought to be accomplished can be
-accomplished, and therefore that it shall be. Senator Patterson has the
-typical American experience of successful men lying behind him. He was
-on familiar terms with the intricacies of a newspaper office in his
-youth; he studied in an Indiana college without an annual expenditure
-of that twenty thousand dollars which some of the latter-day Harvard
-undergraduates find indispensable to the process of securing their "B.
-A.," and tradition records, indeed, that the junior Colorado senator,
-in the prehistoric days of his youth, set out for the fountain of
-learning with a capital of forty dollars; that he frugally walked
-from Crawfordsville to Indianapolis that he might not deplete his
-financial estate which was destined to buy a scholarship, and that in
-this unrecorded tour in the too, too truly rural region of his early
-life, he cleaned two clocks on the way in payment for lodging, and
-that he cleaned them uncommonly well. Of all this traditionary history
-who shall say? Senator Patterson is a man who would always keep faith
-with his aims and convictions. He is sunny and full of wit, and full of
-faith in the ultimate triumph of good things in general, and is, all in
-all, one of the most genial and delightful of men--and senators.
-
-It is related that Senator Patterson first dawned upon Denver in its
-primeval period of 1872, when its municipal affairs were conducted by
-two prominent--if not eminent--gentlemen, one of whom was the champion
-gambler, and the other the champion brewer of the metropolis. There
-were eleven thousand nine hundred and ninety-eight other citizens
-in this municipality besides the brewer and the gambler (and the
-population was said to have been twelve thousand in all), and the
-eleven thousand nine hundred and ninety-eight, like "The Ten" of early
-Florentine history, decided that would "reform the town." Their united
-effort was to elect Mr. Patterson as Mayor. And a good one he proved;
-and he has gone on and on, in the minds as well as in the hearts of his
-fellow-citizens, until now he is the colleague of Senator Teller, and
-he offers another typical illustration of true American integrity and
-honorable ambition and success. Personally, Senator Patterson is one of
-the most winning men in the world, and one delights in his success and
-the high estimation in which he is held.
-
-The development of Colorado and other parts of the great Southwest
-during the past half-century has created a new order of employment in
-that of the government expert,--the specialist in upland or hydraulic
-irrigation, in engineering and mining problems. The government
-surveying work has also increased largely, both in extent and in the
-greater number of specialties now required. The Geological Survey and
-the Agricultural Department, both included under the Department of
-the Interior, are rapidly multiplying branches of work that require
-both the skilled training and ability for original research and
-accomplishment. These positions, which command government salaries
-at from some eighteen to twenty-five hundred dollars a year, afford
-such opportunity for the expert to reveal his value that private
-corporations and business houses continually draw on the ranks of
-the government employees. Of late years the demand for the expert
-irrigation engineer has been so great in Colorado as to seriously
-embarrass the government forces by drawing some of the best men for
-private service. Denver is an especial centre for these enterprises,
-as being the natural metropolis for the vast inter-mountain region and
-the plains country of the Missouri River. This vast territory will
-support many millions more of population. In fact, the dwellers within
-this described territory at this day are but pioneers on the frontier
-to what the future will develop, although they already enjoy all the
-benefits of the older states, with countless advantages beside which
-they cannot enjoy.
-
-The smelteries in Denver, of which the Grant is the largest, treat
-millions of pounds of copper and lead, and great quantities of silver
-and gold, while there are also extensive ones in Pueblo, Leadville,
-Durango, and other places. There is also a good proportion of Colorado
-ore which is not treated at all at smelteries, but is of a free-milling
-order. The revenue from mining has exceeded fifty millions of dollars
-annually of late years, but the revenue from agriculture exceeds
-that of the mines, and to these must be added some twenty millions
-a year from live stock during the past two or three years. In the
-aggregate, Colorado has an internal revenue of hardly less than one
-hundred millions a year, and this largely passes through Denver as the
-distributing point, constituting the Capital one of the most prosperous
-of young cities. Denver stands alone in a rich region. One thousand
-miles from Chicago, six hundred miles from Kansas City, and four
-hundred miles from Salt Lake City, Denver holds its place without any
-rival.
-
-The ideal conditions of living have never been entirely combined in any
-one locality on this sublunary planet, so far as human history reveals;
-and with all the scenic charm, the rich and varied resources, and the
-phenomenal development of Colorado, no one could truthfully describe
-it as Utopia. There is no royal road to high achievement in any line.
-Difficulties and obstacles are "a part of the play," and he alone is
-wise who, by his own determination, faith, and persistence of energy,
-transforms his very obstacles into stepping-stones and thus gains the
-strength of that which he overcomes.
-
-Northern Colorado has great resources even beyond the coal fields
-that will make it the power centre; with its prestige of Denver, and
-such surrounding towns as Greeley, Boulder, Fort Collins, Golden, and
-others, all of which fall within a group of social and commercial
-centres that will soon be interconnected by a network of electric
-trolley lines. For the electric road between Greeley and Denver Mr. J.
-D. Houseman has secured a right of way one hundred and fifty feet wide,
-the rails being midway between the Union Pacific and the Burlington
-lines. Mr. Houseman is one of the noted financiers of the East who came
-to Denver to incorporate and build this road, and his is only one of
-three companies that are now in consultation with the power company
-negotiating for the supplies which will enable them to build the
-proposed new roads.
-
-The Seeman Tunnel, which is to be constructed near Idaho Springs, at a
-distance of fifty miles from Denver, and which is to be twelve miles
-in length, although at an elevation of eighty-five hundred feet, is
-yet to extend under Fall River and the Yankee, Alice, and the Lombard
-mining districts. It will be one of the marvels of the state, and
-will penetrate a thousand mining veins. The Continental Mines, Power
-and Reduction Company, recently incorporated with a capital of three
-millions, of which Captain Seeman is the president, owns many of the
-mining veins which will be touched by this tunnel. Many of the veins
-to which this tunnel will afford approach have not been accessible
-heretofore for more than four or five months in the year. For the
-remaining six or seven months travel is practically impossible in these
-mountains; the "claims" cannot be reached, as they lie in the region of
-perpetual snow. When the Seeman Tunnel is completed the owner of any
-claim that is tapped by it can, by paying a certain royalty per ton
-for each ton of ore mined, obtain the right to work it in the tunnel,
-thus being able to proceed through the entire year and at a far less
-cost in production than at present. Regarding this gigantic enterprise,
-Captain Seeman said, in June of 1906, that the work would be pushed as
-rapidly as men, money, and machinery could advance it, and, he added:
-"I consider it one of the greatest tunnels ever attempted, and one
-that will hold the record for mining tunnels. I am confident that we
-will strike enough ore within the first two or three miles to keep
-us busy for years." The Leviathan is one of the first veins that the
-tunnel is expected to tap,--a vein three hundred feet wide on the
-surface,--and while already traced for more than three miles, it holds
-every promise for as yet uncalculated extension. The Lombard is another
-vein of leading importance which promises to be a bonanza. Gold is the
-principal mineral that appears in these veins, although silver, lead,
-and copper are found. Another ore, tungsten, used for hardening in
-armor plates, large guns, and the best mechanical implements,--an ore
-valued at six hundred dollars per ton,--has been discovered in these
-veins. The Seeman Tunnel is located directly under James's Peak.
-
-Another of the remarkable engineering marvels that mark the progress of
-Colorado is the Moffat road, the new railroad between Denver and Salt
-Lake City, now open as far as Kremling, which initiated its passenger
-service in the late June of 1906 with daily excursions, in solid
-vestibuled trains, making the round trip between Denver and Tolland,
-Corona (the region of perpetual snow) and Arrow, on the Pacific slope
-of the Continental Divide, in one day. This vast enterprise is due to
-the genius and the prophetic vision of President David H. Moffat of the
-First National Bank in Denver, one of the leaders in all that makes for
-the best interests and the advancement of the Centennial State, and of
-the future of Denver the Beautiful. Mr. Moffat says:
-
- "Denver's population is growing steadily and naturally. Some time
- ago I made the prediction that Denver would have three hundred
- thousand inhabitants within five years. I see no reason for
- changing my estimate. Rather, I might increase it, but I will be
- conservative.
-
- "The things that build up a city's wealth and population are 'round
- about Denver in prodigal quantities. If Denver had only the state
- of Colorado from which to draw, her future would be absolutely
- assured. But consider the vast territory that is tributary to this
- city. It stretches away to the east, west, north, and south, an
- area quite one-third of the whole country, and quite the richest
- in all natural resources. Denver is the geographical hub of this
- territory."
-
-The Moffat road will climb the ramparts formed by the main range of
-the Rocky Mountains west of Denver and run directly westward, passing
-through one of the most fertile sections of the state. The road ascends
-to an altitude of eleven thousand six hundred feet, running through a
-region rich in minerals, and especially in coal. The sublime scenery
-along the route has already made it most popular for excursions, which
-draw a vast tourist travel continually. President Moffat's road has
-brought Routt County into such prominence that investors from the East
-are being attracted to this region, a notable one among these being the
-Eastern capitalist, C. B. Knox, who proposes to invest in copper, coal,
-and iron in Routt County, which he regards as the richest section in
-Colorado. Mr. Knox engaged the services of several experts to examine
-and report to him upon this region. To a press correspondent who
-inquired of Mr. Knox his views regarding Colorado, he said:
-
- "I believe that there is wealth unmeasured in Routt County, and I
- am out here to put some money in there. I am sure that this section
- of the state is one of the richest territories in the country.
- How I became interested is a long story,--too long to tell. But
- it is sufficient to say that I have heard of Routt County for so
- long, and from so many different people in whose judgment I have
- the utmost faith, that I have come out here to invest some money.
- I believe thoroughly that money put into Routt County will within
- a few years bring handsome returns. If I did not believe that I
- should not be here looking for a place in which to invest money.
-
- "I have been to Steamboat Springs myself, and I am thoroughly of
- the opinion that it is going to be one of the big towns of your
- state. The fact is, I have never seen a better looking proposition
- in my life than investing money in Routt County. Already I have
- purchased some land, and I am going to get more. It is this iron
- proposition that I am having investigated the most completely. The
- iron to be found in Routt County looks awfully good to me, and
- there is no question in my mind that Routt County is the place to
- put capital.
-
- "I cannot, of course, at this time say just what properties I
- have in view,--that would not be good business; but I have under
- investigation locations of mineral property near Steamboat and
- north and south of there. I have decided on nothing definite;
- that is, as to just what ores I will endeavor to exploit, for the
- whole proposition looks so good to me that I am going to purchase
- probably several different kinds of propositions. As I say,
- though, I am most interested in the iron ore, as that seems to
- present the greatest opportunities."
-
-These views are significant not only as those of an experienced
-financier who has unbounded faith in the future of Colorado, but
-also as typical of the wide range of vision which is open to the
-trained eye of the capitalist and the organizer of great enterprises.
-The spellbinder may work his will in Colorado. It is the land of
-infinite opportunity. It offers resources totally unsurpassed in the
-entire world for unlimited development, and these resources await the
-recognition of those whose vision is sufficiently true to discern the
-psychological moment.
-
-The first railroad reached Denver thirty-six years ago, and the city
-has now sixteen railroad lines. It has a population of over two hundred
-and twenty-five thousand. It is a geographical centre, which assures
-its permanent importance as a distributing point. With two hundred and
-twenty-five miles of street railway, with seventy-five miles of paved
-streets, and a taxable property estimated at one hundred and two and a
-third millions, Denver holds unquestionable commercial importance.
-
-When, on the evening of July Fourth, 1906, the splendid electric flag,
-with the national colors intensified a thousand fold in brilliancy by
-the electrical lights, floated in the air from the dome of the Capitol
-on its commanding eminence, and the new city Arch, a veritable _Arc
-de Triomphe_, flashed its "Welcome" in electrical light to eager
-throngs, the moment was one which might well have been fixed on the
-sensitive plate of the camera of the future as typical of the entire
-horoscope of Denver the Beautiful. On that day had been unveiled this
-triumphal arch, placed at the Seventeenth Street entrance to the city
-from the Union Depot, which, in its sixteen hundred electric lights,
-flashes its legend upon the vision of every one entering Denver. This
-arch, weighing seventy tons, eighty feet in length, and with a central
-height of fifty-nine feet, is constructed from a combination of metals
-so united as to give the best results in strength, durability, and
-beauty, and thus to stand as a symbol of the composite life of the
-nation. Over the entire surface has been placed a plating of bronze
-finished with _verde antique_, to thus give it the aspect of ancient
-bronze. It is built at a cost of twenty-two thousand dollars, and the
-originator of the idea, Mr. William Maher of Denver, received the
-entire subscriptions for it within one day. The design is that of a
-Denver girl, Miss Marie Woodson, whose name must always be immortalized
-in connection with this beautiful achievement which typifies the spirit
-of the city. Constructed by one of the city manufactories, the design
-and the execution are thus exclusively of Denver. In his address at the
-unveiling of the arch, Chancellor Buchtel said:
-
- "To all men who stand for honesty, for industry, for justice, for
- reverence for law, for reverence for life, for education, for
- self-reliance, for individual initiative, for independence, and
- for sound character, the city of Denver speaks only one word, and
- the state of Colorado speaks only one word, and that word we have
- emblazoned on this glorious Arch,--the word 'Welcome.'"
-
-Dean Hart, offering the Invocation, referred to the scriptural fact
-that God had instructed his leaders to build monuments that they might
-bear witness to some act or covenant, and it was right that the people
-of Denver should raise this similar monument to their ideals of peace
-and happiness and truth and justice. Mayor Speer, accepting the gift on
-behalf of the city, emphasized the fact that the arch was to stand in
-its place for ages as the expression of the attitude of the citizens
-to the strangers who enter their gates. "It is intended to reflect our
-hospitality," said Mayor Speer, "on a traveller's arrival and on his
-departure. It is more than a thing of beauty; it is the type of the
-new spirit in Denver, an awakening of civic pride that is sure to be
-followed by much that is artistic and beautiful in our beloved city."
-
-The spirit of Denver the Beautiful is finely interpreted in these words
-by representative citizens. It is the spirit of generous and cordial
-hospitality to all who are prepared to enter into and to contribute to
-its high standards of life. It is the spirit of continually forging
-ahead to accomplish things; of that irresistible energy, combined with
-the eternal vigilance, which is not only the price of liberty, but
-the price of almost everything worth having. With this zeal for the
-great achievements,--carrying railroads through the mountains, opening
-the inexhaustible treasures of mines, bringing the snow of mountain
-peaks to irrigate the arid plains, establishing electric transit for
-fifty miles about, and telephonic connection that brings an area of
-hundreds of miles into instant speaking range with Denver,--with all
-the zeal for these executive accomplishments, the spirit of Denver is
-focussed on that social progress which is aided and fostered by all
-modern mechanical facilities. Education, culture, and religion are
-nowhere more held as the essentials of social progress than in Denver.
-Something of the nature of the problems of civilization that confronted
-the early pathfinders in Colorado may be inferred from the words of
-Major Long,--whose name is now perpetuated by the mountain peak that
-bears it,--when, in 1862, he stated, in an official report to the
-government:
-
- "This region, according to the best intelligence that can be had,
- is thoroughly uninhabitable by a people depending on agriculture
- for their subsistence, but, viewed as a frontier, may prove of
- infinite importance to the United States, inasmuch as it is
- calculated to serve as a barrier to prevent too great an extension
- of our population westward and secure us against the machinations
- or incursions of an enemy that might otherwise be disposed to annoy
- us in that quarter."
-
-Less than sixty-five years have passed since the region of which Denver
-is the great centre was thus pronounced useless except as a frontier
-to serve as protection from an enemy, and this judgment reminds one
-of a keen insight into the evolutionary progress of life expressed by
-Mrs. Julia Ward Howe when she remarked that "Every generation makes a
-fool of the one that went before it." Colorado, pronounced "thoroughly
-uninhabitable" in 1842, was organized as a territory in 1861 and in
-1876 admitted as a state.
-
-Darwin, who regarded "climate and the affections" as the only absolute
-necessities of terrestrial existence, should have lived in Denver,
-for of all the beautiful climates is that in which revels the capital
-of Colorado. The air is all liquid gold from sunrise till sunset; the
-mountains swim in a sea of azure blue; the ground is bare and dry in
-winter, affording the best of walking, and there are few cities where
-the general municipal management exceeds or is, perhaps, even as good
-as that of Denver. The electric street-car service is on schedule time,
-and the two hundred and twenty-five miles of its extent already, with
-increase in the near future, is certainly an achievement for a young
-city. Nature is a potent factor in this excellent service, as there is
-no blocking by heavy snowstorms and blizzards, as in the Middle West
-and the East.
-
-The gazer in the magic mirror of the future requires little aid from
-the imagination to see, in the growth and development of Denver, an
-impressive illustration of the significance of the name of the state
-of which it is the capital and the keynote. With what felicitous
-destiny is the name invested in the old Castilian phrase, "_A Dios con
-le Colorado_" (Go thou merrily with God),--a parting salutation and
-benediction. Denver is, indeed, more than a state capital; it is the
-epitome of the great onward march of civilization, and it must always
-be considered in its wide relations to all the great Southwest as well
-as in respect to its own municipal individuality.
-
-No citizen of Denver has contributed more to the moral and intellectual
-quality of the city as one of the conductors of great enterprises held
-amenable to the higher ideals of citizenship, than has Mr. S. K. Hooper
-of the Denver and Rio Grande, which is one of the marvels of the West
-in scenic glory. From May till October pleasure tourists throng this
-marvellous route through the Royal Gorge, through mysterious cañons
-and across the Divide. For it must always be remembered that Denver
-is a great city for tourists and season visitors, and the floating
-population exceeds a hundred thousand annually. Beautiful as it is in
-the winter, Denver is also essentially a summer city. There is not a
-night in the summer when the wind, cool, refreshing, exhilarating, does
-not blow from the great rampart of the snow-clad, encircling mountains.
-There is not a morning when the wind does not come again, sending
-the blood leaping through the veins, while the sun rides across the
-heavens in a glory of brilliancy, and the great range rears its white
-head to the cloudless blue sky.
-
-The Denver Art League is a flourishing association that has under its
-auspices classes in drawing, water colors, and sculpture. Already many
-artists of Colorado are winning a name. A new Public Library is now in
-process of erection, and the Chamber of Commerce also maintains a free
-library of some twenty-five thousand volumes, the reading-room open
-every day in the year. The city appropriates six thousand dollars a
-year for the expenses of this institution.
-
-The educational standards of Denver are high. Drawing, music, and
-German are included among the studies of the grammar schools, and
-physical culture is introduced in each grade. The high school building
-cost a quarter of a million dollars, and stands second in the entire
-country in point of architectural beauty and admirable arrangements.
-Besides the splendid public-school system there is the University of
-Denver, a few miles from the city; St. Mary's (Catholic) Academy, and
-two large (Episcopal) schools for girls and boys, respectively,--"Wolfe
-Hall" and St. John's College. The Woman's College and Westminster
-University complete this large group of educational institutions
-which centre in Denver. There is also the University of Colorado at
-Boulder, which has established a record for success under the able
-administration of Dr. James H. Baker, who, in January of 1892, was
-called to the presidency after having served as principal of the
-Denver High School for seventeen years. President Baker is well known
-in educational circles in the United States as a scholarly man and a
-capable college president. He has been offered the presidency of other
-State universities from time to time, but has preferred to remain in
-Boulder and to concentrate his efforts toward making this institution
-one of the largest and best of the state universities. He has always
-been active in the State Teachers' Association and the National Council
-of Education.
-
-For three years past the University of Colorado has held a summer
-school with a large attendance of teachers and college students. In
-this past season of 1906, Professor Paul Hanus of Harvard University
-gave a valuable course of lectures on education, and Professor Hart,
-also of Harvard, conducted a course in history.
-
-Over a hundred and fifteen thousand pupils are enrolled in the public
-schools of Denver, including all grades, from the primary to the high
-school. The latter offers the full equivalent of a college education
-freely to all.
-
-The churches of Denver are numerous, and include many fine edifices
-besides the large granite Methodist Church that cost over a quarter of
-a million dollars. It is not, however, only the church structures that
-are noble and impressive, but the preaching in them is of an unusually
-high order of both intellectual power and spiritual aspiration. The
-keen, critical life of Colorado's capital demands the best thought of
-the day. The wonderful exhilaration of the atmosphere seems to exert
-its influence on all life as a universal inspiration.
-
-The new building for the Denver Public Library is under process of
-construction, an appropriation of a quarter of a million dollars having
-been made for the edifice, which will stand in a small triangular
-park, insuring air and light, and giving to its approach a stately and
-beautiful dignity.
-
-The Colorado capital is tending to fulfil the poet's ideal of affording
-
- "room in the streets for the soul."
-
-The life is most delightful. Without any undue and commonplace
-formalities, yet always within that fine etiquette which is the
-unconscious result of good breeding, the meeting and mingling has a
-cordial and sincere basis that lends significance to social life. The
-numerous clubs, and the associations for art and music, for Italian,
-French, and German readings, are all vital and prominent in the city,
-and the political equality of woman imparts to conversation a tone of
-wider thought and higher importance than is elsewhere invariably found.
-
-Denver, which should be the capital city of the United States, is
-pre-eminently the convention city. Even with all the beauty of
-Washington and the vast sums that have been expended within the
-past fifteen years in the incomparable structure for the Library of
-Congress, and in other fine public buildings, and the splendor of
-the private residence region,--even with all this, and the fact that
-the Capitol itself is one of the notable architectural creations of
-the world, the nation is great enough and rich enough to found a
-new capital which should far surpass the present one, however fine
-that present one may be. However great are the treasures of art and
-architecture in Washington, the change could be, even now, made with
-the greatest advantage for the future. Within a quarter of a century
-all that invests Washington with such charm in architectural beauty and
-in art could be more than duplicated in Denver. The nation has wealth
-enough, and the most modern ideas and inspirations in these lines
-surpass those of any previous age or decade. The present is "the heir
-of all the ages."
-
-No one need marvel that Denver ranks as the western metropolis of the
-Union, with its delightful climate, its infinite interests, its centre
-as a point for charming excursions, and its sixteen railroad lines.
-
-In this atmosphere of opportunity and privilege there is, indeed,
-"room for the soul" and all that the poet's phrase suggests. There
-is room for all noble and generous development; for the expansion of
-the spirit to express itself in all loveliness of life, all splendid
-energy of achievement; and in all that makes for the supreme aim of a
-nation,--that of a Christian civilization,--no city can offer greater
-scope than does Denver the Beautiful.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE PICTURESQUE REGION OF PIKE'S PEAK
-
- "_And ever the spell of beauty came
- And turned the drowsy world to flame._"
-
- EMERSON
-
-
-In the picturesque region of Pike's Peak there is grouped such an
-array of scenic wonders as are unrivalled, within the limits of any
-corresponding area, in the entire world. To this region Colorado
-Springs is the gateway, and the poetic little city is already famous
-as one of the world resorts whose charm is not exclusively restricted
-to the summer. The winter is also alluring, for Colorado is the land
-of perpetual sunshine. One turns off the steam heat and sits with open
-windows in December. The air is electric, exhilarating. The cogwheel
-road up Pike's Peak is stopped; but almost any of the other excursions
-one can take as enjoyably as in summer. The East is, apparently, under
-the delusion that the land is covered with snow up to the very summit
-of Pike's Peak. On the contrary, the ground is bare and dry; the
-birds are singing, the sun shines for all, and the everlasting hills
-silhouette themselves against the blue sky in all their grandeur.
-One easily slips into all the charm and fascination of Colorado days
-through these resplendent winters, when there are two hours more of
-light and sunshine in Colorado, on account of its altitude, than in any
-state to the eastward. The climate of Colorado Springs has a perfection
-that is remarked even in the Centennial State, where, in every part,
-the climate is unsurpassed in sunshine and exhilaration. Especially,
-however, is Colorado Springs a summer resort, as is Saratoga or Newport
-or Bar Harbor. Its season is increasingly brilliant and crowded. People
-come to stay a day and prolong it to a week, or come for a week and
-prolong their stay to a month. The driving is fine, the motor cars are
-abundant, the excursions are delightful, and the air is as curative and
-exhilarating as is possible to conceive. The inner glories of the Rocky
-Mountains, with their vast cañons and giant peaks; their waterfalls
-dashing over precipices hundreds of feet in height; the fascinating
-glens and mesas for camping excursions, or for scientific research and
-study, are all reached by this gateway of Colorado Springs.
-
-Pike's Peak, this stupendous continental monument, dominates the entire
-region. The atmospheric effects around its summit offer a perpetual
-panorama of kaleidoscopic changes of color and cloud-forms. Looking
-out on the Peak from Colorado Springs, three miles from its base,
-there are hours when it seems to be actually approaching with such
-swift though stately measure that one involuntarily shrinks back from
-the window in irrational alarm lest the grim monster shall bear down
-upon it, with a force inevitable as Fate; disastrous as a colossal
-iceberg wandering from Polar seas and sweeping down with irresistible
-force against the side of a transatlantic liner. In a lightning flash
-of instantaneous, unreasoning vision, one beholds in imagination the
-impending destruction of a city. It becomes a thing endowed with
-volition; a weird, uncanny monster, the abode of the gods who have
-reared their monuments and established their pleasure-grounds in their
-strange, fantastic garden at its foot.
-
-Again, the Peak enfolds itself in clouds and, secure in this drapery,
-retires altogether from sight, as if weary of being the object of
-public view. It is as if the inmates of a house, feeling an invasion
-of public interest, should turn off the lights, draw the curtains, and
-close the shutters as a forcible intimation of their preference for
-privacy and their decision to exclude the madding crowd. Sometimes
-the Peak will flaunt itself in glorious apparel and gird itself
-in strength. With light it will deck itself as with a garment. It
-surprises a sunrise with the reflection of glory transfigured into
-unspeakable resplendence. It is the royal monarch to which every
-inhabitant of the Pike's Peak region, every sojourner in the land, must
-pay his tribute. The day is fair or foul according as Pike's Peak shall
-smile or frown. All the cycles of the eternal ages have left on its
-summit their records,--the silent and hidden romance of the air. The
-scientist alone may translate this aërial hieroglyphic.
-
- "Omens and signs that fill the air
- To him authentic witness bear."
-
-This monumental peak of the continent shrouds in oblivion its mystic
-past, and still the handwriting on the wall may be read by him who
-holds the key to all this necromancy. The record of the ages is written
-on parchment that will never crumble. The mysteries of the very
-creation itself,--of all this vast and marvellous West,--of infinite
-expanse of sea and of volcanic fires that swallowed up the waters and
-crystallized them into granite and porphyry,--this very record of
-Titanic processes is written, in mystic characters, in that far upper
-air where the lofty Peak reigns in unapproachable majesty. For while
-there are other peaks in the Rocky Mountains as high,--and Long's
-Peak even exceeds it in altitude,--there is no other which rises so
-distinctly alone and which so supremely dominates an infinite plateau
-that extends, like the ocean, beyond the limit of vision.
-
-[Illustration: SUMMIT OF PIKE'S PEAK, COLORADO]
-
-There is one glory of the moon and another glory of the stars, as
-well as the glory of the sun, in this mountain region of Colorado
-Springs. The sunsets over the mountains are marked by the most gorgeous
-phenomena of color before whose intensity all the hues of a painter's
-palette pale. The gates of the New Jerusalem seem to open. Great
-masses of billowy clouds in deepest, burning gold hang in the air;
-the rainbow hues of all the summers that have shone upon earth since
-the first rainbow was set in the heavens, reflect themselves in a
-thousand shimmering cloud-shapes. It is one of the definite things of
-the tourist's day to watch from the western terrace of "The Antlers"
-these unrivalled sunset effects; and when, later (still in compliance
-with the unwritten laws that prevail in the Empire of Transcendent
-Beauty), dinner is served at small tables on the terrace,--where the
-flowers that form the centrepiece of each table, the gleam of exquisite
-cut glass and silver, and the music from an orchestra hidden behind
-the palms and tall roses that fling a thousand fragrances on the
-enchanted air all blend as elements of the faëry scene whose background
-is a panoramic picture of mountains and sky,--the visitor realizes an
-atmosphere of enchantment that one might well cross a continent to gain.
-
-Again, there is the glory of the night. A young moon glances shyly over
-the mountain summit and swiftly retires to her mysterious realms on
-the other side. Each ensuing night she ventures still further afield,
-gazing still longer at the world she is visiting before she again wings
-her flight down the western sky, pausing, for a tremulous moment,
-on the very crest of the mountains ere she is lost to sight in the
-vague distance beyond. The stars come and go in impressive troops and
-processions. They float up from behind the mountains till one questions
-as to whether the other side is not a vast realm of star-dust in
-process of crystallizing into planets and stars. Has one, then, at
-last arrived at the Land that is the forge of the gods who create it?
-May one here surprise the very secrets of the Universe? Perhaps some
-dim, mysterious under-world lies over that colossal range in which
-celestial mechanism is at work sending forth and withdrawing the
-shining planetary visitants, so continuous is the procession of stars
-through all the hours of the night. Each star, as it rises over the
-mountains or sets behind them, pauses for an instant on the crest for a
-preliminary survey, or a parting glance, of the world it is entering or
-leaving.
-
-It is still in the realms of doubt as to whether there may be
-discovered a royal road to learning; but a royal road to the summit
-of Pike's Peak, more than fourteen thousand feet above sea level, has
-been, since 1890, an accomplished fact in the Manitou and Pike's Peak
-cogwheel road, starting from Engleman's Glen, one of the famous resorts
-of Manitou. This lovely town, that dreams away its summer at the base
-of Pike's Peak guarded by precipitous mountain walls, is connected
-with Colorado Springs by electric trolley, and the little journey of
-four miles is one of the pleasure excursions of the region. The route
-lies past the "Garden of the Gods," where the curious shapes of red
-sandstone loom up like spectral forms in some Inferno.
-
-Like Naples, Colorado Springs is the paradise of the tourist, offering
-a new excursion for every day in the season; and there are few of
-these whose route does not include lovely Manitou, which is also the
-objective point from which to fare forth on this journey above the
-clouds, into those mysterious realms where he who listens aright may
-hear spoken the words which it is not lawful for man to utter. The
-journey into aërial spaces opens in a defile of one of the deep cañons,
-the train on the one hand clinging to the wall, while on the other one
-looks down a vast precipice, at the foot of which dashes a river over
-gigantic boulders. The route is diversified by the little stations on
-the way,--Minnehaha, whose waterfall indeed laughs in the air, and is
-given back in a thousand ghostly echoes; the Half-Way House, nestling
-under the pinnacled rocks of Hell Gate--must one always pass through
-the portals of Hades on his way to Paradise? Strange and grotesque
-scenery companions the way. On the mountain-side one finds--of all
-things--a newspaper office, where a souvenir daily paper is issued
-with all the news of that new world above the clouds, Pike's Peak. The
-ascent is very steep in places. The verdure of the foothills vanishes,
-the trees cease to invade this upper air, and only the dwarfed aspen
-shivers in the breeze as it clings to some barren rock. New vistas
-open. The world of day and daylight duties is left behind. Gaunt,
-spectral rocks in uncanny shapes haunt the way. The air grows chill;
-car windows are closed, and warm wraps are at a premium. But the scene
-below! The sensation of looking down on the clouds, the view of Lake
-Moraine, an inland sea high in the mountains; the new sensations of the
-rarefied air,--all these seem to initiate one into a new world. From
-the summit, reached in a journey of ninety minutes, the view can only
-be described as that of unspeakable awe and sublimity. An expanse of
-sixty thousand miles is open to the gaze. To the west rise a thousand
-towering peaks, snow clad, in a majesty of effect beyond power of
-portrayal. To the east the vast plateaus stretch into infinite space.
-Below, the sun shines on floating clouds in all gleams of color. In the
-steel tower of the new Summit Hotel is a powerful telescope that brings
-Denver, eighty miles distant, into near and distinct view. In Colorado
-Springs, fourteen miles "as the crow flies," the telescopic view even
-reveals the signs on the streets so they may be plainly read. In close
-range of vision appear Pueblo, Cripple Creek, Victor, Goldfield,
-Independence, and Manitou.
-
-The surface of the top of Pike's Peak comprises several acres of level
-land thickly strewn with large blocks of rough granite of varying
-size,--blocks that are almost wholly in a regular rectangular shape,
-as if prepared for some Titanic scheme of architecture. The highest
-telegraph office in the world is located here, and the usual souvenir
-shop of every summer resort offers its tempting remembrances, all of
-which are closely associated with the _genus loci_, and are all a very
-part of the Colorado productions. A powerful searchlight was placed
-on Pike's Peak during the summer of 1906, adding the most picturesque
-feature of night to all the surrounding country. Denver, Colorado
-Springs, Pueblo, the Cripple Creek district, the deep cañons of the
-Cheyenne range, the silvery expanse of Broadmoor, whose attractive
-casino is a centre of evening gatherings,--all these points in the
-great landscape are swept with the illumination from the highest
-searchlight in the world to-day.
-
-A century has passed since Major Zebulon Montgomery Pike first
-discovered the shadowy crest of the mountain peak that immortalizes
-his name. It was on November 13, 1806, that the attention of Major
-Pike and his party was arrested by what at first looked to them as a
-light blue cloud in the sky, toward which they marched for ten days
-before arriving at the base of the mountain. The story of this journey
-is one of the dramatic records in the national archives. Major Pike
-and his men left St. Louis on July 15, 1806, on his trip to the Rocky
-Mountains, or Mexican Mountains as he called them at the time. He
-pronounced the country through which he travelled to be so devoid of
-sustenance for human beings that it would serve as a barrier, for all
-time, in the expansion of the United States. In vivid contrast are
-the conditions to-day. Major Pike could now make his journey from St.
-Louis to Pike's Peak over either of several grand trunk railways
-equipped with all the modern luxuries of travel. Where he passed great
-herds of buffalo, he would now see cattle grazing in equal numbers on
-the prairies. The vast plains that paralyzed his imagination by their
-desolate aspects are now dotted with prosperous farms or ranches. The
-mountains that appealed to him only for their scenic grandeur have
-been found to be the treasure vaults of nature that were only waiting
-to be conquered by the hardy frontiersmen who followed him nearly half
-a century later. The great white mountain that he declared could not
-be ascended by a human being is now the objective point of a hundred
-thousand tourists annually, who gayly climb the height in a swift trip
-made in a luxurious Pullman observation car. The first attempt of the
-Pike party to ascend the peak was a failure, and Major Pike expressed
-his opinion that "no human being could ascend to its pinnacle." In 1819
-Hon. John C. Calhoun, then Secretary of War, sent Major Long and a
-party on an expedition to the Rocky Mountains, then almost as unknown
-as the Himalayas. This exploring party camped on the present site of
-Colorado Springs, and on July 13 (1819) started to ascend the peak. On
-the first day they made only two miles, as the ground was covered with
-loose, crumbling granite. On the second day, however, they succeeded;
-the first ascent of Pike's Peak thus having been made on July 14, 1819.
-A chronicle of this ascent describes the point above which the timber
-line disappears as one "of astonishing beauty and of great interest as
-to its productions." The first woman to stand on the summit of Pike's
-Peak was Mrs. James H. Holmes, in August of 1858.
-
-General Zebulon Montgomery Pike achieved distinction both as an
-explorer and a brave soldier. He was but twenty-seven years of age
-when he was chosen to lead the most important military expedition of
-the day, and eight years later, as Brigadier-General, he commanded the
-troops that captured the British stronghold at York (now Toronto),
-Canada, and here he met his death, which has been compared to that of
-Nelson. The captured flag of the enemy was placed under the head of
-the dying general to ease his pain. The cheers of his soldiers aroused
-the young commander, and on being told that the fort was captured, he
-closed his eyes with the words, "I die content."
-
-In his notebook were found the maxims that had guided him through life,
-dedicated to his son, among which were "Preserve your honor free from
-blemish," and "Be always ready to die for your country."
-
-General Pike was buried with full military honors in the government
-plot at Madison Barracks, New York. A modest shaft marks the resting
-place of the heroic soldier-explorer, and on Cascade Avenue in Colorado
-Springs, directly in front of "The Antlers," there is placed a statue
-of the heroic discoverer of the mighty Peak which forever perpetuates
-his name.
-
-No adequate life of Pike has ever been written; but with the monumental
-majesty of the mid-continental mountain peak that proclaims his name to
-all future centuries, what room can there be for biographical record
-or sculptured memorial? The archives of the Department of War, in
-Washington, contain his diary, kept from day to day in this march from
-St. Louis to Colorado. After his discovery of the Peak, Major Pike
-returned to the place where now the city of Pueblo stands, continuing
-his journey into the mountains, thence to New Mexico, where he was
-captured by the Spaniards. Hardships of every description were suffered
-by the party before being placed in captivity at Santa Fé; but even
-the capture of his papers by the Spaniards at Santa Fé did not serve
-to destroy the records of the astute young soldier, who had carefully
-concealed duplicates of his papers in the barrel of his big flintlock
-rifle, and he was afterward able to restore them to original form.
-Major Pike was as tender and humane as he was brave. In the capture of
-the party by the Spanish two of the men had to be abandoned and left to
-their fate in the hills. They were given a small supply of provisions,
-with the assurance that they would be rescued if the rest of the party
-found a haven of safety and rest. Major Pike kept this promise and,
-more nearly dead than alive, these men were brought into Santa Fé by
-the Spanish soldiers.
-
-Well might it have been of Zebulon Montgomery Pike, in his first eager
-march toward this "blue cloud" that beckoned him on and proved to be
-a vast mountain peak,--well might it have been this hero that Emerson
-thus pictured in the lines:
-
- "The free winds told him what they knew,
- Discoursed of fortune as they blew;
- Omens and signs that filled the air
- To him authentic witness bear;
- The birds brought auguries on their wings,
- And carolled undeceiving things
- Him to beckon, him to warn;
- Well might then the poet scorn
- To learn of scribe or courier
- Things writ in vaster character;
- And on his mind at dawn of day
- Soft shadows of the evening lay."
-
-In his diary, kept during the march from St. Louis, Major Pike thus
-pictured his first impressions of Colorado:
-
- "The scene was one of the most sublime and beautiful inland
- prospects ever presented to man; the great lofty mountains, covered
- with eternal snow, seemed to surround the luxuriant vale, crowned
- with perennial flowers, like a terrestrial paradise."
-
-The memory of this hero cannot but invest Colorado Springs with a
-certain consecration of heroism that becomes, indeed, part of the
-"omens and signs" that fill the air.
-
-In the early autumn of 1906 Colorado Springs and Manitou celebrated the
-centenary of the discovery of Pike's Peak with appropriate ceremonies.
-One of the interesting features was the rendering of an "Ode" by a
-chorus of one thousand voices, of which the words were written by
-Charles J. Pike of New York, the well-known sculptor, a great-nephew of
-General Pike, and for which the music was composed by Rubin Goldmark.
-
-One of the noted excursions of the Pike's Peak region is the "Temple
-Drive,"--a carriage road beginning in Manitou, traversing Williams
-Cañon, and, climbing its west wall. The drive offers near views of
-the Temple of Isis, the Cathedral of St. Peter, the Narrows, and
-of St. Peter's Gate in the Cathedral Dome. It is fairly a drive in
-elfland, and is as distinctive a feature of Colorado Springs life as
-is the famous drive from Naples to Amalfi and Sorrento a feature of
-the enchantment of Southern Italy. Manitou Park is easily reached by
-motor or carriage drive from Colorado Springs through the picturesque
-Ute Pass, and aside from its beauty it has an added interest in having
-been presented to Colorado College by General William J. Palmer and Dr.
-William A. Bell, to be used as the field laboratory of the new Colorado
-School of Forestry. Manitou Park contains cottages and recreation
-halls, so that all sorts of hospitalities and entertainments can be
-there enjoyed.
-
-[Illustration: WILLIAMS CAÑON, NEAR MANITOU, COLORADO]
-
-Of the "Garden of the Gods" who can analyze the curious, mystic spell
-of the place? A large tract of rolling mesas is covered with these
-uncanny monsters of rocks in all weird and grotesque forms. The deep
-red sandstone of their formation gives it the aspect, under a midday
-sun or the slanting rays of a brilliant sunset, of being all on fire--a
-kind of inferno, foreign to earth, and revealed, momentarily, from some
-underworld of mystery.
-
-Cheyenne Cañon is one of the most poetically touched places in all the
-Pike's Peak region. Of Cheyenne mountain Helen Hunt Jackson wrote:
-
- "By easy slope to west, as if it had
- No thought, when first its soaring was begun,
- Except to look devoutly to the sun,
- It rises and has risen, until glad,
- With light as with a garment it is clad,
- Each dawn before the tardy plains have won
- One ray, and after day has long been done
- For us the light doth cling reluctant, sad to leave its brow."
-
-Poets and artists have embodied it in song and essayed to transfer
-it to canvas; but the grandeur of South Cheyenne Cañon eludes every
-artist while it impresses the imagination of every visitor. It is fitly
-approached through the "Pillars of Hercules,"--sheer perpendicular
-walls of rock looking up over one thousand feet high, with a
-passage-way of only forty feet. Once within the cañon and one might
-as well have been translated to Mars so far as utter isolation can be
-realized. In the dim green twilight from the lofty wooded cliffs toward
-the Seven Falls one enters on "the twilight of the gods," not dark, but
-a soft light, the sun shut out, the air vibrating with faint hints of
-color, the colossal granite walls rising into the sky, the faint dash
-of waterfalls heard splashing over hidden rocks and stones; a rill here
-and there trickling down the mountain side; the far call of some lonely
-bird heard far away in the upper air; and the soft, mysterious light,
-the dim coolness and fragrance, the glimpse of blue sky just seen in
-the narrow opening above--was anything ever so enchantingly poetic?
-It is here one might well materialize his castle d'Espagne. Winding
-up the cañon, one comes to "Seven Falls,"--a torrent of water rushing
-down mighty cliffs on one side of a colossal amphitheatre, and the
-precipitous cliffs show seven distinct terraces down which the foaming
-torrent plunges.
-
-In North Cheyenne and in Bear Creek Cañons the grandeur is repeated,
-and in those the people find a vast free recreation ground. This
-privilege is again one of the innumerable ones that are due to the
-gifts and grace of General Palmer, who has had this sublime locality
-made into a practicable resort, with pavilions where tea, coffee,
-lemonade, ices, and sandwiches are served; a rustic hostelry, "Bruin
-Inn," is also provided as a place of refuge and entertainment,
-providing against any disasters in the sudden storms that are so
-frequent in these cañon regions; and the bridle paths, the terraced
-drives on the mountain walls, and the glades where games may be played,
-all make South Cheyenne the most unique pleasure resort of that of any
-city in the United States.
-
-[Illustration: SEVEN FALLS, CHEYENNE CAÑON, NEAR COLORADO SPRINGS,
-COLORADO]
-
-In all these cañons the massive, precipitous granite walls, which seem
-to rise almost to the sky, are also rendered more arresting to the eye
-by their richly variegated coloring. These ragged cliffs rise, too, in
-pinnacles and towers and domes that proclaim their warfare with the
-elements for ages innumerable. Visitors familiar with all the Alpine
-gorges and with the Yosemite agree that in no one of these are there
-such majesty of effects as in the Cheyenne cañons.
-
-Manitou, the Indian name for the Great Spirit, is an alluring place in
-a nook of the mountains at the foot of Pike's Peak, reminding one of
-the Swiss-Alpine villages. Ute Pass; Williams Cañon, in which is the
-noted "Cave of the Winds"; the famous "Temple Drive"; Cascade, Green
-Mountain Falls and Glen Eyrie are all grouped near Manitou, and it is
-here that the cogwheel road ascending Pike's Peak begins. The Mineral
-Springs are approached in a pavilion with two or three large rooms;
-the auditorium, where an orchestra plays every afternoon, seats some
-two hundred people, who can listen to the music, sip their glasses of
-mineral water, and chat with friends, all at one and the same time.
-There is a foreign air about Manitou. The little town consists of one
-street extending along the cañon, following its curves, with a few
-cottages perched on terraces above, and the hotels, boarding-houses,
-and the little shops, with the hawkers of curios at their street
-stands, make up a picturesque spectacle. The shop windows glisten with
-jewelry made from the native Colorado stones, the amethyst, opal,
-topaz, emerald, tourmaline, and moonstone being found more or less
-extensively in this state. The native ores are exposed; Indian wares,
-from the bright Navajo rugs and blankets to the pottery, baskets, and
-beaded work; photographs and picture cards of all kinds, and trinkets
-galore, of almost every conceivable description, give a gala-day
-aspect to the little mountain town. The surrounding peaks rise to the
-height of six and eight thousand feet above the street, which looks
-like a toy set in a region designed for the habitation of the gods.
-American life, however, keeps the pace, and in this mountain defile
-at the foot of Pike's Peak were the signs out announcing a "Psychic
-Palmist," a "Scientific Palmist," and a "Thought Healer," by which it
-will be inferred that an up-to-date civilization has by no means failed
-to penetrate to Manitou. Each year the accommodations for travellers
-multiply themselves. Each summer the demand increases. There is a
-fascination about Manitou that throws its spell over every visitor and
-sojourner.
-
-The Grand Caverns are on the side of one of the picturesque mountains,
-reached by a drive through the Ute Pass. Beyond Rainbow Falls, and
-entering the vestibule of these caverns, the visitor finds himself
-under a lofty dome from which stalactites hang, and in which is a pile
-of stones being raised to the memory of General Grant, each visitor
-adding one. No form of memorial to the great military commander,
-whose character was at once so impressive and so simple, could be
-more fitting than is this tribute. From the vestibule one wanders to
-Alabaster Hall, where there are groups of snow-white columns of pure
-alabaster. In a vast space sixty feet high, with a dome of Nature's
-chiselling and two galleries that are curiously wrought by natural
-forces, there is a natural grand organ, formed of stalactites, with
-wonderful reverberations and with a rich, deep tremulous tone. To
-reveal its marvels to visitors a skilled musician is employed, who
-renders on it popular selections, to the amazement of all who are
-present. Another feature of the Grand Caverns is the "jewel casket,"
-where gems encased in limestone reflect the glow of a lamp. There is
-also the "card room," with its columns and its pictorial effects;
-the "Lovers' Lane" and the "Bridal Chamber," filled with translucent
-formations in all curious shapes and hints of color.
-
-The marvellous achievements of the engineer in encircling the
-mountains with steel tracks on which cars climb to the summit are
-seen, in perhaps their most remarkable degree of development in
-conquering the problems of mountain engineering in Colorado. Of all
-these achievements, one of the most conspicuous triumphs is that known
-as the "Short Line" between Colorado Springs and Cripple Creek, a
-distance of only forty-five miles, and the time some two and a half
-hours; but within these limits is comprised the most unspeakably
-sublime panorama of mountain scenery. As the train begins to wind up
-the mountains one looks down on the flaming, rose-red splendor of the
-Garden of the Gods,--with its uncanny shapes, its domes and curious
-formations. Climbing up, the vast plain below--a plain, even though
-it is six thousand feet above sea level--looks like a sea of silver.
-The railroad crosses Bear Creek Cañon on a narrow iron bridge and
-threads its way again on the terraced trunk of the opposite mountain
-up to Point Sublime,--a gigantic rock towering on a mountain crest. A
-landscape unfolds that rivals Church's wonderful "Heart of the Andes"
-in its fascination. Entering South Cheyenne, the beauty and grandeur of
-the eastern end of the cañon are seen by following the narrow course
-between its rugged granite sides hundreds of feet in height, reaching a
-magnificent and most impressive climax at the wonderful Seven Falls. No
-visit to the Pike's Peak region can be considered complete without this
-trip through South Cheyenne Cañon.
-
-[Illustration: ST. PETER'S DOME, ON THE CRIPPLE CREEK SHORT LINE]
-
-The usual feature of the situation as trains circle around the rim
-of these cañons is that their beauty is seen from above. A short stroll
-and one finds himself between walls towering a thousand feet above his
-head. The beauty is all around and above. The tops of the mountains
-seem very far away, and lost in clouds. But in the train the situation
-is reversed; for, seated in a luxurious observation car of the "Short
-Line," the tourist is carried above the peaks and cañon walls, which
-from below seem inaccessible in their height, and from this startling
-elevation one looks down on an underworld of strange and mysterious
-forms. St. Peter's Dome, as it is called, looks down from its towering
-height with the national colors flying from its summit,--a huge mass
-of granite that seems to stand alone and to guard the secrets of the
-depths below.
-
-[Illustration: APPROACHING DUFFIELD]
-
-The ascent of St. Peter's Dome is a triumph of engineering skill. As
-the train glides along, and glory succeeds to glory, vista to vista,
-and cañon to cañon, in ever changing but constant charm, the dizzy
-height is climbed apparently with so much ease that the traveller,
-absorbed in the entrancing surroundings, reaches the top before he is
-aware of it. It seems impossible that the track seen on the opposite
-side of the cañon hundreds of feet above should be the path the train
-is to follow; but a few turns, almost imperceptible, so smooth is
-the roadbed, and one looks down on the place just passed with equal
-wonder, and asks if that can be the track by which he has come. As
-the train climbs the side or rounds the point of each mountain peak,
-the matchless view of the plains is unfolded before the enraptured
-gaze. All description is baffled; any attempt to reproduce in words
-the glory of that scene is impossible. Every tourist in the Pike's
-Peak region regards the "Short Line" trip as the very crown of the
-summer's excursions, or, in the local phrase, one whose sublimity of
-beauty "bankrupts the English language." These forty-five miles not
-only condense within their limits the grandeur one might reasonably
-anticipate during a transcontinental journey of three thousand miles,
-but as an achievement of mountain engineering, railway experts in both
-Europe and America have pronounced it the most substantially built and
-the finest equipped mountain railroad in the world. It was opened in
-1901, and, quite irrespective of any interest felt in visiting the gold
-camps of Cripple Creek, the "Short Line" has become the great excursion
-which all visitors to Colorado desire to make for the sublime effects
-of the scenery. A prominent civil engineer in Colorado said, in answer
-to some question regarding the problem of taking trains over mountain
-ranges and peaks that, given the point to start from and the point to
-reach, and sufficient capital, there was no difficulty in carrying a
-railroad anywhere. The rest is, he said, only a question of time and
-skill. The construction of the "Short Line" reveals the achievement
-of carrying a railroad around the rims of cañons and over the tops of
-mountains rather than that of following a trail through the bottom
-of the cañons. As a scenic success this feat is unparalleled. The
-bewildering magnificence, the incomparable sublimity, as the train
-winds up St. Peter's Dome, are beyond the power of painter or poet
-to picture. Leaving Colorado Springs, the tourist sees the strange
-towering pinnacles of the Garden of the Gods, in their deep red
-contrasting with the green background of trees; Manitou gleams from
-its deep cañon; the towers and spires of Colorado Springs appear in
-miniature from the far height, and the great expanse of the plateau
-looks like the sea. It is difficult to realize that one is still gazing
-upon land. The ascent is more like the experience in an aero-car than
-in a railroad train, so swift is the upward journey. The first little
-station on this route is Point Sublime, where the clouds and the
-mountain peaks meet and mingle. North Cheyenne Cañon is seen far below,
-and in the distance is fair Broadmoor with its Crescent Lake gleaming
-like silver. The Silver Cascade Falls sparkle in the air hundreds of
-feet up the crags. At Fair View the North and South Cheyenne Cañons
-meet,--those two scenic gorges whose fame is world-wide,--and from one
-point the traveller gazes down into each, the bottom depths so remote
-as to be invisible. These precipices are wooded, so that the aspect
-is that of sheer walls of green. St. Peter's Dome almost pierces the
-sky, and as the train finally gains the summit a vista of incomparable
-magnificence opens,--of cañons and peaks and towering rocks,--and
-through one cañon is seen Pueblo, over fifty miles distant, but swept
-up in nearer vision with a mirage-like effect in the air. It is a view
-that might well enchain one. The Spanish Peaks cut the sky far away on
-the horizon, and the beautiful range of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains
-offers a view of wonderful beauty. The road passes Duffields, Summit,
-Rosemont, and Cathedral Park, at each of which stations a house or
-two, or a few tents, may be seen,--the homes of workmen or of summer
-dwellers who find the most romantic and picturesque corners of the
-universe none too good in which to set up their household gods for
-the midsummer days. Nothing is more feasible than to live high up in
-the mountains along the "Short Line." The two trains a day bring the
-mails; all marketing and merchandise are easily procured; and the
-air, the views, the marvellous spectacle of sunrise and sunset, the
-perpetually changing panorama, simply make life a high festival. The
-little station of Rosemont is a natural park, surrounded by three
-towering peaks,--Mount Rosa, Big Chief, and San Luis. Clyde is a point
-much frequented by picnickers. The "Cathedral Park" is an impressive
-example of what the forces of nature can accomplish. Colossal rocks,
-chiselled by erosion, twisted by tempests, worn by the storms of
-innumerable ages, loom up in all conceivable shapes. They are of the
-same order as some of the wonderful groups of rocks seen in the
-Grand Cañon. Towers and arches and temples and shafts have been created
-by Nature's irresistable forces, and to the strange fantastic form
-is added color,--the same rich and varied hues that render the Grand
-Cañon so wonderful in its color effects. This "Cathedral Park" is a
-great pleasure resort for celebrations and picnics, both from Colorado
-Springs, Colorado City, Broadmoor, and other places from below, and
-also from Cripple Creek, Victor, and other towns in Cripple Creek
-District.
-
-[Illustration: PORTLAND AND INDEPENDENCE MINES, VICTOR, COLORADO]
-
-The district of Cripple Creek includes a number of towns,--Victor,
-Anaconda, Eclipse, Santa Rita, Goldfield, Independence, and others,
-each centred about famous and productive mines. The first discovery
-of gold here was made in 1891 by a ranchman, Mr. Womack, who took the
-specimens of gold ore that he found to some scientific men in Colorado
-Springs, who pronounced it the genuine thing, and capitalists became
-interested to develop the mines. In 1891, the first year, the total
-value of the gold produced was $200,000; 1905, the fourteenth year, the
-value of the production was $47,630,107. The total value of the gold
-produced in the fourteen years of the camp's existence, to December 31,
-1905, was $141,395,087.
-
-There are about three hundred properties in the camp which produce
-with more or less regularity. Of this number the greatest proportion
-are spasmodic shippers, making their production from the efforts of
-leasers. There are thirty large mines in the district, each producing
-$100,000 or more annually. Dividends paid by the mining companies in
-1905 amounted to $1,707,000. Total dividends paid to December 31,
-1905, $32,742,000. There are employed on an average some six thousand
-three hundred men in the mines, and the monthly pay-roll runs to about
-$652,189, exclusive of large salaries paid mine superintendents and
-managers and clerks in offices. The lowest wage paid in the camp is
-three dollars per day of eight hours, while many of the miners receive
-more than that. The average wage per day paid for labor amounts to
-$3.44. There are twelve towns in the district, with a population of
-fifty thousand people. During the period of excitement the population
-was about seventy thousand. The social life of the people is much the
-same as in other towns.
-
-There is a free school system, with an enrolment of nearly four
-thousand pupils, with a hundred and eighteen teachers under a
-superintendent with an assistant. There are thirty-four churches,
-representing almost every variety of faith.
-
-Cripple Creek, the largest of these, lies in a hollow of the mountains,
-whose surrounding ranges are a thousand feet above the town. It
-consists mostly of one long street, with minor cross-streets, and there
-are little shops with chiffons, "smart" ribbons and laces, and all
-sorts of articles of dress making gay the show windows, and one sees
-women and children in all their pretty and stylish summer attire. There
-are two daily papers and an "opera house." Cripple Creek is a rather
-favorite point with dramatic companies, as the entire town, the entire
-district, turns out, and the audiences do not lack in either enthusiasm
-or numbers.
-
-[Illustration: VIEW FROM BULL HILL, RICHEST GULCH IN THE WORLD]
-
-Mr. William Caruthers, the district superintendent, estimates that
-this region has become one of the greatest gold-producing regions in
-the world; and in rapid development, and in the richness of its ores,
-nothing like it has ever been known before. In fifteen years the cattle
-ranges have been transformed into a populous district with fifty
-thousand people, and with all the modern conveniences of Eastern cities.
-
-The electric trolley system connects all the towns in Cripple Creek
-district and passes near all the large mines. This trolley line is
-owned and controlled by the "Short Line," and is greatly sought for
-pleasure excursions both by visitors and residents.
-
-Electric cars convey the miners up and down the hills to their
-respective mines. The class of laborers is said to be greatly improved
-of late years, and Mr. Caruthers informs the questioner that no
-problematic characters are longer tolerated in Cripple Creek. It
-has ceased to be the paradise of those who, for various unspecified
-personal reasons, were unable to keep their residence in other cities,
-or had left their own particular country for their country's good.
-When such characters appear, Mr. Caruthers and his staff guide them
-with unerring certainty to the railroad track, with the assurance that
-these intruders are wanted in Colorado Springs, and that, although
-there may be no parlor-car train, with all luxuries warranted, leaving
-at that moment for their migrating convenience, yet the steel track is
-before them, and it leads directly to Pike's Peak Avenue (the leading
-business street of Colorado Springs), and they are advised at once to
-fare forth on this mountain thoroughfare. The persuasion given by Mr.
-Caruthers and his assistants is of such an order that it is usually
-accepted without remonstrance, and the objectionable specimens of
-humanity realize that their climb of several thousand feet up to the
-famous gold camps was by way of being a superfluous expenditure of
-energy on their part.
-
-The special entertainment in Cripple Creek is to make the electric
-circle tour, on electric trolley cars, between Cripple Creek and
-Victor, going on the "low line" one way, and the "high line" the other.
-The high line is almost even with the summit of Pike's Peak, that
-looms up within neighborly distance, and the splendor of the Sangre de
-Cristo range adds a bewildering beauty to the matchless panorama. On
-this round trip--a trolley ride probably not equalled in the entire
-world--one gets quite near many of the famous mines, whose machinery
-offers a curious feature in the landscape.
-
-Taking the trip in the late brilliant afternoon sunshine along this
-mountain crest, offers the spectacle of an entire landscape all in a
-deep rose-pink, gleaming, in contrast with the dark green of the cedar
-forests, like a transformation scene on a stage.
-
-The tourist who regards this life as a probationary period, to
-be employed, as largely as possible, in festas and entertaining
-experiences, may add a unique one to his repertoire, should he be so
-favored by the gods; and sojourning in neighborly proximity to the
-"Garden of the Gods," why should they not bestir themselves in his
-favor? At all events, if he has contrived to invoke their interest, and
-finds himself invited by Mr. MacWatters (the courteous and vigilant
-General Passenger Agent of the "Short Line") to make the return journey
-from Cripple Creek, down below the clouds to Colorado Springs in a
-hand car, he will enjoy an experience to be treasured forever. For the
-hand car runs down of its own accord, by the law of gravitation, and
-is provided with an air-brake to regulate its momentum. To complete
-the enchantment of conditions,--and it need not be said that in a
-Land of Enchantment conditions conform to the prevailing spirit and
-of course are enchanting,--to complete these, let it be a _partie
-carrée_, with Mrs. MacWatters, and with Ellis Meredith, the well-known
-Colorado author, to make up the number; for the keenest political
-writer in Colorado is a woman, and this woman is Ellis Meredith. It
-is a name partly real, partly a literary _nom-de-plume_, and which
-is the one and the other need not be chronicled here. The name of
-Ellis Meredith has flown widely on the wings of fame as the author of
-a most interesting story, "The Master-Knot of Human Fate," which made
-an unusual impression on critical readers. "The Master-Knot" is an
-imaginative romance, whose scene is laid on one of the peaks of the
-Rocky Mountains. It presupposes an extraordinary if not an impossible
-situation, and on this builds up a story, brilliant, thoughtful,
-tantalizing in its undercurrent of suggestive interest, and altogether
-unique.
-
-[Illustration: THE DEVIL'S SLIDE, CRIPPLE CREEK SHORT LINE]
-
-In her connection with a leading Denver journal Miss Meredith wields
-a trenchant pen, and one reading these strong and able articles could
-hardly realize that the same writer is the author of poems,--delicate,
-exquisite, tender,--and of prose romance which is increasingly sought
-by all lovers of the art of fiction. With such a party of friends as
-these, what words can interpret the necromancy of this sunset journey
-winding down the heights of majestic mountains, amid a forest of
-towering peaks, and colossal rocks looming up like giant spectres
-through the early twilight that gathers when the sun sinks behind some
-lofty pinnacle! The rose of afterglow burned in the east, reflecting
-its color over the Cheyenne cañons, and even changing the granite
-precipice of the "Devil's Slide"--a thousand feet of precipitous
-rock, through which the steel track is cut--with a reflection of its
-rose and amber. Cathedral Park took on a new majesty in the deepening
-haze. At the foot of one of its tall spires is an ice cavern, which
-holds its perpetual supply all summer. The solid roadbed, uniformly
-ballasted with disintegrated granite, built on solid rock for its
-entire extent, and totally devoid of dust, gives to the hand car the
-ease and smoothness of a motor on level ground. No one can wonder
-that this road, built originally to convey coal and other supplies
-to Cripple Creek, and to bring the ore from the mines to the mills
-and smelters (a transportation it serves daily), has also, by its
-phenomenal fascinations, achieved a great passenger traffic made up of
-the tourists and visitors to Colorado. Even travellers going through to
-the Pacific Coast make the detour from La Junta to Colorado Springs to
-enjoy the "Short Line," just as they go from Williams to Bright Angel
-Trail for the Grand Cañon. With this aërial journey through a sunset
-fairyland, where the mysterious cañons and gorges lay in shadow and the
-Colorado sunshine painted pinnacles and towers in liquid gold, what
-wonder that our poet, discovering her lyre, offered the following "Ode"
-to the "Short Line":
-
- "There's the splendor that was Grecian;
- There's the glory that was Rome;
- But we know a brighter splendor,
- And we find it here at home.
- Not the Alps or Himalayas,
- Not old Neptune's foaming brine,
- Can surpass the wealth of beauty
- Of this state of yours and mine.
-
- "All the fairy-tales and legends
- Of the time that's passed away;
- All the scientific wonders
- That amaze the world to-day;
- All the artist can imagine,
- All the engineer design,
- Are excelled in magic beauty
- On the Cripple Creek Short Line.
-
- "Oh, those mountains pierce the heavens
- Till its radiance glistens through,
- And the clouds in golden glory
- Float across its field of blue;
- And the soul that may be weary
- Feels the harmony divine
- Of this wonder-tour of Nature
- On the Cripple Creek Short Line.
-
- "There are minarets and towers;
- There are stately domes and fair;
- There are lordly, snow-capped mountains,
- There are lovely valleys there;
- And no ancient moated castle,
- Frowning down upon the Rhine,
- Looks on scenes of greater beauty
- Than the Cripple Creek Short Line.
-
- "There's a vision and a grandeur
- When the plains come into view,
- And one seems to see the ocean
- In the misty rim of blue;
- And the eyes of landlocked sailors
- With unbidden teardrops shine,
- As they see the far-off billows
- From the Cripple Creek Short Line.
-
- "There's a strength and there's a refuge
- In the everlasting hills;
- There's a gleam of joy and gladness
- In the leaping sparkling rills;
- There's a benediction sweeter
- Than the murmur of the pine,
- And it falls on all who travel
- O'er the Cripple Creek Short Line."
-
-[Illustration: COLORADO SPRINGS AND TUNNEL NO. 6, CRIPPLE CREEK SHORT
-LINE]
-
-Ellis Meredith has often pictured in song the charm and romance of
-Colorado with the vividness and power that characterize her poems which
-are essentially those of insight and imagination; but in the opinion of
-many of her admirers she has hardly laid at the shrine of the muses any
-more felicitous votive offering than this little impromptu.
-
-A summer in Colorado Springs is one that is set in the heart of
-fascinating attractions. Nor is the Pike's Peak region a summer land
-alone, for the autumn is even more beautiful, and the winters are all
-crystal and sunshine and full of exquisite exhilaration and delight in
-mountain regions that take on new forms of interest. Colorado Springs
-is not merely--nor even mostly--an excursion city for pleasure-seekers;
-it is a city of permanent homes, whose residential advantages attract
-and create its phenomenal growth.
-
-To open one's eyes on the purple line of the Rocky Mountains, with
-Pike's Peak towering into the sky, in a luminous crystal air that makes
-even existence a delight, is an alluring experience. To look over
-the beautiful city of Colorado Springs, with its broad streets and
-boulevards, and lines of trees on either side; its electric lights,
-electric cars, well-built brick blocks, churches, schools, and free
-public library; its interesting and enterprising journalism; to come
-in contact with the intelligence and refinement of the people,--is to
-realize that this is no provincial Western town, but instead, a gay and
-fashionable city, with the aspect of a summer watering place. Manitou,
-which lies six miles away at the very base of Pike's Peak, and Colorado
-Springs are connected by electric cars running along the mountain
-line, and there is a great social interchange. It is simply a whirl of
-social life in the late summer, and the rapidity with which the guest
-is expected to flit from one garden party, and tea, and reception to
-another, within a given time, reminds him of a London season. In the
-morning every fashionable woman drives to Prospect Lake, and from her
-bathing in its blue waters to the informal "hop" at night, she is on a
-perpetual round of gayety if she so desire.
-
-The wide range and freedom of life in Colorado Springs is equally
-enjoyable. The artist, the thinker, the writer, finds an ideal
-environment in which to pursue his work. This beautiful residence
-city, founded by General Palmer in 1871, has now a population of some
-thirty thousand, and although lying at the foot of Pike's Peak, it is
-yet on an elevation of six thousand feet above the level of the sea.
-Adjoining Colorado Springs is Colorado City, a manufacturing town
-of five thousand inhabitants, and Manitou, the little town at the
-immediate base of Pike's Peak, with some two thousand residents, to
-which, in the summer, is added an equal number of visitors, who bestow
-themselves in the attractive hotels and boarding-houses or who occupy
-cottages or camps in the foothills. Colorado Springs was founded in a
-wise and beneficent spirit. Every deed in the town contains a clause
-prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors, and by the terms of the
-contract any violation of this agreement renders the deed null and void
-and the property reverts to the city. Education is made compulsory,
-and on this basis of temperance, education, and morality the town
-is founded. It is laid out with generous ideas and with unfailing
-allegiance to municipal ideals of taste. The avenues are one hundred
-and forty feet wide and the streets are all one hundred feet wide.
-Lying midway between Denver and Pueblo, the two largest cities of the
-state, Colorado Springs is within two hours of the former and one hour
-of the latter.
-
-Colorado College, a co-educational institution, is largely endowed,
-and it has from eight to nine hundred students. Rev. Samuel A. Eliot,
-D.D., of Boston, the president of the Unitarian Association, was
-invited to deliver the Commencement Address at this college in 1905,
-and on this occasion Dr. Eliot said:
-
- "Nothing can surpass the academic dignity of a commencement at a
- Western State University. The perfection of the discipline would
- make our elegant, but often distressed, 'master of ceremonies' at
- Harvard green with envy. At our Eastern Colleges there are still
- individual idiosyncrasies and perverse prejudices and traditions
- of simpler days to be considered. There are some old-fashioned
- members of the faculty who just won't wear the academic gown or
- the appropriately colored hood, and there are always some reckless
- seniors who will wear tan shoes or a straw hat. Not so in Kansas
- and Colorado, in Iowa and Nebraska. There every professor and every
- senior wears his uniform as if he were used to it; each one knows
- his place and his part and performs it impressively. The academic
- procession, headed by the regents in their gowns and followed by
- the members of the various faculties with their characteristic
- hoods and stripes, and by the senior classes of the college and the
- various professional schools, is perfect in its orderly procedure,
- and the commencement exercises themselves are carried through with
- a solemnity which is sometimes awesome. I caught myself almost
- wishing that some senior would forget to take off his Oxford cap
- at the proper time or trip on his gown as he came up the steps of
- the platform to get his sheepskin, but no such accident marred the
- impressiveness of the occasion."
-
-Dr. Eliot playfully touches a fact in the social as well as in the
-academic life of the West in these remarks. The informalities so
-frequently experienced in recognized social life in the Eastern cities
-are seldom encountered in the corresponding circles of life in the
-West, all observance of times and seasons, as calling hours, ceremonial
-invitations, and driving being quite strictly relegated to their
-true place in the annals of etiquette. In his Commencement address
-before Colorado College in 1905 Dr. Eliot said, regarding the several
-educational schools of Colorado:
-
- "Thus in Colorado the State University is at Boulder, the
- Agricultural College at Fort Collins, the Normal School at Greeley,
- the School of Mines at Golden, and so on. The result is not only
- an injudicious diffusion of energy, but real waste and sometimes
- deplorable rivalry. Doubtless it is now too late to rectify this
- mistake. Provincial jealousies and a sense of local ownership are
- too strong to permit of desirable concentration, and these states
- are probably permanently burdened with the necessity of sustaining
- half a dozen institutions which must often duplicate equipment and
- courses of instruction."
-
-Leading authorities in the Centennial State do not wholly agree with
-this view. The distribution of an educational centre in one city and
-part of the state and another in a different part, contributes to the
-building up of different cities and to a certain concentration on the
-part of the students on the special subjects pursued. President Slocum
-of Colorado College, President Baker of the State University, President
-Snyder of the State Normal College in Greeley, with other college
-presidents and their colleagues and faculties, are devoting their lives
-to the interests of higher education in its broadest and most complete
-sense; and with their own splendid equipments in learning, their
-patience and ability in research, their zeal for teaching, and their
-intense interest in the problems of university life in a new state,
-they are making a record of the most impressive quality. They are the
-great pathfinders of the educational future.
-
-Colorado has the advantage of a larger percentage of American
-population than any other of the Western inland states, there being
-only twenty per cent of foreign admixture in the entire six hundred and
-fifty thousand people,--a fact that is especially to be considered in
-educational progress.
-
-The high school building in Colorado Springs; the court house, costing
-a half-million dollars; the new city library of Colorado stone; the
-thirty-five miles of electric railway; a water system costing over a
-million of dollars; the admirable telephone system,--these and the fine
-architectural art would render it a desirable residence city even aside
-from the group of scenic wonders which has made it famous all over the
-world.
-
-General William J. Palmer, the founder of Colorado Springs, is one of
-the great benefactors of the state of Colorado. "General Palmer has
-always been a builder for the future," says a local authority. "His
-remarkable foresight was best exemplified in the construction of the
-Rio Grande railroad,--the road which made Colorado famous. Colorado
-Springs is another monument to his prophetic vision. With an ample
-fortune he has retired from business life, but is busier than ever with
-his many philanthropies, all of which have an eye to the future.
-
-"At great expense he has abolished Bear Creek toll-gate, and has
-constructed a wonderful carriage road through this beautiful cañon, and
-will give it to the people as a permanent blessing."
-
-This Bear Creek Cañon lies north of Cheyenne Cañon--about five miles
-from Colorado Springs. The road winds back and forth in a zigzag
-elevation, with new vistas of enchantment at every turn,--towering
-mountains, the Garden of the Gods,--that strange, weird spectacle, St.
-Peter's Dome, Phantom Falls, Silver Cascade, Helen Hunt Falls, and
-other points of romantic beauty.
-
-Colorado Springs has a great park system at a cost already of three
-hundred thousand dollars, and with the buildings and other features
-projected the cost will be hardly less than half a million. There are
-to be floral gardens, an Italian sunken basin with a fountain rising
-in streams, after the fashion of the fountains of Versailles,--and an
-art gallery is soon to be added to this lovely and enterprising city.
-Already the city has Palmer Park,--comprising eight hundred acres,
-donated by the generous and beneficent General Palmer,--a park that
-contains Austin's Bluffs, from which a magnificent view is obtained.
-
-It is to General Palmer that all the charming extension of terraced
-drives and walks in North Cheyenne Cañon is due,--the road often
-terraced on the side of the mountain; and here and there little
-refreshment stands, where a sandwich, a glass of lemonade, a cup of
-tea may be had, are found in these wild altitudes. In Palmer Park
-one portion has been appropriately named Statuary Park, from the
-multitude of strange forms and figures that Nature has chiselled in
-the sandstone. Gray's Peak, like a dim shadow on the far horizon to
-the north, and the faint, beautiful outline of the Spanish Peaks to
-the south, are seen from this park, while the massive portals of the
-"Garden of the Gods" in their burning red are near, and at one side the
-rose pink rocks of Blair Athol.
-
-General Palmer's residence in Glen Eyrie is one of the poetic places
-of the world. The romantic environment of mountain cañons, towers,
-and domes of the fantastic sandstone shapes, and overhanging rocks
-that loom up thousands of feet on a mountain side, impart a wild charm
-that no words can picture. The architectural effects have been kept in
-artistic correspondence with the romantic scenery.
-
-Monument Valley Park is the latest of General Palmer's munificent gifts
-to Colorado Springs. It was a tract of low waste land some two miles
-in length and covering an area of two hundred or more acres, but its
-transformation into the present beautiful park is the realization of
-an Aladdin's dream. An artistic stone drinking-fountain; a wide vista
-of trees relieved by a low Italian basin with fountains; Monument
-Creek, made to be sixty feet wide between its banks; the creation of
-artificial lakes; and there are included in the scheme conservatories,
-rustic pavilions, and botanical gardens. This park is one of the most
-extensive improvements in decorative effect, that is known in any city.
-
-Monument Park is distinctive from Monument Valley Park, the former
-lying some ten miles from the city, and it is picturesque beyond words.
-
-The "Garden of the Gods" has achieved world-wide fame. The "Gateway,"
-the "Cathedral Spires," "Balanced Rock," and other singular formations
-fascinate the visitor and draw him back again and again. A local writer
-thus describes the majestic "Gateway":
-
- "Two immense slabs of red sandstone, soft and beautiful in their
- coloring, tower over three hundred feet high on either side and
- seem to challenge the right of the stranger to enter the sacred
- portals. Napoleon, at the Pyramids, sought to impress his soldiers
- with the thought that from that eminence four thousand years
- looked down upon them. But from here geological ages of untold
- length look down upon the beholder. In close proximity may be
- found limestone, gypsum, white sandstone, and red sandstone,
- each representing a different geological era, and each, in all
- probability, representing millions of years in its formation."
-
-The "Garden of the Gods" represents one of those inexplicable epochs
-of Nature's creations as does, only in a more marvellous degree,
-the Grand Cañon and the Petrified Forest. A scientist says of these
-grotesque shapes that "their strangely garish colors, red and yellow
-and white, in enormous masses, lofty buttresses, towers and pinnacles,
-besides formations of lesser size, in fantastic shapes, that readily
-lend themselves to the imagination, are sedimentary strata, which once
-lay horizontally upon the mountain's breast, but that some gigantic
-convulsion of nature threw them into their present perpendicular
-attitude, with their roots, as it were, extending hundreds of feet
-underground. The erosion of water, when this was all the Gulf of
-Mexico, accounts for the shaping.
-
-"The gateway to the Garden is really the grandest feature, rising
-perpendicularly on either side twice the height of Niagara, and framing
-in rich terra cotta a most entrancing picture of the blue and tawny
-peak, apparently only a little way on the other side."
-
-[Illustration: GATEWAY OF THE GARDEN OF THE GODS, COLORADO SPRINGS,
-COLORADO]
-
-[Illustration: CATHEDRAL SPIRES, GARDEN OF THE GODS, COLORADO SPRINGS,
-COLORADO]
-
-Any writer on Colorado Springs is embarrassed by the fact that the
-great founder and benefactor of the city has requested that his name
-is not to be recorded in connection with his great and constant gifts
-to the municipality; and while it is far from the desire of any one
-to disregard the expressed wish of a man whose modesty is as great as
-is his munificent generosity, it is yet impossible to tell the story
-of Colorado Springs without perpetual references to her distinguished
-citizen, her great and noble benefactor and founder. It is not too
-much to say that there is probably not, in the history of the United
-States, all instance parallel to the story of General Palmer and
-Colorado Springs. Yet beyond this bare mention, in which one even thus
-records that which General Palmer has wished to have had left without
-reference, one is under bonds not to go. The Recording Angel may not
-be so plastic to the expressed preferences of the wise founder and the
-munificent benefactor of the charming city; and the vast and generous
-gifts, the noble character of the citizen whose life and example is
-the most priceless legacy that he could bequeath to Colorado Springs,
-however priceless are his long series of gifts,--these are inevitably
-inscribed in that eternal record not made with hands, on whose pages
-must ever remain, in shining letters, the honored name of General
-William J. Palmer, whose energy and whose lofty spirit have invested
-this beautiful centre of the picturesque region of Pike's Peak with the
-spell of an enchanted city lying fair in a Land of Enchantment.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-SUMMER WANDERINGS IN COLORADO
-
- "_God only knows how Saadi dined;
- Roses he ate and drank the wind._"
-
- EMERSON
-
-
-Deep in the heart of the Rocky Mountains lies Glenwood Springs, a
-fashionable watering place, where a great hotel, bearing the name of
-the Centennial State, with every pretty decorative device imaginable,
-allures the summer idlers, and where various kinds of springs and
-baths furnish excuse for occupation. All varieties of invalidism,
-real or fancied, meet their appropriate cure. One lady declared that
-the especial elixir of life was found in a hot cave that yawns its
-cavernous and mysterious depths in an adjacent mountain. Another
-continued to thrive on (or in) the sparkling waters of "the pool,"
-which is, for the most part, a dream of fair women, relay after relay,
-all day and evening, swimming about after the fashion of the Rhine
-sisters; and those who do not take kindly to the pool or the dark and
-"hot" cave fall upon some particular geyser and appropriate it for
-their own. Woe to the woman who interferes with another woman's geyser!
-The whole region around Glenwood Springs is phenomenal. A hot sulphur
-spring boils up at the rate of twenty thousand gallons a minute. The
-"pool"--where the Rhine maidens are forever floating, morning, noon,
-and night--covers over an acre, and is from three to six or seven feet
-deep. Two currents of water are constantly pouring into it,--the hot
-(at one hundred and twenty-seven degrees) at a rate of ten thousand
-gallons a minute, and the cold from a mountain stream. A stream
-constantly runs from it, a part of which is utilized as a waterfall in
-the centre of the large dining-room of the hotel. On one bank of this
-pool is a colossal stone bathhouse (costing over one hundred thousand
-dollars), where every conceivable variety of the bath is administered,
-and from which "the pool" is entered. In warm evenings, when the full
-midsummer moon peeps over the mountains, the groups of girls, one after
-another, begin mysteriously to disappear, and in reply to a question as
-to the destination of this evening pilgrimage one bewitching creature
-in floating blue organdie, as she flitted past, laughingly answered,
-"Come to the pool and see." There was no time to be lost. The moon in
-silver splendor was climbing over the mountains, and the girls emerged
-from their dainty evening gowns to array themselves in bathing suits.
-A few minutes later they were to be seen at this mysterious trysting
-place at "the pool," the only difference being that some were outside
-and some inside. Surely those inside had the best of it. How can the
-scene be pictured? From the broad piazza of the hotel a terraced
-walk ran down through the greenest of lawns, with shade trees and a
-fountain resplendent in colored electric lights. The pool lies in an
-open glade. Not far away is one of the ranges of the Rocky Mountains,
-over which the August moon was climbing. Tall electric lights mingled
-with the moonlight, giving the most curious effects of chiaroscuro
-through the glade and the defiles of the mountains. On one side of this
-immense natatorium rose the vast stone bathhouse,--a beautiful piece of
-architecture. Near by the round sulphur spring boiled and bubbled in a
-way to suggest the witches' rhyme:
-
- "Double, double toil and trouble;
- Fire, burn; and, cauldron, bubble."
-
-A high toboggan slide in one place descended into the pool, and was
-much used by the young athletes,--the men, not the girls. In the pool
-a natural fountain of cold water shot high in the air. The swimmers
-abounded. Those who were unable to swim would cling to a floating
-ladder. Here in the moonlight the girls--clinging two and three
-together--circle around in the water, needing only the melody of the
-Rhine sisters to complete the illusion of one of the most enchanting
-scenes in the entire Wagner operas.
-
-Rev. Frederick Campbell wrote of this unique place:
-
- "There is but one word to utter at Glenwood Springs--'Wonderful!'
- If one enjoys life at the most luxurious of hotels, here it is at
- Hotel Colorado. Built in the Italian style of peach-blow sandstone
- and light brick, lighted with electricity, a searchlight reaching
- from one of its towers at night and lighting the train up the
- valley, a powerful fountain supplied from the mountain stream up
- the cañon pouring the geyser 170 feet straight in the air, and
- views, views everywhere."
-
-The hot cave is as wonderful as anything around Sorrento or Amalfi.
-In fact, all Colorado reminds the traveller of Italian scenery. It
-has been called the Switzerland of America, but it is far more the
-Italy. It has the Italian sky, the Italian coloring, and the mysterious
-and indefinable enchantment of that land of romance and dream. The
-volcanic phenomena is often startlingly similar to that of Italy. This
-hot cave at Glenwood Springs is of the same order as those on Capri
-and the adjacent coasts of Italy. In this cave at Glenwood hot air
-continually comes up from some unknown region, and it is utilized for
-curative purposes. The two or three caves have been made into one,
-a cement floor laid, and marble seats with marble backs put in (the
-ancient Romans would have found this a Paradise). Here come--not the
-halt or the blind, but the people who take "the cure." The process
-is to sit on the marble seat with a linen bag drawn completely over
-the entire form, with a hole for the head to emerge. Around the neck
-is placed a towel wrung out of cold water. To see a cave filled with
-these modern mummies, sitting solemnly, done up in their linen cases,
-like upholstery covering, is a spectacle. The men go in the morning,
-the women in the afternoon. One lady obligingly gave the data of her
-"cure." Twice a week she migrated in negligée to the hot cave, and
-sat done up in her linen covering, bathing in the hot air at one
-hundred and twenty degrees or so. Other afternoons were devoted to the
-hot sulphur water bathing, and what with the various gradations of
-temperature and the work of the attendants, the cup of Turkish coffee
-and the siesta, the process consumed the entire afternoon. It is bliss
-to those who delight in being rolled up like a mummy and sitting still.
-But if it were chasing a star that danced, if it were riding on a
-moonbeam, if it were dancing with the daffodils,--if it were anything
-in all the world that was motion,--then it might have some fairer title
-to charm. The felicity of lying about in a state of inertia is in the
-nature of a mystery. And one questions, too, whether the spring of life
-is not, after all, within rather than without. Let one take care of
-his mental life and the physical will, very largely at least, keep in
-spring and tune without elaborate and expensive processes of propping
-it up. To disport one's self in the pool,--there is a delight. Who
-wouldn't be a Rhine maiden under the midsummer moon in the heart of the
-Rocky Mountains?
-
-[Illustration: THE WALLS OF THE CAÑON, GRAND RIVER]
-
-In nearly all the cañons and caves of this surrounding region are found
-traces of the prehistoric peoples who inhabited them. Fragments of
-pottery, in artistic design and painted in bright colors, are numerous;
-relics similar to those found in the cliff houses are not unfrequently
-chanced upon in walks and excursions and the stone implements abound.
-The ethnologist finds a great field for research in all this Glenwood
-Springs country. There are carriage roads terraced along the base of
-the mountains where drives from five to twenty miles can be enjoyed
-in the deep ravines where only a glimpse of blue sky is seen above,
-and the saunterer finds a new walk every day. The mountains branch off
-in every direction, and the lofty peaks silhouette themselves against
-the sky. It is like being whirled up into the air. The sensation is
-exhilarating beyond words. If people could take "cures" getting up into
-sublime altitudes like this, where the views are so heavenly that one
-does not know where earth ends and Paradise begins,--that would be a
-cure worth the name. Really, it is vitality and exhilaration that one
-wants, and it is to be found in the air far more than in any other
-element.
-
- "'Tis life whereof our nerves are scant;
- 'Tis life, not death, for which we pant,
- More life and fuller that I want."
-
-The Denver and Rio Grande Railway is well called "the scenic line of
-the world." From Denver to Pueblo it runs almost due south, across a
-level valley, with perpetually enchanting views of the mountains and
-curious rock formations, between Denver to the region below Colorado
-Springs. From the great smelting city of Pueblo, "the Pittsburg of the
-West," the road turns westward, on an upward grade, till it reaches
-Cañon City, and from there to Glenwood Springs this road is a marvel of
-civil engineering. Up the narrow, deep cañons of Grand River, through
-the towering granite cliffs, it winds, on and up, passing Holy Cross
-Mountain, offering at every turn new vistas of sublime and wonderful
-beauty. To take a day's ride through such scenery, with the luxurious
-comfort of the most modern Pullman cars, and a good dining-car
-constantly with the train, is to enjoy a day that lives in memory. Not
-the least of the attractions of Glenwood Springs is the enchanting
-route by means of which one arrives in this picturesque region. As the
-train climbs up to plateau after plateau in the mountains the scenes
-are full of changeful enchantment. The formation is interesting,--a
-deep cañon, with rock cliffs apparently towering into the sky, and then
-the emerging on a great level plateau. All along this route, too, are
-those wonderful sandstone formations that have made the "Garden of the
-Gods" so marvellous a place. Between Cañon City and Glenwood Springs
-the very dance of the Brocken is seen in Sandstone sculptures.
-
-[Illustration: THE "FAIRY CAVES," COLORADO]
-
-Near the summit of Iron Mountain, which is in the immediate vicinity,
-the "Fairy Caves" rival the famous "Blue Grotto" of Capri in
-attraction. These caves (less than a mile from the Hotel Colorado)
-are a most intricate and wonderful series of subterranean caverns,
-grottos, and labyrinths, with translucent stalactites and stalagmites,
-and they are all lighted by electricity,--a great improvement on the
-sibyls' cave, where the sibylline leaves were read. The oracles of that
-time were sadly lacking in conditions of modern conveniences. The sibyl
-had not even a telephone. We do things better now, and run electric
-cars up to the Pyramids. Nor did the sibyl of old have a tunnel two
-hundred feet long, by which her votaries could approach the scene of
-her oracles; but visitors to the Fairy Caves may pass by means of
-this tunnel to one of the grandest and most awful precipices in the
-Rocky Mountains, where they step out upon a balcony of stone into the
-open air, with a perpendicular wall of rock one hundred feet high,
-above, and an almost perpendicular abyss, down, twelve hundred feet
-below. Standing on this balcony, nothing can be seen behind but sheer
-perpendicular ascent and descent of rock; but in front and far below
-may be seen the Grand River, appearing as a brook, winding in and out
-among the projecting mountains, visible here like burnished silver, and
-lost there, only to reappear again at a point far distant.
-
-At this high elevation the opening of the cañon of the Grand is seen
-in all of its majesty,--the massive mountains projecting against each
-other in their outlines, and the lofty peaks reaching to the skies. The
-Denver and Rio Grande Railway is at the foot of the cañon,--a mere
-winding line, as seen from this Titanic height.
-
-The Colorado Midland Road also runs through Glenwood Springs, whose
-phenomenal hot caves and luxurious and elaborate bathhouse have given
-it European fame. The twin towers of the hotel remind one of Notre
-Dame, and the views from these are beautiful. The design is after the
-Villa Medici in Rome,--the same motive repeated for the central motive
-of this superb Hotel Colorado with its towers and Italian loggias and
-splendid spacious piazzas, and its searchlight from one of the towers,
-illuminating the evening trains that pass in the deep cañon of Grand
-River. Here is a region that might be that of Sorrento and Capri.
-
-In Glenwood Springs the traveller may meet Mrs. Emma Homan Thayer, the
-author of "Wild Flowers in Colorado," published in both London and New
-York. Mrs. Thayer was a New York girl, one of the original founders
-of the Art League, and the daughter of an enterprising and well-known
-man. She is an artist by nature and grace,--sketches, paints, and
-writes, and in both painting and literature she has made a name that is
-recognized, and she has charmingly perpetuated in her book the unique
-and wonderful procession of Colorado wild flowers.
-
-[Illustration: MARSHALL PASS AND MT. OURAY, COLORADO]
-
-Lookout Mountain, rising some twenty-five hundred feet above the
-town, has an easy trail to its summit; the driving is picturesque
-and safe on terraced mountain roads with perpetual vistas of beauty,
-and many lakes in the vicinity--Mountain, Big Fish, Trappers' Lake,
-and others--offer excellent fishing. The hotel grounds at night are
-transformed into a veritable fairyland. The fountains shoot their
-jets of water up hundreds of feet into the air, with a play of color
-from electric lights thrown over them until they are all a changeful
-iridescent dream of rose and emerald and gold mingled with blue,--the
-very rainbows of heaven reproduced in mid-air.
-
-The journey up the "scenic route" has one point especially--that at the
-base of the Holy Cross Mountain where the train climbs from plateau
-to plateau--that enchants the imagination. The vast mysterious cañons
-lie far below, steeped in the twilight of the gods. The air shimmers
-with faint hints of color. Above, the towering granite walls seem to
-cut their way into the sky. The faint plash of a thousand waterfalls
-echoes from the rocky precipices, and the faint call of some lonely
-bird hovering over a pinnacle is heard. The mysterious light, the
-dim coolness and fragrance, the glimpses of blue sky seen through
-the narrow openings of the cañons above all, combine to produce that
-enchantment--the "Encantada,"--that Vasquez de Coronado felt when he
-first beheld this marvellous country.
-
-Emerson asserts that life is a search after power,--
-
- "Merlin's blows are strokes of fate."
-
-It is apparently a twentieth-century Merlin who has dreamed a dream of
-wresting electricity from the mountain currents to utilize as power to
-create a new field for industrial energy. The electrical engineer, who
-is the magician of contemporary life, demonstrates that not the volume
-of a stream, but rather its "fall," is the measure of its possibilities
-of power, and no country is so rich in water that comes tumbling down
-from the heights as is Colorado. The wild streams that precipitate
-themselves down the mountain-sides are as valuable as are the veins of
-gold that permeate the mountain. Science has now taken them in hand,
-and will not longer permit these torrents and waterfalls to run to
-waste or to display themselves exclusively as decorative features of
-the mountain landscapes. The General Electric Company is utilizing
-these falling waters, and is already achieving results with their
-transformation into power which are beyond the dreams of imagination.
-The Silver Cascade, which for ages has had nothing to do but leap and
-flash under the shimmering gold of the Colorado sunshine, suddenly
-undergoes
-
- "a sea change
- Into something new and strange."
-
-It becomes an important factor in the world's work. For instance, in
-lovely Manitou,--the little town that dreams at the foot of Pike's
-Peak and which seems made only for stars and sunsets and as the stage
-setting of idyllic experiences,--in lovely Manitou an hydro-electric
-plant has been for more than a year in successful operation; and an
-opportunity is thereby afforded the interested observer to see the
-practical working of an enterprise that draws its energy directly from
-nature's sources. The power is obtained from water that is stored in a
-reservoir situated far up on the side of the peak. Three and one-half
-miles of pipe were used to carry the water from the reservoir to the
-plant. The water has a fall of twenty-three hundred feet, which is much
-more than is needed to turn the giant wheels that furnish the power to
-be distributed to Colorado Springs, Colorado City, and the surrounding
-country. The mills at Colorado City use this power exclusively, and the
-cheapness at which it can be furnished is a potent factor in making for
-the success of their operation.
-
-At Durango the Animas Power and Water Company has installed a plant
-for hydro-electric energy which will furnish power to the entire San
-Juan county. The plant comprises two three-thousand horse-power current
-generators and the station appliances that correspond with these; and
-from this plant extend fifty-thousand volt circuits to all the large
-mines near Ouray, Silverton, and Telluride. The "Camp Bird," the "Gold
-King," the "Silver Lake," the "Gold Prince," and the "Revenue Tunnel"
-mines all draw from this plant for their entire milling and mining
-work.
-
-To harness the cascades, which for ages have known no sterner duty
-than to sparkle and frolic in the sunshine, to force the water sprites
-and nixies to perform the work of thousands of horse-power, is the
-achievement of the modern Merlin.
-
-The Platte River Power and Irrigation Company are about to establish
-two electrical power enterprises most important to Denver, one of which
-is to supply all the power that is necessary to turn every wheel now
-in motion in the city, and the second is to secure electric power from
-the water that is stored in the Cheesman dam and transmit it to Denver.
-Responsible men are working for the success of the enterprises, and
-it is anticipated that Denver will soon enjoy the advantage of power
-furnished at a minimum of cost.
-
-The Denver inter-urban service for transportation will be carried on
-entirely by electricity within the near future. All the railroads that
-centre in this City Beautiful are preparing estimates and making ready
-to conduct experiments. The recent tests in the East of electrically
-driven locomotives indicate that Colorado, with Denver as a centre,
-will one day be a network of electric lines traversing productive
-regions and connecting all the prosperous towns of the state by this
-most ideal form of transit.
-
-In Colorado it is one of the unwritten laws--a law from which there
-is no appeal--that nothing which is desirable is impossible. This is
-one of the spiritual laws, indeed, and he who holds it as an axiom
-shall perpetually realize its force and its eternal truth. The entire
-physical world is plastic to the world of spirit. In that realm alone
-realities exist. For "the things which are seen are temporal; but the
-things which are not seen are eternal." The faith that stands--not
-"in the wisdom of man, but in the power of God"--is that which shall
-be justified by the most profound actuality. It is that hidden wisdom
-"which God ordained before the world unto our glory." Science has
-already discerned the connection between organic form and super-space;
-and speculations already begin to emerge from the dim and vague region
-of conjecture into hypothesis and theory out of which are developed new
-working laws of the universe which are as undeniable as is that of the
-law of gravitation.
-
-In harmonious accordance, then, with that unwritten law of Colorado
-that nothing which is desirable is impossible, it was realized that the
-Gunnison River, a powerful stream thirty miles east of the Uncompahgre,
-afforded an abundance of water to reclaim these desert wastes to the
-traditional blossoming of the rose. The Gunnison River, however, flows
-through a box cañon three thousand feet deep. Were it at the bottom of
-a gorge three thousand miles deep, that fact would hardly daunt the
-Colorado spirit. Immediately some invention, incomprehensible to the
-present mind of man, would be made by which the desirable issue should
-be achieved. As has been remarked, failure is a word not included
-in the vocabulary of Colorado. That state has a "revised version" of
-its own for the resources of its language, laws, and literature. Its
-keynote is the invincible. Ways and means are mere matters of minor
-detail. If an achievement is desirable, it is to be accomplished, of
-course. It is not even a question for discussion. There is no margin of
-debatable land in the realization of every conceivable opportunity.
-
-A stupendous work in development is that of this Gunnison Tunnel
-under the Vernal Mesa to Uncompahgre Valley,--a desert waste whose
-area comprises some one hundred thousand acres of sand, sagebrush,
-and stones. Yet even here irrigation worked its spell, and while the
-Uncompahgre River held out a water supply, the land reached proved
-fertile beyond expectation. But the Uncompahgre had its far too
-definite and restricted limits; no other water supply was available
-for this region, and there lay the land--a tract of potential wealth,
-but destined to remain, so far as could be seen, an unproductive and
-cumbersome desert region unless irrigation could be achieved.
-
-To the constructing engineer of the reclamation service there came
-a telegram from the chief engineer in Washington asking if it were
-feasible to divert the waters of Gunnison River to Uncompahgre Valley
-by means of a tunnel under Vernal Mesa? This implied building a tunnel
-from a point totally unknown. No one had ever succeeded in passing
-through Gunnison Cañon. But the past tense does "not count," any more
-than Rip Van Winkle's last glass, in any estimate of the present in
-Colorado. Professor Fellows, an engineer of Denver, selected his
-assistant; they prepared their instruments, their provisions, and
-their inflated rubber mattress, and set forth on this expedition in
-which their lives were in constant peril; in which hardships beyond
-description were endured. The topographic map, for instance, was
-made by Mr. Fellows in the delightful position of being lowered
-with ropes into the deep cañon where, should the slightest accident
-occur, he would never return to the day and daylight world again. The
-establishment of precise levels for both ends of the tunnel, one of
-which must, of course, be lower than the other to induce a flow of
-water, was another matter requiring a delicacy of adjustment beyond
-description. Of their wonderful and even tragic experiences a local
-report says: "It all ended by Fellows and his companion saving two
-things,--their lives and their notebooks. Everything else went down
-with the flood. When the men emerged at the Devil's Slide, weary,
-bruised, and bleeding, friends who had been waiting to pick up their
-mangled bodies hailed them as if they had returned from the dead."
-
-Of all this story there was no hint in the cheerfully laconic telegram
-despatched to Washington,--"Complete surveys for construction." The
-tunnel will be five or six miles in length, of which over two miles
-are already completed. The work proceeds night and day with the drills
-like mighty giants eating their way through the solid granite of the
-Vernal Mesa that lies between the two rivers. This desert region which
-will thus be reclaimed comprises portions of three counties,--Ouray,
-Montrose, and Delta,--the region being at an altitude of five thousand
-feet. It easily produces fruit, alfalfa, and grain, and it is also well
-adapted to the culture of potatoes, celery, and the sugar beet. The
-land when irrigated is estimated to be worth five hundred dollars per
-acre. The tunnel will have a capacity for conveying thirteen thousand
-cubic feet of water per second, and there will be connected with it
-an elaborate system of lesser canals and ditches that will carry the
-water all over this desert tract. It is estimated that this enterprise
-will add thousands of homes to the valley of the Uncompahgre, and that
-it will increase by at least ten millions the taxable property of
-Colorado. The cost of the Gunnison Tunnel will be some two and a half
-millions.
-
-Uncompahgre Valley, lying between the Continental Divide on the east,
-and the Utah Desert on the west, comprises the greatest extent of
-irrigable land west of Pueblo in the entire state; but the need for
-irrigation and the possibilities of supplying that need were so widely
-apart that even Merlin the Enchanter recognized the difficulty, though
-by no means defining it as an impossibility. The Uncompahgre River
-was soon exhausted, and only this apparently impracticable scheme,
-now happily realized, offered any solution of the problem. Hon. Meade
-Hammond of the state legislature of Colorado secured the appropriation
-of twenty-five thousand dollars to meet the expenses of surveying
-and preliminary work. Hon. John C. Bell, the representative for that
-district in Congress, gave untiring devotion to the project, and to
-his efforts was due the zeal with which the reclamation service took
-up this vast work; and when Professor Fellows was appointed as the
-government district engineer its success became the object of his
-supreme interest and unremitting energy, and its achievement adds
-another to the remarkable engineering works of Colorado.
-
-In this Land of Enchantment almost anything is possible, even to
-yachting,--a pastime that would not at first present itself as one to
-be included among the entertainments of an arid state which has to
-set its own legislative machinery and that of Congress in motion in
-order to contrive a water supply for even its agricultural service;
-nevertheless, on a lake in the mountains, more than a mile and a half
-above sea level and some one hundred miles from Denver the Beautiful,
-a yacht club disports itself with all the airy grace and assurance of
-its ground--one means of its water--that distinguishes the delightful
-Yacht Club at old Marblehead on the Atlantic Coast. There was, however,
-no government appropriation made to create this lake, as might at
-first be supposed, nor any experts sent out commissioned to prepare
-the way. There are numerous forms of summer-day entertainments that
-are more or less in evidence in the inland states; but yachting has
-never been supposed to be among them, as preconceived ideas of this joy
-have invariably associated it with oceans and seas. Still, it must be
-remembered that Colorado is an exceptional region in the universe, and
-creates, not follows, precedents. It is the state, as has before been
-remarked, to which nothing conceivable is impossible.
-
-Grand Lake is in Middle Park, sixty miles from the nearest railroad
-station. (With the incredible celerity with which life progresses
-in the Centennial State, of course by the time this description is
-materialized in print Grand Lake may have become a railroad centre--who
-shall say? It is not safe to limit prophecy in Colorado.) At present,
-however, a railroad journey of forty miles from Denver, supplemented
-by sixty miles of stage, brings one to the lake, a beautiful sheet of
-water two miles in length and more than a mile in width, whose water
-is icy cold. The locality has become something of a summer resort for
-many Denver people, and also, to some extent, to those from Chicago
-and Kansas City, and a group of cottages have sprung up. Some seven
-years ago the Grand Lake Yacht Club was duly organized, with Mr. R.
-C. Campbell, a son-in-law of Senator Patterson of Colorado, Mr. W. H.
-Bryant, a prominent citizen of Denver the Beautiful, Major Lafayette
-Campbell, and other well-known men, as its officers. The club has
-now a fleet of yachts; it has its regatta week, and altogether holds
-its own among nautical associations; it takes itself seriously, in fact
-with what Henry James calls the "deadly earnestness of the Bostonians,"
-which is paralleled by this inland and arid-land yachting club.
-
-[Illustration: THE WONDERFUL HANGING LAKE, NEAR GLENWOOD SPRINGS,
-COLORADO]
-
-Besides the joys of yachting in an arid state where that nautical
-pastime is apparently carried on in mid air, is the local diversion of
-climbing mountain peaks that are pronounced impossible of ascension.
-This is one of the favorite entertainments of Colorado young women,
-who have conquered Long's, Gray's, Pike's, and Torrey's peaks, Mount
-Massive, the "Devil's Causeway," and various lesser heights, which they
-scale with the characteristically invincible energy of their state. The
-summit of Mount Massive is fourteen thousand five hundred feet above
-sea level, and of one of these expeditions a Denver journal says of
-this party of several ladies and gentlemen:
-
- "Camp was struck at Lamb's ranch, where, in the early morning, the
- wagon was left with all the outfit not absolutely necessary. The
- trail sloped steadily to the boulder field, where the party stopped
- for lunch. They were now at an altitude of twelve thousand feet.
- A cold wind swept across the range and chilled them, so that the
- climb was soon renewed.
-
- "The boulder field is two miles long and seemed five, for walking
- over the great stones is a wearisome business. At the end of the
- boulder field, which is much like the terminal range of an old
- glacier, is a great snowbank. From a long distance the mountain
- climbers saw the keyhole,--a deep notch of overjutting rock through
- which goes the only trail to the summit of Long's. It is a gigantic
- cornice to a ridge that extends north from the main cone.
-
- "After passing the keyhole, which had loomed up before them through
- weary miles of tramping, a great panorama of mountains stretched
- before them.... There was a precipitous slope of rocks jammed
- together in a gulch. This rises for about seven hundred feet, every
- inch stiff climbing.
-
- "The danger at this point was that some climbers might dislodge
- rocks which would come bounding down on the heads of those in the
- rear. For this reason the orders of the leader were urgent that the
- party should not get separated. The trail at this point led up the
- sharply sloping eaves of the mountain roof, from which the climber
- might drop a dizzy distance to the depths below. Clinging to the
- rocks and hanging on by hands or feet, the party pushed up to a
- ledge from which they looked over an abyss several thousand feet
- sheer down."
-
-In Southern Colorado the cliff-dwellers' region offers some of the most
-remarkable ruins in America, and their preservation in a government
-reservation, to be known as the Mesa Verde National Park, has been
-assured by a bill that has been recently passed by Congress and
-which is one of the eminent features of latter-day legislation. It
-is Representative Hogg who introduced this bill providing for the
-permanent protection of those cliff-dweller ruins which, with those
-in New Mexico and Arizona, constitute some of the most valuable and
-interesting prehistoric remains in the United States. Already much of
-this archæological treasure of inestimable scientific value has been
-carried away by visitors, while, instead of permitting this region to
-be thus despoiled, it should be made easily accessible to tourists
-and held as one of the grand show places of the great Southwest.
-Like the Grand Cañon and the Petrified Forests of Arizona, like the
-Pike's Peak region in Colorado, Mesa Verde would become an objective
-point of pilgrimage to thousands of summer tourists. In the winter
-of 1904-5 Representative Lacey, of Iowa, the eminent chairman of the
-House Committee on Public Lands, made in behalf of his committee a
-favorable report on the Colorado Cliff-dwellers' Bill, presenting, with
-his characteristic eloquence of argument, the truth that the permanent
-preservation of these wonderful and almost prehistoric ruins is greatly
-to be desired by the people of the Southwest, as well as by those
-interested in archæology elsewhere. "The ruins are situated among rocky
-cliffs, and may be easily preserved if protected," said Mr. Lacey, and
-added:
-
- "With the exception of two or three small, fallen, and totally
- uninteresting ones, all the ruins of the Mesa Verde are in the
- Southern Ute Indian Reservation. It is an extremely arid region,
- and little or no agriculture is practised by the Utes, although
- they range sheep, goats, cattle, and ponies on the mesa and in the
- cañons. It is a poor range at best, and the Indians appear to need
- all they can get. Moreover, the reclamation service has made some
- estimates regarding storage reservoirs in the upper Mancos, and it
- may be at some future time a part of this land in the reservation
- will be irrigable and greatly increased in value. The Utes are
- not going to destroy these ruins or dig in them. They stand in
- superstitious awe of them, believing them to be inhabited by the
- spirits of the dead, and cannot be induced to go near them."
-
-These dwellings are excavated in cliffs from five to nine hundred feet
-above the plateaus. Of these, two dwellings stand out prominently,--the
-"Spruce Tree House" and the "Balcony House," the former of which
-contains a hundred and thirty rooms, of each of which the average
-measurement is about eight by six feet. Much pottery, weapons,
-armament, and many skeletons and mummies are found in these dwellings.
-
-The later conclusions of scientists are that these cliff-houses were
-designed as places of refuge and defence rather than as ordinary
-habitations. The parallelogram and circle forms predominate, and they
-are often forty feet in diameter. There are sometimes double, or even
-triple walls, solidly built of hewn stone, with a circular depression
-(council-chamber) in the centre.
-
-Pueblo is the metropolis of Southern Colorado. It is the second city
-in the state, ranking next to Denver. It is an important industrial
-centre, being the location of the great steel works of the Colorado
-Fuel and Iron Company, and two large smelting plants in constant
-activity. It is a town with unusual possibilities of beauty, rambling,
-as it does, over the rolling mesas with a series of enchanting vistas
-and mountain views of great beauty. The Spanish Peaks are in full
-sight from the new residence region of Pueblo, and here is the home of
-ex-Governor and Mrs. Alva Adams, with its spacious, book-lined rooms;
-its choice and finely selected souvenirs of foreign travel; its music
-and pictures; and far above all, the gracious sweetness and charm of
-Mrs. Adams, who has that most perfect of gifts--that of transforming a
-household into a home. Governor Adams, although in his modesty he would
-deprecate the distinction, is easily the first citizen of Colorado.
-Twice the Governor of the state, he has impressed the entire people
-with his flawless integrity of character, his noble ideals, and his
-energy of executive power in securing and enforcing the best measures
-for the people and carrying onward into practical life the highest
-moral and educational standards.
-
-Governor Adams is always greatly in demand as a speaker, and in
-September of 1906 he was again nominated for Governor of the state.
-
-Colorado, quite irrespective of party, is all aglow with the name of
-Alva Adams. Good Republicans have long been greatly perplexed over
-the fact that the man they most desire to vote for, the man to whose
-guidance they would most willingly commit the affairs of state, is a
-Democrat. The ability, the unquestioned integrity, the fidelity to
-lofty ideals, and the great administrative power of Governor Adams
-inspire the almost universal enthusiasm of Colorado irrespective of
-party lines.
-
-No son of the Centennial State is more in sympathy with its individual
-problems. Born in Wisconsin (some fifty-five years ago), Governor Adams
-was about to enter the Ann Arbor Law School when the illness of a
-brother brought him in his earliest youth to Colorado. Its beauty, its
-rich possibilities, enchanted him. Here he married a very cultivated
-and beautiful young woman, whose parents came in her early girlhood to
-Colorado, and whose sympathetic and perfect companionship has been the
-unfailing source of his noblest inspiration.
-
-In an address on "Pathfinders and Pioneers," given before an irrigation
-congress at Colorado Springs, we find Governor Adams saying:
-
- "What a sublime moment when the explorer realizes the fruition
- of his dream! What fateful hours upon the dial of human progress
- when Columbus saw a new world emerge from the sea, when Balboa
- stood 'silent upon a peak in Darien,' when Lewis and Clark upon
- the continent's crest saw the waters of the rivulet run toward the
- West! Such events compensate great souls, and their spirits defy
- hardship, ingratitude, chains, dungeons, and the axe. The curtain
- has been run down upon the careers of those brave men whose praise
- we sing. Their race is run. The explorer, priest, trapper, and
- pioneer have vanished.
-
- "'Westward the course of empire takes its way;
- The four first acts already past,
- A fifth shall close the drama with the day;
- Time's noblest offspring is the last.'
-
- "Would it be a daring assumption to consider the irrigated regions
- of America as the arena in which the fifth act, time's noblest
- offspring, is to perfect and complete the drama of civilization?
-
- "Irrigated lands were the cradle of the race. The first canals
- were run from the four rivers of Paradise. May not the fruition of
- mankind seek the same conditions amid which it was born? Providence
- has kept fallow this new land until man was fitted to enter and
- possess it.
-
- "'Hid in the West through centuries,
- Till men, through countless tyrannies, could understand
- The priceless worth of freedom.'"
-
-"I would not decry culture and refinement," said ex-Governor Adams in
-this address; "they are the charm and beauty of modern life, the music
-and art of the social commerce of the age; but in their acquirement
-I would not give up the robust, vigorous, daring qualities of the
-pioneer."
-
-The Governor proceeded:
-
- "They had blood and iron in their heart, they had the nerve to
- dare, the strength to do. I do not believe in battle for battle's
- sake; but I never want to see our people when they are not willing
- to fight, and able to fight. The only guarantee of peace and
- liberty is the ability and willingness to do battle for your
- rights. Refinement alone is not strength, culture alone is not
- virtue. Absalom, Alcibiades, and Burr stand in history as the
- most polished, cultured men of three ages, yet they were more a
- menace than a brace to the liberties of their time. In stress,
- the world calls upon the Calvins, the Cromwells, the Jacksons,
- Browns, and Lincolns. They were stalwart, strenuous, courageous
- men; not cultured and refined, but rich in royalty and daring. It
- is the rugged and the strong, and not the gentle and the wise, who
- gather in their hands the reins of fate and plough deep furrows
- in the fields of human events. It is they who have driven the car
- of progress and have woven the deepest colors in the fabric of
- human happiness. It is true that some of our Western torch-bearers
- were not perfect; none of them were ever anointed with the oil
- of consecration; around them surged the temptations of a wild
- and boisterous age; through their hearts and souls there swept
- the impulses and passions of the strong; if they sinned, it was
- against themselves, not their country. Let their frailties be
- forgotten, and their good cherished. Often rough and defiant of the
- conventionalities, they were ever true and loyal, and most of these
- empire builders can stand before the great white throne with open
- hearts. They were the architects, the Hiram Abifs of these Western
- empires. They laid the foundations in courage and liberty."
-
-Let no one fancy that Pueblo is a primitive Western city devoid of
-electricity, telephones, motor cars, or even Marconigrams. Let no one
-fancy it is too far from Paris to have the latest French fashions. It
-is hardly an exaggeration to say that it demands the best and the most
-up-to-date ideas of the Eastern cities to be at all eligible in these
-Colorado towns. Pueblo has a most delightful club-house on the edge of
-a lake--the lake is artificially created, and being made to order, is,
-of course, exactly the kind of lake that is desired, the water being
-conducted from the mountains into a large natural depression--where
-great open fires in every room greet the daily visitor; where there are
-large reading-rooms, a dining-room, and a ball-room; no intoxicating
-beverages of any kind are allowed to be sold, so that youths and
-maidens may at any time enjoy the club with no insidious dangers to
-their moral welfare.
-
-There are many centres of social life; and if Pueblo people have any
-other conceivable occupation than to give dinner parties at night and
-go motoring in the morning, with endless receptions of the Daughters
-of the Revolution and other clubs, organizations, or purely private
-card receptions invading the afternoons, the visitor hardly realizes
-it. The dinners given are often as elaborate as in the large Eastern
-cities, as one, for instance, given by Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon D. Thatcher
-at their stately home "Hillcrest," where the decorations were all in
-rich rose red, a most brilliant effect, and the souvenirs were India
-ink reproductions of old castles on white satin. The dinner cards held
-each a quotation from the poets.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Pueblo is always all sunshine and radiance, and has a beauty of
-location that makes it notable, with its encircling blue mountains and
-picturesque mesas, and the perpetual benediction of the Spanish Peaks
-silhouetted against the western sky. Its new library is the pride and
-delight of every citizen. It is one of the Carnegie chain,--a large,
-two-story and basement structure of white Colorado stone, the interior
-finished with the richly variegated Colorado marble which is used for
-mantels and fireplaces. The book stacks, the spacious and splendid
-reading-room, the children's room, and the smaller ones for reference
-and special study, are all planned on the latest and most perfect
-models.
-
-The library is in the Royal Park, on the crest of one of the mesas,
-very near the home of Governor Adams. It is a library to delight the
-heart of the book-lover. Pueblo offers, indeed, great attractions to
-all who incline to this land of sunshine. The climate is even more mild
-than that of Denver, from which city it is a little over three hours
-distant by the fast trains, or four hours by slower ones. Colorado
-Springs lies between--two hours from Denver and a little over one
-hour from Pueblo. The location combines many attractions. With three
-railroads; its large industries in smelting and steel; its excellent
-schools, both public and private; its churches, its daily newspapers;
-its library; and its fine clubhouse, open to families,--women and
-children as well as men enjoying it freely,--Pueblo seems one of
-the most delightful of places. It has large wealth and a power of
-initiating many opportunities. It is on the most picturesque and
-delightful lines of travel to Cañon City, Salida, Leadville, Glenwood
-Springs, and through Salt Lake City to the Pacific Coast; or on the
-line to Arizona and the Grand Cañon of the Colorado, and on to Los
-Angeles and San Francisco; or eastward to Chicago and the Atlantic
-Coast; or southward to Mexico, or St. Louis, or New Orleans. Pueblo is
-really in the heart of things, so to speak. The Chicago papers arrive
-the next day, the New York papers the third morning, and the telephonic
-communication is simply almost without limit. Governor Adams will step
-from his library into another book-lined room where the telephone is
-placed, and from there talk with people in five different states. Once
-he held a conversation with a man at the bottom of a mine a few hundred
-miles away,--a man whose subterranean sojourn had the alleviation of a
-telephone.
-
-The greatest industrial organization west of the Mississippi River is
-that of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company, whose largest plant is at
-Pueblo, and is held at a valuation of fifty-eight million dollars. On
-its pay-roll are fifteen thousand employés. There are twenty thousand
-tons of steel rail produced each month, and it is said that this
-number will soon be largely increased, and that the Goulds and the
-Rockefellers are arranging to utilize the product of these mills for
-their vast railroad interests. The company owns such large tracts of
-land in Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming; it owns coal mines,
-iron mines, lime quarries; it owns parts of two railroads, besides
-telegraph and telephone lines galore, so that by reason of these
-extensive holdings it is able to secure at a minimum of cost all the
-raw materials from which the finished products are turned out. Upward
-of three hundred thousand acres of the richest coal lands in the West,
-an empire containing one hundred square miles more than the coal
-area of Pennsylvania, constitute the holdings for coal mine purposes
-of the company. In addition there are iron, manganese mines, and
-limestone quarries containing the elements which give to the product
-of the furnaces and mills qualities that secure the markets of the
-Western world. Its plant at Pueblo has become the centre of a town
-called Minnequa, composed of its own employés and their families. The
-company has established a model hospital, with a surgeon's department
-fitted up with the most elaborate and finest scientific and nursing
-facilities; a fine library and large reading-rooms, and a recreation
-hall and gymnasium for the workmen. Nearly one million dollars has
-been expended on the tenant houses belonging to the company, which
-are rented to their employés on fair and advantageous terms. In
-many respects Minnequa, at Pueblo, is one of the most remarkable
-manufacturing centres in the world, presenting aspects that invite
-study, in its extensive resources, the vast and colossal character of
-its purposes, and its remarkable achievements. All employés are given
-the opportunity to acquire homes; and every late ideal in the way of
-providing opportunities for their care in health, in mental and moral
-development, and in recreations, is carried out to the fullest possible
-extent.
-
-The company has recently engaged in an irrigation enterprise in the
-purchase of water-right priorities of the Arkansas River for seventy
-cubic feet of water per second, at an expense of one million dollars.
-These rights, which date back to 1860-62, are among the oldest
-existing, and they insure to the company the uninterrupted and certain
-possession of the river flow. A court decree enabled them to change
-the point of division, and they have constructed a new head-gate at
-Adobe, six miles east of Florence. A canal fifty-eight miles in length
-is being constructed from Florence to the mills owned by the company.
-The cost of this canal will be some three quarters of a million. These
-mills produce over seventy-five thousand tons of iron and steel each
-month. The manufacturing plant at Minnequa includes blast furnaces,
-converting works, blooming mills, a merchant iron mill, a hoop and
-cotton tie mill, a spike factory, a bolt factory, a castings and pipe
-foundry, with open hearth furnaces, a reversing mill, and many other
-appliances.
-
-"It must not be supposed, because we find it necessary to practise
-irrigation in Colorado, that we therefore never have any rains,"
-observed a Coloradoan; "on the contrary, the rains of spring are
-usually of such abundance as to make the ground in fine condition
-for ploughing and putting in crops, and we seldom find it necessary
-to apply water to germinate any kind of seed; only once, in thirteen
-years' experience at Greeley, were we compelled to resort to irrigation
-before crops of all kinds were well up and considerably advanced in
-growth. About the last of May, however, as regularly as the natural
-periods of summer, autumn, winter, and spring occur in the other
-states, never varying more than a week in time, these copious rains
-suddenly cease and give place to light and entirely inadequate local
-thunder-showers. Now is the accepted time, and all over cultivated
-Colorado, within a period of not more than two days, every flood-gate
-is opened and the life-giving current started to flowing on the rapidly
-parching grain. Corn will endure until later in the season, but all
-sowed crops must get one thorough application of water within two
-weeks or become severely injured for the want of it. Day and night
-the silent current flows on and on, among the fields of grain; not a
-drop of water nor a moment of time must run to waste until the first
-irrigation is completed."
-
-In so exceptional a summer of drought and heat as was that of 1901 the
-advantages of irrigation stand out. Journeying through Kansas, the long
-day's ride across the state revealed continued devastation from the
-lack of rain. Corn fields looked almost as if a fire had passed over
-them, so shrivelled and stunted they were; but in Colorado on every
-hand there were greenness and luxuriance of vegetation and of crops.
-The result is simply that, with irrigation, man controls his climate
-and all the conditions of prosperity. Without it, he is at the mercy of
-the elements.
-
-The Union Colony of Greeley was the first to introduce upland
-irrigation in Colorado. Of the method employed, the "Greeley Tribune"
-gave this description:
-
- "Almost the first question asked by many persons on their first
- arrival in Colorado, when they see the irrigating ditches running
- along the sides of the bluffs high above the river, and back from
- it five, ten, or twenty miles, is, 'How do you get the water out
- of the river, and so high above it? It looks as if you made the
- water run uphill.' The answer is very simple. All the rivers of
- Colorado are mountain streams, and consequently have a fall of from
- ten to thirty feet to the mile, after they reach the plains. In the
- mountains, of course, the fall is often much greater. The plains
- also have a gradual slope eastward from the foothills, where the
- altitude is generally between six and seven thousand feet above sea
- level, while at the eastern boundary of the state it is only about
- three thousand feet. Take, for example, the canal generally known
- as Number Two, which waters the lands of the Greeley Colony. This
- canal is taken out of the Cache la Poudre River, about seventeen
- miles west of Greeley, and where the bed of the river is probably
- a hundred and sixty feet higher than it is at Greeley. The bed of
- the canal only has a fall of from three to three and a half feet
- to the mile; therefore it is easily seen that when that grade is
- continued for a number of miles, the line of the canal will run in
- a direction further and further from the river, and on much higher
- ground, so that the lands lying between the canal and the river are
- all 'covered by,' or on a lower level than, the water in the canal.
- In the process of irrigation this same plan must be followed,
- of bringing the water in on the higher side of the land to be
- irrigated, then the water will easily flow all over the ground."
-
-In Weld County, of which Greeley is the county seat, irrigation was
-extended during 1905 to cover from fifteen thousand to twenty thousand
-acres of arid land never before under cultivation, and storage
-reservoirs increased in capacity. It is proposed to cut a tunnel
-through the Medicine Bow mountain range and to bring a large quantity
-of water through from the Western slope to irrigate an additional fifty
-thousand acres of prairie.
-
-Within the past year there have been two potato starch factories
-started in successful operation in Greeley which are estimated to
-pay out annually one hundred thousand dollars for potatoes that have
-heretofore been practically a total loss to the farmers.
-
-The Swift Packing Company of Chicago propose investing one and a half
-millions in further irrigation in this county. The products of the
-Greeley district alone, for 1905, were five and a half millions,--a
-fact that suggests the wise foresight of Hon. Nathan Cook Meeker, the
-founder of the town, in selecting this location, in 1869, for his
-colony.
-
-Of recent years a remarkable feature of agricultural progress in
-Colorado has been developed by the "dry farming" system, the discovery
-of which is due to Prof. H. W. Campbell, who has been experimenting,
-for some twenty years past, in Eastern Colorado, in the scientific
-culture of the soil without benefit of irrigation. Professor Campbell
-says that he had been assured that corn would not grow at an altitude
-of three thousand feet, as the nights would be too cool; but that he
-can refute this, as, during the past five years, he has averaged from
-thirty to forty-two bushels per acre at an altitude ranging from five
-thousand to nearly seven thousand feet. Successful agriculture is, in
-Professor Campbell's belief, based on the fundamental principle of soil
-culture, and in an interview he said:
-
- "While the great work now being done by the government in
- promoting irrigation enterprises in the more arid portion of
- the West and the using of millions upon millions of money for
- the building of mammoth reservoirs have value and virtue, and
- means the development of many sections that must remain almost
- worthless without them, and the spending of thousands of dollars
- in traversing foreign countries to secure what some have pleased
- to call drought-resisting plants, will undoubtedly play their part
- in promoting the welfare and prosperity of Colorado, ... yet there
- should also be an understanding of, first, the necessary physical
- condition of the soil for the most liberal growth and development
- of roots; secondly, the storing and conserving the entire season
- rainfall,--not only the portion that falls during the growing
- season, but from the early spring to late in the fall; thirdly, the
- fact that air is just as important in the soil as water, and that
- it is the combination of the elements of air and water in the soil,
- together with heat and light, that is most essential; and that when
- these conditions are fulfilled, Eastern Colorado will come to its
- rightful own, and little towns and cities will spring up along all
- the great trunk lines, while the intervening country will be dotted
- with ideal farm homes and shade trees; orchards and groves will
- break the monotony of the now bleak prairie, and present a restful,
- cheerful, homelike, and prosperous condition."
-
-While agriculture in Colorado is regarded as in its infancy, yet the
-product of Colorado farms alone contributed almost fifty-one millions
-to the world's wealth, in 1905, exclusive of wool, hides, or live
-stock. Professor Olin of the State Agricultural College estimates that
-there are over two hundred thousand acres in Colorado which produce
-crops without irrigation, by the application of Professor Campbell's
-"dry-farming" system. The so-called dry land, consisting of millions
-of acres in Eastern Colorado, averages now four dollars per acre,
-where one year ago untold quantities could be bought for an average of
-two dollars per acre. The speculative value of this land has gone up
-wonderfully under the impetus of the Campbell system of dry farming. If
-this system comes anywhere near proving the claims of its advocates,
-it will vastly increase the wealth and population of the state. With
-a greater understanding of the science of dry culture it is certain
-that the farmers of the state and the state generally will experience
-immeasurable advantage. In the eastern plains of Colorado are embraced
-more than fifteen million acres of land which are now lying practically
-useless, only a small amount being utilized for ranging cattle. The
-claims of dry-culture enthusiasts and those who have been experimenting
-with seed imported to meet the dry conditions are, that this empire
-will be made to yield harvests which will support many thriving
-communities. In proof of their claims they point to so-called model
-farms established at various places on the plains where the hitherto
-unyielding soil has borne substantial crops.
-
-One important feature in the agricultural development of Colorado is
-the extinction of the bonanza ranch of thousands of acres. Instead,
-farms are reduced to manageable proportions, and are carried on far
-more largely by intelligent thought and scientific appliances than by
-mere manual labor.
-
-The present day Colorado ranch is an all-the-year-round enterprise.
-The ranch owner is a careful business man, who watches his acres and
-the products thereof even as the successful merchant or manufacturer
-acquires close knowledge of all the details of his business. He sows
-his land with diversified crops, rotating hay, grain, and root crops
-scientifically for the double purpose of securing the greatest yields
-and preserving the nourishing qualities of the soil. Keeping in touch
-with the market conditions of the world, and with the advancing
-developments of science, he is easily the master of the situation, and
-in no part of the country is the condition of the farmer better, or
-perhaps so good, as in Colorado. The agriculturist of the Centennial
-State who is the owner of two quarter sections, or even of one, is
-altogether independent. The returns from his business are absolutely
-sure, and with the certain knowledge of substantial gains at the end
-of the season he plans improvements to his home, and comforts and even
-luxuries for himself and family, which far exceed those usually secured
-in the Middle West or by the small farmers of the East. In Colorado it
-will be found that almost every young man and woman of those who are
-natives of the state are college graduates. Co-education prevails, just
-as does the political enfranchisement of women, and the results of this
-larger extension of the opportunities and privileges of life are very
-much in evidence in the beauty, the high intelligence, and the liberal
-culture that especially characterize the women of Colorado.
-
-Irrigation enterprises in Colorado are far more widely recognized than
-is the Campbell system of dry culture; but in 1905 these enterprises
-appealed with increased force to capitalists outside, as well as within
-Colorado, as a safe and profitable means of investment. Land held at
-ten dollars per acre is, by irrigation, instantly increased in value
-from twenty to fifty dollars; and it was seen that the most favorable
-localities within the state in which to raise funds for further
-extension of irrigation were among the farmers in the older irrigated
-sections who have won their ranches, improved their places, and made
-large deposits in the banks through the use of the productive waters
-trained to make the soil blossom with wealth.
-
-Irrigation is developed to its highest excellence in Northern Colorado
-and in the valley of the Arkansas River. These regions have been the
-longest under irrigated culture, and their value is increasing rapidly.
-Each year sees the agriculturist grow more conservative in his use of
-water, and the quantity thus saved has been applied to new lands. Thus,
-in an interesting and quite undreamed-of way, a problem that incited
-discord and dissension, that promised only to increase inevitably
-as larger territories of land and their correspondingly increased
-irrigation should be held, was brought to a peaceful solution.
-Continued litigation, and a great pressure to secure legislative
-restrictions of the use of water supply, and the constant irritation
-and turmoil involved in these disputes, were all, happily, laid to rest
-by the discovery of the farmers themselves that extravagance in the use
-of water was not conducive to their own prosperity. In the matter of
-flood waters the irrigation experts of the state are quite generally
-meeting the condition in their own way. Storage reservoirs are dotting
-the irrigation systems at frequent intervals, and in the dry months
-the supply piled up behind the cement dams is drawn off to furnish the
-final necessary moisture for the maturing of the crops.
-
-Another possibility of irrigation that is receiving the attention of
-engineers is the utilization of the streams for power purposes. In many
-cases the power thus generated will be made to accomplish marvellous
-feats in the way of construction, as in the instance at Grand River,
-already described.
-
-One of the special journeys in Colorado is that called a "trip around
-the circle," affording more than a thousand miles among the mountains
-within four days' time; but a permission for ten days is available,
-thus affording several detours by stage, which penetrate into the
-most sublime regions. The abysmal depth of five of the great cañons;
-many of the noted mountain passes; great mining camps, with their
-complicated machinery; cliff dwellings, vast plateaus, and stupendous
-peaks; Indian reservations; the icy crevasses a thousand feet in depth;
-the picturesque "Continental Divide," from which one looks down on a
-thousand mountain peaks, where the vast Cordilleras in their rugged
-grandeur are seen as a wide plain; the beautiful Sangre de Cristo
-("Blood of Christ") range; the sharp outlines of the Spanish Peaks,
-rising twelve and thirteen thousand feet into the air; beautiful meadow
-lands where the blue and white columbine, the state flower of Colorado,
-blooms in profusion, and the tiger lily, the primrose, and the
-"shooting stars" blossom,--all these are enjoyed within the "circle"
-trip; and it also includes Leadville, the "city above the clouds,"
-Durango, Ouray, Gunnison, and other interesting towns. It offers a near
-view of the Mount of the Holy Cross, which strange spectacle is made by
-the snow deposits in transverse, gigantic cañons,--the perpendicular
-one being fifteen hundred feet, while the transverse cross is seven
-hundred and fifty feet in length; of Lost Cañon, a novelty even in a
-land of cañons; and of the Rio de Las Animas Perditas, old Fort Lewis,
-the valley of Dolores River, a region of early Spanish discovery; of
-Black Cañon and Cimarron Cañon and Grand River Cañon, whose walls
-rise to the height of more than twenty-five hundred feet;--all these
-are but the merest outline and hint of the scenic wonders compassed
-within the circle trip. Up the cañons the train climbs; through narrow
-gorges with overhanging rocks, on and on, till a plateau is reached;
-then more cañons, more climbing, more peaks towering into the skies,
-and waterfalls chiming their music. As even an enthusiast in scenery
-cannot entirely subsist on stars, sunsets, and silences, the luxurious
-comforts of these trains enhance one's enjoyment. A dining-car is
-always on, and the excellence of the food and the moderate prices for
-all this perfect comfort and convenience are features the traveller
-appreciates. That dance of the Brocken which one fancies he sees in
-the fantastic sandstone formations on the mountain's side on the
-romantic route to Glenwood Springs is occasionally duplicated in
-other cañons, where these strange rocks resolve themselves, with the
-aid of the mysterious lights and shadows, into a dance of witches,
-and every shape springs to life. The train rushes on, and one leaves
-them dancing, confident that although these figures may be stationary
-by day, they dance at night. Another mountain slope of the sandstone
-shows a colossal figure of a prophet,--shrouded, hooded, suggesting
-that solemn, majestic figure of death in Daniel French's great work
-entitled "Death and the Sculptor." The precipitous walls of the cañon
-rise in many places to over a thousand feet in height. In their sides
-such a variety of designs and figures have been sculptured by erosion
-that the traveller half imagines himself in the realm of the gods of
-Hellas. These innumerable designs and figures incite not only the play
-of fancy, but they invite the study of the geologist, who finds here
-the primary rock formations exhibited in the most varied and striking
-manner. As the train winds deeper into the heart of the projecting
-rocks the crested crags loom up beyond the sight; below, the river
-rushes in foaming torrents and only a faint arch of the sky is seen.
-There are recesses never penetrated by the sun.
-
-[Illustration: CATHEDRAL ROCKS, CLYDE PARK, CRIPPLE CREEK SHORT LINE]
-
-Another group of the sandstone shapes, under the transformation of
-moonlight, resolved itself into a band of angels, and still another
-mountain-side seems to be the scene of ballet dancers. The splendid
-heights of Dolores Peak and Expectation Mountain, the Lizard Head,
-the Cathedral Spires, the Castle Peaks of the Sangre de Cristo--what
-points and groups that fairly focus all conceivable sublimity they
-form! Here is a state more than a third larger than all New England;
-it is the state of sunsets and of stars; of scenery that is impressive
-and uplifting, rather than merely picturesque; a state whose plains,
-even, are of the same altitude as the summit of Mount Washington in the
-White Mountains, and whose mountains and peaks ascend to an altitude
-of over two miles above this height. Of the total extent of Colorado,
-the mountains, inclusive of parks and foothills, occupy two-thirds of
-the area. So it is easily realized to what extent they dominate the
-scene. But great and impressive as they are in effect, the mountain
-features have an undoubted influence, however unconsciously received,
-on the character of the people. The effect of beauty on character is
-incalculable. When to beauty is added sublimity, how much greater must
-this effect be! It was not mere rhetoric when the Psalmist exclaimed,
-"I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help.
-My help cometh from the Lord, which made heaven and earth.... The Lord
-shall preserve thee from all evil. He shall preserve thy soul." It is
-this train of thought which is inevitably suggested to the mind in
-gazing upon the stately, solemn impressiveness of the mountain scenery.
-Nature has predestined Colorado for the theatre of noble life, and the
-influence is all-pervading.
-
-Great engineering feats are in evidence all over Colorado. Miles of
-railway tunnels pass through the mountains. No mountain, not even
-Pike's Peak, is regarded in Colorado as being in any sense an obstacle
-to any form of the extension of travel. The railroad either passes
-through it or climbs it. The matter is apparently simple to the
-railroad mind, and evidently all the peaks of the Himalayas piled on
-Pike's or Long's peaks--"Ossa piled on Pelion"--would not daunt the
-Coloradoan enterprise. In fact, the greater the obstacle, the greater
-is the enterprise thereby incited to overcome it. In the most literal
-way obstacles in this land of enchantment are miraculously transformed
-to stepping-stones. But what would you,--in an Enchanted Country?
-
-Colorado has four great systems of parks whose elevation is from seven
-to nine thousand feet: North Park, with an area of some twenty-five
-hundred square miles; South Park, one thousand; Middle Park, three
-thousand; and San Luis, with nine thousand four hundred square
-miles,--all sheltered by mountains, watered by perpetual streams, and
-so rich in grass lands as to afford perpetual grazing and farming
-resources. Colorado has nearly one thousand inland lakes, and over two
-hundred and fifty rivers fed from mountain snows. Its grand features
-include mountains, cañons, gorges and deep chasms, crags and heights;
-its mountain systems cover more than five times the area of the Alps,
-and its luminous, electrically exhilarating air, its play of color, and
-the necromancy of distances that seem near when afar--all linger in the
-memory as a dream of ecstatic experiences. Colorado is all a splendor
-of color, of vista, and of dream. It is the most poetic of states.
-
-Now the fact that this country has been importing over two million tons
-of sugar a year lends importance to the beet sugar factories already
-largely established. Colorado has a future in beet sugar hardly second
-to her gold-mining interests, if her interests receive the national
-safe-guarding that is her due.
-
-Colorado and the Philippines were brought into collision of interests
-by the attempt to reduce the tariff on sugar imported from those
-islands. This would ruin the beet sugar industry in the Centennial
-State, which is already beginning to transform it into one of the
-richest agricultural states in the Union.
-
-This industry is absolutely identified with the irrigation interests
-of Colorado, as it is the arid land irrigated that offers the best
-facilities for the sugar beets.
-
-The beet sugar enterprise means remunerative work for the farmer, good
-business for the railroads and merchants, and an incalculable degree of
-prosperity for all Colorado. Thomas F. Walsh, of Ouray, Colorado, and
-of Washington, made an earnest protest against this movement.
-
-Mr. Walsh is a great capitalist, but while he has not one dollar
-concerned in the beet sugar enterprise of his state, he is a loyal and
-devoted son of Colorado. In a convincing manner he said:
-
- "... It is not a small thing, this robbery of American farmers and
- home-makers for the benefit of sugar corporations and exploiters
- of Philippine labor. It means the ultimate ruin of an industry
- that is full of the brightest promise for thousands of Americans.
- It means that the people of the United States shall pay tribute
- to a trust forever for one of the necessaries of life.... The
- removal of protection to Colorado sugar growers would simply mean
- that the sugar trust, or cormorants in human form like it, would
- go to the Philippines, employ the peons at starvation wages, and
- send millions of tons of sugar to the United States. Would the
- consumer here be benefited? Not at all. Has the consumer benefited
- by reciprocity with Cuba? The sugar trust has received a gift from
- the treasury of the United States--that is all."
-
-And again Mr. Walsh truly says:
-
- "This proposition is merely a design on the part of enormously
- rich, greedy speculators, who are willing to adopt any means for
- the accumulation of more money. Money, money, money! They have
- already a thousand times more than they need, and are simply money
- mad. They propose to exploit the Philippines for their own selfish
- ends. Help for the poor Filipinos, indeed! Imagine the generosity
- of these get-rich-quick sharks towards the peons in their employ.
- Think of the wages that would be paid, contrasted with the standard
- of living in the United States! I'd rather have the people of this
- country exterminated than to be brought to such a level."
-
-Regarding the arid land Mr. Walsh said:
-
- "With the application of water to this land under the National
- Irrigation Act--one of the greatest acts of statesmanship
- accomplished under our broad-minded and far-sighted President--the
- people of Colorado will furnish an outlet for a great population,
- and the cultivation of beets for sugar will enable thousands of
- American citizens to establish homes of their own. That is what is
- now being done in Colorado, and the industry is in its infancy.
- The people have gone in there at the suggestion of the government,
- planted beets provided to them by the agricultural department, and
- started a great industry. There was an implied, if not expressed,
- promise that they were to be protected in this new industry. Yet
- it is now proposed to place them in competition with the peons
- of the Philippines, at the most critical time in the history of
- the industry. The people of the East," continued Mr. Walsh, "do
- not seem to be able to grasp the great possibilities of the arid
- West under the operation of the national irrigation law. The West,
- properly irrigated with water that we know can be developed by
- drainage, wells, and underground flow, will easily support fifty
- millions of people. Think of what this means! Fifty millions of
- American citizens owning their own homes! It is an incalculable
- addition to the wealth and strength of the United States."
-
-One of the very valuable and exceptional resources of Colorado is
-in its stone, which equals the world's best product in its quality.
-Millions of tons of almost every variety of building stone lie
-unclaimed on the hills and plateaus. There are quarries in Gunnison
-County that would make their owners multi-millionnaires, could the
-stone be made easy of access or transportation. The difficulty of the
-former, and the high freight charges, combine to delay this field
-of development. In Pueblo there is a marbleized sandstone that is
-very beautiful. Its "crushing" strength, as the architectural phrase
-goes, is between eleven and twelve thousand pounds to the square
-inch,--a strength which exceeds the most exacting requirements of any
-architect. This stone is found in unlimited quantities. In the country
-around Fort Collins there is a red sandstone which is very popular, and
-this is also found in large quantities at Castle Rock, south of Denver.
-Near Trinidad is a gray sandstone of great beauty, and the Amago stone,
-which is used for the Denver Postoffice, is a favorite.
-
-In stone for decorative purposes also, Colorado is plentifully
-supplied. Specimens of marble from the vicinity of Redstone show
-characteristics as beautiful as are seen in the finest Italian marble
-found at Carrara.
-
-Besides the marble for building there are also vast beds of the purest
-white marble, which will soon be placed on the market for statuary
-purposes.
-
-Vast deposits of granite are to be found in many different sections of
-the state. In Clear Creek County, about Silver Plume and Georgetown,
-there are mountains of granite. In the southern part of the state
-deposits are found which are used extensively for monumental purposes,
-and great quantities of this granite are shipped out of the state.
-
-Although only a limited amount of work in the way of development and
-seeking markets has been done for Colorado stone, the value of the
-sales is already an appreciable source of revenue.
-
-Statistically, Colorado ranks first in the United States as to the
-yield of gold and silver; first in the area of land under irrigation;
-first as to the quality of wheat, potatoes, and melons, and as to
-the percentage of sugar in the sugar beet. The state ranks fifth in
-coal and iron; sixth in live stock, and eighth in agriculture. It is
-true, however, that irrigated agriculture is considered to be the
-most important interest in Colorado. The Centennial State is not,
-primarily, as has often been supposed, a mining state; the mines, rich
-and varied in products as they are, offer yet a value secondary to that
-of agriculture. A mine is always an uncertainty. A rich pocket may be
-found that is an isolated one and leads to nothing of a permanently
-rich deposit. A vast outlay of time and expensive mechanism can be
-made that will not result in any returns. An apparently rich mine may
-suddenly come to an end; the miner may have reason to believe that
-if he could go down some thousands of feet he would again strike the
-rich vein; he may do this at great cost of machinery and labor only
-to find that the vein has totally disappeared, or does not exist. All
-these and many other mischances render mining something very far from
-an exact science,--something, indeed, totally incalculable, even to
-the specialists and experts,--while agriculture is an industry whose
-conditions render it within reasonable probabilities of control and
-calculation. The great problem which continues to confront Colorado,
-and to a far greater extent Arizona, is the more complete understanding
-of what Prof. Elwood Mead, the government expert in national irrigation
-problems, calls "the duty of water" and the conditions which influence
-it as a basis for planning the larger and costlier works which must be
-built in the future.
-
-"One of the leading objects of expert irrigation investigation is to
-determine the duty of water," says Professor Mead, and he adds:
-
- "In order to do this it is necessary to deal with a large range
- of climatic conditions, and to study the influence of different
- methods of application and the requirements of different crops.
- Farmers need an approximate knowledge of the duty of water in order
- to make intelligent contracts for their supply. It is needed by
- the engineer and investors in order to plan canals and reservoirs
- properly. Without this knowledge every important transaction in
- the construction of irrigation works, or in the distribution of
- water therefrom, is very largely dependent on individual judgment
- or conjecture.... In constructing reservoirs it is as necessary to
- know whether they will be filled in a few years by silt as to know
- that the dam rests on a solid foundation; and it is as desirable to
- provide some means for the removal of this sedimentary accumulation
- as it is to provide an adequate waste way for floods."
-
-The problems of irrigation are evidently highly complicated ones. There
-are large tracts of irrigated land selling at three hundred dollars an
-acre which, fifty years ago, were held as worthless desert regions. The
-value of water rights has risen from four to thirty-five dollars an
-acre. The Platte River and its tributaries, alone, irrigate one million
-nine hundred and twenty-four thousand four hundred and sixty-five
-acres. In the South Platte the average flow of water is two thousand
-seven hundred and sixty-five feet a second. The North Platte and its
-tributaries irrigate about nine hundred thousand acres. There are now
-over two million acres in Colorado under actual irrigation, with an
-agricultural population of some one hundred and fifty thousand, with a
-total income of over thirty millions. The agricultural population is
-increasing so rapidly that the day cannot be distant when it will reach
-a million, with a total production of more than one hundred and fifty
-million dollars. It is believed that an expenditure of forty millions
-in irrigation at the present time would immediately result in an
-increment of from two hundred to three hundred millions. The irrigation
-bill that passed Congress in 1904 proved of the most beneficial nature
-to Colorado; not only for its immediate effects, but for the promise
-it implied and the confidence inspired in the immediate future. The
-encouragement of irrigation in Colorado is the influence that enlarges
-and develops the agricultural efforts, promoting the growing industry
-of beet sugar and extending all resources. Beyond the material results
-there lie, too, the most important social conditions of the greater
-content and industry of the people and the corresponding decrease of
-tendencies toward anarchy and disorder.
-
-In the quarter of a century--with the sixth year now added--since
-Colorado became a state there has passed over twenty million acres of
-government lands into the individual ownership of men whose capital,
-for the most part, consisted solely of the horses and wagon that they
-brought with them. Of this vast area there are some two and a half
-million acres under agricultural cultivation, which are assessed at
-a valuation of some twenty-five millions. The Boston and Colorado
-smelter, established in 1873, has produced a valuation in gold, silver,
-and copper of nearly ninety-six millions. In the year of 1905 the
-Colorado mines,--gold, silver, lead, copper, and zinc,--all told,
-produced nearly ninety million dollars.
-
-The population of Colorado is increasing rapidly, not only by the
-stream of immigration that pours in of those who come _con intentione_,
-but to a considerable degree by those who come only as tourists and
-visitors, and who become so fascinated with Colorado's charm, and so
-impressed with her rich and varied resources, that they remain. The
-development of this state is one of the most remarkable and thrilling
-pages in American history. It is the story of personal sacrifice,
-personal heroism, personal devotion to the nobler purposes and ideals
-of life that no one can read unmoved.
-
-"There can be no backward movement, not even a check in the steady
-tramp of such a conquering army," said the "Denver Republican"
-editorially. "Before it, mountains melt into bars of gold, of silver,
-of copper, lead, zinc, and iron. It passes over virgin soil, and behind
-it spring up fields of grain and groves of fruit. It brings coal from
-distant fields, rocks from far-away hills, and its artisans mould and
-weld and send out tools of trade and articles of merchandise to all the
-world.
-
-"It pushes the railroads it needs to where it needs them, and the world
-comes to marvel at its audacity. It finds to-day what yesterday it
-needed and to-morrow it must have. It waits only the world's needs or
-pleasures to find yet other ways to supply them."
-
-The prosperity of Colorado is a remarkable fact in our national
-history. By some untraced law, defects, faults, misfortunes, or crimes
-are always made more prominent than virtue and good fortune. The crime
-is telegraphed everywhere, the good deed is passed over in silence--as
-a rule. And so the strikes, and the outlawry, and the discords and
-troubles of Colorado have been very widely heralded, while there
-has been less general recognition of the firm and just governmental
-authority that has held these outbreaks in check, and has almost
-succeeded in ending them entirely.
-
-In general aspects and conveniences the towns and cities are under
-excellent municipal regulations. Leadville, formerly one of the most
-lawless of great mining camps, is to-day a peaceful and prosperous city
-on a great trans-continental highway. The Western towns begin with
-wide, clean, beautiful streets. They begin with the most tasteful
-architecture. It may not be the most expensive or the most colossal,
-but it is beautiful.
-
-Northern Colorado is in many respects a distinctive region of itself.
-It offers rich agricultural facilities; the beet sugar factories at
-Greeley are making it a commercial centre; the electric trolley line
-which will soon connect Greeley with Denver will multiply the homes
-and settlements within this distance of fifty miles, and this part
-of Colorado is enriched with great coal fields. The latter promise
-not merely their own extension of industries in digging the coal and
-putting it on the market, but they also indicate another and far more
-important result, which stimulates the scientific imagination,--that of
-making Northern Colorado a power centre whose strength can be applied
-in a variety of ways and transmitted over a large area of country. For
-more than two years the Government has been conducting a series of
-experiments in a very thorough manner, endeavoring to ascertain the gas
-values of the great lignite coal fields between Boulder and Denver. It
-has been discovered that the converting of the coal into gas gives it
-double the efficiency for use as a motor power for engine or for fuel
-than can be gained from the coal in its natural state. A ton of coal
-converted into gas will, as gas, give twice the power that the coal
-would have yielded, and give the same power that two tons of coal, that
-has not been converted into gas, would afford. In order, however,
-to produce this power economically, it must be done at the point of
-mining. It is there that the gas producers must be located; and from
-these points the gas can be transported in pipes, or can be converted
-into electricity and sent by wires at far less cost than would be that
-of sending the coal itself by freight. These discoveries not only
-suggest that this region in Colorado is destined in the near future
-to become a power centre which will be tapped from the surrounding
-country for a great distance in all directions, and will thus render
-Boulder one of the most important of Western cities; but they also
-suggest the evident tendency of the age toward intensity rather than
-immensity,--toward the concentration of energy in the most ethereal
-form rather than its diffusion through large and clumsy masses of
-material.
-
-Colorado contains over twenty-five thousand square miles of coal
-fields, distributed over the state, with an average annual product of
-over seven million tons. No other corresponding area in the entire
-world exceeds Colorado in its great storage of coal, and the state
-ranks as one of the first in the production of iron.
-
-There are already fifteen beet sugar factories in operation,
-representing investments amounting to over twelve million dollars,
-and which are estimated to have produced, in 1906, an aggregate of
-some two hundred and twenty thousand pounds of sugar, the percentage
-of saccharine matter being higher than that of the sugar beet of
-California.
-
-[Illustration: SULTAN MOUNTAIN]
-
-Statistically, Colorado ranks first in irrigation, and there are some
-eighteen thousand miles of irrigating canals already in operation, with
-the system being so rapidly extended that it almost outruns the pace of
-calculation. Three million acres are under cultivation in Colorado, and
-two million eight hundred and fifty thousand acres are irrigated; the
-storage reservoirs already constructed are sufficient to place another
-million of acres under cultivation. This irrigated land sells from
-sixty to one hundred dollars per acre. Colorado has a reputation for
-being a great potato state, and in the year 1905 the town of Greeley
-alone shipped over three hundred thousand dollars' worth of potatoes,
-while tomatoes are a feature often yielding ninety dollars to the acre,
-and celery has been estimated to yield one hundred and fifty dollars an
-acre. There are tracts of from two to three thousand acres devoted to
-peas alone, producing forty to fifty thousand cans; and asparagus grows
-with great success.
-
-Colorado is a fruit country offering the best of conditions. The
-peaches of Southern Colorado lead the world in flavor, beauty, and
-size; the canteloupe flourishes with such extraordinary vitality that
-it often yields a revenue of fifty dollars an acre; and the watermelon
-also grows in unusual perfection. The valley of the Arkansas River is
-the great region for producing melons, and Colorado exports these to
-New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, and St. Louis. Apples, plums, and
-pears grow with equally bounteous success, and there are fruit farms
-that with their orchards and small fruits sometimes realize fifty
-thousand dollars a year, when the season is a good one and the market
-conditions favorable. The seasons of irrigated land are largely under
-control, and surpass those regions which are at the mercy of excessive
-rains or of droughts. So the law of compensation still obtains. The
-resources of horticulture, alone, in Colorado are very important, and
-they form one of the most alluring features of this beautiful and
-richly bountiful state.
-
-In the way of crops, alfalfa takes the lead in Colorado, as wheat
-does in Kansas. It requires the very minimum of care; the land being
-once planted with alfalfa, there is need only of turning on the
-irrigation, and mowing it, at the right time. Alfalfa produces three
-crops a year, and yields from one to two tons per acre. It sells at
-from three to ten dollars a ton, and this makes a revenue quite worth
-considering. The difficulties encountered everywhere in Colorado, in
-every branch of industry, or in domestic work, are those of securing
-labor. Wages are high in every conceivable line of work, but to a
-large extent the labor and service, even when procured, is of a very
-poor order. In many of the larger hotels employés are often kept
-on the pay-roll for two months at a time when not needed, simply
-because it is impossible to fill their places when the need comes.
-From requirements of the seamstress, the laundress, the cook, the
-maid, the farmer's working-men, or the employés in almost any line
-of work, the same difficulty exists. Much is heard regarding strikes
-and other forms of the eternal conflict between labor and capital;
-and yet the high rates paid, the concessions constantly made to the
-demands of employés, the conditions provided for them, would seem, at
-a superficial glance, to be such as to bridge over every difficulty.
-Domestic service is something that presents the greatest problem on the
-part of the employer. If there is so large a number of "the unemployed"
-in the East, why should not the conditions balance themselves and this
-superfluous element find good conditions for living in Colorado? This
-question involves the problem of economics, with which these pages have
-nothing to do; but no traveller, no sojourner, can linger in Colorado
-who is not simply lost in wonder that the varied work that is waiting,
-with the most liberal payments for the worker, and the multitude of
-workers in the East who need the liberal payment, cannot, by some law
-of elective affinity, be brought together.
-
-When it is realized that the Rocky Mountains occupy in Colorado
-more than five times the entire space of the Alps in Europe, their
-importance in climatic influence as well as in scenic magnificence
-can be understood. The forests of Colorado are found on the mountains
-and foothills. The heights are covered with a dense growth of pine
-woods, while in lower ranges abound the silver spruce and the cedar.
-Colorado has a state forestry association which aims to secure as a
-reservation all forests above the altitude of eight thousand five
-hundred feet, as this preservation is considered most important to the
-water supply. In the Alps there are nine peaks over fourteen thousand
-feet in height; in the Rocky Mountains, within the limits of Colorado
-alone, there are forty-three peaks, each one of which exceeds in height
-the Jungfrau. There are in Colorado more than thirty towns, each of
-which is the theatre of active progress, and each of which lies at an
-altitude exceeding that of the pass of St. Bernard. The sublime cañons
-and gorges are eloquent of the story of Titanic forces which rent the
-mountains apart. The vast plateaus were once the bed of inland seas.
-In the cañon of Grand River towering walls rise to the height of half
-a mile, in sheer precipitous rock, for a distance of some sixteen
-miles. The strata of these rocks are distinctly defined, and the play
-of color is rich and fantastic. The vast walls are in brilliant hues
-of red and amber and green and brown,--the blending of color lending
-its enchantment to the marvellous scene. Each cañon has its own
-individuality. No one repeats the wild charm of another. Excursions
-abound. There is "the loop," an enchanting mountain ride made from
-Denver within one day for the round trip; the "Rainbow" tour, and
-others, besides that of the "circle" already described. In each and all
-these journeys the route is often on the very verge of the abyss, and
-the sublimities, the splendor of coloring, exceed any power of language
-to suggest.
-
-In Northwestern Colorado, along the White River and northward, lies
-the sportsman's paradise, now reached only by a stage drive of from
-forty-five to ninety miles from the little town of Rifle on the "scenic
-route" of the Denver and Rio Grande, beyond Glenwood Springs. Trapper's
-Lake and the Marvine lakes are well known, and the Marvine Hunting
-Lodge is a favorite resort of English tourists.
-
-Estes Park, some seventy miles from Denver, a favorite summer resort,
-is a long, narrow plateau of two or three miles in width and fifteen
-in length, a mile and a half above sea level, and enclosed in mountain
-walls that tower above the park from two to seven thousand feet. A
-swift stream, well stocked with trout, runs through the park. The
-four great systems of parks divide Colorado into naturally distinct
-localities: North Park, with an area of twenty-five hundred square
-miles; Middle Park, with its three thousand; the smaller South Park
-of one thousand; and San Luis, with over ninety-four hundred square
-miles,--all, in the aggregate, presenting a unique structural plan.
-Every journey in Colorado has its vista of surprise. No artist can
-paint its panoramas. Every traveller in this Land of Enchantment must
-realize that its exhilaration cannot be decanted in any form. It is a
-thing that lies in character, moulding life.
-
-Colorado is the Land of Achievement. It offers resources totally
-unsurpassed in the entire world for an unlimited expanse. These
-resources await only the recognition of him who can discern the
-psychological moment for their development. That nothing is impossible
-to him who wills is one of the eternal verities, and even the expert
-census taker, or the supernatural tax collector whom nothing escapes,
-might search in vain, within the limits of the splendid Centennial
-State, for any man who fails to will. The resplendence of this state
-of stars and sunshine is due to this blaze of human energy. The
-Coloradoans are the typical spirits who are among those elect
-
- "... who shall arrive
- Prevailing still;
- Spirits with whom the stars connive
- To work their will."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE COLORADO PIONEERS
-
- "_Around the man who seeks a noble end
- Not angels, but divinities attend._"
-
- "_In the deep heart of man a poet dwells
- Who all the day of life his summer story tells;
- Scatters on every eye dust of his spells,
- Scent, form, and color: to the flowers and shells
- Wins the believing child with wondrous tales;
- Touches a cheek with colors of romance,
- And crowds a history into a glance;
- Gives beauty to the lake and fountain,
- Spies over-sea the fires of the mountain;
- When thrushes ope their throat, 'tis he that sings,
- And he that paints the oriole's fiery wings.
- The little Shakespeare in the maiden's heart
- Makes Romeo of a plough-boy on his cart;
- Opens the eye to Virtue's starlike meed
- And gives persuasion to a gentle deed._"
-
- EMERSON
-
-
-Not even the starry splendor of Colorado skies or the untold magic
-of the atmosphere vibrating with unwritten music, pictorial with
-such scenes as no artist ever put on canvas; not even the scientific
-achievements in feats of civil and electrical engineering; not even any
-advancement of the arts and the development of industries, commerce, or
-economics that bring the general life into increasing harmony with the
-physical environment,--none of these things, important and significant
-as they are, touch the profoundest interest of Colorado. For this
-supreme interest is that of the noble men and women whose lives have
-left to the state the legacy of their hopes, their efforts, their
-earnestness, and their faith. "Much is made of the Pilgrim Fathers who
-landed on Plymouth Rock," editorially remarked the "Denver Republican"
-in an article on "Pioneers' Day," in June of 1906; "and if there had
-been phonographs in those days to preserve the record of the speech of
-one of those old fugitives from European persecution, with what delight
-the men and women of this generation would listen to the tones which
-come from the instrument! But, after all, were the Pilgrim Fathers,
-canonized by nearly three hundred years of tradition, any braver, any
-more venturesome, any more worthy of honor, than the pioneers who
-fought Indians and struggled against adverse fortune of every kind
-while they laid in fear and hope the foundations of this great state?"
-
-Among the poems of Walt Whitman is one entitled "The Beginners," which
-interprets a high quality of life. The lines are as follows:
-
- "How they are provided for upon the earth (appearing at intervals):
- How dear and dreadful they are to the earth:
- How they inure to themselves as much as to any--what a paradox appears
- this age:
- How people respond to them, yet know them not:
- How there is something relentless in their fate, all times:
- How all things mischoose the object of their adulation and reward,
- And how the same inexorable price must still be paid for the same great
- purchase."
-
-The price was paid by the pioneers of Colorado. They poured out
-lavishly all their hope, their indomitable energy, their patience,
-which was faith, as well. They planted, knowing that not to themselves
-would come the harvest. They builded that those yet to come might
-have shelter. They gave to Colorado such an endowment of potent
-but invisible force that its momentum pervades the air to-day. The
-accelerated ratio of power with which spiritual forces proceed defies
-even the ablest of the statisticians.
-
-In all the chapters of American history there are none more thrilling
-than the story of the early life in Colorado; there are no chapters
-that more vividly demonstrate the absolutely present and practical aid
-of the divine guidance of God acting through His messengers,--those who
-have lived on earth and have gone on into the life more abundant.
-
-The lives of the remarkable men and women who have been canonized by
-the church have left the world the better for their being and humanity
-the richer for the inheritance of their experience. Their history is
-not to be held merely as tradition or as superstition. Let one visit
-in Italy Assisi, the home of St. Francis; Siena, the home of St.
-Catherine, and follow the footsteps of others whose names enrich the
-church calendar, to their homes and haunts, and their record becomes
-vivid and vitalized as, to a stranger visiting Boston, might become
-the footsteps of her noble and consecrated lives which are yet almost
-within universal personal remembrance: the lives of Lydia Maria Child,
-William Lloyd Garrison, Emerson, Whittier, Lucy Stone, Lowell, Mary A.
-Livermore, James Freeman Clarke, and Phillips Brooks,--men and women
-whom Boston may well hold as her prophets and her saints. They, too,
-were of the order of "The Beginners." They sowed the seeds of the
-higher life. They were receptive to all high counsels from the ethereal
-world, from the divine realms; they listened to great truths which the
-multitude did not hear, and they gave it anew by voice and by pen, till
-all the world might hear and read and receive it. They were, indeed,--
-
- "God's prophets of the Beautiful."
-
-Such persons were living a twofold life during their entire earthly
-pilgrimage, and we may well recall their lives and link them with those
-of the great and the holy men and women of all ages and all climes.
-
-The pathfinders of human progress do not live for personal ease,--
-
- "The hero is not fed on sweets."
-
-These are royal natures, who come into the world not to enjoy ease and
-prosperity, but who bring with them the high destiny of sacrifice.
-Their lives are companioned with struggle and conflict. Of such
-experiences as theirs well might be asked the question so impressively
-conveyed in these noble lines by America's great woman poet,--our poet
-who sang the song of the nation's "Battle-Hymn,"--Julia Ward Howe:
-
- "What hast thou for thy scattered seed,
- O Sower of the plain?
- Where are the many gathered sheaves
- Thy hope should bring again?"
- "The only record of my work
- Lies in the buried grain."
-
- "O Conqueror of a thousand fields!
- In dinted armor dight,
- What growths of purple amaranth
- Shall crown thy brow of might?"
- "Only the blossom of my life
- Flung widely in the fight."
-
- "What is the harvest of thy saints,
- O God! who dost abide?
- Where grow the garlands of thy chiefs
- In blood and sorrow dyed?
- What have thy servants for their pains?"
- "This only--to have tried."
-
-These Shining Ones are on earth to serve as co-workers with the divine
-power; to serve through good fortune or ill fortune; through evil
-report or good report,--still to serve; still to follow The Gleam.
-These are the men who
-
- "... make the world within their reach
- Somewhat the better for their being
- And gladder for their human speech."
-
-The names of many of these heroic pioneers of Colorado may be unwritten
-save in the pages of the Recording Angel; but they live and are
-immortal in the influence they have left as a heritage to succeeding
-generations, in the trains of thought and purposes they initiated,
-and in all that potent power of generous aims and noble ideals,--for
-all advancing civilization rests on lofty ideals. "While the basis of
-civilization must be material," says the Rev. Dr. Charles Gordon Ames
-of Boston, "its life must be spiritual. Its end and object must be the
-soul, and not the body; and it will provide all best things for the
-body, that the soul may be worthily housed and served. The higher and
-chief interests of society will always be intellectual, affectional,
-aspirational--human and humane. The true, the beautiful, and the
-good--almost unknown to the barbarian, and often mocked at by the
-Philistines of modern society--will be sought for as men seek for gold
-and pearls of great price. Wealth will bring its offering to the altars
-of education and art and worship. Science, as it searches the worlds of
-matter and of mind, will find new and sacred parables and gospels of
-grace. Learning will be a priestess of truth. The imagination of man
-will wander and wander in the wide creation, free, fearless, and glad,
-knowing that the Father's house is everywhere, and that his child may
-be everywhere at home."
-
-In many of the pioneer households of Colorado, whether those of
-plenty or of privation, the children had the inestimable advantage of
-the refined and beautiful atmosphere of a home in which high ideals
-and lofty devotion to intellectual progress and spiritual culture
-prevailed. If schools were insufficient, there were the trained
-educational methods of both the father and the mother under which they
-were reared and taught; and poverty of purse cannot greatly matter
-where there is no poverty of the spirit.
-
-Well may these pioneers of Colorado be held as belonging to that order
-of humanity which the poet calls "The Beginners." Some of them were
-unlettered and untaught save in the great school of life itself; some
-of them were rich in learning and culture; but they all shared in
-common a devotion to progress differing only in degree or conception:
-they shared common sacrifices; they gave their best energies to the
-development of a great and beautiful state whose increasing rate of
-progress is to them an immortal monument. These leaders of humanity
-whom the poet so finely characterizes as "The Beginners" are an order
-of people always appearing on earth. They are of those who hear the
-Song in the air and behold the Star in the sky. They are the persons
-who discern--and follow--The Gleam. Their lives are rich in service
-and sacrifice. Their kingdom is not of this world. Their lives are not
-unfrequently cheerless and cold, but on their altar fires glows the
-living coal sent down from heaven. They fast that others may feast.
-They accept privations that others may revel in possessions. They pay
-the inexorable price for the same great purchase. They are those who
-are sent on earth peculiarly set apart to co-operate with God in the
-larger fulfilment of the divine laws. They pay the inexorable price of
-toil and labor and sorrow and sacrifice. They rise into the everlasting
-triumph and the beauty and the joy of spirituality of life. They give
-all for this; they find all in it. But let no one resign his hopes or
-his dreams. Let no one doubt, for an instant, that all of goodness and
-beauty and sweetness and joy that he longs for is on its way toward
-him. It is only a question of time. Let him be patient, which is not a
-mere passive and negative condition, but one full of intense activities
-and serene poise; let him be patient and believing, and make room in
-his life for that immortal joy which no man taketh from him.
-
-The town of Greeley, with its felicitous location midway between the
-two state capitals, Denver and Cheyenne, fifty miles from each, and
-which is already the principal town of Northern Colorado as Pueblo is
-of the southern part of the state, has a romantic and thrilling story
-connected with its founding. In the history of Colorado, among the
-many men whose lives stand out in noble pre-eminence, was that of the
-founder of Greeley, Hon. Nathan Cook Meeker, whose personal life is
-inseparably associated with the interesting town which owes to him its
-origin.
-
-The Meekers trace their ancestry to men who went to England from
-Antwerp about 1500. In 1639 Robert and William Meeker came to this
-country and settled in New Haven. Thirty years later William Meeker
-removed to New Jersey, and the town of Elizabeth was founded by him
-and named for his wife. He was a leader in the affairs of the day,
-held prominent office, and in 1690 he died, leaving the old Meeker
-homestead in Newark, New Jersey, which is still in the possession of
-his descendants. One of his sons was Joseph Meeker, also prominent
-in promoting the conditions of progress, and he was the grandfather
-of Nathan Cook Meeker, the founder of Greeley, who inherited the
-qualities that have made the family a marked one in America. When he
-was but seventeen he carried on an extensive correspondence with Henry
-Clay, John Tyler, George D. Prentice, and other noted men of the day,
-discussing with them subjects of importance, and he was a contributor
-even in these early years to the "Louisville Journal," then edited
-by George D. Prentice, and now the "Courier-Journal," edited by the
-brilliant Colonel Henry Watterson; to the New Orleans "Picayune," and
-other leading papers. Even in his early youth Mr. Meeker seems to have
-been a man of perpetual aspiration and honorable ambition carried out
-to achievement, and by means of his own energy and persistence he
-graduated in 1840 from Oberlin College, became a teacher, and later
-(for literary work was his dominant gift) became a regular contributor
-to the "New York Mirror," edited by N. P. Willis, the poet, and the
-most brilliant man of letters of his day. Mr. Meeker wrote both prose
-and poetry,--essays, romance, and verse alike flowing from his facile
-pen. He is the author of three books, one of which he dedicated to
-President Pierce, and which is in the Boston Public Library among the
-choice and rare works not allowed for general circulation but kept
-intact for the special use of scholars and researchers. He became one
-of the leading writers of the day on sociology, advancing many ideas
-which are to-day maintained by thoughtful students of the questions
-involved in this subject.
-
-Founding towns seemed to "run in the family," and even as his
-great-grandfather founded the town of Elizabeth, New Jersey, so Nathan
-Cook Meeker felt the impulse to stamp his own strong and progressive
-individuality on new communities. He became the secretary and librarian
-(in 1844) of the Ohio Trumbull Phalanx, a colony founded to realize in
-practical form the theories of Fourier, and somewhat similar to the
-famous Brook Farm experiment. Mr. Meeker also co-operated in founding
-the Western Reserve Institute, of which, many years afterward, Hon.
-James A. Garfield became president.
-
-About this time he married Arvilla Delight, a daughter of Levi Smith of
-Connecticut and a descendant of Elder Brewster; a woman whose singular
-force, exaltation, and beauty of character may be traced through a
-notable New England ancestry. The family soon removed to the Western
-Reserve in Ohio. Mrs. Meeker had been known in her sweet girlhood as
-the beauty of the town. She was a woman of exceptional refinement
-and culture; for many years a teacher, and, more than all, of a
-spirituality of character that added to her life its dignity and grace.
-
-The spell of destiny, the burden always laid upon "The Beginners,"
-seemed to be on Nathan Cook and Arvilla Delight Meeker; for no history
-of the work of the husband could be written that did not include that
-of the wife. Like Nathaniel and Sophia Hawthorne, their lives were
-conjoined in that perfect mutual response of spiritual sympathy which
-alone makes the mystic marriage a divine sacrament.
-
-Horace Greeley became interested in Mr. Meeker's work and invited him
-to a place on the editorial staff of "The Tribune," a position which he
-filled with conspicuous ability for several years; but in common with
-all idealists, Mr. Meeker was haunted and beset by his visions of a
-more Utopian future for humanity. A Colorado journal, recently giving
-some reminiscences of the life of its great citizen, said:
-
- "In the fall of 1869 Mr. Meeker made a trip to the West for the
- 'Tribune,' writing interesting letters by the way. On his return
- to New York he was full of the idea of establishing a colony in
- Colorado. He mentioned his ambition to John Russell Young, who
- talked it over with Mr. Greeley, and that great man, at the first
- opportunity, said to the returned correspondent: 'I understand you
- wish to lead a colony to Colorado.' When Mr. Meeker answered 'Yes,'
- Greeley added, 'I think it would be a great success. Go ahead; "The
- Tribune" will stand by you.'
-
- "With such encouragement Mr. Meeker spent the following day in
- writing the article announcing his purpose and outlining the plan
- which was afterwards adopted as the constitution of the colony.
- Mr. Greeley suggested a few minor changes, after which the article
- was printed and kept in type for a week, in order, as its author
- said, 'that there might be due reflection and no haste.' It was
- published in the 'Tribune' of December 14, 1869, with an editorial
- indorsement of the plan and its originator. Nine days later the
- colony was organized, and yet in that short time more than a
- thousand letters had been received in answer to the article. On
- the 15th of the next April the certificate of organization of 'The
- Union Colony of Greeley' was filed for record."
-
-In less extended detail some outline of the life of the founder of
-Greeley, the "Garden City" of Colorado, has already been narrated by
-the writer in a previous book;[1] but no adequate reference can be
-made to the state in which Mr. Meeker's life and work remains as so
-remarkable a contribution and so fundamental a factor, which does not
-present in full the story of his relation to its development; and the
-matter is thus presented even at the risk of some minor repetitions.
-
-In the spring of 1870 Mr. Meeker led his colony to Colorado. The
-colonists wished to give the town the name of its founder, but he
-himself insisted that it should bear the name of Greeley, after the
-great editor of the "Tribune," of whose staff he was still a member.
-Into all the sacrifice and the hardships of this pioneer life Mrs.
-Meeker, a woman gently born and bred, entered with the utmost heroism.
-From the very inception the undertaking was a signal success. But Mr.
-Meeker conceived of still another extension of his activities in the
-problem then so prominently before the country,--the civilization of
-the Indians. He was appointed agent of the northern Utes, in possession
-of the great park region of the Rocky Mountains, on White River. To
-it he went in the same spirit in which General Armstrong entered on
-his work at Hampton. He had matured certain theories regarding the
-proper treatment of the Indians, in bringing them within the pale of
-the civilized arts,--theories so wise, so just, so humane, that they
-might be studied with advantage. These theories he put to the test. His
-youngest daughter, a beautiful and gifted girl, opened a free school
-for teaching the Indians. His wife united with him in every kindly and
-gracious act by which he strove to win the confidence of the race.
-This kindness and gentleness was unmeasured. The family lived a life
-of constant sacrifice and effort for the education and training of
-the Utes. But the Indian nature is one that wreaks its revenge,--not
-necessarily on the aggressor, but on the first comer. Other agents had
-been lax, and a number of causes of discontent to which allusion cannot
-here be made fanned the smouldering fire. Their chief complaints were
-that they were required to work, and to abandon a bit of pasturage,
-only a few acres, for the new agency grounds and gardens. Events drew
-on like the fates in a Greek tragedy, and on the morning of September
-29, 1879, Mr. Meeker was cruelly massacred.
-
-The little town of Meeker marks the site of the Meeker massacre. Here
-is a little village of a thousand inhabitants, located on White River,
-among the most beautiful of the mountain ranges,--the location being
-very much like that of Florence, in Italy,--which is the centre of a
-very rich agricultural and grazing region. Meeker is now forty-five
-miles from a railroad, the nearest station being Rifle, on the Denver
-and Rio Grande, a few miles from Glenwood Springs; but the Moffet road
-brings to it railroad connection with Denver. There is an extensive
-stage line of over one hundred miles, starting from Rifle and going
-on through Meeker up into the mountains, where the hunting attracts a
-great number of travellers, and especially many Englishmen. It is in
-this region that President Roosevelt's happy hunting-grounds lie, and
-he is a familiar and favorite figure in Meeker.
-
-There is a little gray-stone Episcopal church among other churches that
-adorn this town, which has laid out a handsome park and which has the
-perpetual adornment of the beautiful river that flows through it. The
-mountains about supply streams that make irrigation easy, and the great
-fields of wheat, potatoes, and alfalfa are fertile and prosperous.
-Irrigation makes it everywhere possible to control the climatic
-conditions.
-
-Meeker is the county seat of Rio Blanco County, in which uranium has
-been discovered in two different places; and two oil wells, each at a
-cost of four thousand dollars, a creamery, costing nearly six thousand
-dollars, and water-works at a cost of sixty thousand dollars, have been
-established within the past two years. Fifteen reservoirs and eighty
-miles of irrigation ditches were constructed in 1905, and in that year
-was harvested, in this county, a quarter of a million bushels of wheat,
-oats, and rye.
-
-The basis on which Greeley was founded is thus outlined in the official
-documents drawn up by Nathan Cook Meeker:
-
- "I propose to unite with proper persons in the establishment of a
- Union colony in Colorado territory. A location which I have seen
- is well watered with streams and springs; there are beautiful
- pine groves, the soil is rich, the climate healthful, grass will
- keep stock the year round, coal and stone are plentiful, and a
- well-travelled road runs through the property."
-
-Mr. Meeker proceeded to note the cost of the land,--eighteen dollars
-for every one hundred and sixty acres,--and he especially called
-attention--for he had the poet's eye--to the grandeur of the Rocky
-Mountain scenery, and he added:
-
- "The persons with whom I would be willing to associate must be
- temperance men and ambitious to establish good society, and among
- as many as fifty, ten should have as much as ten thousand dollars
- each, or twenty should have five thousand dollars each, while
- others may have from two hundred dollars to one thousand dollars
- and upward. For many to go so far without means could only result
- in disaster."
-
-The practical wisdom of this clause will be appreciated. The true
-idealist is the most practical and wisest of counsellors. It is only
-false idealism that leads to destruction. Mr. Meeker's idea was to
-make the settlement a village, with ample building lots, and then to
-apportion to each family from forty to one hundred and sixty acres
-outside for agriculture.
-
-On such a basis as this the Union Colony of Greeley was founded. A
-constitution was adopted that is a model of the condensation of the
-duties of good citizenship. Industry, temperance, education, and
-religion were the pillars on which the superstructure was raised. It
-is little wonder that the social quality of Greeley to-day--thirty-six
-years after its inauguration as a community--is of the highest type and
-exceptional among all the cities of the United States.
-
-Irrigation was the first necessity. A canal thirty miles long was dug,
-costing sixty thousand dollars. The Cache la Poudre was first examined
-and then tapped to furnish water. The elevation of the surrounding high
-bluffs secured the needed descent for the flow of water. The life began.
-
-Greeley is now a town of some seven thousand inhabitants; the seat of
-the State Normal College, which its president, Dr. Z. X. Snyder, has
-made one of the great educational institutions, not only of Colorado,
-but of the United States; a college that draws students from almost
-every section, even from New England, so able is President Snyder's
-course of instruction and so admirable are the opportunities it
-affords for subsequent connection with the fine public school system
-in Colorado. A position in any of these offers a higher salary than
-can be obtained in the East, to say nothing of many other advantages
-associated with the work. Dr. Snyder was one of the eminent educators
-of the East; and when some sixteen years since he accepted his present
-responsible office, he brought to it the best traditions of Eastern
-culture and united them with the zeal and freedom and infinite
-energy of the West. The Normal campus of forty acres on high ground,
-overlooking the town, with President Snyder's residence in the grounds
-and other college buildings near, comprise a beautiful feature of
-Greeley. The western view, both from the college and from the home of
-President and Mrs. Snyder, over the mountain range including Long's
-Peak, is one of almost incomparable beauty. The faculty of the State
-Normal comprises thirty specialists; there is a library of thirty
-thousand volumes; the laboratory has the latest scientific equipment
-of the day; the art department and the music course are admirably
-conducted; French, German, and Italian are taught according to the
-latest language methods; and athletics, domestic science, nature
-studies, all receive due recognition. The "Training School" of the
-State Normal College has an attendance of nearly five hundred, and the
-graduates of this institution begin work on salaries ranging from five
-hundred to twenty-five hundred dollars annually. The tuition is free to
-all citizens of Colorado.
-
-The many churches, the excellent public schools, the clubs and
-societies for social enjoyment and improvement, indicate the high
-quality of life in Greeley. There are three newspapers; and of these
-the "Greeley Tribune," founded by Mr. Meeker and now under the able
-editorship of Mr. C. H. Wolfe, has created for itself more than a
-local reputation. Financially, Greeley stands well, with its several
-banks and its solidity of resources.
-
-There is hardly a shabby house to be found in all the town, whether of
-residence or business. Every building has a neat and thrifty aspect,
-and the art of architecture has been especially studied, for almost
-without exception every house, whether large or small, is tasteful and
-attractive. A bay window is thrown out here, a little balcony there,
-a piazza, a loggia, an oriel window, and the eye is gratified. But,
-besides this dainty and tasteful architecture, the one great feature
-of Greeley is her beautiful streets. These are due directly to the
-taste and the direction of the founder, Mr. Meeker. The streets are one
-hundred feet wide, lined invariably--every street in the town--with a
-double row of shade trees, giving coolness, beauty, and contributing
-much to the modification of the temperature. Every deed granted in
-Greeley forbids the sale of any intoxicating liquor. There is not a
-saloon in the place. There is not a loafer or a criminal, nor are there
-any poor in the unfortunate sense of the large cities. No police are
-needed. The jail is locally known as a mere ornamental appendage to the
-fine forty thousand dollar courthouse.
-
-For many years it has been felt that some expression should be made in
-honor of the memory of the founder of Greeley, and this has now taken
-form in the project for the "Meeker Memorial Library," which is in
-preparation. The beautiful young city is itself, however, the best
-memorial of its noble founder. It is a living monument of perpetually
-increasing greatness and beauty; and who to-day can wander under the
-shade of the beautiful trees which in a double row line every street
-and boulevard--trees planted in 1870 under Mr. Meeker's personal
-superintendence--without hearing amid the rustle of their whispering
-leaves the poet's words, that fall like a benediction:
-
- "Be of good cheer, brave spirit; steadfastly
- Serve that low whisper thou hast served; for know,
- God hath a select family of sons
- Now scattered wide thro' earth, and each alone,
- Who are thy spiritual kindred, and each one
- By constant service to that inward law,
- Is weaving the sublime proportions
- Of a true monarch's soul. Beauty and strength,
- The riches of a spotless memory,
- The eloquence of truth, the wisdom got
- By searching of a clear and loving eye
- That seeth as God seeth. These are their gifts,
- And Time, who keeps God's word, brings on the day
- To seal the marriage of these minds with thine,
- Thine everlasting lovers. Ye shall be
- The salt of all the elements, world of the world."
-
-The glamour of romance can never fade from Colorado, whose entire
-history is one of heroic deeds and splendid energy; but the primitive
-stage of the state is already left far behind with the nineteenth
-century. In its intellectual and scientific development the years of
-the twentieth century have almost exceeded its twenty-four years
-of life as a state in the nineteenth. The tide of immigration still
-continues, but from being the objective point of mining activities
-where fortune hunters rushed to find a royal road to riches, it is
-now a state of agriculture and of commerce. Social conditions are
-thus altered; and though some of these conditions are those of mining
-regions, as in the Cripple Creek district, they have altered from the
-typical Bret Harte mining-camp life to those of orderly progress,--to
-the life dominated by twentieth-century ideals of humanity; the
-life whose framework is seen in public-school systems, in religious
-observance, in the liberal reading of periodical and other literature,
-and in the maintenance of public libraries as a necessity in every
-community.
-
-The dawn of literary and artistic development in Colorado is very
-evident,--a dawn that is already of such radiant promise as to forecast
-the day when this state shall contribute to our greatest national
-literature. A large number of individual writers could already be named
-whose work in books, magazine articles, and excellent journalism might
-well be held as typical of the best culture of the entire country. The
-first wild turmoil of a new and richly varied state has given way to
-a prosperous, progressive commonwealth. Material progress must still
-always precede the higher growth, yet the air is vital with ideas,
-and the vision of Colorado is always toward the stars. The beauty
-and majesty of the environment cannot but react upon the people. The
-growth of women's clubs has been one steady factor of progress, with
-most favorable effect on all the general life of intellectual and moral
-advancement. The public libraries in every centre establish and develop
-the reading habit. While a love for beauty is an element in human life,
-the influence of the transcendent majesty and incomparable sublimity
-of the Colorado scenery will continue to prove a source of inspiration
-to the mental and moral life of the people. The changing colors of
-the mountains are a constant delight. Colorado offers a perpetual
-feast of beauty. Her resources are infinite. Colorado combines all
-the exaltation of the untried with an abundance of the conveniences
-and luxuries of the older civilization; and of this Centennial State
-it is difficult to record facts and statistics that do not seem to
-suggest the tales of a thousand nights. With resources and with scenic
-loveliness which no language could exaggerate, it is still only to
-those who themselves know and appreciate the grandeur of this state
-that any interpretation of it will appear as rather within than as
-at all beyond the limits of the most statistical and demonstrable
-facts. The East has already outgrown the tradition that the entire
-trans-Mississippi region is a howling wilderness. Colorado is no longer
-as vague as is Calcutta to the average mind. Dr. Edward Everett Hale
-exclaimed that he desired his sons to know that there was something in
-the world besides Beacon Street, and this ambition has of late years
-become too prevalent to leave even the extreme East in any absolute and
-total ignorance of the wonderful West. Still it may be true that the
-flying visions from Pullman-car windows are marvellously extended and
-intensified by increasing familiarity with the almost incredibly swift
-progress of this region.
-
-A typical illustration of the fallibility of human judgment is seen in
-the attitude taken in 1838 by the great Daniel Webster on the floor of
-the United States Senate against an appropriation for a post route west
-of the Missouri River.
-
-"What do we want," said he, "of this vast worthless area,--this region
-of savages and wild beasts, of deserts, shifting sands, and whirlwinds
-of dust, of cactus and prairie dogs? To what use could we ever hope to
-put these great deserts, or these endless mountain ranges, impregnable
-and covered to their base with eternal snow? What use have we for such
-a country? Mr. President, I will never vote one cent from the public
-treasury to place the Pacific Coast one inch nearer Boston than it is
-to-day."
-
-It is a far cry from this "vast worthless area," as Mr. Webster termed
-it in 1838, to the grand and richly promising state of to-day, with its
-splendid young cities where art and science unite with literature and
-ethics in the rapid development of social progress; with its mountain
-ranges climbed in palace cars; its electric transit and electric
-lighting; its vivid and forceful achievements, that even in each
-decade concentrate the progress of a century, as seen in the past.
-
-It is not a mere vagary, but rather a practical and momentous fact,
-that Colorado is peculiarly the realm receptive to invisible potencies
-and mental impressions. Science is now confronted with the question
-as to whether thought and electricity may be identified as the same
-force under different degrees of manifestation. "There is an elemental
-essence--a strange living force--which surrounds us on every side, and
-which is singularly susceptible to the influence of human thought,"
-says an English scientist, and he continues: "This essence responds
-with the most wonderful delicacy to the faintest action of our minds
-or desires; and this being so, it is interesting to note how it is
-affected when the human mind formulates a definite thought or desire."
-All the significance of a thousand years may be concentrated in an
-instant's thought, as all the heat stored up in all the forests of the
-world is concentrated in a small quantity of radium. Emerson embodies
-this truth in the stanza:
-
- "His instant thought a poet spoke,
- And filled the age his fame;
- An inch of ground the lightning strook
- But lit the sky with flame."
-
-It is intensity, not duration, that is of consequence, and that
-determines results. To state that there is something in the Colorado
-air that incites active and lofty thought; that uplifts the soul and
-enables one to discern the practical processes for identifying the
-most marvellous scenic grandeur of the civilized world with the most
-advanced processes of applied industries, is to state a simple fact.
-Phillips Brooks once said:
-
- "I know no ideal humanity that is not filled and pervaded with
- the superhuman. God in man is not unnatural, but the absolutely
- natural. That is what the incarnation makes us know.... The truths
- of heaven and the truths of earth are in perfect sympathy.... The
- needs of human nature are supreme, and have a right to the divinest
- help."
-
-The early explorers and pioneers in Colorado felt this truth, so
-finely stated by Bishop Brooks, even if they did not formulate it in
-words. The apparently insuperable obstacles of a land where the desert
-disputed the space with the Titanic mountain ranges piled against the
-sky, incited them to effort rather than paralyzed their energy. It
-is fitting that this most ideal state, rich in resources of almost
-undreamed-of variety and importance, should present a significant
-object lesson in the working out of the problem involved in the higher
-civilization of the twentieth century. The future of Denver, of Pueblo,
-Colorado Springs, Greeley, and other important centres, is a most
-important part of the future of the nations. The Star of high destiny
-shines on the Centennial State.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE SURPRISES OF NEW MEXICO
-
- "_But my minstrel knows and tells
- The counsel of the gods,
- Knows of Holy Book the spells,
- Knows the law of Night and Day,_
-
- * * * * *
-
- _What sea and land discoursing say
- In sidereal years._"
-
- EMERSON
-
-
-New Mexico is the scene of surprises. Traditionally supposed to be
-a country that is as remote as possible from the accepted canons of
-polite society; that is also an arid waste whose temperature exceeds
-the limits of any well-regulated thermometer,--it reveals itself
-instead as a region whose temperature is most delightful, whose
-coloring of sky and atmosphere is often indescribably beautiful, and
-whose inhabitants include their fair proportion of those who represent
-the best culture and intelligence of our country. New Mexico has a
-mixed population. To a hundred and sixty thousand Americans there are a
-hundred and twenty-five thousand of Spanish or Mexican descent; a few
-hundred Chinese and Japanese, and some thirteen thousand Indians, who
-are, however, peaceful and industrious, and a proportion of whom
-have been educated in the Government schools for the Indians.
-
-[Illustration: ACOMA, NEW MEXICO]
-
-The altitude of New Mexico seldom falls to less than five thousand
-feet, so that the air is cool and exhilarating. The rock formations
-partake of the same rich hue that characterizes those in Colorado and
-in Arizona, and as the soil is rich there is a continual play of color.
-The scenery is one changeful, picturesque panorama of mountains, rock,
-or walled cañons, vast mesas, uncanny buttes, and lava fields left by
-some vanished volcanic fires. The ancient Indian pueblos are still
-largely inhabited, and strange ruins of unknown civilizations add
-their atmosphere of mystery. The mouldering remains of the old Pecos
-church and the strange communistic dwellings in the old Pueblo de Taos;
-the ruins of the fortress and the seven circular mounds, which were
-the council-chambers and halls for mystic rites of the prehistoric
-civilization; and the fabled site of the ancient Aztec city where
-tradition says Montezuma was born,--all contribute to a unique interest
-in this "land of the turquoise sky," as New Mexico is called.
-
-Acoma, the ancient pueblo perched on a perpendicular precipice four
-hundred feet high, with its terraced dwellings of adobe, its gigantic
-church, its reservoir cut out of solid rock, and its inhabitants with
-their strange customs, is fairly accessible to the traveller from
-Albuquerque by a drive of some twenty miles. Mr. Lummis calls it "the
-most wonderful pueblo," and "the most remarkable city in the world,"
-as compared, of course, with other pueblos and ruined cities. Acoma has
-a present population of some four hundred Indians, and its romantic
-beauty of location is unparalleled. There are scientists who incline
-to believe that the original Acoma was built on the top of the _Mesa
-Encantada_,--the "Enchanted Mesa,"--a sheer, precipitous rock seven
-hundred feet high which is now practically unscalable; although Mr.
-F. W. Hodge, of the Bureau of Ethnology, achieved this apparently
-impossible feat, and found what is, in his convictions, unmistakable
-evidence of human habitation, supporting the traditions regarding this
-colossal rock. Some mighty cataclasm of nature swept the approach away;
-but if ever there were human habitations on the "Enchanted Mesa," the
-period is lost in prehistoric ages.
-
-[Illustration: THE ENCHANTED MESA, NEW MEXICO]
-
-The colossal church in Acoma is a striking feature. Its walls are ten
-feet in thickness and sixty feet high, and the church and yard in
-which it stands consumed forty years in their construction. It was
-only reached by rude stairs cut in the rock. Dim traditions, which are
-perhaps hardly more than speculative theory, suggest that these steps
-of approach were suddenly swept away by some convulsion of nature at
-a time when the men of this prehistoric pueblo were away hunting, or
-otherwise engaged in procuring means of sustenance, and that the women
-and children were thus cut off from all supplies and aid and left to
-starve. Mr. Lummis has a theory that seems to him possible, if not
-probable, that there was a ledge of neighboring rocks which served as
-ladders to the _Mesa Encantada_, and that these rocks were swept away
-by some frightful storm, or some sudden convulsion of nature, during
-the absence of the men; and that a new city--the present Acoma--was
-then built on the lesser rock on which it now stands. Acoma was old
-even when Coronado, in 1540, made his expedition through the country,
-from which period the authentic history of New Mexico begins with the
-meagre records of the heroic friars and the memorials of the Spanish
-conquerors. Laguna, a pueblo founded in 1699, lies twenty miles from
-Acoma on the Santa Fé route, of which it is one of the interesting
-features. All these old Spanish missions, which are found in more or
-less degrees of preservation in all this chain of pueblos in the valley
-of the Rio Grande, contain ancient paintings and statues of saints.
-Largely, the paintings are crude and worthless, but there exist those
-that have legitimate claim to art as the work of Spanish artists not
-unknown to fame. Among these is the painting of San José in the mission
-at Acoma, a painting presented by Charles II of Spain. This mission
-was founded by Friar Ramirez, who dedicated it "To God, to the Roman
-Catholic Church, and to St. Joseph,"--who was the patron saint of this
-pueblo.
-
-There is an amusing legend that Laguna, submerged in all manner of
-disasters, looked on the prosperity of Acoma and ascribed it wholly to
-the influence of this picture of the saint before which the people made
-their daily adorations and laid their votive offerings. Laguna believed
-that San José would invest it with the same felicities enjoyed by the
-neighboring city, could they only secure the portrait, and their urgent
-plea to borrow it for a time was granted by Acoma. Their confidence in
-the saint was justified; peace and plenty again smiled on Laguna, and
-they made their daily devotions before the great picture. At length, so
-runs the legend, Acoma reminded Laguna that a loan was not a gift,--to
-be held in perpetual fee, and demanded its return. The faithless people
-of Laguna declared it was their own,--and the case actually went into
-litigation and was tried in Court. Judge Kirby Benedict, after hearing
-all the evidence, decided in favor of Acoma, but the picture had
-mysteriously disappeared. The messengers sent from Acoma to bring the
-sacred treasure at last discovered it under a tree half-way between
-the two pueblos. They instantly recognized that the saint, rejoiced
-at the righteous decision, had started on his homeward journey of his
-own volition. The last one of the Franciscan friars to minister in New
-Mexico was Padre Mariano de Jesus Lopez, whose work was in Acoma, the
-"city in the sky." Of all the cliff-built cities, Acoma is the most
-marvellous. Its terraced dwellings seem, as Mr. Lummis so graphically
-says, to be "the castles of giants," for "the lapse of ages has carved
-the rocks into battlements, buttresses, walls, columns, and towers,
-and the view from this cloud-swept city is one never to be forgotten.
-On this cliff the sand rises and falls like the billows of the sea."
-
-[Illustration: LAGUNA, NEW MEXICO, ON THE SANTA FÉ RAILROAD]
-
-No latter-day interest of contemporary life, either in the romantic
-scenery or the potential development of New Mexico, can exceed the
-richness of its prehistoric past and the marvels of this ancient
-civilization that yet remain. Alluding to these wonderful monumental
-remains, Colonel Max Frost, of Santa Fé, who knows his territory in
-every aspect of its life and its attractions, says:
-
- "The Pajarito Cliff-dwellers' Park, the Chaco Cañon, the Gila
- Cañon, western Valencia and Socorro counties abound in cliff and
- communal buildings, the age of which has puzzled scientists, but
- which are older than any other ruins on the American continent, and
- probably in the world. The most accessible cliff-dwellers' region
- is the Pajarito Park, only one day's overland trip from Santa Fé or
- Española, in which twenty thousand cliff-dwellings and caves are
- situated within a comparatively small area. The scenery of this
- natural park is superb; 'wonderful' is the only adjective that
- will do justice to the caves in the cliffs, high and inaccessible
- almost as eagles' nests, but showing many other signs of occupation
- besides the peculiar picture writings in the soft volcanic tufa of
- which the cliffs are composed. In addition to the cliffs, there are
- remains of communal buildings of later occupation, some of them
- containing as high as twelve hundred rooms. There are also burial
- mounds with remains of ancient pottery. Along the eastern foot of
- this steep plateau flows the Rio Grande and lie the villages of
- San Ildefonso, Santa Clara, and San Juan, while to the west rise
- the stupendous mountain masses of the Valles, the Cochiti and
- Jemez ranges, with their deep forests and cañons, their famous hot
- springs, their Indian villages, and their mines. Where else on
- earth is there so much of the beautiful in scenery, of romance,
- of historic monuments, of prehistoric remains, of the ancient,
- the unique, the picturesque, the sublime, to be found as within a
- radius of fifty miles of Santa Fé? One day's trip will take the
- wanderer from the historic Old Palace and San Miguel Church in the
- City of the Holy Faith, over the foothills of the Sangre de Cristo
- range, from which rise in full view mountain peaks almost thirteen
- thousand feet high, into the picturesque Tesuque Valley and by the
- ancient Indian pueblo of Tesuque. The road winds through sandhills
- that the air and the rain have cut into grotesque shapes, huge as
- Titans and weird as the rock formations in the Garden of the Gods.
- Then come once more fertile fields and the village of Cuymungue,
- formerly an Indian pueblo, now a native settlement. Along the
- Nambe River, with its grand falls, close by the Indian pueblo of
- Nambe to the pueblo of San Ildefonso on the Rio Grande; then along
- that river through the laughing Española Valley, past the Black
- Mesa, a famous Indian battleground, into the large Indian pueblo
- of Santa Clara and its mission church to Santa Cruz, also with a
- quaint and ancient church building, threads the wagon road across
- the river into Española. From there the road ascends the wildly
- beautiful Santa Clara Cañon, along a rippling trout stream up to
- the steep cliffs of the Puye and the Shufinne, with their hundreds
- and thousands of prehistoric caves and communal buildings. And
- all that in one day's journey overland! If the trip be prolonged
- another day or two, the remarkable hot springs at Ojo Caliente and
- the hot springs in the deep chasm of the Rio Grande at Wamsley's,
- the Indian pueblos of Picuris and Taos, the finest trout streams
- and best haunts of wild game, or the Jicarilla Indian Reservation,
- as well as busy lumber and mining camps, can be visited. And that
- is only in one direction from Santa Fé! Going south, one day's trip
- will pass through the quaint settlements of Agua Fria, Cienega,
- and Cieneguilla, by the Tiffany turquoise mines, the old mining
- camp of Bonanza, the smelter at Cerrillos, the Ortiz gold placers,
- worked a hundred years before gold was discovered in California and
- still yielding gold dust and nuggets, the coal mines at Madrid,
- where bituminous and anthracite coal have been mined from the same
- hillside, the placer and gold mines of Golden and San Pedro, not to
- speak of sheep and cattle ranches and the beautiful scenery of the
- Cerrillos, Ortiz, San Pedro, and Sandia mountains.
-
- "Another trip of one day from Santa Fé will take the traveller
- by the pueblo ruins of Arroyo Hondo over Apache hill, the
- battlegrounds of Apache Springs, the interesting native settlement
- of Cañoncito, over Glorieta Pass and the battlefield of Glorieta,
- to the upper Pecos River, by the ancient and historic Pecos church
- ruins, the village of Pecos, and through the most beautiful
- summer-resort country in the Southwest, where trout streams babble
- in every cañon and where from one summit can be surveyed the hoary
- heads of eleven of the twelve highest peaks in New Mexico.
-
- "Another day's trip out of Santa Fé will take the visitor up the
- rugged Santa Fé Cañon, by the large reservoir and the Aztec mineral
- springs to the Scenic Highway, which crosses the Santa Fé range
- into the upper Pecos Valley and unfolds at every step new mountain
- views and panoramas magnificent beyond description. Nor do these
- trips exhaust the interesting points in and about Santa Fé. Almost
- every other town in the territory offers sights and scenes of equal
- interest to the tourist and sightseer.
-
- "The prehistoric ruin of the Chaco Cañon and Pueblo Bonito, in
- southeastern San Juan County, as well as those at Aztec, in the
- same county, are more fully excavated than those of the Pajarito
- Park, and in some respects are more palatial and more impressive.
- They can best be reached from Gallup or Thoreau on the Santa Fé
- Railway in McKinley County.
-
- "The prehistoric ruins on the Gila Forest Reserve, as well as those
- in western Valencia and Socorro counties, have not been thoroughly
- explored thus far, being distant from the highways of travel;
- but on this very account they should have a special charm and
- attraction for the student of archæology.
-
-[Illustration: CLIFF DWELLER RUINS, NEAR SANTA FÉ, NEW MEXICO]
-
-[Illustration: STONE TENT, CLIFF DWELLERS, NEW MEXICO]
-
- "Coming to more recent, although still ancient days, the ruins
- of the Gran Quivira and of nearby abandoned pueblo villages,
- between the Jumanes Mesa and the Mal Pais and Jornado del Muerto,
- are of great historic interest. They are best reached from the
- station of Willard at the junction of the Santa Fé Central and
- Eastern Railway of New Mexico. Similar ruins are found in western
- Valencia, Socorro, and other counties, and divide the interest of
- the tourist with the many present-day Indian pueblos and Spanish
- settlements boasting of considerable antiquity. The Zuñi, Navaho,
- Jicarilla, and Mescalero Indian reservations are well worthy a
- visit, and upon the first two named are many prehistoric ruins.
-
- "Foremost in interest and value in historic archæology are the
- old mission churches of the Franciscans. In every occupied Indian
- pueblo and at the site of almost every abandoned pueblo, there
- is one of the monuments of those pioneers of Christianity and
- civilization, the Franciscan Fathers. Many of these are in a good
- state of preservation, while others are in ruins, but every one is
- an object of historic interest.
-
- "The old mission church of San Diego, which is the oldest of the
- California missions, was founded in 1769. It is almost a total
- ruin; only the front remains in a good state of preservation. The
- side walls are still standing, but no portions of the roof or
- interior remain. This is the most venerable and venerated historic
- monument in the state of California, and is annually visited by
- thousands of tourists. It has stood for one hundred and sixty-four
- years. It marks the beginning of civilization and Christianity
- in California. And yet, in New Mexico, on the upper Pecos,
- thirty-five miles west of Las Vegas, at the site of the abandoned
- Pueblo of Cicuye, are the ruins of the old Pecos church. The church
- is three hundred years old. It was nearly one hundred and fifty
- years old when the San Diego mission was founded. It was projected
- before the Spanish Armada was destroyed and antedates the coming of
- the Mayflower and the settlement of Jamestown. All that is said of
- the old Pecos church may be said of that of Jemez. They were built
- at the same time. The one at Gran Quivira was founded in 1630, and
- is a fairly well-preserved ruin. The churches at San Ildefonso and
- Santa Clara are in a complete state of preservation. They are nine
- years older than the oldest of the California ruins. The old San
- Miguel mission in Santa Fé has been rebuilt. Its walls date from
- 1650, the roof from 1694, or possibly a few years later. From the
- old church at Algodones was taken a bell, cast in Spain in 1356,
- and at the Cathedral at Santa Fé and other churches are ancient
- relics and art treasures of old Spanish and Italian masters. These
- are only a few examples selected at random from the large number
- of ancient churches of equally great interest scattered over New
- Mexico. Inscription Rock, on the old road to Zuñi, and every one of
- the pueblos from Taos on the north to Isleta on the south, and from
- the Rio Grande pueblos in the central part to Zuñi in the west, are
- worthy of a visit, both for historic and present-day interest.
-
- "Nor is there any other building in this country to compare in
- historic interest with the Old Palace at Santa Fé, which has been
- more to New Mexico than Faneuil Hall to Massachusetts or Liberty
- Hall to Pennsylvania, nor is there any other town in the United
- States which offers so much of interest to the tourist as the city
- of St. Francis d'Assisi."
-
-It is no exaggeration to say that in many respects the archæological
-interest of New Mexico, its atmosphere, its historic color, is as
-distinctive as that of Egypt or of Greece, Italy, or Spain. When,
-on December 15, 1905, the first long-distance telephone in Santa Fé
-established communication _viva voce_ with Denver, while within a
-radius of fifty miles, ruins of prehistoric civilization fascinated
-the tourist,--surely the remote past and the latest developments of
-the present met and mingled after the fashion of "blue spirits and
-gray." Very curiously mixed is the civilization of New Mexico. It can
-almost be said to lie in strata, like geologic testimony. The ancient
-peoples whose very name is lost,--shrouded in antiquity that has closed
-the chapters and refuses to turn the pages for the twentieth-century
-reader; the Indian population; the Spanish, whose explorers--Alvar
-Nuñez, Cabeza de Vaca, Coronado, Juan de Oñate, and others--and whose
-missionaries, from the ranks of the Franciscan friars, brought to the
-savage land the first message of modern civilization; and the American,
-which within almost the past half-century has established itself since
-that August day of 1846 when General Kearny floated the stars and
-stripes from the "Old Palace" in Santa Fé. The American civilization
-and high enlightenment has poured itself into this "Land of the Sun
-King,"--the "Land of the Turquoise Sky." For now, as Colonel Frost
-has so ably and comprehensively noted, "New Mexico is strictly up to
-date in its government, in its hotels, its railroad accommodations, in
-the protection the law affords, in its universities, colleges, public
-schools, sanitariums, charitable institutions, its progress, and in
-its prosperity. Churches are found in every settlement, newspapers in
-every town, together with fine stores, banking institutions, and every
-safety, comfort, and luxury that the centres of civilization of the
-East afford." If that vivid and inspiring group of the Muses,--the
-muse of History, of Science, of Philosophy, and others,--painted by
-Puvis de Chavannes to adorn the court of the grand stairway of rich
-Siena marble in the Public Library of Boston,--an achievement in modern
-art that alone would immortalize the great painter of France,--if
-these Muses could visit New Mexico, the specialty of each would be
-found. The richly historic past that has left its various records; the
-present, that has impressed into its service every power of science,
-of engineering, of architectural construction, of agriculture, and of
-social progress, would furnish to each a vast field in its own especial
-domain.
-
-A work published in Paris somewhere about the middle of the nineteenth
-century, entitled "_Memoires Historiques sur La Louisiane_,"--a
-book that has never been translated,--gives an account of a French
-expedition in New Mexico in search of a mine of emeralds and their
-encounter with the Spanish forces; but although in this engagement
-the Spanish troops suffered disaster, the Spanish civilization still
-continues, while there is little permanent trace of the French in New
-Mexico. It is a curious fact, however, that the present continues this
-varied and strangely assorted grouping of races which characterized the
-country in its earliest days.
-
-New Mexico reminds one of Algiers. There is the same Oriental
-suggestion of intense coloring, of dazzling brilliancy of sky, of
-gleaming pearl, of floating clouds.
-
-There is one feature of this trans-Continental trip which is of the
-first importance to the tourist, and this is the line of artistic and
-beautiful hotels built after the old mission design, the architecture
-felicitously harmonizing with the landscape,--those Harvey hotels
-built in connection with the Santa Fé stations at principal points, as
-at Trinidad, Las Vegas, Albuquerque, and others, all christened with
-Spanish names,--the "Cardenas," the "Castañeda," the "Alvarado,"--all
-of which are conducted with a perfection of cuisine and service
-that is rarely equalled. The social and the picturesque charm of
-the long journey is singularly enhanced by the leisurely stops made
-for refreshment; the leaving the long train--with its two engines,
-one at either end--for the little exercise in fresh air gained by
-going into the dining-rooms; being able to procure papers at the news
-stands, fruit, or other delicacies, and enjoying the scenery and
-gaining some knowledge of the place. In connection with the Alvarado,
-at Albuquerque, are two buildings: one that offers a most interesting
-museum of Indian archæological and ethnological collections, and
-the other showing native goods from Africa and the Pacific islands.
-Salesrooms connected with these enable the traveller to purchase any
-souvenir from a trifle, to the costly baskets, richly colored Navajo
-blankets, the strange symbolic pottery, or the objects of religious
-rites.
-
-A day's delay at Albuquerque enables the traveller to visit four
-interesting pueblos,--Santa Ana, Sandia, Zia, and Jemez,--in a day's
-stage ride between Jemez and Albuquerque. At all these important
-stations on the route the Santa Fé has established free reading-rooms
-for its employés, fitted up with every comfort.
-
-New Mexico, while partaking in the general fascination that invests all
-the great Southwest, is especially not only a land of enchantment, but
-a land of opportunities. It is a country of untold latent wealth, of
-uncalculated resources. There are vast tracts of soil that are ready
-for the cultivation they will so bountifully repay; there are over
-three hundred mining districts, few of which are developed. Six million
-sheep are grazing upon its thousand hills, which would furnish raw
-material for a large number of woollen mills. The land is favorable for
-the culture of the sugar beet, and manufactories for this product are
-needed. A local authority states that "the rubber plant is indigenous
-and mineral products are of such extent and variety that industries
-that need them for raw material, or incidentally in the process of
-manufacture, will find in this part of the United States a location
-much more favorable than most of the Eastern manufacturing centres.
-There exist large deposits of iron ore, fluxing material and fuel for
-furnaces, steel mills and smelters, and there are but few branches
-of manufacture which could not be established with profit in this
-part of the Southwest. Besides the raw material there are offered the
-water-power, the fuel, the cheap labor, special inducements, such as
-exemption from taxation for the first five years and a low assessment
-thereafter, favorable legislation, cheap building sites, railroad
-facilities, freedom from excessive competition, the increasing home
-demand of a growing commonwealth of vast resources, and proximity to
-the markets of Mexico and the Orient....
-
-"Farmers are urged to come to till the fertile soil under the most
-favorable conditions, and with home markets that pay better prices
-than can be obtained anywhere else. Only a quarter of a million of
-acres are under cultivation, and most of these only in forage plants
-or in products that demand little attention; four times that area is
-immediately available for agricultural purposes. Not one-half of the
-flowing water is utilized, and not one-fiftieth of the flood water is
-stored. There are undeveloped possibilities of farming by the Campbell
-or dry-soil method. New Mexico raises the finest fruit in the world,
-and every other crop that can be produced anywhere in the temperate
-zone. Yet it imports annually millions of dollars' worth of flour,
-alfalfa, hay, potatoes, fruit, garden produce, poultry, eggs, butter,
-cheese, honey, beef, pork, and other products of the farm and dairy
-that it can and should raise at home. Free lands, the finest climate
-in the world, irrigation, churches, schools, railroad facilities, home
-markets, good prices, and extensive range, are all factors which help
-to make the life of the farmer and stock grower in New Mexico pleasant
-and prosperous."
-
-The visitor from the East enters New Mexico through a long tunnel;
-and in Raton, a prosperous city of some eight thousand people located
-in the Raton Mountains, is found the centre of an enormous coal belt,
-and also a promising oil field. Raton is called the "Gate City." It
-exports ice of a very pure quality, the water being from a reservoir
-of a capacity of over fifty million gallons. The streets of Raton are
-graded and have electric lighting; there is a fine park, long-distance
-telephonic connection with Colorado and New Mexican cities, and its
-schools and churches are numerous. A new Raton tunnel is now in
-process of construction by the Santa Fé line that will enter New
-Mexico through the mountains at a lower point. The work is being done
-by electric drills that offer a most interesting spectacle in their
-process. The tunnel will cost a million dollars. Most beautiful is
-the landscape and the coloring of air and sky between Raton and Las
-Vegas. The Cimarron range is silhouetted against the western sky;
-picturesque points on the old Santa Fé trail are seen; and Mora Cañon,
-through which the journey lies, has its romantic attractions. From
-the lofty plateau of Raton's Peak the deep, dark valley of Rio Las
-Animas Perdidas is disclosed; the matchless Spanish Peaks, "Las Cumbres
-Españolas," lift their heads into the blue sky; Pike's Peak gleams like
-a monumental shaft in the clouds, and the Snowy Range, for more than
-two hundred miles, is within the luminous landscape.
-
-Las Vegas, the second city in importance in New Mexico, is a
-fascinating place. There are really three towns of Las Vegas--the old
-Spanish town, still retaining its ancient convent and missions; the
-new, up-to-date Las Vegas, with its Castañeda Hotel--beautiful in the
-old Moorish architecture, with spacious piazzas and balconies; and
-Las Vegas Hot Springs, connected by trolley cars. Thus there is the
-particular paradise of the invalid, or of those who take prevention
-rather than cure and a sunny winter in order not to be invalids; for at
-Las Vegas Hot Springs, to which a branch railroad of this omnipresent
-Santa Fé conveys the traveller--only six miles--the Hot Springs boil
-and bubble like the witches' caldron. Here the guests may immerse
-themselves in boiling mineral water, or lie all day in the sunshine,
-or whatever else they prefer; and the medicinal waters, internally
-and externally administered, are said to make one over altogether.
-Rheumatic and tubercular affections flee, it is said, before this
-treatment and the wonderful air; and apparently if Ponce de Leon had
-only chanced upon Las Vegas he would not have searched in vain for his
-fabled fountain.
-
-Albuquerque is an exceedingly "smart" town. Its residents are almost
-entirely Eastern capitalists, who are living here that they may keep
-an eye on their possessions, mines, ranches, and the things of this
-world in general. However largely they have laid up their treasures
-in heaven, they have a goodly amount also on earth, over which they
-perhaps keep closer watch and ward than over their more immaterial
-possessions. At all events, Albuquerque is a sort of Newport of the
-West, where people drive and dance and dine from one week to another,
-and the women are so stylish as to suggest some occult affinities with
-the Rue de la Paix.
-
-In this brilliant and thoroughly up-to-date young city of Albuquerque,
-the metropolis of New Mexico; in Las Vegas, one of the fascinating
-towns of the continent; in Raton and Gallup, and in its capital, Santa
-Fé, the territory has a galaxy of exceedingly interesting towns.
-
-Albuquerque is the trade centre of a region exceeding in area all New
-England. With a population estimated at some eighteen thousand; the
-seat of the University of New Mexico, whose buildings occupy a plateau
-two hundred feet above the town, commanding a beautiful view; with a
-scenic background of the Sandia and the Jemez mountains; with the most
-extensive free Public Library in the territory; two daily journals and
-a number of weekly papers in both Spanish and English, and several
-monthly publications; with its splendid railway facilities both to
-the North and the South, as well as on the great trans-continental
-line from the East to the Pacific; with the shops of the Santa Fé road
-employing over seven hundred men, as the junction point of three lines
-of this superb system; and with the beautiful Alvarado hotel, in the
-old Spanish mission architecture, from whose wide piazzas the view
-comprises a host of mountain peaks piercing the turquoise sky, and
-whose beauty and comfort is a masterpiece of the magician of the Land
-of Enchantment; with the Musée of Indian relics and souvenirs of the
-Moki, the Navajo, the Zuñi, Pima, and Apache; the fine Mexican filigree
-work; the model of an Indian pueblo, and other curios,--with all these
-and many other interesting aspects, Albuquerque fascinates the tourist.
-In the "Commercial Club" it has a unique institution representing the
-combination of business and social life. The broad streets are well
-lighted by electricity; there is electric transit and a fine water
-system. Albuquerque has also extensive manufacturing interests, in
-foundry, lumber, and other directions, which aggregate an investment of
-over two millions of capital with an annual productive value of more
-than four millions.
-
-Returning to Las Vegas; with its ten thousand inhabitants, its large
-floating population drawn by the medicinal hot springs, and the seat
-of the territorial Normal School. As a noted wool centre, and with its
-daily papers, good schools, and many churches, it is another alluring
-point. One feature of important interest is the new "Scenic Highway"
-that is in process of completion between Las Vegas and Santa Fé, across
-the Pecos Forest Reserve, which will offer some of the grandest views
-in any of the mountain regions of the West. It will be to Santa Fé
-and Las Vegas what the beautiful drive between Naples, Sorrento, and
-Amalfi is to Southern Italy. This scenic road will wind up to the
-Dalton Divide, nine thousand five hundred feet high, where Lake Peak,
-glittering with snow, Santa Fé Cañon, and other peaks and precipices
-and cañons, are all about, and the Pecos River is seen far below as a
-thread of silver. This drive will be one of the famous features of the
-entire West when completed. New Mexico monopolizes the greatest belt of
-coal deposits west of the Missouri, while Arizona has the monopoly in
-pine forests.
-
-The reclamation work in the southern part of the Rio Grande Valley is
-now in successful process, and near Engle a reservoir forty miles in
-length will be established, having a capacity of two million acre-feet.
-It is estimated that a hundred and ten thousand acres of land will thus
-be put under irrigated agriculture which will yield marvellous returns
-in alfalfa, cereals, vegetables, and fruits.
-
-The government has also purchased the system of the Pecos Irrigation
-Company, which is now transferred to the Reclamation Service of the
-United States. This is the largest irrigation scheme in New Mexico. It
-is located on the Pecos River, which is fed from springs many of which
-gush forth from the earth with such force as to indicate that their
-source must be in high, snow-crowned hills.
-
-New Mexico's railroad facilities may be estimated from the fact that
-not a county in the territory is without a railroad, while many have
-the benefit of three lines. With twenty-five hundred miles of railroads
-within the territorial limits already in operation, it is confidently
-expected that this number will be increased to four thousand miles
-within two years, as much of this anticipated increase is already under
-construction. Of the present railways eleven hundred miles belong to
-the Santa Fé system alone. The matchless scenery of the Denver and
-Rio Grande route between Ontonito and Santa Fé offers the tourist one
-of the most enjoyable of trips through Española, Caliente, and other
-points of beauty with the mountain peaks of San Antonio, Taos, Ute, and
-others within the horizon, often appearing like islands swimming in a
-faint blue haze.
-
-There is space and to spare in New Mexico. There are almost unlimited
-possibilities, with much to get and as much to give, and the latter is
-by no means less important in life than the former. Out of a total area
-of over seventy-eight million acres only about a quarter of a million
-are under irrigation agriculture, and the field for reclamation is as
-unlimited as it is promising. The land is fertile and the productions
-are abundant. The sky is a dream of color and of luminous beauty, and
-the climate is one of the most delightful in the entire world. Nor
-does New Mexico suffer from that which is the greatest deprivation of
-Arizona,--the lack of water. There is an abundance of the mountain
-flood waters that now go to waste which would store vast reservoirs;
-there is the flow of copious streams and large river systems, and
-there are artesian belts of water all ready for mechanical appliances.
-The Campbell dry culture, which is increasingly in use in the eastern
-part of Colorado, has been successfully introduced into New Mexico.
-Fruit-growing is already becoming an important industry, and the
-apple orchard, of all other varieties of horticulture, is the most
-successful. At the Paris Exposition in 1900 New Mexico made an exhibit
-of apples, and also at Buffalo in 1901, receiving from the former the
-award to rank with those of the best apple-growing regions in any part
-of the United States, and from the latter the first prize. Peaches,
-pears, and apricots grow well; the cherry does not thrive in New
-Mexico, but grapes are grown with conspicuous success.
-
-The mineral resources of New Mexico are varied, and include gold,
-silver, copper, lead, and other minerals. In precious stones there is
-promise of untold development. The Tiffanys own large turquoise mines,
-whose supply, thus far, has proved inexhaustible; and the opal and
-the moonstone are found in many places. But it is as an agricultural
-commonwealth, and as the repository of vast coal belts, that New Mexico
-is chiefly distinguished.
-
-It was early in February, 1880, that the first train over the Santa
-Fé railroad entered the territorial capital and initiated its
-transformation from the mediæval Spanish town to that which is, in
-part, the theatre of the progressive American life. In Santa Fé one
-of the landmarks pointed out to-day to the visitor is the old Santa
-Fé Trail, whose story was told so vividly, some years ago, by Colonel
-Henry Inman,[2] who has described the majestic solitude of this highway
-and has narrated the mingled experiences of the early pioneers and the
-soldiers who thus marched through the wilderness. History and romance
-mingle in the wonderful past of New Mexico, and it needs no sibyl of
-old to proclaim from the _Mesa Encantada_ the promise of the future to
-this beautiful Land of the Turquoise Sky.
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE STORY OF SANTA FÉ
-
- "_From scheme and creed the light goes out,
- The saintly fact survives,
- The Blessed Master none can doubt
- Revealed in holy lives._"
-
- "_Oh, more than sacred relic, more
- Than solemn rite or sacred lore,
- The holy life of one who trod
- The footmarks of the Christ of God._"
-
-
-In the place once occupied by those whose lives were consecrated to
-the divine ideal, some influence, as potent as it is unseen, binds
-the soul to maintain the honor that they left; to hold the same noble
-standard of life. The spell is felt even while it eludes analysis. Few
-to-day can tread the narrow, primitive little streets of old Santa Fé
-without some consciousness of this mystic influence. It was here, in
-the centuries gone from all save memory, that
-
- "there trod
- The whitest of the saints of God,"
-
-and "The True City of the Holy Faith of Saint Francis" (_La Ciudad Real
-de la Santa Fé de San Francisco_) is forever consecrated by the memory
-of these holy men, and vital with the tragic interest, the heroic and
-pathetic story of their lives. As early as 1539 Friar Marcos de Nizza
-and other Fathers of the Church pressed on into this country--then an
-unknown wilderness--to extend the domain of the Holy Cross and carry
-onward "the true faith of St. Francis." They encountered every hardship
-possible to a savage land; sacrifice and martyrdom were their reward.
-They left a land of learning and refinement to carry the light into
-regions of barbarism. They gave their lives to teaching and prayer,
-and they sowed without reaping their harvest. Yet who shall dare think
-of their brilliant, consecrated lives as wasted? for the lesson they
-taught of absolute faith in God is the most important in life. Faith
-provides the atmosphere through which alone the divine aid can be
-manifested, and the divine aid is sent through and by means of our
-friends and helpers and counsellors in the unseen world. It is man's
-business, his chief business, now and here, to co-operate with God in
-the carrying out of His plans and purposes. It was this literal and
-practical faith in divine aid that the Franciscan Fathers taught in the
-wilderness through all hardship and disaster.
-
- "Say not the struggle naught availeth."
-
-It must always avail.
-
- "Yet do thy work; it shall succeed
- In thine or in another's day,
- And if denied the victor's meed
- Thou shalt not lack the toiler's pay."
-
-This Spanish mission work planted itself over the entire vast region
-which is now known as New Mexico, Arizona, and Southern California.
-The friars set out on long, lonely journeys, wholly without ways and
-means to reach a given destination save as they were guided by unseen
-hands and companioned by unseen guides. The cloud by day and the pillar
-of fire by night led them on. They went forth to meet desolation and
-sacrifice and often martyrdom; yet their gentle zeal and cheerful
-courage never failed. They traversed hundreds of miles of desert
-wastes; they encountered the cruel treatment of the Apaches and the
-Navajos; but these experiences were simply to them the incidents of
-the hour, and had no relation to the ultimate issue of their work. In
-1598 the first church was founded, by a band of ten missionaries who
-accompanied Juan de Oñate, the colonizer, and was called the chapel
-of San Gabriel de los Españoles, but it was deserted when, in 1605,
-the city of Santa Fé was founded by Oñate, and in 1630 the church of
-San Miguel was built. The original wall was partly destroyed in the
-rebellion of a half-century later, but it was restored in 1710, and the
-new cathedral was built on the site where the present one now stands.
-As early as 1617 there were eleven Spanish mission churches within
-the limits of what is now New Mexico,--at Pecos, Jemez, and Taos; at
-Santa Clara, San Felipe, and other places, mostly within the valley
-of the Rio Grande. In six of the historic "seven cities of Cibola,"
-all Zuñi towns, these missions were established; and in the ancient
-pueblo of San Antonio de Senecú, Antonio de Arteaga founded a church
-in 1629; in Picuries, in 1632, Friar Ascencion de Zárate established
-the mission, and in 1635 one also in Isleta. In passing Glorieta, from
-the train windows, to-day, can be seen the ruins of the early mission
-church established there. Before the close of the seventeenth century
-the churches in Acoma, Alameda, Santa Cruz, Cuaray, and Tabirá had been
-founded, the ruins of all of which are still standing. These Franciscan
-Fathers penetrated the desert and made their habitations in solitary
-wastes so desolate that no colonizers would follow; but to the Indians
-they preached and taught them the elements of civilized life.
-
-"Not the wildest conceptions of the mission founders could have
-foreseen the results of their California enterprises," says Professor
-George Wharton James in his interesting work on these old missions.[3]
-"To see the land they found in the possession of thousands of savages
-converted in one short century, to the home of tens of thousands of
-happy, contented people, would have been a wild vision indeed. God
-surely does work mysteriously, marvellously, His wonders to perform."
-
-Santa Fé is the centre of the archdiocese whose other diocesean
-cities are Denver and Tucson. The archbishop, the Most Reverend J. B.
-Salpointe, D.D., whose presence exalts the city of his residence, is
-one who follows reverently in the footsteps of Him whose kingdom on
-earth the early Franciscans labored to establish.
-
-[Illustration: SAN MIGUEL CHURCH, SANTA FÉ]
-
-In 1708 San Miguel was restored by Governor José Chacon Medina
-Salazar y Villaseñor, Marqués de Peñuela, and two years later these
-restorations were completed. An inscription that can be traced to-day
-on the gallery bears this legend:
-
- El Señor Marqués de la Peñuela Hizo Esta Fábrica: El Alférez real
- Don Augustin Flores Vergara su criado. Año de 1710.
-
-Not only is this "City of the Holy Faith" consecrated by that
-sacrificial devotion of the Franciscan Fathers; the heroic explorers
-and pioneers, the brave and dauntless soldiers, from the time of
-Cabeza de Vaca and Coronado to that of the gallant and noble General
-Kearny, have left on Santa Fé the impress of their brave purpose and
-high endeavor. The old Cathedral of San Francisco, the ancient church
-of San Miguel, and the Rosario Chapel, all interest the stranger. In
-1692 Diego de Vargas marched up from the south with two hundred men and
-looked sadly at the little town of Santa Fé, from which his countrymen
-had been driven. It would seem that de Vargas was a romantic figure of
-his time. He was evidently endowed with the characteristic vehemence of
-temperament, intense energy, and the genius for effective action that
-marked the Spanish pioneers. He was rich in resources and manifested
-a power of swift decision regarding all the perplexities into which
-his adventurous life led, ever beckoning him on. The little town he
-had entered appealed to him in its impressive beauty. Surrounded with
-majestic mountains, with their deep and mysterious cañons, it was then,
-as now, a region of entrancing sublimity.
-
-Adjoining San Miguel is the old house where Coronado is said to have
-lodged in 1540. The "Old Palace," always used by the Governors of
-New Mexico, is partly given over to a museum of Indian and Mexican
-curiosities. There is a little library, open only every other
-afternoon; there are many mountain peaks around, which are not
-difficult to climb, and which offer charming views. The new State House
-is a fine modern building, and Governor Hagerman, formerly an attaché
-of the American Embassy at St. Petersburg, is alert and progressive in
-his methods.
-
-More than half the residents of Santa Fé speak no English, and these
-Spanish and Mexican residents have their papers in their own language,
-their separate schools, and their worship in the old Cathedral. In
-the early afternoon women in black, with black mantillas over their
-heads, are seen passing up San Francisco Street and entering the
-Cathedral, where they fall on their knees and tell their beads in the
-silent church. Often one may see in the streets a funeral procession.
-The casket is carried in a cart, and the family sit around it, on
-the bottom of the wagon. A few friends follow on foot, and thus the
-pathetic and grotesque little procession winds on its way.
-
-The history lying in the dim background of this ancient Spanish city is
-one that impresses the imagination. It is a part of all that wonderful
-early exploration by the Spanish pioneers of the vast region of country
-that is now known as Arizona and New Mexico.
-
-In 1538 Cabeza de Vaca, after following the disastrous expedition of
-Pánfilo de Narvaez to Florida, set forth with four men to penetrate
-the vast unknown wastes to the west, and without compass or provisions
-they made their way, crossing the Mississippi two years before its
-discovery by De Soto, reached the Moqui country, and finally arrived in
-Sinolao with glowing tales that excited the enterprise of the Spanish
-conquerors and led to the founding of another expedition authorized
-by the viceroy, Mendoza. It fared forth under the leadership of Padre
-Marcos de Nizza, who (in 1539) entered the country of the Pimas, passed
-up the valley of the Santa Ana, and set up the cross, giving the
-country the name of the New Kingdom of San Francisco.
-
-Padre de Nizza's men were all massacred by the Moquis, but he returned,
-as if bearing a charmed life, and set all New Spain aflame with his
-tales of gold and of glory, and the great opportunity to extend the
-work of the Holy Cross.
-
-Mendoza then proceeded to organize two other expeditions, one under
-the intrepid Vasquez de Coronado and the other under Fernando Alarçon.
-Coronado visited the ruins of Casa Grande and at last reached the
-"Seven Cities," but their fabled wealth had shrunk to the sordid
-actualities of insignificant huts, and Coronado returned to New Spain
-in 1542, disappointed and dejected.
-
-In the meantime the expedition of Alarçon had sailed up the Gulf of
-California (then known as the Sea of Cortez), and he discovered the
-Colorado and the Gila rivers, ascending the Colorado in boats up to
-the foot of the Grand Cañon. Then for nearly half a century no further
-efforts to explore this region were made. But it is interesting to note
-that some eighty years before the landing of the Pilgrims a Spanish
-expedition had penetrated into the country which is now Arizona, and
-have left definite record of their discoveries.
-
-In 1582 Antonio de Espejio explored the pueblos of the Zuñi and Moqui
-tribes, visiting seventy-four in all, and discovering a mountain rich
-in silver ore. From this time New Mexico was under the rule of the
-Spanish conquerors.
-
-Juan de Oñate, who married Isabel, a daughter of Cortez and a
-great-granddaughter of Montezuma, assumed the leadership, and about
-1605 the town of Santa Fé was founded, and within the succeeding decade
-the Mission Fathers had built a dozen churches and their converts
-composed over fourteen thousand. A prominent padre in this movement was
-Eusebio Francisco Kino.
-
-Santa Fé has the distinction of being the oldest town in the United
-States, having been established fifteen years before the landing of the
-Pilgrims.
-
-[Illustration: "WATCH TOWER." CLIFF DWELLERS, NEW MEXICO]
-
-[Illustration: CLIFF DWELLERS. WITHIN TWENTY-FIVE MILES OF SANTA FÉ,
-NEW MEXICO]
-
-The mission church of San Xavier del Bac was established at so early
-a date that it was in ruins in 1768, and on its site was built the
-present one, in the valley of Santa Cruz, some ten miles south of
-Tucson. This mission is a rare mingling of Ionic and Byzantine
-architecture, with a dome, two minarets, and castellated exterior. The
-front bears the coat-of-arms of the Franciscan monks--a cross with a
-coil of rope and two arms below--one of Cohant and the other of St.
-Francis d'Assisi. There are four fresco paintings, and there are more
-than fifty pieces of sculpture around the high altar.
-
-The missions of Guevara, Zumacacori, and San Xavier were peculiarly
-fruitful in good results. The ruins of Zumacacori still cover a large
-space. The church is partially unroofed; the form is seen to have been
-that of a plain Greek cross with a basilica, and a roofless chapel
-is standing. The basilica is still crowned by the cross, and the
-vital influence of this sign and seal of faith in the Christ, this
-commemoration of the sacrificial zeal that animated the Mission Fathers
-is still felt by all who gaze upon this sacred emblem silhouetted
-against a blue sky.
-
-Santa Fé is, indeed, alive with the most profound and arresting
-interest. The work of the early Spanish missionary priests effected
-a great work among the Indians in creating conditions of peace and
-industry; for faith in God, taught in any form, is not merely nor even
-mostly an attitude of spirit: it is the instinctive action of life.
-It permeates every motive inspiring it with power; it vitalizes every
-effort with creative energy. Faith in God may well be described as the
-highest possible form of potency. He who is receptive to the Divine
-Spirit moves onward like a ship whose sails are set to the favoring
-winds. He who is unreceptive to the Divine Spirit is like the ship
-before the wind with all her sails furled. "The merit of power for
-moral victory on the earth," said Phillips Brooks, "is not man and is
-not God. It is God and man, not two, but one, not meeting accidentally,
-not running together in emergencies only to separate again when
-the emergency is over; it is God and man belonging essentially
-together,--God filling man, man opening his life by faith to be a part
-of God's, as the gulf opens itself and is part of the great ocean."
-
-The unfaltering devotion of the Franciscan Fathers to the work of
-bringing civilization and Christianity to these Indian pueblos and
-their martyrdom in their efforts to establish "the true faith of St.
-Francis" invests Santa Fé with an atmosphere of holy tradition.
-
- "All souls that struggle and aspire,
- All hearts of prayer by Thee are lit;
- And, dim or clear, Thy tongues of fire
- On dusky tribes and twilight centuries sit."
-
-These early Church Fathers taught a pure and high order of faith in the
-most practical way. They acquired the Indian language in sufficient
-measure to speak to the tribes. They taught them the rudiments of
-arithmetic, history, and geography--in the imperfect way then known;
-but they gave their best. They inculcated industry and honesty. Their
-faith is largely told in the poet's words,--
-
- "That to be saved is only this:
- Salvation from our selfishness."
-
-The missions through all the Southwest were peculiarly fruitful in
-good results. The ruins of many still exist, revealing them to have
-usually been in the general design of a nave and basilica crowned by
-the cross--this sign and seal of faith in the Christ.
-
- "O Love Divine! whose constant beam
- Shines on the eyes that will not see,
- And waits to bless us; while we dream
- Thou leavest, because we turn from Thee!
-
- * * * * *
-
- "Nor bounds, nor clime, nor creed thou know'st;
- Wide as our need Thy favors fall;
- The white wings of the Holy Ghost,
- Brood, seen or unseen, o'er the heads of all."
-
-Three Spanish documents still exist in the territorial records of
-New Mexico dated 1693-1694, which give a full account of the Spanish
-conquest; of the re-conquest by the Indians, and the final conquest
-again by the Spaniards. There is ample evidence that a city existed on
-the present site of Santa Fé four hundred years before the settlement
-at St. Augustine. The final Spanish conquest took place in 1692, but
-all the records prior to 1680 were unfortunately destroyed in the
-Pueblo Rebellion. New Mexico's historian, Hon. L. Bradford Prince, who
-has more than once served as Governor of the territory and who is one
-of the most distinguished men of the West, has finely said that the
-people of his territory, although threefold in origin and language
-(Spanish, Mexican, and American), are one in nationality, purpose, and
-destiny. In Governor Prince's history of New Mexico he notes its three
-determining epochs,--the Pueblo, the Spanish, and the American,--and
-he refers to it as "an isolated, unique civilization in the midst of
-encircling deserts and nomadic tribes."
-
-On August 18, 1846, General Stephen W. Kearny took possession of the
-capital of New Mexico in the name of the United States; and on that
-date, for the first time, the national colors floated from the Old
-Palace and the acting Spanish Governor, Don Juan Baptista Vigil y
-Alvarid resigned his authority.
-
-On the historic plaza where now a memorial to this brave officer
-stands, placed there by the "Daughters of the Revolution," General
-Kearny proclaimed the peaceful annexation of the territory of the
-United States.
-
- "We come as friends to make you a part of the representative
- government," he said. "In our government all men are equal. Every
- man has a right to serve God according to his conscience and his
- heart."
-
-General Kearny assured the people of the protection of every
-civil and religious right, and this forcible and noble speech--so
-characteristically representing the generous and noble spirit of one
-of the ablest among the leaders and the heroes of the nineteenth
-century--made a profound impression on the minds of all who listened
-to the words. When on August 18 of 1946 New Mexico shall celebrate her
-centenary of union with the United States, this memorable address of
-General Kearny's should be read to the assembled populace. Not even
-Lincoln's noble speech at Gettysburg exceeds in simple eloquence and
-magnanimity the lofty words of General Kearny. They were worthy to be
-spoken in "The City of the Holy Faith."
-
-It was thus that New Mexico entered the United States, _Esto Perpetua_.
-To-day, after a territorial novitiate of more than sixty years, she is
-ardently urging her claim for statehood.
-
-In old Santa Fé the past and the present meet. Governor Hagerman
-receives his guests in the same room in the Old Palace that was used
-by the first viceroy; and seventy-six Spanish and Mexican and eighteen
-American rulers have preceded him, among whom was General Lew. Wallace,
-who, while serving as territorial Governor, wrote his immortal "Ben
-Hur" in one room of the palace, which is still pointed out to the
-visitor. During this period Mrs. Wallace wrote many interesting
-articles on the history, the life, and the resources of the territory,
-in which are embalmed valuable information delightfully recorded. Mrs.
-Prince, the wife of ex-Governor Prince, a lady distinguished throughout
-all the country for her gracious sweetness and refined dignity of
-manner, is much interested in the New Mexico Historical Association;
-and the ex-Governor and Mrs. Prince, His Honor, Mayor Cotrell, and Mrs.
-Cotrell, Colonel and Mrs. Max Frost, and others of the choice society
-of Santa Fé, are preserving the history of this territory "that has
-survived all those strange modulations by which a Spanish province has
-become a territory of the Union bordering on statehood." Santa Fé is
-the home of some of the ablest lawyers in the United States, and one
-private law library is said to be the largest legal library west of
-Chicago.
-
-The Old Palace has been identified with the times of the Inquisition;
-with the zealous work of Friar Marcos de Nizza, Friar Augustino Ruiz,
-and with Coronado and his band of warriors. On the Plaza, Juan de
-Oñate unfurled the banner of Spain; here de Vargas gave thanks for his
-victory, and here to-day is a simple monumental memorial of General
-Kearny placed there by the Daughters of the Revolution. The revered
-memory of Archbishop Lamy is closely associated with the place. In the
-Old Palace is a musée where a great array of unique curios is gathered;
-pictures of saints rudely painted on skins; crucifixes rudely carved
-in wood or moulded in native silver; gods carved in stone, and
-primitive domestic utensils.
-
-There is a very charming and cultivated society in Santa Fé of the
-small circle of American residents,--a circle that is of late rapidly
-increasing. The country around is rich in gems,--the turquoise, opal,
-onyx, garnet, and bloodstone being found in liberal deposits; and in
-the town is a manufactory of Mexican filigree work that employs the
-natives only who are very skilful in this delicate art. The Plaza is a
-curiously fascinating place to saunter around, and the visitor finds
-himself loitering and lingering as he is wont to loiter and linger on
-the old Ponte Vecchio in Florence. The nomenclature of Santa Fé is
-sufficiently foreign to enable one to fancy himself in Andalusia, as
-such names as Padilla, Quintona, Lopez, Gutierrez, Vaca, and others
-recur.
-
-The Rosario Chapel, built by Señor Diego de Vargas, stands on a height
-overlooking Santa Fé a mile distant from the Plaza and the Old Palace.
-Near it is now located the Ramona School for the children of the
-Apaches. The legend of the founding of San Rosario is still on the
-air. When, in 1692, Señor de Vargas, marching from the south with his
-band of two hundred men, gazed upon the city from which, in 1680, his
-compatriots had been so tragically driven, he prostrated himself on the
-ground and implored in prayer the protection and aid of "Our Lady of
-the Rosary," and recorded his purpose that, would she but lead him on
-to victory, he would build, on the very site where he was kneeling, a
-chapel to her name. Arising, he led his band on to assault, and after
-a tragic struggle of eleven hours' duration he was victorious. Did the
-"Lady of the Rosary" shield and strengthen him? Who shall venture to
-deny it?
-
- "More things are wrought by prayer
- Than this world dreams of."
-
-De Vargas had promised that, in case the victory was granted to him, he
-would have the statue of the Virgin carried from the cathedral to the
-Rosario Chapel, as already noted. To this day the custom is fulfilled;
-and each year, on the Sunday following _Corpus Christi_, this sacred
-drama is enacted, with sometimes two thousand people, drawn from all
-the country around, forming the procession. The statue is kept in the
-chapel a week, with solemn masses celebrated every morning, after which
-it is returned to the cathedral and the chapel is closed, not to be
-opened again until the octave of the Feast of _Corpus Christi_ the next
-year.
-
-The "City of the Holy Faith" is very quiet in these days, and one
-finds little trace of the turbulent past when it was the storm centre
-of tragic wars and revolutions. The incessant warfare between the
-Spaniards and the Indians, the sublime courage and devotion of Bishop
-Lamy and other Fathers of the Church, constitute a wonderful chapter in
-the history of our country.
-
-Santa Fé antedates the landing of the Pilgrims by more than twenty
-years. Its history is an unbroken record of thrilling and romantic
-events, from its capture by the Pueblos in 1680; the terrible massacre
-of the Mission Fathers, and the flight of the Governor to El Paso;
-its conquest again by de Vargas in 1692; the change from Spanish to
-Mexican rule; then the splendid entrance of General Kearny and his
-troops (in the summer of 1846) in the name of the United States, down
-to the scenes and the incidents of the old Santa Fé Trail and thence to
-the present day, when three railroads have brought the city into close
-touch with the modern life of which it still refuses to become a part.
-Still, Santa Fé has nine mails a day, a free-delivery postal system,
-electric lights, and local and long-distance telephonic connection.
-The Capitol, where Governor Hagerman presides over the councils of
-state, is a fine modern building with a beautiful view from the dome.
-There is a new Federal Building of stone in classic design, in front
-of which is placed a monument to Kit Carson. St. Michael's College,
-the residence of the Archbishop, and the Government Indian School
-attract the eye. But it is the old Santa Fé of haunting historic
-memories that one dreams of in the narrow streets, or in looking down
-on the town from a mountain-side. The quaint little Plaza dreams in
-the sunshine, which lingers, as if with a _Benedicite_, on the Kearny
-memorial, while through the unshuttered and uncurtained windows of the
-Old Palace, forming one side of the Plaza, the antique débris may be
-dimly seen. Should the ghost of any of the old Spanish warriors peer
-forth, the apparition would hardly produce a ripple of surprise. The
-long colonnade may be the favorite promenade of phantoms for aught one
-knows,--phantoms, that come and go,--
-
- "With feet that make no sound upon the floor."
-
-The twentieth-century sunshine lights up the dusky corners wherein are
-stored the relics of the Spanish conquerors and the followers of St.
-Francis. Perchance Francis d'Assisi himself, "revisiting the glimpses
-of the moon," glides along the shadows, drawn to the spot where, at
-so fearful a cost of life and treasure, his "holy faith" was guarded;
-or it may be the warrior in his armor who for an instant is dimly
-discerned through the dust-covered windows. Coronado, too, may haunt
-this scene. Many are those in the historic ranks who have contributed
-to the making of Santa Fé. It is the most composite city in American
-history. The very air is vocal with tradition and legend.
-
-The little shops around the Plaza bear their signs mostly in Spanish.
-Yet mingling with these is the office of Mr. Lutz of the Santa Fé
-transcontinental line, with which the New Mexican capital is connected
-by a branch to Lamy, on the main line, where one may stand and converse
-with Denver,--a feat which may surprise the ghost of Coronado or of
-Juan de Oñate were it looking on; and Colonel Frost's daily journal,
-with its news of the world, is just at the corner. Not far away, too,
-is Mr. Linney, who represents the United States Signal Service, and
-regards Santa Fé as a most opportune town in which to pursue his most
-up-to-date study of atmospheric phenomena.
-
-A remarkable personality in Santa Fé is Colonel Max Frost, the editor
-of "The New Mexican," the political leader of the Republican party and
-a man who, though blind and paralyzed, is simply a living encyclopædia
-of historic and contemporary events. At eight o'clock every morning
-Colonel Frost is in his office, at his desk, dictating to three expert
-stenographers, carrying on three different subjects simultaneously.
-Instead of his blindness being a hindrance to his work, he has, by the
-sheer force of his remarkable energy, transformed the obstacle into a
-stepping-stone. "I can do more work in ten minutes than most men can
-in an hour," he said, in reply to a question, "as, being blind, I have
-nothing to distract my attention. I put my mind on my work and keep it
-there."
-
-Colonel Frost's experience is the most convincing testimony to the
-phenomenal power that lies in mental concentration. He cannot move
-without assistance,--physically he is a wreck; yet he dictates columns
-of work daily; he is the most influential leader of the political
-party, and he is one of the makers of New Mexico. Every line of copy
-in his daily paper is read to him before it goes to press, and the
-vigorous and brilliant editorial page is largely his own work. For four
-hours, every evening, Mrs. Frost reads to him from the great Eastern
-dailies, the periodicals, and new books. It is said in New Mexico that
-Colonel Frost has been the power behind the throne in territorial
-legislation since the time that General Lew. Wallace served as chief
-executive in 1879.
-
-Colonel Frost went to Santa Fé from Washington in 1876 as a brilliant
-young officer, commissioned to build a military telegraph line from
-Santa Fé to Phoenix, Arizona,--a distance of five hundred miles.
-This commission attracted great attention, and Colonel Frost became
-at once a power among the Spanish-American citizens of the territory.
-His great ability was widely recognized by leading men all over the
-Southwest. He was urged to remain and become a citizen of Santa Fé. As
-if to further prepare him for his remarkable life, he was commissioned
-by the government to serve at several points in New Mexico on a variety
-of important matters, and he thus became singularly identified with the
-general progress of the country.
-
-With all his extraordinary work in conducting his paper and devoting
-himself to party political measures, Colonel Frost is serving his
-territory as Secretary of the Bureau of Immigration with the most
-conspicuous ability. Under his electric touch and irresistible
-energy there is constantly prepared and sent out some of the finest
-transcriptions of the entire status of the country, in climate,
-resources, and opportunities; in achievements already realized and in
-the potential developments of the future. Thousands of residents have
-been drawn to New Mexico through the data so ably set forth by Colonel
-Frost, the matter being, each year, revised to date. He knows, from
-personal observation and intimate contact, every part of the territory;
-he is personally acquainted with all the leading people; and no visitor
-in the territory can feel his trip in any sense complete without
-meeting Colonel Max Frost. If every state and territory in the Far West
-could command such efficient service in the literature of immigration
-as is rendered by Colonel Frost, there would be an appreciable increase
-of their settlers.
-
-There are many eminent men in Santa Fé,--government officers, political
-leaders, gifted lawyers,--whom the stranger within the gates must
-recognize as among the ablest leaders and makers of the nation. A
-newspaper recently established, "The Eagle," ably edited by Mr. A.
-J. Loomis, adds another attraction and source of inspiration to the
-wonderful old city, whose life still continues to illustrate and exalt
-the "Holy Faith of St. Francis."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-MAGIC AND MYSTERY OF ARIZONA
-
- "_... The stars are glowing wheels,
- Giddy with motion Nature reels;
- Sun, moon, man, undulate and stream,
- The mountains flow, the solids seem,
- Change acts, reacts; back, forward hurled,
- And pause were palsy to the world.--
- The morn is come: the starry crowds
- Are hid behind the thrice-piled clouds;
- The new day lowers, and equal odds
- Have changed not less the guest of gods._"
-
- EMERSON
-
-
-Arizona is the Land of Magic and of Mystery. It is the land of the yet
-undreamed-of future, and it is also the region of brooding mystery,
-of strange surprise. Besides its stupendous Grand Cañon, here are the
-cañons of Chiquito, Marble, Desolation, and Limestone; the Montezuma
-Well, Castle Dome, the Four Peaks--rising to the height of several
-thousand feet, for hundreds of miles; the Thumb Buttes, San Francisco
-Peak, the Tonto Basin, and the Twin Lake--all of these phenomenal
-marvels of scenery telling their tale of the action of water and of
-fire thousands of ages ago; convulsions of nature which have rent
-the mountains asunder, opened chasms thousands of feet deep in the
-earth, and projected the bottom of a sea into the air as a mountain
-peak,--
-
- "What time the gods kept carnival."
-
-[Illustration: PETRIFIED GIANTS, THIRD FOREST, ARIZONA]
-
-The gods have, indeed, kept high carnival in Arizona. Every aspect of
-nature is on a scale of Titanic magnificence. The cañon systems of its
-mountain ranges; the indescribable grandeur which reaches its supreme
-majesty in the Grand Cañon; the wonders of extinct volcanic action;
-the colossal channels cut by rushing waters; the unearthly splendor of
-the atmospheric effects, and the coloring of the skies,--all combine
-to render Arizona an expression of magical wonder. All manner of
-phenomenal conditions are encountered. The land is a red sandy desert,
-whose leading productions are loose stones (lying so thickly in the
-sand as to make walking or driving all but impossible) and pine trees,
-petrified forests, and cacti. The riotous growth of the cactus is,
-indeed, a terror to the unwary. But it is in sunsets and enchantment
-of views and richness of mines, and in marvellous curiosities--as the
-Petrified Forest, Meteorite Mountain, and the Grand Cañon--that Arizona
-distinguishes herself. She cannot irrigate her soil because there
-is no available water. But the pine forests--some of them--produce
-lumber; the mines are rich, and the features of nature unequalled in
-the entire world; while the exhilaration of the electric air and the
-wonderful beauty of coloring quite make up to Arizona resources that
-are unsurpassed if not unrivalled.
-
-Arizona is not an agricultural country by nature, nor hardly by grace.
-The resources are mining and timber. Still there are probably some
-twenty million acres capable of rich productiveness, on which wheat,
-barley, corn, vegetables of all kinds, and also rice and cotton,
-could be successfully cultivated if irrigation could be sufficiently
-effected. The largest area of agricultural land lies in the regions
-adjacent to Prescott and Phoenix. This Salt River Valley is rich in
-alluvial soil. The Gila Valley also offers, though in lesser area,
-the same fertile land, and the valleys of the Colorado, Chiquito, of
-Pueblo Viejo, the Santa Cruz, the San Pedro, the Sulphur Springs,
-and the great mesa between Florence and Phoenix, offer the same
-possibilities. The great problem of Arizona is that of irrigation, as
-most of the rivers lie at the bottom of inaccessible cañons and present
-difficulties of access which no engineer can as yet clearly see a way
-to overcome. The conditions are, however, materially assisted by the
-rainy seasons, occurring usually in February or March and in July
-or August, when water can be stored. The rain itself is as peculiar
-in Arizona as are other conditions of this wonderland. It rains in
-sections; it may rain in torrents in a man's front yard while the sun
-shines in his back yard; or if this statement has something of the
-flavor of "travellers'" tales, it is at least typical of actual facts.
-Five minutes' walking is often all that is required to carry one into,
-or out of, a severe downpour of rain. The clouds follow the mountain
-spurs as invariably as a needle follows the magnet and a torrent may
-fall on the mountains above, flashing down in a hundred improvised
-raging cataracts and waterfalls, while in the valley below the sun
-shines out of the bluest of skies. No panoramic pictures of the stage
-ever equalled the pictorial effects of a thunderstorm in the mountains,
-when the forked lightning leaps from peak to peak in a blaze, through
-the air; when it dashes like a meteoric shower from rock to crag, and
-the thunder reverberates with the mighty roar of a thousand oceans
-beating their surf on the shore.
-
-In Maricopa County, in the Salt River Valley, new and important
-conditions have been initiated by the government system of irrigation
-which has transformed arid lands into fertile gardens. The government
-has expended three million dollars in constructing the Salt River dam
-(sixty miles north of Phoenix), which is the largest artificial
-lake in the world. This reservoir will store one and a half million
-acres-feet of water, drawing it from the mountain cañons miles away.
-Not only does this project mean an abundant water supply for a region
-heretofore useless, but rich returns as well.
-
-There are few regions which so attract and reward the researches of
-the scientist as does Arizona. The geologist, the mineralogist, the
-ethnologist, the archæologist, finds here the most amazing field for
-apparently unending investigation and study. Nor is the botanist
-excluded. The flora of Arizona offers the same strange and unique
-developments that characterize the region in so many other directions.
-The cacti flourish in riotous growth. The saguaro, a giant species,
-frequently attains a height of forty feet. A strange spectacle it is,
-with its pale green body, fluted like a Corinthian column, and its
-colossal arms outstretched, covered with immense prickly thorns and
-bearing purple blossoms. The century plant flourishes in Arizona.
-There is a curious scarlet flower, blooming in clusters, at the top
-of straight pole-like stumps ten to fifteen feet in height, which
-terminate in luxuriant masses of scarlet blossoms and green leaves,
-and grow in groups of from a dozen to fifty together, producing the
-most fascinating color effects in the landscape. This plant is called
-the ocotilla. There are plants which produce a fibrous textile leaf
-which the native Mexicans used as paper; there are others whose roots
-are used as a substitute for soap. The trees are largely pine, cedar,
-and juniper, though in many parts of the state the rolling foothills
-bear forests of oak, and the sycamore, ash, elder, walnut, and the
-swift-growing cottonwood are found along the watercourses.
-
-[Illustration: COLLECTION OF CACTI MADE BY OFFICERS AT FORT McDOWELL,
-ARIZONA, FOR THIS PICTURE]
-
-"The echinocactus, or bisnaga, is also called 'The Well of the
-Desert,'" says Dr. Joseph A. Munk in some interesting sketches of
-Arizona.[4] "It has a large barrel-shaped body, which is covered with
-long spikes that are curved like fishhooks. It is full of sap that is
-sometimes used to quench thirst. By cutting off the top and scooping
-out a hollow, the cup-shaped hole soon fills with a sap that is not
-exactly nectar, but can be drunk in an emergency. Men who have been in
-danger of perishing from thirst on the desert have sometimes been saved
-by this unique method of well-digging."
-
-Of the palo verde Dr. Munk notes that it is "a true child of the
-desert," and he adds:
-
- "No matter how hot and dry the weather, the palo verde is always
- green and flourishing. At a distance it resembles a weeping willow
- tree stripped of its leaves. Its numerous long, slender, drooping
- branches gracefully crisscross and interlace in an intricate figure
- of filigree work. It has no commercial value, but if it could be
- successfully transplanted and transported it would make a desirable
- addition to greenhouse collections in the higher latitudes.
-
- "The romantic mistletoe, that is world-renowned for its magic
- influence in love affairs, grows to perfection in Southern Arizona.
- There are several varieties of this parasitic plant that are very
- unlike in appearance. Each kind partakes more or less of the
- characteristics of the tree upon which it grows, but all have the
- glossy leaf and waxen berry."
-
-The grasses of Arizona, are, in some places, very beautiful, of a rich
-velvety green; and the infinite varieties of wild clover, the gramma,
-the buffalo, the sacatone, and other grasses, are richly nutritive and
-offer good facilities for grazing. As a wool-producing country Arizona
-has no rival, the climate giving the best of protection to sheep
-with the minimum of care, and the grazing offering adequate means of
-support; and stock raising of all kinds, indeed, is destined to become
-a great industry in Southern Arizona.
-
-The climate of Arizona can only be alluded to in the plural, as in the
-expressive phrase of one of Mr. George W. Cable's creole characters,
-"dose climates," for Arizona has all the climates of the known world.
-The range of choice almost exceeds the range of the Fahrenheit
-registration. From the mountain summit, covered with snow for at least
-ten months out of the year, to the heat in Yuma, which has scored up to
-one hundred and twenty-eight degrees or more, there are all varieties
-and every conceivable quality of atmosphere. In the main, however, the
-climate of Arizona is inexpressibly delightful.
-
-Dr. Munk, who is one of the distinguished physicians in Los Angeles,
-has made a study of Arizona as a health resort, and of its conditions
-he says:
-
- "The atmosphere of Arizona is not only dry, but also very
- electrical; so much so, indeed, that at times it becomes almost
- painful. Whenever the experiment is tried, sparks can be produced
- by friction or the handling of metal, hair, or wool. It affects
- animals as well as man, and literally causes 'the hair to stand on
- end.' The writer has on various occasions seen a string of horses
- standing close together at a watering-trough, drinking, so full of
- electricity that their manes and tails were spread out and floated
- in the air, and the long hairs drawn by magnetic attraction from
- one animal to the other all down the line in a spontaneous effort
- to complete a circuit. There are times when the free electricity
- in the air is so abundant that every object becomes charged with
- the fluid, and it cannot escape fast enough or find 'a way out' by
- any adequate conductor. The effect of such an excess of electricity
- is decidedly unpleasant on the nerves, and causes annoying
- irritability and nervousness.
-
- "The hot sun sometimes blisters the skin and burns the complexion
- to a rich nut-brown color, but the air always feels soft and balmy,
- and usually blows only in gentle zephyrs. The air has a pungent
- fragrance which is peculiar to the desert, that is the mingled
- product of a variety of resinous plants. The weather is uniformly
- pleasant, and the elements are rarely violently disturbed.
-
- "In the older settled sections of our country, whenever there is
- any sudden or extreme change of either heat or cold, wet or dry, it
- is always followed by an increase of sickness and death. The aged
- and invalid, who are sensitive and weak, suffer most, as they feel
- every change in the weather. There is, perhaps, no place on earth
- that can boast of a perfect climate, but the country that can show
- the fewest and mildest extremes approaches nearest to the ideal.
- The Southwest is exceptionally favored in its climatic conditions."
-
-There is a legend that the poetic, musical name, Arizona, was derived
-from "Ari," a maiden queen who once ruled the destinies of the Primas,
-and "Zon," a valley, from the romantic configuration of the state,
-the two combining into the melodious "Arizona." The tradition is
-sufficiently romantic to be in keeping with the country it designates,
-and nothing tends more to simplify the too complex processes of life,
-not to say history, than to apply the rule of believing those things
-that appeal to one's sense of the "eternal fitness" and rejecting
-those which do not. The apostles of the simple life might well include
-this contribution toward simplicity as an axiom of their faith. At all
-events, as no other origin of Arizona's pretty name is on record, one
-may indulge himself in accepting this one with a clear conscience.
-
-The authentic Spanish history of Arizona dates to the exploration of
-Mendoza in 1540. For nearly three hundred years--until the treaty of
-Guadaloupe-Hidalgo in 1866, when all the region north of the Gila
-and Mesilla valleys was incorporated into the area of the United
-States--the Spanish explorers and the Indian natives were in perpetual
-conflict, and it was as late as 1863 that Arizona received its name
-and individual domain as separate from New Mexico, with which it had
-been incorporated. At the time of the Guadaloupe-Hidalgo treaty Arizona
-did not contain a single white settlement in the north and west. Near
-Tucson and Tuba were a few hundred whites, but all the other portions
-were the domain of the Apaches and the Moquis. In 1856 the Hon. James
-Gadsden, then United States Minister to Mexico, negotiated for the
-purchase of this territory at a price of ten million dollars, and the
-Mexican colors in Tucson were replaced by the Stars and Stripes. On
-December 1, 1854, a memorial was presented to the legislature of New
-Mexico for a separate territorial organization and name of the new
-acquirement.
-
-Although the Spanish civilization has long since receded into the dim
-historic past, its spirit is impressed in the very air; its zeal and
-fervor still, in some mysterious way, permeate the atmosphere.
-
-Until 1863 Arizona remained a portion of New Mexico, the separate
-territorial government of each being inaugurated at Fort Whipple, near
-Prescott,--a thriving town of some six thousand people, named for the
-historian whose works are the unquestionable authority on matters of
-the Aztec and Spanish civilizations. Prescott is one of the young
-Western cities that has a great future. Its altitude insures it a
-delightful climate, the railroad facilities are good, and it is in a
-region of almost fabulous mineral wealth. The "United Verde" mine, one
-of the possessions of Senator Clark of Montana, is some thirty-five
-miles from Prescott and yields vast revenues. Within thirty miles of
-the town there are very large beds of onyx, one of which covers over
-one hundred acres. This onyx is found in all colors,--the translucent
-old gold, green, red, black, and white, with much in richly varied
-combinations of color. Prescott has an altitude of a mile above the
-sea and is a summer resort of itself for Phoenix and other Southern
-Arizona towns. It is a distance of some three hundred miles from
-Ash Fork to Winhelman, and Prescott and Phoenix are one hundred
-miles apart, Prescott being only a hundred miles from Ash Fork and
-Phoenix about the same distance from Winhelman. Near Prescott there
-is a curious spot which is not less worthy of world-wide fame than is
-the "Garden of the Gods" at Colorado Springs; although the "Point of
-Rocks," as this grotesque system of formation near Prescott is called,
-is little known to travellers. It is of that same unique sandstone
-formation that is found in the "Garden of the Gods." Ruskin declared
-that he could not visit America on the ground that it contained no
-castles; but had his vision included Colorado and Arizona, with their
-wonderful sandstone formations, he would have found castles galore so
-far as scenic effect goes. It is not alone the "Garden of the Gods"
-and the "Point of Rocks" that are marvellous spectacles, but all over
-the states, here and there, on foothill and mountain and mesa, these
-strange, fantastic, colossal rock formations arise, that have all the
-landscape effect of the castles and towers in Italy.
-
-All the country around Prescott is alluring. On the branch road from
-Ash Fork of the main transcontinental line to Winhelman some three
-hundred miles south, there is an assortment of scenery which might be
-described as warranted to please every taste. There are lofty mountains
-pine-clad and green with verdure; others are seen barren and bleak,
-whose sides and foothills are only decorated with the débris of mines.
-There are vast desert solitudes where only the misshapen cacti grow,
-looming up like giant skeletons in the air; and again there are glades
-carpeted with a profusion of flowers in brilliant hues. There are
-river-beds (arroyos) without any water and there are streams that go
-wandering about, in aimless fashion, devoid of regulation river-beds.
-Some of the arroyos, indeed, have streams running in strong currents,
-but they hide these streams under the river-bed, as something too
-valuable perhaps for common view. The clairvoyance of the scientific
-vision, however, detects this fraud on the part of the arroyo at once,
-so that of late years it is of little use for any well-regulated river
-to hide its current under its bed. It may just as well relinquish the
-attempt and let the stream run in an honest Eastern fashion, like the
-Connecticut River, for instance, which is staid and steady, like its
-state, and never undertakes to play pranks with its current. Since the
-scientist has fixed his glittering eye on Colorado and Arizona, all the
-gnomes and nixies have the time of their life to elude this vigilance,
-and they seldom succeed. The scientist relentlessly harnesses them to
-his use; and though a river may think to conceal its course by taking
-refuge under its bed instead of running honestly along above it, the
-effort is hopeless in an age when the scientist is abroad. It is said
-that there are no secrets in heaven, and apparently nature is very like
-paradise in this respect at least, for it is quite useless for her to
-pretend to keep her operations to herself. The specialist, the expert,
-surprises every secret she may treasure.
-
-Of all the rivers in Arizona no one has more entirely defied all the
-accepted traditions of staying in its place and keeping within its own
-limits than has the Colorado, which, not content with the extraordinary
-part it plays at the bottom of that Titanic chasm, the Grand Cañon,
-is now creating an inland sea, named the Salton Sea, in Southern
-California. Prof. N. H. Newell, the government expert hydrographer of
-the United States Geological Survey, has given close attention to the
-Colorado of late, and of it he says:
-
- "... The Colorado cuts in its course the deepest cañons on the
- face of the earth. From the solid rocks where it has made them,
- through hundreds of miles, it has taken material down to the Gulf
- of California, and by slight but regular annual overflows gradually
- built banks on each side out into that gulf. These, in time, cut
- off the head of the gulf, leaving dry a depression in Southern
- California, considerably below sea level, known as 'the Salton
- Sink.' For miles of its journey the Southern Pacific runs below
- sea level. Ten thousand people, approximately, in what is known as
- the Imperial Valley, live below the sea level. A privately owned
- irrigation enterprise, on the Mexican side of the line, cut a gash
- into this bank of the Colorado which nature had been forming. The
- high waters came and man lost control of his artificial channel,
- with the result that the river thought best to pour its waters
- back into the depression which had once been a part of the Gulf of
- California. To get the river to resume its own course is no small
- task, and with it the Southern Pacific railroad evidently purposes
- to grapple heroically.
-
-[Illustration: LOOKING THROUGH A PART OF THE RIVER GORGE, FOOT OF BAD
-TRAIL, GRAND CAÑON]
-
- "The river is now pouring down a steep declivity into this basin,
- which is two hundred feet or more below the sea level. If this were
- allowed to continue, it would make a great salt lake in Southern
- California. This water has already risen to the point where it
- has submerged big salt works and fifteen miles of the Southern
- Pacific's overland track, forcing that company to build around
- the rising sea, and, unless its engineers succeed in routing the
- Colorado for its old destination, it will be necessary to rebuild a
- much longer piece of that road. Some people have argued that such
- a sea would affect favorably the climate of Southern California,
- but they forget that the great Gulf of California, jutting into
- the most barren regions of the United States and Mexico, seemingly
- has had no good effect on the climate of either. The Salton Sea
- would add only two per cent of water surface to that part of the
- country, and so hardly would do what the Gulf of California has
- not accomplished. Unless the break is restored, the river will
- pour into this basin, forming a very shallow lake, which would
- be almost a frying-pan under that semi-tropical sun. This would
- continue to rise until evaporation balanced the river flow, and
- then would fluctuate with the seasons of the year, shrinking in
- area during the months of the heaviest evaporation and slightest
- inflow.
-
- "The gash in the river bank was cut by a Mexican corporation on
- that side of the international line, but the water is delivered
- to a number of American corporations, so that to-day several
- are concerned in the affair. It is understood that the Southern
- Pacific, when the river reaches its lowest stage, will put in
- a great force of men in an endeavor to get the river back to
- its former course. One great difficulty comes in the sugar-like
- material which has been eroded, in which it is extremely hard to
- insert any permanent structure. A pile one hundred feet deep will
- be driven into it, and almost as soon the water, working in under
- it, will lift it out."
-
-The Salton Sea, at this writing, covers an area of over four hundred
-square miles, and is constantly increasing. The Southern Pacific
-Railway that traversed its border has been driven twice from its line
-and forced to lay new roadbeds and tracks. It is also creating great
-confusion as to irrigation facilities, both in the United States and
-in Mexico, within the region where it lies; and as a scientific event
-it is one of the first magnitude,--an act in the drama of nature made
-visible to all.
-
-The Salton Sink has long been known to the explorers and visitors
-of this region. It was a vast basin of some one hundred and forty
-miles in length and sixty-five or seventy in width; the evident
-bed of a former sea, which had become a desolate and barren waste.
-Sometimes a mirage--a not unfrequent phenomenon in Arizona and Southern
-California,--would transform this long deserted basin into a phantom
-sea, wonderful in aspect. To what extent this transformation will
-continue defies prophecy.
-
-Phoenix, the capital of Arizona, is in Maricopa County,--a county
-as large as the entire state of Massachusetts. The journey of two
-hundred miles between Ash Fork and Phoenix is one of the most
-uncanny and unearthly sort of trips, with mountains resembling a
-witches' dance,--full of grotesque wonder and romantic charm,--but the
-experience is almost like visiting another planet and coming under
-totally different conditions of life. Phoenix is both the capital
-and the metropolis of Arizona, and no city west of the Mississippi is
-more popular among tourists or is able to inspire a stronger sentiment
-of attachment among its residents. To some twelve or thirteen thousand
-inhabitants are added, every winter, from four to five thousand
-tourists. The city lies in the centre of the Salt River Valley,--that
-marvel of the Southwest. The most important and valuable agricultural
-region in Colorado lies in Maricopa County, of which Phoenix is the
-pet and pride. In this locality the visitor to Arizona returns to the
-normal day and daylight world again. The forest trees are not stone
-quarries, nor have meteors, wandering through space, buried themselves
-in its soil. There is no need of colossal magnetic appliances to seek
-to discover and extricate some submerged star. Nor has the earth opened
-and disclosed an Inferno, "bathed in celestial fires," as that of the
-Grand Cañon far away to the northwest. The streams "stay put" within
-their legitimate borders, and are apparently as firm in "standing pat"
-as is the Republican party over a (new) tariff revision. Maricopa
-County pursues a way of peaceful prosperity, with no lapse into the
-vaudeville of petrified forests and buried stars. Her stars make their
-appointed rounds in the skies, and shine nightly upon the just and the
-unjust. In the northern part of Maricopa there are mineral districts
-of rich ores, gold and copper as well as silver, lead, and others, but
-chiefly the county holds her way as an agricultural region, indulging
-in no freaks. Canals radiate in every direction from the Salt and
-the Verde rivers. The Salt River Valley is so level that a theory
-prevails that in some prehistoric ages it was smoothed by the Toltec
-civilization, which even preceded that of the Aztec. Fields of alfalfa,
-miles in extent, smile in the sunshine, while cattle graze knee-deep in
-luxurious clover. Orange groves alternate with the apple and apricot
-orchards. The date-palm, the fig, and the olive trees abound. Beautiful
-homes stand in spacious grounds shaded by the dark foliage of the
-umbrella tree, through which gleams the scarlet of the oleander and
-the brilliant gold of the pomegranate.
-
-Phoenix offers to the resident or the visitor a good proportion
-of the best that life can give: in good society, that which is
-intelligent, moral, cultured, and sympathetic; in an admirable school
-system; in churches of many denominations,--Catholic, Episcopal,
-Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian, Christian Science, and others,--all
-having their fine houses of worship and earnest congregations. There
-is an excellent and a constantly growing public library, and there are
-four daily and several weekly newspapers, business blocks that would
-do no discredit to any large Eastern city, a circuit telephone system
-completely equipped, gas and water works, free city and rural mail
-delivery, good hotels, a theatre, and an opera house. There are banks
-and a Board of Trade. There are clubs both of men and women. The State
-Normal School of Arizona is nine miles distant--in Tempe.
-
-There are three railroads that centre in Phoenix which transport
-the traveller with the usual accepted ease and luxury of modern
-railroading; and a new road to form a link in a second Santa Fé
-transcontinental line will then place Phoenix on a trunk road over
-which the Santa Fé traffic will largely pass.
-
-The winters in Phoenix are most attractive. From October till May
-there is a climate all balm and sunshine without the enervating quality
-felt in the tropics. The region all around has good roads, and driving
-and riding are most enjoyable.
-
-Seventy-five miles east from Phoenix, in the Tonto Basin, the
-government is building a vast water storage dam which it is expected
-will liberally irrigate two hundred thousand acres of land which,
-under reclamation, will produce in rich abundance both agricultural
-and horticultural products. The climate and conditions combine those
-of the temperate and the semi-tropical zones and favor products grown
-in both. The Tonto dam will be, with the possible exception of the
-Assouan dam in Egypt, the greatest storage enterprise in the world. It
-will be constructed of hard sandstone imbedded in cement, making it as
-permanent as the mountains. It will be two hundred and eighty-five feet
-above foundations and only two hundred feet wide at the bottom. Above
-will be a lake about twenty-five miles long, with storage capacity for
-one and a half millions acre-feet, which means enough water to cover
-that number of acres a foot deep. Even to the best of cement, Nature
-has provided on the ground every necessity for construction. Along the
-hillsides above is being dug a power canal, to discharge above the dam,
-there to generate not less than five thousand horsepower,--more than
-enough for the demands of construction. When the dam is finished this
-power will be transmitted electrically to the vicinity of Phoenix,
-here to be used for pumping. The government engineers have made plans
-for eventually developing eighteen thousand horsepower, by harnessing
-the falls of the river and the canals.
-
-The Salt River Valley has more than fifty thousand acres devoted to
-alfalfa, which sometimes yields six crops in a year. Wheat, barley, and
-corn are also grown, and the orange groves produce the finest fruit
-known in the Eastern markets, antedating by a month the California
-oranges. Grapes, apricots, and dates abound; and if Maricopa County
-does not literally as well as figuratively find that her land is
-flowing in milk and honey, it is certainly not for lack of the most
-favorable conditions.
-
-The Arizona strawberries, too, are a feature of importance in the fruit
-market, as for both size and flavor they absolutely exceed almost any
-other in the United States.
-
-All this sunny prosperity of conditions and loveliness of climate
-reacts on life. There is a poise, a serene confidence, and a charm of
-good-will and joyous companionship felt in Phoenix that give to this
-delightful young city an individuality of its own.
-
-The great dam now being built in the Tonto Basin has made it necessary
-to destroy the town of Roosevelt,--a village of two thousand
-inhabitants, with its churches, schools, water-works, electric lights,
-and other appliances of modern civilization. "Roosevelt must perish,"
-writes a press correspondent, "that a desert may be made to bloom.
-Already the marvellous engineering work is well under way. The walls
-of the narrow cañon through which Salt River rushes on edge are being
-locked by a massive monolith of solid masonry, the highest arch dam in
-the world."
-
-The writer continues:
-
- "This wonderful structure of sandstone and cement will be two
- hundred and eighty feet in height from foundation to parapet.
- Placed by the side of an eighteen-story skyscraper, this dam would
- rise ten feet above it, while its length on top would be more than
- two city blocks. A turbulent stream, with its enormous floods, will
- beat itself into stillness against the masonry monster, its foam
- and spume lost in a deep lake twenty-five miles long and two miles
- wide.
-
- "By day and by night the dull roar of dynamite breaks the desert
- stillness, and the cañon walls go crashing down to furnish material
- for this structure. On the hill far above, the rock crushers never
- stop grinding the limestone, and great kilns, white hot, are
- burning daily hundreds of barrels of cement.
-
- "When night comes, myriads of electric lights burst forth, weirdly
- illuminating a busy army of toilers working gnome-like in a shadowy
- cañon. A star-gemmed heaven looks down upon a wondrous scene,
- unreal, awesome, and inspiring.
-
- "This great work of the government possesses unusual attractions
- for the engineer and the layman. It is located in a valley which
- has been the abode of three races, one of which lived here when
- Cæsar sat upon his throne. In an age forgotten the cliff-dwellers
- built their eyrie-like homes along the cañons of this stream, and
- in the narrow valleys the lines of their irrigation canals may yet
- be traced. Centuries later the Apaches came, and for many years
- their tepees dotted the basin. Then came the white man, who sought
- to reconquer the desert, which had resumed its sway after the
- cliff-dwellers vanished.
-
- "The battle with unfriendly nature proved too much for the pioneer,
- and Uncle Sam took a hand in the fight. No problems could daunt
- his engineers. They laughed at floods and mocked at desolation. A
- dam site was discovered sixty-two miles from a railroad, and they
- proceeded to connect it with civilization by a marvellous road
- which winds its way for forty miles through deep cañons, along the
- face of frowning precipices, over foaming cataracts, and across
- broad areas of treeless desert. It opens up to the transcontinental
- traveller a new region of compelling interest and of splendid
- scenery. Better than that, it provides an easy thoroughfare for the
- transportation of heavy machinery of all kinds and the supplies for
- the new community which sprang into life almost at a word.
-
- "... Every stone that is laid in the narrow arch, which is to
- retain the foaming river now rushing through the cañon, brings
- nearer and nearer the day when Roosevelt shall vanish beneath an
- inland sea. When the great dam is completed, in 1908, and its
- massive gates of steel, weighing eight hundred thousand pounds, are
- shut down, a rising flood will cover the site of the city with two
- hundred feet of water.
-
- "The ingenuity of man has been taxed in this work. Its isolated
- position, the difficult physical conditions, the tremendous and
- unexpected floods, have tried the mettle of the engineers. The
- enormous amount of cement required was in itself a problem which
- forced Uncle Sam to turn manufacturer in order to solve it. Nature,
- having kindly furnished an ideal site for a dam, was thoughtful
- enough to provide materials near at hand for making cement. A
- cement mill was quickly erected at a cost of one hundred thousand
- dollars. The downward rush of the river was utilized for electric
- power to operate the mill, and many thousand barrels of first-class
- cement have already been used in the works.
-
- "But while the city of Roosevelt, with the homes of its two
- thousand inhabitants, is doomed, a fair valley is to be redeemed in
- which the agricultural possibilities are not exceeded anywhere in
- the world. Under almost tropical skies, with a soil of wonderful
- fertility, the farmer in Salt River Valley will cultivate his
- orange groves, his fig trees, his vines, while his broad meadows
- will yield him heavy harvests of alfalfa six and seven times a year.
-
- "The great lake which will be created by the Roosevelt dam is to be
- tapped by canals hundreds of miles long and extending all over the
- broad valley around Phoenix. Vast areas now absolutely worthless
- will be transformed quickly into blossoming orchards and purpling
- vineyards, and hundreds of happy homes will dot a plain where now
- the giant saguaro rears its spiny head and the Gila monster roams
- at will."
-
-Life in the Far West is a continual series of the occurrence of such
-events as these. Its problems are largely solved by the civil engineer
-and the irrigation expert, who transform vast deserts to regions of
-blossoming beauty, change the course of a river, send railroad trains
-climbing the mountain peaks or penetrating beneath the range, and who
-are, in short, the modern magicians who work their will with the forces
-of nature. The National Reclamation Act is fairly recreating the entire
-Southwest.
-
-The Gila River, which is the largest tributary of the Colorado, flows
-through the regions south of Florence, Arizona, and affords water to
-many fertile and beautiful valleys; and Florence, with the towns of
-Yuma, Tucson, Glendale, Bisbee, Winslow, and others, is fully abreast
-in modern life. Large department stores, public libraries, schools and
-churches, women's clubs, daily newspapers, good railroad facilities,
-free postal delivery,--all these make up the environment of a splendid
-and progressive citizenship. As the Governor of Arizona, Hon. Joseph H.
-Kirley, has recently said:
-
- "Nowhere can a man who respects his neighbor's rights, with
- reasonably strict attention to his own business, go about with more
- freedom and with greater confidence of personal safety than in
- Arizona. Locked and barricaded doors are in most parts of Arizona a
- novelty. The professional thief is almost unknown in the territory."
-
-The East--at least the portion of it that has not personally visited
-the magic land of Arizona--can form little idea of its marvellous
-resources and its potent achievements.
-
-The statehood problem looms up on the social and political horizon,
-and there is a strong feeling that to force Arizona and New Mexico
-into union would do violence to the judgment and the feeling of the
-citizens of Arizona. For several years past the incipient possibility
-of statehood on these terms has aroused widespread opposition.
-
-The local press voices almost daily the editorial convictions that such
-a union would be most disastrous to the interests of Arizona--a country
-which is simply a wonderland of treasure and rich and varied resources.
-Arizona is settled chiefly by people from the great South and from New
-England, the Middle West being hardly represented; its citizens are of
-the best quality of our national life, and to unite them with those of
-New Mexico--a large proportion of whom can hardly speak or understand
-the English language even, to say nothing of their divergence in race,
-requirements, and habits from the population of Arizona--would be
-imposing upon them a century's delay in realizing the grand ideals of
-education, moral progress, and economic development now prevailing in
-Arizona.
-
-Phoenix has to-day a better public-school system than Boston, and
-other surprising degrees of progress might be related of many of the
-towns.
-
-Hon. N. O. Murphy, twice a Governor of Arizona, has recently made
-an eloquent plea against forcing these two territories into union as
-a state. Ex-Governor Murphy was appointed by President Harrison (in
-1889) Secretary of Arizona. Under President Cleveland he was elected
-the Delegate to Congress representing the territorial interests; and
-on the expiration of this term he was appointed by President McKinley
-the Governor of the territory. His experience has given him the most
-intimate knowledge and wide grasp of territorial conditions, and in
-a letter of three columns over his own signature to the "Washington
-Post," appearing under date of February 25, 1906, ex-Governor Murphy
-does not hesitate to say that were the Bill for united statehood
-then pending before Congress passed, it would be one of the greatest
-legislative outrages ever perpetrated in this country. "I refer
-particularly to the proposed merger of the territories of Arizona and
-New Mexico into a single state against the protests of the people of
-those territories," he added.
-
-The ex-Governor points out these statistical facts:
-
- "The area of New England, comprising six states, with twelve
- senators, is 66,465 square miles; the area of the territory of
- Arizona is nearly twice as great, being 113,916 square miles.
-
- "The area of the territories of New Mexico and Arizona, now
- proposed to be merged, is 235,600 square miles, or greater than
- Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island,
- Connecticut, Michigan, New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and New
- Jersey, represented in the Upper House now by twenty-two senators."
-
-The fact that the population of New Mexico is largely Mexican, and that
-of Arizona is mostly American, suggests a potent reason for the strong
-feeling in Arizona against this proposition. Their racial instincts and
-their business interests alike conflict. If they are joined as a single
-state, there will be continual jealousy and friction, and legislation
-to promote the interests of one-half the state will necessarily be at
-the expense of the other.
-
-To the traveller sensitive to the spell of a strange, unearthly beauty,
-Arizona prefigures itself as the country God remembered rather than as
-"the country God forgot." It is at once the oldest and the newest of
-the states. Its authentic and historic past antedates the coming of the
-Mayflower to the rocky and desolate December shores of Massachusetts,
-while its future flashes before one like an electric panorama
-outspeeding wireless telegraphy. It is the Land of Magic and Mystery.
-The light is a perpetual radiance, as if proceeding from some alchemy
-of distilled sunshine. While Colorado is the Land of Perpetual Dawn,
-of an heroic and poetic achievement, Arizona is the region of brooding
-mystery, of strange surprise.
-
-There are the music and pictures of Arizona in her fertile valleys,
-her wide rolling mesas; and the very melody of the wind harps meet and
-mingle with the organ strains of sweeping orchestral effects of the
-winds in the cañons and in wild, desolate gorges where impenetrable
-twilight renders them a veritable No Man's Land. Mr. Aldrich's "Two
-Shapes" might have met in that uncanny region of the Petrified Forest.
-The very dance of the Brocken may nightly be seen in the midnight
-fissures and steep precipices of the Grand Cañon.
-
-It is, however, essentially the land of mirage and mystery, this
-wonderful Arizona! As one journeys about he half fancies that he hears
-on the air those magic lines:
-
- "O birds of ether without wings!
- O heavenly ships without a sail!"
-
-Every incredible thing is possible in this miracle country, where
-purple mountain peaks quiver in the shimmering golden light, where
-ruins of remote ages stand side by side with the primitive mechanism
-of pioneer living, where snow-capped mountain peaks are watched from
-valleys that have the temperature and the productions of the tropics.
-Arizona contains unknown and undreamed-of resources of gold, copper,
-and silver. The state has the richest possibilities in mineral wealth;
-there are thousands of square miles of range lands; there is wealth of
-forests, although it is a part of the miracle character of this state
-of color and dream life that its forests are almost as much concealed
-from casual view as are its minerals hidden in the depths of the
-earth, for they are secluded in deep cañons or they are high out of
-sight on the mountain summits. In fruits and flowers Arizona has the
-luxurious growth and lavish abundance of the tropics, producing grapes,
-figs, oranges, lemons, pomegranates, pineapples, and peaches,--almost
-everything, indeed, unless it be the apples of Hesperides.
-
-Although Arizona has not the electric exhilaration and infinite energy
-of Colorado, it has a delicious quality, as if the very air were a
-caress. Though warm in the south, the heat has none of the enervating
-effect of the heat where humidity combines with it. The heat here is
-so dry, the air so pure, that there is little extreme discomfort even
-when the mercury soars to legendary altitudes. In winter all Southern
-Arizona is a paradise of loveliness. At this season the towns of
-Florence, Phoenix, Tucson, Yuma, and other points invite one to the
-balmy air, the luminous brilliant skies, and the nights, which are a
-glory of starry illumination. Northern Arizona has a perfection of
-summer climate, and the Grand Cañon is destined in the near future to
-become one of the great summer resorts of the world. With the splendid
-facilities for comfort offered by the arrangements, the traveller
-finds all his accustomed conveniences, and the cañon has literally all
-seasons for its own. There is one glory of July and another glory of
-January; there is a transcendent loveliness of June, and an equally
-indescribable charm of October. No month is without its special reasons
-for visiting at that time this most marvellous scenic wonder of the
-entire earth.
-
-In remote ages Arizona was evidently an inland sea.
-
-Montezuma Well, on the Verde River, some fifty miles from Prescott, is
-one of the strange spectacles of Arizona. The well is on an elevated
-mesa of solid limestone. It has a circular opening some six hundred
-feet in diameter, as perfect as if carved by a skilled workman. From
-the surface opening down to the water is a distance of some seventy
-feet, and the water itself is over one hundred feet deep. It is
-perfectly clear and pure. Near the well are several cave dwellings, and
-fragments of pottery abound in the vicinity. There are beds of lava,
-also revealing that the well is the crater of an extinct volcano.
-
-There can be no question but that Arizona is one of the most marvellous
-regions of the world. Its interest to the tourist is not exceeded
-by that of the Yellowstone, whose mountains and geysers and strange
-color effects enchant poet and painter. For the cañon system of the
-Arizona mountain ranges, the stupendous majesty of scenic grandeur
-which reaches its supreme aspect in the Grand Cañon of the Colorado,
-the wonders of extinct volcanic action, the colossal channels cut by
-the action of water, the unearthly splendor of the coloring in sky and
-atmospheric effects, all combine to make this state the very embodiment
-and visible expression of magic and mystery.
-
-In the broken mountain ranges the detached peaks extend, with
-narrow, fertile valleys lying between; while deep cañons and wild
-gorges, with rushing mountain torrents, still further diversify the
-grandeur of the panorama. Five great rivers add another impressive
-feature,--the Colorado, the San Juan, the Salinas, the Verde, and the
-San Francisco,--this system of rivers completing the most extraordinary
-combination of mountain, valley, mesa, and cañon to be found in the
-entire world. Numberless extinct volcanoes and vast lava beds add their
-fantastic imagery; and the metamorphic rock strata, recording the most
-violent volcanic upheavals, tell the prehistoric story of the fiery
-molten flood which swept over all this region when the earth was new.
-
-As has perhaps been suggested in the preceding pages, life in Arizona
-is by no means without its features of entertainment. These include
-various aspects, not to mention one that is by no means to be enjoyed
-in any of the great Eastern centres,--that of the exclusive annual
-festivity of the "Snake Dance." Chicago and Paris, New York and London,
-may find social entertainment in balls and opera, dancing and dining,
-but in Arizona one goes to this entertainment on the Painted Desert;
-and if in some happy summer of life one's horoscope has deflected his
-course into Arizona and Colorado, one comes to regard those fascinating
-localities with the devotion of a native of their sunny climes.
-
-After all, it is not length of time in any experience of life that is
-significant, but intensity of feeling, and one finds himself really
-living more intensely in a few weeks in the Far West, in all its wonder
-world, than in years or decades of his accustomed rounds in Eastern
-cities.
-
-This entertainment of the Snake Dance is furnished by the Moki Indians
-at their camp some seventy miles over the desert from Flagstaff. There
-is no means of conveyance save by wagons. The journey is over sagebrush
-and sand, enlivened by stones and cacti. The horses can make only slow
-progress. But the air is simply delightful and full of exhilaration,
-and the particular desert over which those who fare forth for this
-æsthetic spectacle must pass is the "Painted Desert," whose walls of
-rocks and mountains, brilliant in a dream of color, recede as they are
-approached, and thus the entire two days consumed in the journey are
-a perpetual delight to the eye. The wayfarers camp out overnight, and
-during the five days' journey--two days to go, two to return, and one
-to stay--their wants are, perforce, reduced to the most primitive.
-As the festivity lasts only twenty-eight minutes, it is certainly
-spending a good deal of time and energy in order to behold so brief a
-spectacle. But one is told it is worth all the fatigue and the time. It
-is a religious rite of the Moki Indians, and is a prayer for rain. The
-description of it is a literal one, for the dancers hold from one to
-three snakes--and rattlesnakes at that--in the mouth as they perform
-their strange gyrations. The dancers are the "braves," while the squaws
-chant a crooning accompaniment.
-
-One student of this Indian rite has said:
-
- "With the first glow in the east the priests hasten to the shrine
- of the Sun God with their offerings, the luminary himself being
- greeted with a prayer or with songs as he slowly emerges from
- behind the mesa in the Far East. Later the priests repair to their
- homes, and return to the kiva, bearing the ceremonial paraphernalia
- with which, early in the afternoon, they robe themselves in
- gorgeous array preparatory to the dance, which is given usually
- before the sun sets behind the San Francisco Peaks.
-
- "As the priests emerge from the kiva, where they wait in line until
- all have appeared, there is the hush of expectancy throughout the
- village; the inhabitants now line the terraces, house-tops and
- every available spot around the dance plaza, all being attired
- in their gayest and brightest costumes. In single file and with
- measured tread comes the line of priests. Entering the plaza, they
- wheel about and begin a slow, short dance, the time of the step
- being accompanied by the shaking of rattles and by the singing of
- sacred songs. The dance is over all too soon, when the spectators
- return to their camps and the priests to the kiva, where great
- quantities of food have been brought for them. Finally, in a
- great feast, they break the fast, which, on the part of the chief
- priests, has been maintained for many days."
-
-It is quite by way of being love's labor lost to visit Arizona during
-that period of time devoted to the Moqui Festival. Apparently the
-entire population betake themselves to this entertainment, journeying
-over the desert in their wagons, carrying with them their beds,
-their food, and every necessity, for except what they take with them
-they must do without. But as all the world, alas, cannot or does not
-dwell in Arizona,--a region in which any one sunset alone is worth
-the journey there,--and is thus deprived of the unique privilege of
-assisting at the Snake Dance, the next best thing, as a substitute,
-is to read the new work of George Wharton James (the author of "In
-and Around the Grand Canyon") called "Indians of the Painted Desert
-Region." It is the very gateway to a wide and deeply interesting
-knowledge of Indian life in Arizona and its relation to advancing
-civilization. It is the presentation of a series of wonderful
-landscapes in a vivid manner of word-picturing.
-
-"Wild, weird, and mystic pictures are formed in the mind by the very
-name--Painted Desert," writes Mr. James. "The sound suggests a fabled
-rather than a real land. Surely it must be akin to Atlantis or the
-island of Circe or the place where the Cyclops lived. Is it not a
-land of enchantment and dreams, not a place for living men and women,
-Indians though they be?"
-
-It seems that the Spaniards gave the name "El Pintado Deserto"--the
-Painted Desert.
-
-"Stand with me," writes Mr. James, "on the summit of one of the
-towering mountains that guard the region, and you will see such a
-landscape of color as exists nowhere else in the world. It suggests the
-thought of God's original palette, where he experimented in color ere
-he decided how to paint the sunset, tint the sun-kissed hills at dawn,
-give red to the rose, green to the leaves, yellow to the sunflowers....
-Look! here is a vast field of alkali,--fine, dazzling white. Yonder is
-a mural face half a thousand feet high and two hundred or more miles
-long. It is over a hundred miles away, but it reveals the rich glowing
-red of its walls, and between it and us are vast patches of pinks,
-grays, greens, carmines, blue, yellow, crimson, and brown, blending
-in every conceivable shade in a strange and grotesque yet fascinating
-manner. It is a rainbow petrified. It is a sunset painted on desert
-sands."
-
-And here art and archæology may revel. "History--exciting, thrilling,
-tragic--has been made in the Painted Desert region; was being made
-centuries before Lief Ericson landed on the shores of Vinland or John
-and Sebastian Cabot sailed from Bristol.... In the Painted Desert
-region we find peoples strange, peculiar, and interesting, whose
-mythology is more fascinating than that of ancient Greece, and for
-aught we know to the contrary, may be equally ancient; whose ceremonies
-of to-day are more elaborate than those of a devout Catholic, more
-complex than those of a Hindoo Pantheist, more weird than those of
-a howling dervish of Turkistan.... One of the countries comprised in
-the Painted Desert region is the theme of an epoch ... reciting deeds
-as brave and heroic as those of the Greeks at Marathon or Thermopylæ;
-a poem recently discovered after having been buried in the tomb of
-oblivion for over two hundred years. Here are peoples to whom a written
-letter is witchcraft and sorcery, and yet who can read the heavens,
-interpret the writings of the clouds, deserts, and cañons with unerring
-certainty.... A land it is of witchcraft and sorcery, of horror and
-dread of ghosts and goblins, of daily propitiations of fates and
-powers, and princes of darkness and air, at the very thought of whom
-withering injuries are sure to come."
-
-One is tempted to run on and on in quotation from this fascinating
-book, which depicts the strange life and the marvellous scenery in the
-country "where atmospheric colorings are so perfect and so divinely
-artistic that desolate deserts are made dreams of glory."
-
-Harriet Monroe, the Chicago poet, playwright, and most charming of
-essayists, who by no means limits her séances with the Muses to those
-particular hours in which she dons her singing robes, has given this
-prose-poem picture of a scene on the "Painted Desert":
-
- "The rocks lay in belts as red as flame, yellow as gold, purple
- as violets, and they seemed to shine of their own light; the City
- of Rocks, flaming red, and high as mountains; one thousand foot
- walls sheer to the desert, all carved in needles, spires, towers,
- castles--the most tremendous thing on earth--there it lay!"
-
-Of the sudden climatic changes of the desert Professor James says:
-
- "I have been almost frozen in its piercing snowstorms; choked
- with sand in its whirling sandstorms; wet through ere I could
- dismount from my horse in its fierce rainstorms; terrified and
- temporarily blinded by the brilliancy of its lightning storms,
- and almost sunstruck by the scorching power of the sun in its
- desolate confines.... With my horses I have camped, again and
- again, waterless, on its arid and inhospitable rocks and sands, and
- prayed for morning, only to resume our exhausting journey in the
- fiercely beating rays of the burning sun; longing for some pool of
- water, no matter how dirty, how stagnant, that our parched tongues
- and throats might feel the delight of swallowing something fluid.
- And last year (1902), in a journey to the home of the Hopi, my
- friends and I saw a part of this desert covered with the waters of
- a fierce rainstorm as if it were an ocean, and the 'dry-wash' of
- the Oraibi the scene of a flood that for hours equalled the rapids
- of the Colorado River. Desert though it is in the main,--barren,
- wild, and desolate,--here and there within its boundaries are
- fertile valleys, wooded slopes, and garden spots as rich as any
- on earth; and the people who make their dwelling-place in this
- inhospitable land present characteristics as strongly contrasted
- as those of nature. Here are peoples of uncertain and mysterious
- origin whose history is preserved only in fantastic legends and
- traditional songs; whose government is as pure and perfect as that
- of the patriarchs, and possibly as ancient, and yet more republican
- than the most modern of existing governments; peoples whose women
- build and own the houses, and whose men weave the garments of the
- women, knit the stockings of their own wear, and are as expert
- with needle and thread as their ancestors were with bow and arrow,
- obsidian-tipped spear, or stone battle-axe.... Here are peoples
- of stupendous religious beliefs. Peoples who can truthfully be
- designated as the most religious of the world, yet peoples as
- agnostic and sceptic, if not as learned as Hume, Voltaire, Spencer,
- and Ingersoll. Peoples to whom a written letter is witchcraft
- and sorcery, and yet who can read the heavens, interpret the
- writings of the woods, deserts, and cañons with a certainty never
- failing.... Here are intelligent farmers who for centuries have
- scientifically irrigated their lands and yet who cut off the ears
- of their burros to keep them from stealing corn.... Peoples who
- pray by machinery as the Burmese use their prayer wheels, and who
- 'plant' supplications as a gardener plants trees and shrubs....
- Peoples who are pantheists, sun worshippers, and snake dancers,
- yet who have churches and convents built with incredible labor and
- as extensive as any modern cathedral. Peoples whose conservatism
- in manners and religion surpasses that of the veriest English
- Tories; who for hundreds of years have steadily and successfully
- resisted all efforts to 'convert' and change them, and who to-day
- are as firm in their faiths as ever.... Peoples to whom fraternal
- organizations and secret societies, for men and women alike, are as
- ancient as the mountains they inhabit, whose lodgerooms are more
- wonderful, and whose signs and passwords more complex, than those
- of any organization of civilized lands and modern times."
-
-One of the most weird and fascinating experiences in Arizona is a visit
-to "Assamanuda," the "Country of the Departed Spirits." This is the
-poetic name the Iroquois Indians give to the Painted Desert. This vast
-plain stretches away with gigantic horizontal columns, the remains of
-vast layers of sedimentary rock, from which the rains of prehistoric
-ages have washed away the connecting earth, and the columns are
-streaked and mottled with scarlet, due, it is said, to the oxidization
-of particles of feldspar in the granite of which these rocks are
-composed. Here may be witnessed in its perfection the Fata Morgana. In
-the air appear palaces, hanging gardens, and temples; fountains and
-wonderful parks adorned with sculpture; towers and turreted castles;
-beautiful villas with terraced lawns and cascades of water thrown high
-in the air; rose gardens and hills, where the deer and the antelope are
-seen; all these and other visions of loveliness are pictured on the air
-in a perfection of light and shading. It is not difficult to fancy that
-one is really gazing into the ethereal world, beyond the pearly gates,
-and gazing indeed into "the country of departed spirits."
-
-[Illustration: SUWARA (GIANT CACTUS), SALT RIVER VALLEY, ARIZONA]
-
-All Northern and Northeastern Arizona are comprised in the
-region,--Nature's picture gallery. Dr. Newberry, the geologist, who
-explored all the regions east of the upper Colorado as far as the
-junction of the Green and the Grand rivers, thus pictures one view of
-the plateau:
-
- "Directly south the view was bounded by the high and distant mesas
- of the Navajo country, succeeded in the southwest by the still
- more lofty battlements of the great white mesa formerly seen from
- the Moqui pueblos. On these high tablelands the outlines were not
- only distinctly visible, but grand and impressive at the distance
- of a hundred miles. Nearly west a great gap opened in the high
- tablelands through which the San Juan flows to its junction with
- the Colorado. The distance between the mesa walls is perhaps ten
- miles, and scattered over it are castle-like buttes and slender
- towers, none of which can be less than a thousand feet in height,
- their sides absolutely perpendicular and their forms wonderful
- imitations of architectural art. Illuminated by the setting sun the
- outlines of these singular objects come out sharp and distinct with
- such exact similitude to art that we could hardly resist conviction
- that we beheld the walls and towers of some ancient Cyclopean city,
- hitherto undiscovered."
-
-Every journey in Arizona seems to lead on into an enchanted world.
-The gray valley road, the curious mesa formations that stretch into
-infinite distances; the mystic apparition in the Estrella range of
-the Montezuma faces; the ruins of Casa Grande, which tell their tale
-of a massive city that once existed here; the ruins on the Rio
-Verde; the mounds and shafts discovered belonging to some prehistoric
-civilization; the ancient watch tower; the painted rocks, with their
-extensive hieroglyphics,--all speak to the archæologist in a language
-that fascinates the imagination. Its three greatest features--the
-Grand Cañon, regarding which there is neither speech nor language;
-the Petrified Forest, and that Submerged Star known as "Meteorite
-Mountain"--would alone make it the world mecca of scientists; to say
-nothing of the strange ruins of prehistoric peoples, of an unearthly
-beauty of atmospheric coloring, and of the contemporary scientific
-interest of the great Lowell Observatory at Flagstaff, or the splendid
-progress and development of the people. It might well have been of this
-marvellous country that Emerson wrote:
-
- "And many a thousand summers
- My gardens ripened well,
- And light from meliorating stars
- With firmer glory fell.
-
- "I wrote the past in characters
- Of rock and fire the scroll,
- The building in the coral sea,
- The planting of the coal.
-
- "And thefts from satellites and rings
- And broken stars I drew,
- And out of spent and aged things
- I formed the world anew."
-
-What is the world that shall be in this mystic Arizona? What, indeed,
-was the world that has been there? Imagination falters alike before
-the stupendous marvels of its past, the picturesque splendors of its
-future. Its scenic grandeur will make Arizona a world centre; the
-nations from afar will make their pilgrimage to the sublimest marvels
-of all nature's revelations to this planet. Here will be sought the
-counsel of the gods. The message of the prehistoric past and of the
-undiscovered future will "give the law of night and day" in wonderful
-Arizona, the land of magic and mystery.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE PETRIFIED FOREST AND THE METEORITE MOUNTAIN
-
- "_A spell is laid on sod and stone,
- Night and day are tampered with.
- Every quality and pith
- Surcharged and sultry with a power
- That works its will on age and hour._"
-
- EMERSON
-
-
-A June day in the Petrified Forests of Arizona is an experience that
-can never fade from memory. Every excursion into this strange, uncanny
-realm of Arizona, which is an empire in its area; every journey one
-takes, every trail he follows, leads into strange and fascinating
-locality; and Adamana, the gateway to the Petrified Forests, has its
-own spellbinding power for the tourist. Adamana consists of a water
-tank, the station, and two bungalows, in one of which very comfortable
-entertainment is offered, and in the other of which dwells a character
-whom all travellers meet,--Adam Hanna, a distant relative of the
-late Mark Hanna, the original settler of this region. For a long
-time the place was known as Adam Hanna's, and when with advancing
-civilization this designation became too colloquial for an up-to-date
-twentieth-century world, the elision of two or three letters gave the
-present attractive name,--Adamana.
-
-To leave the comfortable ease of a Pullman sleeper at the witching hour
-of five in the morning to stop over at Adamana and visit the Petrified
-Forest requires a degree of fortitude beyond that usually calculated.
-Left to one's self, one would emulate the example of the man who
-journeyed to the north pole to see a sunrise that occurred only three
-days in the year. On the first two mornings he refused to rise on the
-plea of the further extension of his opportunities; on the third, when
-his servant reminded him that it was the "last call," he turned over
-and philosophically remarked that he would come again next year. But
-the dusky porter allows the tourist no such margin for reflection, and
-one finds himself standing in some wonderful place spellbound by the
-witchery of the desert, and the long train vanishing in the distance,
-almost before he knows whether he has exchanged the land of dreams for
-the land of day and daylight realities,--for this weird and mystic
-panorama of the infinite desert, with the bluest of turquoise skies
-already lighted by the blazing splendor of the June sunrise, and the
-grotesque, uncanny buttes scattered at intervals all over that vast
-plain. The intense silence was unbroken save by the voice and footstep
-of the man representing the little bungalow termed the Forest Hotel.
-Contrary to one's preconceived ideas of an Arizona desert, the morning
-was cold, and the blazing fire and hot coffee were most grateful. But
-where was the "Petrified Forest"? one marvelled. Away on the horizon
-gleamed an evanescent, palpitating region of shimmering color. Yet this
-was not the "quarry of jewels," but the "Bad Lands," which have at
-least one redeeming virtue, whatever their vices,--that of producing
-the most aërial and fairy-like color effects imaginable.
-
-It is astonishing how swiftly one relinquishes preconceived ideas of
-living and learns to get on without electric bells, long-distance
-telephones, and elaborate conveniences in general, even to the
-"prepared air," strained through thin layers of cloth, as the latest
-superfine condition added to a great New York hotel, and adapts one's
-self to a mode of life in which a simple but very clean room, primitive
-food, wonderful air, good, kind people, and a petrified forest to amuse
-him, take the place of the complex and elaborate life of the great
-Eastern cities. At Adamana one finds himself seventy-five miles from
-Gallup, New Mexico, the nearest town of any importance, from which
-all household supplies must be ordered. When the coffee gives out,
-for instance, seventy-five miles from a lemon; and when a Sunday and
-a holiday have almost followed each other, thus delaying all orders,
-one has then the most delightful and spacious opportunities for
-experimenting on the simple life. The desert offers other things; and
-while these do not include the menu of Sherry's, for instance, they
-do include certain allurements for which the country might be searched
-in vain, as they only exist on the Colorado desert. The quality of the
-air, the color of the sky, the marvel of color vistas,--all make up a
-new world in which one finds himself fairly questioning regarding his
-own identity. Nor has he any apparent test by which to determine--
-
- "If I am I, as I do hope I be."
-
-Perhaps, indeed, he does not so tenaciously cling to that which he
-remembers of himself yesterday, and is rather interested, on the
-whole, in accepting some possibly new transformation of his being. The
-locality seems to him sufficiently well indicated as being, according
-to his first impression, simply somewhere in the magic and witchery
-of space. This address might not be accepted by the government postal
-service, but even that heretofore indispensable matter in some way
-fades into comparative insignificance. What does one who has an Arizona
-sky, and a bewildering shimmer of color afar on the horizon that might
-be
-
- "A painted ship upon a painted ocean"
-
-or almost anything else,--what does he want of the sublunary detail
-of eight postal deliveries a day, beginning at half-past seven in
-the morning, with his first dawn of returning consciousness, and
-ending with midnight, when he is, very likely, summoned out of his
-sleep by the rap of a bellboy delivering more mail,--more,--as if he
-had not been under an avalanche of it all day and had sought refuge
-in dreamland for the very purpose of escaping the vigilance of his
-national postal service. But one may as well accept the fact as one
-from which there is no appeal, that in the heart of civilization he
-cannot escape its burdens and its penalties. He can only evade them
-by going to--Adamana, for instance; Adamana, the metropolis of the
-railroad water-tank, the station, and two bungalows. Even these are too
-many. One bungalow is enough. He cannot repose in two at the same time;
-and as for neighbors and news,--has he not the stars and the sunsets?
-What does Emily Dickinson say?--
-
- "The only news I know
- Is bulletins all day
- From Immortality."
-
-There are no birds to
-
- "... carol undeceiving things,"
-
-as in Colorado; but there is, instead, intense silence,--a silence so
-absolutely intense as to be, by a paradox, fairly vocal; and if one
-does but catch the music of the spheres for which he finds himself
-listening, it must be that his powers of hearing are defective. One
-recalls the lines:
-
- "Who loves the music of the spheres
- And lives on earth, must close his ears
- To many voices that he hears."
-
-The "many voices" are stilled; one has left them at least seventy-five
-miles away,--in Gallup, for instance! Gallup, that for the time
-prefigures itself to him as his New York, his Paris, his London. It is
-the source of all his possible supplies; and that it does not assume an
-overwhelming importance is simply because he does not want any supplies
-of the particular nature that Gallup--or Paris--can furnish. He has
-achieved something more than the power to satisfy all his (former)
-multitudinous wants; he has eliminated them.
-
-To be sure, the Chinese have a proverb that it is not worth while to
-cut off one's feet to save buying shoes. Yet, if instead of depriving
-himself of feet he has achieved wings, why, manifestly, there is no
-need of shoes. There are, when one comes to think of it, a vast number
-of things in our late civilization for which there is no special need.
-
- "For a cap and bells our lives we pay;
- Bubbles we earn with a whole soul's tasking:
- 'Tis heaven alone that is given away;
- 'Tis only God may be had for the asking."
-
-In fact, when one comes to reflect upon the aspects of his former life
-(as he sees them in mental panorama from Adamana), he can only arrive
-at the conclusion that life is unnecessarily choked and submerged
-under an ever-increasing burden of _things_. Emerson, of course, whose
-insight saw the universe as a crystal sphere which revealed to his
-vision its entire working mechanism,--Emerson long since announced that
-
- "Things are in the saddle
- And ride mankind."
-
-Why should one be ridden by things? Why should he enslave
-himself,--mortgage his entire powers of achievement, such as they are,
-to pay his bills to the butcher, the baker, and the candlestick maker?
-Is not the life more than meat, and the spirit than fine raiment? So he
-may dream for the moment, gazing meditatively at the water-tank, the
-station, and the two bungalows that comprise Adamana. Good for that day
-only, at least, is its contrast to the bewildering din of _entrepôts_,
-of ports, of custom-houses, of the general din and warfare of the world
-he has left behind.
-
-Holbrook, the other station for the Petrified Forests, is twenty miles
-away. Flagstaff, a very thriving and interesting Arizona town, famous
-as the site of the Observatory of Prof. Percival Lowell of Boston,
-is one hundred and fifty miles to the west; and one hour of railroad
-journey beyond Flagstaff is Williams, the town from which runs the
-branch railroad to the Grand Cañon over the rolling mesas crowned
-with the beautiful peaks of the San Francisco mountains, a distance
-of sixty-three miles, the journey occupying three hours. The nearest
-town to Adamana station, in which a daily paper is published, is
-Albuquerque, in New Mexico, which is nine hundred and thirty-five
-miles to the east, almost as far as from New York to Chicago. The
-metropolis to which this region looks as its nearest large city is Los
-Angeles, twenty-six hours distant. So here one is out of the world, so
-to speak,--
-
- "The world forgetting, by the world forgot,"--
-
-with the vast rolling mesas, with sandstone cliffs offering an uncanny
-landscape before the eye, with the eternal blue of Arizona skies
-bending above, with a silence so deep brooding over the desert that one
-might well feel himself on the moon rather than on earth,--a silence
-only broken by the semi-daily rush of the long overland trains and
-occasional freight lines that pass.
-
-[Illustration: SAN FRANCISCO PEAK, NEAR FLAGSTAFF, ARIZONA]
-
-John Muir, the famous California naturalist, explorer, and author of
-valuable books on the Western parks, passed the winter of 1905-06 at
-Adamana with his two daughters, the Misses Wanda and Helen Muir, and it
-is he who has discovered the new Petrified Forest which he calls the
-"Blue Forest"--all the specimens having a deep blue tone, while the
-other three are simply quarries of red moss, agate, amethyst, topaz,
-pale rose crystals gleaming against a smoky green ground. The landscape
-effect of the "Bad Lands" from the little bungalow known as the Forest
-Hotel is of fairy-like enchantment. A shimmer of rose and gray and gold
-and emerald, it gleams on the horizon. Lighted by a blazing sunset, it
-might well be the gates of a New Jerusalem. Anything more exquisite,
-and more ineffably ethereal in coloring, one might journey far to seek.
-
- "Moreover, something is, or seems,
- That touches us like mystic gleams,
- Like glimpses of forgotten dreams."
-
-These lines may, perchance, come echoing around one in the air as he
-loiters at night on the low, long piazza, while the myriad meteors of
-Arizona skies blaze their way through the transparent air and a sky
-full of stars contends with the moon for brilliancy; the unearthly,
-delicate, ethereal coloring of the "Bad Lands" gleaming resplendent on
-the distant horizon.
-
-If the wanderer has fallen upon particularly fortunate days in his
-horoscope and found Miss Wanda Muir--her quaint name coming from her
-mother, the daughter of a Polish nobleman--to drive him out to this
-marvellous "forest" of stone, he will have a pleasure enhanced by
-interesting conversation. A graduate of Berkeley College in California,
-and the constant companion of her father in his wanderings, Miss Muir
-is indeed an ideal guide, and under her hand one June morning the
-two horses sped along over the rough, stony ground at a pace to set
-every fibre tingling. One of the features of the Arizona desert is the
-arroyo, a dry stream, a ready-made river, so to speak, minus the water.
-Some of these even have a stream of flowing water, only it is under the
-bed of the river rather than on top of it, for Arizona is the land of
-magic and wonder and of a general reversal of accepted conditions.
-
-"Sometimes in driving out here," said Miss Muir, "a cloudburst comes
-up while we are in the Petrified Forests, and on returning the horses
-have to swim this dry stream. Once the water was so high it came into
-the wagon. Not infrequently, when we go out to the forest, some one
-comes dashing after us on horseback to warn us to get back as quickly
-as possible, or the torrents of water from a sudden cloudburst will
-cut us off altogether, perhaps for a day and a night." The pleasing
-uncertainty of life in Arizona may be realized from this danger of
-being suddenly drowned in the arid sands of a desert, and being
-confronted with a sudden Lodore that descends from the heavens on a
-midsummer noon. But, as one is constantly saying to himself, Arizona is
-the land of surprises. No known laws of meteorology, or of any other
-form of science, hold good here. The mountain peak transforms itself
-into the bottom of a sea, and the sea suddenly upheaves itself in air
-and figures as a mountain. Arizona is nature's kaleidoscope; it is the
-land of transformation.
-
-Of the three petrified forests, each separated by a mile or two, the
-first is reached by a drive of some six miles, while the third is more
-than twice as far. The second is the largest and most elaborate, and
-in the aggregate they cover an area of over two thousand acres. The
-ground is the high rolling mesas, and over it are scattered, "thick
-as leaves in Vallombrosa," the jewel-like fragments of mighty trees in
-deposits that are the wonder of the scientist. From the huge fallen
-tree trunks, many of these being over two hundred feet in length and
-of similar proportions in diameter, to the mere chips and twigs, the
-forests are transmuted into agate and onyx and chalcedony. Numbers of
-these specimens contain perfect crystals. They are vivid and striking
-in color,--in rich Byzantine red, deep greens and purples and yellow,
-white and translucent, or dark in all color blendings. Great blocks
-of agate cover many parts of the forest. Hundreds of entire trees are
-seen. When cut transversely these logs show the bark, the inner fibre,
-and veining as perfectly as would a living tree. And over all these
-fallen monarchs of a prehistoric forest bends the wonderful turquoise
-sky of Arizona, and the air is all the liquid gold of the intense
-sunshine.
-
-At Tiffany's in New York may be seen huge slabs and sections of this
-petrified wood under high polish. A fine exhibit of it was made at
-the Paris exposition in 1900, and a specimen of it was presented to
-Rodin, the great sculptor, who was incredulous of the possibility that
-this block, apparently of onyx, could have been wood. Through all the
-forests are these strange rock formations called buttes, rising in the
-most weird shapes from the sand and stones and sagebrush of the vast
-desert. What a treasure-ground of antiquity! This region, which seems
-a plain, is yet higher than the top of Mount Washington, and the
-altitude insures almost perpetual coolness. Scientists seem to agree in
-the theory that the petrified forests are a debatable phenomenon whose
-origin eludes any final conclusion. It is possible that some mighty
-sea suddenly arose--perhaps as the present Salton Sea in Southern
-California--and engulfed them. The land is partly the "bad lands" and
-partly a sandy plain covered with petrifactions. The third forest
-contains hundreds of unbroken tree trunks, of which some are over two
-hundred feet in length. Many of these are partly imbedded in the earth.
-
-All around this high plateau rise on the horizon surrounding cliffs
-to the height of one hundred and fifty and more feet, serrated into
-ravines and gorges, variegated with the sandstone formations in all
-their shimmer of colors, and indicating that this basin was once the
-bottom of a sea.
-
-It is the paradise of the ethnologist as well as of the geologist.
-Besides cliff ruins and hieroglyphics, almost anywhere, by chance, one
-may find traces of submerged walls, and following these, a man with
-an ordinary spade may dig up prehistoric pottery, skeletons, beads,
-rings, and occasionally necklaces. The pottery, both in design and in
-scheme of decoration, shows a high degree of civilization. Who were
-these prehistoric peoples who had built their pueblos and created their
-implements and pottery and were already old when Plymouth Rock was new?
-Much of the symbolic creation here still awaits its interpreter.
-
-From these millions of tons of glistening, shining blocks and segments
-and tree trunks the tourist is not allowed to carry away specimens
-_carte blanche_, as formerly. The Petrified Forests are now a
-government reservation, although not yet one of the government parks.
-Small specimens, within a reasonable amount, are permitted the tourist
-as souvenirs.
-
-The Petrified Forests are quarries rather than forests; the great
-fallen logs, branches, and chips, lying prostrate on the ground, are
-seen glowing and gleaming like jewels. So far as the eye can reach
-there is not a human habitation. Over the infinite stretch of sand and
-rocks bends the bluest of skies, and here and there are prehistoric
-Indian mines, and one ledge of cliffs on which are strange and as yet
-undeciphered hieroglyphics. The graves of the prehistoric inhabitants
-of this region are numerous, each containing rare and choice specimens
-of pottery which are dug out intact. This region seems to have been
-once thickly populated. The remains of pueblos are numerous. Skeletons
-are constantly being found.
-
-Although the visitor is not allowed to carry away with him a trainload
-or so of specimens, he may still be permitted a beautiful cross-section
-of an entire tree trunk, showing all the veins of the wood and the
-bark, a specimen thin enough to be portable, and worthy a place in
-any cabinet of curiosities, besides many chips showing all the range
-of beautiful colors which abound in Chalcedony Park. In this park
-lies a vast fallen tree trunk that forms a natural bridge over a
-chasm,--a bridge that seems to be of solid agate. These forests are
-among the great scenic wonders of the world, and if they were in the
-heart of the Himalayas or some other especially inaccessible spot,
-all good Americans would hasten to visit them. But our own wonderful
-and incomparable scenic grandeur is neglected. These "Petrified
-Forests" are the marvel of the geologist. What has happened, in all
-the phenomena of nature, to produce this incredible spectacle? Many
-scientific men believe that these forests did not grow on the spot
-where they now would lie prostrate, but were swept down by floods when
-this region was a vast inland sea, and that they became imbedded in the
-sand; that then the sea vanished and volcanic eruptions poured over,
-and the wood was hardened to rock. Again, a flood of water passed over
-and washed away the sand and silt, and the erosion left these thousands
-of acres of petrifactions exposed on the surface as now; and thus,
-after millenniums have passed, we have these quarries of chalcedony and
-agate, onyx, cornelian, topaz, and amethyst.
-
-Every evening at Adamana disclosed a sky panorama of kaleidoscopic
-wonder. Afar to the horizon the Bad Lands shimmered in a faint dream
-of colors under the full moon. The stars seemed to hang midway in the
-air, and frequent meteors blazed through the vast, mysterious space.
-Adamana is nine hours from Albuquerque, the metropolis of New Mexico,
-and five hours distant from Flagstaff, to the west. All the thousands
-of acres of desert lands about require only water to render them richly
-productive. But water is unattainable. There are no mountain ranges
-near enough to produce water storage, and unless the twentieth-century
-scientists discover some way of creating rain, these arid regions must
-remain as they are. Yet even here American life and energy and progress
-are seen. The scattered settlers unite in maintaining public schools
-six months in the year, and with only from twelve to twenty pupils the
-teacher is paid from seventy-five to eighty dollars a month,--more than
-twice the salary paid in the country schools in New England. In the
-little bungalow here at Adamana, where Mr. Stevenson, the government
-guardian of the Petrified Forests, makes tourists strangely comfortable
-during their desert sojourn, one finds a piano, a well-selected little
-library, and young people whose command of the violin and piano
-offer music that is by no means unacceptable. The children get music
-lessons--no one knows how; they are eager for any instruction in
-language, and acquire French and Spanish in some measure, and in all
-ways the national ambition is sustained. From Albuquerque comes a daily
-paper, and only one day behind date the Los Angeles papers arrive. One
-is not out of the world (alas!) even on the Arizona desert.
-
-It is a new world in itself,--the desert of Arizona. No region on the
-earth is more diversified, more intensely interesting. This desert
-comprises mountains and plains; it contains that one supreme scenic
-wonder of the world, the Grand Cañon; in it are Cañon Diablo and the
-Meteorite Mountain. Within its area also is the "Tonto Basin,"--an
-incalculable chaos of isolated and unrelated cliffs, and crags of
-mountains peaks that have lost their mountains, and general wreck and
-ruin. One might fancy that at the end of creation, when the universe
-itself was completed, all the chips and fragments and débris in
-general were hurled into the Tonto Basin,--only that, of course, the
-universe was never "made," but is always in the making; only that the
-physical configuration of the entire earth is always in process of
-transformation into new aspects, and nowhere is this progress of the
-ages more extraordinarily in evidence than in Arizona.
-
-Leaving the Petrified Forest for the Grand Cañon, one has a wonderful
-journey of six hours to Williams, and thence three hours over the
-branch road to Bright Angel, where the new and magnificent hotel, "El
-Tovar," captivates the travellers, and from which a stage runs to Grand
-View, thirteen miles away, where Vishnu Temple, the Coliseum, Solomon's
-Temple, and other wonders of the marvellous sandstone architecture, in
-the depths of the Grand Cañon are viewed.
-
-In waiting for the train on the branch road running from Williams to
-the Grand Cañon over the beautiful San Franciscan mountains, the
-hour of waiting at Williams is made a delight by a most unique and
-interesting curiosity shop under the splendid Harvey management, where
-all kinds of natural curiosities and Indian and Mexican things are
-shown. The walls are hung with bright-hued blankets and rugs, the
-ceiling is decorated and draped, easy-chairs and sofas abound, and
-these tend to make the journey a kind of royal progress.
-
-In 1540 Pedro de Tovar, one of the officers who accompanied Coronado
-through his great expedition, passed through Arizona. Even then an
-extinct civilization was already old. The ruins of the dwellings of
-those prehistoric people abound near Flagstaff. In the recesses of
-Walnut Cañon there are found cliff-dwellings in great numbers. "Some
-of these are in ruins, and have but a narrow shelf of the once broad
-floor of solid rock left to evidence their extreme antiquity. Others
-are almost wholly intact, having stubbornly resisted the weathering of
-time." Nothing but fragments of pottery now remain of the many quaint
-implements and trinkets that characterized these dwellings at the time
-of their discovery.
-
- "Fixed like swallows' nests upon the face of a precipice,
- approachable from above or below only by deliberate and cautious
- climbing, these dwellings have the appearance of fortified retreats
- rather than habitual abodes. That there was a time in the remotest
- past when warlike peoples of mysterious origin passed southward
- over this plateau is generally credited. And the existence of
- the cliff-dwellings is ascribed to the exigencies of that dark
- period when the inhabitants of the plateau, unable to cope with
- the superior energy, intelligence, and numbers of the descending
- hordes, devised these unassailable retreats. All their quaintness
- and antiquity cannot conceal the deep pathos of their being,
- for tragedy is written all over these poor hovels hung between
- earth and sky. Their builders hold no smallest niche in recorded
- history. Their aspirations, their struggles, and their fate are all
- unwritten, save on these crumbling stones, which are their sole
- monument and meagre epitaph. Here once they dwelt. They left no
- other print on time."
-
-Flagstaff is a pleasant mountain town some seven thousand feet above
-sea level, and is particularly fortunate in being the site of the
-Lowell Observatory, founded by Professor Percival Lowell of Boston,
-which brings eminent astronomers and scientists to the place. In the
-Lowell Observatory some of the best work in modern science is being
-accomplished, and Professor Lowell and his staff have for some years
-been devoting themselves to the special study of Mars. Flagstaff was
-selected for the site of the observatory on account of the singularly
-clear and still air of Arizona. It is an atmosphere almost without
-vibration. Never were distances more curiously deceiving to the eye
-than in Arizona. A point that is apparently only a few yards away may
-be, in reality, at a distance of two miles. Professor Lowell and his
-staff have, therefore, exceptional facilities for their work, and Mr.
-Carl Otto Lampland, the stellar photographer of the staff, has taken
-impressions of Mars that seem to leave little doubt in the minds of
-experts that canals on that planet reflect themselves by the camera.
-This achievement is recognized by astronomers everywhere as marking
-an epoch in the study of Mars and as fairly closing the argument
-regarding the possibility of canals on that body by bringing their
-construction there as an unquestionable fact. It was Schiaparelli, the
-Italian astronomer, who first observed what he believed were canals
-on Mars. His report was received with incredulity; but his theory has
-been so reinforced and supported by actual results of observations
-since then that it is now generally accepted. Early in the decade of
-1880-90 Professor Lowell began a special study at Flagstaff with his
-fine twenty-four-inch telescope, but it was in May, 1905, that the
-first results of real significance were obtained. The light about Mars
-is said to be faint, and the vibrations in the air, though less in
-Arizona than is usual elsewhere, still produced disturbing effects on
-the plate. It is said that Mr. Lampland overcame this difficulty after
-a long series of experiments, "by using a diaphragm on the telescope,
-cutting down the aperture from twenty-four inches to twelve inches,
-as a rule. Though this diaphragming of a photographic lens is not
-new, this was the first time it was applied to a glass as large as
-twenty-four inches in diameter and for such faint objects. Hitherto
-astronomers have been more concerned with availing themselves of the
-light-gathering power of the large lenses. It was a distinct advance,
-and is the one step to which the largest share of the credit is due of
-successfully photographing the canals."
-
-In the vestibule of the Institute of Technology in Boston were shown in
-the spring of 1906 a number of these photographs. To the uninitiated
-they merely presented a black ground with white lines faintly defined.
-Professor Lowell says that the special significance of the photographs
-lies in the fact that they corroborate the results shown by other
-photographers of Mars, and that they also corroborate the methods. That
-the sensitive plate of the camera will record a star never visible
-through even the strongest glass, and thus prove its existence, is a
-wonderful fact in stellar photography.
-
-Cañon Diablo is one of the volcanic phenomena of Arizona,--a narrow
-chasm some two hundred and fifty feet deep, several miles long,
-and five or six hundred feet wide, which the Santa Fé road crosses
-on a wonderful steel spider-web bridge a few miles before reaching
-Flagstaff. It is one of the curious things for which the tourist is
-watching. For so intensely interesting is the entire journey westward
-after leaving La Junta in Colorado, that the traveller who realizes the
-wonderland through which he is passing is very much on the alert for
-the landscape.
-
-Between Adamana and Flagstaff is a strangely interesting country.
-Here is Meteorite Mountain, where evidently a huge meteor fell into
-the earth with terrific force, upheaving all the surrounding crust
-and thus producing a mountain with an enormous cavity in its centre.
-For five years men have been digging here to find the meteor. They
-have excavated huge fragments of it. The vast hollow crater where the
-meteorite is supposed to have fallen into the ground is a mile wide.
-In some fragments of the meteor which were submitted to Sir William
-Crookes for examination that great scientist found diamonds in small
-but unmistakable quantities.
-
-The Meteorite Mountain is situated not more than ten miles south of
-Cañon Diablo, from which station the traveller may drive to this
-phenomenal cavity. Within recent months shafts are being projected into
-the earth to discover, if possible, whether the meteoric theory is
-the true one. More and more, with every year, is science undertaking
-to "pluck out the heart of the mystery" in this problematic Arizona.
-Prof. G. K. Gilbert, of the United States Geological Survey, has made a
-special study of this phenomenon, and it is he who experimented with a
-magnetic test, assuming that if an enormous meteorite had hurled itself
-into the earth until it was buried past excavation, the great mass of
-metallic iron would still respond to the test, and furnish unmistakable
-proof of its presence if subjected to magnetic attraction. A scientific
-writer who has recently made a study of Meteorite Mountain thus reports
-the conditions:
-
- "The mountain is about two hundred feet high, and there are a few
- stunted pines about its forbidding looking slopes. Going to the top
- of this mountain, over huge masses of strange-looking rock, one
- will find a great depression, generally called the crater, though
- there are no evidences of its volcanic formation. This crater is a
- huge bowl one mile across and six hundred feet deep. The winds of
- the desert have blown much sand into the crater, evidently covering
- the bottom of the depression to a depth of many feet. There is a
- level space of about forty acres in the bottom of the crater.
-
- "When the gigantic meteor fell hissing into the earth, if it
- ever did so, the concussion must have been terrific. And in this
- connection it is interesting to note that the Indians near by
- have a legend about a huge star falling out of the heavens and
- dazzling the tribe with its brightness. Then there was a great
- shock and sudden darkness, and ever since then the Indians have
- regarded Meteorite Mountain with awe. Some idea of the action of
- the meteorite can be obtained by throwing a stone into the mud.
- When the meteorite buried itself far into the earth the sides were
- heaved up, leaving a rim-like circle about the depression. As
- the meteorite sank into the earth it must have crushed layers of
- red sandstone and limestone. It is believed that the white sand
- found in the crater and on the sides of the mountain is from the
- sandstone pulverized by the meteor in its descent. This sand was
- blown skyward and afterward settled down on the mountain, covering
- it thickly. No sand like it is to be found near the mountain.
-
- "Men searching the ground surrounding the mountain for a distance
- of several miles find small meteorites. Several of these weigh
- as much as one thousand pounds, and others weigh only a fraction
- of an ounce. The largest pieces were found furthest from the
- mountain. These meteorites have been proved to be practically
- non-magnetic. This may explain why the immense body of iron in
- the buried meteor has not shown any magnetic properties. Needles
- taken to the mountain have not shown the presence of any great
- magnetic attraction, and this fact puzzled scientists until it was
- found that the fragments found near the mountain did not possess
- magnetism.
-
- "Another interesting discovery is the presence of what is called
- 'iron shale' near the mountain. These are fragments of burned or
- 'dead' iron. They might have been broken from the meteorite at the
- time of the terrific impact, or they might have been snapped from
- the larger body owing to a sudden cooling process. Inasmuch as the
- Cañon Diablo country was at one time an immense inland sea, another
- interesting theory has been brought forth,--that the meteor fell
- into this sea, and that the great number of splinters of iron in
- the neighborhood were caused by the sudden cooling of the molten
- mass. It has been discovered that these small meteorites contain
- diamonds."
-
-In the immediate vicinity of Meteorite Mountain several tons of
-meteoric fragments have been found of which Prof. George Wharton James
-has one, weighing about a ton, on his lawn at his charming residence in
-Pasadena. There are also found in this vicinity large amounts of shale
-which scientists pronounce analogous to the meteorite, but "dead"; yet
-this shale is highly magnetic and possesses polarity,--one of the most
-mysterious and incomprehensible properties of electricity.
-
-Professor Gilbert did not meet success when he tried the magnetic
-test, and in discussing this matter in an address on "The Origin of
-Hypotheses," delivered before the Geological Society in Washington last
-year, he said:
-
- "Still another contribution to the subject, while it does not
- increase the number of hypotheses, is nevertheless important in
- that it tends to diminish the weight of the magnetic evidence
- and thus to reopen the question which Mr. Baker and I supposed
- we had settled. Our fellow-member, Mr. Edwin E. Howell, through
- whose hands much of the meteoric iron had passed, points out that
- each of the iron masses, great and small, is in itself a complete
- individual. They have none of the characters that would be found if
- they had been broken one from another, and yet, as they are all of
- one type and all reached the earth within a small district, it must
- be supposed that they were originally connected in some way.
-
- "Reasoning by analogy from the characters of other meteoric bodies,
- he infers that the irons were all included in a large mass of some
- different material, either crystalline rock, such as constitutes
- the class of meteorites called 'stony,' or else a compound of iron
- and sulphur, similar to certain nodules discovered inside the
- iron masses when sawn in two. Neither of these materials is so
- enduring as iron, and the fact that they are not now found on the
- plain does not prove their original absence. Moreover, the plain
- is strewn in the vicinity of the crater with bits of limonite, a
- mineral frequently produced by the action of air and water on iron
- sulphides, and this material is much more abundant than the iron.
- If it be true that the iron masses were thus embedded, like plums
- in an astral pudding, the hypothetic buried star might have great
- size and yet only small power to attract the magnetic needle.
- Mr. Howell also proposes a qualification of the test by volumes,
- suggesting that some of the rocks beneath the buried star might
- have been condensed by the shock so as to occupy less space.
-
- "These considerations are eminently pertinent to the study of
- the crater and will find appropriate place in any comprehensive
- discussion of its origin; but the fact which is peculiarly
- worthy of note at the present time is their ability to unsettle
- a conclusion that was beginning to feel itself secure. This
- illustrates the tentative nature not only of the hypotheses of
- science, but of what science calls its results.
-
- "The method of hypotheses, and that method is the method of
- science, founds its explanations of nature wholly on observed
- facts, and its results are ever subject to the limitations imposed
- by imperfect observation. However grand, however widely accepted,
- however useful its conclusions, none is so sure that it cannot be
- called into question by a newly discovered fact. In the domain of
- the world's knowledge there is no infallibility."
-
-Sir William Crookes has been deeply interested in the phenomenon of
-Meteorite Mountain, which must take rank with the Petrified Forests
-and even with the Grand Cañon as one of the marvels of Arizona. The
-meteoric shower which seems to have accompanied the falling of the
-huge meteorite--if the theory of its existence is true--has recorded
-its traces over a radius of more than five miles from the crater-like
-cavity. The experiment of Dr. Foote is thus described:
-
- "An ardent mineralogist, the late Dr. Foote, in cutting a section
- of this meteorite, found the tools were injured by something vastly
- harder than metallic iron, and an emery wheel used in grinding
- the iron had been ruined. He examined the specimen chemically,
- and soon after announced to the scientific world that the Cañon
- Diablo Meteorite contained black and transparent diamonds. This
- startling discovery was afterwards verified by Professors Friedel
- and Moissan, who found that the Cañon Diablo Meteorite contained
- the three varieties of carbon,--diamond (transparent and black),
- graphite, and amorphous carbon. Since this revelation the search
- for diamonds in meteorites has occupied the attention of chemists
- all over the world.
-
- "Here, then, we have absolute proof of the truth of the meteoric
- theory. Under atmospheric influences the iron would rapidly oxidize
- and rust away, coloring the adjacent soil with red oxide of iron.
- The meteoric diamonds would be unaffected and left on the surface
- to be found by explorers when oxidation had removed the last proof
- of their celestial origin. That there are still lumps of iron left
- in Arizona is merely due to the extreme dryness of the climate and
- the comparatively short time that the iron has been on our planet.
- We are here witnesses to the course of an event which may have
- happened in geologic times anywhere on the earth's surface."
-
-In this desert plateau of dull red sandstone worn by the erosion and
-the storms of untold ages, does there indeed lie a submerged star? And
-if there does, buried so deep in the earth as to elude as yet all the
-research of science, what force projected it, "shot madly from its
-sphere," into the desert lands of Arizona? To visit these extraordinary
-things--the Petrified Forests, the Meteorite Mountain, the Grand
-Cañon--is to feel, in the words of the poet,--
-
- "These are but seeds of days,
- Not yet a steadfast morn,
- An intermittent blaze,
- An embryo god unborn.
-
- * * * * *
-
- I snuff the breath of my morning afar,
- I see the pale lustres condense to a star:
- The fading colors fix,
- The vanishing are seen,
- And the world that shall be
- Twins the world that has been."
-
-Not the least among the phenomena of Arizona is that Emerson, who never
-saw the Great West, should have left on record in his poems the lines
-and stanzas that seem as if written from personal familiarity with its
-unspeakable marvels of scenic and scientific interest.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-LOS ANGELES, THE SPELL-BINDER
-
- "_This is the land the sunset washes,
- These are the banks of the Yellow Sea;
- Where it rose, or whither it rushes,
- These are the western mystery!_
-
- "_Night after night her purple traffic
- Strews the landing with opal bales;
- Merchantmen poise upon horizons,
- Dip, and vanish with fairy sails._"
-
- EMILY DICKINSON
-
- "_In what ethereal dances!
- By what eternal streams!_"
-
-
-Los Angeles, "the City of the Angels," is invested with the same poetic
-suggestion in its name as that which surrounds Santa Fé,--"the City
-of the Holy Faith." A terraced street is known as "Angel Flight." Any
-retrospective contemplation of Los Angeles gives one the sensation
-of having been whirled through the starry immensities of space.
-During even a brief stay one afterward discovers by the unerring
-logic of mathematics that within a few days he has perhaps travelled
-some four hundred miles by the electric trolley cars, besides his
-motor-car journeys when shot through space from old San Gabriel to the
-Pacific Coast, or from Elysium Park to Hollywood, and far and away
-on the opposite side of the city. Were one caught up in an aëro-car,
-journeying far above the clouds for ten days, it could hardly seem more
-unreal. One can only think of Los Angeles as the City of Vast Spaces.
-The town has laid out all the surrounding country, one would fancy, in
-beautiful tracts (there are over four thousand), each tract containing
-several acres,--laid out under alluring names, with streets, sidewalks,
-and lamp-posts.
-
-The "boom" is something tremendous. Companies and corporations run
-free electric cars to points forty miles out of town, as Redondo Beach
-and other localities, for people to inspect the lots offered,--lots
-at prices from "four dollars down, and four dollars a month," with
-the entire cost from ninety dollars up to that of several hundred.
-If all the world is not supplied with homes it is not the fault of
-enterprising Los Angeles. The incomparable electric trolley system
-renders the entire region within fifty miles around eligible for
-city privileges. People think nothing of going thirty, forty, even
-seventy-five miles by the "express electrics." Over an area of a
-thousand miles in length and perhaps one hundred and fifty in width
-there is scattered a population less than that centred within city
-limits in Chicago. The world is wide--in Southern California. There
-is nothing of the dreamy, languorous old Spanish atmosphere in Los
-Angeles. It is the most electrically up-to-date city imaginable. The
-city limits comprise over twenty-eight thousand acres. The streets are
-paved and oiled; the lighting is wonderful, most of it being done from
-tall towers rather than ordinary lamp-posts. Not even New York has any
-street or avenue so illuminated by night as is Broadway in Los Angeles,
-where, as in the boulevards in Paris, one can easily read by the
-street lights. Los Angeles has twenty-one great parks and innumerable
-hills and valleys in the residence regions. This diversity affords
-natural facilities for landscape gardening which are utilized with fine
-effect. Spacious boulevards, artificial lakes, and series of terraces
-everywhere enchant the eye, seen amidst the bewildering luxuriance of
-creamy magnolia blossoms and the graceful pepper tree.
-
-The enterprise of Los Angeles is equalled by the refinement and culture
-of the people, and the schools, churches, libraries--the social
-life--all reveal the best spirit of American institutions.
-
-That this is one of the spellbinding cities goes without saying.
-Everything is in gleam and glitter and glow. The electric car and the
-telephone system are here developed to a higher degree than perhaps
-in any other Western city except Denver. The growth of Los Angeles is
-something fairly incredible. A leading park commissioner, Dr. Lamb, has
-described the beauty of the four thousand tracts of land (each tract
-comprising many acres), all laid out, ready for buyers and builders.
-Of the twenty-one parks, one comprises more than three thousand
-acres, and another, Elysium Park, over eight hundred acres of hills
-and valleys already decoratively laid out with terraced drives and
-beautiful shrubs, flowers, and artificial lakes. The trend of the city
-is rapidly toward the ocean, some fifteen to twenty miles away, and it
-can hardly be five years before from Venice and Santa Monica, on the
-coast, to Pasadena, ten miles to the east of Los Angeles, there will
-be one solid city, one vast metropolis of the Southwest. The public
-library is ably administered, and it is one of considerable breadth of
-resources, with the advantage of having for its librarian Mr. Charles
-F. Lummis, the well-known writer on the Southwest. Madam Severance, who
-in 1878 founded the Woman's Club, a large and influential association
-of which for many years she was the president, and Mrs. Rebecca
-Spring, the friend of Margaret Fuller, are two Boston women who have
-transferred their homes to Los Angeles and whose lives emphasize
-Emerson's assertion that it is the fine souls who serve us and not what
-we call fine society.
-
-The rush and the brilliancy of life in all this Los Angeles region
-transcend description. Broadway has more than two miles of fine
-business blocks, the architecture being restricted to some eight or
-nine stories. The beautiful parks, with their artificial lakes, their
-date-palm trees, their profusion of brilliant flowers, attract the eye.
-There are residence sections of exceeding beauty,--the lawns bordered
-by hedges of rosebushes in full bloom and perhaps another rose hedge
-separating the sidewalk from the street.
-
-From the high plateaus of Northern Arizona to the blossoming plains
-of California is a contrast indeed. In Arizona these thousands of
-acres need only irrigation to become richly productive. The climate
-is delightful, for the elevation--over seven thousand feet--insures
-coolness and exhilaration almost every day through the summer. But at
-present there seems no conceivable way to procure water with which to
-irrigate. In California precisely the same land is irrigated and has
-also the advantage of a rainy season, and the vegetation and fruits
-abound luxuriously. Orange groves, with the golden fruit shimmering on
-the trees; lemon groves, olive orchards, and the avenues and groves of
-the eucalyptus tree make fair the landscape. An important industry here
-is that of lima beans. Tracts of fifteen hundred acres sown with these
-are not unusual, and the crops are contracted for by Russia and Germany
-almost as soon as sown. On one of these it is said that the owner had
-made a princely fortune within two years. The creation of the city in
-imagination is in great favor. Vast tracts of country from one to ten
-miles outside the city limits are staked out, as before noted; avenues
-and streets defined and named, lamp-posts erected, an attractive name
-given the locality, and lots are offered for sale from perhaps four or
-five hundred dollars up, on the terms of "fifty dollars down and ten
-dollars a month."
-
-The trolley-car service in and around Los Angeles is said to be the
-best in the world. To Venice and Santa Monica, on the beach,--at a
-distance of some seventeen miles,--there are electric "flyers" that
-make the trip within thirty minutes. Venice is a French Étretat. The
-little rows of streets at right angles with the coast line, running
-down to the water, are named "Rose Avenue," "Ozone Avenue," "Sunset
-Street," and other alluring names. This Venice is a veritable (refined
-and artistic) "Midway," with its colonnades of shops offering every
-conceivable phase of trinkets and _bijouterie_; its concert halls,
-casino, gay little restaurants, and every conceivable variety of
-amusement. It is the most unique little toy town of a creation
-conceivable, and the electrical display and decorations at night are
-fascinating in their scenic effect.
-
-Santa Monica, some two miles farther up the coast, is still, stately,
-and poetic. Here the blue Pacific rolls in in the most bewildering
-sea greens and deep blues, and over it bends a sky rivalling that of
-Arizona in depth and richness of color. The entire Pacific Coast is an
-idyl of landscape loveliness.
-
-But of life. What are the people of this lovely young city of two
-hundred thousand inhabitants doing and thinking? It is not a question
-to be answered in a paragraph. Life here is intense, interesting,
-full of color and movement, and its many-faceted aspects invite
-consideration. As one sits, for instance, on a Pasadena piazza, with
-the golden glory of the sunset seen over the Sierra Madre, and the
-rose hedges, the orange groves, the great bushes of heliotrope that
-are almost like young trees pouring out their mingled fragrance on
-the evening air, one falls under its spell. As the twilight deepens
-into darkness the great searchlight from Mount Lowe, directly in
-the foreground, a picturesque panorama, may swing out with its
-weird, sweeping, dazzling illumination over the scene. When this
-searchlight is out, people at the far-away beaches can see to read by
-it at distances of from twenty-five to fifty miles. Quite near Mount
-Lowe--one of the adjacent peaks--is Mount Wilson, on which the new
-Carnegie Observatory is to be located. This will be fitted with the
-largest telescope in the world and will have the advantage of every
-latest scientific appliance.
-
-Pasadena, like all the California towns and cities, covers very large
-tracts of country. There is a thriving business centre, not very far
-from which are the great Raymond Hotel and other winter resorts for
-the throngs of tourists who are almost as important to the revenues
-of California as they are to Italy. There are both North and South
-Pasadena,--each almost a separate city in itself,--and the most
-beautiful street is Orange Grove Avenue, with large estates on either
-side and spacious lawns. On Fair Oaks Avenue, in a pretty cottage,
-lives Prof. George Wharton James, the famous explorer, scientist,
-and notable writer on the Grand Cañon in Arizona,--and the greatest
-interpreter, indeed, of the entire Southwest. The books of Professor
-James, "In and Out of the Old Missions of California," "The Indians
-of the Painted Desert," and "Indian Basketry" (besides his book on
-the "Grand Canyon," which is the accepted authority), interpret the
-many phases of life in the Southwest in a vivid and accurate manner,
-rendering them invaluable to contemporary literature. Professor James
-makes his original explorations, taking with him an assistant and his
-own camera, and going through varied hardships, almost greater than
-could be realized. In the vast desert spaces, remote from any human
-habitation, he has had to swim large, muddy, inland lakes, where vermin
-were swarming; to go without food and water, and to endure the intense
-fatigue of long tramps. In perusing his books the reader little dreams
-at what fearful cost of energy all this original material was obtained.
-In his home Professor James has a most interesting collection of the
-_objets d'art_ of the Southwest. One must travel over this part of
-the country in order to appreciate them. They are as distinctive of
-New Mexico, Arizona, and Southern California as the old masters and
-other phases of Italian art are of Italy. There are brilliant Navajo
-blankets and rugs--soft, rich, and vivid in color, with curiously
-decorated designs; the most interesting array of Indian pottery--the
-many specimens from the old tombs being far finer than any pottery done
-by the modern Indians; and at the entrance to his lawn Professor James
-has a huge meteorite from Meteorite Mountain in Arizona, which weighs
-over a ton. He has a large section of a tree of the Petrified Forest,
-and the finer specimens that show the bark and the fibre, and also the
-crystallization. His library is large and fine, and comprises many
-autograph gift copies from other authors.
-
-One feature of the life of Professor James is especially helpful. In
-his spacious library upstairs, on every Thursday evening, he gives
-an informal talk on his travels and explorations to his friends and
-neighbors. His personal experiences in studying the phenomenon of the
-Salton Sea and the vagaries of the Colorado River, which is a law unto
-itself, are most interesting.
-
-The call of the wild is not more irresistible than the call of the
-desert to Professor James. He has lived on it and with it, and learned
-to read its hieroglyphics. The desert spirits have companioned him.
-He has explored vast spaces of the Grand Cañon; he has encamped,
-day after day, even week after week, on the Painted Desert; he has
-wandered in the grim strange Tonto Basin, and sailed (of late) the
-Salton Sea,--this sheet of four hundred square miles of water, this
-impromptu lake where but a little while before was a deserted hollow
-of a long extinct volcanic sea. Nature leads man a pretty dance out in
-this Land of Enchantment. No one would venture to prophesy at night
-just what stage transformation might take place before morning. This
-very uncertainty of any particular tenure of mountain, sea, or desert
-perhaps tends, unconsciously, to so react upon the population that
-their more real life is thrown forward into the future. For instance,
-Los Angeles lays no particular stress upon her present population,
-but announces that by 1910 the figures will undoubtedly reach the
-half-million mark. Nor, indeed, can the observer doubt this in any
-contemplation of the present incredible rapidity of progress in every
-direction. The city seems half made up of millionnaires, and the latest
-municipal bank clearings amounted to almost four hundred millions of
-dollars. Los Angeles is really an exotic, for the latest census reveals
-the astonishing fact that ninety per cent of its inhabitants are from
-the East, leaving only ten per cent as native Californians. Never was
-the advertising of a city carried out to the degree of being fairly a
-fine art so wonderfully as in Los Angeles. In the Chamber of Commerce
-there is a perpetual exhibition of fruits and flowers in season, and of
-the products and manufactures of the country.
-
-Los Angeles, like most of the other more important Western cities, is
-deeply concerned with irrigation schemes. This region of California
-supplements its rainfall with irrigation, and between the two the
-whole country is in bloom and blossom. Los Angeles is now arranging a
-gigantic scheme to bring water from the Owen's River, two hundred miles
-away, by means of tunnels through mountains and a huge canal. This
-fall of water will not only entirely supply the city with water power
-of immense force and volume, but it is estimated that it will also
-irrigate a hundred thousand acres. The scheme will employ five thousand
-men for some four years, and it is estimated that the cost will be
-twenty-five millions. No undertaking daunts the Western city. If an
-enterprise is desirable, it is to be achieved. That is the law and the
-prophets in the Land of Enchantment.
-
-Los Angeles, like Colorado Springs, is the paradise of excursions. The
-trip up Mount Lowe to the observatory offers a magnificent panorama of
-landscape, including Pasadena Valley and Catalina and Santa Barbara
-islands. Old San Gabriel Mission and the San Gabriel Valley are
-infinitely interesting, and the famous bells of San Gabriel still ring
-in their quaint, rude stone framework even though they are jangled and
-out of tune with the lapse of years. The Sierra Nevada Mountains rise
-from the San Gabriel Valley.
-
-One of the excursions has a feature that is new to every visitor,--that
-of glass-bottom power boats which give a view of the marvels of the
-ocean. These boats run from Avalon on the coast--an hour's express
-trolley ride from Los Angeles--to the submarine gardens adjoining
-Catalina Island, and they have a capacity to seat over a hundred
-passengers around the glass. In sailing over these submarine gardens
-the boats move very slowly, that the passengers may enjoy the view of
-the strange seaweed, the marine flowers, the varied aquatic vegetation.
-Catalina Island is a favorite sea resort, lying in such convenient
-proximity to the city.
-
-Los Angeles seems to be the paradise of every one who has a new
-idea--or ideal--for the betterment of humanity. There is an atmosphere
-of idealism. Among the recent institutions is the Pacific School of
-Osteopathy, with a faculty of thirty physicians, men and women, who
-base their therapeutics on the scientific fact that the body is subject
-to chemical, electrical, thermal, mental, and mechanical treatment. In
-the line of ethics Rev. B. Fay Mills has established a comprehensive
-movement of "Fellowship," including religious services and social
-intercourse, with a large and enthusiastic membership drawn by this
-eloquent orator and preacher who for many years before in his pastorate
-in Boston preached to large congregations who gave him profound
-appreciation.
-
-A most important centre that radiates sweetness and light in infinite
-measure is that of Christ Church (Episcopal), whose rector, Rev.
-Baker P. Lee, is not only eminent as a preacher, but as a leader and
-inspirer of a network of organizations connected with the church for
-the betterment of human life. Christ Church parish is a large one,
-numbering over two thousand in direct connection with the church, with
-a list of communicants of over twelve hundred. Within the past three
-years the parish has built a magnificent new church and a rectory, and
-the holy earnestness of the young and gifted rector makes the work one
-of vital spirituality.
-
-No city can offer more beautiful homes than those of Los Angeles;
-more attractive parks, more enchanting scenery, or more delightful
-excursions over a network of electric lines which aggregate above five
-hundred miles of single track and reach one hundred towns and villages
-from Monrovia of the foothills to Redondo by the sea. The world has
-but one Southern California, with its cool, soft, gray sea-fogs in
-the early mornings, followed by its cloudless days of blue sky over
-golden sunshine; where the sea-breeze gladly brings its health-giving
-ozone in exchange for the odors of orange blossoms and roses; where
-the mountains stand glorying in the ruggedness of their rocky cliffs
-until, touched by sunset's wand, they glow with pink lights and
-purple shadows; and over all comes a golden radiance that changes the
-forbidding outlines of their jagged peaks into radiant beauty,--fitting
-features of the vast panorama of nature to hold their eternal place in
-the Land of Enchantment.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-GRAND CAÑON; THE CARNIVAL OF THE GODS
-
- "_What time the gods kept carnival!_"
-
- EMERSON
-
- "_The earth grew bold with longing
- And called the high gods down;
- Yea, though ye dwell in heaven and hell,
- I challenge their renown.
- Abodes as fair I build ye
- As heaven's rich courts of pearl,
- And chasms dire where flood like fire
- Ravage and roar and whirl._
-
- "_Come, for my soul is weary
- Of time and death and change;
- Eternity doth summon me--
- With mightier worlds I range.
- Come, for my vision's glory
- Awaits your songs and wings;
- Here on my breast I bid ye rest
- From starry wanderings._"
-
- HARRIET MONROE
-
-
-One takes the wings of the morning and arrives at the uttermost parts
-of the earth to find--the Grand Cañon, the scenic marvel of the entire
-world.
-
-Only to the poet's vision is the Grand Cañon revealed; only to the
-poet's touch do its mighty harmonies respond. For this sublime
-spectacle is as vital as a drama enacted on the stage, only its acts
-require the centuries and the ages in which to represent themselves.
-Whatever one sees of the Grand Cañon,--it matters not from what
-commanding view of vision or vista, one sees only an infinitesimal
-point. It is the Carnival of the Gods. "Prophets and poets had wandered
-here," writes Harriet Monroe, "before they were born to tell their
-mighty tales,--Isaiah and Æschylus and Dante, the giants who dared
-the utmost. Here at last the souls of great architects must find
-their dreams fulfilled; must recognize the primal inspiration which,
-after long ages, had achieved Assyrian palaces, the temples and
-pyramids of Egypt, the fortresses and towered cathedrals of mediæval
-Europe. For the inscrutable Prince of builders had reared these
-imperishable monuments, evenly terraced upward from the remote abyss;
-had so cunningly planned them that mortal foot could never climb and
-enter to disturb the everlasting hush. Of all richest elements they
-were fashioned,--jasper and chalcedony, topaz, beryl, and amethyst,
-fire-hearted opal, and pearl; for they caught and held the most
-delicate colors of a dream and flashed full recognition to the sun.
-Never on earth could such glory be unveiled,--not on level spaces of
-sea, not on the cold bare peaks of mountains. This was not earth; for
-was not heaven itself across there, rising above yonder alabaster marge
-in opalescent ranks for the principalities and powers?... In a moment
-we stood at the end of the world, at the brink of the kingdoms of peace
-and pain. The gorgeous purples of sunset fell into darkness and rose
-into light over mansions colossal beyond the needs of our puny unwinged
-race. Terrific abysses yawned and darkened; magical heights glowed with
-iridescent fire."
-
-If one pauses for a moment with any sense of obligation to himself
-to gain some _rationale_ of this cañon; if for a moment he turn from
-rhapsody and ecstasy and the dream of poet and painter to grope after
-statistical estimates, what does he find? One comparison is that,--
-
- "If the Eiffel Tower, which with a height of almost a thousand feet
- is the tallest structure in the world, were placed at the bottom of
- the cañon in its deepest part, five more towers just like the first
- would have to be piled on top of one another to reach the rim of
- the plateau."
-
-And again:
-
- "Could the cañon be filled in for a building site, it would furnish
- room enough for fifty New York cities. Indeed, it would have an
- area of sixteen thousand square miles, equal to the whole of
- Switzerland, or the states of Massachusetts, Connecticut, Delaware,
- and Rhode Island combined."
-
-Statistical comparisons are, at best, a necessary evil which, once
-confronted, need not companion one further. It is beauty, it is
-sublimity, not mathematical assurances, that really lays hold on life.
-The inexplicable impressions made by this spectacle are mirrored in
-the following words:--
-
- "As I grew familiar with the vision I could not quite explain its
- stupendous quality. From mountain tops one looks across greater
- distances and sees range after range lifting snowy peaks into the
- blue. The ocean reaches out into boundless space, and the ebb
- and flow of its waters have the beauty of rhythmic motion and
- exquisitely varied color. And in the rush of mighty cataracts
- are power and splendor and majestic peace. Yet for grandeur
- appalling and unearthly; for ineffable, impossible beauty, the
- cañon transcends all these. It is as though to the glory of nature
- were added the glory of art; as though, to achieve her utmost, the
- proud young world had commanded architecture to build for her and
- color to grace the building. The irregular masses of mountains,
- cast up out of the molten earth in some primeval war of elements,
- bear no relation to these prodigious symmetrical edifices mounted
- on abysmal terraces and grouped into spacious harmonies which give
- form to one's dreams of heaven. The sweetness of green does not
- last forever, but these mightily varied purples are eternal. All
- that grows and moves must perish, while these silent immensities
- endure."
-
-The majestic panorama dominates every detail of daily life. As when in
-Bayreuth for the Wagner music-dramas alone, every other consideration
-is subordinated to these, so in life in El Tovar, on Bright Angel
-Trail, one's hours for sleep and for any daily occupations are
-held strictly amenable to "effects" in the mysterious splendor of
-the Titanic underworld. To see the cañon under the full moon; to
-see it when all the pinnacles of rock are leaping in rose-red flame
-under a sunrise; to see it in a dream of twilight as the purple
-canopy falls,--all these hours,--all hours are made for the magical
-transformations. With every breath of change of the atmosphere this
-celestial beauty changes. One is hardly conscious as to the special
-ways and means by which he finds himself in an enchanted world,--
-
- "From the shore of souls arrived?"
-
-It is very possible. Nor does he know how--or when--he shall depart.
-The past is effaced, and the future recedes into some unformulated
-atmosphere. Life, a thousand lifetimes, concentrate themselves in the
-present. A supreme experience has always this peculiarity,--that it
-bars out all the past and all the future. When one is on the Mount of
-Transfiguration, he is not scrutinizing the pathway by which he came
-nor that by which he may descend.
-
-Even if one has seen the Grand Cañon before, he is surprised to find
-how absolutely newly created it is to him when its haunting magic
-draws him back. No enshrined memory can compare with the reality. In
-seeing the Petrified Forest one checks it off as a thing accomplished
-for life. It is definite. The great logs of agate and jasper and
-chalcedony lie on the ground as they have lain for perhaps thousands of
-ages. It is a wonder--the seventh wonder of the world, if one pleases
-and--the paradise of geologists, but it is unchanging. Not so the
-Grand Cañon. The cañon is a perpetual transformation scene. Its color
-effects rival those of an electric fountain under the full play of the
-spectroscope. It is rose, purple, amber, emerald, pearl gray, pale
-blue, scarlet--according to atmospheric states. One leaves it in the
-late afternoon with the rocky towers and pinnacles and battlements all
-in glowing scarlet, seen through a transparent air. He steps out upon
-the broad hotel piazzas an hour later and, behold, the uncalculated
-spaces of the cañon are filled with a half-transparent blue mist which
-envelops all the curious sandstone formations that gleam in pale rose
-and opal tints through this thin blue mist, and assume wraith-like
-shapes. Major Powell well said, that really to see the Grand Cañon, a
-year is necessary. Yet just as truly may it be said that even for two
-days it is worth crossing the continent to enjoy this most marvellous
-of spectacles. Only the scientist and the specialist dream of seeing it
-in anything like completeness. For the tourist and traveller a range of
-twenty miles is quite sufficient to disclose its representative beauty.
-A day's drive by the stage to Grandview Point, Hance's Trail, and
-Moran's Point is easily made between nine and five o'clock. A drive
-of two or three miles in the opposite direction will include Rowe's
-and O'Neil's points. One day will allow the adventurous tourist to "go
-down the trail." Still, after doing all these things, the best of all,
-it may be, is to live into the atmosphere. To draw one's chair out on
-the broad balcony of the new and beautiful hotel, El Tovar, and sit and
-dream and gaze and wonder, and wonder and gaze and dream, is, perhaps,
-the greatest joy one can have in all the time passed here, especially
-if the solitude can be the solitude _à deux_. No joy, no interest, is
-of much consequence until or unless it is sympathetically shared. As a
-_décor de scène_ the Grand Cañon is unrivalled. The magic and mystery
-of all the universe broods over its Titanic spaces.
-
-[Illustration: GRAND CAÑON, FROM GRAND VIEW POINT]
-
-The air is the most bracing, exhilarating, and exquisite imaginable.
-The great rolling mesas covered with pine forests are more than
-seven thousand feet above the sea, and their exhilarating and tonic
-properties are beyond description. The entire atmosphere is fragrant
-with the pines. Throat and chest are bathed in balm and healing. There
-can hardly be any difficulty with the bronchial and breathing mechanism
-that cannot find its cure here. And the charm, the utter enchantment of
-living on this rainbow-tinted cañon, a mile and a half deep, thirteen
-miles across at this "Bright Angel" point (and this is its narrowest
-place), the joy of life is to steep one's self in the atmosphere
-of enchanting loveliness; and this perpetual play of color is an
-experience that finds no interpretation in language.
-
-On first alighting from the branch of the Santa Fé that runs from
-Williams, Arizona, to Bright Angel, at the head of Bright Angel Trail
-on the Grand Cañon,--a three hour's ride of transcendent beauty among
-the purple peaks of the San Francisco mountains,--on first stepping
-from the train up the terrace to the beautiful "El Tovar" built on the
-very rim of the cañon, one objects strenuously to entering the hotel.
-His eye has caught the Vision,--a "celestial Inferno bathed in soft
-fires?" or the "Promised Land?" or the mystical vision that John saw
-on the Island of Patmos? The hotel would, presumably, remain; but this
-spectacle,--what can it be save a mirage, one never seen before on
-earth and perhaps not to be too confidently anticipated in Paradise?
-Would such a picture remain? Can one safely leave a sunset which is all
-a miracle of splendor while he goes in to dine? Can he safely turn away
-from the heavens when a young moon at night is winging her way down the
-sky and expect to find her midway in the heavens? And could one safely
-leave this most marvellous scene of all while he should bestow himself
-in his rooms?
-
- "Would the Vision there remain?
- Would the Vision come again?"
-
-Could it be, in the very nature of things, any more permanent than any
-other momentary revelation of an enchanted hour that would fade
-into the darkness as night came on, like the splendor of a sunset, the
-color-scheme of a rainbow, or the glory and the freshness of a dream?
-
-[Illustration: ZIGZAG, BRIGHT ANGEL TRAIL, GRAND CAÑON, ARIZONA]
-
-Instead, the Grand Cañon prefigures itself to one as an apparition,
-and while he may gaze upon it under all changing lights of dawn, of
-noonday, of sunset--and of moonlight--he cannot come to any realization
-that it is there all the time. His room in the hotel may look out into
-it and over it; and, waking in the night, he rises and leans out of his
-window to see if it is still there. One does not expect a vision of
-the New Jerusalem, a palpitating, changing, flaming, throbbing sea of
-color--in its rose-reds, its greens, its amber, gold, and purple--to
-remain like a field or a forest. It seems a thing of conditions,
-visible at one moment, vanished, perchance, the next.
-
-Think of a chasm a mile and a half deep, from thirteen to eighteen
-miles wide, and as long as from Boston to New York--two hundred miles!
-Think of it again as not merely a deep, dark chasm, but as filled with
-the most wonderful architectural effects in the sandstone formations
-which simulate Chinese pagodas, temples, altars, cathedrals, domes,
-and towers so perfectly that one is incredulous of the fact that their
-shaping is nature's work alone. Add to this the color scheme, now an
-intense royal purple, again flashes of rose and green and ivory and
-a rare blue; or again a "nocturne" in silvery gray, with hints of
-lingering rose and amber shimmering in the air. Until within a few
-years the Grand Cañon was so inaccessible as to quite account for
-the general ignorance of this most wonderful scenic phenomenon in
-our country, and, indeed, with no exaggeration be it said, the most
-wonderful in the entire world. Twenty Yosemites might be thrown into
-it and make no impression; and as for Niagara, it would be a mere tiny
-waterfall in comparison.
-
-In the trail leading downward into the cañon the first level is just
-five times the height of St. Peter's in Rome, or the Pyramids of Cheops.
-
-[Illustration: A CLIFF ON BRIGHT ANGEL TRAIL, GRAND CAÑON]
-
-From the brink one looks down a mile and a half into towers and
-pinnacles; one looks across eighteen miles in the widest place;
-and one looks up and down its tortuous length, as its complicated
-system of cañons revealed themselves as far as the eye could see
-either way. One gazes, not into a deep, dark cleft, a Titanic royal
-gorge, but on and into a sea of color and a wealth of architectural
-wonders,--cathedrals, towers, mosques, pinnacles, minarets, temples,
-and balconies exceeding in variety of design, in extraordinary beauty
-of grouping and splendor of color, anything of which one could dream,
-even in his most enchanted moments. The red sandstone, the brilliant
-white of the limestone luminous under the setting sun, the green of
-pine trees or of copper rocks, the gray and ochre tints of gravel and
-fallen rocks and débris, the soft, deep purple mist enveloping all
-as an atmosphere in which all these architectural marvels seemed to
-swim--the strange, unearthly splendor of it all--holds one under a
-fascination that can neither be analyzed nor described. This, then, is
-"El Grande Cañon de la Colorado." One stands speechless, breathless,
-as if transported to some other planet. Suddenly all life--everything
-that floated in memory--seemed confused, unreal. Was the past (whose
-running series of incident and event and circumstance already seemed
-vague) a dream, and was this the reality? Or had there never been any
-reality in life before? Was this a dream, wrought under some untold
-spell of enchantment? Would one hear the water nixies chanting their
-refrain if he listened? Or was this scene of Titanic grandeur the abode
-of Wagner's gods and heroes? One watched for the sacred fires to flame
-on Brunhilde's rock and for Siegfried to appear. One saw the ship which
-had borne Tristan on his ill-starred voyage, and the garden where the
-lovers confessed their intense and instant love, and the fatal potion
-scene rises before him; and again he is lost in rapt ecstasy as the air
-seems filled with the passionate drama of Lilli Lehmann and Alvarez.
-For let Ternina and other younger women come and go in the Wagner
-music-drama, and yet where will that absolute perfection of dramatic
-action, that passionate exaltation of emotion, ever again attend and
-invest any singer as they invest and are identified with Lilli Lehmann?
-
- "The Fairest enchants me,
- The Mighty commands me."
-
-In this most sublime of all earthly spectacles there are aërial
-landscape effects as delicate and evanescent as a cloud-wreath, or as
-a fog that advances, wraith-like, to melt away into dissolving views.
-"The region is full of wonders and beauties and sublimities that
-Shelley's imaginings do not match in the 'Prometheous Unbound,'" wrote
-Charles Dudley Warner.
-
-If the world realized the marvellous effects of this very Carnival
-of the Gods, the infinite spaces of the Grand Cañon itself could not
-contain all who would eagerly throng to behold it. The statistical
-record of the increase of visitors is rather interesting. In 1900 there
-were eight hundred and thirteen; the succeeding year, six thousand
-eight hundred and eighty-three; while in 1903 the number increased
-to nearly one hundred and twenty-eight thousand. Since that date the
-number of visitors has multiplied itself after the fashion of compound
-interest. The establishment of all the conveniences and comforts, not
-to say luxuries, of modern travel may be one of the most potent factors
-in this increase of visitors. Until within five years the Grand Cañon
-could only be reached by a stage ride of seventy miles through the
-Coconino Forest,--whose dim gray twilight reminds one of the forests
-of Fontainebleau,--and which drive, however romantically beautiful,
-was attended with too great terrestrial discomfort to commend it to
-general public service. Until 1906 the hotel accommodations, also,
-while offering a modest comfort, were essentially primitive; while
-now the superb new Harvey hostelry, "El Tovar," built at a cost of a
-quarter of a million dollars (and the Harvey name is a synonym in the
-West for everything admirable in dining cars, refreshment stands, and
-hotels), insures to every traveller any degree of luxurious comfort he
-requires. Even the man who, after visiting all the enchanted points in
-the Land of Enchantment, in its prehistoric period of twenty years ago
-before Pullman cars climbed the mountain peaks and the Waldorf-Astoria
-type of hotels sprang up, the man who, after a trip through these
-wonders of the world, returned to New York and declared that he would
-rather see an electric bell and a bath than all the grandeur between
-Pike's Peak and the Pacific, would now be fully reconciled to Western
-sojourns. He would find his electric bell and his bath to be as much a
-matter of course as in Fifth Avenue, besides also finding that there
-were spectacles,--as that of the Garden of the Gods, Cheyenne Cañon,
-the Petrified Forests, the Grand Cañon, and the Los Angeles electric
-trolley system (which quite deserves to rank with the modern "Seven
-Wonders" of the world), and which Fifth Avenue by no means provided for
-her votaries. In fact, "El Tovar" is so inclusive of comfort as to be
-fairly a feature of the cañon, commanding, on one side, a magnificence
-of prospect without parallel in the world in the mighty chasm on
-whose brink it stands, on the other side the fragrant Coconino pine
-forest,--the largest belt of pine timber in the United States, and
-which has been made a government forest reservation.
-
-There is now a project to erect a memorial to Major John W. Powell, the
-pioneer explorer of the Grand Cañon, to be placed on the rim at the
-head of Bright Angel Trail at El Tovar. This most fitting plan to honor
-the name of the great scientist and explorer whose research contributed
-the first authoritative knowledge of the cañon is the thought of the
-American Scenic Association, which will petition Congress to grant the
-requisite appropriation. No monument to human greatness could be more
-ideally placed than this to perpetually repeat to every visitor and
-sojourner the name of the explorer who successfully achieved the most
-startling and heroic journey in all history,--that made through the
-complete extent of the Grand Cañon.
-
-It was in 1869 that Major Powell, with four boats and nine men,
-inaugurated this expedition, starting from Green River City in Utah.
-He was dissuaded and importuned in the most urgent way by those
-most familiar with the region not to attempt the feat. The Indians
-especially insisted that no boat could live in any one of the score of
-rapids to be passed. There was also a tradition that for some hundreds
-of miles the river lost itself in the earth, and Major Powell and his
-men would thus be imprisoned within a Titantic fortress from which
-escape would be impossible. But men of destiny do not hesitate when
-they are led to great achievements. Major Powell set out on May 24,
-1869, with his nine men and four boats, and landed on August 3, with
-four men and two boats, at the mouth of the Virgin River, after having
-sailed the boiling torrent of the Colorado River, at the bottom of the
-cañon, for more than a thousand miles. Mr. C. A. Higgins characterizes
-this feat as "the most wonderful geological and spectacular phenomenon
-known to mankind."
-
-The first authentic knowledge of the existence of the Grand Cañon
-dates back to August of 1540, when the Spanish friar, Alvar Nuñez,
-after years of romantic wanderings among the pueblos of the Southwest,
-returned to Mexico with tales of this mighty chasm. Coronado, who
-had discovered the Seven Cities of Cibola (of which now only Zuñi
-remains), ordered Garcia Lopez to take a band of men and Indian guides
-and search for this chasm, which he succeeded in discovering; with the
-more difficulty, surely, in that one has to gain its very rim before he
-has hardly an intimation of its proximity. The spectacle of the cañon
-always presents itself as a sudden surprise. It was not, however, until
-1884 that, by the building of the great transcontinental line, the
-Santa Fé, the Grand Cañon became accessible. Then for some twenty years
-it was reached, as has already been noted, by stage from Flagstaff.
-Now one can travel in his sleeper without change from Chicago to El
-Tovar, and thousands of tourists annually visit the extraordinary
-scene. Not the least of the interesting data regarding the cañon is
-this gulf of more than three hundred years that divides its discovery
-from its taking rank as the most phenomenal scenic resort of the world.
-The mills of the gods grind slowly. The visitors to the Grand Cañon
-present singularly cosmopolitan groups, there being hardly a country in
-the world that is not represented at some time during the year.
-
-For the cañon has all seasons for its own. It is almost as much of
-an object of winter as of summer pilgrimage. One season is found, on
-the whole, to be almost as enjoyable here as another. It is cool in
-summer, and it is warm and sunny in winter. Sometimes there is a fairy
-snowfall, but hardly more lasting than a spring frost, and when it
-comes it only adds another flitting variety to the stupendous scene.
-
-With untold tons of the water of the Colorado River pouring itself in
-torrents through the bottom of the cañon, all the water used for the
-table, for toilet, and for laundry purposes has to be brought from a
-distance of a hundred and twenty miles, and twenty thousand gallons are
-in daily use. An electric-light plant furnishes brilliant illumination.
-
-The Hopi House, built in imitation of an Indian pueblo, with a group
-of quaintly garbed Hopi Indians within in attendance, is a curiosity;
-and besides the Hopis there are Navajos and Supais coming to sell their
-handiwork,--that of pottery, silver ornaments, blankets, and baskets.
-Cataract Cañon, forty miles from El Tovar, is the home of the Supais,
-and it is a place that well repays visiting for an entirely new point
-of view of the vast cañon that it affords. There are peaceful Indians
-to be seen daily riding their horses through the pine woods, journeying
-from El Tovar to Grand View, to "Hance's Trail," to "Moran's Point,"
-and other localities, to sell or barter their wares. One old Indian
-who seems to roam about alone has developed an ingenious manner of
-procuring food when he is hungry. He enters the hotel office and seeks
-the proprietor himself, recognizing with unerring instinct that this
-gentleman's liberal endowment of sympathy and unfailing generosity
-never permits him to "turn down" a request for aid. The wily old savage
-seeks him out and makes conspicuous overtures of his affection.
-
-"You is heap my son; pale face heap my son!" the dusky visitor
-declares, and when this assurance is emphasized to the proprietor he
-realizes that it means he is "heap my son" because his visitor is
-hungry. These outbursts of devotion occur only when the old Indian is
-at his wits' end to know where to procure something to eat. Once fed he
-is off, and thinks no more of the man whom he assured that he was "heap
-my son" until hunger again assails him and stimulates his parental
-affection.
-
-So the little trifles and pleasantries of the _comédie humaine_
-assert their place in the general life even on the rim of the sublime
-spectacle of the Carnival of the Gods.
-
-For more than two hundred miles the cañon offers its innumerable
-panoramas, no one ever duplicating that of another. There are thousands
-of cañons in it--it is a complicated system of colossal cañons. Every
-wall is an aggregation of hundreds of walls. Every pinnacle is formed
-of hundreds of pinnacles. When the sun shines in splendor on the
-vermilion walls, the glory is almost beyond what man can bear. When
-from the trail below a star seems to float in the air and rest on the
-verge of the cliff, what words can convey any image of this ineffable
-beauty?
-
-The cloud-effects are another of the phases of faëry. A rain creates a
-panorama of clouds creeping out of one cañon and flying into another,
-all "as if they had souls and wills of their own," says Major Powell;
-and he adds, "In the imagination the clouds belong to the sky, and when
-they are in the cañon the skies come down into the gorges and cling to
-the cliffs and lift them up to immeasurable heights, for the sky must
-still be far away; thus they lend infinity to the walls." The cañon
-mirrors the color and the state of the sky as water does. This is one
-of the most curious facts connected with it. "Yet form and color do not
-exhaust all the divine qualities of the Grand Cañon," continues Major
-Powell; "it is the land of music. The river thunders in perpetual
-roar, swelling in floods of music when the storm-gods play upon the
-rocks, and fading away in soft and low murmurs when the infinite blue
-of heaven is unveiled.... The adamant foundations of the earth have
-been wrought into a sublime harp upon which the clouds of heaven play
-with mighty tempests or with gentle showers."
-
-Major Powell, the explorer and practically the modern discoverer of the
-cañon, remains its most complete interpreter. His journal narrating
-that remarkable voyage through the Colorado River in a region "more
-difficult to traverse than the Alps or the Himalayas," is fairly an
-epic in American literature. He had the vision of the painter and the
-heart of the poet. He felt that infinitely complex variety of the
-cañon, and he read its sublime inscriptions on a scroll not made with
-hands. He pictures one feature especially that has hardly been touched
-by other writers,--that of the perpetually changing aspects. "One
-moment as we looked out over the landscape," he writes, "the atmosphere
-seemed to be trembling and moving about, giving the impression of an
-unstable land: plains and hills and cliffs and distant mountains seemed
-vaguely to be floating about in a trembling, wave-rocked sea; and
-patches of landscape would seem to float away and be lost, and then
-reappear.... The craggy buttes seem dancing about.... The sun shone
-in splendor on the vermilion walls. Shaded into green and gray when
-the rocks were lichened over, the river filled the channel from wall
-to wall, and the cañon opened like a beautiful doorway to a region of
-glory. But at evening, when the sun was going down and the shadows were
-settling in the cañon, the scarlet gleams and roseate hues, blended
-with tints of green and gray, slowly changed to sombre brown above and
-black shadows crept over them from below.... Lying down, one looked
-up through the cañon and saw that only a little of the blue heavens
-appeared overhead,--a crescent of blue sky with but two or three
-constellations peering down upon us. Soon I saw a bright star that
-appeared to rest on the verge of the cliffs overhead, and, as it moved
-up from the rock, I almost wondered that it did not fall, and indeed it
-appeared as if swayed down by its own weight. The star appeared to be
-_in_ the cañon, so high were the walls."
-
-So the wonderful story of Major Powell's runs on of these atmospheric
-phenomena of the cañon, effects that
-
- "... give to seas and sunset skies
- Their unspent beauty of surprise."
-
-It is from Bright Angel Trail that the Grand Cañon is the most
-accessible. Parties of men and women, mounted on sure-footed burros,
-go down this trail with their guides--apparently under the special
-protection of the bright angels of the celestial host, as no accident
-has ever, thus far, occurred. Prof. George Wharton James notes, in his
-invaluable work on the Grand Cañon,[5] that this trail was originally
-used by the Havasupai Indians and that the rude irrigating canals that
-conveyed water from an adjacent spring to a so-called Indian Garden
-in the near vicinity are still to be seen. The view from the head of
-Bright Angel Trail is one of vast extent and a peculiar sublimity.
-Buddha Temple is a colossal pile that rises in isolated grandeur,
-and near it is Buddha Cloister. An impressive tower of rock rising
-in the cañon bears the honored name of Agassiz. Isis Temple and the
-Temple of Brahma are within the range of the eye from this point.
-The perfectly transparent air, and that absence of aërial vibration
-that characterizes the atmosphere of Arizona, conspire to invest all
-distance with magic illusion. Looking across the thirteen miles of the
-cañon's abyss from Bright Angel Trail, the opposite rim hardly seems
-farther away than the distance of three or four city blocks. Isis
-Temple is said to be as great in mass as the mountainous part of Mt.
-Washington, and the summit of Isis looks down six thousand feet into
-the depths of a chasm, the ledges on the side being "as impracticable
-as the face of Bunker Hill Monument."
-
-It is a noticeable fact, and one which the general reader may regard
-with quiet amusement, that all the writers who even attempt to allude
-to the Grand Cañon quote copiously from each other; and this is the
-almost inevitable instinct of each, in order to reinforce himself with
-authority for statements which, to those who have not themselves gazed
-upon this Carnival of the Gods, would sound incredible even to the
-verge of the wildest extravaganza. Major Powell's vivid transcription
-of his thrilling journey through the cañon, sailing through the
-boiling, rushing river whose torrents constantly threatened to engulf
-his boats,--Major Powell's transcription stands for itself alone;
-it was not only the pictured scenes of a writer, but the scientific
-report of an official government explorer; but since this,--and from
-Major Powell's narrative every writer invariably quotes,--since this,
-the writers quote from each other; they use each other's statements
-as evidence which they cite in order to support their own statements
-regarding a marvel so unspeakably phenomenal that the most literal and
-statistical description reads like an Arabian Nights romance. Then,
-too, the array of pen-pictures is interesting. A writer who coined
-wonderful descriptive phrases is Mr. C. A. Higgins. Of the silent
-transformations of the cañon when it "sinks into mysterious purple
-shadow" he said: "The far Shinumo Altar is tipped with a golden ray,
-and against a leaden horizon the long line of the Echo Cliffs reflects
-a soft brilliance of indescribable beauty, a light that, elsewhere,
-surely never was on sea or land. Then darkness falls," he continues,
-"and should there be a moon, the scene in part revives in silver light
-a thousand spectral forms projected from inscrutable gloom; dreams of
-mountains, as in their sleep they brood on things eternal." Others who
-have written of the Grand Cañon are: Harriet Monroe, whose poet's pen
-is dipped in the colors of an artist's palette; George Wharton James;
-and Mr. Charles S. Gleed, a distinguished lawyer of Topeka, who thus
-described the Cañon's wonders:
-
- "Surrendering our minds to the magic spell of that mighty chasm,
- what pictures troop before us! Yonder see Gibraltar, giant sentinel
- of the Mediterranean. There on long ledges are St. Peter's
- and St. Paul's, Niagara, the Pyramids, and the Tower of Pisa.
- Bracketed beyond are the great parliament houses of the world.
- Down below behold in life size the lesser mountains of our own
- land,--Washington, Monadnock, Mansfield, Lookout, and a thousand
- others. See in the distance a million colored pictures of the Alps,
- the Adirondacks, and the Sierras. On endless shelves, this way and
- that, behold the temples and cathedrals, the castles and fortresses
- of all time. See vast armies, the armies of the ages, winding up
- the slopes, and great navies manoeuvring in the mirage-like
- distance. Here, indeed, the giant mind of Dante would have found
- new worlds to conquer; and Homer would have dreamed new dreams of
- gods and men, love and war, life and death, heaven and hell."
-
-Hamlin Garland, in one of his prose-poems, has said:
-
- "The clouds and the sunset, the moonrise and the storm, will
- transform it into a splendor no mountain range can surpass. Peaks
- will shift and glow, walls darken, crags take fire, and gray-green
- mesas, dimly seen, take on the gleam of opalescent lakes of
- mountain water. The traveller who goes out to the edge and peers
- into the great abyss sees but one phase out of hundreds. If he is
- fortunate, it may be one of its most beautiful combinations of
- color and shadow. But to know it, to feel its majesty, one should
- camp in the bottom and watch the sunset and the moonrise while the
- river marches from its lair like an angry lion."
-
-Robert Brewster Stanton, a civil engineer whose original work has
-brought him prominently before the scientific world, followed Major
-Powell's explorations, twenty years later, with a surveying company of
-his own organization,--and Mr. Stanton is, indeed, the only explorer
-who has made the continuous journey the entire length of the Colorado
-River which Major Powell navigated for a thousand miles. It was in May
-of 1889 that Mr. Stanton and his men initiated this daring feat, and
-of one phase of the appearance of the cañon Mr. Stanton's glowing,
-eloquent pen recorded:
-
-"Those terrifying, frowning walls _are moving, are changing_! A new
-light is not only creeping over them, but is coming out from their
-very shadows. See those flattened slopes above the dark sandstone on
-top the granite; even at this very moment they are _being colored_ in
-gorgeous stripes of horizontal layers of yellow, brown, white, green,
-and purple.
-
-"What means this wondrous change? Wherein lies this secret of the great
-cañon?
-
-"After living in it and with it for so many weeks and months, I lost
-all thought of the great chasm as being only a huge rock mass, carved
-into its many intricate forms by ages of erosion. It became to me what
-it has ever since remained, and what it really is,--a living, moving,
-sentient being!
-
-"The Grand Cañon is not a solitude. It is a living, moving, pulsating
-being, ever changing in form and color, pinnacles and towers springing
-into being out of unseen depths. From dark shades of brown and black,
-scarlet flames suddenly flash out and then die away into stretches of
-orange and purple. How can such a shifting, animated glory be called 'a
-thing'? It is a being, and among its upper battlements, its temples,
-its amphitheatres, its cathedral spires, its monuments and its domes,
-and in the deeper recesses of its inner gorge its spirit, its soul,
-the very spirit of the living God himself, lives and moves and has its
-being."
-
-Mr. C. M. Skinner, of the "Brooklyn Eagle," impressively wrote:
-
- "... After the sky colors, too, have faded, you are about to turn
- away, lingering, regretting, when--again, a wonder; for new colors,
- deep, tender, solemn, flow up along the painted walls, as night
- brims out of the deep. The bottom grows vague and misty, but each
- Walhalla is steeped in purple as soft as the bloom of grapes.
- When day is wholly gone and the cañon has become to the eye a mere
- feeling or impression of depth and space, walk out on some lonely
- point. The slopes, thirteen miles away, are visible as gray walls,
- distinct from the black cliffs, and on the hither side the trees
- are clear against the snow. No night is absolute in blackness, but
- as we look it seems as though the cañon was lighted from within.
- It is an abyss of shadow and mystery. There is a sadness in the
- cañon, as in all great things of nature, that removes it from human
- experience. We have seen the utmost of the world's sublimity, and
- life is fuller from that hour."
-
-All these and many other transcriptions of its glory form a picture
-gallery which each lover of the Grand Cañon prizes as among his
-choicest possessions. Thomas Moran, the artist, has painted many
-scenes from the cañon, one of these paintings having been placed in
-the Capitol in Washington, where it is the object of the admiration
-and the wonder of the endless procession of visitors who throng the
-nation's centre. Painter and poet and prophet make their pilgrimages
-to this one stupendous Marvel of Nature. To the prophets and the poets
-of every century and every age it flashes its responsive message; and
-the worshipper at the shrine of this Infinite Beauty, this sublimest
-Majesty, can but feel, with Mr. Higgins,--that poetic lover of the vast
-Southwest, the lover of music and literature and art and nature, whose
-beautiful life on earth closed in 1900, but whose charm of presence
-still pervades the scenes he loved and memorialized,--with this lofty
-and poetic recorder of nature one can but say of the Grand Cañon:
-"Never was picture more harmonious, never flower more exquisitely
-beautiful. It flashes instant communication of all that architecture
-and painting and music for a thousand years have gropingly striven to
-express. It is the soul of Michael Angelo and of Beethoven."
-
- * * * * *
-
-In retrospective glance over a very midsummer night's dream of
-the ineffable glory and beauty of wanderings from Pike's Peak to
-the Pacific there stands out to the mental vision one treasured
-possession whose loveliness exceeds that of all scenic landscape;
-which is more luminous and crystal clear than the luminous atmosphere
-of beautiful Colorado or glowing Arizona; which is more enduring in
-its changelessness than even the Petrified Forests or the mighty
-precipices of the Grand Cañon; which is invested with all the etherial
-splendor of that brilliant young city which the Spanish conquerors
-knew as _Pueblo de la Reine de los Angeles_: which is as sacred in its
-nature as are the sacred legends of the Holy Faith of St. Francis.
-This treasured possession is that of the friendships formed during
-this enchanted journey; of the generous kindness, the bountiful
-hospitality; the exquisite courtesy and grace constantly received
-from each and all with an unfailing uniformity, including those in
-widely varying relations and pursuits; those who, according to outer
-standards, are the more, or the less, fortunate in power, resources, or
-development,--the treasured possession of all this sweet and gracious
-friendliness is imperishable; and in this priceless and precious gift,
-which is not only a treasure for the life that now is, but also for the
-life which is to come, is there crystallized all the charm of summer
-wanderings in the Land of Enchantment.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Acoma, New Mexico, 183;
- theory of its origin, 184;
- its antiquity, 185;
- rivalry between it and Laguna, 185, 186;
- Charles F. Lummis on, 186, 187.
-
- Adamana, the gateway to the Petrified Forests of Arizona, 270;
- origin of its name, 270;
- the simple life at, 274, 275.
-
- Adams, the Hon. Alva, 117, 118;
- quoted, 118, 119, 120.
-
- Agriculture in Colorado, 130, 131;
- in New Mexico, 204, 205.
-
- Albuquerque, New Mexico, 196;
- excursions from, 196;
- a "smart" town, 200;
- characteristics of, 201.
-
- Ames, Rev. Dr. Charles Gordon, on civilization, 162.
-
- Arizona, sights of, 4, 228, 229, 239, 257, 258, 267, 268;
- a treasure land, 9;
- visited by the Spaniards, 214;
- a land of magic and mystery, 228, 254, 255;
- its resources, 230, 255;
- irrigation in, 230, 231, 246;
- rainfall in, 230, 279;
- its attractions for men of science, 231, 232;
- flora of, 232;
- cacti of, 233;
- grasses of, 234;
- climate of, 234, 235, 256;
- as a health resort, 234, 235;
- meaning of the name, 236;
- history of, 236;
- separation from New Mexico, 236, 237, 252;
- rivers of, 240, 251;
- capital of, 243;
- towns of, 251;
- safety of property in, 251;
- citizens of, 252, 254;
- festivity of the "Snake Dance," 258, 259, 260, 261;
- the "Painted Desert" of, 263, 264, 265, 266;
- Petrified Forests of, 270;
- desert of, 284, 285.
-
-
- Bear Creek Cañon, 89.
-
- Bell, the Hon. John C., and the Gunnison Tunnel, 111.
-
- "Ben Hur," where written, 219.
-
- Boston woman characterized, 23.
-
- Brooks, Bishop Phillips, on the superhuman, 181;
- quoted, 216.
-
-
- California, Southern, features of, 9.
-
- Campbell, Rev. Frederick, on Glenwood Springs, 96, 97.
-
- Campbell, Prof. H. W., on "dry farming," 129, 130.
-
- Cañon Diablo, Arizona, 289, 292.
-
- Caruthers, William, on resources of Cripple Creek, 77.
-
- "Cathedral Rock," 74, 75, 81.
-
- Cheyenne Cañon, 65, 66, 67;
- Helen Hunt Jackson on, 65.
-
- Cliff-dwellings of Southern Colorado, 114, 115, 116;
- bill in Congress for preservation of, 114, 115;
- opinions concerning, 116;
- at Flagstaff, Arizona, 286.
-
- Colorado, splendors of, 14, 139;
- a second Italy, 15, 97;
- people of, 16;
- woman suffrage in, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29;
- developed a demand for specialists, 33;
- employment in, 33;
- revenue of, 34;
- railways of, 37, 40, 99;
- C. B. Knox on the future of, 39;
- Major Pike's description of, 63;
- has larger percentage of American population than any other Western
- state, 88;
- waterfalls of, 104;
- irrigation of, 110, 111, 119, 126, 127, 133, 134, 141, 145, 146, 151;
- yachting in, 111, 112, 113;
- mountain climbing in, 113, 114;
- agriculture in, 130, 131;
- ranching in, 132;
- "trip round the circle" journey described, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138;
- engineering feats in, 138;
- park systems of, 139;
- industries of, 139, 140, 141;
- stone-quarrying in, 142, 143;
- mineral resources of, 143, 144, 147;
- population of, 147;
- progress of, 148;
- towns of, 148;
- northern, 149;
- coal-fields of, 150;
- fruit cultivation in, 151;
- labor in, 152, 153;
- forests of, 153, 154;
- sport in, 155;
- public school system in, 173;
- literature and art in, 177;
- its future, 178, 180, 181.
-
- ----, pioneers of, 157-181;
- contrasted with the Pilgrim Fathers, 158;
- "Denver Republican" on, 158;
- their unselfishness, 159, 160, 163;
- environment of, 162, 163;
- Nathan Cook Meeker, 164-176.
-
- Colorado College, 85, 86, 87.
-
- Colorado Fuel and Iron Company, 124, 125, 126.
-
- Colorado River, Arizona, 240;
- Prof. N. H. Newell on, 240, 241, 242.
-
- Colorado Springs, gateway to Pike's Peak district, 51;
- climate of, 52;
- excursions from, 52;
- as a tourist centre, 57;
- summer and autumn in, 83;
- the town described, 84;
- life at, 84, 85;
- founded by General Palmer, 85;
- buildings of, 88;
- park system of, 89, 91.
-
- Commencement ceremonies in East and West contrasted, 86.
-
- Cripple Creek, towns of, 75, 76;
- gold resources of, 75, 76, 77;
- mines of, 76;
- character of miners in, 77, 78;
- favorite excursion from, 78, 79.
-
-
- Denver, 15;
- metropolis of the West, 16;
- climate of, 16, 44;
- its buildings, 17, 18, 19;
- residential district of, 17;
- the Capitol, 18;
- City Park, 18, 19;
- homes of, 19;
- telephone service of, 21;
- women of, and politics, 22, 23, 25;
- election frauds in, 28;
- smelteries of, 34;
- growth of population, 37;
- future of, 38;
- City Arch, 40, 41, 42;
- spirit of the city, 42;
- enterprise of, 43;
- an early opinion of, 43;
- a convention city, 45;
- Art League of, 46;
- institutions of, 46;
- education in, 46, 47;
- churches of, 47;
- life in, 48;
- should replace Washington as capital of the Union, 48, 49;
- electrical supply in, 106.
-
- Denver and Rio Grande Railway, 99;
- scenery on, 100.
-
- "Denver Republican, The," quoted, 147;
- on the pioneers of Colorado, 158.
-
- "Dry Farming" system, discovered by Prof. H. W. Campbell, 129;
- Professor Olin on benefits of, 131;
- extent of, in Eastern Colorado, 131;
- success of, in New Mexico, 204.
-
-
- Eliot, Rev. Dr. Samuel A., quoted, 86, 87.
-
- Emerson, Ralph Waldo, quoted, 25, 51, 63, 94, 104, 157, 182, 228, 268,
- 270, 275, 296, 311.
-
- Estes Park, Colorado, 155.
-
-
- "Fairy Caves" of Colorado, 98, 100, 101.
-
- Fellows, Professor, surveys for the Gunnison Tunnel, 109, 111.
-
- Flagstaff, Arizona, 286;
- its antiquities, 286;
- the Lowell Observatory at, 287, 288.
-
- Franciscans, mission churches of, 191, 209, 210;
- their labors, 208, 216, 217.
-
- Frost, Colonel Max, on old New Mexico, 187-193;
- his influence in New Mexico, 225;
- his career, 226;
- Secretary of the Bureau of Immigration, 227.
-
-
- "Garden of the Gods," Colorado, 91, 92;
- gateway to, 91, 92.
-
- Garland, Hamlin, on the Grand Cañon, 333, 334.
-
- Gilbert, Prof. G. K., studies Meteorite Mountain of Arizona, 290, 293,
- 294.
-
- Gleed, Charles S., on the Grand Cañon, 333.
-
- Glenwood Springs, Colorado, 94;
- its mineral springs, 94, 95;
- bathing at, 95, 96, 97;
- Rev. Frederick Campbell on, 96;
- hot cave of, 97;
- "Fairy Caves" of, 98, 99, 100, 101;
- scenery at, 99.
-
- Grand Cañon, 4;
- scenic marvels of, 311, 312, 314, 315, 317, 319, 321;
- Harriet Monroe on, 312, 313;
- compared with the Eiffel Tower, 313;
- area of, 313, 319, 328;
- always revealing new beauties, 316;
- atmospheric effects of, 316, 318, 319;
- approach to, 318, 325, 326, 330;
- architectural effects of, 319, 320, 328;
- Charles Dudley Warner on, 322;
- visitors to, 322;
- hotels of, 323;
- proposed memorial to Major John W. Powell, 324;
- earliest discovery of, 325;
- the Hopi House at, 326;
- Indians of, 327;
- Major Powell's journal of his exploration of, 329, 330, 332;
- Prof. George Wharton James on, 331;
- eulogies of, by C. A. Higgins, 332, 337,
- by Charles S. Gleed, 333,
- by Hamlin Garland, 333,
- by Robert Brewster Stanton, 334,
- and by C. M. Skinner, 335;
- paintings of, by Thomas Moran, 336.
-
- Grand Caverns of Pike's Peak, 68, 69;
- memorial to General Grant in, 69.
-
- Grand Lake, Colorado, 112;
- its yacht club, 112.
-
- Grand River, the, 101.
-
- Grant, General, memorial to, in Grand Caverns, 69.
-
- Greeley, founding of, 164, 169, 171, 172;
- constitution of, 172;
- population of, 173;
- educational establishments of, 173;
- churches of, 174;
- buildings of, 175;
- life in, 175;
- the Meeker Memorial Library, 175.
-
- Greeley, Horace, and Colorado, 168.
-
- "Greeley Tribune, The," on irrigation, 127, 128;
- foundation of, 174.
-
- Grenfell, Helen, record of, 27.
-
- Gunnison River, Colorado, 107, 108;
- plan to divert, 108.
-
- Gunnison Tunnel, 108, 109, 110.
-
-
- Hammond, the Hon. Meade, and the Gunnison Tunnel, 111.
-
- Higgins, C. A., on the Grand Cañon, 332, 337.
-
- Hosmer, Harriet, on travelling by night, 12.
-
- Howe, Julia Ward, quoted, 161.
-
-
- Irrigation in Colorado, 107, 110, 111, 119, 125, 126, 127, 128, 133,
- 134, 141, 145, 146, 151;
- in New Mexico, 203, 204;
- in Arizona, 230, 231, 246;
- in California, 302, 307, 308.
-
-
- Jackson, Helen Hunt, quoted, 65.
-
- James, Prof. George Wharton, on Californian missions, 210;
- on Indian life in Arizona, 261, 262, 263;
- on the "Painted Desert," 264, 265;
- home of, at Pasadena, 305, 306;
- his love of the desert of the Southwest, 306, 307;
- on the Grand Cañon, 330.
-
-
- Kansas City, 13.
-
- Kearny, General Stephen W., occupies Santa Fé, 218, 219;
- memorial to, 218;
- quoted, 218.
-
- Kirley, the Hon. Joseph H., on Arizona, 251.
-
- Knox, C. B., on Colorado, 39, 40.
-
-
- Lacey, Representative, on the Mesa Verde cliff-dwellings, 115, 116.
-
- Laguna, New Mexico, 185, 186.
-
- Las Vegas, New Mexico, 199;
- hot springs of, 199, 200;
- its attractions, 202.
-
- Lindsay, Judge, on woman suffrage, 27, 28, 29.
-
- Lookout Mountain, Colorado, 102, 103;
- scenery on the ascent of, 103.
-
- Los Angeles, the "boom" of, 229, 300, 301;
- trolley system of, 299, 303;
- lighting of, 300;
- its parks, 301;
- public library of, 301;
- climate, 302;
- irrigation in, 302, 307;
- life of, 303, 304, 310;
- population of, 307;
- as a centre for excursions, 308;
- idealism of, 309;
- Pacific School Osteopathy at, 309;
- churches of, 309, 310.
-
- Lowell Observatory, 6, 268, 276, 287, 288.
-
- Lowell, Professor Percival, 287.
-
-
- Manitou, 67, 68, 104;
- mineral springs of, 67.
-
- Manitou Park, 64, 65.
-
- Maricopa County, 243, 244.
-
- Mars, photographs of, taken at Lowell Observatory, 287, 288, 289.
-
- Mead, Prof. Elwood, on irrigation, 144, 145.
-
- Meeker family, 164, 165.
-
- Meeker, the Hon. Nathan Cook, 165;
- his career, 165, 166;
- his visit to the West, 167;
- Horace Greeley encourages him to establish a colony in Colorado, 168;
- founds the town of Greeley, 169;
- his work among the Indians, 169, 170;
- massacred, 170.
-
- Meeker, town of, 170, 171.
-
- Mendoza, expeditions organized by, 213, 236.
-
- Meredith, Ellis, 79;
- her literary work, 80;
- her ode to the "Short Line," 81.
-
- "Mesa, the Enchanted," ascent of, 184;
- described, 184.
-
- Mesa Verde, cliff-dwellings of, 115, 116;
- Representative Lacey on, 115, 116.
-
- Meteorite Mountain, Arizona, 290;
- theory of origin, 290, 291, 293, 295;
- discovery of diamonds in, 290;
- description of, 291, 292;
- experiments of Dr. Foote relating to, 295.
-
- Monroe, Harriet, on the "Painted Desert," 263;
- quoted, 311;
- on the Grand Cañon, 312, 313.
-
- Montezuma Well, Arizona, 257.
-
- Monument Park, 91.
-
- Monument Valley, 91.
-
- Moran, Thomas, paintings by, of the Grand Cañon, 336.
-
- Mount Massive, ascent of, 113, 114.
-
- Mountain climbing in Colorado, 113, 114.
-
- Muir, John, discovers a new Petrified Forest of Arizona, 277.
-
- Munk, Dr. Joseph A., on the cacti of Arizona, 232, 233;
- on Arizona as a health resort, 234, 235.
-
- Murphy, the Hon. N. O., opinions on the union of Arizona and New
- Mexico, 253, 254.
-
-
- New Mexico, features of, 8;
- climate of, 13;
- a land of surprises, 182;
- its mixed population, 182;
- scenery of, 183;
- ruins of, 183;
- its ancient civilization, 187-193;
- Franciscan mission churches of, 191;
- archæology of, 193;
- its progress in modern ideas, 194;
- French expedition to, 195;
- compared with Algiers, 195;
- hotels in, 195;
- resources of, 196, 197, 198;
- irrigation in, 203, 204;
- railroads of, 203;
- opportunities in, 204;
- fruit growing in, 205;
- mineral wealth of, 205;
- under Spanish rule, 214;
- records of, 217;
- Historical Association of, 220.
-
- Newberry, Dr., on Arizona, 267.
-
- Newell, Prof. N. H., on the Colorado River, 240, 241, 242.
-
- Newspapers of the Southwest, 122;
- "Greeley Tribune" quoted, 127;
- "Denver Republican" quoted, 147, 158;
- "The New Mexican," 225;
- "The Eagle" of Santa Fé, 227.
-
- Night, charm of travelling by, 11, 12;
- at Pike's Peak, 55, 56.
-
- Nizza, Friar Marcos de, missionary labors of, 208;
- expedition of, 213.
-
-
- Oñate, Juan de, founds Santa Fé, 214.
-
-
- "Painted Desert," The, of Arizona, 261-266;
- Prof. George Wharton James on, 262, 264;
- Harriet Monroe on, 263.
-
- Pajarito Park, New Mexico, 187.
-
- Palmer, General William J., founds Colorado Springs, 85;
- benefactor of the state, 89, 90, 93;
- residence of, 90.
-
- Pasadena, California, 304;
- home of Prof. George Wharton James at, 305, 306.
-
- "Pathfinders and Pioneers," Governor Alva Adams on, 118, 119, 120.
-
- Patterson, Senator, career of, 31, 32.
-
- Petrified Forests, the, of Arizona, 270;
- a visit to, 271, 278, 279;
- atmospheric effects in, 272, 273, 283;
- towns in neighborhood of, 276;
- metropolis of, 277;
- discovery by John Muir, 277;
- difficulties of visiting, 279;
- three in number, 279;
- area of, 279;
- antiquities of, 281, 282;
- preservation of, insured by the Government, 282;
- the marvel of the geologist, 283;
- an arid region, 284.
-
- Phillips, Stephen, quoted, 15.
-
- Phoenix, capital of Arizona, 243;
- a tourist centre, 243;
- attractions of, 245;
- winter in, 245;
- school system of, 252.
-
- Pike, Major (afterwards General) Zebulon Montgomery, discovery by, 59;
- his ascent of Pike's Peak, 60;
- his career, 61, 62;
- diary of, 62, 63.
-
- Pike's Peak, region of, 4;
- gateway of, 51;
- winter at, 51;
- the mountain described, 52, 53, 54;
- sunsets at, 54, 55;
- at night, 55, 56;
- cogwheel railway of, 56;
- ascent of, 57, 58;
- its souvenir daily paper, 57;
- summit of, 58;
- discovery of, 59;
- centenary of discovery celebrated, 64;
- favorite excursion in vicinity of, 64.
-
- Pilgrim Fathers, contrasted with the Colorado pioneers, 158.
-
- "Point of Rocks," Arizona, 238.
-
- Powell, Major John W., explores the Grand Cañon, 324, 325;
- journal of his expedition, 329, 330.
-
- Prescott, in Arizona, 237;
- mines of, 237;
- the "Point of Rocks" near, 238;
- surrounding country, 238.
-
- Prince, the Hon. L. Bradford, on New Mexico, 218.
-
- Pueblo, 116, 117;
- home of Governor Alva Adams in, 117;
- its amenities, 121, 123;
- club-house of, 121;
- climate of, 122;
- library of, 122;
- plant of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company at, 124, 125, 126.
-
-
- Ranching in Colorado, 132.
-
- Raton, New Mexico, 198.
-
- Routt County, mineral wealth of, 39.
-
-
- Salpointe, Most Rev. Dr. J. B., archbishop of New Mexico, 210.
-
- Salt River Valley, Arizona, 230, 244, 247;
- its mammoth dam, 231;
- fruit-rearing in, 247.
-
- Salton Sea, the, 242.
-
- Salton Sink, the, 242, 243.
-
- San Xavier, mission church of, 215, 217.
-
- Santa Fé, consecrated by holy memories, 207;
- founded by Oñate, 209, 214;
- centre of archdiocese, 210;
- church of San Miguel, 209, 211;
- visit of Diego de Vargas to, 211;
- buildings of, 212;
- inhabitants of, 212;
- oldest town in the United States, 214;
- occupied by General Stephen W. Kearney, 218;
- governed by General Lew. Wallace, 219;
- "Ben Hur" written at, 219;
- old palace of, 220;
- society in, 220, 221;
- precious stones in vicinity of, 221;
- chapel of San Rosario, 221, 222;
- history of, 223;
- buildings of, 223.
-
- Santa Monica, California, 303.
-
- Seeman Tunnel, the, 35;
- claims reached by, 36.
-
- "Short Line" trip, Colorado, 4, 7, 70, 71, 72;
- homes along the railway, 74;
- hand-car journey on, 79, 80, 81;
- Ellis Meredith's ode to, 81.
-
- Skinner, C. M., on the Grand Cañon, 335, 336.
-
- "Snake Dance, The," in Arizona, 258, 259, 260, 261.
-
- Southwest, scenic attractions of, 4-14;
- characteristics of life in, 10;
- travelling facilities of, 11, 12;
- gateway of, 13.
-
- Stanton, Robert Brewster, on the Grand Cañon, 334, 335.
-
- Stone, Lucy, and the emancipation of women, 24.
-
- St. Peter's Dome, railway up, 4;
- excursion to, 64;
- ascent of, 71, 73;
- view from, 72, 74.
-
- Sugar, cultivation of, in Colorado, 139, 140, 141, 150.
-
-
- Teller, the Hon. Henry M., career of, 30.
-
- "Temple Drive," a favorite excursion in Pike's Peak region, 64.
-
- Tennyson, Lord, quoted, 3.
-
- Thayer, Mrs. Emma Homan, 102;
- her "Wild Flowers in Colorado," 102.
-
- Tonto Basin, mammoth dam at, 246, 248, 249, 250;
- entailed the destruction of the town of Roosevelt, 247, 250.
-
-
- Vaca, Cabeza de, expedition of, 213.
-
- Vargas, Diego de, visits Santa Fé, 211, 221;
- his vow to the Virgin Mary, 222.
-
-
- Wallace, General Lew., governor of New Mexico, 219;
- writes "Ben Hur" at Santa Fé, 219.
-
- Walsh, Thomas F., on Colorado and Philippine interests, 140, 141, 142.
-
- Warner, Charles Dudley, on the Grand Cañon, 322.
-
- Washington, may give place to Denver as the capital of the Union, 49.
-
- Water-power, in Colorado, and electricity, 104, 105, 106, 107.
-
- Webster, Daniel, on the worthlessness of the West, 179.
-
- Whitman, Walt, quotation from, 158.
-
- Woman suffrage, 23, 24, 25;
- in Colorado, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29;
- Judge Lindsay on, 27, 28, 29.
-
-
- Yachting in Colorado, 111, 112, 113.
-
-
- Zumacacori, mission church of, 215.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] The Life Radiant: Little, Brown, & Company, 1903.
-
-[2] The Old Santa Fé Trail: The Story of a Great Highway, 1897. The
-Macmillan Company.
-
-[3] In and Out of the Old Missions of California, by George Wharton
-James. Little, Brown, & Co., Boston, 1905.
-
-[4] Arizona Sketches, by Joseph A. Munk, M.D. The Grafton Press, New
-York.
-
-[5] In and Around the Grand Canyon, by George Wharton James. Little,
-Brown, and Co. 1900.
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
-
- Text in italics is surrounded with underscores: _italics_.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
- Archaic and variable spelling as well as inconsistencies in hyphenation have been preserved.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Land of Enchantment: From Pike's
-Peak to the Pacific, by Lilian Whiting
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Land of Enchantment: From Pike's Peak
-to the Pacific, by Lilian Whiting
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Land of Enchantment: From Pike's Peak to the Pacific
-
-Author: Lilian Whiting
-
-Release Date: October 9, 2017 [EBook #55718]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT: ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Donald Cummings, David E. Brown, Bryan Ness
-and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
-Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-
-
-<h1>THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT</h1>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_0" id="Page_0"></a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_frontis.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">PICTURESQUE BRIGHT ANGEL TRAIL, GRAND CAÑON, ARIZONA</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<p><span class="xxlarge">THE LAND OF<br />
-ENCHANTMENT</span><br />
-
-<span class="xlarge">From Pike's Peak to the Pacific</span></p>
-
-<p>By LILIAN WHITING</p>
-
-<p>Author of "The World Beautiful," "The Florence of<br />
-Landor," "Boston Days," etc.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="topspace">
-<div class="verse"><strong>"<i>The Fairest enchants me;</i></strong></div>
-<div class="verse"><strong><i>The Mighty commands me.</i>"</strong></div></div></div></div>
-
-<p>WITH ILLUSTRATIONS FROM PHOTOGRAPHS</p>
-
-<p>BOSTON<br />
-LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY<br />
-1909</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="center">
-<i>Copyright, 1906</i>,<br />
-By <span class="smcap">Little, Brown, and Company</span>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<i>All rights reserved.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Printers<br />
-<span class="smcap">S. J. Parkhill &amp; Co., Boston, U. S. A.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class="center">TO<br />
-<span class="smcap">The Unfading Memory</span><br />
-OF<br />
-MAJOR JOHN WESLEY POWELL<br />
-THE GREAT EXPLORER</p>
-
-<p>Whose name is inseparably linked for all time with the "Titan of Chasms,"
-the entire length of which he penetrated, revealing its weird and mysterious
-grandeur; whose fidelity to scientific survey has signally advanced the progress
-of our country; whose wise foresight in advocating water supplies for arid
-lands, whose heroism amid hardships and whose persistence of energy and
-noble purpose forever endear his name to every American and to all who revere
-the loftiest achievements of science,</p>
-
-<p class="center">These pages are inscribed by</p>
-
-<p class="right">LILIAN WHITING.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"<i>The sun set, but not his hope;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Stars rose; his faith was earlier up.</i>"</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"<i>What's life to me?</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Where'er I look is fire, where'er I listen</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Music; and where I tend bliss evermore.</i>"</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Browning.</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">
-AUTHOR'S NOTE</h2></div>
-
-
-<p>It is a special pleasure to the author to gratefully present
-her acknowledgments to Mr. W. H. Simpson, of the
-Santa Fé; Mr. S. K. Hooper, of the Denver and Rio
-Grande; Mr. David Cameron Mac Watters, of the Short
-Line, and Mr. Croycroft, the artist of Santa Fé, New
-Mexico, for their kind courtesies in facilitating the choice
-of subjects for illustration and for their sympathetic encouragement
-in the effort to interpret something of the
-sublimity and the loveliness of this land of enchantment
-between Pike's Peak and the Pacific.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Brunswick</span></p>
-
-<p class="indent"><span class="smcap">Boston</span>, October, 1906</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2></div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap"><small>Chapter</small></span></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><span class="smcap"><small>Page</small></span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">I.</td><td> <span class="smcap">With Western Stars and Sunsets</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_3">3</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">II.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Denver the Beautiful</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_15">15</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">III.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Picturesque Region of Pike's Peak</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">IV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Summer Wanderings in Colorado</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_94">94</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">V.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Colorado Pioneers</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_157">157</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">VI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Surprises of New Mexico</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_182">182</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">VII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Story of Santa Fé</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">VIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Magic and Mystery of Arizona</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_228">228</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">IX.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Petrified Forest and the Meteorite Mountain</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_270">270</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">X.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Los Angeles, the Spell-Binder</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_298">298</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td align="right">XI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Grand Cañon; the Carnival of the Gods</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_311">311</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td><span class="smcap">Index</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_339">339</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span></p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2></div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-
-<tr><td>Picturesque Bright Angel Trail, Grand Cañon, Arizona</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_0"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><span class="smcap"><small>Page</small></span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Acoma, New Mexico. Two Miles Distant</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_13">13</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Summit of Pike's Peak, Colorado</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_55">55</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Williams Cañon, near Manitou, Colorado</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Seven Falls, Cheyenne Cañon, near Colorado Springs, Colorado</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_66">66</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>St. Peter's Dome, on the Cripple Creek Short Line</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Approaching Duffield</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Portland and Independence Mines, Victor, Colorado</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>View from Bull Hill, Richest Gulch in the World</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The Devil's Slide, Cripple Creek Short Line</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_80">80</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Colorado Springs and Tunnel No. 6, Cripple Creek Short Line</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Gateway of the Garden of the Gods, Colorado Springs, Colorado</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Cathedral Spires, Garden of the Gods, Colorado Springs, Colorado</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The Walls of the Cañon, Grand River</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The "Fairy Caves," Colorado</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_101">101</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Marshall Pass and Mt. Ouray, Colorado</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_103">103</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The Wonderful Hanging Lake, near Glenwood Springs, Colorado</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_112">112</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Cathedral Rocks, Clyde Park, Cripple Creek Short Line</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_137">137</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Sultan Mountain</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_150">150</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Acoma, New Mexico</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_183">183</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The Enchanted Mesa, New Mexico</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_184">184</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Laguna, New Mexico</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_187">187</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</a></span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Cliff Dweller Ruins, near Santa Fé, New Mexico</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Stone Tent. Cliff Dwellers, New Mexico</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>San Miguel Church, Santa Fé, New Mexico</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_211">211</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>"Watch Tower." Cliff Dwellers, New Mexico</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_215">215</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Cliff Dwellers. Within Twenty-five Miles of Santa Fé, New Mexico</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_215">215</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Petrified Giants, Third Forest, Arizona</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_228">228</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Collection of Cacti made by Officers at Fort McDowell, Arizona, for this Picture</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_232">232</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Looking through a Part of the River Gorge, Foot of Bad Trail, Grand Cañon</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_240">240</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Suwara (Giant Cactus), Salt River Valley, Arizona</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_267">267</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>San Francisco Peak, near Flagstaff, Arizona</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_276">276</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Grand Cañon, from Grand View Point</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_317">317</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Zigzag, Bright Angel Trail, Grand Cañon</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_318">318</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>A Cliff on Bright Angel Trail, Grand Cañon</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_320">320</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center"><span class="xlarge">THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center"><span class="large">THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT</span></p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I</h2></div>
-
-<p class="center"><strong>WITH WESTERN STARS AND SUNSETS</strong></p>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"<i>The sun, the moon, the stars, the seas, the hills, and the plains&mdash;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Are not these, O Soul, the Vision of Him who reigns?</i>"</div>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Tennyson</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"<i>It may be that the gulfs will wash us down.</i>"</div>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Tennyson</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p><i>My father's kingdom is so large that people perish with cold at one
-extremity whilst they are suffocated with heat at the other.</i>"</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Cyrus to Xenophon</span></p></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> good American of the Twentieth century by no
-means defers going to Paris until he dies, but anticipates
-the joys of Paradise by making a familiarity with
-the French capital one of the consolations that tend to
-the alleviation of his enforced terrestrial sojourn. All
-Europe, indeed, has become the pleasure-ground of American
-tourists, a large proportion of whom fail to realize
-that in our own country there are enchanted regions
-in which the traveller feels that he has been caught
-up in the starry immensities and heard the words not
-lawful for man to utter. Within the limits of Colorado,
-New Mexico, Arizona, and Southern California there are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
-four centres of sublime and unparalleled scenic sublimity
-which stand alone and unrivalled in the world. Neither
-the Alps nor the Himalayas can offer any parallel to the phenomena
-of the mountain and desert systems of the Southwest
-as wrought by the march of ages, presenting unique
-and incomparable problems of scientific interest that defy
-solution, and which are inviting the constant study and
-increasing research of many among the most eminent specialists
-of the day in geology and metallurgy. The Pike's
-Peak region offers to the traveller not only the ascent of the
-stupendous Peak, but also the "Short Line" trip between
-Colorado Springs and Cripple Creek, which affords forty-five
-miles of marvellous mountain and cañon effects. The
-engineering problem of the ascent of St. Peter's Dome,&mdash;a
-huge mass of granite towering eleven thousand feet into
-the air, around which the steel track winds in terraces, glory
-after glory of view repeating itself from the ascending vistas
-as the train climbs the dizzy height,&mdash;the engineering
-problem that is here at once presented and solved, has
-attracted scientific attention all over the world as the most
-extraordinary achievement in mountain transportation.
-The Grand Cañon of the Colorado in Arizona, two days'
-journey from the Pike's Peak region, the Petrified Forests
-that lie also in Arizona, seventy-five miles beyond the
-border of New Mexico, and that Buried Star near Cañon
-Diablo, make up a group that travellers and scientists
-are beginning ardently to appreciate. Colorado, New<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
-Mexico, Arizona, and Southern California offer, all in all,
-a landscape panorama that for grandeur, charm of climate,
-and rich and varied resources is unrivalled. Imagination
-falters before the resources of this region and the inducements
-it offers as a locality in which to live surrounded by
-perpetual beauty. The air is all exhilaration; the deep
-blue skies are a miracle of color by day, and a miracle
-of shining firmament by night; the land offers its richly
-varied returns in agriculture, fruit, mining, or grazing,
-according to the specific locality; the inhabitants represent
-the best quality of American life; the opportunities
-and advantages already offered and constantly increasing
-are greater than would at first be considered possible.
-This entire Southwest can only be accurately defined as
-the Land of Enchantment.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"Yet all experience is an arch wherethro'</div>
-<div class="verse">Gleams that untravell'd world,"</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>exclaims Tennyson's Ulysses, and the wanderer under
-Western stars that hang, like blazing clusters of radiant
-light, midway in the air, cannot but feel that all these
-new experiences open to him vistas of untold significance
-and undreamed-of inspiration.</p>
-
-<p class="center">"It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles,"</p>
-
-<p>is the haunting refrain of his thoughts when, through the
-luminous air, he gazes into the golden glory of sunsets
-whose splendor is forever impressed on his memory.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
-Every hour of the journey through the Southwest is
-an hour of enchantment in the intense interest of the
-scenes. One must not miss the outlook when descending
-the steep grade down Raton Mountain; nor must he fail
-to be on the alert in passing through the strange old
-pueblos of Isleta and Acoma; he must not miss Cañon
-Diablo when crossing that wonderful chasm on the wonderful
-bridge, nor the gleam of the Lowell Observatory
-at Flagstaff on its pine-clad hill-slope, nor fail to gaze on
-the purple Franciscan peaks on which the lingering sunset
-rays recall to him the poet's line,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center">"Day in splendid purple dying."</p>
-
-<p>Like a modern Telemachus he sees "the baths of all the
-western stars."</p>
-
-<p>Between La Junta in Colorado and Los Angeles in California
-there lies a journey which, in connection with its
-side trips, is unequalled, because there is only one Grand
-Cañon, one Pike's Peak with its adjacent wonderland, and
-because, as a rule, elsewhere in the United States&mdash;or in
-the world, for that matter,&mdash;forests do not turn into
-stone nor stars hurl themselves into the earth with a
-force that buries them too deep for resurrection. Through
-the East and the Middle West the mountains do not, on
-general principles, attempt any competition with the clouds,
-but content themselves with the gentle altitude of a mile
-or so; the stars stay decorously in the firmament and are
-not shooting madly about, trying fantastic Jules Verne<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
-experiments to determine whether or not they can shine
-better from the centre of the earth than from their natural
-place in the upper air; the stars of the Eastern skies
-"stand pat," so to speak, and are not flying in the face
-of the universe; so that, altogether, in these regions it
-would seem quite evident that</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"The world is built in order,</div>
-<div class="verse">And the atoms march in tune."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>These exceptional variations to the established order,
-however,&mdash;these wonderful peaks and cañons and forests
-and gardens of gods,&mdash;all these enchanted things lie, naturally,
-within the Land of Enchantment, within this vast
-territorial expanse replete with many other attractions.
-From La Junta let the traveller journey into Colorado
-with its splendor of resources, and in gazing upon the
-stately, solemn impressiveness of the Snowy Range he
-cannot but feel that Nature has predestined Colorado
-for the theatre of noble life and realize the influence as
-all-pervading. Infinite possibilities open before one as
-an alluring vista, and he hears the refrain,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="indent1">"My spirit beats her mortal bars</div>
-<div class="verse">As down dark tides the glory slides</div>
-<div class="indent1">And star-like mingles with the stars."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>With the excursions offered,&mdash;grand panoramas of
-mountain views where the tourist from his lofty perch in
-the observation-car looks down on clouds and on peaks
-and pinnacles far below the heights to which his train<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
-climbs,&mdash;with the cogwheel road ascending Pike's Peak,
-the fascinating drives through Cheyenne Cañon, the Garden
-of the Gods, Ute Pass, and around Glen Eyrie, and with
-the luxurious ease of life at "The Antlers," the traveller
-finds fairly a new world, rich in suggestion and wide outlook.
-This attractive region is, however, only one of the
-central points of interest in Colorado. Denver, the brilliant
-and fascinating capital; Pueblo, the metropolis of
-Southern Colorado; Glenwood Springs, the romantic and
-fashionable watering place and summer resort high up in the
-mountains on the beautiful "scenic route" of the Denver
-and Rio Grande; Boulder, the picturesque mountain town,
-with its State University so ably conducted; Greeley, the
-town of the "Union Colony," whose romantic and tragic
-story is a part of the great history of the Centennial
-State, and where an admirable normal school draws students
-from all over the country, even including New England,&mdash;these
-and a wealth of other features offer interest
-that is coming to engage the attention of the civilized
-world.</p>
-
-<p>New Mexico has been more or less considered as one of
-the impossible and uncivilized localities, or has failed to
-establish any claim to being considered at all; yet here
-is a territory whose climate is simply delightful by virtue
-of its altitude,&mdash;cool in summer and mild and sunny in
-winter,&mdash;whose mines of amethysts and other precious
-stones suggest developments yet undreamed-of; whose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
-ethnological interest, in the marvellous remains of Cliff-dwellers
-and of a people far antedating any authentic
-records, enchains the scientist; a territory whose future
-promises almost infinitely varied riches in many directions
-of its development.</p>
-
-<p>Arizona is simply a treasure land. If it offered only
-that enthralling feature, the Grand Cañon, it would
-be a central point of pilgrimage for the entire civilized
-world; but even aside from this,&mdash;the sublimest vision
-ever offered to human eye,&mdash;even aside from the Grand
-Cañon, which dominates the world as the most sublime
-spectacle,&mdash;Arizona offers the fascinations of the Painted
-Desert, the Tonto Basin, the uncanny buttes that
-loom up in grotesque shapes on the horizon, the
-dreamy lines of mountain ranges, the strange pueblos,
-the productive localities where grains and where fruits
-and flowers grow with tropical luxuriance, the Petrified
-Forests, and the exquisite coloring of sky and
-atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>Southern California, with its brilliantly fascinating metropolis,
-Los Angeles; the neighboring city of Pasadena,
-the "Crown of the Valley"; with an extensive electric
-trolley-car connection with towns within a radius of fifty
-miles, and other distinctive and delightful features, almost
-each one of which might well furnish a separate chapter of
-description; with mountain trips made easy and enjoyable
-by the swift electric lines,&mdash;all this region fascinates the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
-imagination and indicates new and wonderful vistas of life
-in the immediate future. The vast and varied resources
-of the great Southwest will also, as they are developed,
-increasingly affect the economic aspects of the country.</p>
-
-<p>To the traveller one fact stands out in especial prominence,
-and that is that the traditional primitive conditions
-in this region hardly continue to exist. The picturesque
-aspects of nature form the stage setting to very-much-up-to-date
-life. The opportunities and advantages already
-offered and constantly increasing are greater than would
-at first be considered possible. In isolated homes on the
-desert the children of the family will be found studying
-the higher mathematics, taking music lessons, or receiving
-lessons in languages (classic, or the romance languages)
-from some one in the neighborhood who is able to give
-such instruction. If any traveller expects to encounter the
-traditional "cow-boy" aspects of life, he will be very much
-disappointed. There is no refinement of life in the East
-that is not mirrored and duplicated in the West. There
-are no aspirations, no ideals, no fine culture in the East
-that have not their corresponding aspects in the great
-West. In fact, in many ways the West begins where the
-East leaves off. For instance, the new towns of the West
-that have sprung up within the past twenty years have
-never known what it was to have gas or horse-cars.
-They begin with electric lights and electric transit. Their
-schoolhouses are built with up-to-date methods, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
-houses, however modest, are constructed with a taste and
-a beauty unknown in the rural regions of the East. The
-square white house with green blinds and a straight
-stone-paved pathway to the front gate, so common in New
-England, is not seen in the West. Instead, the most
-modest little structure has its piazza, its projecting bay
-window thrown out, its balcony&mdash;something, at all events,
-tasteful and beautiful to the eye.</p>
-
-<p>The journey from La Junta (in Colorado) to Los Angeles
-offers a series of enthralling pictorial effects that are
-invested with all the refinements of civilized life delightfully
-devoid of its commonplaceness. These long transcontinental
-trains with two engines, one at the front and
-one at the rear, with their different grades of the Pullman,
-the tourist, and the emigrant car service, are as distinctive
-a feature of the twentieth century as the "prairie
-schooners" were of the early half of the nineteenth century.
-The real journey begins, of course, at Chicago,
-and as these trains leave in the evening the traveller fares
-forth in the seclusion of his berth in the Pullman. The
-nights on a sleeping-car may be a very trance of ecstasy
-to one who loves to watch the panorama of the skies.
-Raise the curtain, pile up the pillows to the angle that
-one can gaze without lifting the head, and what ethereal
-visions one is wafted through! One has a sense of flying
-in the air among the starry spaces, especially if he chances
-to have the happy fortune of a couch on the side where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
-the moon is shining down,&mdash;a midsummer moon, with
-stars, and filmy, flitting clouds,&mdash;when the panorama of
-the air becomes the enchantment of a dream.</p>
-
-<p>It is, literally, "such stuff as dreams are made of," and
-when one drops off into slumber, he utilizes it for his
-fancies of the night. Miss Harriet Hosmer, the famous
-sculptor, once related a story of a night journey she took
-with a party of congenial spirits on horseback between
-Rome and Florence. By way of "a lark" they rested by
-day and rode by night, and the beauty of the effects of
-light and shade sank into her mind so that she drew
-on them thirty years or more later for the wonderful
-designs in her great "Gates," which even rival those
-of Ghiberti. "The night hath counsel" and suggestion
-of artistic beauty as well, and the effects that one may get
-from a flying train are impossible to obtain under any
-other condition. After all, is it not a part of the fine
-art of living to take the enjoyment of the moment as it
-comes, in whatever guise, without lamenting that it is not
-something else?</p>
-
-<p>These splendidly equipped trains of the Santa Fé service
-admit very little dust; the swift motion keeps up a
-constant breeze, and some necromancy of perpetual vigilance
-surrounds the traveller with exceptional cleanliness
-and personal comfort. One experiences a certain sense of
-detachment from ordinary day and daylight duties that
-is exhilarating.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>Kansas City, the gateway to the great Southwest,
-might well claim attention as an important manufacturing
-and distributing centre; Kansas itself, once the bed of an
-inland sea, is not without scientific interest for the deposits
-of gypsum and salt that have left the soil so fertile, as well
-as for strange fossils revealing gigantic animals, both
-land and aquatic, that have lived there,&mdash;the mastodon,
-rhinoceros, elephant, the crocodile and shark,&mdash;many
-of whose skeletons are preserved in the National
-Museum in Washington. The prosperous inland
-cities with their schools and colleges, their beautiful
-homes and constant traffic,&mdash;all these features of Kansas,
-the state of heroic history, are deeply impressive. But
-it is Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, with which
-these pages are chiefly concerned, and the especially
-picturesque aspects of the journey begin with La
-Junta.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p013.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">ACOMA. TWO MILES DISTANT</p>
-
-<p>Entering Colorado, the plateau is four thousand feet
-above sea level, and constantly rising. This altitude renders
-the climate of New Mexico particularly invigorating
-and delightful.</p>
-
-<p>The most romantic and poetically enchanting regions of
-the United States are entered into on this journey, in
-which easy detours allow one to visit that mysterious
-"City in the Sky," the pueblo of Acoma, near Albuquerque
-in New Mexico; to make excursions to Montezuma's
-Well; to the mysterious ruin of Casa Grande; to the Twin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
-Lakes (which lie on a mountain crest); and to study
-other marvels of nature in Arizona. The splendors of
-Colorado, with the myriad mountain peaks and silver lakes,
-the mysterious cañons and deep gorges, the rose-flushed
-valleys lying fair under a sapphire sky in the
-luminous golden atmosphere, and the profound interest inspired
-in the general social tone of life in its educational,
-economic, and religious aspects, invest a summer-day tour
-through the Land of Enchantment with all the glory and
-the freshness of a dream.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II</h2></div>
-
-<p class="center"><strong>DENVER THE BEAUTIFUL</strong></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"<i>I will make me a city of gliding and wide-wayed silence,</i></div>
-<div class="indent2"><i>With a highway of glass and of gold;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>With life of a colored peace, and a lucid leisure,</i></div>
-<div class="indent2"><i>Of smooth electrical ease,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Of sweet excursion of noiseless and brilliant travel,</i></div>
-<div class="indent2"><i>With room in your streets for the soul.</i>"</div>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Stephen Phillips</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Denver</span> the Beautiful is the dynamo of Western civilization,
-and the keynote to the entire scale of life in Colorado.
-The atmosphere seems charged with high destiny.
-"I worship with wonder the great Fortune," said Emerson,
-using the term in the universal sense, "and find it none
-too large for use. My receptivity matches its greatness."
-The receptivity of the dwellers in this splendid environment
-seems to match its greatness, and expand with the
-increase of its vast resources. As Paris is France, so
-Denver is Colorado. Hardly any other commonwealth
-and its capital are in such close relation, unless it be that
-of Massachusetts and Boston. Colorado is a second Italy,
-rather than Switzerland, as it has been called. Over it
-bends the Italian sky; its luminous atmosphere is that
-of Dante's country; at night the stars hang low as they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
-hang over the heights of San Miniato in fair Florence;
-the mountain coloring, when one has distance enough,
-has the soft melting purple and amethyst lights of the
-Apennines, and the courtesy of the people is not less
-marked than in the land of the olive and the myrtle.
-Then, too, the light&mdash;the resplendent and luminous effect
-of the atmosphere&mdash;is like that of no other state.
-The East is dark by comparison with this transparency
-of golden light.</p>
-
-<p>As the metropolis of the great West between Chicago
-and the Pacific Coast, Denver has a continual procession
-of visitors from all countries, who pause in the overland
-journey to study the outlook of the most wonderful state
-in the Union,&mdash;that of the richest and most varied resources.
-To find within the limits of one state resources
-that include gold, silver, copper, lead, zinc, coal, and tin
-mines; agriculture, horticulture, stock raising, manufactures,
-and oil wells, sounds like a fiction; yet this is literally
-true. Add to these some of the most beautiful
-and sublime scenery in the world, the best modern appliances,
-and the most intelligent and finely aspiring class
-of people, and one has an outline of the possibilities of
-the Centennial State.</p>
-
-<p>Denver is, geographically, the central city of the country,
-equally accessible from both the Atlantic and the Pacific
-coasts, from the North and the South. It has the finest
-climate of the continent; its winters are all sunshine and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
-exhilaration, with few cloudy or stormy days; its summers
-are those in which oppressive heat is hardly known, and
-the nights are invariably cool. It is a great railroad
-centre; it has infinite space in which to extend itself
-in any direction; it has unsurpassed beauty of location.
-No city west of Chicago concentrates so many desirable
-features, for all this wealth of resource and loveliness of
-scenic setting is the theatre of noble energy and high
-achievement. Denver is only twenty-six hours from
-Chicago; it is but forty-five hours from New York.
-Although apparently a city of the plains, it is a mile
-above sea level, and is surrounded with more than two
-hundred miles of mountain ranges, whose changeful color,
-in royal purple, deep rose, amber, pale blue, gleams
-through the transparent air against the horizon. The
-business and hotel part of Denver lies on a lower level,
-while the Capitol, a superb building of Colorado marble,
-and all the best residential region, is on a higher plateau.
-The Capitol has the novel decoration of an electric flag,
-so arranged that through colored glass of red, white, and
-blue the intense light shines.</p>
-
-<p>The Denver residential region is something unusual
-within general municipal possibilities, as it has unbounded
-territory over which to expand, thus permitting each home
-to have its own grounds, nearly all of which are spacious;
-and these, with the broad streets lined with trees, give
-to this part of the city the appearance of an enormous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
-park. For miles these avenues and streets extend, all
-traversed by swift electric cars that so annihilate time and
-space that a man may live five, ten, or a dozen miles from
-his place of business and call it all joy. He insures
-himself pure air, beautiful views, and an abundance of
-ground. If the family desires to go into the city for
-evening lectures, concerts, or the theatre, the transit is
-swift and enjoyable. They control every convenience.
-These individual villas are all fire-proof. The municipal
-law requires the buildings to be of brick or stone, thus
-making Denver a practically fireproof city. Both the
-business blocks and the homes share the benefit of the
-improved modern taste in architecture. The city of
-Denver covers an area of eighty-nine square miles, and
-these limits are soon to be extended.</p>
-
-<p>The Capitol has an enchanting mountain view; it also
-contains a fine museum of historic relics found in Colorado
-from cliff-dwellings and other points. A million dollars
-has been offered&mdash;and refused&mdash;for this state collection.
-The City Park, covering nearly four hundred acres, with
-its two lakes, its beds of flowers and groups of shrubbery;
-its casino, where an orchestra plays every afternoon in the
-summer, while dozens of carriages and motor cars with
-their tastefully dressed occupants draw up and listen to
-the music, is a centre of attraction to both residents and
-visitors. This park is to Denver as is the Pincian Hill to
-Rome, or as Hyde Park to London,&mdash;the fashionable drive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
-and rendezvous. Great beds of scarlet geraniums contrast
-with the emerald green of the grass, while here and there
-a fountain throws its spray into the air. Far away on
-the horizon are the encircling mountains in view for over
-two hundred miles, the ranges taking on all the colors of
-fairyland, while a deep turquoise sky, soft and beautiful,
-bends over the entire panorama. From this plateau four
-great peaks are in view: Pike's Peak, seventy-five miles to
-the south; Long's, Gray's, and James's peaks, all distinctly
-silhouetted against the sky, rising from the serrated range
-which connects them. During these open-air concerts
-in the park there is a midsummer holiday air over the
-scene as if all the city were <i>en fête</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The architectural scheme of Denver's residential region
-harmonizes with the landscape. The houses are not the
-palaces of upper Fifth Avenue and Riverside drive, or of
-Massachusetts or Connecticut avenues in Washington;
-but there is hardly an individual residence that has not
-legitimate claim to beauty. The tower, the oriel window,
-and the broad balcony are much in evidence; and
-the piazza, with its swinging seat, its easy chairs, and
-table disposed on a bright rug, suggest a charm of <i>vie intime</i>
-that appeals to the passer-by. Books, papers, and
-magazines are scattered over the table: the home has the
-unmistakable air of being lived in and enjoyed; of being
-the centre of a happy, intelligent life, buoyant with enterprise
-and energy, and identified with the social progress of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
-the day. On the greenest of lawn a jet of water or, in
-many cases, a fountain plays, the advantage of an irrigated
-country being that the householder creates and controls
-his own climatic conditions. The rain,&mdash;it raineth
-every day when irrigation determines the shower; roses
-grow in riotous profusion on the lawn, and the crimson
-"rambler" climbs the portico; lilies nod in the luminous
-gold of the sunshine, and all kinds of foliage plants lend
-their rich color to these beautiful grounds that surround
-every home. To the children growing up in Denver the
-spectacle of dreary streets would be as much of a novelty
-as the ruins of Karnak. The line that divides the past
-from the present is not only very definite, but also very
-recent, as is indicated by the question of a five-year-old
-lad who wonderingly asked: "Mamma, did they ever
-have horses draw the trolley cars?" The mastodon is
-not more remote in antiquity to the man or woman of
-to-day than was the idea of horses drawing a car to this
-child. Between the nineteenth and the twentieth centuries
-the gulf of demarcation is almost as wide as between
-the fifteenth and the nineteenth.</p>
-
-<p>The streets of Denver are very broad, usually planted
-with trees, and the smooth roads offer an earthly paradise
-to the motor-car transit that abounds in Denver. One
-of the happy excursions is that of motoring to Colorado
-Springs, seventy-five miles distant, a constant entertainment.
-With the splendid electric-transit system, annihilating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
-distance; with the broad streets paved after the
-best modern methods; with the wide and smooth sidewalks
-of Colorado stone and the almost celestial charm
-of the view, city life is transformed. Telephonic service
-is practically universal; electric lighting and an admirable
-water system are among the easy conveniences of this section,
-which is not yet suburban because of its complete
-identification with all other parts of the city.</p>
-
-<p>The universality of telephonic intercourse in Colorado
-would go far to support the theory of Dr. Edward Everett
-Hale that the time will come when writing will be a lost
-art, and will be considered, at best, as a clumsy and laborious
-means of communication in much the same
-manner that the late centuries regard the production of
-the manuscript book before the invention of the art of
-printing. In few cities is the telephone service carried
-out to such constant colloquial use as in Denver. The
-traveller finds in his room a telephone as a matter of
-course, and there are very few quarters of an hour when
-the bell does not summon him to chat with a friend,
-from one on the same floor of the hotel to one who is
-miles away in the city, or even fifty or a hundred miles
-distant, as at Greeley, Colorado Springs, or Pueblo.</p>
-
-<p>"How are you to-day?" questions the friendly voice.
-"Did you see so-and-so in the morning papers? And
-what do you think about it? and can you be ready at
-eleven to go to hear Mrs. &mdash;&mdash; lecture? and at one will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
-you lunch with Mrs. &mdash;&mdash;? the entire conversation to be
-in Italian? and could you go at about four this afternoon
-to a tea to meet an Oriental Princess who will discuss
-the laws of reincarnation? and will you also dine with
-us at seven, and go later to the Woman's Municipal
-Club that holds a conference to-night?" All those lovely
-things fall upon one with apparently no thought of its
-being an unusual day&mdash;this is Denver! This is twentieth-century
-life. This is an illustration of what can be
-done when the non-essential is eliminated from the days
-and that which is essential is felicitously pursued.</p>
-
-<p>When the Denver woman remarked to the Eastern
-woman sojourner within the gates that she was unable to
-be away that autumn on any extended absence, as the
-campaign was to be more than usually important, the
-wanderer from the Atlantic shore irreverently laughed.
-Her hostess endeavored (unsuccessfully) not to seem
-shocked by this levity regarding serious subjects. She remembered
-that there were extenuating circumstances, and
-that the Eastern women had really never had a fair chance
-in life. Their part, she reflected, consisted in obeying laws
-and abiding by whatever was decreed, with no voice allowed
-to express their own preferences or convictions. She
-remembered that a proportion of the feminine New England
-intellect consecrates its powers and its time to extended
-researches in the Boston Public Library and in the venerable
-records of the Massachusetts Historical Society, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
-a perpetual quest of information regarding its ancestors,
-who are worshipped with the zeal and fervor of the
-Japanese. The Boston woman, indeed, may have only the
-most vague ideas regarding the rate bill, the problem of
-the Philippines, the Panama Canal, or the next Governor
-of Massachusetts; but she is thoroughly conversant with
-all the details of the Mayflower and her own ancestral
-dignities. Recognizing the New England passion for its
-ancestry, a leading Boston journal offers a page, weekly,
-to open correspondence on the momentous question as to
-whether Winthrop Bellingham married Priscilla Patience
-Mather in 1699 or in 1700, and a multitude of similar
-questions concerning the vanished centuries. The Denver
-woman realized all this and was discreetly charitable in
-her judgment of her friend's failure to recognize the significant
-side of the political enfranchisement of women in
-Colorado. For despite some actual disadvantages and
-defects of woman suffrage in the centennial state, and a
-vast amount of exaggerated criticism on these defects, it is
-yet a benefit to the four states that enjoy it,&mdash;Colorado,
-Utah, Idaho, and Wyoming.</p>
-
-<p>In a majority of the states of the entire nation there
-is a conviction (and one not without its claims) that
-women are adequately represented and protected in all
-their rights, as things are, and that it is superfluous to
-increase the vote.</p>
-
-<p>The anti-suffrage argument suggests many reflections<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
-whose truth must be admitted, and this side of the controversy
-is espoused and led by some proportion of men
-and women whose names inspire profound respect, if not
-conviction, with their belief. Still, the fact remains that
-when woman suffrage is subjected to the practical test of
-experience, the advantages are so obvious, its efficacy for
-good so momentous, that their realization fairly compels acceptance.
-In the entire nation there has never been a man
-or a woman whose clearness and profundity of intellect,
-moral greatness, and sympathetic insight into the very
-springs of national and individual life exceeded those of Lucy
-Stone, the remarkable pioneer in the political emancipation
-of women, whose logical eloquence and winning, beautiful
-personality was the early focus of this movement. Mrs.
-Stone surrounded herself with a noble group,&mdash;Mary A.
-Livermore, Julia Ward Howe, Thomas Wentworth Higginson,
-and others whose names readily suggest themselves,
-and with whom, in the complete companionship
-and sympathy of her husband, Dr. Henry B. Blackwell,
-she successfully worked, even though the final success has
-not yet been achieved. Other great and noble women&mdash;Susan
-B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton&mdash;consecrated
-their entire lives and remarkable powers to the early
-championship of woman suffrage. The present ranks of
-women workers&mdash;the younger women&mdash;are so numerous,
-and they include so large a proportion of the most notable
-women of both the East and the West, that volumes would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
-not afford sufficient room for adequate allusion. In Denver
-the leading people are fully convinced of the responsibility
-of women in politics. Although the ballot has
-not been generally granted to women, the very movement
-toward it has resulted in their higher education and their
-larger freedom in all ways. The situation reminds one of
-the "subtle ways" of Emerson's Brahma:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"If the red slayer think he slays,</div>
-<div class="indent1">Or if the slain think he is slain,</div>
-<div class="verse">They know not well the subtle ways</div>
-<div class="indent1">I keep, and pass, and turn again.</div>
-</div>
- <div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"Far or forgot to me is near;</div>
-<div class="indent1">Shadow and sunlight are the same;</div>
-<div class="verse">The vanished gods to me appear;</div>
-<div class="indent1">And one to me are shame and fame.</div>
-</div>
- <div class="stanza">
-<div class="indent1">"They reckon ill who leave me out;</div>
-<div class="verse">When me they fly, I am the wings;</div>
-<div class="indent1">I am the doubter and the doubt,</div>
-<div class="verse">And I the hymn the Brahmin sings."</div>
-</div>
- <div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><hr class="tb" />
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Apparently, the principle of woman suffrage has "subtle
-ways" in which "to pass and turn again." It has
-recently turned in a manner to compel a new and more
-profound revision of all opinion and argument.</p>
-
-<p>Colorado presents a most interesting field for the study
-of woman suffrage, and from any fair and adequate review
-of its workings and results there could hardly fail to be
-but one conclusion,&mdash;that of its signal value and importance
-as a factor in human progress. One of its special<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
-claims is of a nature not down on the bills,&mdash;the fact of the
-great intellectual enlargement and stimulus,&mdash;aside from
-its results, which the very exercise of political power gives
-to the women of the state. It is seen in the higher quality
-of conversational tone and the tendency to eliminate
-the inconsequential and the inane because great matters
-of universal interest were thus brought home to women
-in connection with their power to decide on these matters.
-This result is perhaps equally seen among the
-women who rejoice and the women who regret the fact of
-their political enfranchisement. For in Colorado, as well
-as in other states, there is a proportion of women who do
-not believe in the desirability of the ballot for themselves.
-They sincerely regret that it has been "forced," as they
-say, upon them. This proportion in Colorado is not
-a large one, but it includes some of the most intelligent
-and cultured women, just as an enthusiastic acceptance
-of the ballot includes a much larger proportion of
-this higher order of women. However, welcome or unwelcome,
-desired or not desired, the ballot is there, and
-so the women who regret this fact yet realize its responsibility
-and feel it a moral duty to use it wisely as well.
-And so they, too, study great questions, and discuss them,
-and fit themselves to use the power that is conferred upon
-them. All this reacts on the general tone of society, and
-the quality of conversation at ladies' lunches, at teas,
-and at clubs, is of a far higher order than is often<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
-found in other states among the more purely feminine
-gatherings.</p>
-
-<p>Among the women who have successfully administered
-public office in Colorado was the late Mrs.
-Helen Grenfell, whose record as State Superintendent
-of Public Instruction was so remarkable that both
-political parties supported her. A Denver journal said
-of her:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Mrs. Grenfell's term has lasted six years, the last two
-years having been under a Republican administration, although
-Mrs. Grenfell is a Democrat. Her most notable
-achievement has been in her conduct of the school lands of
-the state, making them valuable sources of revenue. Her
-policy from the first was against the sale of the school lands,
-which comprise some three million acres. The income from
-such sales had been limited, as the investments were prescribed,
-and the interest rate rather low, as Western interest
-goes. The leasing system was inaugurated under Mrs. Grenfell's
-direction, and the result was an increase of school revenues
-of nearly two hundred thousand dollars a year, with no
-decrease in the capital. The Land Department of the state
-shares the credit with the state superintendent of public
-instruction, as they have administered her policy wisely, but
-the policy was hers alone."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Judge Lindsay of Denver, giving an official opinion as
-to the desirability of woman suffrage for Colorado, said:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Woman suffrage in Colorado for over ten years has more
-than demonstrated its justice. No one would dare to propose
-its repeal; and, if left to the men of the state, any proposition
-to revoke the right bestowed upon women would be
-overwhelmingly defeated.</p>
-
-<p>"Many good laws have been obtained in Colorado which
-would not have been secured but for the power and influence
-of women.</p>
-
-<p>"At some of the elections in Denver frauds have been
-committed. Ninety-nine per cent of these frauds were committed
-by men, without any connivance or assistance, direct
-or indirect, from women; but because one per cent were
-committed by women, there are ignorant or careless-minded
-people in other states who actually argue that this is a reason
-for denying women the right to vote. If it were a just reason
-for denying suffrage to women, it would be a ten times greater
-reason for denying it to men.</p>
-
-<p>"In Colorado it has never made women any the less womanly
-or any the less motherly, or interfered with their
-duties in the home, that they have been given the right to
-participate in the affairs of state.</p>
-
-<p>"Many a time I have heard the 'boss' in the political
-caucus object to the nomination of some candidate because of
-his bad moral character, with the mere explanation that if the
-women found him out it might hurt the whole ticket. While
-many bad men have been nominated and elected to office in
-spite of woman suffrage, they have not been nominated and
-elected because of woman suffrage. If the women alone had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
-a right to vote, it would result in a class of men in public
-office whose character for morality, honesty, and courage
-would be of a much higher order....</p>
-
-<p>"People have no right to judge woman suffrage in Colorado
-by the election frauds in a few precincts. The election frauds
-in Philadelphia, where women do not vote, were never used
-as a reason why suffrage should be denied to men....</p>
-
-<p>"With women, as with men, it requires more or less public
-sentiment to arouse them to their civic duties; but when
-aroused, as they frequently are, their power for good cannot
-be overestimated. Again, the very fact that the women have
-such a power is a wonderful reserve force in the cause of
-righteousness in Colorado, and has been a powerful deterrent
-in anticipating and opposing the forces of evil.</p>
-
-<p>"It does not take any mother from her home duties or cares
-to spend ten minutes in going to the polling place and casting
-her vote and returning to the bosom of her home; but
-in that ten minutes she wields a power that is doing more to
-protect that home now, and will do more to protect it in the
-future, and to protect all other homes, than any power or
-influence in Colorado.</p>
-
-<p>"I know that the great majority of people in Colorado favor
-woman suffrage, after more than a decade of practical experience,&mdash;first,
-because it is fair, just, and decent; and secondly,
-because its influence has been good rather than evil in our
-political affairs."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Judge Lindsay's words represent the general attitude of
-the representative people of the state.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>The Hon. Henry M. Teller, senior senator of Colorado,
-is one of the most interesting men in the Centennial State,
-and the traveller who may meet and talk with him is impressed
-with his quiet sincerity, with the sense of reserved
-power with which he seems endowed, and the refinement
-and directness of his methods. He is by birth an Eastern
-man, and a graduate of Harvard; but his mature life has
-been passed in Colorado. As a lawyer his law office claims
-much of his time and thought, even with all the great
-tide of national interests with which he is identified. He
-is a thorough and, indeed, an astute politician; not
-in the "machine" sense, but with a very clear and comprehensive
-grasp of the situation and a large infusion
-of practical sagacity. Senator Teller is in no sense an
-enthusiast. He is responsive to high aims and high
-ideals; he knows what they are, so to speak; he recognizes
-them on sight; he never falls into the error of under-valuing
-them; but he is not a man to be carried away by
-an ecstatic vision, and he would have no use for wings at
-all where he had feet. He would regard the solid earth
-as a better foundation, on the whole, than the air, and one
-more suited to existing conditions.</p>
-
-<p>Senator Teller has had more than a quarter of a century's
-experience in political life and in statesmanship.
-For two years he was a member of the Cabinet. For
-twenty-seven years he has been in the Senate, where, with
-Senator Hoar of Massachusetts, he shared the highest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
-honor, and the most absolute confidence, in both his flawless
-integrity and conspicuous ability, that the Senate, and
-the nation as well, can give to him.</p>
-
-<p>Senator Patterson, the junior senator from Colorado, is
-a man whom, if he encounters an obstacle does not grant
-it the dignity of recognition. He instantly discovers the
-end,&mdash;the desired result,&mdash;and declares, per saltum, "It
-is right; it should be done,&mdash;it shall be done." Senator
-Patterson is a man of very keen perceptions and one with
-whom it is easy to come into touch instantly; he is responsive,
-sympathetic, full of faith that the thing that ought
-to be accomplished can be accomplished, and therefore that
-it shall be. Senator Patterson has the typical American
-experience of successful men lying behind him. He was
-on familiar terms with the intricacies of a newspaper office
-in his youth; he studied in an Indiana college without
-an annual expenditure of that twenty thousand dollars
-which some of the latter-day Harvard undergraduates find
-indispensable to the process of securing their "B. A.," and
-tradition records, indeed, that the junior Colorado senator,
-in the prehistoric days of his youth, set out for the fountain
-of learning with a capital of forty dollars; that he
-frugally walked from Crawfordsville to Indianapolis that
-he might not deplete his financial estate which was destined
-to buy a scholarship, and that in this unrecorded
-tour in the too, too truly rural region of his early life, he
-cleaned two clocks on the way in payment for lodging, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
-that he cleaned them uncommonly well. Of all this traditionary
-history who shall say? Senator Patterson is a
-man who would always keep faith with his aims and convictions.
-He is sunny and full of wit, and full of faith
-in the ultimate triumph of good things in general, and is,
-all in all, one of the most genial and delightful of men&mdash;and
-senators.</p>
-
-<p>It is related that Senator Patterson first dawned upon
-Denver in its primeval period of 1872, when its municipal
-affairs were conducted by two prominent&mdash;if not eminent&mdash;gentlemen,
-one of whom was the champion gambler,
-and the other the champion brewer of the metropolis.
-There were eleven thousand nine hundred and ninety-eight
-other citizens in this municipality besides the brewer and
-the gambler (and the population was said to have been
-twelve thousand in all), and the eleven thousand nine hundred
-and ninety-eight, like "The Ten" of early Florentine
-history, decided that would "reform the town." Their
-united effort was to elect Mr. Patterson as Mayor. And
-a good one he proved; and he has gone on and on, in the
-minds as well as in the hearts of his fellow-citizens, until
-now he is the colleague of Senator Teller, and he offers
-another typical illustration of true American integrity
-and honorable ambition and success. Personally, Senator
-Patterson is one of the most winning men in the world,
-and one delights in his success and the high estimation
-in which he is held.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>The development of Colorado and other parts of the
-great Southwest during the past half-century has created
-a new order of employment in that of the government
-expert,&mdash;the specialist in upland or hydraulic irrigation,
-in engineering and mining problems. The government
-surveying work has also increased largely, both in extent
-and in the greater number of specialties now required.
-The Geological Survey and the Agricultural Department,
-both included under the Department of the Interior, are
-rapidly multiplying branches of work that require both the
-skilled training and ability for original research and accomplishment.
-These positions, which command government
-salaries at from some eighteen to twenty-five hundred
-dollars a year, afford such opportunity for the expert to
-reveal his value that private corporations and business
-houses continually draw on the ranks of the government
-employees. Of late years the demand for the expert irrigation
-engineer has been so great in Colorado as to seriously
-embarrass the government forces by drawing some of the
-best men for private service. Denver is an especial centre
-for these enterprises, as being the natural metropolis
-for the vast inter-mountain region and the plains country
-of the Missouri River. This vast territory will
-support many millions more of population. In fact,
-the dwellers within this described territory at this day
-are but pioneers on the frontier to what the future
-will develop, although they already enjoy all the benefits<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
-of the older states, with countless advantages beside
-which they cannot enjoy.</p>
-
-<p>The smelteries in Denver, of which the Grant is the
-largest, treat millions of pounds of copper and lead, and
-great quantities of silver and gold, while there are also
-extensive ones in Pueblo, Leadville, Durango, and other
-places. There is also a good proportion of Colorado ore
-which is not treated at all at smelteries, but is of a free-milling
-order. The revenue from mining has exceeded
-fifty millions of dollars annually of late years, but the
-revenue from agriculture exceeds that of the mines, and to
-these must be added some twenty millions a year from live
-stock during the past two or three years. In the aggregate,
-Colorado has an internal revenue of hardly less than
-one hundred millions a year, and this largely passes through
-Denver as the distributing point, constituting the Capital
-one of the most prosperous of young cities. Denver stands
-alone in a rich region. One thousand miles from Chicago,
-six hundred miles from Kansas City, and four hundred
-miles from Salt Lake City, Denver holds its place without
-any rival.</p>
-
-<p>The ideal conditions of living have never been entirely
-combined in any one locality on this sublunary planet, so
-far as human history reveals; and with all the scenic
-charm, the rich and varied resources, and the phenomenal
-development of Colorado, no one could truthfully describe
-it as Utopia. There is no royal road to high achievement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
-in any line. Difficulties and obstacles are "a part of the
-play," and he alone is wise who, by his own determination,
-faith, and persistence of energy, transforms his very
-obstacles into stepping-stones and thus gains the strength
-of that which he overcomes.</p>
-
-<p>Northern Colorado has great resources even beyond the
-coal fields that will make it the power centre; with its
-prestige of Denver, and such surrounding towns as Greeley,
-Boulder, Fort Collins, Golden, and others, all of which
-fall within a group of social and commercial centres that
-will soon be interconnected by a network of electric trolley
-lines. For the electric road between Greeley and Denver
-Mr. J. D. Houseman has secured a right of way one hundred
-and fifty feet wide, the rails being midway between
-the Union Pacific and the Burlington lines. Mr. Houseman
-is one of the noted financiers of the East who came
-to Denver to incorporate and build this road, and his is
-only one of three companies that are now in consultation
-with the power company negotiating for the supplies which
-will enable them to build the proposed new roads.</p>
-
-<p>The Seeman Tunnel, which is to be constructed near
-Idaho Springs, at a distance of fifty miles from Denver,
-and which is to be twelve miles in length, although at
-an elevation of eighty-five hundred feet, is yet to extend
-under Fall River and the Yankee, Alice, and the Lombard
-mining districts. It will be one of the marvels of the
-state, and will penetrate a thousand mining veins. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
-Continental Mines, Power and Reduction Company, recently
-incorporated with a capital of three millions, of
-which Captain Seeman is the president, owns many of the
-mining veins which will be touched by this tunnel. Many
-of the veins to which this tunnel will afford approach have
-not been accessible heretofore for more than four or five
-months in the year. For the remaining six or seven
-months travel is practically impossible in these mountains;
-the "claims" cannot be reached, as they lie in the region
-of perpetual snow. When the Seeman Tunnel is completed
-the owner of any claim that is tapped by it can, by paying
-a certain royalty per ton for each ton of ore mined, obtain
-the right to work it in the tunnel, thus being able to proceed
-through the entire year and at a far less cost in
-production than at present. Regarding this gigantic enterprise,
-Captain Seeman said, in June of 1906, that the
-work would be pushed as rapidly as men, money, and
-machinery could advance it, and, he added: "I consider
-it one of the greatest tunnels ever attempted, and one
-that will hold the record for mining tunnels. I am
-confident that we will strike enough ore within the first
-two or three miles to keep us busy for years." The
-Leviathan is one of the first veins that the tunnel is
-expected to tap,&mdash;a vein three hundred feet wide on the
-surface,&mdash;and while already traced for more than three
-miles, it holds every promise for as yet uncalculated
-extension. The Lombard is another vein of leading importance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
-which promises to be a bonanza. Gold is the
-principal mineral that appears in these veins, although
-silver, lead, and copper are found. Another ore, tungsten,
-used for hardening in armor plates, large guns,
-and the best mechanical implements,&mdash;an ore valued at
-six hundred dollars per ton,&mdash;has been discovered in
-these veins. The Seeman Tunnel is located directly under
-James's Peak.</p>
-
-<p>Another of the remarkable engineering marvels that
-mark the progress of Colorado is the Moffat road, the
-new railroad between Denver and Salt Lake City, now
-open as far as Kremling, which initiated its passenger
-service in the late June of 1906 with daily excursions, in
-solid vestibuled trains, making the round trip between
-Denver and Tolland, Corona (the region of perpetual snow)
-and Arrow, on the Pacific slope of the Continental Divide,
-in one day. This vast enterprise is due to the genius and
-the prophetic vision of President David H. Moffat of the
-First National Bank in Denver, one of the leaders in all
-that makes for the best interests and the advancement of
-the Centennial State, and of the future of Denver the
-Beautiful. Mr. Moffat says:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Denver's population is growing steadily and naturally.
-Some time ago I made the prediction that Denver would have
-three hundred thousand inhabitants within five years. I see
-no reason for changing my estimate. Rather, I might increase
-it, but I will be conservative.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>"The things that build up a city's wealth and population
-are 'round about Denver in prodigal quantities. If Denver
-had only the state of Colorado from which to draw, her future
-would be absolutely assured. But consider the vast territory
-that is tributary to this city. It stretches away to the east,
-west, north, and south, an area quite one-third of the whole
-country, and quite the richest in all natural resources. Denver
-is the geographical hub of this territory."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The Moffat road will climb the ramparts formed by the
-main range of the Rocky Mountains west of Denver and
-run directly westward, passing through one of the most
-fertile sections of the state. The road ascends to an
-altitude of eleven thousand six hundred feet, running
-through a region rich in minerals, and especially in coal.
-The sublime scenery along the route has already made it
-most popular for excursions, which draw a vast tourist
-travel continually. President Moffat's road has brought
-Routt County into such prominence that investors
-from the East are being attracted to this region, a
-notable one among these being the Eastern capitalist,
-C. B. Knox, who proposes to invest in copper, coal,
-and iron in Routt County, which he regards as the
-richest section in Colorado. Mr. Knox engaged the
-services of several experts to examine and report to him
-upon this region. To a press correspondent who inquired
-of Mr. Knox his views regarding Colorado,
-he said:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"I believe that there is wealth unmeasured in Routt
-County, and I am out here to put some money in there.
-I am sure that this section of the state is one of the richest
-territories in the country. How I became interested is a long
-story,&mdash;too long to tell. But it is sufficient to say that I have
-heard of Routt County for so long, and from so many different
-people in whose judgment I have the utmost faith, that I have
-come out here to invest some money. I believe thoroughly
-that money put into Routt County will within a few years
-bring handsome returns. If I did not believe that I should
-not be here looking for a place in which to invest money.</p>
-
-<p>"I have been to Steamboat Springs myself, and I am thoroughly
-of the opinion that it is going to be one of the big
-towns of your state. The fact is, I have never seen a better
-looking proposition in my life than investing money in Routt
-County. Already I have purchased some land, and I am going
-to get more. It is this iron proposition that I am having
-investigated the most completely. The iron to be found in
-Routt County looks awfully good to me, and there is no
-question in my mind that Routt County is the place to put
-capital.</p>
-
-<p>"I cannot, of course, at this time say just what properties
-I have in view,&mdash;that would not be good business; but I have
-under investigation locations of mineral property near Steamboat
-and north and south of there. I have decided on nothing
-definite; that is, as to just what ores I will endeavor to
-exploit, for the whole proposition looks so good to me that I
-am going to purchase probably several different kinds of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
-propositions. As I say, though, I am most interested in the
-iron ore, as that seems to present the greatest opportunities."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>These views are significant not only as those of an
-experienced financier who has unbounded faith in the
-future of Colorado, but also as typical of the wide range
-of vision which is open to the trained eye of the capitalist
-and the organizer of great enterprises. The spellbinder
-may work his will in Colorado. It is the land of infinite
-opportunity. It offers resources totally unsurpassed in the
-entire world for unlimited development, and these resources
-await the recognition of those whose vision is sufficiently
-true to discern the psychological moment.</p>
-
-<p>The first railroad reached Denver thirty-six years ago,
-and the city has now sixteen railroad lines. It has a
-population of over two hundred and twenty-five thousand.
-It is a geographical centre, which assures its permanent
-importance as a distributing point. With two hundred
-and twenty-five miles of street railway, with seventy-five
-miles of paved streets, and a taxable property estimated
-at one hundred and two and a third millions, Denver
-holds unquestionable commercial importance.</p>
-
-<p>When, on the evening of July Fourth, 1906, the splendid
-electric flag, with the national colors intensified a thousand
-fold in brilliancy by the electrical lights, floated in the
-air from the dome of the Capitol on its commanding
-eminence, and the new city Arch, a veritable <i>Arc de Triomphe</i>,
-flashed its "Welcome" in electrical light to eager<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
-throngs, the moment was one which might well have been
-fixed on the sensitive plate of the camera of the future as
-typical of the entire horoscope of Denver the Beautiful.
-On that day had been unveiled this triumphal arch,
-placed at the Seventeenth Street entrance to the city
-from the Union Depot, which, in its sixteen hundred
-electric lights, flashes its legend upon the vision of every
-one entering Denver. This arch, weighing seventy tons,
-eighty feet in length, and with a central height of fifty-nine
-feet, is constructed from a combination of metals
-so united as to give the best results in strength, durability,
-and beauty, and thus to stand as a symbol of the
-composite life of the nation. Over the entire surface has
-been placed a plating of bronze finished with <i>verde antique</i>,
-to thus give it the aspect of ancient bronze. It is
-built at a cost of twenty-two thousand dollars, and the
-originator of the idea, Mr. William Maher of Denver, received
-the entire subscriptions for it within one day. The
-design is that of a Denver girl, Miss Marie Woodson,
-whose name must always be immortalized in connection
-with this beautiful achievement which typifies the spirit
-of the city. Constructed by one of the city manufactories,
-the design and the execution are thus exclusively
-of Denver. In his address at the unveiling of the arch,
-Chancellor Buchtel said:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"To all men who stand for honesty, for industry, for justice,
-for reverence for law, for reverence for life, for education,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
-for self-reliance, for individual initiative, for independence, and
-for sound character, the city of Denver speaks only one word,
-and the state of Colorado speaks only one word, and that
-word we have emblazoned on this glorious Arch,&mdash;the word
-'Welcome.'"</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Dean Hart, offering the Invocation, referred to the
-scriptural fact that God had instructed his leaders to
-build monuments that they might bear witness to some
-act or covenant, and it was right that the people of
-Denver should raise this similar monument to their
-ideals of peace and happiness and truth and justice.
-Mayor Speer, accepting the gift on behalf of the city,
-emphasized the fact that the arch was to stand in its
-place for ages as the expression of the attitude of the
-citizens to the strangers who enter their gates. "It is
-intended to reflect our hospitality," said Mayor Speer,
-"on a traveller's arrival and on his departure. It is more
-than a thing of beauty; it is the type of the new spirit
-in Denver, an awakening of civic pride that is sure to be
-followed by much that is artistic and beautiful in our
-beloved city."</p>
-
-<p>The spirit of Denver the Beautiful is finely interpreted
-in these words by representative citizens. It is the spirit
-of generous and cordial hospitality to all who are prepared
-to enter into and to contribute to its high standards
-of life. It is the spirit of continually forging ahead
-to accomplish things; of that irresistible energy, combined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
-with the eternal vigilance, which is not only the
-price of liberty, but the price of almost everything worth
-having. With this zeal for the great achievements,&mdash;carrying
-railroads through the mountains, opening the
-inexhaustible treasures of mines, bringing the snow of
-mountain peaks to irrigate the arid plains, establishing
-electric transit for fifty miles about, and telephonic connection
-that brings an area of hundreds of miles into
-instant speaking range with Denver,&mdash;with all the zeal
-for these executive accomplishments, the spirit of Denver
-is focussed on that social progress which is aided and
-fostered by all modern mechanical facilities. Education,
-culture, and religion are nowhere more held as the essentials
-of social progress than in Denver. Something of the
-nature of the problems of civilization that confronted
-the early pathfinders in Colorado may be inferred from
-the words of Major Long,&mdash;whose name is now perpetuated
-by the mountain peak that bears it,&mdash;when, in
-1862, he stated, in an official report to the government:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"This region, according to the best intelligence that can
-be had, is thoroughly uninhabitable by a people depending on
-agriculture for their subsistence, but, viewed as a frontier,
-may prove of infinite importance to the United States, inasmuch
-as it is calculated to serve as a barrier to prevent too
-great an extension of our population westward and secure us
-against the machinations or incursions of an enemy that
-might otherwise be disposed to annoy us in that quarter."</p></blockquote>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>Less than sixty-five years have passed since the region
-of which Denver is the great centre was thus pronounced
-useless except as a frontier to serve as protection from an
-enemy, and this judgment reminds one of a keen insight
-into the evolutionary progress of life expressed by Mrs.
-Julia Ward Howe when she remarked that "Every generation
-makes a fool of the one that went before it."
-Colorado, pronounced "thoroughly uninhabitable" in
-1842, was organized as a territory in 1861 and in 1876
-admitted as a state.</p>
-
-<p>Darwin, who regarded "climate and the affections" as
-the only absolute necessities of terrestrial existence,
-should have lived in Denver, for of all the beautiful climates
-is that in which revels the capital of Colorado. The
-air is all liquid gold from sunrise till sunset; the mountains
-swim in a sea of azure blue; the ground is bare and
-dry in winter, affording the best of walking, and there are
-few cities where the general municipal management exceeds
-or is, perhaps, even as good as that of Denver. The
-electric street-car service is on schedule time, and the two
-hundred and twenty-five miles of its extent already, with
-increase in the near future, is certainly an achievement
-for a young city. Nature is a potent factor in this excellent
-service, as there is no blocking by heavy snowstorms
-and blizzards, as in the Middle West and the East.</p>
-
-<p>The gazer in the magic mirror of the future requires
-little aid from the imagination to see, in the growth and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
-development of Denver, an impressive illustration of the
-significance of the name of the state of which it is the
-capital and the keynote. With what felicitous destiny is
-the name invested in the old Castilian phrase, "<i>A Dios
-con le Colorado</i>" (Go thou merrily with God),&mdash;a parting
-salutation and benediction. Denver is, indeed, more than
-a state capital; it is the epitome of the great onward
-march of civilization, and it must always be considered
-in its wide relations to all the great Southwest as well as in
-respect to its own municipal individuality.</p>
-
-<p>No citizen of Denver has contributed more to the
-moral and intellectual quality of the city as one of
-the conductors of great enterprises held amenable to the
-higher ideals of citizenship, than has Mr. S. K. Hooper of
-the Denver and Rio Grande, which is one of the marvels
-of the West in scenic glory. From May till October
-pleasure tourists throng this marvellous route through the
-Royal Gorge, through mysterious cañons and across the
-Divide. For it must always be remembered that Denver
-is a great city for tourists and season visitors, and the
-floating population exceeds a hundred thousand annually.
-Beautiful as it is in the winter, Denver is also essentially a
-summer city. There is not a night in the summer when
-the wind, cool, refreshing, exhilarating, does not blow from
-the great rampart of the snow-clad, encircling mountains.
-There is not a morning when the wind does not come
-again, sending the blood leaping through the veins, while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
-the sun rides across the heavens in a glory of brilliancy,
-and the great range rears its white head to the cloudless
-blue sky.</p>
-
-<p>The Denver Art League is a flourishing association that
-has under its auspices classes in drawing, water colors,
-and sculpture. Already many artists of Colorado are
-winning a name. A new Public Library is now in process
-of erection, and the Chamber of Commerce also maintains
-a free library of some twenty-five thousand volumes,
-the reading-room open every day in the year. The
-city appropriates six thousand dollars a year for the
-expenses of this institution.</p>
-
-<p>The educational standards of Denver are high. Drawing,
-music, and German are included among the studies
-of the grammar schools, and physical culture is introduced
-in each grade. The high school building cost a quarter of
-a million dollars, and stands second in the entire country
-in point of architectural beauty and admirable arrangements.
-Besides the splendid public-school system there is
-the University of Denver, a few miles from the city; St.
-Mary's (Catholic) Academy, and two large (Episcopal)
-schools for girls and boys, respectively,&mdash;"Wolfe Hall"
-and St. John's College. The Woman's College and Westminster
-University complete this large group of educational
-institutions which centre in Denver. There is
-also the University of Colorado at Boulder, which has
-established a record for success under the able administration<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
-of Dr. James H. Baker, who, in January of
-1892, was called to the presidency after having served
-as principal of the Denver High School for seventeen
-years. President Baker is well known in educational
-circles in the United States as a scholarly man and a
-capable college president. He has been offered the presidency
-of other State universities from time to time, but
-has preferred to remain in Boulder and to concentrate his
-efforts toward making this institution one of the largest
-and best of the state universities. He has always been
-active in the State Teachers' Association and the National
-Council of Education.</p>
-
-<p>For three years past the University of Colorado has
-held a summer school with a large attendance of teachers
-and college students. In this past season of 1906, Professor
-Paul Hanus of Harvard University gave a valuable
-course of lectures on education, and Professor Hart, also
-of Harvard, conducted a course in history.</p>
-
-<p>Over a hundred and fifteen thousand pupils are enrolled
-in the public schools of Denver, including all grades, from
-the primary to the high school. The latter offers the full
-equivalent of a college education freely to all.</p>
-
-<p>The churches of Denver are numerous, and include
-many fine edifices besides the large granite Methodist
-Church that cost over a quarter of a million dollars.
-It is not, however, only the church structures that are
-noble and impressive, but the preaching in them is of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
-an unusually high order of both intellectual power and
-spiritual aspiration. The keen, critical life of Colorado's
-capital demands the best thought of the day. The
-wonderful exhilaration of the atmosphere seems to exert
-its influence on all life as a universal inspiration.</p>
-
-<p>The new building for the Denver Public Library is
-under process of construction, an appropriation of a
-quarter of a million dollars having been made for the
-edifice, which will stand in a small triangular park, insuring
-air and light, and giving to its approach a stately
-and beautiful dignity.</p>
-
-<p>The Colorado capital is tending to fulfil the poet's
-ideal of affording</p>
-
-<p class="center">"room in the streets for the soul."</p>
-
-<p>The life is most delightful. Without any undue and
-commonplace formalities, yet always within that fine
-etiquette which is the unconscious result of good breeding,
-the meeting and mingling has a cordial and sincere basis
-that lends significance to social life. The numerous clubs,
-and the associations for art and music, for Italian, French,
-and German readings, are all vital and prominent in the
-city, and the political equality of woman imparts to
-conversation a tone of wider thought and higher importance
-than is elsewhere invariably found.</p>
-
-<p>Denver, which should be the capital city of the
-United States, is pre-eminently the convention city.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
-Even with all the beauty of Washington and the vast
-sums that have been expended within the past fifteen
-years in the incomparable structure for the Library of Congress,
-and in other fine public buildings, and the splendor
-of the private residence region,&mdash;even with all this, and
-the fact that the Capitol itself is one of the notable
-architectural creations of the world, the nation is great
-enough and rich enough to found a new capital which
-should far surpass the present one, however fine that
-present one may be. However great are the treasures
-of art and architecture in Washington, the change could
-be, even now, made with the greatest advantage for the
-future. Within a quarter of a century all that invests
-Washington with such charm in architectural beauty
-and in art could be more than duplicated in Denver.
-The nation has wealth enough, and the most modern
-ideas and inspirations in these lines surpass those of any
-previous age or decade. The present is "the heir of all
-the ages."</p>
-
-<p>No one need marvel that Denver ranks as the western
-metropolis of the Union, with its delightful climate,
-its infinite interests, its centre as a point for charming
-excursions, and its sixteen railroad lines.</p>
-
-<p>In this atmosphere of opportunity and privilege there
-is, indeed, "room for the soul" and all that the poet's
-phrase suggests. There is room for all noble and generous
-development; for the expansion of the spirit to ex<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>press
-itself in all loveliness of life, all splendid energy
-of achievement; and in all that makes for the supreme
-aim of a nation,&mdash;that of a Christian civilization,&mdash;no
-city can offer greater scope than does Denver the
-Beautiful.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III</h2></div>
-
-<p class="center"><strong>THE PICTURESQUE REGION OF PIKE'S PEAK</strong></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"<i>And ever the spell of beauty came</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>And turned the drowsy world to flame.</i>"</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Emerson</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the picturesque region of Pike's Peak there is grouped
-such an array of scenic wonders as are unrivalled, within
-the limits of any corresponding area, in the entire world.
-To this region Colorado Springs is the gateway, and the
-poetic little city is already famous as one of the world
-resorts whose charm is not exclusively restricted to the
-summer. The winter is also alluring, for Colorado is the
-land of perpetual sunshine. One turns off the steam heat
-and sits with open windows in December. The air is
-electric, exhilarating. The cogwheel road up Pike's Peak
-is stopped; but almost any of the other excursions one
-can take as enjoyably as in summer. The East is, apparently,
-under the delusion that the land is covered
-with snow up to the very summit of Pike's Peak. On
-the contrary, the ground is bare and dry; the birds are
-singing, the sun shines for all, and the everlasting hills
-silhouette themselves against the blue sky in all their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
-grandeur. One easily slips into all the charm and fascination
-of Colorado days through these resplendent winters,
-when there are two hours more of light and sunshine
-in Colorado, on account of its altitude, than in any
-state to the eastward. The climate of Colorado Springs
-has a perfection that is remarked even in the Centennial
-State, where, in every part, the climate is unsurpassed in
-sunshine and exhilaration. Especially, however, is Colorado
-Springs a summer resort, as is Saratoga or Newport
-or Bar Harbor. Its season is increasingly brilliant and
-crowded. People come to stay a day and prolong it to a
-week, or come for a week and prolong their stay to a
-month. The driving is fine, the motor cars are abundant,
-the excursions are delightful, and the air is as curative and
-exhilarating as is possible to conceive. The inner glories
-of the Rocky Mountains, with their vast cañons and giant
-peaks; their waterfalls dashing over precipices hundreds
-of feet in height; the fascinating glens and mesas for
-camping excursions, or for scientific research and study,
-are all reached by this gateway of Colorado Springs.</p>
-
-<p>Pike's Peak, this stupendous continental monument,
-dominates the entire region. The atmospheric effects
-around its summit offer a perpetual panorama of kaleidoscopic
-changes of color and cloud-forms. Looking out on
-the Peak from Colorado Springs, three miles from its base,
-there are hours when it seems to be actually approaching
-with such swift though stately measure that one involuntarily<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
-shrinks back from the window in irrational alarm
-lest the grim monster shall bear down upon it, with a
-force inevitable as Fate; disastrous as a colossal iceberg
-wandering from Polar seas and sweeping down with irresistible
-force against the side of a transatlantic liner.
-In a lightning flash of instantaneous, unreasoning vision,
-one beholds in imagination the impending destruction
-of a city. It becomes a thing endowed with volition; a
-weird, uncanny monster, the abode of the gods who have
-reared their monuments and established their pleasure-grounds
-in their strange, fantastic garden at its foot.</p>
-
-<p>Again, the Peak enfolds itself in clouds and, secure in
-this drapery, retires altogether from sight, as if weary of
-being the object of public view. It is as if the inmates
-of a house, feeling an invasion of public interest, should
-turn off the lights, draw the curtains, and close the shutters
-as a forcible intimation of their preference for privacy
-and their decision to exclude the madding crowd.
-Sometimes the Peak will flaunt itself in glorious apparel
-and gird itself in strength. With light it will deck itself
-as with a garment. It surprises a sunrise with the reflection
-of glory transfigured into unspeakable resplendence.
-It is the royal monarch to which every inhabitant of the
-Pike's Peak region, every sojourner in the land, must pay
-his tribute. The day is fair or foul according as Pike's
-Peak shall smile or frown. All the cycles of the eternal
-ages have left on its summit their records,&mdash;the silent and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
-hidden romance of the air. The scientist alone may translate
-this aërial hieroglyphic.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"Omens and signs that fill the air</div>
-<div class="verse">To him authentic witness bear."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>This monumental peak of the continent shrouds in
-oblivion its mystic past, and still the handwriting on
-the wall may be read by him who holds the key to all
-this necromancy. The record of the ages is written on
-parchment that will never crumble. The mysteries of the
-very creation itself,&mdash;of all this vast and marvellous
-West,&mdash;of infinite expanse of sea and of volcanic fires
-that swallowed up the waters and crystallized them into
-granite and porphyry,&mdash;this very record of Titanic processes
-is written, in mystic characters, in that far upper air
-where the lofty Peak reigns in unapproachable majesty.
-For while there are other peaks in the Rocky Mountains
-as high,&mdash;and Long's Peak even exceeds it in altitude,&mdash;there
-is no other which rises so distinctly alone and which
-so supremely dominates an infinite plateau that extends,
-like the ocean, beyond the limit of vision.</p>
-
-<p>There is one glory of the moon and another glory of
-the stars, as well as the glory of the sun, in this mountain
-region of Colorado Springs. The sunsets over the mountains
-are marked by the most gorgeous phenomena of color
-before whose intensity all the hues of a painter's palette
-pale. The gates of the New Jerusalem seem to open.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>Great masses of billowy clouds in deepest, burning gold
-hang in the air; the rainbow hues of all the summers that
-have shone upon earth since the first rainbow was set in
-the heavens, reflect themselves in a thousand shimmering
-cloud-shapes. It is one of the definite things of the tourist's
-day to watch from the western terrace of "The
-Antlers" these unrivalled sunset effects; and when, later
-(still in compliance with the unwritten laws that prevail in
-the Empire of Transcendent Beauty), dinner is served at
-small tables on the terrace,&mdash;where the flowers that form the
-centrepiece of each table, the gleam of exquisite cut glass
-and silver, and the music from an orchestra hidden behind
-the palms and tall roses that fling a thousand fragrances
-on the enchanted air all blend as elements of the faëry
-scene whose background is a panoramic picture of mountains
-and sky,&mdash;the visitor realizes an atmosphere of enchantment
-that one might well cross a continent to gain.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p055.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">SUMMIT OF PIKE'S PEAK, COLORADO</p>
-
-<p>Again, there is the glory of the night. A young moon
-glances shyly over the mountain summit and swiftly retires
-to her mysterious realms on the other side. Each ensuing
-night she ventures still further afield, gazing still longer
-at the world she is visiting before she again wings her
-flight down the western sky, pausing, for a tremulous
-moment, on the very crest of the mountains ere she is lost
-to sight in the vague distance beyond. The stars come
-and go in impressive troops and processions. They float
-up from behind the mountains till one questions as to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
-whether the other side is not a vast realm of star-dust in
-process of crystallizing into planets and stars. Has one,
-then, at last arrived at the Land that is the forge of the
-gods who create it? May one here surprise the very
-secrets of the Universe? Perhaps some dim, mysterious
-under-world lies over that colossal range in which celestial
-mechanism is at work sending forth and withdrawing the
-shining planetary visitants, so continuous is the procession
-of stars through all the hours of the night. Each star, as it
-rises over the mountains or sets behind them, pauses for an
-instant on the crest for a preliminary survey, or a parting
-glance, of the world it is entering or leaving.</p>
-
-<p>It is still in the realms of doubt as to whether there
-may be discovered a royal road to learning; but a royal
-road to the summit of Pike's Peak, more than fourteen
-thousand feet above sea level, has been, since 1890, an
-accomplished fact in the Manitou and Pike's Peak cogwheel
-road, starting from Engleman's Glen, one of the
-famous resorts of Manitou. This lovely town, that dreams
-away its summer at the base of Pike's Peak guarded by
-precipitous mountain walls, is connected with Colorado
-Springs by electric trolley, and the little journey of four
-miles is one of the pleasure excursions of the region. The
-route lies past the "Garden of the Gods," where the
-curious shapes of red sandstone loom up like spectral
-forms in some Inferno.</p>
-
-<p>Like Naples, Colorado Springs is the paradise of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
-tourist, offering a new excursion for every day in the season;
-and there are few of these whose route does not include
-lovely Manitou, which is also the objective point
-from which to fare forth on this journey above the clouds,
-into those mysterious realms where he who listens aright
-may hear spoken the words which it is not lawful for man
-to utter. The journey into aërial spaces opens in a defile
-of one of the deep cañons, the train on the one hand
-clinging to the wall, while on the other one looks down a
-vast precipice, at the foot of which dashes a river over
-gigantic boulders. The route is diversified by the little
-stations on the way,&mdash;Minnehaha, whose waterfall indeed
-laughs in the air, and is given back in a thousand ghostly
-echoes; the Half-Way House, nestling under the pinnacled
-rocks of Hell Gate&mdash;must one always pass through
-the portals of Hades on his way to Paradise? Strange
-and grotesque scenery companions the way. On the
-mountain-side one finds&mdash;of all things&mdash;a newspaper
-office, where a souvenir daily paper is issued with all the
-news of that new world above the clouds, Pike's Peak.
-The ascent is very steep in places. The verdure of the
-foothills vanishes, the trees cease to invade this upper
-air, and only the dwarfed aspen shivers in the breeze as
-it clings to some barren rock. New vistas open. The
-world of day and daylight duties is left behind. Gaunt,
-spectral rocks in uncanny shapes haunt the way. The
-air grows chill; car windows are closed, and warm wraps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
-are at a premium. But the scene below! The sensation
-of looking down on the clouds, the view of Lake Moraine,
-an inland sea high in the mountains; the new sensations
-of the rarefied air,&mdash;all these seem to initiate one into a
-new world. From the summit, reached in a journey of
-ninety minutes, the view can only be described as that of
-unspeakable awe and sublimity. An expanse of sixty
-thousand miles is open to the gaze. To the west rise
-a thousand towering peaks, snow clad, in a majesty of
-effect beyond power of portrayal. To the east the vast
-plateaus stretch into infinite space. Below, the sun shines
-on floating clouds in all gleams of color. In the steel
-tower of the new Summit Hotel is a powerful telescope
-that brings Denver, eighty miles distant, into near and
-distinct view. In Colorado Springs, fourteen miles "as
-the crow flies," the telescopic view even reveals the signs
-on the streets so they may be plainly read. In close
-range of vision appear Pueblo, Cripple Creek, Victor,
-Goldfield, Independence, and Manitou.</p>
-
-<p>The surface of the top of Pike's Peak comprises several
-acres of level land thickly strewn with large blocks of
-rough granite of varying size,&mdash;blocks that are almost
-wholly in a regular rectangular shape, as if prepared for
-some Titanic scheme of architecture. The highest telegraph
-office in the world is located here, and the usual
-souvenir shop of every summer resort offers its tempting
-remembrances, all of which are closely associated with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
-<i>genus loci</i>, and are all a very part of the Colorado productions.
-A powerful searchlight was placed on Pike's
-Peak during the summer of 1906, adding the most picturesque
-feature of night to all the surrounding country.
-Denver, Colorado Springs, Pueblo, the Cripple Creek district,
-the deep cañons of the Cheyenne range, the silvery
-expanse of Broadmoor, whose attractive casino is a centre
-of evening gatherings,&mdash;all these points in the great landscape
-are swept with the illumination from the highest
-searchlight in the world to-day.</p>
-
-<p>A century has passed since Major Zebulon Montgomery
-Pike first discovered the shadowy crest of the
-mountain peak that immortalizes his name. It was on
-November 13, 1806, that the attention of Major Pike
-and his party was arrested by what at first looked to
-them as a light blue cloud in the sky, toward which
-they marched for ten days before arriving at the base
-of the mountain. The story of this journey is one of the
-dramatic records in the national archives. Major Pike
-and his men left St. Louis on July 15, 1806, on his trip to
-the Rocky Mountains, or Mexican Mountains as he called
-them at the time. He pronounced the country through
-which he travelled to be so devoid of sustenance for
-human beings that it would serve as a barrier, for all
-time, in the expansion of the United States. In vivid
-contrast are the conditions to-day. Major Pike could now
-make his journey from St. Louis to Pike's Peak over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
-either of several grand trunk railways equipped with all
-the modern luxuries of travel. Where he passed great
-herds of buffalo, he would now see cattle grazing in equal
-numbers on the prairies. The vast plains that paralyzed
-his imagination by their desolate aspects are now dotted
-with prosperous farms or ranches. The mountains that
-appealed to him only for their scenic grandeur have been
-found to be the treasure vaults of nature that were
-only waiting to be conquered by the hardy frontiersmen
-who followed him nearly half a century later. The great
-white mountain that he declared could not be ascended by
-a human being is now the objective point of a hundred
-thousand tourists annually, who gayly climb the height
-in a swift trip made in a luxurious Pullman observation
-car. The first attempt of the Pike party to
-ascend the peak was a failure, and Major Pike expressed
-his opinion that "no human being could ascend to its
-pinnacle." In 1819 Hon. John C. Calhoun, then
-Secretary of War, sent Major Long and a party on an
-expedition to the Rocky Mountains, then almost as
-unknown as the Himalayas. This exploring party
-camped on the present site of Colorado Springs, and
-on July 13 (1819) started to ascend the peak. On the
-first day they made only two miles, as the ground was
-covered with loose, crumbling granite. On the second
-day, however, they succeeded; the first ascent of Pike's
-Peak thus having been made on July 14, 1819. A<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
-chronicle of this ascent describes the point above
-which the timber line disappears as one "of astonishing
-beauty and of great interest as to its productions."
-The first woman to stand on the summit of
-Pike's Peak was Mrs. James H. Holmes, in August
-of 1858.</p>
-
-<p>General Zebulon Montgomery Pike achieved distinction
-both as an explorer and a brave soldier. He was but
-twenty-seven years of age when he was chosen to lead the
-most important military expedition of the day, and eight
-years later, as Brigadier-General, he commanded the
-troops that captured the British stronghold at York
-(now Toronto), Canada, and here he met his death, which
-has been compared to that of Nelson. The captured flag
-of the enemy was placed under the head of the dying
-general to ease his pain. The cheers of his soldiers
-aroused the young commander, and on being told that
-the fort was captured, he closed his eyes with the words,
-"I die content."</p>
-
-<p>In his notebook were found the maxims that had guided
-him through life, dedicated to his son, among which were
-"Preserve your honor free from blemish," and "Be always
-ready to die for your country."</p>
-
-<p>General Pike was buried with full military honors in
-the government plot at Madison Barracks, New York. A
-modest shaft marks the resting place of the heroic soldier-explorer,
-and on Cascade Avenue in Colorado Springs,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
-directly in front of "The Antlers," there is placed a statue
-of the heroic discoverer of the mighty Peak which forever
-perpetuates his name.</p>
-
-<p>No adequate life of Pike has ever been written; but
-with the monumental majesty of the mid-continental
-mountain peak that proclaims his name to all future
-centuries, what room can there be for biographical record
-or sculptured memorial? The archives of the Department
-of War, in Washington, contain his diary, kept from day
-to day in this march from St. Louis to Colorado. After
-his discovery of the Peak, Major Pike returned to the place
-where now the city of Pueblo stands, continuing his journey
-into the mountains, thence to New Mexico, where he
-was captured by the Spaniards. Hardships of every description
-were suffered by the party before being placed
-in captivity at Santa Fé; but even the capture of his
-papers by the Spaniards at Santa Fé did not serve to
-destroy the records of the astute young soldier, who had
-carefully concealed duplicates of his papers in the barrel of
-his big flintlock rifle, and he was afterward able to restore
-them to original form. Major Pike was as tender and
-humane as he was brave. In the capture of the party by
-the Spanish two of the men had to be abandoned and left
-to their fate in the hills. They were given a small supply
-of provisions, with the assurance that they would be rescued
-if the rest of the party found a haven of safety and rest.
-Major Pike kept this promise and, more nearly dead than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
-alive, these men were brought into Santa Fé by the
-Spanish soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>Well might it have been of Zebulon Montgomery Pike,
-in his first eager march toward this "blue cloud" that
-beckoned him on and proved to be a vast mountain peak,&mdash;well
-might it have been this hero that Emerson thus
-pictured in the lines:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"The free winds told him what they knew,</div>
-<div class="verse">Discoursed of fortune as they blew;</div>
-<div class="verse">Omens and signs that filled the air</div>
-<div class="verse">To him authentic witness bear;</div>
-<div class="verse">The birds brought auguries on their wings,</div>
-<div class="verse">And carolled undeceiving things</div>
-<div class="verse">Him to beckon, him to warn;</div>
-<div class="verse">Well might then the poet scorn</div>
-<div class="verse">To learn of scribe or courier</div>
-<div class="verse">Things writ in vaster character;</div>
-<div class="verse">And on his mind at dawn of day</div>
-<div class="verse">Soft shadows of the evening lay."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>In his diary, kept during the march from St. Louis,
-Major Pike thus pictured his first impressions of Colorado:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"The scene was one of the most sublime and beautiful
-inland prospects ever presented to man; the great lofty
-mountains, covered with eternal snow, seemed to surround
-the luxuriant vale, crowned with perennial flowers, like a
-terrestrial paradise."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The memory of this hero cannot but invest Colorado
-Springs with a certain consecration of heroism that becomes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
-indeed, part of the "omens and signs" that fill
-the air.</p>
-
-<p>In the early autumn of 1906 Colorado Springs and
-Manitou celebrated the centenary of the discovery of
-Pike's Peak with appropriate ceremonies. One of the
-interesting features was the rendering of an "Ode"
-by a chorus of one thousand voices, of which the
-words were written by Charles J. Pike of New York,
-the well-known sculptor, a great-nephew of General
-Pike, and for which the music was composed by Rubin
-Goldmark.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p064.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">WILLIAMS CAÑON, NEAR MANITOU, COLORADO</p>
-
-<p>One of the noted excursions of the Pike's Peak region
-is the "Temple Drive,"&mdash;a carriage road beginning in
-Manitou, traversing Williams Cañon, and, climbing its
-west wall. The drive offers near views of the Temple of
-Isis, the Cathedral of St. Peter, the Narrows, and of St.
-Peter's Gate in the Cathedral Dome. It is fairly a drive
-in elfland, and is as distinctive a feature of Colorado
-Springs life as is the famous drive from Naples to Amalfi
-and Sorrento a feature of the enchantment of Southern
-Italy. Manitou Park is easily reached by motor or carriage
-drive from Colorado Springs through the picturesque
-Ute Pass, and aside from its beauty it has an added interest
-in having been presented to Colorado College by
-General William J. Palmer and Dr. William A. Bell, to
-be used as the field laboratory of the new Colorado School of
-Forestry. Manitou Park contains cottages and recreation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
-halls, so that all sorts of hospitalities and entertainments
-can be there enjoyed.</p>
-
-<p>Of the "Garden of the Gods" who can analyze the
-curious, mystic spell of the place? A large tract of rolling
-mesas is covered with these uncanny monsters of rocks
-in all weird and grotesque forms. The deep red sandstone
-of their formation gives it the aspect, under a midday sun
-or the slanting rays of a brilliant sunset, of being all on
-fire&mdash;a kind of inferno, foreign to earth, and revealed,
-momentarily, from some underworld of mystery.</p>
-
-<p>Cheyenne Cañon is one of the most poetically touched
-places in all the Pike's Peak region. Of Cheyenne mountain
-Helen Hunt Jackson wrote:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"By easy slope to west, as if it had</div>
-<div class="verse">No thought, when first its soaring was begun,</div>
-<div class="verse">Except to look devoutly to the sun,</div>
-<div class="verse">It rises and has risen, until glad,</div>
-<div class="verse">With light as with a garment it is clad,</div>
-<div class="verse">Each dawn before the tardy plains have won</div>
-<div class="verse">One ray, and after day has long been done</div>
-<div class="verse">For us the light doth cling reluctant, sad to leave its brow."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Poets and artists have embodied it in song and essayed to
-transfer it to canvas; but the grandeur of South Cheyenne
-Cañon eludes every artist while it impresses the imagination
-of every visitor. It is fitly approached through the
-"Pillars of Hercules,"&mdash;sheer perpendicular walls of rock
-looking up over one thousand feet high, with a passage-way
-of only forty feet. Once within the cañon and one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
-might as well have been translated to Mars so far as utter
-isolation can be realized. In the dim green twilight from
-the lofty wooded cliffs toward the Seven Falls one enters
-on "the twilight of the gods," not dark, but a soft light,
-the sun shut out, the air vibrating with faint hints of
-color, the colossal granite walls rising into the sky, the
-faint dash of waterfalls heard splashing over hidden rocks
-and stones; a rill here and there trickling down the mountain
-side; the far call of some lonely bird heard far away
-in the upper air; and the soft, mysterious light, the dim
-coolness and fragrance, the glimpse of blue sky just seen
-in the narrow opening above&mdash;was anything ever so enchantingly
-poetic? It is here one might well materialize
-his castle d'Espagne. Winding up the cañon, one comes
-to "Seven Falls,"&mdash;a torrent of water rushing down
-mighty cliffs on one side of a colossal amphitheatre, and
-the precipitous cliffs show seven distinct terraces down
-which the foaming torrent plunges.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p066.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">SEVEN FALLS, CHEYENNE CAÑON, NEAR
-COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO</p>
-
-<p>In North Cheyenne and in Bear Creek Cañons the
-grandeur is repeated, and in those the people find a
-vast free recreation ground. This privilege is again one
-of the innumerable ones that are due to the gifts and
-grace of General Palmer, who has had this sublime locality
-made into a practicable resort, with pavilions where tea,
-coffee, lemonade, ices, and sandwiches are served; a rustic
-hostelry, "Bruin Inn," is also provided as a place of refuge
-and entertainment, providing against any disasters in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
-sudden storms that are so frequent in these cañon regions;
-and the bridle paths, the terraced drives on the mountain
-walls, and the glades where games may be played, all
-make South Cheyenne the most unique pleasure resort
-of that of any city in the United States.</p>
-
-<p>In all these cañons the massive, precipitous granite
-walls, which seem to rise almost to the sky, are also rendered
-more arresting to the eye by their richly variegated
-coloring. These ragged cliffs rise, too, in pinnacles and
-towers and domes that proclaim their warfare with the
-elements for ages innumerable. Visitors familiar with
-all the Alpine gorges and with the Yosemite agree that
-in no one of these are there such majesty of effects as in
-the Cheyenne cañons.</p>
-
-<p>Manitou, the Indian name for the Great Spirit, is an
-alluring place in a nook of the mountains at the foot of
-Pike's Peak, reminding one of the Swiss-Alpine villages.
-Ute Pass; Williams Cañon, in which is the noted "Cave
-of the Winds"; the famous "Temple Drive"; Cascade,
-Green Mountain Falls and Glen Eyrie are all grouped
-near Manitou, and it is here that the cogwheel road
-ascending Pike's Peak begins. The Mineral Springs are
-approached in a pavilion with two or three large rooms;
-the auditorium, where an orchestra plays every afternoon,
-seats some two hundred people, who can listen to the
-music, sip their glasses of mineral water, and chat with
-friends, all at one and the same time. There is a foreign<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
-air about Manitou. The little town consists of one
-street extending along the cañon, following its curves,
-with a few cottages perched on terraces above, and the
-hotels, boarding-houses, and the little shops, with the
-hawkers of curios at their street stands, make up a picturesque
-spectacle. The shop windows glisten with jewelry
-made from the native Colorado stones, the amethyst, opal,
-topaz, emerald, tourmaline, and moonstone being found
-more or less extensively in this state. The native ores are
-exposed; Indian wares, from the bright Navajo rugs and
-blankets to the pottery, baskets, and beaded work; photographs
-and picture cards of all kinds, and trinkets galore,
-of almost every conceivable description, give a gala-day
-aspect to the little mountain town. The surrounding
-peaks rise to the height of six and eight thousand feet
-above the street, which looks like a toy set in a region
-designed for the habitation of the gods. American life,
-however, keeps the pace, and in this mountain defile at
-the foot of Pike's Peak were the signs out announcing a
-"Psychic Palmist," a "Scientific Palmist," and a "Thought
-Healer," by which it will be inferred that an up-to-date
-civilization has by no means failed to penetrate to Manitou.
-Each year the accommodations for travellers multiply
-themselves. Each summer the demand increases. There
-is a fascination about Manitou that throws its spell over
-every visitor and sojourner.</p>
-
-<p>The Grand Caverns are on the side of one of the picturesque<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
-mountains, reached by a drive through the Ute
-Pass. Beyond Rainbow Falls, and entering the vestibule
-of these caverns, the visitor finds himself under a lofty
-dome from which stalactites hang, and in which is a pile
-of stones being raised to the memory of General Grant,
-each visitor adding one. No form of memorial to the
-great military commander, whose character was at once
-so impressive and so simple, could be more fitting than is
-this tribute. From the vestibule one wanders to Alabaster
-Hall, where there are groups of snow-white columns
-of pure alabaster. In a vast space sixty feet high, with
-a dome of Nature's chiselling and two galleries that are
-curiously wrought by natural forces, there is a natural
-grand organ, formed of stalactites, with wonderful reverberations
-and with a rich, deep tremulous tone. To reveal
-its marvels to visitors a skilled musician is employed, who
-renders on it popular selections, to the amazement of all
-who are present. Another feature of the Grand Caverns
-is the "jewel casket," where gems encased in limestone
-reflect the glow of a lamp. There is also the "card
-room," with its columns and its pictorial effects; the
-"Lovers' Lane" and the "Bridal Chamber," filled with
-translucent formations in all curious shapes and hints of
-color.</p>
-
-<p>The marvellous achievements of the engineer in encircling
-the mountains with steel tracks on which cars climb
-to the summit are seen, in perhaps their most remarkable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
-degree of development in conquering the problems of
-mountain engineering in Colorado. Of all these achievements,
-one of the most conspicuous triumphs is that
-known as the "Short Line" between Colorado Springs and
-Cripple Creek, a distance of only forty-five miles, and the
-time some two and a half hours; but within these limits
-is comprised the most unspeakably sublime panorama of
-mountain scenery. As the train begins to wind up the
-mountains one looks down on the flaming, rose-red splendor
-of the Garden of the Gods,&mdash;with its uncanny
-shapes, its domes and curious formations. Climbing up,
-the vast plain below&mdash;a plain, even though it is six
-thousand feet above sea level&mdash;looks like a sea of silver.
-The railroad crosses Bear Creek Cañon on a narrow iron
-bridge and threads its way again on the terraced trunk of
-the opposite mountain up to Point Sublime,&mdash;a gigantic
-rock towering on a mountain crest. A landscape unfolds
-that rivals Church's wonderful "Heart of the
-Andes" in its fascination. Entering South Cheyenne, the
-beauty and grandeur of the eastern end of the cañon are
-seen by following the narrow course between its rugged
-granite sides hundreds of feet in height, reaching a
-magnificent and most impressive climax at the wonderful
-Seven Falls. No visit to the Pike's Peak region can
-be considered complete without this trip through South
-Cheyenne Cañon.</p>
-
-<p>The usual feature of the situation as trains circle around<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
-the rim of these cañons is that their beauty is seen from
-above. A short stroll and one finds himself between walls
-towering a thousand feet above his head. The beauty is
-all around and above. The tops of the mountains seem
-very far away, and lost in clouds. But in the train the
-situation is reversed; for, seated in a luxurious observation
-car of the "Short Line," the tourist is carried above the
-peaks and cañon walls, which from below seem inaccessible
-in their height, and from this startling elevation one looks
-down on an underworld of strange and mysterious forms.
-St. Peter's Dome, as it is called, looks down from its towering
-height with the national colors flying from its summit,&mdash;a
-huge mass of granite that seems to stand alone and
-to guard the secrets of the depths below.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p071.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">ST. PETER'S DOME, ON THE CRIPPLE CREEK SHORT LINE</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p072.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">APPROACHING DUFFIELD</p>
-
-<p>The ascent of St. Peter's Dome is a triumph of engineering
-skill. As the train glides along, and glory succeeds
-to glory, vista to vista, and cañon to cañon, in ever
-changing but constant charm, the dizzy height is climbed
-apparently with so much ease that the traveller, absorbed
-in the entrancing surroundings, reaches the top before he
-is aware of it. It seems impossible that the track seen
-on the opposite side of the cañon hundreds of feet above
-should be the path the train is to follow; but a few turns,
-almost imperceptible, so smooth is the roadbed, and one
-looks down on the place just passed with equal wonder, and
-asks if that can be the track by which he has come. As
-the train climbs the side or rounds the point of each mountain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
-peak, the matchless view of the plains is unfolded
-before the enraptured gaze. All description is baffled;
-any attempt to reproduce in words the glory of that scene
-is impossible. Every tourist in the Pike's Peak region
-regards the "Short Line" trip as the very crown of the
-summer's excursions, or, in the local phrase, one whose
-sublimity of beauty "bankrupts the English language."
-These forty-five miles not only condense within their
-limits the grandeur one might reasonably anticipate during
-a transcontinental journey of three thousand miles,
-but as an achievement of mountain engineering, railway
-experts in both Europe and America have pronounced
-it the most substantially built and the finest equipped
-mountain railroad in the world. It was opened in 1901,
-and, quite irrespective of any interest felt in visiting
-the gold camps of Cripple Creek, the "Short Line" has
-become the great excursion which all visitors to Colorado
-desire to make for the sublime effects of the scenery.
-A prominent civil engineer in Colorado said, in answer to
-some question regarding the problem of taking trains over
-mountain ranges and peaks that, given the point to start
-from and the point to reach, and sufficient capital, there
-was no difficulty in carrying a railroad anywhere. The
-rest is, he said, only a question of time and skill. The construction
-of the "Short Line" reveals the achievement
-of carrying a railroad around the rims of cañons and over
-the tops of mountains rather than that of following a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
-trail through the bottom of the cañons. As a scenic
-success this feat is unparalleled. The bewildering magnificence,
-the incomparable sublimity, as the train winds
-up St. Peter's Dome, are beyond the power of painter or
-poet to picture. Leaving Colorado Springs, the tourist
-sees the strange towering pinnacles of the Garden of the
-Gods, in their deep red contrasting with the green background
-of trees; Manitou gleams from its deep cañon;
-the towers and spires of Colorado Springs appear in
-miniature from the far height, and the great expanse of
-the plateau looks like the sea. It is difficult to realize
-that one is still gazing upon land. The ascent is more
-like the experience in an aero-car than in a railroad train,
-so swift is the upward journey. The first little station on
-this route is Point Sublime, where the clouds and the
-mountain peaks meet and mingle. North Cheyenne Cañon
-is seen far below, and in the distance is fair Broadmoor
-with its Crescent Lake gleaming like silver. The
-Silver Cascade Falls sparkle in the air hundreds of feet up
-the crags. At Fair View the North and South Cheyenne
-Cañons meet,&mdash;those two scenic gorges whose fame is
-world-wide,&mdash;and from one point the traveller gazes down
-into each, the bottom depths so remote as to be invisible.
-These precipices are wooded, so that the aspect
-is that of sheer walls of green. St. Peter's Dome
-almost pierces the sky, and as the train finally gains
-the summit a vista of incomparable magnificence opens,&mdash;of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
-cañons and peaks and towering rocks,&mdash;and through
-one cañon is seen Pueblo, over fifty miles distant, but
-swept up in nearer vision with a mirage-like effect in the
-air. It is a view that might well enchain one. The
-Spanish Peaks cut the sky far away on the horizon, and
-the beautiful range of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains
-offers a view of wonderful beauty. The road passes Duffields,
-Summit, Rosemont, and Cathedral Park, at each
-of which stations a house or two, or a few tents, may be
-seen,&mdash;the homes of workmen or of summer dwellers who
-find the most romantic and picturesque corners of the
-universe none too good in which to set up their household
-gods for the midsummer days. Nothing is more
-feasible than to live high up in the mountains along the
-"Short Line." The two trains a day bring the mails;
-all marketing and merchandise are easily procured; and
-the air, the views, the marvellous spectacle of sunrise and
-sunset, the perpetually changing panorama, simply make
-life a high festival. The little station of Rosemont is
-a natural park, surrounded by three towering peaks,&mdash;Mount
-Rosa, Big Chief, and San Luis. Clyde is a
-point much frequented by picnickers. The "Cathedral
-Park" is an impressive example of what the forces of
-nature can accomplish. Colossal rocks, chiselled by erosion,
-twisted by tempests, worn by the storms of innumerable
-ages, loom up in all conceivable shapes. They
-are of the same order as some of the wonderful groups of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
-rocks seen in the Grand Cañon. Towers and arches and
-temples and shafts have been created by Nature's irresistable
-forces, and to the strange fantastic form is added
-color,&mdash;the same rich and varied hues that render the
-Grand Cañon so wonderful in its color effects. This
-"Cathedral Park" is a great pleasure resort for celebrations
-and picnics, both from Colorado Springs, Colorado
-City, Broadmoor, and other places from below, and also
-from Cripple Creek, Victor, and other towns in Cripple
-Creek District.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p075.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">PORTLAND AND INDEPENDENCE MINES, VICTOR, COLORADO</p>
-
-<p>The district of Cripple Creek includes a number of
-towns,&mdash;Victor, Anaconda, Eclipse, Santa Rita, Goldfield,
-Independence, and others, each centred about famous
-and productive mines. The first discovery of gold here
-was made in 1891 by a ranchman, Mr. Womack, who
-took the specimens of gold ore that he found to some
-scientific men in Colorado Springs, who pronounced it
-the genuine thing, and capitalists became interested to
-develop the mines. In 1891, the first year, the total
-value of the gold produced was $200,000; 1905, the fourteenth
-year, the value of the production was $47,630,107.
-The total value of the gold produced in the fourteen
-years of the camp's existence, to December 31, 1905, was
-$141,395,087.</p>
-
-<p>There are about three hundred properties in the camp
-which produce with more or less regularity. Of this number
-the greatest proportion are spasmodic shippers, making<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
-their production from the efforts of leasers. There are
-thirty large mines in the district, each producing $100,000
-or more annually. Dividends paid by the mining companies
-in 1905 amounted to $1,707,000. Total dividends
-paid to December 31, 1905, $32,742,000. There are employed
-on an average some six thousand three hundred
-men in the mines, and the monthly pay-roll runs to about
-$652,189, exclusive of large salaries paid mine superintendents
-and managers and clerks in offices. The lowest
-wage paid in the camp is three dollars per day of eight
-hours, while many of the miners receive more than that.
-The average wage per day paid for labor amounts to
-$3.44. There are twelve towns in the district, with a
-population of fifty thousand people. During the period
-of excitement the population was about seventy thousand.
-The social life of the people is much the same as
-in other towns.</p>
-
-<p>There is a free school system, with an enrolment of
-nearly four thousand pupils, with a hundred and eighteen
-teachers under a superintendent with an assistant. There
-are thirty-four churches, representing almost every variety
-of faith.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p076.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">VIEW FROM BULL HILL, RICHEST GULCH IN THE WORLD</p>
-
-<p>Cripple Creek, the largest of these, lies in a hollow of
-the mountains, whose surrounding ranges are a thousand
-feet above the town. It consists mostly of one long
-street, with minor cross-streets, and there are little shops
-with chiffons, "smart" ribbons and laces, and all sorts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
-of articles of dress making gay the show windows, and
-one sees women and children in all their pretty and
-stylish summer attire. There are two daily papers and an
-"opera house." Cripple Creek is a rather favorite point
-with dramatic companies, as the entire town, the entire
-district, turns out, and the audiences do not lack in either
-enthusiasm or numbers.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. William Caruthers, the district superintendent,
-estimates that this region has become one of the greatest
-gold-producing regions in the world; and in rapid development,
-and in the richness of its ores, nothing like it has
-ever been known before. In fifteen years the cattle ranges
-have been transformed into a populous district with fifty
-thousand people, and with all the modern conveniences of
-Eastern cities.</p>
-
-<p>The electric trolley system connects all the towns in
-Cripple Creek district and passes near all the large mines.
-This trolley line is owned and controlled by the "Short
-Line," and is greatly sought for pleasure excursions both
-by visitors and residents.</p>
-
-<p>Electric cars convey the miners up and down the hills to
-their respective mines. The class of laborers is said to be
-greatly improved of late years, and Mr. Caruthers informs
-the questioner that no problematic characters are longer
-tolerated in Cripple Creek. It has ceased to be the paradise
-of those who, for various unspecified personal reasons,
-were unable to keep their residence in other cities, or had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
-left their own particular country for their country's good.
-When such characters appear, Mr. Caruthers and his staff
-guide them with unerring certainty to the railroad track,
-with the assurance that these intruders are wanted in
-Colorado Springs, and that, although there may be no
-parlor-car train, with all luxuries warranted, leaving at
-that moment for their migrating convenience, yet the steel
-track is before them, and it leads directly to Pike's Peak
-Avenue (the leading business street of Colorado Springs),
-and they are advised at once to fare forth on this mountain
-thoroughfare. The persuasion given by Mr. Caruthers
-and his assistants is of such an order that it is usually
-accepted without remonstrance, and the objectionable
-specimens of humanity realize that their climb of several
-thousand feet up to the famous gold camps was by way of
-being a superfluous expenditure of energy on their part.</p>
-
-<p>The special entertainment in Cripple Creek is to make
-the electric circle tour, on electric trolley cars, between
-Cripple Creek and Victor, going on the "low line" one
-way, and the "high line" the other. The high line is
-almost even with the summit of Pike's Peak, that looms
-up within neighborly distance, and the splendor of the
-Sangre de Cristo range adds a bewildering beauty to the
-matchless panorama. On this round trip&mdash;a trolley ride
-probably not equalled in the entire world&mdash;one gets quite
-near many of the famous mines, whose machinery offers a
-curious feature in the landscape.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>Taking the trip in the late brilliant afternoon sunshine
-along this mountain crest, offers the spectacle of an entire
-landscape all in a deep rose-pink, gleaming, in contrast
-with the dark green of the cedar forests, like a transformation
-scene on a stage.</p>
-
-<p>The tourist who regards this life as a probationary
-period, to be employed, as largely as possible, in festas
-and entertaining experiences, may add a unique one to
-his repertoire, should he be so favored by the gods; and
-sojourning in neighborly proximity to the "Garden of the
-Gods," why should they not bestir themselves in his favor?
-At all events, if he has contrived to invoke their interest,
-and finds himself invited by Mr. MacWatters (the courteous
-and vigilant General Passenger Agent of the "Short
-Line") to make the return journey from Cripple Creek,
-down below the clouds to Colorado Springs in a hand car,
-he will enjoy an experience to be treasured forever. For
-the hand car runs down of its own accord, by the law of
-gravitation, and is provided with an air-brake to regulate
-its momentum. To complete the enchantment of conditions,&mdash;and
-it need not be said that in a Land of Enchantment
-conditions conform to the prevailing spirit and
-of course are enchanting,&mdash;to complete these, let it be
-a <i>partie carrée</i>, with Mrs. MacWatters, and with Ellis
-Meredith, the well-known Colorado author, to make up
-the number; for the keenest political writer in Colorado
-is a woman, and this woman is Ellis Meredith. It is a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
-name partly real, partly a literary <i>nom-de-plume</i>, and which
-is the one and the other need not be chronicled here. The
-name of Ellis Meredith has flown widely on the wings of
-fame as the author of a most interesting story, "The
-Master-Knot of Human Fate," which made an unusual
-impression on critical readers. "The Master-Knot" is
-an imaginative romance, whose scene is laid on one of
-the peaks of the Rocky Mountains. It presupposes
-an extraordinary if not an impossible situation, and on
-this builds up a story, brilliant, thoughtful, tantalizing
-in its undercurrent of suggestive interest, and altogether
-unique.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p080.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE DEVIL'S SLIDE, CRIPPLE CREEK SHORT LINE</p>
-
-<p>In her connection with a leading Denver journal Miss
-Meredith wields a trenchant pen, and one reading these
-strong and able articles could hardly realize that the
-same writer is the author of poems,&mdash;delicate, exquisite,
-tender,&mdash;and of prose romance which is increasingly
-sought by all lovers of the art of fiction. With
-such a party of friends as these, what words can interpret
-the necromancy of this sunset journey winding down the
-heights of majestic mountains, amid a forest of towering
-peaks, and colossal rocks looming up like giant spectres
-through the early twilight that gathers when the sun
-sinks behind some lofty pinnacle! The rose of afterglow
-burned in the east, reflecting its color over the Cheyenne
-cañons, and even changing the granite precipice of the
-"Devil's Slide"&mdash;a thousand feet of precipitous rock,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
-through which the steel track is cut&mdash;with a reflection
-of its rose and amber. Cathedral Park took on a new
-majesty in the deepening haze. At the foot of one of its
-tall spires is an ice cavern, which holds its perpetual supply
-all summer. The solid roadbed, uniformly ballasted with
-disintegrated granite, built on solid rock for its entire
-extent, and totally devoid of dust, gives to the hand car
-the ease and smoothness of a motor on level ground. No
-one can wonder that this road, built originally to convey
-coal and other supplies to Cripple Creek, and to bring
-the ore from the mines to the mills and smelters (a transportation
-it serves daily), has also, by its phenomenal
-fascinations, achieved a great passenger traffic made up of
-the tourists and visitors to Colorado. Even travellers
-going through to the Pacific Coast make the detour from
-La Junta to Colorado Springs to enjoy the "Short Line,"
-just as they go from Williams to Bright Angel Trail for the
-Grand Cañon. With this aërial journey through a sunset
-fairyland, where the mysterious cañons and gorges lay in
-shadow and the Colorado sunshine painted pinnacles and
-towers in liquid gold, what wonder that our poet, discovering
-her lyre, offered the following "Ode" to the "Short
-Line":</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"There's the splendor that was Grecian;</div>
-<div class="indent3">There's the glory that was Rome;</div>
-<div class="verse">But we know a brighter splendor,</div>
-<div class="indent3">And we find it here at home.</div>
-<div class="verse">Not the Alps or Himalayas,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></div>
-<div class="indent3">Not old Neptune's foaming brine,</div>
-<div class="verse">Can surpass the wealth of beauty</div>
-<div class="indent3">Of this state of yours and mine.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"All the fairy-tales and legends</div>
-<div class="indent3">Of the time that's passed away;</div>
-<div class="verse">All the scientific wonders</div>
-<div class="indent3">That amaze the world to-day;</div>
-<div class="verse">All the artist can imagine,</div>
-<div class="indent3">All the engineer design,</div>
-<div class="verse">Are excelled in magic beauty</div>
-<div class="indent3">On the Cripple Creek Short Line.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"Oh, those mountains pierce the heavens</div>
-<div class="indent3">Till its radiance glistens through,</div>
-<div class="verse">And the clouds in golden glory</div>
-<div class="indent3">Float across its field of blue;</div>
-<div class="verse">And the soul that may be weary</div>
-<div class="indent3">Feels the harmony divine</div>
-<div class="verse">Of this wonder-tour of Nature</div>
-<div class="indent3">On the Cripple Creek Short Line.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"There are minarets and towers;</div>
-<div class="indent3">There are stately domes and fair;</div>
-<div class="verse">There are lordly, snow-capped mountains,</div>
-<div class="indent3">There are lovely valleys there;</div>
-<div class="verse">And no ancient moated castle,</div>
-<div class="indent3">Frowning down upon the Rhine,</div>
-<div class="verse">Looks on scenes of greater beauty</div>
-<div class="indent3">Than the Cripple Creek Short Line.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"There's a vision and a grandeur</div>
-<div class="indent3">When the plains come into view,</div>
-<div class="verse">And one seems to see the ocean</div>
-<div class="indent3">In the misty rim of blue;</div>
-<div class="verse">And the eyes of landlocked sailors<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></div>
-<div class="indent3">With unbidden teardrops shine,</div>
-<div class="verse">As they see the far-off billows</div>
-<div class="indent3">From the Cripple Creek Short Line.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"There's a strength and there's a refuge</div>
-<div class="indent3">In the everlasting hills;</div>
-<div class="verse">There's a gleam of joy and gladness</div>
-<div class="indent3">In the leaping sparkling rills;</div>
-<div class="verse">There's a benediction sweeter</div>
-<div class="indent3">Than the murmur of the pine,</div>
-<div class="verse">And it falls on all who travel</div>
-<div class="indent3">O'er the Cripple Creek Short Line."</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p083.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">COLORADO SPRINGS AND TUNNEL NO. 6, CRIPPLE CREEK SHORT LINE</p>
-
-<p>Ellis Meredith has often pictured in song the charm
-and romance of Colorado with the vividness and power
-that characterize her poems which are essentially those of
-insight and imagination; but in the opinion of many
-of her admirers she has hardly laid at the shrine of
-the muses any more felicitous votive offering than this
-little impromptu.</p>
-
-<p>A summer in Colorado Springs is one that is set in the
-heart of fascinating attractions. Nor is the Pike's Peak
-region a summer land alone, for the autumn is even
-more beautiful, and the winters are all crystal and sunshine
-and full of exquisite exhilaration and delight in
-mountain regions that take on new forms of interest.
-Colorado Springs is not merely&mdash;nor even mostly&mdash;an
-excursion city for pleasure-seekers; it is a city of permanent
-homes, whose residential advantages attract and
-create its phenomenal growth.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>To open one's eyes on the purple line of the Rocky
-Mountains, with Pike's Peak towering into the sky, in
-a luminous crystal air that makes even existence a delight,
-is an alluring experience. To look over the beautiful
-city of Colorado Springs, with its broad streets and
-boulevards, and lines of trees on either side; its electric
-lights, electric cars, well-built brick blocks, churches,
-schools, and free public library; its interesting and enterprising
-journalism; to come in contact with the intelligence
-and refinement of the people,&mdash;is to realize
-that this is no provincial Western town, but instead,
-a gay and fashionable city, with the aspect of a summer
-watering place. Manitou, which lies six miles away
-at the very base of Pike's Peak, and Colorado Springs
-are connected by electric cars running along the mountain
-line, and there is a great social interchange. It is simply
-a whirl of social life in the late summer, and the rapidity
-with which the guest is expected to flit from one garden
-party, and tea, and reception to another, within a given
-time, reminds him of a London season. In the morning
-every fashionable woman drives to Prospect Lake, and
-from her bathing in its blue waters to the informal
-"hop" at night, she is on a perpetual round of gayety
-if she so desire.</p>
-
-<p>The wide range and freedom of life in Colorado Springs
-is equally enjoyable. The artist, the thinker, the writer,
-finds an ideal environment in which to pursue his work.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
-This beautiful residence city, founded by General Palmer
-in 1871, has now a population of some thirty thousand,
-and although lying at the foot of Pike's Peak, it is yet
-on an elevation of six thousand feet above the level of
-the sea. Adjoining Colorado Springs is Colorado City,
-a manufacturing town of five thousand inhabitants, and
-Manitou, the little town at the immediate base of Pike's
-Peak, with some two thousand residents, to which, in
-the summer, is added an equal number of visitors, who
-bestow themselves in the attractive hotels and boarding-houses
-or who occupy cottages or camps in the foothills.
-Colorado Springs was founded in a wise and beneficent
-spirit. Every deed in the town contains a clause prohibiting
-the sale of intoxicating liquors, and by the
-terms of the contract any violation of this agreement
-renders the deed null and void and the property reverts
-to the city. Education is made compulsory, and on this
-basis of temperance, education, and morality the town
-is founded. It is laid out with generous ideas and with
-unfailing allegiance to municipal ideals of taste. The
-avenues are one hundred and forty feet wide and the
-streets are all one hundred feet wide. Lying midway
-between Denver and Pueblo, the two largest cities of
-the state, Colorado Springs is within two hours of the
-former and one hour of the latter.</p>
-
-<p>Colorado College, a co-educational institution, is largely
-endowed, and it has from eight to nine hundred students.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
-Rev. Samuel A. Eliot, D.D., of Boston, the president
-of the Unitarian Association, was invited to deliver
-the Commencement Address at this college in 1905, and
-on this occasion Dr. Eliot said:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Nothing can surpass the academic dignity of a commencement
-at a Western State University. The perfection of the
-discipline would make our elegant, but often distressed, 'master
-of ceremonies' at Harvard green with envy. At our
-Eastern Colleges there are still individual idiosyncrasies and
-perverse prejudices and traditions of simpler days to be
-considered. There are some old-fashioned members of the
-faculty who just won't wear the academic gown or the appropriately
-colored hood, and there are always some reckless
-seniors who will wear tan shoes or a straw hat. Not so in
-Kansas and Colorado, in Iowa and Nebraska. There every
-professor and every senior wears his uniform as if he were
-used to it; each one knows his place and his part and performs
-it impressively. The academic procession, headed by the
-regents in their gowns and followed by the members of the
-various faculties with their characteristic hoods and stripes,
-and by the senior classes of the college and the various professional
-schools, is perfect in its orderly procedure, and the
-commencement exercises themselves are carried through with
-a solemnity which is sometimes awesome. I caught myself
-almost wishing that some senior would forget to take off his
-Oxford cap at the proper time or trip on his gown as he came
-up the steps of the platform to get his sheepskin, but no such
-accident marred the impressiveness of the occasion."</p></blockquote>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>Dr. Eliot playfully touches a fact in the social as well
-as in the academic life of the West in these remarks.
-The informalities so frequently experienced in recognized
-social life in the Eastern cities are seldom encountered in
-the corresponding circles of life in the West, all observance
-of times and seasons, as calling hours, ceremonial
-invitations, and driving being quite strictly relegated
-to their true place in the annals of etiquette. In his
-Commencement address before Colorado College in 1905
-Dr. Eliot said, regarding the several educational schools of
-Colorado:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Thus in Colorado the State University is at Boulder, the
-Agricultural College at Fort Collins, the Normal School at
-Greeley, the School of Mines at Golden, and so on. The
-result is not only an injudicious diffusion of energy, but real
-waste and sometimes deplorable rivalry. Doubtless it is now
-too late to rectify this mistake. Provincial jealousies and a
-sense of local ownership are too strong to permit of desirable
-concentration, and these states are probably permanently
-burdened with the necessity of sustaining half a dozen institutions
-which must often duplicate equipment and courses
-of instruction."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Leading authorities in the Centennial State do not
-wholly agree with this view. The distribution of an
-educational centre in one city and part of the state and
-another in a different part, contributes to the building up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
-of different cities and to a certain concentration on the
-part of the students on the special subjects pursued.
-President Slocum of Colorado College, President Baker of
-the State University, President Snyder of the State Normal
-College in Greeley, with other college presidents and
-their colleagues and faculties, are devoting their lives to
-the interests of higher education in its broadest and most
-complete sense; and with their own splendid equipments
-in learning, their patience and ability in research, their
-zeal for teaching, and their intense interest in the problems
-of university life in a new state, they are making a
-record of the most impressive quality. They are the
-great pathfinders of the educational future.</p>
-
-<p>Colorado has the advantage of a larger percentage of
-American population than any other of the Western
-inland states, there being only twenty per cent of foreign
-admixture in the entire six hundred and fifty thousand
-people,&mdash;a fact that is especially to be considered in
-educational progress.</p>
-
-<p>The high school building in Colorado Springs; the
-court house, costing a half-million dollars; the new city
-library of Colorado stone; the thirty-five miles of electric
-railway; a water system costing over a million of dollars;
-the admirable telephone system,&mdash;these and the fine
-architectural art would render it a desirable residence city
-even aside from the group of scenic wonders which has
-made it famous all over the world.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>General William J. Palmer, the founder of Colorado
-Springs, is one of the great benefactors of the state of
-Colorado. "General Palmer has always been a builder
-for the future," says a local authority. "His remarkable
-foresight was best exemplified in the construction of the
-Rio Grande railroad,&mdash;the road which made Colorado
-famous. Colorado Springs is another monument to his
-prophetic vision. With an ample fortune he has retired
-from business life, but is busier than ever with his many
-philanthropies, all of which have an eye to the future.</p>
-
-<p>"At great expense he has abolished Bear Creek toll-gate,
-and has constructed a wonderful carriage road
-through this beautiful cañon, and will give it to the
-people as a permanent blessing."</p>
-
-<p>This Bear Creek Cañon lies north of Cheyenne Cañon&mdash;about
-five miles from Colorado Springs. The road
-winds back and forth in a zigzag elevation, with new vistas
-of enchantment at every turn,&mdash;towering mountains, the
-Garden of the Gods,&mdash;that strange, weird spectacle, St.
-Peter's Dome, Phantom Falls, Silver Cascade, Helen Hunt
-Falls, and other points of romantic beauty.</p>
-
-<p>Colorado Springs has a great park system at a cost
-already of three hundred thousand dollars, and with the
-buildings and other features projected the cost will be
-hardly less than half a million. There are to be floral
-gardens, an Italian sunken basin with a fountain rising
-in streams, after the fashion of the fountains of Versailles,&mdash;and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
-an art gallery is soon to be added to this lovely and
-enterprising city. Already the city has Palmer Park,&mdash;comprising
-eight hundred acres, donated by the generous
-and beneficent General Palmer,&mdash;a park that contains
-Austin's Bluffs, from which a magnificent view is obtained.</p>
-
-<p>It is to General Palmer that all the charming extension
-of terraced drives and walks in North Cheyenne Cañon is
-due,&mdash;the road often terraced on the side of the mountain;
-and here and there little refreshment stands, where
-a sandwich, a glass of lemonade, a cup of tea may be had,
-are found in these wild altitudes. In Palmer Park one
-portion has been appropriately named Statuary Park, from
-the multitude of strange forms and figures that Nature
-has chiselled in the sandstone. Gray's Peak, like a dim
-shadow on the far horizon to the north, and the faint,
-beautiful outline of the Spanish Peaks to the south, are
-seen from this park, while the massive portals of the
-"Garden of the Gods" in their burning red are near,
-and at one side the rose pink rocks of Blair Athol.</p>
-
-<p>General Palmer's residence in Glen Eyrie is one of the
-poetic places of the world. The romantic environment of
-mountain cañons, towers, and domes of the fantastic
-sandstone shapes, and overhanging rocks that loom up
-thousands of feet on a mountain side, impart a wild charm
-that no words can picture. The architectural effects have
-been kept in artistic correspondence with the romantic
-scenery.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>Monument Valley Park is the latest of General Palmer's
-munificent gifts to Colorado Springs. It was a tract of
-low waste land some two miles in length and covering
-an area of two hundred or more acres, but its transformation
-into the present beautiful park is the realization of
-an Aladdin's dream. An artistic stone drinking-fountain;
-a wide vista of trees relieved by a low Italian basin
-with fountains; Monument Creek, made to be sixty feet
-wide between its banks; the creation of artificial lakes;
-and there are included in the scheme conservatories,
-rustic pavilions, and botanical gardens. This park is one
-of the most extensive improvements in decorative effect,
-that is known in any city.</p>
-
-<p>Monument Park is distinctive from Monument Valley
-Park, the former lying some ten miles from the city, and
-it is picturesque beyond words.</p>
-
-<p>The "Garden of the Gods" has achieved world-wide
-fame. The "Gateway," the "Cathedral Spires," "Balanced
-Rock," and other singular formations fascinate the
-visitor and draw him back again and again. A local
-writer thus describes the majestic "Gateway":</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Two immense slabs of red sandstone, soft and beautiful
-in their coloring, tower over three hundred feet high on either
-side and seem to challenge the right of the stranger to enter
-the sacred portals. Napoleon, at the Pyramids, sought to impress
-his soldiers with the thought that from that eminence
-four thousand years looked down upon them. But from here<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
-geological ages of untold length look down upon the beholder.
-In close proximity may be found limestone, gypsum,
-white sandstone, and red sandstone, each representing a
-different geological era, and each, in all probability, representing
-millions of years in its formation."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The "Garden of the Gods" represents one of those
-inexplicable epochs of Nature's creations as does, only
-in a more marvellous degree, the Grand Cañon and the
-Petrified Forest. A scientist says of these grotesque shapes
-that "their strangely garish colors, red and yellow and
-white, in enormous masses, lofty buttresses, towers and
-pinnacles, besides formations of lesser size, in fantastic
-shapes, that readily lend themselves to the imagination,
-are sedimentary strata, which once lay horizontally upon
-the mountain's breast, but that some gigantic convulsion
-of nature threw them into their present perpendicular
-attitude, with their roots, as it were, extending hundreds
-of feet underground. The erosion of water, when
-this was all the Gulf of Mexico, accounts for the
-shaping.</p>
-
-<p>"The gateway to the Garden is really the grandest
-feature, rising perpendicularly on either side twice the
-height of Niagara, and framing in rich terra cotta a most
-entrancing picture of the blue and tawny peak, apparently
-only a little way on the other side."</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p092a.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">GATEWAY OF THE GARDEN OF THE GODS,
-COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p092b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">CATHEDRAL SPIRES, GARDEN OF THE GODS,
-COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO</p>
-
-<p>Any writer on Colorado Springs is embarrassed by the
-fact that the great founder and benefactor of the city<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
-has requested that his name is not to be recorded in connection
-with his great and constant gifts to the municipality;
-and while it is far from the desire of any one to
-disregard the expressed wish of a man whose modesty
-is as great as is his munificent generosity, it is yet impossible
-to tell the story of Colorado Springs without
-perpetual references to her distinguished citizen, her great
-and noble benefactor and founder. It is not too much
-to say that there is probably not, in the history of the
-United States, all instance parallel to the story of General
-Palmer and Colorado Springs. Yet beyond this bare
-mention, in which one even thus records that which
-General Palmer has wished to have had left without
-reference, one is under bonds not to go. The Recording
-Angel may not be so plastic to the expressed preferences
-of the wise founder and the munificent benefactor of the
-charming city; and the vast and generous gifts, the noble
-character of the citizen whose life and example is the most
-priceless legacy that he could bequeath to Colorado
-Springs, however priceless are his long series of gifts,&mdash;these
-are inevitably inscribed in that eternal record not
-made with hands, on whose pages must ever remain,
-in shining letters, the honored name of General William J.
-Palmer, whose energy and whose lofty spirit have invested
-this beautiful centre of the picturesque region of Pike's
-Peak with the spell of an enchanted city lying fair in a
-Land of Enchantment.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV</h2></div>
-
-<p class="center"><strong>SUMMER WANDERINGS IN COLORADO</strong></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"<i>God only knows how Saadi dined;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Roses he ate and drank the wind.</i>"</div>
-
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Emerson</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Deep</span> in the heart of the Rocky Mountains lies Glenwood
-Springs, a fashionable watering place, where a great hotel,
-bearing the name of the Centennial State, with every pretty
-decorative device imaginable, allures the summer idlers, and
-where various kinds of springs and baths furnish excuse for
-occupation. All varieties of invalidism, real or fancied,
-meet their appropriate cure. One lady declared that the
-especial elixir of life was found in a hot cave that yawns
-its cavernous and mysterious depths in an adjacent mountain.
-Another continued to thrive on (or in) the sparkling
-waters of "the pool," which is, for the most part, a
-dream of fair women, relay after relay, all day and evening,
-swimming about after the fashion of the Rhine sisters;
-and those who do not take kindly to the pool or the dark
-and "hot" cave fall upon some particular geyser and appropriate
-it for their own. Woe to the woman who interferes
-with another woman's geyser! The whole region
-around Glenwood Springs is phenomenal. A hot sulphur<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
-spring boils up at the rate of twenty thousand gallons a
-minute. The "pool"&mdash;where the Rhine maidens are forever
-floating, morning, noon, and night&mdash;covers over an
-acre, and is from three to six or seven feet deep. Two
-currents of water are constantly pouring into it,&mdash;the hot
-(at one hundred and twenty-seven degrees) at a rate of ten
-thousand gallons a minute, and the cold from a mountain
-stream. A stream constantly runs from it, a part of which
-is utilized as a waterfall in the centre of the large dining-room
-of the hotel. On one bank of this pool is a colossal
-stone bathhouse (costing over one hundred thousand dollars),
-where every conceivable variety of the bath is administered,
-and from which "the pool" is entered. In warm
-evenings, when the full midsummer moon peeps over the
-mountains, the groups of girls, one after another, begin
-mysteriously to disappear, and in reply to a question as
-to the destination of this evening pilgrimage one bewitching
-creature in floating blue organdie, as she flitted past,
-laughingly answered, "Come to the pool and see." There
-was no time to be lost. The moon in silver splendor was
-climbing over the mountains, and the girls emerged from
-their dainty evening gowns to array themselves in bathing
-suits. A few minutes later they were to be seen
-at this mysterious trysting place at "the pool," the only
-difference being that some were outside and some inside.
-Surely those inside had the best of it. How can the
-scene be pictured? From the broad piazza of the hotel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
-a terraced walk ran down through the greenest of lawns,
-with shade trees and a fountain resplendent in colored
-electric lights. The pool lies in an open glade. Not
-far away is one of the ranges of the Rocky Mountains,
-over which the August moon was climbing. Tall electric
-lights mingled with the moonlight, giving the most curious
-effects of chiaroscuro through the glade and the defiles
-of the mountains. On one side of this immense natatorium
-rose the vast stone bathhouse,&mdash;a beautiful piece of
-architecture. Near by the round sulphur spring boiled and
-bubbled in a way to suggest the witches' rhyme:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"Double, double toil and trouble;</div>
-<div class="verse">Fire, burn; and, cauldron, bubble."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>A high toboggan slide in one place descended into the
-pool, and was much used by the young athletes,&mdash;the men,
-not the girls. In the pool a natural fountain of cold water
-shot high in the air. The swimmers abounded. Those
-who were unable to swim would cling to a floating ladder.
-Here in the moonlight the girls&mdash;clinging two and three
-together&mdash;circle around in the water, needing only the
-melody of the Rhine sisters to complete the illusion of
-one of the most enchanting scenes in the entire Wagner
-operas.</p>
-
-<p>Rev. Frederick Campbell wrote of this unique place:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"There is but one word to utter at Glenwood Springs&mdash;'Wonderful!'
-If one enjoys life at the most luxurious of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
-hotels, here it is at Hotel Colorado. Built in the Italian
-style of peach-blow sandstone and light brick, lighted with
-electricity, a searchlight reaching from one of its towers at
-night and lighting the train up the valley, a powerful fountain
-supplied from the mountain stream up the cañon pouring
-the geyser 170 feet straight in the air, and views, views
-everywhere."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The hot cave is as wonderful as anything around Sorrento
-or Amalfi. In fact, all Colorado reminds the traveller of
-Italian scenery. It has been called the Switzerland of
-America, but it is far more the Italy. It has the Italian
-sky, the Italian coloring, and the mysterious and indefinable
-enchantment of that land of romance and dream.
-The volcanic phenomena is often startlingly similar to
-that of Italy. This hot cave at Glenwood Springs is of
-the same order as those on Capri and the adjacent coasts
-of Italy. In this cave at Glenwood hot air continually
-comes up from some unknown region, and it is utilized for
-curative purposes. The two or three caves have been
-made into one, a cement floor laid, and marble seats with
-marble backs put in (the ancient Romans would have
-found this a Paradise). Here come&mdash;not the halt or
-the blind, but the people who take "the cure." The
-process is to sit on the marble seat with a linen bag drawn
-completely over the entire form, with a hole for the head
-to emerge. Around the neck is placed a towel wrung out
-of cold water. To see a cave filled with these modern<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
-mummies, sitting solemnly, done up in their linen cases,
-like upholstery covering, is a spectacle. The men go in the
-morning, the women in the afternoon. One lady obligingly
-gave the data of her "cure." Twice a week she migrated
-in negligée to the hot cave, and sat done up in her
-linen covering, bathing in the hot air at one hundred and
-twenty degrees or so. Other afternoons were devoted to
-the hot sulphur water bathing, and what with the various
-gradations of temperature and the work of the attendants,
-the cup of Turkish coffee and the siesta, the process
-consumed the entire afternoon. It is bliss to those who
-delight in being rolled up like a mummy and sitting still.
-But if it were chasing a star that danced, if it were riding
-on a moonbeam, if it were dancing with the daffodils,&mdash;if
-it were anything in all the world that was motion,&mdash;then
-it might have some fairer title to charm. The felicity of
-lying about in a state of inertia is in the nature of a mystery.
-And one questions, too, whether the spring of life
-is not, after all, within rather than without. Let one
-take care of his mental life and the physical will, very
-largely at least, keep in spring and tune without elaborate
-and expensive processes of propping it up. To
-disport one's self in the pool,&mdash;there is a delight. Who
-wouldn't be a Rhine maiden under the midsummer moon
-in the heart of the Rocky Mountains?</p>
-
-<p>In nearly all the cañons and caves of this surrounding
-region are found traces of the prehistoric peoples who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
-inhabited them. Fragments of pottery, in artistic design
-and painted in bright colors, are numerous; relics similar
-to those found in the cliff houses are not unfrequently
-chanced upon in walks and excursions and the stone implements
-abound. The ethnologist finds a great field for
-research in all this Glenwood Springs country. There are
-carriage roads terraced along the base of the mountains
-where drives from five to twenty miles can be enjoyed in
-the deep ravines where only a glimpse of blue sky is seen
-above, and the saunterer finds a new walk every day. The
-mountains branch off in every direction, and the lofty
-peaks silhouette themselves against the sky. It is like being
-whirled up into the air. The sensation is exhilarating beyond
-words. If people could take "cures" getting up into
-sublime altitudes like this, where the views are so heavenly
-that one does not know where earth ends and Paradise
-begins,&mdash;that would be a cure worth the name. Really,
-it is vitality and exhilaration that one wants, and it is to
-be found in the air far more than in any other element.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"'Tis life whereof our nerves are scant;</div>
-<div class="verse">'Tis life, not death, for which we pant,</div>
-<div class="verse">More life and fuller that I want."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p099.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE WALLS OF THE CAÑON, GRAND RIVER</p>
-
-<p>The Denver and Rio Grande Railway is well called
-"the scenic line of the world." From Denver to Pueblo
-it runs almost due south, across a level valley, with perpetually
-enchanting views of the mountains and curious
-rock formations, between Denver to the region below<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
-Colorado Springs. From the great smelting city of
-Pueblo, "the Pittsburg of the West," the road turns westward,
-on an upward grade, till it reaches Cañon City, and
-from there to Glenwood Springs this road is a marvel of
-civil engineering. Up the narrow, deep cañons of Grand
-River, through the towering granite cliffs, it winds, on and
-up, passing Holy Cross Mountain, offering at every turn
-new vistas of sublime and wonderful beauty. To take
-a day's ride through such scenery, with the luxurious comfort
-of the most modern Pullman cars, and a good dining-car
-constantly with the train, is to enjoy a day that lives
-in memory. Not the least of the attractions of Glenwood
-Springs is the enchanting route by means of which one
-arrives in this picturesque region. As the train climbs up
-to plateau after plateau in the mountains the scenes are
-full of changeful enchantment. The formation is interesting,&mdash;a
-deep cañon, with rock cliffs apparently towering
-into the sky, and then the emerging on a great level
-plateau. All along this route, too, are those wonderful
-sandstone formations that have made the "Garden of the
-Gods" so marvellous a place. Between Cañon City and
-Glenwood Springs the very dance of the Brocken is seen
-in Sandstone sculptures.</p>
-
-<p>Near the summit of Iron Mountain, which is in the
-immediate vicinity, the "Fairy Caves" rival the famous
-"Blue Grotto" of Capri in attraction. These caves
-(less than a mile from the Hotel Colorado) are a most<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
-intricate and wonderful series of subterranean caverns,
-grottos, and labyrinths, with translucent stalactites and
-stalagmites, and they are all lighted by electricity,&mdash;a
-great improvement on the sibyls' cave, where the sibylline
-leaves were read. The oracles of that time were sadly
-lacking in conditions of modern conveniences. The sibyl
-had not even a telephone. We do things better now, and
-run electric cars up to the Pyramids. Nor did the sibyl of
-old have a tunnel two hundred feet long, by which her
-votaries could approach the scene of her oracles; but
-visitors to the Fairy Caves may pass by means of this
-tunnel to one of the grandest and most awful precipices
-in the Rocky Mountains, where they step out upon a
-balcony of stone into the open air, with a perpendicular
-wall of rock one hundred feet high, above, and an almost
-perpendicular abyss, down, twelve hundred feet below.
-Standing on this balcony, nothing can be seen behind
-but sheer perpendicular ascent and descent of rock; but
-in front and far below may be seen the Grand River,
-appearing as a brook, winding in and out among the
-projecting mountains, visible here like burnished silver,
-and lost there, only to reappear again at a point far
-distant.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p101.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE "FAIRY CAVES," COLORADO</p>
-
-<p>At this high elevation the opening of the cañon of the
-Grand is seen in all of its majesty,&mdash;the massive mountains
-projecting against each other in their outlines, and
-the lofty peaks reaching to the skies. The Denver and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
-Rio Grande Railway is at the foot of the cañon,&mdash;a mere
-winding line, as seen from this Titanic height.</p>
-
-<p>The Colorado Midland Road also runs through Glenwood
-Springs, whose phenomenal hot caves and luxurious
-and elaborate bathhouse have given it European
-fame. The twin towers of the hotel remind one of
-Notre Dame, and the views from these are beautiful.
-The design is after the Villa Medici in Rome,&mdash;the
-same motive repeated for the central motive of this
-superb Hotel Colorado with its towers and Italian
-loggias and splendid spacious piazzas, and its searchlight
-from one of the towers, illuminating the evening
-trains that pass in the deep cañon of Grand River.
-Here is a region that might be that of Sorrento and
-Capri.</p>
-
-<p>In Glenwood Springs the traveller may meet Mrs.
-Emma Homan Thayer, the author of "Wild Flowers
-in Colorado," published in both London and New York.
-Mrs. Thayer was a New York girl, one of the original
-founders of the Art League, and the daughter of an
-enterprising and well-known man. She is an artist by
-nature and grace,&mdash;sketches, paints, and writes, and
-in both painting and literature she has made a name that
-is recognized, and she has charmingly perpetuated in
-her book the unique and wonderful procession of
-Colorado wild flowers.</p>
-
-<p>Lookout Mountain, rising some twenty-five hundred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
-feet above the town, has an easy trail to its summit; the
-driving is picturesque and safe on terraced mountain
-roads with perpetual vistas of beauty, and many lakes
-in the vicinity&mdash;Mountain, Big Fish, Trappers' Lake, and
-others&mdash;offer excellent fishing. The hotel grounds at
-night are transformed into a veritable fairyland. The
-fountains shoot their jets of water up hundreds of feet
-into the air, with a play of color from electric lights
-thrown over them until they are all a changeful iridescent
-dream of rose and emerald and gold mingled with
-blue,&mdash;the very rainbows of heaven reproduced in mid-air.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p103.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">MARSHALL PASS AND MT. OURAY, COLORADO</p>
-
-<p>The journey up the "scenic route" has one point
-especially&mdash;that at the base of the Holy Cross Mountain
-where the train climbs from plateau to plateau&mdash;that
-enchants the imagination. The vast mysterious
-cañons lie far below, steeped in the twilight of the gods.
-The air shimmers with faint hints of color. Above, the
-towering granite walls seem to cut their way into the sky.
-The faint plash of a thousand waterfalls echoes from the
-rocky precipices, and the faint call of some lonely bird
-hovering over a pinnacle is heard. The mysterious light,
-the dim coolness and fragrance, the glimpses of blue
-sky seen through the narrow openings of the cañons
-above all, combine to produce that enchantment&mdash;the
-"Encantada,"&mdash;that Vasquez de Coronado felt when
-he first beheld this marvellous country.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>Emerson asserts that life is a search after power,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center">"Merlin's blows are strokes of fate."</p>
-
-<p>It is apparently a twentieth-century Merlin who has
-dreamed a dream of wresting electricity from the mountain
-currents to utilize as power to create a new field for
-industrial energy. The electrical engineer, who is the
-magician of contemporary life, demonstrates that not the
-volume of a stream, but rather its "fall," is the measure of
-its possibilities of power, and no country is so rich in water
-that comes tumbling down from the heights as is Colorado.
-The wild streams that precipitate themselves down
-the mountain-sides are as valuable as are the veins of
-gold that permeate the mountain. Science has now taken
-them in hand, and will not longer permit these torrents
-and waterfalls to run to waste or to display themselves exclusively
-as decorative features of the mountain landscapes.
-The General Electric Company is utilizing these falling
-waters, and is already achieving results with their transformation
-into power which are beyond the dreams of
-imagination. The Silver Cascade, which for ages has had
-nothing to do but leap and flash under the shimmering
-gold of the Colorado sunshine, suddenly undergoes</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="indent4">"a sea change</div>
-<div class="verse">Into something new and strange."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>It becomes an important factor in the world's work. For
-instance, in lovely Manitou,&mdash;the little town that dreams<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
-at the foot of Pike's Peak and which seems made only for
-stars and sunsets and as the stage setting of idyllic experiences,&mdash;in
-lovely Manitou an hydro-electric plant has
-been for more than a year in successful operation; and an
-opportunity is thereby afforded the interested observer to
-see the practical working of an enterprise that draws its
-energy directly from nature's sources. The power is obtained
-from water that is stored in a reservoir situated far
-up on the side of the peak. Three and one-half miles of
-pipe were used to carry the water from the reservoir to the
-plant. The water has a fall of twenty-three hundred feet,
-which is much more than is needed to turn the giant
-wheels that furnish the power to be distributed to Colorado
-Springs, Colorado City, and the surrounding country.
-The mills at Colorado City use this power exclusively,
-and the cheapness at which it can be furnished is a potent
-factor in making for the success of their operation.</p>
-
-<p>At Durango the Animas Power and Water Company
-has installed a plant for hydro-electric energy which will
-furnish power to the entire San Juan county. The plant
-comprises two three-thousand horse-power current generators
-and the station appliances that correspond with these;
-and from this plant extend fifty-thousand volt circuits to all
-the large mines near Ouray, Silverton, and Telluride. The
-"Camp Bird," the "Gold King," the "Silver Lake," the
-"Gold Prince," and the "Revenue Tunnel" mines all draw
-from this plant for their entire milling and mining work.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>To harness the cascades, which for ages have known
-no sterner duty than to sparkle and frolic in the sunshine,
-to force the water sprites and nixies to perform the work
-of thousands of horse-power, is the achievement of the
-modern Merlin.</p>
-
-<p>The Platte River Power and Irrigation Company are
-about to establish two electrical power enterprises most
-important to Denver, one of which is to supply all the
-power that is necessary to turn every wheel now in motion
-in the city, and the second is to secure electric power from
-the water that is stored in the Cheesman dam and transmit
-it to Denver. Responsible men are working for the success
-of the enterprises, and it is anticipated that Denver will
-soon enjoy the advantage of power furnished at a minimum
-of cost.</p>
-
-<p>The Denver inter-urban service for transportation will
-be carried on entirely by electricity within the near future.
-All the railroads that centre in this City Beautiful are
-preparing estimates and making ready to conduct experiments.
-The recent tests in the East of electrically driven
-locomotives indicate that Colorado, with Denver as a
-centre, will one day be a network of electric lines traversing
-productive regions and connecting all the prosperous
-towns of the state by this most ideal form of transit.</p>
-
-<p>In Colorado it is one of the unwritten laws&mdash;a law
-from which there is no appeal&mdash;that nothing which is
-desirable is impossible. This is one of the spiritual laws,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
-indeed, and he who holds it as an axiom shall perpetually
-realize its force and its eternal truth. The entire physical
-world is plastic to the world of spirit. In that realm
-alone realities exist. For "the things which are seen are
-temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal."
-The faith that stands&mdash;not "in the wisdom of man,
-but in the power of God"&mdash;is that which shall be justified
-by the most profound actuality. It is that hidden
-wisdom "which God ordained before the world unto our
-glory." Science has already discerned the connection between
-organic form and super-space; and speculations
-already begin to emerge from the dim and vague region of
-conjecture into hypothesis and theory out of which are
-developed new working laws of the universe which are as
-undeniable as is that of the law of gravitation.</p>
-
-<p>In harmonious accordance, then, with that unwritten
-law of Colorado that nothing which is desirable is impossible,
-it was realized that the Gunnison River, a powerful
-stream thirty miles east of the Uncompahgre, afforded an
-abundance of water to reclaim these desert wastes to the
-traditional blossoming of the rose. The Gunnison River,
-however, flows through a box cañon three thousand feet
-deep. Were it at the bottom of a gorge three thousand
-miles deep, that fact would hardly daunt the Colorado spirit.
-Immediately some invention, incomprehensible to the present
-mind of man, would be made by which the desirable issue
-should be achieved. As has been remarked, failure is a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
-word not included in the vocabulary of Colorado. That
-state has a "revised version" of its own for the resources
-of its language, laws, and literature. Its keynote is the
-invincible. Ways and means are mere matters of minor
-detail. If an achievement is desirable, it is to be accomplished,
-of course. It is not even a question for discussion.
-There is no margin of debatable land in the realization of
-every conceivable opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>A stupendous work in development is that of this Gunnison
-Tunnel under the Vernal Mesa to Uncompahgre
-Valley,&mdash;a desert waste whose area comprises some one
-hundred thousand acres of sand, sagebrush, and stones.
-Yet even here irrigation worked its spell, and while the
-Uncompahgre River held out a water supply, the land
-reached proved fertile beyond expectation. But the
-Uncompahgre had its far too definite and restricted limits;
-no other water supply was available for this region, and
-there lay the land&mdash;a tract of potential wealth, but
-destined to remain, so far as could be seen, an unproductive
-and cumbersome desert region unless irrigation
-could be achieved.</p>
-
-<p>To the constructing engineer of the reclamation service
-there came a telegram from the chief engineer in Washington
-asking if it were feasible to divert the waters of
-Gunnison River to Uncompahgre Valley by means of
-a tunnel under Vernal Mesa? This implied building a
-tunnel from a point totally unknown. No one had ever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
-succeeded in passing through Gunnison Cañon. But the
-past tense does "not count," any more than Rip Van
-Winkle's last glass, in any estimate of the present in
-Colorado. Professor Fellows, an engineer of Denver,
-selected his assistant; they prepared their instruments,
-their provisions, and their inflated rubber mattress, and
-set forth on this expedition in which their lives were in
-constant peril; in which hardships beyond description
-were endured. The topographic map, for instance, was
-made by Mr. Fellows in the delightful position of being
-lowered with ropes into the deep cañon where, should the
-slightest accident occur, he would never return to the day
-and daylight world again. The establishment of precise
-levels for both ends of the tunnel, one of which must, of
-course, be lower than the other to induce a flow of water,
-was another matter requiring a delicacy of adjustment
-beyond description. Of their wonderful and even tragic
-experiences a local report says: "It all ended by Fellows
-and his companion saving two things,&mdash;their lives and
-their notebooks. Everything else went down with the
-flood. When the men emerged at the Devil's Slide, weary,
-bruised, and bleeding, friends who had been waiting to pick
-up their mangled bodies hailed them as if they had returned
-from the dead."</p>
-
-<p>Of all this story there was no hint in the cheerfully
-laconic telegram despatched to Washington,&mdash;"Complete
-surveys for construction." The tunnel will be five or six<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
-miles in length, of which over two miles are already completed.
-The work proceeds night and day with the drills
-like mighty giants eating their way through the solid granite
-of the Vernal Mesa that lies between the two rivers. This
-desert region which will thus be reclaimed comprises portions
-of three counties,&mdash;Ouray, Montrose, and Delta,&mdash;the
-region being at an altitude of five thousand feet. It easily
-produces fruit, alfalfa, and grain, and it is also well adapted
-to the culture of potatoes, celery, and the sugar beet. The
-land when irrigated is estimated to be worth five hundred
-dollars per acre. The tunnel will have a capacity for conveying
-thirteen thousand cubic feet of water per second,
-and there will be connected with it an elaborate system of
-lesser canals and ditches that will carry the water all over
-this desert tract. It is estimated that this enterprise will
-add thousands of homes to the valley of the Uncompahgre,
-and that it will increase by at least ten millions the taxable
-property of Colorado. The cost of the Gunnison
-Tunnel will be some two and a half millions.</p>
-
-<p>Uncompahgre Valley, lying between the Continental
-Divide on the east, and the Utah Desert on the west,
-comprises the greatest extent of irrigable land west of
-Pueblo in the entire state; but the need for irrigation
-and the possibilities of supplying that need were so widely
-apart that even Merlin the Enchanter recognized the
-difficulty, though by no means defining it as an impossibility.
-The Uncompahgre River was soon exhausted, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
-only this apparently impracticable scheme, now happily
-realized, offered any solution of the problem. Hon. Meade
-Hammond of the state legislature of Colorado secured the
-appropriation of twenty-five thousand dollars to meet the
-expenses of surveying and preliminary work. Hon. John
-C. Bell, the representative for that district in Congress,
-gave untiring devotion to the project, and to his efforts
-was due the zeal with which the reclamation service took
-up this vast work; and when Professor Fellows was appointed
-as the government district engineer its success
-became the object of his supreme interest and unremitting
-energy, and its achievement adds another to the
-remarkable engineering works of Colorado.</p>
-
-<p>In this Land of Enchantment almost anything is possible,
-even to yachting,&mdash;a pastime that would not at first
-present itself as one to be included among the entertainments
-of an arid state which has to set its own legislative
-machinery and that of Congress in motion in order to
-contrive a water supply for even its agricultural service;
-nevertheless, on a lake in the mountains, more than a mile
-and a half above sea level and some one hundred miles from
-Denver the Beautiful, a yacht club disports itself with all
-the airy grace and assurance of its ground&mdash;one means of
-its water&mdash;that distinguishes the delightful Yacht Club
-at old Marblehead on the Atlantic Coast. There was,
-however, no government appropriation made to create this
-lake, as might at first be supposed, nor any experts sent out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
-commissioned to prepare the way. There are numerous
-forms of summer-day entertainments that are more or less
-in evidence in the inland states; but yachting has never
-been supposed to be among them, as preconceived ideas of
-this joy have invariably associated it with oceans and seas.
-Still, it must be remembered that Colorado is an exceptional
-region in the universe, and creates, not follows,
-precedents. It is the state, as has before been remarked, to
-which nothing conceivable is impossible.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p112.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE WONDERFUL HANGING LAKE, NEAR
-GLENWOOD SPRINGS, COLORADO</p>
-
-<p>Grand Lake is in Middle Park, sixty miles from the
-nearest railroad station. (With the incredible celerity
-with which life progresses in the Centennial State, of
-course by the time this description is materialized in
-print Grand Lake may have become a railroad centre&mdash;who
-shall say? It is not safe to limit prophecy in Colorado.)
-At present, however, a railroad journey of forty
-miles from Denver, supplemented by sixty miles of stage,
-brings one to the lake, a beautiful sheet of water two
-miles in length and more than a mile in width, whose
-water is icy cold. The locality has become something of
-a summer resort for many Denver people, and also, to some
-extent, to those from Chicago and Kansas City, and a
-group of cottages have sprung up. Some seven years ago
-the Grand Lake Yacht Club was duly organized, with Mr.
-R. C. Campbell, a son-in-law of Senator Patterson of Colorado,
-Mr. W. H. Bryant, a prominent citizen of Denver
-the Beautiful, Major Lafayette Campbell, and other well-known<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
-men, as its officers. The club has now a fleet of
-yachts; it has its regatta week, and altogether holds its
-own among nautical associations; it takes itself seriously,
-in fact with what Henry James calls the "deadly earnestness
-of the Bostonians," which is paralleled by this inland
-and arid-land yachting club.</p>
-
-<p>Besides the joys of yachting in an arid state where that
-nautical pastime is apparently carried on in mid air, is the
-local diversion of climbing mountain peaks that are pronounced
-impossible of ascension. This is one of the favorite
-entertainments of Colorado young women, who have conquered
-Long's, Gray's, Pike's, and Torrey's peaks, Mount
-Massive, the "Devil's Causeway," and various lesser heights,
-which they scale with the characteristically invincible energy
-of their state. The summit of Mount Massive is fourteen
-thousand five hundred feet above sea level, and of one of
-these expeditions a Denver journal says of this party of
-several ladies and gentlemen:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Camp was struck at Lamb's ranch, where, in the early
-morning, the wagon was left with all the outfit not absolutely
-necessary. The trail sloped steadily to the boulder field,
-where the party stopped for lunch. They were now at an
-altitude of twelve thousand feet. A cold wind swept across
-the range and chilled them, so that the climb was soon
-renewed.</p>
-
-<p>"The boulder field is two miles long and seemed five, for
-walking over the great stones is a wearisome business. At the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
-end of the boulder field, which is much like the terminal
-range of an old glacier, is a great snowbank. From a long
-distance the mountain climbers saw the keyhole,&mdash;a deep
-notch of overjutting rock through which goes the only trail
-to the summit of Long's. It is a gigantic cornice to a ridge
-that extends north from the main cone.</p>
-
-<p>"After passing the keyhole, which had loomed up before
-them through weary miles of tramping, a great panorama of
-mountains stretched before them.... There was a precipitous
-slope of rocks jammed together in a gulch. This rises
-for about seven hundred feet, every inch stiff climbing.</p>
-
-<p>"The danger at this point was that some climbers might
-dislodge rocks which would come bounding down on the
-heads of those in the rear. For this reason the orders of the
-leader were urgent that the party should not get separated.
-The trail at this point led up the sharply sloping eaves of the
-mountain roof, from which the climber might drop a dizzy
-distance to the depths below. Clinging to the rocks and
-hanging on by hands or feet, the party pushed up to a ledge
-from which they looked over an abyss several thousand feet
-sheer down."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In Southern Colorado the cliff-dwellers' region offers
-some of the most remarkable ruins in America, and their
-preservation in a government reservation, to be known as
-the Mesa Verde National Park, has been assured by a bill
-that has been recently passed by Congress and which is
-one of the eminent features of latter-day legislation. It
-is Representative Hogg who introduced this bill providing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
-for the permanent protection of those cliff-dweller ruins
-which, with those in New Mexico and Arizona, constitute
-some of the most valuable and interesting prehistoric remains
-in the United States. Already much of this archæological
-treasure of inestimable scientific value has been
-carried away by visitors, while, instead of permitting this
-region to be thus despoiled, it should be made easily
-accessible to tourists and held as one of the grand show
-places of the great Southwest. Like the Grand Cañon
-and the Petrified Forests of Arizona, like the Pike's Peak
-region in Colorado, Mesa Verde would become an objective
-point of pilgrimage to thousands of summer tourists. In
-the winter of 1904-5 Representative Lacey, of Iowa, the
-eminent chairman of the House Committee on Public
-Lands, made in behalf of his committee a favorable report
-on the Colorado Cliff-dwellers' Bill, presenting, with his
-characteristic eloquence of argument, the truth that the
-permanent preservation of these wonderful and almost
-prehistoric ruins is greatly to be desired by the people of
-the Southwest, as well as by those interested in archæology
-elsewhere. "The ruins are situated among rocky cliffs,
-and may be easily preserved if protected," said Mr. Lacey,
-and added:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"With the exception of two or three small, fallen, and
-totally uninteresting ones, all the ruins of the Mesa Verde
-are in the Southern Ute Indian Reservation. It is an extremely
-arid region, and little or no agriculture is practised<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
-by the Utes, although they range sheep, goats, cattle, and
-ponies on the mesa and in the cañons. It is a poor range at
-best, and the Indians appear to need all they can get. Moreover,
-the reclamation service has made some estimates regarding
-storage reservoirs in the upper Mancos, and it may
-be at some future time a part of this land in the reservation
-will be irrigable and greatly increased in value. The Utes
-are not going to destroy these ruins or dig in them. They
-stand in superstitious awe of them, believing them to be
-inhabited by the spirits of the dead, and cannot be induced
-to go near them."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>These dwellings are excavated in cliffs from five to nine
-hundred feet above the plateaus. Of these, two dwellings
-stand out prominently,&mdash;the "Spruce Tree House" and
-the "Balcony House," the former of which contains a
-hundred and thirty rooms, of each of which the average
-measurement is about eight by six feet. Much pottery,
-weapons, armament, and many skeletons and mummies are
-found in these dwellings.</p>
-
-<p>The later conclusions of scientists are that these cliff-houses
-were designed as places of refuge and defence rather
-than as ordinary habitations. The parallelogram and
-circle forms predominate, and they are often forty feet in
-diameter. There are sometimes double, or even triple
-walls, solidly built of hewn stone, with a circular depression
-(council-chamber) in the centre.</p>
-
-<p>Pueblo is the metropolis of Southern Colorado. It is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
-the second city in the state, ranking next to Denver. It
-is an important industrial centre, being the location of
-the great steel works of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company,
-and two large smelting plants in constant activity.
-It is a town with unusual possibilities of beauty, rambling,
-as it does, over the rolling mesas with a series of
-enchanting vistas and mountain views of great beauty.
-The Spanish Peaks are in full sight from the new residence
-region of Pueblo, and here is the home of ex-Governor
-and Mrs. Alva Adams, with its spacious, book-lined
-rooms; its choice and finely selected souvenirs of foreign
-travel; its music and pictures; and far above all, the
-gracious sweetness and charm of Mrs. Adams, who has
-that most perfect of gifts&mdash;that of transforming a household
-into a home. Governor Adams, although in his
-modesty he would deprecate the distinction, is easily the
-first citizen of Colorado. Twice the Governor of the state,
-he has impressed the entire people with his flawless integrity
-of character, his noble ideals, and his energy of executive
-power in securing and enforcing the best measures
-for the people and carrying onward into practical life the
-highest moral and educational standards.</p>
-
-<p>Governor Adams is always greatly in demand as a
-speaker, and in September of 1906 he was again nominated
-for Governor of the state.</p>
-
-<p>Colorado, quite irrespective of party, is all aglow
-with the name of Alva Adams. Good Republicans have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
-long been greatly perplexed over the fact that the man
-they most desire to vote for, the man to whose guidance
-they would most willingly commit the affairs of state,
-is a Democrat. The ability, the unquestioned integrity,
-the fidelity to lofty ideals, and the great administrative
-power of Governor Adams inspire the almost
-universal enthusiasm of Colorado irrespective of party
-lines.</p>
-
-<p>No son of the Centennial State is more in sympathy
-with its individual problems. Born in Wisconsin (some
-fifty-five years ago), Governor Adams was about to enter
-the Ann Arbor Law School when the illness of a brother
-brought him in his earliest youth to Colorado. Its
-beauty, its rich possibilities, enchanted him. Here he
-married a very cultivated and beautiful young woman,
-whose parents came in her early girlhood to Colorado,
-and whose sympathetic and perfect companionship has
-been the unfailing source of his noblest inspiration.</p>
-
-<p>In an address on "Pathfinders and Pioneers," given
-before an irrigation congress at Colorado Springs, we find
-Governor Adams saying:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"What a sublime moment when the explorer realizes the
-fruition of his dream! What fateful hours upon the dial of
-human progress when Columbus saw a new world emerge
-from the sea, when Balboa stood 'silent upon a peak in
-Darien,' when Lewis and Clark upon the continent's crest
-saw the waters of the rivulet run toward the West! Such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
-events compensate great souls, and their spirits defy hardship,
-ingratitude, chains, dungeons, and the axe. The curtain has
-been run down upon the careers of those brave men whose
-praise we sing. Their race is run. The explorer, priest,
-trapper, and pioneer have vanished.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"'Westward the course of empire takes its way;</div>
-<div class="indent1">The four first acts already past,</div>
-<div class="verse">A fifth shall close the drama with the day;</div>
-<div class="indent1">Time's noblest offspring is the last.'</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>"Would it be a daring assumption to consider the irrigated
-regions of America as the arena in which the fifth act, time's
-noblest offspring, is to perfect and complete the drama of
-civilization?</p>
-
-<p>"Irrigated lands were the cradle of the race. The first
-canals were run from the four rivers of Paradise. May not
-the fruition of mankind seek the same conditions amid which
-it was born? Providence has kept fallow this new land until
-man was fitted to enter and possess it.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"'Hid in the West through centuries,</div>
-<div class="verse">Till men, through countless tyrannies, could understand</div>
-<div class="verse">The priceless worth of freedom.'"</div>
-</div></div></blockquote>
-
-<p>"I would not decry culture and refinement," said ex-Governor
-Adams in this address; "they are the charm
-and beauty of modern life, the music and art of the social
-commerce of the age; but in their acquirement I would
-not give up the robust, vigorous, daring qualities of the
-pioneer."</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>The Governor proceeded:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"They had blood and iron in their heart, they had the
-nerve to dare, the strength to do. I do not believe in battle
-for battle's sake; but I never want to see our people when
-they are not willing to fight, and able to fight. The only
-guarantee of peace and liberty is the ability and willingness
-to do battle for your rights. Refinement alone is not
-strength, culture alone is not virtue. Absalom, Alcibiades,
-and Burr stand in history as the most polished, cultured men
-of three ages, yet they were more a menace than a brace to
-the liberties of their time. In stress, the world calls upon
-the Calvins, the Cromwells, the Jacksons, Browns, and Lincolns.
-They were stalwart, strenuous, courageous men; not
-cultured and refined, but rich in royalty and daring. It is
-the rugged and the strong, and not the gentle and the wise,
-who gather in their hands the reins of fate and plough deep
-furrows in the fields of human events. It is they who have
-driven the car of progress and have woven the deepest colors
-in the fabric of human happiness. It is true that some of our
-Western torch-bearers were not perfect; none of them were
-ever anointed with the oil of consecration; around them
-surged the temptations of a wild and boisterous age; through
-their hearts and souls there swept the impulses and passions
-of the strong; if they sinned, it was against themselves, not
-their country. Let their frailties be forgotten, and their
-good cherished. Often rough and defiant of the conventionalities,
-they were ever true and loyal, and most of these empire
-builders can stand before the great white throne with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
-open hearts. They were the architects, the Hiram Abifs of
-these Western empires. They laid the foundations in courage
-and liberty."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Let no one fancy that Pueblo is a primitive Western
-city devoid of electricity, telephones, motor cars, or even
-Marconigrams. Let no one fancy it is too far from Paris
-to have the latest French fashions. It is hardly an exaggeration
-to say that it demands the best and the most
-up-to-date ideas of the Eastern cities to be at all eligible in
-these Colorado towns. Pueblo has a most delightful club-house
-on the edge of a lake&mdash;the lake is artificially created,
-and being made to order, is, of course, exactly the kind of
-lake that is desired, the water being conducted from the
-mountains into a large natural depression&mdash;where great
-open fires in every room greet the daily visitor; where
-there are large reading-rooms, a dining-room, and a ball-room;
-no intoxicating beverages of any kind are allowed
-to be sold, so that youths and maidens may at any time
-enjoy the club with no insidious dangers to their moral
-welfare.</p>
-
-<p>There are many centres of social life; and if Pueblo
-people have any other conceivable occupation than to give
-dinner parties at night and go motoring in the morning,
-with endless receptions of the Daughters of the
-Revolution and other clubs, organizations, or purely private
-card receptions invading the afternoons, the visitor
-hardly realizes it. The dinners given are often as elaborate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
-as in the large Eastern cities, as one, for instance,
-given by Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon D. Thatcher at their stately
-home "Hillcrest," where the decorations were all in rich
-rose red, a most brilliant effect, and the souvenirs were
-India ink reproductions of old castles on white satin.
-The dinner cards held each a quotation from the poets.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Pueblo is always all sunshine and radiance, and has a
-beauty of location that makes it notable, with its encircling
-blue mountains and picturesque mesas, and the perpetual
-benediction of the Spanish Peaks silhouetted against
-the western sky. Its new library is the pride and delight
-of every citizen. It is one of the Carnegie chain,&mdash;a
-large, two-story and basement structure of white Colorado
-stone, the interior finished with the richly variegated
-Colorado marble which is used for mantels and fireplaces.
-The book stacks, the spacious and splendid reading-room,
-the children's room, and the smaller ones for reference and
-special study, are all planned on the latest and most
-perfect models.</p>
-
-<p>The library is in the Royal Park, on the crest of one of
-the mesas, very near the home of Governor Adams. It is
-a library to delight the heart of the book-lover. Pueblo
-offers, indeed, great attractions to all who incline to this
-land of sunshine. The climate is even more mild than
-that of Denver, from which city it is a little over three
-hours distant by the fast trains, or four hours by slower<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
-ones. Colorado Springs lies between&mdash;two hours from
-Denver and a little over one hour from Pueblo. The location
-combines many attractions. With three railroads;
-its large industries in smelting and steel; its excellent
-schools, both public and private; its churches, its daily
-newspapers; its library; and its fine clubhouse, open to
-families,&mdash;women and children as well as men enjoying it
-freely,&mdash;Pueblo seems one of the most delightful of places.
-It has large wealth and a power of initiating many opportunities.
-It is on the most picturesque and delightful
-lines of travel to Cañon City, Salida, Leadville, Glenwood
-Springs, and through Salt Lake City to the Pacific
-Coast; or on the line to Arizona and the Grand Cañon
-of the Colorado, and on to Los Angeles and San Francisco;
-or eastward to Chicago and the Atlantic Coast; or
-southward to Mexico, or St. Louis, or New Orleans.
-Pueblo is really in the heart of things, so to speak. The
-Chicago papers arrive the next day, the New York papers
-the third morning, and the telephonic communication is
-simply almost without limit. Governor Adams will step
-from his library into another book-lined room where the
-telephone is placed, and from there talk with people in
-five different states. Once he held a conversation with a
-man at the bottom of a mine a few hundred miles away,&mdash;a
-man whose subterranean sojourn had the alleviation
-of a telephone.</p>
-
-<p>The greatest industrial organization west of the Mississippi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
-River is that of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company,
-whose largest plant is at Pueblo, and is held at a valuation
-of fifty-eight million dollars. On its pay-roll are fifteen
-thousand employés. There are twenty thousand tons of
-steel rail produced each month, and it is said that this
-number will soon be largely increased, and that the
-Goulds and the Rockefellers are arranging to utilize the
-product of these mills for their vast railroad interests.
-The company owns such large tracts of land in Colorado,
-New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming; it owns coal mines,
-iron mines, lime quarries; it owns parts of two railroads,
-besides telegraph and telephone lines galore, so
-that by reason of these extensive holdings it is able to
-secure at a minimum of cost all the raw materials from
-which the finished products are turned out. Upward of
-three hundred thousand acres of the richest coal lands in
-the West, an empire containing one hundred square miles
-more than the coal area of Pennsylvania, constitute the
-holdings for coal mine purposes of the company. In
-addition there are iron, manganese mines, and limestone
-quarries containing the elements which give to the product
-of the furnaces and mills qualities that secure the markets
-of the Western world. Its plant at Pueblo has become
-the centre of a town called Minnequa, composed of its
-own employés and their families. The company has
-established a model hospital, with a surgeon's department
-fitted up with the most elaborate and finest scientific<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
-and nursing facilities; a fine library and large reading-rooms,
-and a recreation hall and gymnasium for the workmen.
-Nearly one million dollars has been expended on
-the tenant houses belonging to the company, which are
-rented to their employés on fair and advantageous terms.
-In many respects Minnequa, at Pueblo, is one of the most
-remarkable manufacturing centres in the world, presenting
-aspects that invite study, in its extensive resources,
-the vast and colossal character of its purposes, and its
-remarkable achievements. All employés are given the
-opportunity to acquire homes; and every late ideal in
-the way of providing opportunities for their care in
-health, in mental and moral development, and in recreations,
-is carried out to the fullest possible extent.</p>
-
-<p>The company has recently engaged in an irrigation
-enterprise in the purchase of water-right priorities of the
-Arkansas River for seventy cubic feet of water per second,
-at an expense of one million dollars. These rights, which
-date back to 1860-62, are among the oldest existing, and
-they insure to the company the uninterrupted and certain
-possession of the river flow. A court decree enabled
-them to change the point of division, and they have
-constructed a new head-gate at Adobe, six miles east of
-Florence. A canal fifty-eight miles in length is being
-constructed from Florence to the mills owned by the
-company. The cost of this canal will be some three
-quarters of a million. These mills produce over seventy-five<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
-thousand tons of iron and steel each month. The
-manufacturing plant at Minnequa includes blast furnaces,
-converting works, blooming mills, a merchant iron mill,
-a hoop and cotton tie mill, a spike factory, a bolt factory,
-a castings and pipe foundry, with open hearth furnaces, a
-reversing mill, and many other appliances.</p>
-
-<p>"It must not be supposed, because we find it necessary
-to practise irrigation in Colorado, that we therefore never
-have any rains," observed a Coloradoan; "on the contrary,
-the rains of spring are usually of such abundance as to
-make the ground in fine condition for ploughing and putting
-in crops, and we seldom find it necessary to apply
-water to germinate any kind of seed; only once, in thirteen
-years' experience at Greeley, were we compelled to resort
-to irrigation before crops of all kinds were well up and
-considerably advanced in growth. About the last of May,
-however, as regularly as the natural periods of summer,
-autumn, winter, and spring occur in the other states,
-never varying more than a week in time, these copious
-rains suddenly cease and give place to light and entirely
-inadequate local thunder-showers. Now is the accepted
-time, and all over cultivated Colorado, within a period of
-not more than two days, every flood-gate is opened and
-the life-giving current started to flowing on the rapidly
-parching grain. Corn will endure until later in the
-season, but all sowed crops must get one thorough application
-of water within two weeks or become severely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
-injured for the want of it. Day and night the silent
-current flows on and on, among the fields of grain; not a
-drop of water nor a moment of time must run to waste
-until the first irrigation is completed."</p>
-
-<p>In so exceptional a summer of drought and heat as
-was that of 1901 the advantages of irrigation stand out.
-Journeying through Kansas, the long day's ride across
-the state revealed continued devastation from the lack
-of rain. Corn fields looked almost as if a fire had
-passed over them, so shrivelled and stunted they were;
-but in Colorado on every hand there were greenness and
-luxuriance of vegetation and of crops. The result is simply
-that, with irrigation, man controls his climate and all
-the conditions of prosperity. Without it, he is at the
-mercy of the elements.</p>
-
-<p>The Union Colony of Greeley was the first to introduce
-upland irrigation in Colorado. Of the method employed,
-the "Greeley Tribune" gave this description:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Almost the first question asked by many persons on their
-first arrival in Colorado, when they see the irrigating ditches
-running along the sides of the bluffs high above the river, and
-back from it five, ten, or twenty miles, is, 'How do you get
-the water out of the river, and so high above it? It looks
-as if you made the water run uphill.' The answer is very
-simple. All the rivers of Colorado are mountain streams, and
-consequently have a fall of from ten to thirty feet to the
-mile, after they reach the plains. In the mountains, of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
-course, the fall is often much greater. The plains also have
-a gradual slope eastward from the foothills, where the altitude
-is generally between six and seven thousand feet above sea
-level, while at the eastern boundary of the state it is only
-about three thousand feet. Take, for example, the canal
-generally known as Number Two, which waters the lands of
-the Greeley Colony. This canal is taken out of the Cache
-la Poudre River, about seventeen miles west of Greeley, and
-where the bed of the river is probably a hundred and sixty
-feet higher than it is at Greeley. The bed of the canal only
-has a fall of from three to three and a half feet to the mile;
-therefore it is easily seen that when that grade is continued
-for a number of miles, the line of the canal will run in a
-direction further and further from the river, and on much
-higher ground, so that the lands lying between the canal and
-the river are all 'covered by,' or on a lower level than, the
-water in the canal. In the process of irrigation this same
-plan must be followed, of bringing the water in on the higher
-side of the land to be irrigated, then the water will easily
-flow all over the ground."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In Weld County, of which Greeley is the county seat,
-irrigation was extended during 1905 to cover from fifteen
-thousand to twenty thousand acres of arid land never
-before under cultivation, and storage reservoirs increased
-in capacity. It is proposed to cut a tunnel through the
-Medicine Bow mountain range and to bring a large quantity
-of water through from the Western slope to irrigate
-an additional fifty thousand acres of prairie.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>Within the past year there have been two potato starch
-factories started in successful operation in Greeley which
-are estimated to pay out annually one hundred thousand
-dollars for potatoes that have heretofore been practically
-a total loss to the farmers.</p>
-
-<p>The Swift Packing Company of Chicago propose investing
-one and a half millions in further irrigation in this
-county. The products of the Greeley district alone, for
-1905, were five and a half millions,&mdash;a fact that suggests
-the wise foresight of Hon. Nathan Cook Meeker, the
-founder of the town, in selecting this location, in 1869,
-for his colony.</p>
-
-<p>Of recent years a remarkable feature of agricultural
-progress in Colorado has been developed by the "dry
-farming" system, the discovery of which is due to Prof.
-H. W. Campbell, who has been experimenting, for some
-twenty years past, in Eastern Colorado, in the scientific
-culture of the soil without benefit of irrigation. Professor
-Campbell says that he had been assured that corn would
-not grow at an altitude of three thousand feet, as the
-nights would be too cool; but that he can refute this, as,
-during the past five years, he has averaged from thirty to
-forty-two bushels per acre at an altitude ranging from
-five thousand to nearly seven thousand feet. Successful
-agriculture is, in Professor Campbell's belief, based on the
-fundamental principle of soil culture, and in an interview
-he said:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"While the great work now being done by the government
-in promoting irrigation enterprises in the more arid portion
-of the West and the using of millions upon millions of money
-for the building of mammoth reservoirs have value and virtue,
-and means the development of many sections that must
-remain almost worthless without them, and the spending of
-thousands of dollars in traversing foreign countries to secure
-what some have pleased to call drought-resisting plants, will
-undoubtedly play their part in promoting the welfare and prosperity
-of Colorado, ... yet there should also be an understanding
-of, first, the necessary physical condition of the soil
-for the most liberal growth and development of roots; secondly,
-the storing and conserving the entire season rainfall,&mdash;not
-only the portion that falls during the growing season,
-but from the early spring to late in the fall; thirdly, the fact
-that air is just as important in the soil as water, and that it is
-the combination of the elements of air and water in the soil,
-together with heat and light, that is most essential; and that
-when these conditions are fulfilled, Eastern Colorado will
-come to its rightful own, and little towns and cities will
-spring up along all the great trunk lines, while the intervening
-country will be dotted with ideal farm homes and shade
-trees; orchards and groves will break the monotony of the
-now bleak prairie, and present a restful, cheerful, homelike,
-and prosperous condition."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>While agriculture in Colorado is regarded as in its infancy,
-yet the product of Colorado farms alone contributed
-almost fifty-one millions to the world's wealth, in 1905,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
-exclusive of wool, hides, or live stock. Professor Olin of the
-State Agricultural College estimates that there are over
-two hundred thousand acres in Colorado which produce
-crops without irrigation, by the application of Professor
-Campbell's "dry-farming" system. The so-called dry
-land, consisting of millions of acres in Eastern Colorado,
-averages now four dollars per acre, where one year ago
-untold quantities could be bought for an average of two
-dollars per acre. The speculative value of this land has
-gone up wonderfully under the impetus of the Campbell
-system of dry farming. If this system comes anywhere
-near proving the claims of its advocates, it will vastly
-increase the wealth and population of the state. With
-a greater understanding of the science of dry culture it
-is certain that the farmers of the state and the state
-generally will experience immeasurable advantage. In
-the eastern plains of Colorado are embraced more than
-fifteen million acres of land which are now lying practically
-useless, only a small amount being utilized for ranging
-cattle. The claims of dry-culture enthusiasts and those
-who have been experimenting with seed imported to meet
-the dry conditions are, that this empire will be made
-to yield harvests which will support many thriving communities.
-In proof of their claims they point to so-called
-model farms established at various places on the plains
-where the hitherto unyielding soil has borne substantial
-crops.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>One important feature in the agricultural development
-of Colorado is the extinction of the bonanza ranch of thousands
-of acres. Instead, farms are reduced to manageable
-proportions, and are carried on far more largely by intelligent
-thought and scientific appliances than by mere
-manual labor.</p>
-
-<p>The present day Colorado ranch is an all-the-year-round
-enterprise. The ranch owner is a careful business man,
-who watches his acres and the products thereof even as the
-successful merchant or manufacturer acquires close knowledge
-of all the details of his business. He sows his land
-with diversified crops, rotating hay, grain, and root crops
-scientifically for the double purpose of securing the greatest
-yields and preserving the nourishing qualities of the
-soil. Keeping in touch with the market conditions of the
-world, and with the advancing developments of science, he
-is easily the master of the situation, and in no part of the
-country is the condition of the farmer better, or perhaps
-so good, as in Colorado. The agriculturist of the Centennial
-State who is the owner of two quarter sections, or even
-of one, is altogether independent. The returns from his
-business are absolutely sure, and with the certain knowledge
-of substantial gains at the end of the season he plans improvements
-to his home, and comforts and even luxuries for
-himself and family, which far exceed those usually secured
-in the Middle West or by the small farmers of the East.
-In Colorado it will be found that almost every young man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
-and woman of those who are natives of the state are
-college graduates. Co-education prevails, just as does the
-political enfranchisement of women, and the results of this
-larger extension of the opportunities and privileges of life
-are very much in evidence in the beauty, the high intelligence,
-and the liberal culture that especially characterize
-the women of Colorado.</p>
-
-<p>Irrigation enterprises in Colorado are far more widely
-recognized than is the Campbell system of dry culture;
-but in 1905 these enterprises appealed with increased force
-to capitalists outside, as well as within Colorado, as a safe
-and profitable means of investment. Land held at ten
-dollars per acre is, by irrigation, instantly increased in
-value from twenty to fifty dollars; and it was seen that
-the most favorable localities within the state in which to
-raise funds for further extension of irrigation were among
-the farmers in the older irrigated sections who have won
-their ranches, improved their places, and made large deposits
-in the banks through the use of the productive waters
-trained to make the soil blossom with wealth.</p>
-
-<p>Irrigation is developed to its highest excellence in Northern
-Colorado and in the valley of the Arkansas River.
-These regions have been the longest under irrigated culture,
-and their value is increasing rapidly. Each year
-sees the agriculturist grow more conservative in his use
-of water, and the quantity thus saved has been applied
-to new lands. Thus, in an interesting and quite undreamed-of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
-way, a problem that incited discord and dissension,
-that promised only to increase inevitably as larger
-territories of land and their correspondingly increased irrigation
-should be held, was brought to a peaceful solution.
-Continued litigation, and a great pressure to secure legislative
-restrictions of the use of water supply, and the constant
-irritation and turmoil involved in these disputes,
-were all, happily, laid to rest by the discovery of the
-farmers themselves that extravagance in the use of water
-was not conducive to their own prosperity. In the matter
-of flood waters the irrigation experts of the state are
-quite generally meeting the condition in their own way.
-Storage reservoirs are dotting the irrigation systems at
-frequent intervals, and in the dry months the supply piled
-up behind the cement dams is drawn off to furnish the
-final necessary moisture for the maturing of the crops.</p>
-
-<p>Another possibility of irrigation that is receiving the
-attention of engineers is the utilization of the streams for
-power purposes. In many cases the power thus generated
-will be made to accomplish marvellous feats in the way of
-construction, as in the instance at Grand River, already
-described.</p>
-
-<p>One of the special journeys in Colorado is that called a
-"trip around the circle," affording more than a thousand
-miles among the mountains within four days' time; but a
-permission for ten days is available, thus affording several
-detours by stage, which penetrate into the most sublime<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
-regions. The abysmal depth of five of the great cañons;
-many of the noted mountain passes; great mining camps,
-with their complicated machinery; cliff dwellings, vast
-plateaus, and stupendous peaks; Indian reservations; the
-icy crevasses a thousand feet in depth; the picturesque
-"Continental Divide," from which one looks down on a
-thousand mountain peaks, where the vast Cordilleras in
-their rugged grandeur are seen as a wide plain; the beautiful
-Sangre de Cristo ("Blood of Christ") range; the
-sharp outlines of the Spanish Peaks, rising twelve and
-thirteen thousand feet into the air; beautiful meadow
-lands where the blue and white columbine, the state flower
-of Colorado, blooms in profusion, and the tiger lily, the
-primrose, and the "shooting stars" blossom,&mdash;all these
-are enjoyed within the "circle" trip; and it also includes
-Leadville, the "city above the clouds," Durango,
-Ouray, Gunnison, and other interesting towns. It offers a
-near view of the Mount of the Holy Cross, which strange
-spectacle is made by the snow deposits in transverse, gigantic
-cañons,&mdash;the perpendicular one being fifteen hundred
-feet, while the transverse cross is seven hundred and fifty
-feet in length; of Lost Cañon, a novelty even in a land
-of cañons; and of the Rio de Las Animas Perditas, old
-Fort Lewis, the valley of Dolores River, a region of
-early Spanish discovery; of Black Cañon and Cimarron
-Cañon and Grand River Cañon, whose walls rise to the
-height of more than twenty-five hundred feet;&mdash;all these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
-are but the merest outline and hint of the scenic wonders
-compassed within the circle trip. Up the cañons the train
-climbs; through narrow gorges with overhanging rocks, on
-and on, till a plateau is reached; then more cañons, more
-climbing, more peaks towering into the skies, and waterfalls
-chiming their music. As even an enthusiast in scenery
-cannot entirely subsist on stars, sunsets, and silences,
-the luxurious comforts of these trains enhance one's enjoyment.
-A dining-car is always on, and the excellence of
-the food and the moderate prices for all this perfect comfort
-and convenience are features the traveller appreciates.
-That dance of the Brocken which one fancies he sees in
-the fantastic sandstone formations on the mountain's side
-on the romantic route to Glenwood Springs is occasionally
-duplicated in other cañons, where these strange rocks
-resolve themselves, with the aid of the mysterious lights
-and shadows, into a dance of witches, and every shape
-springs to life. The train rushes on, and one leaves them
-dancing, confident that although these figures may be stationary
-by day, they dance at night. Another mountain
-slope of the sandstone shows a colossal figure of a prophet,&mdash;shrouded,
-hooded, suggesting that solemn, majestic
-figure of death in Daniel French's great work entitled
-"Death and the Sculptor." The precipitous walls of the
-cañon rise in many places to over a thousand feet in height.
-In their sides such a variety of designs and figures have
-been sculptured by erosion that the traveller half imagines
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>himself in the realm of the gods of Hellas. These
-innumerable designs and figures incite not only the play
-of fancy, but they invite the study of the geologist,
-who finds here the primary rock formations exhibited in
-the most varied and striking manner. As the train
-winds deeper into the heart of the projecting rocks the
-crested crags loom up beyond the sight; below, the river
-rushes in foaming torrents and only a faint arch of
-the sky is seen. There are recesses never penetrated
-by the sun.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p137.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">CATHEDRAL ROCKS, CLYDE PARK, CRIPPLE CREEK SHORT LINE</p>
-
-<p>Another group of the sandstone shapes, under the transformation
-of moonlight, resolved itself into a band of
-angels, and still another mountain-side seems to be the
-scene of ballet dancers. The splendid heights of Dolores
-Peak and Expectation Mountain, the Lizard Head, the
-Cathedral Spires, the Castle Peaks of the Sangre de Cristo&mdash;what
-points and groups that fairly focus all conceivable
-sublimity they form! Here is a state more than
-a third larger than all New England; it is the state of
-sunsets and of stars; of scenery that is impressive and
-uplifting, rather than merely picturesque; a state whose
-plains, even, are of the same altitude as the summit of
-Mount Washington in the White Mountains, and whose
-mountains and peaks ascend to an altitude of over two
-miles above this height. Of the total extent of Colorado,
-the mountains, inclusive of parks and foothills, occupy
-two-thirds of the area. So it is easily realized to what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
-extent they dominate the scene. But great and impressive
-as they are in effect, the mountain features have an
-undoubted influence, however unconsciously received, on
-the character of the people. The effect of beauty on
-character is incalculable. When to beauty is added
-sublimity, how much greater must this effect be! It was
-not mere rhetoric when the Psalmist exclaimed, "I will lift
-up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help.
-My help cometh from the Lord, which made heaven and
-earth.... The Lord shall preserve thee from all evil.
-He shall preserve thy soul." It is this train of thought
-which is inevitably suggested to the mind in gazing upon
-the stately, solemn impressiveness of the mountain scenery.
-Nature has predestined Colorado for the theatre of noble
-life, and the influence is all-pervading.</p>
-
-<p>Great engineering feats are in evidence all over Colorado.
-Miles of railway tunnels pass through the mountains.
-No mountain, not even Pike's Peak, is regarded in
-Colorado as being in any sense an obstacle to any form of
-the extension of travel. The railroad either passes through
-it or climbs it. The matter is apparently simple to the
-railroad mind, and evidently all the peaks of the Himalayas
-piled on Pike's or Long's peaks&mdash;"Ossa piled on
-Pelion"&mdash;would not daunt the Coloradoan enterprise.
-In fact, the greater the obstacle, the greater is the enterprise
-thereby incited to overcome it. In the most literal
-way obstacles in this land of enchantment are miraculously<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
-transformed to stepping-stones. But what would you,&mdash;in
-an Enchanted Country?</p>
-
-<p>Colorado has four great systems of parks whose elevation
-is from seven to nine thousand feet: North Park,
-with an area of some twenty-five hundred square miles;
-South Park, one thousand; Middle Park, three thousand;
-and San Luis, with nine thousand four hundred square
-miles,&mdash;all sheltered by mountains, watered by perpetual
-streams, and so rich in grass lands as to afford perpetual
-grazing and farming resources. Colorado has nearly one
-thousand inland lakes, and over two hundred and fifty
-rivers fed from mountain snows. Its grand features include
-mountains, cañons, gorges and deep chasms, crags
-and heights; its mountain systems cover more than five
-times the area of the Alps, and its luminous, electrically
-exhilarating air, its play of color, and the necromancy of
-distances that seem near when afar&mdash;all linger in the
-memory as a dream of ecstatic experiences. Colorado is
-all a splendor of color, of vista, and of dream. It is the
-most poetic of states.</p>
-
-<p>Now the fact that this country has been importing over
-two million tons of sugar a year lends importance to the
-beet sugar factories already largely established. Colorado
-has a future in beet sugar hardly second to her gold-mining
-interests, if her interests receive the national safe-guarding
-that is her due.</p>
-
-<p>Colorado and the Philippines were brought into collision<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
-of interests by the attempt to reduce the tariff on sugar
-imported from those islands. This would ruin the beet
-sugar industry in the Centennial State, which is already beginning
-to transform it into one of the richest agricultural
-states in the Union.</p>
-
-<p>This industry is absolutely identified with the irrigation
-interests of Colorado, as it is the arid land irrigated that
-offers the best facilities for the sugar beets.</p>
-
-<p>The beet sugar enterprise means remunerative work for
-the farmer, good business for the railroads and merchants,
-and an incalculable degree of prosperity for all Colorado.
-Thomas F. Walsh, of Ouray, Colorado, and of Washington,
-made an earnest protest against this movement.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Walsh is a great capitalist, but while he has not
-one dollar concerned in the beet sugar enterprise of his
-state, he is a loyal and devoted son of Colorado. In a
-convincing manner he said:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"... It is not a small thing, this robbery of American
-farmers and home-makers for the benefit of sugar corporations
-and exploiters of Philippine labor. It means the ultimate ruin
-of an industry that is full of the brightest promise for thousands
-of Americans. It means that the people of the United
-States shall pay tribute to a trust forever for one of the necessaries
-of life.... The removal of protection to Colorado
-sugar growers would simply mean that the sugar trust, or
-cormorants in human form like it, would go to the Philippines,
-employ the peons at starvation wages, and send millions of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
-tons of sugar to the United States. Would the consumer
-here be benefited? Not at all. Has the consumer benefited
-by reciprocity with Cuba? The sugar trust has received a
-gift from the treasury of the United States&mdash;that is all."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>And again Mr. Walsh truly says:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"This proposition is merely a design on the part of enormously
-rich, greedy speculators, who are willing to adopt any
-means for the accumulation of more money. Money, money,
-money! They have already a thousand times more than they
-need, and are simply money mad. They propose to exploit
-the Philippines for their own selfish ends. Help for the poor
-Filipinos, indeed! Imagine the generosity of these get-rich-quick
-sharks towards the peons in their employ. Think of
-the wages that would be paid, contrasted with the standard
-of living in the United States! I'd rather have the people
-of this country exterminated than to be brought to such a
-level."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Regarding the arid land Mr. Walsh said:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"With the application of water to this land under the
-National Irrigation Act&mdash;one of the greatest acts of statesmanship
-accomplished under our broad-minded and far-sighted
-President&mdash;the people of Colorado will furnish an outlet for
-a great population, and the cultivation of beets for sugar will
-enable thousands of American citizens to establish homes of
-their own. That is what is now being done in Colorado, and
-the industry is in its infancy. The people have gone in there
-at the suggestion of the government, planted beets provided<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
-to them by the agricultural department, and started a great
-industry. There was an implied, if not expressed, promise
-that they were to be protected in this new industry. Yet it
-is now proposed to place them in competition with the peons
-of the Philippines, at the most critical time in the history of
-the industry. The people of the East," continued Mr. Walsh,
-"do not seem to be able to grasp the great possibilities of the
-arid West under the operation of the national irrigation law.
-The West, properly irrigated with water that we know can be
-developed by drainage, wells, and underground flow, will
-easily support fifty millions of people. Think of what this
-means! Fifty millions of American citizens owning their
-own homes! It is an incalculable addition to the wealth and
-strength of the United States."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>One of the very valuable and exceptional resources of
-Colorado is in its stone, which equals the world's best product
-in its quality. Millions of tons of almost every variety
-of building stone lie unclaimed on the hills and plateaus.
-There are quarries in Gunnison County that would make
-their owners multi-millionnaires, could the stone be made
-easy of access or transportation. The difficulty of the
-former, and the high freight charges, combine to delay
-this field of development. In Pueblo there is a marbleized
-sandstone that is very beautiful. Its "crushing" strength,
-as the architectural phrase goes, is between eleven and
-twelve thousand pounds to the square inch,&mdash;a strength
-which exceeds the most exacting requirements of any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
-architect. This stone is found in unlimited quantities.
-In the country around Fort Collins there is a red sandstone
-which is very popular, and this is also found in large
-quantities at Castle Rock, south of Denver. Near Trinidad
-is a gray sandstone of great beauty, and the Amago stone,
-which is used for the Denver Postoffice, is a favorite.</p>
-
-<p>In stone for decorative purposes also, Colorado is plentifully
-supplied. Specimens of marble from the vicinity of
-Redstone show characteristics as beautiful as are seen in
-the finest Italian marble found at Carrara.</p>
-
-<p>Besides the marble for building there are also vast
-beds of the purest white marble, which will soon be
-placed on the market for statuary purposes.</p>
-
-<p>Vast deposits of granite are to be found in many different
-sections of the state. In Clear Creek County, about
-Silver Plume and Georgetown, there are mountains of
-granite. In the southern part of the state deposits are
-found which are used extensively for monumental purposes,
-and great quantities of this granite are shipped
-out of the state.</p>
-
-<p>Although only a limited amount of work in the way
-of development and seeking markets has been done for
-Colorado stone, the value of the sales is already an
-appreciable source of revenue.</p>
-
-<p>Statistically, Colorado ranks first in the United States
-as to the yield of gold and silver; first in the area of
-land under irrigation; first as to the quality of wheat,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
-potatoes, and melons, and as to the percentage of sugar in
-the sugar beet. The state ranks fifth in coal and iron;
-sixth in live stock, and eighth in agriculture. It is true,
-however, that irrigated agriculture is considered to be the
-most important interest in Colorado. The Centennial
-State is not, primarily, as has often been supposed, a
-mining state; the mines, rich and varied in products as
-they are, offer yet a value secondary to that of agriculture.
-A mine is always an uncertainty. A rich pocket may be
-found that is an isolated one and leads to nothing of a
-permanently rich deposit. A vast outlay of time and
-expensive mechanism can be made that will not result
-in any returns. An apparently rich mine may suddenly
-come to an end; the miner may have reason to believe
-that if he could go down some thousands of feet he would
-again strike the rich vein; he may do this at great cost
-of machinery and labor only to find that the vein has
-totally disappeared, or does not exist. All these and
-many other mischances render mining something very far
-from an exact science,&mdash;something, indeed, totally incalculable,
-even to the specialists and experts,&mdash;while agriculture
-is an industry whose conditions render it within
-reasonable probabilities of control and calculation. The
-great problem which continues to confront Colorado, and
-to a far greater extent Arizona, is the more complete
-understanding of what Prof. Elwood Mead, the government
-expert in national irrigation problems, calls "the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
-duty of water" and the conditions which influence it as
-a basis for planning the larger and costlier works which
-must be built in the future.</p>
-
-<p>"One of the leading objects of expert irrigation investigation
-is to determine the duty of water," says Professor
-Mead, and he adds:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"In order to do this it is necessary to deal with a large
-range of climatic conditions, and to study the influence of
-different methods of application and the requirements of
-different crops. Farmers need an approximate knowledge
-of the duty of water in order to make intelligent contracts for
-their supply. It is needed by the engineer and investors in
-order to plan canals and reservoirs properly. Without this
-knowledge every important transaction in the construction of
-irrigation works, or in the distribution of water therefrom, is
-very largely dependent on individual judgment or conjecture....
-In constructing reservoirs it is as necessary to
-know whether they will be filled in a few years by silt as to
-know that the dam rests on a solid foundation; and it is as
-desirable to provide some means for the removal of this sedimentary
-accumulation as it is to provide an adequate waste
-way for floods."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The problems of irrigation are evidently highly complicated
-ones. There are large tracts of irrigated land
-selling at three hundred dollars an acre which, fifty years
-ago, were held as worthless desert regions. The value of
-water rights has risen from four to thirty-five dollars an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
-acre. The Platte River and its tributaries, alone, irrigate
-one million nine hundred and twenty-four thousand four
-hundred and sixty-five acres. In the South Platte the
-average flow of water is two thousand seven hundred and
-sixty-five feet a second. The North Platte and its tributaries
-irrigate about nine hundred thousand acres. There
-are now over two million acres in Colorado under actual
-irrigation, with an agricultural population of some one
-hundred and fifty thousand, with a total income of over
-thirty millions. The agricultural population is increasing
-so rapidly that the day cannot be distant when it will
-reach a million, with a total production of more than one
-hundred and fifty million dollars. It is believed that an
-expenditure of forty millions in irrigation at the present
-time would immediately result in an increment of from
-two hundred to three hundred millions. The irrigation
-bill that passed Congress in 1904 proved of the most
-beneficial nature to Colorado; not only for its immediate
-effects, but for the promise it implied and the confidence
-inspired in the immediate future. The encouragement
-of irrigation in Colorado is the influence that enlarges and
-develops the agricultural efforts, promoting the growing
-industry of beet sugar and extending all resources. Beyond
-the material results there lie, too, the most important
-social conditions of the greater content and industry
-of the people and the corresponding decrease of tendencies
-toward anarchy and disorder.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>In the quarter of a century&mdash;with the sixth year now
-added&mdash;since Colorado became a state there has passed
-over twenty million acres of government lands into the
-individual ownership of men whose capital, for the most
-part, consisted solely of the horses and wagon that they
-brought with them. Of this vast area there are some
-two and a half million acres under agricultural cultivation,
-which are assessed at a valuation of some twenty-five
-millions. The Boston and Colorado smelter, established
-in 1873, has produced a valuation in gold, silver, and
-copper of nearly ninety-six millions. In the year of 1905
-the Colorado mines,&mdash;gold, silver, lead, copper, and zinc,&mdash;all
-told, produced nearly ninety million dollars.</p>
-
-<p>The population of Colorado is increasing rapidly, not
-only by the stream of immigration that pours in of those
-who come <i>con intentione</i>, but to a considerable degree by
-those who come only as tourists and visitors, and who
-become so fascinated with Colorado's charm, and so impressed
-with her rich and varied resources, that they
-remain. The development of this state is one of the most
-remarkable and thrilling pages in American history. It
-is the story of personal sacrifice, personal heroism, personal
-devotion to the nobler purposes and ideals of life that no
-one can read unmoved.</p>
-
-<p>"There can be no backward movement, not even a
-check in the steady tramp of such a conquering army,"
-said the "Denver Republican" editorially. "Before it,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
-mountains melt into bars of gold, of silver, of copper, lead,
-zinc, and iron. It passes over virgin soil, and behind it
-spring up fields of grain and groves of fruit. It brings coal
-from distant fields, rocks from far-away hills, and its artisans
-mould and weld and send out tools of trade and articles
-of merchandise to all the world.</p>
-
-<p>"It pushes the railroads it needs to where it needs them,
-and the world comes to marvel at its audacity. It finds
-to-day what yesterday it needed and to-morrow it must
-have. It waits only the world's needs or pleasures to find
-yet other ways to supply them."</p>
-
-<p>The prosperity of Colorado is a remarkable fact in our
-national history. By some untraced law, defects, faults,
-misfortunes, or crimes are always made more prominent
-than virtue and good fortune. The crime is telegraphed
-everywhere, the good deed is passed over in silence&mdash;as a
-rule. And so the strikes, and the outlawry, and the
-discords and troubles of Colorado have been very widely
-heralded, while there has been less general recognition of
-the firm and just governmental authority that has held
-these outbreaks in check, and has almost succeeded in
-ending them entirely.</p>
-
-<p>In general aspects and conveniences the towns and cities
-are under excellent municipal regulations. Leadville, formerly
-one of the most lawless of great mining camps, is
-to-day a peaceful and prosperous city on a great trans-continental
-highway. The Western towns begin with wide, clean,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
-beautiful streets. They begin with the most tasteful
-architecture. It may not be the most expensive or the
-most colossal, but it is beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>Northern Colorado is in many respects a distinctive
-region of itself. It offers rich agricultural facilities; the
-beet sugar factories at Greeley are making it a commercial
-centre; the electric trolley line which will soon connect
-Greeley with Denver will multiply the homes and settlements
-within this distance of fifty miles, and this part of Colorado
-is enriched with great coal fields. The latter promise not
-merely their own extension of industries in digging the
-coal and putting it on the market, but they also indicate
-another and far more important result, which stimulates
-the scientific imagination,&mdash;that of making Northern
-Colorado a power centre whose strength can be applied in
-a variety of ways and transmitted over a large area of
-country. For more than two years the Government has
-been conducting a series of experiments in a very thorough
-manner, endeavoring to ascertain the gas values of the
-great lignite coal fields between Boulder and Denver. It
-has been discovered that the converting of the coal into
-gas gives it double the efficiency for use as a motor power
-for engine or for fuel than can be gained from the coal in
-its natural state. A ton of coal converted into gas will, as
-gas, give twice the power that the coal would have yielded,
-and give the same power that two tons of coal, that has
-not been converted into gas, would afford. In order, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
-to produce this power economically, it must be done
-at the point of mining. It is there that the gas producers
-must be located; and from these points the gas
-can be transported in pipes, or can be converted into
-electricity and sent by wires at far less cost than would be
-that of sending the coal itself by freight. These discoveries
-not only suggest that this region in Colorado is
-destined in the near future to become a power centre which
-will be tapped from the surrounding country for a great
-distance in all directions, and will thus render Boulder
-one of the most important of Western cities; but they
-also suggest the evident tendency of the age toward intensity
-rather than immensity,&mdash;toward the concentration
-of energy in the most ethereal form rather than its
-diffusion through large and clumsy masses of material.</p>
-
-<p>Colorado contains over twenty-five thousand square
-miles of coal fields, distributed over the state, with an
-average annual product of over seven million tons. No
-other corresponding area in the entire world exceeds Colorado
-in its great storage of coal, and the state ranks as one
-of the first in the production of iron.</p>
-
-<p>There are already fifteen beet sugar factories in operation,
-representing investments amounting to over twelve
-million dollars, and which are estimated to have produced,
-in 1906, an aggregate of some two hundred and twenty thousand
-pounds of sugar, the percentage of saccharine matter
-being higher than that of the sugar beet of California.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p150.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">SULTAN MOUNTAIN</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>Statistically, Colorado ranks first in irrigation, and there
-are some eighteen thousand miles of irrigating canals
-already in operation, with the system being so rapidly
-extended that it almost outruns the pace of calculation.
-Three million acres are under cultivation in Colorado, and
-two million eight hundred and fifty thousand acres are irrigated;
-the storage reservoirs already constructed are sufficient
-to place another million of acres under cultivation.
-This irrigated land sells from sixty to one hundred dollars
-per acre. Colorado has a reputation for being a great potato
-state, and in the year 1905 the town of Greeley alone
-shipped over three hundred thousand dollars' worth of potatoes,
-while tomatoes are a feature often yielding ninety
-dollars to the acre, and celery has been estimated to yield
-one hundred and fifty dollars an acre. There are tracts
-of from two to three thousand acres devoted to peas alone,
-producing forty to fifty thousand cans; and asparagus
-grows with great success.</p>
-
-<p>Colorado is a fruit country offering the best of conditions.
-The peaches of Southern Colorado lead the world
-in flavor, beauty, and size; the canteloupe flourishes with
-such extraordinary vitality that it often yields a revenue
-of fifty dollars an acre; and the watermelon also grows in
-unusual perfection. The valley of the Arkansas River is
-the great region for producing melons, and Colorado exports
-these to New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, and St.
-Louis. Apples, plums, and pears grow with equally bounteous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
-success, and there are fruit farms that with their
-orchards and small fruits sometimes realize fifty thousand
-dollars a year, when the season is a good one and the
-market conditions favorable. The seasons of irrigated
-land are largely under control, and surpass those regions
-which are at the mercy of excessive rains or of droughts.
-So the law of compensation still obtains. The resources
-of horticulture, alone, in Colorado are very important,
-and they form one of the most alluring features of this
-beautiful and richly bountiful state.</p>
-
-<p>In the way of crops, alfalfa takes the lead in Colorado,
-as wheat does in Kansas. It requires the very minimum
-of care; the land being once planted with alfalfa, there is
-need only of turning on the irrigation, and mowing it, at
-the right time. Alfalfa produces three crops a year, and
-yields from one to two tons per acre. It sells at from
-three to ten dollars a ton, and this makes a revenue quite
-worth considering. The difficulties encountered everywhere
-in Colorado, in every branch of industry, or in
-domestic work, are those of securing labor. Wages are
-high in every conceivable line of work, but to a large extent
-the labor and service, even when procured, is of a very
-poor order. In many of the larger hotels employés are
-often kept on the pay-roll for two months at a time when
-not needed, simply because it is impossible to fill their
-places when the need comes. From requirements of the
-seamstress, the laundress, the cook, the maid, the farmer's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
-working-men, or the employés in almost any line of work,
-the same difficulty exists. Much is heard regarding
-strikes and other forms of the eternal conflict between
-labor and capital; and yet the high rates paid, the concessions
-constantly made to the demands of employés, the
-conditions provided for them, would seem, at a superficial
-glance, to be such as to bridge over every difficulty. Domestic
-service is something that presents the greatest problem
-on the part of the employer. If there is so large a
-number of "the unemployed" in the East, why should not
-the conditions balance themselves and this superfluous element
-find good conditions for living in Colorado? This
-question involves the problem of economics, with which
-these pages have nothing to do; but no traveller, no sojourner,
-can linger in Colorado who is not simply lost in
-wonder that the varied work that is waiting, with the
-most liberal payments for the worker, and the multitude
-of workers in the East who need the liberal payment,
-cannot, by some law of elective affinity, be brought
-together.</p>
-
-<p>When it is realized that the Rocky Mountains occupy
-in Colorado more than five times the entire space of the
-Alps in Europe, their importance in climatic influence as
-well as in scenic magnificence can be understood. The
-forests of Colorado are found on the mountains and foothills.
-The heights are covered with a dense growth of
-pine woods, while in lower ranges abound the silver spruce<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
-and the cedar. Colorado has a state forestry association
-which aims to secure as a reservation all forests above the
-altitude of eight thousand five hundred feet, as this preservation
-is considered most important to the water supply.
-In the Alps there are nine peaks over fourteen thousand
-feet in height; in the Rocky Mountains, within the limits
-of Colorado alone, there are forty-three peaks, each one of
-which exceeds in height the Jungfrau. There are in
-Colorado more than thirty towns, each of which is the
-theatre of active progress, and each of which lies at an
-altitude exceeding that of the pass of St. Bernard. The
-sublime cañons and gorges are eloquent of the story of
-Titanic forces which rent the mountains apart. The
-vast plateaus were once the bed of inland seas. In the
-cañon of Grand River towering walls rise to the height
-of half a mile, in sheer precipitous rock, for a distance of
-some sixteen miles. The strata of these rocks are distinctly
-defined, and the play of color is rich and fantastic.
-The vast walls are in brilliant hues of red and amber and
-green and brown,&mdash;the blending of color lending its
-enchantment to the marvellous scene. Each cañon has
-its own individuality. No one repeats the wild charm of
-another. Excursions abound. There is "the loop," an
-enchanting mountain ride made from Denver within one
-day for the round trip; the "Rainbow" tour, and others,
-besides that of the "circle" already described. In each
-and all these journeys the route is often on the very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
-verge of the abyss, and the sublimities, the splendor of
-coloring, exceed any power of language to suggest.</p>
-
-<p>In Northwestern Colorado, along the White River and
-northward, lies the sportsman's paradise, now reached only
-by a stage drive of from forty-five to ninety miles from
-the little town of Rifle on the "scenic route" of the Denver
-and Rio Grande, beyond Glenwood Springs. Trapper's
-Lake and the Marvine lakes are well known, and the
-Marvine Hunting Lodge is a favorite resort of English
-tourists.</p>
-
-<p>Estes Park, some seventy miles from Denver, a favorite
-summer resort, is a long, narrow plateau of two or
-three miles in width and fifteen in length, a mile and a
-half above sea level, and enclosed in mountain walls that
-tower above the park from two to seven thousand feet.
-A swift stream, well stocked with trout, runs through the
-park. The four great systems of parks divide Colorado
-into naturally distinct localities: North Park, with an
-area of twenty-five hundred square miles; Middle Park,
-with its three thousand; the smaller South Park of one
-thousand; and San Luis, with over ninety-four hundred
-square miles,&mdash;all, in the aggregate, presenting a unique
-structural plan. Every journey in Colorado has its vista
-of surprise. No artist can paint its panoramas. Every
-traveller in this Land of Enchantment must realize that
-its exhilaration cannot be decanted in any form. It is a
-thing that lies in character, moulding life.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>Colorado is the Land of Achievement. It offers resources
-totally unsurpassed in the entire world for an
-unlimited expanse. These resources await only the recognition
-of him who can discern the psychological moment
-for their development. That nothing is impossible to
-him who wills is one of the eternal verities, and even
-the expert census taker, or the supernatural tax collector
-whom nothing escapes, might search in vain, within
-the limits of the splendid Centennial State, for any
-man who fails to will. The resplendence of this state of
-stars and sunshine is due to this blaze of human energy.
-The Coloradoans are the typical spirits who are among
-those elect</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="indent3">"... who shall arrive</div>
-<div class="indent3">Prevailing still;</div>
-<div class="verse">Spirits with whom the stars connive</div>
-<div class="indent3">To work their will."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V</h2></div>
-
-<p class="center"><strong>THE COLORADO PIONEERS</strong></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"<i>Around the man who seeks a noble end</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Not angels, but divinities attend.</i>"</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"<i>In the deep heart of man a poet dwells</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Who all the day of life his summer story tells;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Scatters on every eye dust of his spells,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Scent, form, and color: to the flowers and shells</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Wins the believing child with wondrous tales;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Touches a cheek with colors of romance,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>And crowds a history into a glance;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Gives beauty to the lake and fountain,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Spies over-sea the fires of the mountain;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>When thrushes ope their throat, 'tis he that sings,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>And he that paints the oriole's fiery wings.</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>The little Shakespeare in the maiden's heart</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Makes Romeo of a plough-boy on his cart;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Opens the eye to Virtue's starlike meed</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>And gives persuasion to a gentle deed.</i>"</div>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Emerson</span></p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Not</span> even the starry splendor of Colorado skies or the
-untold magic of the atmosphere vibrating with unwritten
-music, pictorial with such scenes as no artist ever put on
-canvas; not even the scientific achievements in feats of
-civil and electrical engineering; not even any advancement
-of the arts and the development of industries,
-commerce, or economics that bring the general life into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
-increasing harmony with the physical environment,&mdash;none
-of these things, important and significant as they
-are, touch the profoundest interest of Colorado. For this
-supreme interest is that of the noble men and women
-whose lives have left to the state the legacy of their hopes,
-their efforts, their earnestness, and their faith. "Much is
-made of the Pilgrim Fathers who landed on Plymouth
-Rock," editorially remarked the "Denver Republican" in
-an article on "Pioneers' Day," in June of 1906; "and if
-there had been phonographs in those days to preserve the
-record of the speech of one of those old fugitives from
-European persecution, with what delight the men and
-women of this generation would listen to the tones which
-come from the instrument! But, after all, were the Pilgrim
-Fathers, canonized by nearly three hundred years
-of tradition, any braver, any more venturesome, any more
-worthy of honor, than the pioneers who fought Indians
-and struggled against adverse fortune of every kind while
-they laid in fear and hope the foundations of this great
-state?"</p>
-
-<p>Among the poems of Walt Whitman is one entitled
-"The Beginners," which interprets a high quality of life.
-The lines are as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"How they are provided for upon the earth (appearing at intervals):</div>
-<div class="verse">How dear and dreadful they are to the earth:</div>
-<div class="verse">How they inure to themselves as much as to any&mdash;what a paradox appears this age:</div>
-<div class="verse">How people respond to them, yet know them not:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></div>
-<div class="verse">How there is something relentless in their fate, all times:</div>
-<div class="verse">How all things mischoose the object of their adulation and reward,</div>
-<div class="verse">And how the same inexorable price must still be paid for the same great purchase."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The price was paid by the pioneers of Colorado. They
-poured out lavishly all their hope, their indomitable
-energy, their patience, which was faith, as well. They
-planted, knowing that not to themselves would come the
-harvest. They builded that those yet to come might have
-shelter. They gave to Colorado such an endowment of
-potent but invisible force that its momentum pervades
-the air to-day. The accelerated ratio of power with which
-spiritual forces proceed defies even the ablest of the
-statisticians.</p>
-
-<p>In all the chapters of American history there are none
-more thrilling than the story of the early life in Colorado;
-there are no chapters that more vividly demonstrate the
-absolutely present and practical aid of the divine guidance
-of God acting through His messengers,&mdash;those who
-have lived on earth and have gone on into the life more
-abundant.</p>
-
-<p>The lives of the remarkable men and women who have
-been canonized by the church have left the world the better
-for their being and humanity the richer for the inheritance
-of their experience. Their history is not to be held merely
-as tradition or as superstition. Let one visit in Italy
-Assisi, the home of St. Francis; Siena, the home of St.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
-Catherine, and follow the footsteps of others whose names
-enrich the church calendar, to their homes and haunts, and
-their record becomes vivid and vitalized as, to a stranger
-visiting Boston, might become the footsteps of her noble
-and consecrated lives which are yet almost within universal
-personal remembrance: the lives of Lydia Maria Child,
-William Lloyd Garrison, Emerson, Whittier, Lucy Stone,
-Lowell, Mary A. Livermore, James Freeman Clarke, and
-Phillips Brooks,&mdash;men and women whom Boston may
-well hold as her prophets and her saints. They, too,
-were of the order of "The Beginners." They sowed the
-seeds of the higher life. They were receptive to all high
-counsels from the ethereal world, from the divine realms;
-they listened to great truths which the multitude did not
-hear, and they gave it anew by voice and by pen, till all
-the world might hear and read and receive it. They were,
-indeed,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center">"God's prophets of the Beautiful."</p>
-
-<p>Such persons were living a twofold life during their entire
-earthly pilgrimage, and we may well recall their lives and
-link them with those of the great and the holy men and
-women of all ages and all climes.</p>
-
-<p>The pathfinders of human progress do not live for personal
-ease,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center">"The hero is not fed on sweets."</p>
-
-<p>These are royal natures, who come into the world not to
-enjoy ease and prosperity, but who bring with them the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
-high destiny of sacrifice. Their lives are companioned
-with struggle and conflict. Of such experiences as theirs
-well might be asked the question so impressively conveyed
-in these noble lines by America's great woman poet,&mdash;our
-poet who sang the song of the nation's "Battle-Hymn,"&mdash;Julia
-Ward Howe:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"What hast thou for thy scattered seed,</div>
-<div class="indent1">O Sower of the plain?</div>
-<div class="verse">Where are the many gathered sheaves</div>
-<div class="indent1">Thy hope should bring again?"</div>
-<div class="verse">"The only record of my work</div>
-<div class="indent1">Lies in the buried grain."</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"O Conqueror of a thousand fields!</div>
-<div class="indent1">In dinted armor dight,</div>
-<div class="verse">What growths of purple amaranth</div>
-<div class="indent1">Shall crown thy brow of might?"</div>
-<div class="verse">"Only the blossom of my life</div>
-<div class="indent1">Flung widely in the fight."</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"What is the harvest of thy saints,</div>
-<div class="indent1">O God! who dost abide?</div>
-<div class="verse">Where grow the garlands of thy chiefs</div>
-<div class="indent1">In blood and sorrow dyed?</div>
-<div class="verse">What have thy servants for their pains?"</div>
-<div class="indent1">"This only&mdash;to have tried."</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>These Shining Ones are on earth to serve as co-workers
-with the divine power; to serve through good fortune or
-ill fortune; through evil report or good report,&mdash;still to
-serve; still to follow The Gleam. These are the men who</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="indent1">"... make the world within their reach</div>
-<div class="verse">Somewhat the better for their being</div>
-<div class="indent1">And gladder for their human speech."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>The names of many of these heroic pioneers of Colorado
-may be unwritten save in the pages of the Recording
-Angel; but they live and are immortal in the influence
-they have left as a heritage to succeeding generations,
-in the trains of thought and purposes they initiated, and
-in all that potent power of generous aims and noble
-ideals,&mdash;for all advancing civilization rests on lofty ideals.
-"While the basis of civilization must be material," says
-the Rev. Dr. Charles Gordon Ames of Boston, "its life
-must be spiritual. Its end and object must be the soul,
-and not the body; and it will provide all best things for
-the body, that the soul may be worthily housed and
-served. The higher and chief interests of society will
-always be intellectual, affectional, aspirational&mdash;human
-and humane. The true, the beautiful, and the good&mdash;almost
-unknown to the barbarian, and often mocked at by
-the Philistines of modern society&mdash;will be sought for as
-men seek for gold and pearls of great price. Wealth will
-bring its offering to the altars of education and art and
-worship. Science, as it searches the worlds of matter and
-of mind, will find new and sacred parables and gospels of
-grace. Learning will be a priestess of truth. The imagination
-of man will wander and wander in the wide
-creation, free, fearless, and glad, knowing that the Father's
-house is everywhere, and that his child may be everywhere
-at home."</p>
-
-<p>In many of the pioneer households of Colorado, whether<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
-those of plenty or of privation, the children had the inestimable
-advantage of the refined and beautiful atmosphere
-of a home in which high ideals and lofty devotion to intellectual
-progress and spiritual culture prevailed. If
-schools were insufficient, there were the trained educational
-methods of both the father and the mother under which
-they were reared and taught; and poverty of purse cannot
-greatly matter where there is no poverty of the spirit.</p>
-
-<p>Well may these pioneers of Colorado be held as belonging
-to that order of humanity which the poet calls "The
-Beginners." Some of them were unlettered and untaught
-save in the great school of life itself; some of them were
-rich in learning and culture; but they all shared in common
-a devotion to progress differing only in degree or conception:
-they shared common sacrifices; they gave their best
-energies to the development of a great and beautiful state
-whose increasing rate of progress is to them an immortal
-monument. These leaders of humanity whom the poet so
-finely characterizes as "The Beginners" are an order of
-people always appearing on earth. They are of those
-who hear the Song in the air and behold the Star in the
-sky. They are the persons who discern&mdash;and follow&mdash;The
-Gleam. Their lives are rich in service and sacrifice.
-Their kingdom is not of this world. Their lives are not
-unfrequently cheerless and cold, but on their altar fires
-glows the living coal sent down from heaven. They fast
-that others may feast. They accept privations that others<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
-may revel in possessions. They pay the inexorable price
-for the same great purchase. They are those who are sent
-on earth peculiarly set apart to co-operate with God in the
-larger fulfilment of the divine laws. They pay the inexorable
-price of toil and labor and sorrow and sacrifice.
-They rise into the everlasting triumph and the beauty and
-the joy of spirituality of life. They give all for this; they
-find all in it. But let no one resign his hopes or his
-dreams. Let no one doubt, for an instant, that all of
-goodness and beauty and sweetness and joy that he longs
-for is on its way toward him. It is only a question of
-time. Let him be patient, which is not a mere passive and
-negative condition, but one full of intense activities and
-serene poise; let him be patient and believing, and make
-room in his life for that immortal joy which no man taketh
-from him.</p>
-
-<p>The town of Greeley, with its felicitous location midway
-between the two state capitals, Denver and Cheyenne,
-fifty miles from each, and which is already the principal
-town of Northern Colorado as Pueblo is of the southern
-part of the state, has a romantic and thrilling story
-connected with its founding. In the history of Colorado,
-among the many men whose lives stand out in noble pre-eminence,
-was that of the founder of Greeley, Hon. Nathan
-Cook Meeker, whose personal life is inseparably associated
-with the interesting town which owes to him its origin.</p>
-
-<p>The Meekers trace their ancestry to men who went to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
-England from Antwerp about 1500. In 1639 Robert
-and William Meeker came to this country and settled
-in New Haven. Thirty years later William Meeker removed
-to New Jersey, and the town of Elizabeth was
-founded by him and named for his wife. He was a
-leader in the affairs of the day, held prominent office, and
-in 1690 he died, leaving the old Meeker homestead in
-Newark, New Jersey, which is still in the possession of
-his descendants. One of his sons was Joseph Meeker, also
-prominent in promoting the conditions of progress, and
-he was the grandfather of Nathan Cook Meeker, the founder
-of Greeley, who inherited the qualities that have made
-the family a marked one in America. When he was but
-seventeen he carried on an extensive correspondence with
-Henry Clay, John Tyler, George D. Prentice, and other
-noted men of the day, discussing with them subjects of
-importance, and he was a contributor even in these early
-years to the "Louisville Journal," then edited by George
-D. Prentice, and now the "Courier-Journal," edited by
-the brilliant Colonel Henry Watterson; to the New Orleans
-"Picayune," and other leading papers. Even in his
-early youth Mr. Meeker seems to have been a man of perpetual
-aspiration and honorable ambition carried out to
-achievement, and by means of his own energy and persistence
-he graduated in 1840 from Oberlin College,
-became a teacher, and later (for literary work was his
-dominant gift) became a regular contributor to the "New<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
-York Mirror," edited by N. P. Willis, the poet, and the
-most brilliant man of letters of his day. Mr. Meeker
-wrote both prose and poetry,&mdash;essays, romance, and
-verse alike flowing from his facile pen. He is the author
-of three books, one of which he dedicated to President
-Pierce, and which is in the Boston Public Library among
-the choice and rare works not allowed for general circulation
-but kept intact for the special use of scholars
-and researchers. He became one of the leading writers of
-the day on sociology, advancing many ideas which are
-to-day maintained by thoughtful students of the questions
-involved in this subject.</p>
-
-<p>Founding towns seemed to "run in the family," and
-even as his great-grandfather founded the town of
-Elizabeth, New Jersey, so Nathan Cook Meeker felt the
-impulse to stamp his own strong and progressive individuality
-on new communities. He became the secretary
-and librarian (in 1844) of the Ohio Trumbull Phalanx, a
-colony founded to realize in practical form the theories
-of Fourier, and somewhat similar to the famous Brook
-Farm experiment. Mr. Meeker also co-operated in founding
-the Western Reserve Institute, of which, many years
-afterward, Hon. James A. Garfield became president.</p>
-
-<p>About this time he married Arvilla Delight, a daughter
-of Levi Smith of Connecticut and a descendant of
-Elder Brewster; a woman whose singular force, exaltation,
-and beauty of character may be traced through a notable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
-New England ancestry. The family soon removed to
-the Western Reserve in Ohio. Mrs. Meeker had been
-known in her sweet girlhood as the beauty of the town.
-She was a woman of exceptional refinement and culture;
-for many years a teacher, and, more than all, of a spirituality
-of character that added to her life its dignity and
-grace.</p>
-
-<p>The spell of destiny, the burden always laid upon "The
-Beginners," seemed to be on Nathan Cook and Arvilla
-Delight Meeker; for no history of the work of the husband
-could be written that did not include that of the
-wife. Like Nathaniel and Sophia Hawthorne, their lives
-were conjoined in that perfect mutual response of spiritual
-sympathy which alone makes the mystic marriage a divine
-sacrament.</p>
-
-<p>Horace Greeley became interested in Mr. Meeker's work
-and invited him to a place on the editorial staff of "The
-Tribune," a position which he filled with conspicuous
-ability for several years; but in common with all idealists,
-Mr. Meeker was haunted and beset by his visions of
-a more Utopian future for humanity. A Colorado journal,
-recently giving some reminiscences of the life of its
-great citizen, said:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"In the fall of 1869 Mr. Meeker made a trip to the West
-for the 'Tribune,' writing interesting letters by the way.
-On his return to New York he was full of the idea of establishing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
-a colony in Colorado. He mentioned his ambition to
-John Russell Young, who talked it over with Mr. Greeley,
-and that great man, at the first opportunity, said to the returned
-correspondent: 'I understand you wish to lead a
-colony to Colorado.' When Mr. Meeker answered 'Yes,'
-Greeley added, 'I think it would be a great success. Go
-ahead; "The Tribune" will stand by you.'</p>
-
-<p>"With such encouragement Mr. Meeker spent the following
-day in writing the article announcing his purpose and
-outlining the plan which was afterwards adopted as the constitution
-of the colony. Mr. Greeley suggested a few minor
-changes, after which the article was printed and kept in type
-for a week, in order, as its author said, 'that there might
-be due reflection and no haste.' It was published in the
-'Tribune' of December 14, 1869, with an editorial indorsement
-of the plan and its originator. Nine days later the
-colony was organized, and yet in that short time more than
-a thousand letters had been received in answer to the
-article. On the 15th of the next April the certificate of
-organization of 'The Union Colony of Greeley' was filed
-for record."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In less extended detail some outline of the life of the
-founder of Greeley, the "Garden City" of Colorado, has
-already been narrated by the writer in a previous book;<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
-but no adequate reference can be made to the state in
-which Mr. Meeker's life and work remains as so remarkable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
-a contribution and so fundamental a factor, which
-does not present in full the story of his relation to its
-development; and the matter is thus presented even at
-the risk of some minor repetitions.</p>
-
-<p>In the spring of 1870 Mr. Meeker led his colony to
-Colorado. The colonists wished to give the town the name
-of its founder, but he himself insisted that it should bear
-the name of Greeley, after the great editor of the "Tribune,"
-of whose staff he was still a member. Into all
-the sacrifice and the hardships of this pioneer life Mrs.
-Meeker, a woman gently born and bred, entered with the
-utmost heroism. From the very inception the undertaking
-was a signal success. But Mr. Meeker conceived of
-still another extension of his activities in the problem
-then so prominently before the country,&mdash;the civilization
-of the Indians. He was appointed agent of the northern
-Utes, in possession of the great park region of the Rocky
-Mountains, on White River. To it he went in the same
-spirit in which General Armstrong entered on his work at
-Hampton. He had matured certain theories regarding
-the proper treatment of the Indians, in bringing them
-within the pale of the civilized arts,&mdash;theories so wise, so
-just, so humane, that they might be studied with advantage.
-These theories he put to the test. His youngest
-daughter, a beautiful and gifted girl, opened a free school
-for teaching the Indians. His wife united with him in
-every kindly and gracious act by which he strove to win<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
-the confidence of the race. This kindness and gentleness
-was unmeasured. The family lived a life of constant sacrifice
-and effort for the education and training of the Utes.
-But the Indian nature is one that wreaks its revenge,&mdash;not
-necessarily on the aggressor, but on the first comer.
-Other agents had been lax, and a number of causes of discontent
-to which allusion cannot here be made fanned the
-smouldering fire. Their chief complaints were that they
-were required to work, and to abandon a bit of pasturage,
-only a few acres, for the new agency grounds and gardens.
-Events drew on like the fates in a Greek tragedy, and on
-the morning of September 29, 1879, Mr. Meeker was
-cruelly massacred.</p>
-
-<p>The little town of Meeker marks the site of the
-Meeker massacre. Here is a little village of a thousand
-inhabitants, located on White River, among the most beautiful
-of the mountain ranges,&mdash;the location being very
-much like that of Florence, in Italy,&mdash;which is the centre
-of a very rich agricultural and grazing region. Meeker is
-now forty-five miles from a railroad, the nearest station
-being Rifle, on the Denver and Rio Grande, a few miles
-from Glenwood Springs; but the Moffet road brings to
-it railroad connection with Denver. There is an extensive
-stage line of over one hundred miles, starting from
-Rifle and going on through Meeker up into the mountains,
-where the hunting attracts a great number of
-travellers, and especially many Englishmen. It is in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
-this region that President Roosevelt's happy hunting-grounds
-lie, and he is a familiar and favorite figure in
-Meeker.</p>
-
-<p>There is a little gray-stone Episcopal church among
-other churches that adorn this town, which has laid out a
-handsome park and which has the perpetual adornment of
-the beautiful river that flows through it. The mountains
-about supply streams that make irrigation easy, and the
-great fields of wheat, potatoes, and alfalfa are fertile and
-prosperous. Irrigation makes it everywhere possible to
-control the climatic conditions.</p>
-
-<p>Meeker is the county seat of Rio Blanco County, in
-which uranium has been discovered in two different
-places; and two oil wells, each at a cost of four thousand
-dollars, a creamery, costing nearly six thousand dollars,
-and water-works at a cost of sixty thousand dollars, have
-been established within the past two years. Fifteen reservoirs
-and eighty miles of irrigation ditches were constructed
-in 1905, and in that year was harvested, in this
-county, a quarter of a million bushels of wheat, oats, and
-rye.</p>
-
-<p>The basis on which Greeley was founded is thus outlined
-in the official documents drawn up by Nathan
-Cook Meeker:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"I propose to unite with proper persons in the establishment
-of a Union colony in Colorado territory. A location
-which I have seen is well watered with streams and springs;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
-there are beautiful pine groves, the soil is rich, the climate
-healthful, grass will keep stock the year round, coal and
-stone are plentiful, and a well-travelled road runs through
-the property."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Mr. Meeker proceeded to note the cost of the land,&mdash;eighteen
-dollars for every one hundred and sixty acres,&mdash;and
-he especially called attention&mdash;for he had the poet's
-eye&mdash;to the grandeur of the Rocky Mountain scenery, and
-he added:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"The persons with whom I would be willing to associate
-must be temperance men and ambitious to establish good society,
-and among as many as fifty, ten should have as much as
-ten thousand dollars each, or twenty should have five thousand
-dollars each, while others may have from two hundred
-dollars to one thousand dollars and upward. For many to go
-so far without means could only result in disaster."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The practical wisdom of this clause will be appreciated.
-The true idealist is the most practical and wisest of counsellors.
-It is only false idealism that leads to destruction.
-Mr. Meeker's idea was to make the settlement a village,
-with ample building lots, and then to apportion to each
-family from forty to one hundred and sixty acres outside
-for agriculture.</p>
-
-<p>On such a basis as this the Union Colony of Greeley was
-founded. A constitution was adopted that is a model of
-the condensation of the duties of good citizenship. Industry,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
-temperance, education, and religion were the pillars
-on which the superstructure was raised. It is little wonder
-that the social quality of Greeley to-day&mdash;thirty-six
-years after its inauguration as a community&mdash;is of the
-highest type and exceptional among all the cities of the
-United States.</p>
-
-<p>Irrigation was the first necessity. A canal thirty miles
-long was dug, costing sixty thousand dollars. The Cache
-la Poudre was first examined and then tapped to furnish
-water. The elevation of the surrounding high bluffs secured
-the needed descent for the flow of water. The life
-began.</p>
-
-<p>Greeley is now a town of some seven thousand inhabitants;
-the seat of the State Normal College, which its
-president, Dr. Z. X. Snyder, has made one of the great
-educational institutions, not only of Colorado, but of the
-United States; a college that draws students from almost
-every section, even from New England, so able is President
-Snyder's course of instruction and so admirable are the
-opportunities it affords for subsequent connection with
-the fine public school system in Colorado. A position
-in any of these offers a higher salary than can be obtained
-in the East, to say nothing of many other advantages
-associated with the work. Dr. Snyder was one of
-the eminent educators of the East; and when some sixteen
-years since he accepted his present responsible office,
-he brought to it the best traditions of Eastern culture<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
-and united them with the zeal and freedom and infinite
-energy of the West. The Normal campus of forty acres
-on high ground, overlooking the town, with President
-Snyder's residence in the grounds and other college buildings
-near, comprise a beautiful feature of Greeley. The
-western view, both from the college and from the home
-of President and Mrs. Snyder, over the mountain range
-including Long's Peak, is one of almost incomparable
-beauty. The faculty of the State Normal comprises thirty
-specialists; there is a library of thirty thousand volumes;
-the laboratory has the latest scientific equipment
-of the day; the art department and the music course are
-admirably conducted; French, German, and Italian are
-taught according to the latest language methods; and
-athletics, domestic science, nature studies, all receive due
-recognition. The "Training School" of the State Normal
-College has an attendance of nearly five hundred, and
-the graduates of this institution begin work on salaries
-ranging from five hundred to twenty-five hundred dollars
-annually. The tuition is free to all citizens of
-Colorado.</p>
-
-<p>The many churches, the excellent public schools, the
-clubs and societies for social enjoyment and improvement,
-indicate the high quality of life in Greeley. There are
-three newspapers; and of these the "Greeley Tribune,"
-founded by Mr. Meeker and now under the able editorship
-of Mr. C. H. Wolfe, has created for itself more than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
-a local reputation. Financially, Greeley stands well, with
-its several banks and its solidity of resources.</p>
-
-<p>There is hardly a shabby house to be found in all
-the town, whether of residence or business. Every building
-has a neat and thrifty aspect, and the art of architecture
-has been especially studied, for almost without
-exception every house, whether large or small, is tasteful
-and attractive. A bay window is thrown out here, a little
-balcony there, a piazza, a loggia, an oriel window, and the
-eye is gratified. But, besides this dainty and tasteful
-architecture, the one great feature of Greeley is her beautiful
-streets. These are due directly to the taste and
-the direction of the founder, Mr. Meeker. The streets
-are one hundred feet wide, lined invariably&mdash;every street
-in the town&mdash;with a double row of shade trees, giving
-coolness, beauty, and contributing much to the modification
-of the temperature. Every deed granted in Greeley
-forbids the sale of any intoxicating liquor. There is not
-a saloon in the place. There is not a loafer or a criminal,
-nor are there any poor in the unfortunate sense of
-the large cities. No police are needed. The jail is
-locally known as a mere ornamental appendage to the
-fine forty thousand dollar courthouse.</p>
-
-<p>For many years it has been felt that some expression
-should be made in honor of the memory of the founder of
-Greeley, and this has now taken form in the project for
-the "Meeker Memorial Library," which is in preparation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
-The beautiful young city is itself, however, the best memorial
-of its noble founder. It is a living monument of
-perpetually increasing greatness and beauty; and who
-to-day can wander under the shade of the beautiful trees
-which in a double row line every street and boulevard&mdash;trees
-planted in 1870 under Mr. Meeker's personal
-superintendence&mdash;without hearing amid the rustle of
-their whispering leaves the poet's words, that fall like a
-benediction:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"Be of good cheer, brave spirit; steadfastly</div>
-<div class="verse">Serve that low whisper thou hast served; for know,</div>
-<div class="verse">God hath a select family of sons</div>
-<div class="verse">Now scattered wide thro' earth, and each alone,</div>
-<div class="verse">Who are thy spiritual kindred, and each one</div>
-<div class="verse">By constant service to that inward law,</div>
-<div class="verse">Is weaving the sublime proportions</div>
-<div class="verse">Of a true monarch's soul. Beauty and strength,</div>
-<div class="verse">The riches of a spotless memory,</div>
-<div class="verse">The eloquence of truth, the wisdom got</div>
-<div class="verse">By searching of a clear and loving eye</div>
-<div class="verse">That seeth as God seeth. These are their gifts,</div>
-<div class="verse">And Time, who keeps God's word, brings on the day</div>
-<div class="verse">To seal the marriage of these minds with thine,</div>
-<div class="verse">Thine everlasting lovers. Ye shall be</div>
-<div class="verse">The salt of all the elements, world of the world."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The glamour of romance can never fade from Colorado,
-whose entire history is one of heroic deeds and splendid
-energy; but the primitive stage of the state is already left
-far behind with the nineteenth century. In its intellectual
-and scientific development the years of the twentieth century<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
-have almost exceeded its twenty-four years of life as
-a state in the nineteenth. The tide of immigration still
-continues, but from being the objective point of mining
-activities where fortune hunters rushed to find a royal road
-to riches, it is now a state of agriculture and of commerce.
-Social conditions are thus altered; and though some of
-these conditions are those of mining regions, as in the
-Cripple Creek district, they have altered from the typical
-Bret Harte mining-camp life to those of orderly progress,&mdash;to
-the life dominated by twentieth-century ideals of
-humanity; the life whose framework is seen in public-school
-systems, in religious observance, in the liberal
-reading of periodical and other literature, and in the
-maintenance of public libraries as a necessity in every
-community.</p>
-
-<p>The dawn of literary and artistic development in Colorado
-is very evident,&mdash;a dawn that is already of such
-radiant promise as to forecast the day when this state shall
-contribute to our greatest national literature. A large
-number of individual writers could already be named
-whose work in books, magazine articles, and excellent
-journalism might well be held as typical of the best culture
-of the entire country. The first wild turmoil of a
-new and richly varied state has given way to a prosperous,
-progressive commonwealth. Material progress must still
-always precede the higher growth, yet the air is vital with
-ideas, and the vision of Colorado is always toward the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
-stars. The beauty and majesty of the environment cannot
-but react upon the people. The growth of women's clubs
-has been one steady factor of progress, with most favorable
-effect on all the general life of intellectual and moral
-advancement. The public libraries in every centre establish
-and develop the reading habit. While a love for
-beauty is an element in human life, the influence of the
-transcendent majesty and incomparable sublimity of the
-Colorado scenery will continue to prove a source of inspiration
-to the mental and moral life of the people. The
-changing colors of the mountains are a constant delight.
-Colorado offers a perpetual feast of beauty. Her resources
-are infinite. Colorado combines all the exaltation of the
-untried with an abundance of the conveniences and luxuries
-of the older civilization; and of this Centennial State it is
-difficult to record facts and statistics that do not seem to
-suggest the tales of a thousand nights. With resources
-and with scenic loveliness which no language could exaggerate,
-it is still only to those who themselves know and
-appreciate the grandeur of this state that any interpretation
-of it will appear as rather within than as at all
-beyond the limits of the most statistical and demonstrable
-facts. The East has already outgrown the tradition that
-the entire trans-Mississippi region is a howling wilderness.
-Colorado is no longer as vague as is Calcutta to the average
-mind. Dr. Edward Everett Hale exclaimed that he
-desired his sons to know that there was something in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
-world besides Beacon Street, and this ambition has of late
-years become too prevalent to leave even the extreme
-East in any absolute and total ignorance of the wonderful
-West. Still it may be true that the flying visions from
-Pullman-car windows are marvellously extended and intensified
-by increasing familiarity with the almost incredibly
-swift progress of this region.</p>
-
-<p>A typical illustration of the fallibility of human judgment
-is seen in the attitude taken in 1838 by the great
-Daniel Webster on the floor of the United States Senate
-against an appropriation for a post route west of the
-Missouri River.</p>
-
-<p>"What do we want," said he, "of this vast worthless
-area,&mdash;this region of savages and wild beasts, of deserts,
-shifting sands, and whirlwinds of dust, of cactus and prairie
-dogs? To what use could we ever hope to put these great
-deserts, or these endless mountain ranges, impregnable and
-covered to their base with eternal snow? What use have
-we for such a country? Mr. President, I will never vote
-one cent from the public treasury to place the Pacific Coast
-one inch nearer Boston than it is to-day."</p>
-
-<p>It is a far cry from this "vast worthless area," as Mr. Webster
-termed it in 1838, to the grand and richly promising
-state of to-day, with its splendid young cities where art and
-science unite with literature and ethics in the rapid development
-of social progress; with its mountain ranges climbed
-in palace cars; its electric transit and electric lighting; its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
-vivid and forceful achievements, that even in each decade
-concentrate the progress of a century, as seen in the past.</p>
-
-<p>It is not a mere vagary, but rather a practical and
-momentous fact, that Colorado is peculiarly the realm
-receptive to invisible potencies and mental impressions.
-Science is now confronted with the question as to whether
-thought and electricity may be identified as the same force
-under different degrees of manifestation. "There is an
-elemental essence&mdash;a strange living force&mdash;which surrounds
-us on every side, and which is singularly susceptible
-to the influence of human thought," says an English scientist,
-and he continues: "This essence responds with the
-most wonderful delicacy to the faintest action of our minds
-or desires; and this being so, it is interesting to note how it
-is affected when the human mind formulates a definite
-thought or desire." All the significance of a thousand
-years may be concentrated in an instant's thought, as
-all the heat stored up in all the forests of the world is
-concentrated in a small quantity of radium. Emerson
-embodies this truth in the stanza:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"His instant thought a poet spoke,</div>
-<div class="indent1">And filled the age his fame;</div>
-<div class="verse">An inch of ground the lightning strook</div>
-<div class="indent1">But lit the sky with flame."</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is intensity, not duration, that is of consequence, and
-that determines results. To state that there is something
-in the Colorado air that incites active and lofty thought;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
-that uplifts the soul and enables one to discern the practical
-processes for identifying the most marvellous scenic
-grandeur of the civilized world with the most advanced
-processes of applied industries, is to state a simple fact.
-Phillips Brooks once said:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"I know no ideal humanity that is not filled and pervaded
-with the superhuman. God in man is not unnatural, but the
-absolutely natural. That is what the incarnation makes us
-know.... The truths of heaven and the truths of earth are
-in perfect sympathy.... The needs of human nature are
-supreme, and have a right to the divinest help."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The early explorers and pioneers in Colorado felt this
-truth, so finely stated by Bishop Brooks, even if they did
-not formulate it in words. The apparently insuperable
-obstacles of a land where the desert disputed the space
-with the Titanic mountain ranges piled against the sky,
-incited them to effort rather than paralyzed their energy.
-It is fitting that this most ideal state, rich in resources of
-almost undreamed-of variety and importance, should present
-a significant object lesson in the working out of
-the problem involved in the higher civilization of the
-twentieth century. The future of Denver, of Pueblo,
-Colorado Springs, Greeley, and other important centres,
-is a most important part of the future of the nations.
-The Star of high destiny shines on the Centennial State.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI</h2></div>
-
-<p class="center"><strong>THE SURPRISES OF NEW MEXICO</strong></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"<i>But my minstrel knows and tells</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>The counsel of the gods,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Knows of Holy Book the spells,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Knows the law of Night and Day,</i></div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<hr class="tb" />
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><i>What sea and land discoursing say</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>In sidereal years.</i>"</div>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Emerson</span></p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">New Mexico</span> is the scene of surprises. Traditionally supposed
-to be a country that is as remote as possible from
-the accepted canons of polite society; that is also an arid
-waste whose temperature exceeds the limits of any well-regulated
-thermometer,&mdash;it reveals itself instead as a
-region whose temperature is most delightful, whose coloring
-of sky and atmosphere is often indescribably beautiful,
-and whose inhabitants include their fair proportion
-of those who represent the best culture and intelligence of
-our country. New Mexico has a mixed population. To
-a hundred and sixty thousand Americans there are a hundred
-and twenty-five thousand of Spanish or Mexican descent;
-a few hundred Chinese and Japanese, and some
-thirteen thousand Indians, who are, however, peaceful and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
-industrious, and a proportion of whom have been educated
-in the Government schools for the Indians.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p183.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">ACOMA, NEW MEXICO</p>
-
-<p>The altitude of New Mexico seldom falls to less than
-five thousand feet, so that the air is cool and exhilarating.
-The rock formations partake of the same rich hue that
-characterizes those in Colorado and in Arizona, and as the
-soil is rich there is a continual play of color. The scenery
-is one changeful, picturesque panorama of mountains, rock,
-or walled cañons, vast mesas, uncanny buttes, and lava fields
-left by some vanished volcanic fires. The ancient Indian
-pueblos are still largely inhabited, and strange ruins of unknown
-civilizations add their atmosphere of mystery. The
-mouldering remains of the old Pecos church and the
-strange communistic dwellings in the old Pueblo de Taos;
-the ruins of the fortress and the seven circular mounds,
-which were the council-chambers and halls for mystic rites
-of the prehistoric civilization; and the fabled site of the
-ancient Aztec city where tradition says Montezuma was
-born,&mdash;all contribute to a unique interest in this "land
-of the turquoise sky," as New Mexico is called.</p>
-
-<p>Acoma, the ancient pueblo perched on a perpendicular
-precipice four hundred feet high, with its terraced dwellings
-of adobe, its gigantic church, its reservoir cut out of
-solid rock, and its inhabitants with their strange customs,
-is fairly accessible to the traveller from Albuquerque by a
-drive of some twenty miles. Mr. Lummis calls it "the
-most wonderful pueblo," and "the most remarkable city in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
-the world," as compared, of course, with other pueblos
-and ruined cities. Acoma has a present population of
-some four hundred Indians, and its romantic beauty of
-location is unparalleled. There are scientists who incline to
-believe that the original Acoma was built on the top of
-the <i>Mesa Encantada</i>,&mdash;the "Enchanted Mesa,"&mdash;a sheer,
-precipitous rock seven hundred feet high which is now
-practically unscalable; although Mr. F. W. Hodge, of the
-Bureau of Ethnology, achieved this apparently impossible
-feat, and found what is, in his convictions, unmistakable
-evidence of human habitation, supporting the traditions
-regarding this colossal rock. Some mighty cataclasm of
-nature swept the approach away; but if ever there were
-human habitations on the "Enchanted Mesa," the period
-is lost in prehistoric ages.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p184.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE ENCHANTED MESA, NEW MEXICO</p>
-
-<p>The colossal church in Acoma is a striking feature. Its
-walls are ten feet in thickness and sixty feet high, and the
-church and yard in which it stands consumed forty years
-in their construction. It was only reached by rude stairs
-cut in the rock. Dim traditions, which are perhaps hardly
-more than speculative theory, suggest that these steps of
-approach were suddenly swept away by some convulsion of
-nature at a time when the men of this prehistoric pueblo
-were away hunting, or otherwise engaged in procuring
-means of sustenance, and that the women and children
-were thus cut off from all supplies and aid and left to
-starve. Mr. Lummis has a theory that seems to him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
-possible, if not probable, that there was a ledge of
-neighboring rocks which served as ladders to the <i>Mesa
-Encantada</i>, and that these rocks were swept away by some
-frightful storm, or some sudden convulsion of nature, during
-the absence of the men; and that a new city&mdash;the
-present Acoma&mdash;was then built on the lesser rock on
-which it now stands. Acoma was old even when Coronado,
-in 1540, made his expedition through the country,
-from which period the authentic history of New Mexico
-begins with the meagre records of the heroic friars and
-the memorials of the Spanish conquerors. Laguna, a
-pueblo founded in 1699, lies twenty miles from Acoma
-on the Santa Fé route, of which it is one of the interesting
-features. All these old Spanish missions, which are found
-in more or less degrees of preservation in all this chain
-of pueblos in the valley of the Rio Grande, contain ancient
-paintings and statues of saints. Largely, the paintings
-are crude and worthless, but there exist those that
-have legitimate claim to art as the work of Spanish artists
-not unknown to fame. Among these is the painting of
-San José in the mission at Acoma, a painting presented
-by Charles II of Spain. This mission was founded by
-Friar Ramirez, who dedicated it "To God, to the Roman
-Catholic Church, and to St. Joseph,"&mdash;who was the
-patron saint of this pueblo.</p>
-
-<p>There is an amusing legend that Laguna, submerged in
-all manner of disasters, looked on the prosperity of Acoma<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
-and ascribed it wholly to the influence of this picture of
-the saint before which the people made their daily adorations
-and laid their votive offerings. Laguna believed
-that San José would invest it with the same felicities
-enjoyed by the neighboring city, could they only secure
-the portrait, and their urgent plea to borrow it for a time
-was granted by Acoma. Their confidence in the saint was
-justified; peace and plenty again smiled on Laguna, and
-they made their daily devotions before the great picture.
-At length, so runs the legend, Acoma reminded Laguna
-that a loan was not a gift,&mdash;to be held in perpetual fee,
-and demanded its return. The faithless people of Laguna
-declared it was their own,&mdash;and the case actually went
-into litigation and was tried in Court. Judge Kirby Benedict,
-after hearing all the evidence, decided in favor of
-Acoma, but the picture had mysteriously disappeared. The
-messengers sent from Acoma to bring the sacred treasure
-at last discovered it under a tree half-way between the two
-pueblos. They instantly recognized that the saint, rejoiced
-at the righteous decision, had started on his homeward
-journey of his own volition. The last one of the
-Franciscan friars to minister in New Mexico was Padre
-Mariano de Jesus Lopez, whose work was in Acoma, the
-"city in the sky." Of all the cliff-built cities, Acoma
-is the most marvellous. Its terraced dwellings seem, as
-Mr. Lummis so graphically says, to be "the castles of
-giants," for "the lapse of ages has carved the rocks into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
-battlements, buttresses, walls, columns, and towers, and
-the view from this cloud-swept city is one never to be
-forgotten. On this cliff the sand rises and falls like the
-billows of the sea."</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p186.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">LAGUNA, NEW MEXICO, ON THE SANTA FÉ RAILROAD</p>
-
-<p>No latter-day interest of contemporary life, either in
-the romantic scenery or the potential development of New
-Mexico, can exceed the richness of its prehistoric past
-and the marvels of this ancient civilization that yet remain.
-Alluding to these wonderful monumental remains, Colonel
-Max Frost, of Santa Fé, who knows his territory in every
-aspect of its life and its attractions, says:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"The Pajarito Cliff-dwellers' Park, the Chaco Cañon, the
-Gila Cañon, western Valencia and Socorro counties abound in
-cliff and communal buildings, the age of which has puzzled
-scientists, but which are older than any other ruins on the
-American continent, and probably in the world. The most
-accessible cliff-dwellers' region is the Pajarito Park, only one
-day's overland trip from Santa Fé or Española, in which
-twenty thousand cliff-dwellings and caves are situated within
-a comparatively small area. The scenery of this natural park
-is superb; 'wonderful' is the only adjective that will do
-justice to the caves in the cliffs, high and inaccessible almost
-as eagles' nests, but showing many other signs of occupation
-besides the peculiar picture writings in the soft volcanic tufa
-of which the cliffs are composed. In addition to the cliffs,
-there are remains of communal buildings of later occupation,
-some of them containing as high as twelve hundred rooms.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
-There are also burial mounds with remains of ancient pottery.
-Along the eastern foot of this steep plateau flows the Rio
-Grande and lie the villages of San Ildefonso, Santa Clara, and
-San Juan, while to the west rise the stupendous mountain
-masses of the Valles, the Cochiti and Jemez ranges, with their
-deep forests and cañons, their famous hot springs, their Indian
-villages, and their mines. Where else on earth is there so
-much of the beautiful in scenery, of romance, of historic
-monuments, of prehistoric remains, of the ancient, the unique,
-the picturesque, the sublime, to be found as within a radius
-of fifty miles of Santa Fé? One day's trip will take the
-wanderer from the historic Old Palace and San Miguel Church
-in the City of the Holy Faith, over the foothills of the Sangre
-de Cristo range, from which rise in full view mountain peaks
-almost thirteen thousand feet high, into the picturesque
-Tesuque Valley and by the ancient Indian pueblo of Tesuque.
-The road winds through sandhills that the air and the rain
-have cut into grotesque shapes, huge as Titans and weird as
-the rock formations in the Garden of the Gods. Then come
-once more fertile fields and the village of Cuymungue, formerly
-an Indian pueblo, now a native settlement. Along the
-Nambe River, with its grand falls, close by the Indian pueblo
-of Nambe to the pueblo of San Ildefonso on the Rio Grande;
-then along that river through the laughing Española Valley,
-past the Black Mesa, a famous Indian battleground, into the
-large Indian pueblo of Santa Clara and its mission church to
-Santa Cruz, also with a quaint and ancient church building,
-threads the wagon road across the river into Española. From<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
-there the road ascends the wildly beautiful Santa Clara
-Cañon, along a rippling trout stream up to the steep cliffs of
-the Puye and the Shufinne, with their hundreds and thousands
-of prehistoric caves and communal buildings. And all
-that in one day's journey overland! If the trip be prolonged
-another day or two, the remarkable hot springs at Ojo Caliente
-and the hot springs in the deep chasm of the Rio Grande at
-Wamsley's, the Indian pueblos of Picuris and Taos, the finest
-trout streams and best haunts of wild game, or the Jicarilla
-Indian Reservation, as well as busy lumber and mining camps,
-can be visited. And that is only in one direction from Santa
-Fé! Going south, one day's trip will pass through the quaint
-settlements of Agua Fria, Cienega, and Cieneguilla, by the
-Tiffany turquoise mines, the old mining camp of Bonanza, the
-smelter at Cerrillos, the Ortiz gold placers, worked a hundred
-years before gold was discovered in California and still
-yielding gold dust and nuggets, the coal mines at Madrid,
-where bituminous and anthracite coal have been mined from
-the same hillside, the placer and gold mines of Golden and
-San Pedro, not to speak of sheep and cattle ranches and the
-beautiful scenery of the Cerrillos, Ortiz, San Pedro, and
-Sandia mountains.</p>
-
-<p>"Another trip of one day from Santa Fé will take the traveller
-by the pueblo ruins of Arroyo Hondo over Apache hill,
-the battlegrounds of Apache Springs, the interesting native
-settlement of Cañoncito, over Glorieta Pass and the battlefield
-of Glorieta, to the upper Pecos River, by the ancient and
-historic Pecos church ruins, the village of Pecos, and through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
-the most beautiful summer-resort country in the Southwest,
-where trout streams babble in every cañon and where from
-one summit can be surveyed the hoary heads of eleven of the
-twelve highest peaks in New Mexico.</p>
-
-<p>"Another day's trip out of Santa Fé will take the visitor
-up the rugged Santa Fé Cañon, by the large reservoir and the
-Aztec mineral springs to the Scenic Highway, which crosses
-the Santa Fé range into the upper Pecos Valley and unfolds
-at every step new mountain views and panoramas magnificent
-beyond description. Nor do these trips exhaust the interesting
-points in and about Santa Fé. Almost every other town
-in the territory offers sights and scenes of equal interest to
-the tourist and sightseer.</p>
-
-<p>"The prehistoric ruin of the Chaco Cañon and Pueblo
-Bonito, in southeastern San Juan County, as well as those at
-Aztec, in the same county, are more fully excavated than
-those of the Pajarito Park, and in some respects are more
-palatial and more impressive. They can best be reached
-from Gallup or Thoreau on the Santa Fé Railway in McKinley
-County.</p>
-
-<p>"The prehistoric ruins on the Gila Forest Reserve, as well
-as those in western Valencia and Socorro counties, have not
-been thoroughly explored thus far, being distant from the
-highways of travel; but on this very account they should
-have a special charm and attraction for the student of
-archæology.</p>
-
-<p>"Coming to more recent, although still ancient days, the
-ruins of the Gran Quivira and of nearby abandoned pueblo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
-villages, between the Jumanes Mesa and the Mal Pais and
-Jornado del Muerto, are of great historic interest. They are
-best reached from the station of Willard at the junction of
-the Santa Fé Central and Eastern Railway of New Mexico.
-Similar ruins are found in western Valencia, Socorro, and
-other counties, and divide the interest of the tourist with the
-many present-day Indian pueblos and Spanish settlements
-boasting of considerable antiquity. The Zuñi, Navaho,
-Jicarilla, and Mescalero Indian reservations are well worthy
-a visit, and upon the first two named are many prehistoric
-ruins.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p191a.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">CLIFF DWELLER RUINS, NEAR SANTA FÉ, NEW MEXICO</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p191b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">STONE TENT, CLIFF DWELLERS, NEW MEXICO</p>
-
-<p>"Foremost in interest and value in historic archæology
-are the old mission churches of the Franciscans. In every
-occupied Indian pueblo and at the site of almost every
-abandoned pueblo, there is one of the monuments of those
-pioneers of Christianity and civilization, the Franciscan
-Fathers. Many of these are in a good state of preservation,
-while others are in ruins, but every one is an object of
-historic interest.</p>
-
-<p>"The old mission church of San Diego, which is the oldest
-of the California missions, was founded in 1769. It is almost
-a total ruin; only the front remains in a good state of preservation.
-The side walls are still standing, but no portions of
-the roof or interior remain. This is the most venerable and
-venerated historic monument in the state of California, and
-is annually visited by thousands of tourists. It has stood for
-one hundred and sixty-four years. It marks the beginning
-of civilization and Christianity in California. And yet, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
-New Mexico, on the upper Pecos, thirty-five miles west of
-Las Vegas, at the site of the abandoned Pueblo of Cicuye, are
-the ruins of the old Pecos church. The church is
-three hundred years old. It was nearly one hundred and
-fifty years old when the San Diego mission was founded. It
-was projected before the Spanish Armada was destroyed and
-antedates the coming of the Mayflower and the settlement
-of Jamestown. All that is said of the old Pecos church may
-be said of that of Jemez. They were built at the same time.
-The one at Gran Quivira was founded in 1630, and is a fairly
-well-preserved ruin. The churches at San Ildefonso and Santa
-Clara are in a complete state of preservation. They are nine
-years older than the oldest of the California ruins. The old
-San Miguel mission in Santa Fé has been rebuilt. Its walls
-date from 1650, the roof from 1694, or possibly a few years
-later. From the old church at Algodones was taken a bell,
-cast in Spain in 1356, and at the Cathedral at Santa Fé and
-other churches are ancient relics and art treasures of old
-Spanish and Italian masters. These are only a few examples
-selected at random from the large number of ancient churches
-of equally great interest scattered over New Mexico. Inscription
-Rock, on the old road to Zuñi, and every one of the
-pueblos from Taos on the north to Isleta on the south, and
-from the Rio Grande pueblos in the central part to Zuñi in
-the west, are worthy of a visit, both for historic and present-day
-interest.</p>
-
-<p>"Nor is there any other building in this country to compare
-in historic interest with the Old Palace at Santa Fé,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
-which has been more to New Mexico than Faneuil Hall to
-Massachusetts or Liberty Hall to Pennsylvania, nor is there
-any other town in the United States which offers so much of
-interest to the tourist as the city of St. Francis d'Assisi."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>It is no exaggeration to say that in many respects the
-archæological interest of New Mexico, its atmosphere,
-its historic color, is as distinctive as that of Egypt or of
-Greece, Italy, or Spain. When, on December 15, 1905,
-the first long-distance telephone in Santa Fé established
-communication <i>viva voce</i> with Denver, while within a
-radius of fifty miles, ruins of prehistoric civilization
-fascinated the tourist,&mdash;surely the remote past and the
-latest developments of the present met and mingled after
-the fashion of "blue spirits and gray." Very curiously
-mixed is the civilization of New Mexico. It can almost
-be said to lie in strata, like geologic testimony. The
-ancient peoples whose very name is lost,&mdash;shrouded in
-antiquity that has closed the chapters and refuses to turn
-the pages for the twentieth-century reader; the Indian
-population; the Spanish, whose explorers&mdash;Alvar Nuñez,
-Cabeza de Vaca, Coronado, Juan de Oñate, and others&mdash;and
-whose missionaries, from the ranks of the Franciscan
-friars, brought to the savage land the first message
-of modern civilization; and the American, which within
-almost the past half-century has established itself since
-that August day of 1846 when General Kearny floated
-the stars and stripes from the "Old Palace" in Santa Fé.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
-The American civilization and high enlightenment has
-poured itself into this "Land of the Sun King,"&mdash;the
-"Land of the Turquoise Sky." For now, as Colonel Frost
-has so ably and comprehensively noted, "New Mexico is
-strictly up to date in its government, in its hotels, its railroad
-accommodations, in the protection the law affords,
-in its universities, colleges, public schools, sanitariums,
-charitable institutions, its progress, and in its prosperity.
-Churches are found in every settlement, newspapers in
-every town, together with fine stores, banking institutions,
-and every safety, comfort, and luxury that the
-centres of civilization of the East afford." If that vivid
-and inspiring group of the Muses,&mdash;the muse of History,
-of Science, of Philosophy, and others,&mdash;painted by
-Puvis de Chavannes to adorn the court of the grand stairway
-of rich Siena marble in the Public Library of
-Boston,&mdash;an achievement in modern art that alone
-would immortalize the great painter of France,&mdash;if
-these Muses could visit New Mexico, the specialty of each
-would be found. The richly historic past that has left
-its various records; the present, that has impressed into
-its service every power of science, of engineering, of
-architectural construction, of agriculture, and of social
-progress, would furnish to each a vast field in its own
-especial domain.</p>
-
-<p>A work published in Paris somewhere about the middle
-of the nineteenth century, entitled "<i>Memoires Historiques</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
-<i>sur La Louisiane</i>,"&mdash;a book that has never been translated,&mdash;gives
-an account of a French expedition in New
-Mexico in search of a mine of emeralds and their encounter
-with the Spanish forces; but although in this engagement
-the Spanish troops suffered disaster, the Spanish
-civilization still continues, while there is little permanent
-trace of the French in New Mexico. It is a curious
-fact, however, that the present continues this varied and
-strangely assorted grouping of races which characterized
-the country in its earliest days.</p>
-
-<p>New Mexico reminds one of Algiers. There is the same
-Oriental suggestion of intense coloring, of dazzling brilliancy
-of sky, of gleaming pearl, of floating clouds.</p>
-
-<p>There is one feature of this trans-Continental trip
-which is of the first importance to the tourist, and this is
-the line of artistic and beautiful hotels built after the old
-mission design, the architecture felicitously harmonizing
-with the landscape,&mdash;those Harvey hotels built in connection
-with the Santa Fé stations at principal points, as
-at Trinidad, Las Vegas, Albuquerque, and others, all christened
-with Spanish names,&mdash;the "Cardenas," the "Castañeda,"
-the "Alvarado,"&mdash;all of which are conducted
-with a perfection of cuisine and service that is rarely
-equalled. The social and the picturesque charm of the
-long journey is singularly enhanced by the leisurely stops
-made for refreshment; the leaving the long train&mdash;with
-its two engines, one at either end&mdash;for the little exercise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
-in fresh air gained by going into the dining-rooms;
-being able to procure papers at the news stands, fruit, or
-other delicacies, and enjoying the scenery and gaining some
-knowledge of the place. In connection with the Alvarado,
-at Albuquerque, are two buildings: one that offers
-a most interesting museum of Indian archæological and
-ethnological collections, and the other showing native
-goods from Africa and the Pacific islands. Salesrooms
-connected with these enable the traveller to purchase any
-souvenir from a trifle, to the costly baskets, richly colored
-Navajo blankets, the strange symbolic pottery, or the
-objects of religious rites.</p>
-
-<p>A day's delay at Albuquerque enables the traveller to
-visit four interesting pueblos,&mdash;Santa Ana, Sandia, Zia,
-and Jemez,&mdash;in a day's stage ride between Jemez and
-Albuquerque. At all these important stations on the
-route the Santa Fé has established free reading-rooms for
-its employés, fitted up with every comfort.</p>
-
-<p>New Mexico, while partaking in the general fascination
-that invests all the great Southwest, is especially
-not only a land of enchantment, but a land of opportunities.
-It is a country of untold latent wealth, of uncalculated
-resources. There are vast tracts of soil that
-are ready for the cultivation they will so bountifully
-repay; there are over three hundred mining districts,
-few of which are developed. Six million sheep are grazing
-upon its thousand hills, which would furnish raw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
-material for a large number of woollen mills. The land
-is favorable for the culture of the sugar beet, and manufactories
-for this product are needed. A local authority
-states that "the rubber plant is indigenous and mineral
-products are of such extent and variety that industries
-that need them for raw material, or incidentally in the
-process of manufacture, will find in this part of the
-United States a location much more favorable than most
-of the Eastern manufacturing centres. There exist large
-deposits of iron ore, fluxing material and fuel for furnaces,
-steel mills and smelters, and there are but few branches of
-manufacture which could not be established with profit
-in this part of the Southwest. Besides the raw material
-there are offered the water-power, the fuel, the cheap
-labor, special inducements, such as exemption from taxation
-for the first five years and a low assessment thereafter,
-favorable legislation, cheap building sites, railroad
-facilities, freedom from excessive competition, the increasing
-home demand of a growing commonwealth of vast
-resources, and proximity to the markets of Mexico and
-the Orient....</p>
-
-<p>"Farmers are urged to come to till the fertile soil
-under the most favorable conditions, and with home
-markets that pay better prices than can be obtained anywhere
-else. Only a quarter of a million of acres are under
-cultivation, and most of these only in forage plants or in
-products that demand little attention; four times that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
-area is immediately available for agricultural purposes.
-Not one-half of the flowing water is utilized, and not
-one-fiftieth of the flood water is stored. There are undeveloped
-possibilities of farming by the Campbell or dry-soil
-method. New Mexico raises the finest fruit in the
-world, and every other crop that can be produced anywhere
-in the temperate zone. Yet it imports annually
-millions of dollars' worth of flour, alfalfa, hay, potatoes,
-fruit, garden produce, poultry, eggs, butter, cheese, honey,
-beef, pork, and other products of the farm and dairy that
-it can and should raise at home. Free lands, the finest
-climate in the world, irrigation, churches, schools, railroad
-facilities, home markets, good prices, and extensive
-range, are all factors which help to make the life of the
-farmer and stock grower in New Mexico pleasant and
-prosperous."</p>
-
-<p>The visitor from the East enters New Mexico through
-a long tunnel; and in Raton, a prosperous city of some
-eight thousand people located in the Raton Mountains,
-is found the centre of an enormous coal belt, and also a
-promising oil field. Raton is called the "Gate City." It
-exports ice of a very pure quality, the water being from
-a reservoir of a capacity of over fifty million gallons. The
-streets of Raton are graded and have electric lighting;
-there is a fine park, long-distance telephonic connection
-with Colorado and New Mexican cities, and its schools
-and churches are numerous. A new Raton tunnel is now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
-in process of construction by the Santa Fé line that will
-enter New Mexico through the mountains at a lower
-point. The work is being done by electric drills that
-offer a most interesting spectacle in their process. The
-tunnel will cost a million dollars. Most beautiful is the
-landscape and the coloring of air and sky between Raton
-and Las Vegas. The Cimarron range is silhouetted against
-the western sky; picturesque points on the old Santa Fé
-trail are seen; and Mora Cañon, through which the journey
-lies, has its romantic attractions. From the lofty
-plateau of Raton's Peak the deep, dark valley of Rio Las
-Animas Perdidas is disclosed; the matchless Spanish
-Peaks, "Las Cumbres Españolas," lift their heads into
-the blue sky; Pike's Peak gleams like a monumental
-shaft in the clouds, and the Snowy Range, for more than
-two hundred miles, is within the luminous landscape.</p>
-
-<p>Las Vegas, the second city in importance in New Mexico,
-is a fascinating place. There are really three towns of
-Las Vegas&mdash;the old Spanish town, still retaining its ancient
-convent and missions; the new, up-to-date Las
-Vegas, with its Castañeda Hotel&mdash;beautiful in the old
-Moorish architecture, with spacious piazzas and balconies;
-and Las Vegas Hot Springs, connected by trolley cars.
-Thus there is the particular paradise of the invalid, or of
-those who take prevention rather than cure and a sunny
-winter in order not to be invalids; for at Las Vegas Hot
-Springs, to which a branch railroad of this omnipresent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
-Santa Fé conveys the traveller&mdash;only six miles&mdash;the
-Hot Springs boil and bubble like the witches' caldron.
-Here the guests may immerse themselves in boiling
-mineral water, or lie all day in the sunshine, or whatever
-else they prefer; and the medicinal waters, internally
-and externally administered, are said to make one over
-altogether. Rheumatic and tubercular affections flee, it
-is said, before this treatment and the wonderful air;
-and apparently if Ponce de Leon had only chanced upon
-Las Vegas he would not have searched in vain for his
-fabled fountain.</p>
-
-<p>Albuquerque is an exceedingly "smart" town. Its
-residents are almost entirely Eastern capitalists, who are
-living here that they may keep an eye on their possessions,
-mines, ranches, and the things of this world in
-general. However largely they have laid up their treasures
-in heaven, they have a goodly amount also on earth,
-over which they perhaps keep closer watch and ward than
-over their more immaterial possessions. At all events,
-Albuquerque is a sort of Newport of the West, where
-people drive and dance and dine from one week to another,
-and the women are so stylish as to suggest some
-occult affinities with the Rue de la Paix.</p>
-
-<p>In this brilliant and thoroughly up-to-date young city
-of Albuquerque, the metropolis of New Mexico; in
-Las Vegas, one of the fascinating towns of the continent;
-in Raton and Gallup, and in its capital, Santa Fé,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
-the territory has a galaxy of exceedingly interesting
-towns.</p>
-
-<p>Albuquerque is the trade centre of a region exceeding
-in area all New England. With a population estimated
-at some eighteen thousand; the seat of the University of
-New Mexico, whose buildings occupy a plateau two hundred
-feet above the town, commanding a beautiful view;
-with a scenic background of the Sandia and the Jemez
-mountains; with the most extensive free Public Library
-in the territory; two daily journals and a number of
-weekly papers in both Spanish and English, and several
-monthly publications; with its splendid railway facilities
-both to the North and the South, as well as on the great
-trans-continental line from the East to the Pacific; with
-the shops of the Santa Fé road employing over seven
-hundred men, as the junction point of three lines of this
-superb system; and with the beautiful Alvarado hotel,
-in the old Spanish mission architecture, from whose wide
-piazzas the view comprises a host of mountain peaks
-piercing the turquoise sky, and whose beauty and comfort
-is a masterpiece of the magician of the Land of Enchantment;
-with the Musée of Indian relics and souvenirs of
-the Moki, the Navajo, the Zuñi, Pima, and Apache; the
-fine Mexican filigree work; the model of an Indian
-pueblo, and other curios,&mdash;with all these and many
-other interesting aspects, Albuquerque fascinates the
-tourist. In the "Commercial Club" it has a unique<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
-institution representing the combination of business and
-social life. The broad streets are well lighted by electricity;
-there is electric transit and a fine water system.
-Albuquerque has also extensive manufacturing interests,
-in foundry, lumber, and other directions, which aggregate
-an investment of over two millions of capital with an
-annual productive value of more than four millions.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to Las Vegas; with its ten thousand inhabitants,
-its large floating population drawn by the medicinal
-hot springs, and the seat of the territorial Normal School.
-As a noted wool centre, and with its daily papers, good
-schools, and many churches, it is another alluring point.
-One feature of important interest is the new "Scenic Highway"
-that is in process of completion between Las Vegas and
-Santa Fé, across the Pecos Forest Reserve, which will offer
-some of the grandest views in any of the mountain regions
-of the West. It will be to Santa Fé and Las Vegas what
-the beautiful drive between Naples, Sorrento, and Amalfi
-is to Southern Italy. This scenic road will wind up to the
-Dalton Divide, nine thousand five hundred feet high,
-where Lake Peak, glittering with snow, Santa Fé Cañon,
-and other peaks and precipices and cañons, are all about,
-and the Pecos River is seen far below as a thread of silver.
-This drive will be one of the famous features of the entire
-West when completed. New Mexico monopolizes the
-greatest belt of coal deposits west of the Missouri, while
-Arizona has the monopoly in pine forests.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>The reclamation work in the southern part of the
-Rio Grande Valley is now in successful process, and near
-Engle a reservoir forty miles in length will be established,
-having a capacity of two million acre-feet. It is estimated
-that a hundred and ten thousand acres of land
-will thus be put under irrigated agriculture which will
-yield marvellous returns in alfalfa, cereals, vegetables,
-and fruits.</p>
-
-<p>The government has also purchased the system of the
-Pecos Irrigation Company, which is now transferred to
-the Reclamation Service of the United States. This is
-the largest irrigation scheme in New Mexico. It is located
-on the Pecos River, which is fed from springs many
-of which gush forth from the earth with such force as to
-indicate that their source must be in high, snow-crowned
-hills.</p>
-
-<p>New Mexico's railroad facilities may be estimated from
-the fact that not a county in the territory is without a
-railroad, while many have the benefit of three lines. With
-twenty-five hundred miles of railroads within the territorial
-limits already in operation, it is confidently expected
-that this number will be increased to four thousand miles
-within two years, as much of this anticipated increase is
-already under construction. Of the present railways eleven
-hundred miles belong to the Santa Fé system alone. The
-matchless scenery of the Denver and Rio Grande route
-between Ontonito and Santa Fé offers the tourist one of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
-the most enjoyable of trips through Española, Caliente,
-and other points of beauty with the mountain peaks of
-San Antonio, Taos, Ute, and others within the horizon,
-often appearing like islands swimming in a faint blue
-haze.</p>
-
-<p>There is space and to spare in New Mexico. There
-are almost unlimited possibilities, with much to get
-and as much to give, and the latter is by no means less
-important in life than the former. Out of a total area of
-over seventy-eight million acres only about a quarter of a
-million are under irrigation agriculture, and the field for
-reclamation is as unlimited as it is promising. The land
-is fertile and the productions are abundant. The sky is a
-dream of color and of luminous beauty, and the climate is
-one of the most delightful in the entire world. Nor does
-New Mexico suffer from that which is the greatest deprivation
-of Arizona,&mdash;the lack of water. There is an abundance
-of the mountain flood waters that now go to waste
-which would store vast reservoirs; there is the flow of
-copious streams and large river systems, and there are
-artesian belts of water all ready for mechanical appliances.
-The Campbell dry culture, which is increasingly in use in
-the eastern part of Colorado, has been successfully introduced
-into New Mexico. Fruit-growing is already becoming
-an important industry, and the apple orchard, of all
-other varieties of horticulture, is the most successful. At
-the Paris Exposition in 1900 New Mexico made an exhibit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
-of apples, and also at Buffalo in 1901, receiving from
-the former the award to rank with those of the best
-apple-growing regions in any part of the United States,
-and from the latter the first prize. Peaches, pears,
-and apricots grow well; the cherry does not thrive in
-New Mexico, but grapes are grown with conspicuous
-success.</p>
-
-<p>The mineral resources of New Mexico are varied, and
-include gold, silver, copper, lead, and other minerals. In
-precious stones there is promise of untold development.
-The Tiffanys own large turquoise mines, whose supply,
-thus far, has proved inexhaustible; and the opal and the
-moonstone are found in many places. But it is as an
-agricultural commonwealth, and as the repository of vast
-coal belts, that New Mexico is chiefly distinguished.</p>
-
-<p>It was early in February, 1880, that the first train
-over the Santa Fé railroad entered the territorial capital
-and initiated its transformation from the mediæval Spanish
-town to that which is, in part, the theatre of the
-progressive American life. In Santa Fé one of the landmarks
-pointed out to-day to the visitor is the old Santa
-Fé Trail, whose story was told so vividly, some years ago,
-by Colonel Henry Inman,<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> who has described the majestic
-solitude of this highway and has narrated the mingled experiences
-of the early pioneers and the soldiers who thus
-marched<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span> through the wilderness. History and romance
-mingle in the wonderful past of New Mexico, and it needs
-no sibyl of old to proclaim from the <i>Mesa Encantada</i>
-the promise of the future to this beautiful Land of the
-Turquoise Sky.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="center"><strong>THE STORY OF SANTA FÉ</strong></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"<i>From scheme and creed the light goes out,</i></div>
-<div class="indent1"><i>The saintly fact survives,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>The Blessed Master none can doubt</i></div>
-<div class="indent1"><i>Revealed in holy lives.</i>"</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"<i>Oh, more than sacred relic, more</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Than solemn rite or sacred lore,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>The holy life of one who trod</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>The footmarks of the Christ of God.</i>"</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the place once occupied by those whose lives were consecrated
-to the divine ideal, some influence, as potent as it
-is unseen, binds the soul to maintain the honor that they
-left; to hold the same noble standard of life. The spell
-is felt even while it eludes analysis. Few to-day can tread
-the narrow, primitive little streets of old Santa Fé without
-some consciousness of this mystic influence. It was here,
-in the centuries gone from all save memory, that</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="indent5">"there trod</div>
-<div class="verse">The whitest of the saints of God,"</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>and "The True City of the Holy Faith of Saint Francis"
-(<i>La Ciudad Real de la Santa Fé de San Francisco</i>) is
-forever consecrated by the memory of these holy men, and
-vital with the tragic interest, the heroic and pathetic story<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
-of their lives. As early as 1539 Friar Marcos de Nizza
-and other Fathers of the Church pressed on into this
-country&mdash;then an unknown wilderness&mdash;to extend the
-domain of the Holy Cross and carry onward "the true
-faith of St. Francis." They encountered every hardship
-possible to a savage land; sacrifice and martyrdom were
-their reward. They left a land of learning and refinement
-to carry the light into regions of barbarism. They gave
-their lives to teaching and prayer, and they sowed without
-reaping their harvest. Yet who shall dare think of their
-brilliant, consecrated lives as wasted? for the lesson they
-taught of absolute faith in God is the most important in
-life. Faith provides the atmosphere through which alone
-the divine aid can be manifested, and the divine aid is
-sent through and by means of our friends and helpers and
-counsellors in the unseen world. It is man's business, his
-chief business, now and here, to co-operate with God in
-the carrying out of His plans and purposes. It was this
-literal and practical faith in divine aid that the Franciscan
-Fathers taught in the wilderness through all hardship and
-disaster.</p>
-
-<p class="center">"Say not the struggle naught availeth."</p>
-
-<p>It must always avail.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"Yet do thy work; it shall succeed</div>
-<div class="indent1">In thine or in another's day,</div>
-<div class="verse">And if denied the victor's meed</div>
-<div class="indent1">Thou shalt not lack the toiler's pay."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>This Spanish mission work planted itself over the entire
-vast region which is now known as New Mexico, Arizona,
-and Southern California. The friars set out on long,
-lonely journeys, wholly without ways and means to reach a
-given destination save as they were guided by unseen
-hands and companioned by unseen guides. The cloud by
-day and the pillar of fire by night led them on. They
-went forth to meet desolation and sacrifice and often martyrdom;
-yet their gentle zeal and cheerful courage never
-failed. They traversed hundreds of miles of desert wastes;
-they encountered the cruel treatment of the Apaches and
-the Navajos; but these experiences were simply to them
-the incidents of the hour, and had no relation to the ultimate
-issue of their work. In 1598 the first church was
-founded, by a band of ten missionaries who accompanied
-Juan de Oñate, the colonizer, and was called the chapel of
-San Gabriel de los Españoles, but it was deserted when, in
-1605, the city of Santa Fé was founded by Oñate, and in
-1630 the church of San Miguel was built. The original
-wall was partly destroyed in the rebellion of a half-century
-later, but it was restored in 1710, and the new cathedral
-was built on the site where the present one now stands.
-As early as 1617 there were eleven Spanish mission churches
-within the limits of what is now New Mexico,&mdash;at Pecos,
-Jemez, and Taos; at Santa Clara, San Felipe, and other
-places, mostly within the valley of the Rio Grande. In
-six of the historic "seven cities of Cibola," all Zuñi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
-towns, these missions were established; and in the ancient
-pueblo of San Antonio de Senecú, Antonio de Arteaga
-founded a church in 1629; in Picuries, in 1632, Friar
-Ascencion de Zárate established the mission, and in 1635
-one also in Isleta. In passing Glorieta, from the train
-windows, to-day, can be seen the ruins of the early
-mission church established there. Before the close of the
-seventeenth century the churches in Acoma, Alameda,
-Santa Cruz, Cuaray, and Tabirá had been founded, the
-ruins of all of which are still standing. These Franciscan
-Fathers penetrated the desert and made their habitations
-in solitary wastes so desolate that no colonizers
-would follow; but to the Indians they preached and
-taught them the elements of civilized life.</p>
-
-<p>"Not the wildest conceptions of the mission founders
-could have foreseen the results of their California enterprises,"
-says Professor George Wharton James in his interesting
-work on these old missions.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> "To see the land
-they found in the possession of thousands of savages converted
-in one short century, to the home of tens of thousands
-of happy, contented people, would have been a
-wild vision indeed. God surely does work mysteriously,
-marvellously, His wonders to perform."</p>
-
-<p>Santa Fé is the centre of the archdiocese whose other
-diocesean cities are Denver and Tucson. The archbishop,
-the Most Reverend J. B. Salpointe, D.D., whose presence
-exalts the city of his residence, is one who follows reverently
-in the footsteps of Him whose kingdom on earth
-the early Franciscans labored to establish.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>In 1708 San Miguel was restored by Governor José
-Chacon Medina Salazar y Villaseñor, Marqués de Peñuela,
-and two years later these restorations were completed. An
-inscription that can be traced to-day on the gallery bears
-this legend:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>El Señor Marqués de la Peñuela Hizo Esta Fábrica: El
-Alférez real Don Augustin Flores Vergara su criado. Año
-de 1710.</p></blockquote>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p211.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">SAN MIGUEL CHURCH, SANTA FÉ</p>
-
-<p>Not only is this "City of the Holy Faith" consecrated
-by that sacrificial devotion of the Franciscan Fathers; the
-heroic explorers and pioneers, the brave and dauntless
-soldiers, from the time of Cabeza de Vaca and Coronado to
-that of the gallant and noble General Kearny, have left
-on Santa Fé the impress of their brave purpose and high
-endeavor. The old Cathedral of San Francisco, the ancient
-church of San Miguel, and the Rosario Chapel, all interest
-the stranger. In 1692 Diego de Vargas marched up from
-the south with two hundred men and looked sadly at the
-little town of Santa Fé, from which his countrymen had
-been driven. It would seem that de Vargas was a romantic
-figure of his time. He was evidently endowed with
-the characteristic vehemence of temperament, intense
-energy, and the genius for effective action that marked
-the Spanish pioneers. He was rich in resources and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
-manifested a power of swift decision regarding all the
-perplexities into which his adventurous life led, ever
-beckoning him on. The little town he had entered appealed
-to him in its impressive beauty. Surrounded with
-majestic mountains, with their deep and mysterious cañons,
-it was then, as now, a region of entrancing sublimity.</p>
-
-<p>Adjoining San Miguel is the old house where Coronado
-is said to have lodged in 1540. The "Old Palace," always
-used by the Governors of New Mexico, is partly given over
-to a museum of Indian and Mexican curiosities. There
-is a little library, open only every other afternoon; there
-are many mountain peaks around, which are not difficult
-to climb, and which offer charming views. The new
-State House is a fine modern building, and Governor
-Hagerman, formerly an attaché of the American Embassy
-at St. Petersburg, is alert and progressive in his methods.</p>
-
-<p>More than half the residents of Santa Fé speak no English,
-and these Spanish and Mexican residents have their
-papers in their own language, their separate schools, and
-their worship in the old Cathedral. In the early afternoon
-women in black, with black mantillas over their heads, are
-seen passing up San Francisco Street and entering the Cathedral,
-where they fall on their knees and tell their beads
-in the silent church. Often one may see in the streets a
-funeral procession. The casket is carried in a cart, and
-the family sit around it, on the bottom of the wagon.
-A few friends follow on foot, and thus the pathetic and
-grotesque little procession winds on its way.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>The history lying in the dim background of this ancient
-Spanish city is one that impresses the imagination. It is
-a part of all that wonderful early exploration by the
-Spanish pioneers of the vast region of country that is now
-known as Arizona and New Mexico.</p>
-
-<p>In 1538 Cabeza de Vaca, after following the disastrous
-expedition of Pánfilo de Narvaez to Florida, set forth
-with four men to penetrate the vast unknown wastes to
-the west, and without compass or provisions they made
-their way, crossing the Mississippi two years before its discovery
-by De Soto, reached the Moqui country, and finally
-arrived in Sinolao with glowing tales that excited the enterprise
-of the Spanish conquerors and led to the founding
-of another expedition authorized by the viceroy, Mendoza.
-It fared forth under the leadership of Padre Marcos de
-Nizza, who (in 1539) entered the country of the Pimas,
-passed up the valley of the Santa Ana, and set up the
-cross, giving the country the name of the New Kingdom
-of San Francisco.</p>
-
-<p>Padre de Nizza's men were all massacred by the Moquis,
-but he returned, as if bearing a charmed life, and set all
-New Spain aflame with his tales of gold and of glory, and
-the great opportunity to extend the work of the Holy
-Cross.</p>
-
-<p>Mendoza then proceeded to organize two other expeditions,
-one under the intrepid Vasquez de Coronado and the
-other under Fernando Alarçon. Coronado visited the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
-ruins of Casa Grande and at last reached the "Seven
-Cities," but their fabled wealth had shrunk to the sordid
-actualities of insignificant huts, and Coronado returned
-to New Spain in 1542, disappointed and dejected.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime the expedition of Alarçon had sailed
-up the Gulf of California (then known as the Sea of Cortez),
-and he discovered the Colorado and the Gila rivers,
-ascending the Colorado in boats up to the foot of the Grand
-Cañon. Then for nearly half a century no further efforts
-to explore this region were made. But it is interesting to
-note that some eighty years before the landing of the Pilgrims
-a Spanish expedition had penetrated into the country
-which is now Arizona, and have left definite record of
-their discoveries.</p>
-
-<p>In 1582 Antonio de Espejio explored the pueblos of
-the Zuñi and Moqui tribes, visiting seventy-four in all,
-and discovering a mountain rich in silver ore. From this
-time New Mexico was under the rule of the Spanish
-conquerors.</p>
-
-<p>Juan de Oñate, who married Isabel, a daughter of Cortez
-and a great-granddaughter of Montezuma, assumed
-the leadership, and about 1605 the town of Santa Fé
-was founded, and within the succeeding decade the Mission
-Fathers had built a dozen churches and their converts
-composed over fourteen thousand. A prominent padre in
-this movement was Eusebio Francisco Kino.</p>
-
-<p>Santa Fé has the distinction of being the oldest town in
-the United States, having been established fifteen years
-before the landing of the Pilgrims.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>The mission church of San Xavier del Bac was established
-at so early a date that it was in ruins in 1768, and
-on its site was built the present one, in the valley of Santa
-Cruz, some ten miles south of Tucson. This mission is a
-rare mingling of Ionic and Byzantine architecture, with
-a dome, two minarets, and castellated exterior. The front
-bears the coat-of-arms of the Franciscan monks&mdash;a cross
-with a coil of rope and two arms below&mdash;one of Cohant
-and the other of St. Francis d'Assisi. There are four
-fresco paintings, and there are more than fifty pieces of
-sculpture around the high altar.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p215a.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">"WATCH TOWER." CLIFF DWELLERS, NEW MEXICO</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p215b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">CLIFF DWELLERS. WITHIN TWENTY-FIVE MILES OF
-SANTA FÉ, NEW MEXICO</p>
-
-<p>The missions of Guevara, Zumacacori, and San Xavier
-were peculiarly fruitful in good results. The ruins of
-Zumacacori still cover a large space. The church is partially
-unroofed; the form is seen to have been that of a
-plain Greek cross with a basilica, and a roofless chapel is
-standing. The basilica is still crowned by the cross, and
-the vital influence of this sign and seal of faith in the
-Christ, this commemoration of the sacrificial zeal that animated
-the Mission Fathers is still felt by all who gaze upon
-this sacred emblem silhouetted against a blue sky.</p>
-
-<p>Santa Fé is, indeed, alive with the most profound and
-arresting interest. The work of the early Spanish missionary
-priests effected a great work among the Indians
-in creating conditions of peace and industry; for faith in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
-God, taught in any form, is not merely nor even mostly
-an attitude of spirit: it is the instinctive action of life.
-It permeates every motive inspiring it with power; it
-vitalizes every effort with creative energy. Faith in God
-may well be described as the highest possible form of potency.
-He who is receptive to the Divine Spirit moves
-onward like a ship whose sails are set to the favoring winds.
-He who is unreceptive to the Divine Spirit is like the ship
-before the wind with all her sails furled. "The merit of
-power for moral victory on the earth," said Phillips Brooks,
-"is not man and is not God. It is God and man, not
-two, but one, not meeting accidentally, not running together
-in emergencies only to separate again when the
-emergency is over; it is God and man belonging essentially
-together,&mdash;God filling man, man opening his life by faith
-to be a part of God's, as the gulf opens itself and is part
-of the great ocean."</p>
-
-<p>The unfaltering devotion of the Franciscan Fathers to
-the work of bringing civilization and Christianity to these
-Indian pueblos and their martyrdom in their efforts to establish
-"the true faith of St. Francis" invests Santa Fé
-with an atmosphere of holy tradition.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"All souls that struggle and aspire,</div>
-<div class="indent1">All hearts of prayer by Thee are lit;</div>
-<div class="verse">And, dim or clear, Thy tongues of fire</div>
-<div class="indent1">On dusky tribes and twilight centuries sit."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>These early Church Fathers taught a pure and high
-order of faith in the most practical way. They acquired<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
-the Indian language in sufficient measure to speak to the
-tribes. They taught them the rudiments of arithmetic,
-history, and geography&mdash;in the imperfect way then known;
-but they gave their best. They inculcated industry and
-honesty. Their faith is largely told in the poet's words,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"That to be saved is only this:</div>
-<div class="verse">Salvation from our selfishness."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The missions through all the Southwest were peculiarly
-fruitful in good results. The ruins of many still exist,
-revealing them to have usually been in the general design
-of a nave and basilica crowned by the cross&mdash;this sign
-and seal of faith in the Christ.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"O Love Divine! whose constant beam</div>
-<div class="indent1">Shines on the eyes that will not see,</div>
-<div class="verse">And waits to bless us; while we dream</div>
-<div class="indent1">Thou leavest, because we turn from Thee!</div>
-<div class="verse"><hr class="tb" /></div>
-<div class="verse">"Nor bounds, nor clime, nor creed thou know'st;</div>
-<div class="indent1">Wide as our need Thy favors fall;</div>
-<div class="verse">The white wings of the Holy Ghost,</div>
-<div class="indent1">Brood, seen or unseen, o'er the heads of all."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Three Spanish documents still exist in the territorial
-records of New Mexico dated 1693-1694, which give a full
-account of the Spanish conquest; of the re-conquest by
-the Indians, and the final conquest again by the Spaniards.
-There is ample evidence that a city existed on the present
-site of Santa Fé four hundred years before the settlement
-at St. Augustine. The final Spanish conquest took place<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
-in 1692, but all the records prior to 1680 were unfortunately
-destroyed in the Pueblo Rebellion. New Mexico's
-historian, Hon. L. Bradford Prince, who has more than once
-served as Governor of the territory and who is one of the
-most distinguished men of the West, has finely said that
-the people of his territory, although threefold in origin
-and language (Spanish, Mexican, and American), are one
-in nationality, purpose, and destiny. In Governor Prince's
-history of New Mexico he notes its three determining
-epochs,&mdash;the Pueblo, the Spanish, and the American,&mdash;and
-he refers to it as "an isolated, unique civilization in
-the midst of encircling deserts and nomadic tribes."</p>
-
-<p>On August 18, 1846, General Stephen W. Kearny took
-possession of the capital of New Mexico in the name of
-the United States; and on that date, for the first time,
-the national colors floated from the Old Palace and the
-acting Spanish Governor, Don Juan Baptista Vigil y
-Alvarid resigned his authority.</p>
-
-<p>On the historic plaza where now a memorial to this
-brave officer stands, placed there by the "Daughters of
-the Revolution," General Kearny proclaimed the peaceful
-annexation of the territory of the United States.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"We come as friends to make you a part of the representative
-government," he said. "In our government all men
-are equal. Every man has a right to serve God according to
-his conscience and his heart."</p></blockquote>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>General Kearny assured the people of the protection
-of every civil and religious right, and this forcible and
-noble speech&mdash;so characteristically representing the generous
-and noble spirit of one of the ablest among the leaders
-and the heroes of the nineteenth century&mdash;made a
-profound impression on the minds of all who listened to
-the words. When on August 18 of 1946 New Mexico
-shall celebrate her centenary of union with the United
-States, this memorable address of General Kearny's should
-be read to the assembled populace. Not even Lincoln's
-noble speech at Gettysburg exceeds in simple eloquence
-and magnanimity the lofty words of General Kearny.
-They were worthy to be spoken in "The City of the
-Holy Faith."</p>
-
-<p>It was thus that New Mexico entered the United States,
-<i>Esto Perpetua</i>. To-day, after a territorial novitiate of
-more than sixty years, she is ardently urging her claim
-for statehood.</p>
-
-<p>In old Santa Fé the past and the present meet. Governor
-Hagerman receives his guests in the same room in
-the Old Palace that was used by the first viceroy; and
-seventy-six Spanish and Mexican and eighteen American
-rulers have preceded him, among whom was General Lew.
-Wallace, who, while serving as territorial Governor, wrote
-his immortal "Ben Hur" in one room of the palace,
-which is still pointed out to the visitor. During this
-period Mrs. Wallace wrote many interesting articles on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
-the history, the life, and the resources of the territory, in
-which are embalmed valuable information delightfully
-recorded. Mrs. Prince, the wife of ex-Governor Prince,
-a lady distinguished throughout all the country for her
-gracious sweetness and refined dignity of manner, is much
-interested in the New Mexico Historical Association; and
-the ex-Governor and Mrs. Prince, His Honor, Mayor
-Cotrell, and Mrs. Cotrell, Colonel and Mrs. Max Frost,
-and others of the choice society of Santa Fé, are preserving
-the history of this territory "that has survived
-all those strange modulations by which a Spanish province
-has become a territory of the Union bordering
-on statehood." Santa Fé is the home of some of the
-ablest lawyers in the United States, and one private
-law library is said to be the largest legal library west of
-Chicago.</p>
-
-<p>The Old Palace has been identified with the times of
-the Inquisition; with the zealous work of Friar Marcos de
-Nizza, Friar Augustino Ruiz, and with Coronado and his
-band of warriors. On the Plaza, Juan de Oñate unfurled
-the banner of Spain; here de Vargas gave thanks for his
-victory, and here to-day is a simple monumental memorial
-of General Kearny placed there by the Daughters of the
-Revolution. The revered memory of Archbishop Lamy is
-closely associated with the place. In the Old Palace is a
-musée where a great array of unique curios is gathered;
-pictures of saints rudely painted on skins; crucifixes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
-rudely carved in wood or moulded in native silver; gods
-carved in stone, and primitive domestic utensils.</p>
-
-<p>There is a very charming and cultivated society in
-Santa Fé of the small circle of American residents,&mdash;a
-circle that is of late rapidly increasing. The country
-around is rich in gems,&mdash;the turquoise, opal, onyx, garnet,
-and bloodstone being found in liberal deposits; and in the
-town is a manufactory of Mexican filigree work that
-employs the natives only who are very skilful in this delicate
-art. The Plaza is a curiously fascinating place to
-saunter around, and the visitor finds himself loitering and
-lingering as he is wont to loiter and linger on the old
-Ponte Vecchio in Florence. The nomenclature of Santa
-Fé is sufficiently foreign to enable one to fancy himself
-in Andalusia, as such names as Padilla, Quintona, Lopez,
-Gutierrez, Vaca, and others recur.</p>
-
-<p>The Rosario Chapel, built by Señor Diego de Vargas,
-stands on a height overlooking Santa Fé a mile distant
-from the Plaza and the Old Palace. Near it is
-now located the Ramona School for the children of the
-Apaches. The legend of the founding of San Rosario is
-still on the air. When, in 1692, Señor de Vargas, marching
-from the south with his band of two hundred men, gazed
-upon the city from which, in 1680, his compatriots had
-been so tragically driven, he prostrated himself on the
-ground and implored in prayer the protection and aid of
-"Our Lady of the Rosary," and recorded his purpose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
-that, would she but lead him on to victory, he would
-build, on the very site where he was kneeling, a chapel to
-her name. Arising, he led his band on to assault, and
-after a tragic struggle of eleven hours' duration he was
-victorious. Did the "Lady of the Rosary" shield and
-strengthen him? Who shall venture to deny it?</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"More things are wrought by prayer</div>
-<div class="verse">Than this world dreams of."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>De Vargas had promised that, in case the victory was
-granted to him, he would have the statue of the Virgin
-carried from the cathedral to the Rosario Chapel, as
-already noted. To this day the custom is fulfilled; and
-each year, on the Sunday following <i>Corpus Christi</i>, this
-sacred drama is enacted, with sometimes two thousand
-people, drawn from all the country around, forming the
-procession. The statue is kept in the chapel a week, with
-solemn masses celebrated every morning, after which it is
-returned to the cathedral and the chapel is closed, not to
-be opened again until the octave of the Feast of <i>Corpus
-Christi</i> the next year.</p>
-
-<p>The "City of the Holy Faith" is very quiet in these
-days, and one finds little trace of the turbulent past when
-it was the storm centre of tragic wars and revolutions.
-The incessant warfare between the Spaniards and the
-Indians, the sublime courage and devotion of Bishop
-Lamy and other Fathers of the Church, constitute a wonderful
-chapter in the history of our country.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>Santa Fé antedates the landing of the Pilgrims by more
-than twenty years. Its history is an unbroken record of
-thrilling and romantic events, from its capture by the
-Pueblos in 1680; the terrible massacre of the Mission
-Fathers, and the flight of the Governor to El Paso; its
-conquest again by de Vargas in 1692; the change from
-Spanish to Mexican rule; then the splendid entrance of
-General Kearny and his troops (in the summer of 1846)
-in the name of the United States, down to the scenes and
-the incidents of the old Santa Fé Trail and thence to the
-present day, when three railroads have brought the city
-into close touch with the modern life of which it still
-refuses to become a part. Still, Santa Fé has nine mails a
-day, a free-delivery postal system, electric lights, and local
-and long-distance telephonic connection. The Capitol,
-where Governor Hagerman presides over the councils of
-state, is a fine modern building with a beautiful view from
-the dome. There is a new Federal Building of stone in
-classic design, in front of which is placed a monument to
-Kit Carson. St. Michael's College, the residence of the
-Archbishop, and the Government Indian School attract
-the eye. But it is the old Santa Fé of haunting historic
-memories that one dreams of in the narrow streets, or in
-looking down on the town from a mountain-side. The
-quaint little Plaza dreams in the sunshine, which lingers,
-as if with a <i>Benedicite</i>, on the Kearny memorial, while
-through the unshuttered and uncurtained windows of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
-Old Palace, forming one side of the Plaza, the antique
-débris may be dimly seen. Should the ghost of any
-of the old Spanish warriors peer forth, the apparition
-would hardly produce a ripple of surprise. The long
-colonnade may be the favorite promenade of phantoms
-for aught one knows,&mdash;phantoms, that come and go,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center">"With feet that make no sound upon the floor."</p>
-
-<p>The twentieth-century sunshine lights up the dusky
-corners wherein are stored the relics of the Spanish
-conquerors and the followers of St. Francis. Perchance
-Francis d'Assisi himself, "revisiting the glimpses of the
-moon," glides along the shadows, drawn to the spot where,
-at so fearful a cost of life and treasure, his "holy faith" was
-guarded; or it may be the warrior in his armor who
-for an instant is dimly discerned through the dust-covered
-windows. Coronado, too, may haunt this scene.
-Many are those in the historic ranks who have contributed
-to the making of Santa Fé. It is the most composite
-city in American history. The very air is vocal with
-tradition and legend.</p>
-
-<p>The little shops around the Plaza bear their signs
-mostly in Spanish. Yet mingling with these is the office
-of Mr. Lutz of the Santa Fé transcontinental line, with
-which the New Mexican capital is connected by a branch
-to Lamy, on the main line, where one may stand and
-converse with Denver,&mdash;a feat which may surprise the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
-ghost of Coronado or of Juan de Oñate were it looking
-on; and Colonel Frost's daily journal, with its news of
-the world, is just at the corner. Not far away, too, is
-Mr. Linney, who represents the United States Signal
-Service, and regards Santa Fé as a most opportune town
-in which to pursue his most up-to-date study of atmospheric
-phenomena.</p>
-
-<p>A remarkable personality in Santa Fé is Colonel Max
-Frost, the editor of "The New Mexican," the political
-leader of the Republican party and a man who, though
-blind and paralyzed, is simply a living encyclopædia of
-historic and contemporary events. At eight o'clock every
-morning Colonel Frost is in his office, at his desk, dictating
-to three expert stenographers, carrying on three
-different subjects simultaneously. Instead of his blindness
-being a hindrance to his work, he has, by the sheer
-force of his remarkable energy, transformed the obstacle
-into a stepping-stone. "I can do more work in ten
-minutes than most men can in an hour," he said, in
-reply to a question, "as, being blind, I have nothing to
-distract my attention. I put my mind on my work and
-keep it there."</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Frost's experience is the most convincing testimony
-to the phenomenal power that lies in mental
-concentration. He cannot move without assistance,&mdash;physically
-he is a wreck; yet he dictates columns of work
-daily; he is the most influential leader of the political<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
-party, and he is one of the makers of New Mexico.
-Every line of copy in his daily paper is read to him
-before it goes to press, and the vigorous and brilliant
-editorial page is largely his own work. For four hours,
-every evening, Mrs. Frost reads to him from the great
-Eastern dailies, the periodicals, and new books. It is said
-in New Mexico that Colonel Frost has been the power
-behind the throne in territorial legislation since the time
-that General Lew. Wallace served as chief executive in
-1879.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Frost went to Santa Fé from Washington in
-1876 as a brilliant young officer, commissioned to build
-a military telegraph line from Santa Fé to Ph&oelig;nix, Arizona,&mdash;a
-distance of five hundred miles. This commission
-attracted great attention, and Colonel Frost became
-at once a power among the Spanish-American citizens of
-the territory. His great ability was widely recognized
-by leading men all over the Southwest. He was urged
-to remain and become a citizen of Santa Fé. As if to
-further prepare him for his remarkable life, he was commissioned
-by the government to serve at several points in
-New Mexico on a variety of important matters, and he
-thus became singularly identified with the general progress
-of the country.</p>
-
-<p>With all his extraordinary work in conducting his paper
-and devoting himself to party political measures, Colonel
-Frost is serving his territory as Secretary of the Bureau<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
-of Immigration with the most conspicuous ability. Under
-his electric touch and irresistible energy there is constantly
-prepared and sent out some of the finest transcriptions
-of the entire status of the country, in climate, resources,
-and opportunities; in achievements already realized and
-in the potential developments of the future. Thousands
-of residents have been drawn to New Mexico through
-the data so ably set forth by Colonel Frost, the matter
-being, each year, revised to date. He knows, from personal
-observation and intimate contact, every part of the
-territory; he is personally acquainted with all the leading
-people; and no visitor in the territory can feel his trip in
-any sense complete without meeting Colonel Max Frost.
-If every state and territory in the Far West could command
-such efficient service in the literature of immigration
-as is rendered by Colonel Frost, there would be an
-appreciable increase of their settlers.</p>
-
-<p>There are many eminent men in Santa Fé,&mdash;government
-officers, political leaders, gifted lawyers,&mdash;whom the stranger
-within the gates must recognize as among the ablest
-leaders and makers of the nation. A newspaper recently
-established, "The Eagle," ably edited by Mr. A. J.
-Loomis, adds another attraction and source of inspiration
-to the wonderful old city, whose life still continues to
-illustrate and exalt the "Holy Faith of St. Francis."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII</h2></div>
-
-<p class="center"><strong>MAGIC AND MYSTERY OF ARIZONA</strong></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"<i>... The stars are glowing wheels,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Giddy with motion Nature reels;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Sun, moon, man, undulate and stream,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>The mountains flow, the solids seem,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Change acts, reacts; back, forward hurled,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>And pause were palsy to the world.&mdash;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>The morn is come: the starry crowds</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Are hid behind the thrice-piled clouds;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>The new day lowers, and equal odds</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Have changed not less the guest of gods.</i>"</div>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Emerson</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p228.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">PETRIFIED GIANTS, THIRD FOREST, ARIZONA</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Arizona</span> is the Land of Magic and of Mystery. It is the
-land of the yet undreamed-of future, and it is also the region
-of brooding mystery, of strange surprise. Besides its stupendous
-Grand Cañon, here are the cañons of Chiquito,
-Marble, Desolation, and Limestone; the Montezuma Well,
-Castle Dome, the Four Peaks&mdash;rising to the height of
-several thousand feet, for hundreds of miles; the Thumb
-Buttes, San Francisco Peak, the Tonto Basin, and the Twin
-Lake&mdash;all of these phenomenal marvels of scenery telling
-their tale of the action of water and of fire thousands of
-ages ago; convulsions of nature which have rent the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
-mountains asunder, opened chasms thousands of feet deep
-in the earth, and projected the bottom of a sea into the
-air as a mountain peak,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center">"What time the gods kept carnival."</p>
-
-<p>The gods have, indeed, kept high carnival in Arizona.
-Every aspect of nature is on a scale of Titanic magnificence.
-The cañon systems of its mountain ranges; the indescribable
-grandeur which reaches its supreme majesty in
-the Grand Cañon; the wonders of extinct volcanic action;
-the colossal channels cut by rushing waters; the unearthly
-splendor of the atmospheric effects, and the coloring of
-the skies,&mdash;all combine to render Arizona an expression of
-magical wonder. All manner of phenomenal conditions
-are encountered. The land is a red sandy desert, whose
-leading productions are loose stones (lying so thickly in
-the sand as to make walking or driving all but impossible)
-and pine trees, petrified forests, and cacti. The
-riotous growth of the cactus is, indeed, a terror to the
-unwary. But it is in sunsets and enchantment of views
-and richness of mines, and in marvellous curiosities&mdash;as
-the Petrified Forest, Meteorite Mountain, and the Grand
-Cañon&mdash;that Arizona distinguishes herself. She cannot
-irrigate her soil because there is no available water. But
-the pine forests&mdash;some of them&mdash;produce lumber; the
-mines are rich, and the features of nature unequalled in
-the entire world; while the exhilaration of the electric<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
-air and the wonderful beauty of coloring quite make
-up to Arizona resources that are unsurpassed if not
-unrivalled.</p>
-
-<p>Arizona is not an agricultural country by nature, nor
-hardly by grace. The resources are mining and timber.
-Still there are probably some twenty million acres capable
-of rich productiveness, on which wheat, barley, corn, vegetables
-of all kinds, and also rice and cotton, could be successfully
-cultivated if irrigation could be sufficiently effected.
-The largest area of agricultural land lies in the regions
-adjacent to Prescott and Ph&oelig;nix. This Salt River Valley
-is rich in alluvial soil. The Gila Valley also offers, though
-in lesser area, the same fertile land, and the valleys of the
-Colorado, Chiquito, of Pueblo Viejo, the Santa Cruz, the
-San Pedro, the Sulphur Springs, and the great mesa
-between Florence and Ph&oelig;nix, offer the same possibilities.
-The great problem of Arizona is that of irrigation, as most
-of the rivers lie at the bottom of inaccessible cañons and
-present difficulties of access which no engineer can as yet
-clearly see a way to overcome. The conditions are, however,
-materially assisted by the rainy seasons, occurring
-usually in February or March and in July or August,
-when water can be stored. The rain itself is as peculiar
-in Arizona as are other conditions of this wonderland.
-It rains in sections; it may rain in torrents in a man's
-front yard while the sun shines in his back yard; or if
-this statement has something of the flavor of "travellers'"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
-tales, it is at least typical of actual facts. Five minutes'
-walking is often all that is required to carry one into, or
-out of, a severe downpour of rain. The clouds follow the
-mountain spurs as invariably as a needle follows the magnet
-and a torrent may fall on the mountains above, flashing
-down in a hundred improvised raging cataracts and waterfalls,
-while in the valley below the sun shines out of the
-bluest of skies. No panoramic pictures of the stage ever
-equalled the pictorial effects of a thunderstorm in the
-mountains, when the forked lightning leaps from peak to
-peak in a blaze, through the air; when it dashes like a
-meteoric shower from rock to crag, and the thunder reverberates
-with the mighty roar of a thousand oceans beating
-their surf on the shore.</p>
-
-<p>In Maricopa County, in the Salt River Valley, new and
-important conditions have been initiated by the government
-system of irrigation which has transformed arid lands
-into fertile gardens. The government has expended three
-million dollars in constructing the Salt River dam (sixty
-miles north of Ph&oelig;nix), which is the largest artificial lake
-in the world. This reservoir will store one and a half
-million acres-feet of water, drawing it from the mountain
-cañons miles away. Not only does this project mean an
-abundant water supply for a region heretofore useless, but
-rich returns as well.</p>
-
-<p>There are few regions which so attract and reward the
-researches of the scientist as does Arizona. The geologist,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
-the mineralogist, the ethnologist, the archæologist, finds
-here the most amazing field for apparently unending
-investigation and study. Nor is the botanist excluded.
-The flora of Arizona offers the same strange and unique
-developments that characterize the region in so many
-other directions. The cacti flourish in riotous growth.
-The saguaro, a giant species, frequently attains a height
-of forty feet. A strange spectacle it is, with its pale green
-body, fluted like a Corinthian column, and its colossal
-arms outstretched, covered with immense prickly thorns
-and bearing purple blossoms. The century plant flourishes
-in Arizona. There is a curious scarlet flower, blooming
-in clusters, at the top of straight pole-like stumps ten
-to fifteen feet in height, which terminate in luxuriant
-masses of scarlet blossoms and green leaves, and grow in
-groups of from a dozen to fifty together, producing the
-most fascinating color effects in the landscape. This
-plant is called the ocotilla. There are plants which produce
-a fibrous textile leaf which the native Mexicans used
-as paper; there are others whose roots are used as a substitute
-for soap. The trees are largely pine, cedar, and
-juniper, though in many parts of the state the rolling
-foothills bear forests of oak, and the sycamore, ash, elder,
-walnut, and the swift-growing cottonwood are found along
-the watercourses.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p232.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">COLLECTION OF CACTI MADE BY OFFICERS AT FORT
-McDOWELL, ARIZONA, FOR THIS PICTURE</p>
-
-<p>"The echinocactus, or bisnaga, is also called 'The Well
-of the Desert,'" says Dr. Joseph A. Munk in some interesting
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>sketches of Arizona.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> "It has a large barrel-shaped
-body, which is covered with long spikes that are curved
-like fishhooks. It is full of sap that is sometimes used to
-quench thirst. By cutting off the top and scooping out
-a hollow, the cup-shaped hole soon fills with a sap that
-is not exactly nectar, but can be drunk in an emergency.
-Men who have been in danger of perishing from thirst on
-the desert have sometimes been saved by this unique
-method of well-digging."</p>
-
-<p>Of the palo verde Dr. Munk notes that it is "a true
-child of the desert," and he adds:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"No matter how hot and dry the weather, the palo verde
-is always green and flourishing. At a distance it resembles
-a weeping willow tree stripped of its leaves. Its numerous
-long, slender, drooping branches gracefully crisscross
-and interlace in an intricate figure of filigree work. It has
-no commercial value, but if it could be successfully transplanted
-and transported it would make a desirable addition
-to greenhouse collections in the higher latitudes.</p>
-
-<p>"The romantic mistletoe, that is world-renowned for its
-magic influence in love affairs, grows to perfection in Southern
-Arizona. There are several varieties of this parasitic
-plant that are very unlike in appearance. Each kind partakes
-more or less of the characteristics of the tree upon
-which it grows, but all have the glossy leaf and waxen
-berry."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>The grasses of Arizona, are, in some places, very beautiful,
-of a rich velvety green; and the infinite varieties of
-wild clover, the gramma, the buffalo, the sacatone, and
-other grasses, are richly nutritive and offer good facilities
-for grazing. As a wool-producing country Arizona has no
-rival, the climate giving the best of protection to sheep
-with the minimum of care, and the grazing offering adequate
-means of support; and stock raising of all kinds, indeed,
-is destined to become a great industry in Southern
-Arizona.</p>
-
-<p>The climate of Arizona can only be alluded to in the
-plural, as in the expressive phrase of one of Mr. George
-W. Cable's creole characters, "dose climates," for Arizona
-has all the climates of the known world. The range of
-choice almost exceeds the range of the Fahrenheit registration.
-From the mountain summit, covered with snow
-for at least ten months out of the year, to the heat in
-Yuma, which has scored up to one hundred and twenty-eight
-degrees or more, there are all varieties and every
-conceivable quality of atmosphere. In the main, however,
-the climate of Arizona is inexpressibly delightful.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Munk, who is one of the distinguished physicians
-in Los Angeles, has made a study of Arizona as a health
-resort, and of its conditions he says:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"The atmosphere of Arizona is not only dry, but also very
-electrical; so much so, indeed, that at times it becomes almost
-painful. Whenever the experiment is tried, sparks can
-be produced by friction or the handling of metal, hair, or wool.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
-It affects animals as well as man, and literally causes 'the
-hair to stand on end.' The writer has on various occasions
-seen a string of horses standing close together at a watering-trough,
-drinking, so full of electricity that their manes and
-tails were spread out and floated in the air, and the long hairs
-drawn by magnetic attraction from one animal to the other
-all down the line in a spontaneous effort to complete a circuit.
-There are times when the free electricity in the air is so
-abundant that every object becomes charged with the fluid,
-and it cannot escape fast enough or find 'a way out' by
-any adequate conductor. The effect of such an excess of
-electricity is decidedly unpleasant on the nerves, and causes
-annoying irritability and nervousness.</p>
-
-<p>"The hot sun sometimes blisters the skin and burns the
-complexion to a rich nut-brown color, but the air always
-feels soft and balmy, and usually blows only in gentle zephyrs.
-The air has a pungent fragrance which is peculiar to the
-desert, that is the mingled product of a variety of resinous
-plants. The weather is uniformly pleasant, and the elements
-are rarely violently disturbed.</p>
-
-<p>"In the older settled sections of our country, whenever
-there is any sudden or extreme change of either heat or cold,
-wet or dry, it is always followed by an increase of sickness
-and death. The aged and invalid, who are sensitive and
-weak, suffer most, as they feel every change in the weather.
-There is, perhaps, no place on earth that can boast of a perfect
-climate, but the country that can show the fewest and
-mildest extremes approaches nearest to the ideal. The Southwest
-is exceptionally favored in its climatic conditions."</p></blockquote>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>There is a legend that the poetic, musical name, Arizona,
-was derived from "Ari," a maiden queen who once ruled
-the destinies of the Primas, and "Zon," a valley, from the
-romantic configuration of the state, the two combining
-into the melodious "Arizona." The tradition is sufficiently
-romantic to be in keeping with the country it designates,
-and nothing tends more to simplify the too complex
-processes of life, not to say history, than to apply the rule
-of believing those things that appeal to one's sense of the
-"eternal fitness" and rejecting those which do not. The
-apostles of the simple life might well include this contribution
-toward simplicity as an axiom of their faith. At
-all events, as no other origin of Arizona's pretty name is
-on record, one may indulge himself in accepting this one
-with a clear conscience.</p>
-
-<p>The authentic Spanish history of Arizona dates to the
-exploration of Mendoza in 1540. For nearly three hundred
-years&mdash;until the treaty of Guadaloupe-Hidalgo in 1866,
-when all the region north of the Gila and Mesilla valleys
-was incorporated into the area of the United States&mdash;the
-Spanish explorers and the Indian natives were in perpetual
-conflict, and it was as late as 1863 that Arizona received
-its name and individual domain as separate from New
-Mexico, with which it had been incorporated. At the
-time of the Guadaloupe-Hidalgo treaty Arizona did not
-contain a single white settlement in the north and west.
-Near Tucson and Tuba were a few hundred whites, but all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
-the other portions were the domain of the Apaches and
-the Moquis. In 1856 the Hon. James Gadsden, then
-United States Minister to Mexico, negotiated for the purchase
-of this territory at a price of ten million dollars, and
-the Mexican colors in Tucson were replaced by the Stars
-and Stripes. On December 1, 1854, a memorial was presented
-to the legislature of New Mexico for a separate territorial
-organization and name of the new acquirement.</p>
-
-<p>Although the Spanish civilization has long since receded
-into the dim historic past, its spirit is impressed in the
-very air; its zeal and fervor still, in some mysterious way,
-permeate the atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>Until 1863 Arizona remained a portion of New Mexico,
-the separate territorial government of each being inaugurated
-at Fort Whipple, near Prescott,&mdash;a thriving town
-of some six thousand people, named for the historian
-whose works are the unquestionable authority on matters
-of the Aztec and Spanish civilizations. Prescott is one of
-the young Western cities that has a great future. Its
-altitude insures it a delightful climate, the railroad facilities
-are good, and it is in a region of almost fabulous
-mineral wealth. The "United Verde" mine, one of the
-possessions of Senator Clark of Montana, is some thirty-five
-miles from Prescott and yields vast revenues. Within
-thirty miles of the town there are very large beds of onyx,
-one of which covers over one hundred acres. This onyx
-is found in all colors,&mdash;the translucent old gold, green,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
-red, black, and white, with much in richly varied combinations
-of color. Prescott has an altitude of a mile above
-the sea and is a summer resort of itself for Ph&oelig;nix and
-other Southern Arizona towns. It is a distance of some
-three hundred miles from Ash Fork to Winhelman, and
-Prescott and Ph&oelig;nix are one hundred miles apart, Prescott
-being only a hundred miles from Ash Fork and Ph&oelig;nix
-about the same distance from Winhelman. Near Prescott
-there is a curious spot which is not less worthy of
-world-wide fame than is the "Garden of the Gods" at
-Colorado Springs; although the "Point of Rocks," as
-this grotesque system of formation near Prescott is called,
-is little known to travellers. It is of that same unique
-sandstone formation that is found in the "Garden of the
-Gods." Ruskin declared that he could not visit America
-on the ground that it contained no castles; but had his
-vision included Colorado and Arizona, with their wonderful
-sandstone formations, he would have found castles galore
-so far as scenic effect goes. It is not alone the "Garden
-of the Gods" and the "Point of Rocks" that are marvellous
-spectacles, but all over the states, here and there, on
-foothill and mountain and mesa, these strange, fantastic,
-colossal rock formations arise, that have all the landscape
-effect of the castles and towers in Italy.</p>
-
-<p>All the country around Prescott is alluring. On the
-branch road from Ash Fork of the main transcontinental
-line to Winhelman some three hundred miles south, there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
-is an assortment of scenery which might be described as
-warranted to please every taste. There are lofty mountains
-pine-clad and green with verdure; others are seen
-barren and bleak, whose sides and foothills are only decorated
-with the débris of mines. There are vast desert
-solitudes where only the misshapen cacti grow, looming
-up like giant skeletons in the air; and again there are
-glades carpeted with a profusion of flowers in brilliant
-hues. There are river-beds (arroyos) without any water
-and there are streams that go wandering about, in aimless
-fashion, devoid of regulation river-beds. Some of the arroyos,
-indeed, have streams running in strong currents, but
-they hide these streams under the river-bed, as something
-too valuable perhaps for common view. The clairvoyance
-of the scientific vision, however, detects this fraud on the
-part of the arroyo at once, so that of late years it is of little
-use for any well-regulated river to hide its current under
-its bed. It may just as well relinquish the attempt and
-let the stream run in an honest Eastern fashion, like the
-Connecticut River, for instance, which is staid and steady,
-like its state, and never undertakes to play pranks with
-its current. Since the scientist has fixed his glittering eye
-on Colorado and Arizona, all the gnomes and nixies have
-the time of their life to elude this vigilance, and they
-seldom succeed. The scientist relentlessly harnesses them
-to his use; and though a river may think to conceal its
-course by taking refuge under its bed instead of running<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
-honestly along above it, the effort is hopeless in an age
-when the scientist is abroad. It is said that there are no
-secrets in heaven, and apparently nature is very like
-paradise in this respect at least, for it is quite useless for
-her to pretend to keep her operations to herself. The
-specialist, the expert, surprises every secret she may
-treasure.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p240.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">LOOKING THROUGH A PART OF THE RIVER GORGE, FOOT OF
-BAD TRAIL, GRAND CAÑON</p>
-
-<p>Of all the rivers in Arizona no one has more entirely
-defied all the accepted traditions of staying in its place
-and keeping within its own limits than has the Colorado,
-which, not content with the extraordinary part it plays
-at the bottom of that Titanic chasm, the Grand Cañon,
-is now creating an inland sea, named the Salton Sea, in
-Southern California. Prof. N. H. Newell, the government
-expert hydrographer of the United States Geological
-Survey, has given close attention to the Colorado of late,
-and of it he says:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"... The Colorado cuts in its course the deepest cañons
-on the face of the earth. From the solid rocks where it has
-made them, through hundreds of miles, it has taken material
-down to the Gulf of California, and by slight but regular annual
-overflows gradually built banks on each side out into that
-gulf. These, in time, cut off the head of the gulf, leaving
-dry a depression in Southern California, considerably below
-sea level, known as 'the Salton Sink.' For miles of its
-journey the Southern Pacific runs below sea level. Ten
-thousand people, approximately, in what is known as the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
-Imperial Valley, live below the sea level. A privately owned
-irrigation enterprise, on the Mexican side of the line, cut a
-gash into this bank of the Colorado which nature had been
-forming. The high waters came and man lost control of his
-artificial channel, with the result that the river thought best
-to pour its waters back into the depression which had once
-been a part of the Gulf of California. To get the river to
-resume its own course is no small task, and with it the
-Southern Pacific railroad evidently purposes to grapple
-heroically.</p></blockquote>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"The river is now pouring down a steep declivity into this
-basin, which is two hundred feet or more below the sea level.
-If this were allowed to continue, it would make a great salt lake
-in Southern California. This water has already risen to the
-point where it has submerged big salt works and fifteen miles
-of the Southern Pacific's overland track, forcing that company
-to build around the rising sea, and, unless its engineers
-succeed in routing the Colorado for its old destination, it will
-be necessary to rebuild a much longer piece of that road.
-Some people have argued that such a sea would affect favorably
-the climate of Southern California, but they forget that
-the great Gulf of California, jutting into the most barren
-regions of the United States and Mexico, seemingly has had
-no good effect on the climate of either. The Salton Sea
-would add only two per cent of water surface to that part of
-the country, and so hardly would do what the Gulf of California
-has not accomplished. Unless the break is restored,
-the river will pour into this basin, forming a very shallow lake,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
-which would be almost a frying-pan under that semi-tropical
-sun. This would continue to rise until evaporation balanced
-the river flow, and then would fluctuate with the seasons of
-the year, shrinking in area during the months of the heaviest
-evaporation and slightest inflow.</p>
-
-<p>"The gash in the river bank was cut by a Mexican corporation
-on that side of the international line, but the water is
-delivered to a number of American corporations, so that
-to-day several are concerned in the affair. It is understood
-that the Southern Pacific, when the river reaches its lowest
-stage, will put in a great force of men in an endeavor to get
-the river back to its former course. One great difficulty
-comes in the sugar-like material which has been eroded, in
-which it is extremely hard to insert any permanent structure.
-A pile one hundred feet deep will be driven into it, and almost
-as soon the water, working in under it, will lift it out."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The Salton Sea, at this writing, covers an area of over
-four hundred square miles, and is constantly increasing.
-The Southern Pacific Railway that traversed its border has
-been driven twice from its line and forced to lay new
-roadbeds and tracks. It is also creating great confusion
-as to irrigation facilities, both in the United States and
-in Mexico, within the region where it lies; and as a
-scientific event it is one of the first magnitude,&mdash;an act
-in the drama of nature made visible to all.</p>
-
-<p>The Salton Sink has long been known to the explorers
-and visitors of this region. It was a vast basin of some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
-one hundred and forty miles in length and sixty-five or
-seventy in width; the evident bed of a former sea, which
-had become a desolate and barren waste. Sometimes a
-mirage&mdash;a not unfrequent phenomenon in Arizona and
-Southern California,&mdash;would transform this long deserted
-basin into a phantom sea, wonderful in aspect.
-To what extent this transformation will continue defies
-prophecy.</p>
-
-<p>Ph&oelig;nix, the capital of Arizona, is in Maricopa County,&mdash;a
-county as large as the entire state of Massachusetts.
-The journey of two hundred miles between Ash Fork and
-Ph&oelig;nix is one of the most uncanny and unearthly sort of
-trips, with mountains resembling a witches' dance,&mdash;full
-of grotesque wonder and romantic charm,&mdash;but the experience
-is almost like visiting another planet and coming
-under totally different conditions of life. Ph&oelig;nix is both
-the capital and the metropolis of Arizona, and no city
-west of the Mississippi is more popular among tourists or
-is able to inspire a stronger sentiment of attachment among
-its residents. To some twelve or thirteen thousand inhabitants
-are added, every winter, from four to five thousand
-tourists. The city lies in the centre of the Salt River
-Valley,&mdash;that marvel of the Southwest. The most important
-and valuable agricultural region in Colorado lies
-in Maricopa County, of which Ph&oelig;nix is the pet and
-pride. In this locality the visitor to Arizona returns to
-the normal day and daylight world again. The forest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
-trees are not stone quarries, nor have meteors, wandering
-through space, buried themselves in its soil. There is no
-need of colossal magnetic appliances to seek to discover
-and extricate some submerged star. Nor has the earth
-opened and disclosed an Inferno, "bathed in celestial fires,"
-as that of the Grand Cañon far away to the northwest.
-The streams "stay put" within their legitimate borders,
-and are apparently as firm in "standing pat" as is the
-Republican party over a (new) tariff revision. Maricopa
-County pursues a way of peaceful prosperity, with no lapse
-into the vaudeville of petrified forests and buried stars.
-Her stars make their appointed rounds in the skies, and
-shine nightly upon the just and the unjust. In the
-northern part of Maricopa there are mineral districts
-of rich ores, gold and copper as well as silver, lead,
-and others, but chiefly the county holds her way as an
-agricultural region, indulging in no freaks. Canals radiate
-in every direction from the Salt and the Verde rivers.
-The Salt River Valley is so level that a theory prevails
-that in some prehistoric ages it was smoothed by the
-Toltec civilization, which even preceded that of the Aztec.
-Fields of alfalfa, miles in extent, smile in the sunshine,
-while cattle graze knee-deep in luxurious clover. Orange
-groves alternate with the apple and apricot orchards.
-The date-palm, the fig, and the olive trees abound. Beautiful
-homes stand in spacious grounds shaded by the dark
-foliage of the umbrella tree, through which gleams the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
-scarlet of the oleander and the brilliant gold of the
-pomegranate.</p>
-
-<p>Ph&oelig;nix offers to the resident or the visitor a good proportion
-of the best that life can give: in good society, that
-which is intelligent, moral, cultured, and sympathetic; in
-an admirable school system; in churches of many denominations,&mdash;Catholic,
-Episcopal, Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian,
-Christian Science, and others,&mdash;all having their
-fine houses of worship and earnest congregations. There
-is an excellent and a constantly growing public library, and
-there are four daily and several weekly newspapers, business
-blocks that would do no discredit to any large Eastern
-city, a circuit telephone system completely equipped, gas
-and water works, free city and rural mail delivery, good
-hotels, a theatre, and an opera house. There are banks
-and a Board of Trade. There are clubs both of men and
-women. The State Normal School of Arizona is nine
-miles distant&mdash;in Tempe.</p>
-
-<p>There are three railroads that centre in Ph&oelig;nix which
-transport the traveller with the usual accepted ease and
-luxury of modern railroading; and a new road to form a
-link in a second Santa Fé transcontinental line will then
-place Ph&oelig;nix on a trunk road over which the Santa Fé
-traffic will largely pass.</p>
-
-<p>The winters in Ph&oelig;nix are most attractive. From
-October till May there is a climate all balm and sunshine
-without the enervating quality felt in the tropics. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
-region all around has good roads, and driving and riding
-are most enjoyable.</p>
-
-<p>Seventy-five miles east from Ph&oelig;nix, in the Tonto
-Basin, the government is building a vast water storage
-dam which it is expected will liberally irrigate two hundred
-thousand acres of land which, under reclamation, will
-produce in rich abundance both agricultural and horticultural
-products. The climate and conditions combine
-those of the temperate and the semi-tropical zones and
-favor products grown in both. The Tonto dam will be,
-with the possible exception of the Assouan dam in Egypt,
-the greatest storage enterprise in the world. It will be
-constructed of hard sandstone imbedded in cement, making
-it as permanent as the mountains. It will be two hundred
-and eighty-five feet above foundations and only two hundred
-feet wide at the bottom. Above will be a lake about
-twenty-five miles long, with storage capacity for one and
-a half millions acre-feet, which means enough water to
-cover that number of acres a foot deep. Even to the best
-of cement, Nature has provided on the ground every necessity
-for construction. Along the hillsides above is being
-dug a power canal, to discharge above the dam, there to
-generate not less than five thousand horsepower,&mdash;more
-than enough for the demands of construction. When the
-dam is finished this power will be transmitted electrically
-to the vicinity of Ph&oelig;nix, here to be used for pumping.
-The government engineers have made plans for eventually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
-developing eighteen thousand horsepower, by harnessing
-the falls of the river and the canals.</p>
-
-<p>The Salt River Valley has more than fifty thousand
-acres devoted to alfalfa, which sometimes yields six crops
-in a year. Wheat, barley, and corn are also grown, and
-the orange groves produce the finest fruit known in the
-Eastern markets, antedating by a month the California
-oranges. Grapes, apricots, and dates abound; and if
-Maricopa County does not literally as well as figuratively
-find that her land is flowing in milk and honey, it is
-certainly not for lack of the most favorable conditions.</p>
-
-<p>The Arizona strawberries, too, are a feature of importance
-in the fruit market, as for both size and flavor they
-absolutely exceed almost any other in the United States.</p>
-
-<p>All this sunny prosperity of conditions and loveliness
-of climate reacts on life. There is a poise, a serene confidence,
-and a charm of good-will and joyous companionship
-felt in Ph&oelig;nix that give to this delightful young city
-an individuality of its own.</p>
-
-<p>The great dam now being built in the Tonto Basin has
-made it necessary to destroy the town of Roosevelt,&mdash;a
-village of two thousand inhabitants, with its churches,
-schools, water-works, electric lights, and other appliances
-of modern civilization. "Roosevelt must perish," writes
-a press correspondent, "that a desert may be made to bloom.
-Already the marvellous engineering work is well under
-way. The walls of the narrow cañon through which Salt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>
-River rushes on edge are being locked by a massive monolith
-of solid masonry, the highest arch dam in the world."</p>
-
-<p>The writer continues:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"This wonderful structure of sandstone and cement will
-be two hundred and eighty feet in height from foundation to
-parapet. Placed by the side of an eighteen-story skyscraper,
-this dam would rise ten feet above it, while its length on top
-would be more than two city blocks. A turbulent stream,
-with its enormous floods, will beat itself into stillness against
-the masonry monster, its foam and spume lost in a deep lake
-twenty-five miles long and two miles wide.</p>
-
-<p>"By day and by night the dull roar of dynamite breaks
-the desert stillness, and the cañon walls go crashing down
-to furnish material for this structure. On the hill far above,
-the rock crushers never stop grinding the limestone, and
-great kilns, white hot, are burning daily hundreds of barrels
-of cement.</p>
-
-<p>"When night comes, myriads of electric lights burst forth,
-weirdly illuminating a busy army of toilers working gnome-like
-in a shadowy cañon. A star-gemmed heaven looks down
-upon a wondrous scene, unreal, awesome, and inspiring.</p>
-
-<p>"This great work of the government possesses unusual
-attractions for the engineer and the layman. It is located in
-a valley which has been the abode of three races, one of
-which lived here when Cæsar sat upon his throne. In an age
-forgotten the cliff-dwellers built their eyrie-like homes along
-the cañons of this stream, and in the narrow valleys the lines
-of their irrigation canals may yet be traced. Centuries later<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
-the Apaches came, and for many years their tepees dotted
-the basin. Then came the white man, who sought to reconquer
-the desert, which had resumed its sway after the cliff-dwellers
-vanished.</p>
-
-<p>"The battle with unfriendly nature proved too much for
-the pioneer, and Uncle Sam took a hand in the fight. No
-problems could daunt his engineers. They laughed at floods
-and mocked at desolation. A dam site was discovered sixty-two
-miles from a railroad, and they proceeded to connect it
-with civilization by a marvellous road which winds its way for
-forty miles through deep cañons, along the face of frowning
-precipices, over foaming cataracts, and across broad areas of
-treeless desert. It opens up to the transcontinental traveller
-a new region of compelling interest and of splendid scenery.
-Better than that, it provides an easy thoroughfare for the
-transportation of heavy machinery of all kinds and the supplies
-for the new community which sprang into life almost at
-a word.</p>
-
-<p>"... Every stone that is laid in the narrow arch, which
-is to retain the foaming river now rushing through the
-cañon, brings nearer and nearer the day when Roosevelt
-shall vanish beneath an inland sea. When the great dam is
-completed, in 1908, and its massive gates of steel, weighing
-eight hundred thousand pounds, are shut down, a rising flood
-will cover the site of the city with two hundred feet of
-water.</p>
-
-<p>"The ingenuity of man has been taxed in this work. Its
-isolated position, the difficult physical conditions, the tremendous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>
-and unexpected floods, have tried the mettle of the
-engineers. The enormous amount of cement required was
-in itself a problem which forced Uncle Sam to turn manufacturer
-in order to solve it. Nature, having kindly furnished
-an ideal site for a dam, was thoughtful enough to provide
-materials near at hand for making cement. A cement mill
-was quickly erected at a cost of one hundred thousand dollars.
-The downward rush of the river was utilized for electric
-power to operate the mill, and many thousand barrels of first-class
-cement have already been used in the works.</p>
-
-<p>"But while the city of Roosevelt, with the homes of its
-two thousand inhabitants, is doomed, a fair valley is to be
-redeemed in which the agricultural possibilities are not
-exceeded anywhere in the world. Under almost tropical
-skies, with a soil of wonderful fertility, the farmer in Salt
-River Valley will cultivate his orange groves, his fig trees,
-his vines, while his broad meadows will yield him heavy
-harvests of alfalfa six and seven times a year.</p>
-
-<p>"The great lake which will be created by the Roosevelt
-dam is to be tapped by canals hundreds of miles long and
-extending all over the broad valley around Ph&oelig;nix. Vast
-areas now absolutely worthless will be transformed quickly
-into blossoming orchards and purpling vineyards, and hundreds
-of happy homes will dot a plain where now the giant
-saguaro rears its spiny head and the Gila monster roams
-at will."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Life in the Far West is a continual series of the
-occurrence of such events as these. Its problems are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
-largely solved by the civil engineer and the irrigation
-expert, who transform vast deserts to regions of blossoming
-beauty, change the course of a river, send railroad
-trains climbing the mountain peaks or penetrating beneath
-the range, and who are, in short, the modern
-magicians who work their will with the forces of nature.
-The National Reclamation Act is fairly recreating the
-entire Southwest.</p>
-
-<p>The Gila River, which is the largest tributary of the
-Colorado, flows through the regions south of Florence,
-Arizona, and affords water to many fertile and beautiful
-valleys; and Florence, with the towns of Yuma, Tucson,
-Glendale, Bisbee, Winslow, and others, is fully abreast
-in modern life. Large department stores, public libraries,
-schools and churches, women's clubs, daily newspapers,
-good railroad facilities, free postal delivery,&mdash;all these
-make up the environment of a splendid and progressive
-citizenship. As the Governor of Arizona, Hon. Joseph H.
-Kirley, has recently said:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Nowhere can a man who respects his neighbor's rights,
-with reasonably strict attention to his own business, go about
-with more freedom and with greater confidence of personal
-safety than in Arizona. Locked and barricaded doors are in
-most parts of Arizona a novelty. The professional thief is
-almost unknown in the territory."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The East&mdash;at least the portion of it that has not
-personally visited the magic land of Arizona&mdash;can form<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
-little idea of its marvellous resources and its potent
-achievements.</p>
-
-<p>The statehood problem looms up on the social and
-political horizon, and there is a strong feeling that to
-force Arizona and New Mexico into union would do violence
-to the judgment and the feeling of the citizens of Arizona.
-For several years past the incipient possibility of
-statehood on these terms has aroused widespread opposition.</p>
-
-<p>The local press voices almost daily the editorial convictions
-that such a union would be most disastrous to
-the interests of Arizona&mdash;a country which is simply a
-wonderland of treasure and rich and varied resources.
-Arizona is settled chiefly by people from the great South
-and from New England, the Middle West being hardly
-represented; its citizens are of the best quality of our
-national life, and to unite them with those of New Mexico&mdash;a
-large proportion of whom can hardly speak or understand
-the English language even, to say nothing of their
-divergence in race, requirements, and habits from the
-population of Arizona&mdash;would be imposing upon them
-a century's delay in realizing the grand ideals of education,
-moral progress, and economic development now prevailing
-in Arizona.</p>
-
-<p>Ph&oelig;nix has to-day a better public-school system than
-Boston, and other surprising degrees of progress might
-be related of many of the towns.</p>
-
-<p>Hon. N. O. Murphy, twice a Governor of Arizona,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
-has recently made an eloquent plea against forcing these
-two territories into union as a state. Ex-Governor Murphy
-was appointed by President Harrison (in 1889) Secretary
-of Arizona. Under President Cleveland he was elected
-the Delegate to Congress representing the territorial interests;
-and on the expiration of this term he was
-appointed by President McKinley the Governor of the
-territory. His experience has given him the most intimate
-knowledge and wide grasp of territorial conditions,
-and in a letter of three columns over his own signature to
-the "Washington Post," appearing under date of February
-25, 1906, ex-Governor Murphy does not hesitate to say
-that were the Bill for united statehood then pending
-before Congress passed, it would be one of the greatest
-legislative outrages ever perpetrated in this country. "I
-refer particularly to the proposed merger of the territories
-of Arizona and New Mexico into a single state
-against the protests of the people of those territories," he
-added.</p>
-
-<p>The ex-Governor points out these statistical facts:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"The area of New England, comprising six states, with
-twelve senators, is 66,465 square miles; the area of the
-territory of Arizona is nearly twice as great, being 113,916
-square miles.</p>
-
-<p>"The area of the territories of New Mexico and Arizona,
-now proposed to be merged, is 235,600 square miles, or
-greater than Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
-Rhode Island, Connecticut, Michigan, New York, Pennsylvania,
-Maryland, and New Jersey, represented in the Upper
-House now by twenty-two senators."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The fact that the population of New Mexico is largely
-Mexican, and that of Arizona is mostly American, suggests
-a potent reason for the strong feeling in Arizona
-against this proposition. Their racial instincts and their
-business interests alike conflict. If they are joined as a
-single state, there will be continual jealousy and friction,
-and legislation to promote the interests of one-half the
-state will necessarily be at the expense of the other.</p>
-
-<p>To the traveller sensitive to the spell of a strange,
-unearthly beauty, Arizona prefigures itself as the country
-God remembered rather than as "the country God forgot."
-It is at once the oldest and the newest of the states. Its
-authentic and historic past antedates the coming of the
-Mayflower to the rocky and desolate December shores of
-Massachusetts, while its future flashes before one like an
-electric panorama outspeeding wireless telegraphy. It is
-the Land of Magic and Mystery. The light is a perpetual
-radiance, as if proceeding from some alchemy of distilled
-sunshine. While Colorado is the Land of Perpetual
-Dawn, of an heroic and poetic achievement, Arizona is
-the region of brooding mystery, of strange surprise.</p>
-
-<p>There are the music and pictures of Arizona in her
-fertile valleys, her wide rolling mesas; and the very
-melody of the wind harps meet and mingle with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>
-organ strains of sweeping orchestral effects of the winds
-in the cañons and in wild, desolate gorges where impenetrable
-twilight renders them a veritable No Man's Land.
-Mr. Aldrich's "Two Shapes" might have met in that uncanny
-region of the Petrified Forest. The very dance of
-the Brocken may nightly be seen in the midnight fissures
-and steep precipices of the Grand Cañon.</p>
-
-<p>It is, however, essentially the land of mirage and mystery,
-this wonderful Arizona! As one journeys about
-he half fancies that he hears on the air those magic lines:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"O birds of ether without wings!</div>
-<div class="verse">O heavenly ships without a sail!"</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Every incredible thing is possible in this miracle country,
-where purple mountain peaks quiver in the shimmering
-golden light, where ruins of remote ages stand side
-by side with the primitive mechanism of pioneer living,
-where snow-capped mountain peaks are watched from
-valleys that have the temperature and the productions
-of the tropics. Arizona contains unknown and undreamed-of
-resources of gold, copper, and silver. The state has
-the richest possibilities in mineral wealth; there are thousands
-of square miles of range lands; there is wealth of
-forests, although it is a part of the miracle character of
-this state of color and dream life that its forests are
-almost as much concealed from casual view as are its
-minerals hidden in the depths of the earth, for they are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
-secluded in deep cañons or they are high out of sight on
-the mountain summits. In fruits and flowers Arizona has
-the luxurious growth and lavish abundance of the tropics,
-producing grapes, figs, oranges, lemons, pomegranates,
-pineapples, and peaches,&mdash;almost everything, indeed,
-unless it be the apples of Hesperides.</p>
-
-<p>Although Arizona has not the electric exhilaration and
-infinite energy of Colorado, it has a delicious quality,
-as if the very air were a caress. Though warm in the
-south, the heat has none of the enervating effect of the
-heat where humidity combines with it. The heat here is so
-dry, the air so pure, that there is little extreme discomfort
-even when the mercury soars to legendary altitudes. In
-winter all Southern Arizona is a paradise of loveliness.
-At this season the towns of Florence, Ph&oelig;nix, Tucson,
-Yuma, and other points invite one to the balmy air, the
-luminous brilliant skies, and the nights, which are a glory
-of starry illumination. Northern Arizona has a perfection
-of summer climate, and the Grand Cañon is destined
-in the near future to become one of the great summer
-resorts of the world. With the splendid facilities for
-comfort offered by the arrangements, the traveller finds
-all his accustomed conveniences, and the cañon has literally
-all seasons for its own. There is one glory of July
-and another glory of January; there is a transcendent
-loveliness of June, and an equally indescribable charm of
-October. No month is without its special reasons for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
-visiting at that time this most marvellous scenic wonder
-of the entire earth.</p>
-
-<p>In remote ages Arizona was evidently an inland sea.</p>
-
-<p>Montezuma Well, on the Verde River, some fifty miles
-from Prescott, is one of the strange spectacles of Arizona.
-The well is on an elevated mesa of solid limestone. It has
-a circular opening some six hundred feet in diameter, as
-perfect as if carved by a skilled workman. From the
-surface opening down to the water is a distance of some
-seventy feet, and the water itself is over one hundred feet
-deep. It is perfectly clear and pure. Near the well are
-several cave dwellings, and fragments of pottery abound
-in the vicinity. There are beds of lava, also revealing that
-the well is the crater of an extinct volcano.</p>
-
-<p>There can be no question but that Arizona is one of
-the most marvellous regions of the world. Its interest to
-the tourist is not exceeded by that of the Yellowstone,
-whose mountains and geysers and strange color effects
-enchant poet and painter. For the cañon system of the
-Arizona mountain ranges, the stupendous majesty of
-scenic grandeur which reaches its supreme aspect in the
-Grand Cañon of the Colorado, the wonders of extinct
-volcanic action, the colossal channels cut by the action
-of water, the unearthly splendor of the coloring in sky
-and atmospheric effects, all combine to make this state
-the very embodiment and visible expression of magic and
-mystery.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>In the broken mountain ranges the detached peaks
-extend, with narrow, fertile valleys lying between; while
-deep cañons and wild gorges, with rushing mountain torrents,
-still further diversify the grandeur of the panorama.
-Five great rivers add another impressive feature,&mdash;the
-Colorado, the San Juan, the Salinas, the Verde, and the
-San Francisco,&mdash;this system of rivers completing the most
-extraordinary combination of mountain, valley, mesa, and
-cañon to be found in the entire world. Numberless extinct
-volcanoes and vast lava beds add their fantastic imagery;
-and the metamorphic rock strata, recording the most
-violent volcanic upheavals, tell the prehistoric story of
-the fiery molten flood which swept over all this region
-when the earth was new.</p>
-
-<p>As has perhaps been suggested in the preceding
-pages, life in Arizona is by no means without its features
-of entertainment. These include various aspects, not to
-mention one that is by no means to be enjoyed in any
-of the great Eastern centres,&mdash;that of the exclusive
-annual festivity of the "Snake Dance." Chicago and
-Paris, New York and London, may find social entertainment
-in balls and opera, dancing and dining, but in Arizona
-one goes to this entertainment on the Painted Desert;
-and if in some happy summer of life one's horoscope has
-deflected his course into Arizona and Colorado, one comes
-to regard those fascinating localities with the devotion of
-a native of their sunny climes.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>After all, it is not length of time in any experience of
-life that is significant, but intensity of feeling, and one
-finds himself really living more intensely in a few weeks
-in the Far West, in all its wonder world, than in years or
-decades of his accustomed rounds in Eastern cities.</p>
-
-<p>This entertainment of the Snake Dance is furnished by
-the Moki Indians at their camp some seventy miles over
-the desert from Flagstaff. There is no means of conveyance
-save by wagons. The journey is over sagebrush and
-sand, enlivened by stones and cacti. The horses can
-make only slow progress. But the air is simply delightful
-and full of exhilaration, and the particular desert over
-which those who fare forth for this æsthetic spectacle
-must pass is the "Painted Desert," whose walls of rocks
-and mountains, brilliant in a dream of color, recede as they
-are approached, and thus the entire two days consumed in
-the journey are a perpetual delight to the eye. The wayfarers
-camp out overnight, and during the five days' journey&mdash;two
-days to go, two to return, and one to stay&mdash;their
-wants are, perforce, reduced to the most primitive.
-As the festivity lasts only twenty-eight minutes, it is certainly
-spending a good deal of time and energy in order
-to behold so brief a spectacle. But one is told it is
-worth all the fatigue and the time. It is a religious rite
-of the Moki Indians, and is a prayer for rain. The description
-of it is a literal one, for the dancers hold from one
-to three snakes&mdash;and rattlesnakes at that&mdash;in the mouth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
-as they perform their strange gyrations. The dancers
-are the "braves," while the squaws chant a crooning
-accompaniment.</p>
-
-<p>One student of this Indian rite has said:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"With the first glow in the east the priests hasten to the
-shrine of the Sun God with their offerings, the luminary
-himself being greeted with a prayer or with songs as he
-slowly emerges from behind the mesa in the Far East. Later
-the priests repair to their homes, and return to the kiva,
-bearing the ceremonial paraphernalia with which, early in
-the afternoon, they robe themselves in gorgeous array preparatory
-to the dance, which is given usually before the
-sun sets behind the San Francisco Peaks.</p>
-
-<p>"As the priests emerge from the kiva, where they wait in
-line until all have appeared, there is the hush of expectancy
-throughout the village; the inhabitants now line the terraces,
-house-tops and every available spot around the dance plaza,
-all being attired in their gayest and brightest costumes. In
-single file and with measured tread comes the line of priests.
-Entering the plaza, they wheel about and begin a slow, short
-dance, the time of the step being accompanied by the shaking
-of rattles and by the singing of sacred songs. The dance is
-over all too soon, when the spectators return to their camps
-and the priests to the kiva, where great quantities of food
-have been brought for them. Finally, in a great feast, they
-break the fast, which, on the part of the chief priests, has
-been maintained for many days."</p></blockquote>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>It is quite by way of being love's labor lost to visit
-Arizona during that period of time devoted to the Moqui
-Festival. Apparently the entire population betake themselves
-to this entertainment, journeying over the desert
-in their wagons, carrying with them their beds, their food,
-and every necessity, for except what they take with them
-they must do without. But as all the world, alas, cannot
-or does not dwell in Arizona,&mdash;a region in which any one
-sunset alone is worth the journey there,&mdash;and is thus
-deprived of the unique privilege of assisting at the Snake
-Dance, the next best thing, as a substitute, is to read the
-new work of George Wharton James (the author of "In
-and Around the Grand Canyon") called "Indians of the
-Painted Desert Region." It is the very gateway to a wide
-and deeply interesting knowledge of Indian life in Arizona
-and its relation to advancing civilization. It is the presentation
-of a series of wonderful landscapes in a vivid
-manner of word-picturing.</p>
-
-<p>"Wild, weird, and mystic pictures are formed in the
-mind by the very name&mdash;Painted Desert," writes Mr.
-James. "The sound suggests a fabled rather than a real
-land. Surely it must be akin to Atlantis or the island
-of Circe or the place where the Cyclops lived. Is it not
-a land of enchantment and dreams, not a place for living
-men and women, Indians though they be?"</p>
-
-<p>It seems that the Spaniards gave the name "El Pintado
-Deserto"&mdash;the Painted Desert.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>"Stand with me," writes Mr. James, "on the summit
-of one of the towering mountains that guard the region,
-and you will see such a landscape of color as exists nowhere
-else in the world. It suggests the thought of God's
-original palette, where he experimented in color ere he
-decided how to paint the sunset, tint the sun-kissed hills
-at dawn, give red to the rose, green to the leaves, yellow
-to the sunflowers.... Look! here is a vast field of alkali,&mdash;fine,
-dazzling white. Yonder is a mural face half
-a thousand feet high and two hundred or more miles long.
-It is over a hundred miles away, but it reveals the rich
-glowing red of its walls, and between it and us are vast
-patches of pinks, grays, greens, carmines, blue, yellow,
-crimson, and brown, blending in every conceivable shade
-in a strange and grotesque yet fascinating manner. It
-is a rainbow petrified. It is a sunset painted on desert
-sands."</p>
-
-<p>And here art and archæology may revel. "History&mdash;exciting,
-thrilling, tragic&mdash;has been made in the Painted
-Desert region; was being made centuries before Lief Ericson
-landed on the shores of Vinland or John and Sebastian
-Cabot sailed from Bristol.... In the Painted Desert
-region we find peoples strange, peculiar, and interesting,
-whose mythology is more fascinating than that of ancient
-Greece, and for aught we know to the contrary, may be
-equally ancient; whose ceremonies of to-day are more
-elaborate than those of a devout Catholic, more complex<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
-than those of a Hindoo Pantheist, more weird than those
-of a howling dervish of Turkistan.... One of the countries
-comprised in the Painted Desert region is the theme
-of an epoch ... reciting deeds as brave and heroic as
-those of the Greeks at Marathon or Thermopylæ; a poem
-recently discovered after having been buried in the tomb
-of oblivion for over two hundred years. Here are peoples
-to whom a written letter is witchcraft and sorcery, and
-yet who can read the heavens, interpret the writings of the
-clouds, deserts, and cañons with unerring certainty....
-A land it is of witchcraft and sorcery, of horror and dread
-of ghosts and goblins, of daily propitiations of fates and
-powers, and princes of darkness and air, at the very thought
-of whom withering injuries are sure to come."</p>
-
-<p>One is tempted to run on and on in quotation from
-this fascinating book, which depicts the strange life and
-the marvellous scenery in the country "where atmospheric
-colorings are so perfect and so divinely artistic that
-desolate deserts are made dreams of glory."</p>
-
-<p>Harriet Monroe, the Chicago poet, playwright, and
-most charming of essayists, who by no means limits her
-séances with the Muses to those particular hours in which
-she dons her singing robes, has given this prose-poem
-picture of a scene on the "Painted Desert":</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"The rocks lay in belts as red as flame, yellow as gold,
-purple as violets, and they seemed to shine of their own
-light; the City of Rocks, flaming red, and high as mountains;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
-one thousand foot walls sheer to the desert, all carved in
-needles, spires, towers, castles&mdash;the most tremendous thing
-on earth&mdash;there it lay!"</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Of the sudden climatic changes of the desert Professor
-James says:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"I have been almost frozen in its piercing snowstorms;
-choked with sand in its whirling sandstorms; wet through
-ere I could dismount from my horse in its fierce rainstorms;
-terrified and temporarily blinded by the brilliancy of its
-lightning storms, and almost sunstruck by the scorching
-power of the sun in its desolate confines.... With my
-horses I have camped, again and again, waterless, on its arid
-and inhospitable rocks and sands, and prayed for morning,
-only to resume our exhausting journey in the fiercely beating
-rays of the burning sun; longing for some pool of water, no
-matter how dirty, how stagnant, that our parched tongues
-and throats might feel the delight of swallowing something
-fluid. And last year (1902), in a journey to the home of
-the Hopi, my friends and I saw a part of this desert covered
-with the waters of a fierce rainstorm as if it were an
-ocean, and the 'dry-wash' of the Oraibi the scene of a flood
-that for hours equalled the rapids of the Colorado River.
-Desert though it is in the main,&mdash;barren, wild, and desolate,&mdash;here
-and there within its boundaries are fertile valleys,
-wooded slopes, and garden spots as rich as any on earth; and
-the people who make their dwelling-place in this inhospitable
-land present characteristics as strongly contrasted as those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
-of nature. Here are peoples of uncertain and mysterious
-origin whose history is preserved only in fantastic legends
-and traditional songs; whose government is as pure and perfect
-as that of the patriarchs, and possibly as ancient, and yet
-more republican than the most modern of existing governments;
-peoples whose women build and own the houses,
-and whose men weave the garments of the women, knit the
-stockings of their own wear, and are as expert with needle
-and thread as their ancestors were with bow and arrow,
-obsidian-tipped spear, or stone battle-axe.... Here are
-peoples of stupendous religious beliefs. Peoples who can
-truthfully be designated as the most religious of the world,
-yet peoples as agnostic and sceptic, if not as learned as
-Hume, Voltaire, Spencer, and Ingersoll. Peoples to whom
-a written letter is witchcraft and sorcery, and yet who can
-read the heavens, interpret the writings of the woods, deserts,
-and cañons with a certainty never failing.... Here are
-intelligent farmers who for centuries have scientifically irrigated
-their lands and yet who cut off the ears of their burros
-to keep them from stealing corn.... Peoples who pray by
-machinery as the Burmese use their prayer wheels, and who
-'plant' supplications as a gardener plants trees and shrubs....
-Peoples who are pantheists, sun worshippers, and snake
-dancers, yet who have churches and convents built with
-incredible labor and as extensive as any modern cathedral.
-Peoples whose conservatism in manners and religion surpasses
-that of the veriest English Tories; who for hundreds
-of years have steadily and successfully resisted all efforts to
-'convert' and change them, and who to-day are as firm in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>
-their faiths as ever.... Peoples to whom fraternal organizations
-and secret societies, for men and women alike, are as
-ancient as the mountains they inhabit, whose lodgerooms are
-more wonderful, and whose signs and passwords more complex,
-than those of any organization of civilized lands and modern
-times."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>One of the most weird and fascinating experiences in
-Arizona is a visit to "Assamanuda," the "Country of the
-Departed Spirits." This is the poetic name the Iroquois
-Indians give to the Painted Desert. This vast plain
-stretches away with gigantic horizontal columns, the remains
-of vast layers of sedimentary rock, from which the
-rains of prehistoric ages have washed away the connecting
-earth, and the columns are streaked and mottled with
-scarlet, due, it is said, to the oxidization of particles of
-feldspar in the granite of which these rocks are composed.
-Here may be witnessed in its perfection the Fata Morgana.
-In the air appear palaces, hanging gardens, and
-temples; fountains and wonderful parks adorned with
-sculpture; towers and turreted castles; beautiful villas
-with terraced lawns and cascades of water thrown high
-in the air; rose gardens and hills, where the deer and the
-antelope are seen; all these and other visions of loveliness
-are pictured on the air in a perfection of light and shading.
-It is not difficult to fancy that one is really gazing into
-the ethereal world, beyond the pearly gates, and gazing
-indeed into "the country of departed spirits."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>All Northern and Northeastern Arizona are comprised
-in the region,&mdash;Nature's picture gallery. Dr. Newberry,
-the geologist, who explored all the regions east of the
-upper Colorado as far as the junction of the Green and
-the Grand rivers, thus pictures one view of the plateau:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Directly south the view was bounded by the high and distant
-mesas of the Navajo country, succeeded in the southwest
-by the still more lofty battlements of the great white mesa
-formerly seen from the Moqui pueblos. On these high tablelands
-the outlines were not only distinctly visible, but grand
-and impressive at the distance of a hundred miles. Nearly
-west a great gap opened in the high tablelands through
-which the San Juan flows to its junction with the Colorado.
-The distance between the mesa walls is perhaps ten miles,
-and scattered over it are castle-like buttes and slender towers,
-none of which can be less than a thousand feet in height,
-their sides absolutely perpendicular and their forms wonderful
-imitations of architectural art. Illuminated by the setting
-sun the outlines of these singular objects come out sharp
-and distinct with such exact similitude to art that we could
-hardly resist conviction that we beheld the walls and towers
-of some ancient Cyclopean city, hitherto undiscovered."</p></blockquote>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p267.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">SUWARA (GIANT CACTUS), SALT RIVER VALLEY, ARIZONA</p>
-
-<p>Every journey in Arizona seems to lead on into an
-enchanted world. The gray valley road, the curious mesa
-formations that stretch into infinite distances; the mystic
-apparition in the Estrella range of the Montezuma faces;
-the ruins of Casa Grande, which tell their tale of a massive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
-city that once existed here; the ruins on the Rio Verde;
-the mounds and shafts discovered belonging to some prehistoric
-civilization; the ancient watch tower; the painted
-rocks, with their extensive hieroglyphics,&mdash;all speak to the
-archæologist in a language that fascinates the imagination.
-Its three greatest features&mdash;the Grand Cañon,
-regarding which there is neither speech nor language;
-the Petrified Forest, and that Submerged Star known
-as "Meteorite Mountain"&mdash;would alone make it the
-world mecca of scientists; to say nothing of the strange
-ruins of prehistoric peoples, of an unearthly beauty of
-atmospheric coloring, and of the contemporary scientific
-interest of the great Lowell Observatory at Flagstaff,
-or the splendid progress and development of the people.
-It might well have been of this marvellous country that
-Emerson wrote:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"And many a thousand summers</div>
-<div class="indent1">My gardens ripened well,</div>
-<div class="verse">And light from meliorating stars</div>
-<div class="indent1">With firmer glory fell.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"I wrote the past in characters</div>
-<div class="indent1">Of rock and fire the scroll,</div>
-<div class="verse">The building in the coral sea,</div>
-<div class="indent1">The planting of the coal.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"And thefts from satellites and rings</div>
-<div class="indent1">And broken stars I drew,</div>
-<div class="verse">And out of spent and aged things</div>
-<div class="indent1">I formed the world anew."</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>What is the world that shall be in this mystic Arizona?
-What, indeed, was the world that has been there? Imagination
-falters alike before the stupendous marvels of its
-past, the picturesque splendors of its future. Its scenic
-grandeur will make Arizona a world centre; the nations
-from afar will make their pilgrimage to the sublimest
-marvels of all nature's revelations to this planet. Here
-will be sought the counsel of the gods. The message of
-the prehistoric past and of the undiscovered future will
-"give the law of night and day" in wonderful Arizona,
-the land of magic and mystery.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX</h2></div>
-
-<p class="center"><strong>THE PETRIFIED FOREST AND THE
-METEORITE MOUNTAIN</strong></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"<i>A spell is laid on sod and stone,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Night and day are tampered with.</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Every quality and pith</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Surcharged and sultry with a power</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>That works its will on age and hour.</i>"</div>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Emerson</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A June</span> day in the Petrified Forests of Arizona is an
-experience that can never fade from memory. Every excursion
-into this strange, uncanny realm of Arizona, which
-is an empire in its area; every journey one takes, every
-trail he follows, leads into strange and fascinating locality;
-and Adamana, the gateway to the Petrified Forests, has its
-own spellbinding power for the tourist. Adamana consists
-of a water tank, the station, and two bungalows, in
-one of which very comfortable entertainment is offered,
-and in the other of which dwells a character whom all
-travellers meet,&mdash;Adam Hanna, a distant relative of the
-late Mark Hanna, the original settler of this region.
-For a long time the place was known as Adam Hanna's,
-and when with advancing civilization this designation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
-became too colloquial for an up-to-date twentieth-century
-world, the elision of two or three letters gave the present
-attractive name,&mdash;Adamana.</p>
-
-<p>To leave the comfortable ease of a Pullman sleeper at
-the witching hour of five in the morning to stop over at
-Adamana and visit the Petrified Forest requires a degree
-of fortitude beyond that usually calculated. Left to one's
-self, one would emulate the example of the man who journeyed
-to the north pole to see a sunrise that occurred only
-three days in the year. On the first two mornings he refused
-to rise on the plea of the further extension of his
-opportunities; on the third, when his servant reminded
-him that it was the "last call," he turned over and philosophically
-remarked that he would come again next year.
-But the dusky porter allows the tourist no such margin
-for reflection, and one finds himself standing in some wonderful
-place spellbound by the witchery of the desert, and
-the long train vanishing in the distance, almost before he
-knows whether he has exchanged the land of dreams for
-the land of day and daylight realities,&mdash;for this weird and
-mystic panorama of the infinite desert, with the bluest of
-turquoise skies already lighted by the blazing splendor of
-the June sunrise, and the grotesque, uncanny buttes scattered
-at intervals all over that vast plain. The intense
-silence was unbroken save by the voice and footstep of the
-man representing the little bungalow termed the Forest
-Hotel. Contrary to one's preconceived ideas of an Arizona<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
-desert, the morning was cold, and the blazing fire and hot
-coffee were most grateful. But where was the "Petrified
-Forest"? one marvelled. Away on the horizon gleamed
-an evanescent, palpitating region of shimmering color.
-Yet this was not the "quarry of jewels," but the "Bad
-Lands," which have at least one redeeming virtue, whatever
-their vices,&mdash;that of producing the most aërial and
-fairy-like color effects imaginable.</p>
-
-<p>It is astonishing how swiftly one relinquishes preconceived
-ideas of living and learns to get on without electric
-bells, long-distance telephones, and elaborate conveniences
-in general, even to the "prepared air," strained through
-thin layers of cloth, as the latest superfine condition
-added to a great New York hotel, and adapts one's self
-to a mode of life in which a simple but very clean room,
-primitive food, wonderful air, good, kind people, and a
-petrified forest to amuse him, take the place of the
-complex and elaborate life of the great Eastern cities.
-At Adamana one finds himself seventy-five miles from
-Gallup, New Mexico, the nearest town of any importance,
-from which all household supplies must be ordered.
-When the coffee gives out, for instance, seventy-five miles
-from a lemon; and when a Sunday and a holiday have
-almost followed each other, thus delaying all orders, one
-has then the most delightful and spacious opportunities
-for experimenting on the simple life. The desert offers
-other things; and while these do not include the menu of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
-Sherry's, for instance, they do include certain allurements
-for which the country might be searched in vain, as they
-only exist on the Colorado desert. The quality of the air,
-the color of the sky, the marvel of color vistas,&mdash;all make
-up a new world in which one finds himself fairly questioning
-regarding his own identity. Nor has he any apparent
-test by which to determine&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center">"If I am I, as I do hope I be."</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps, indeed, he does not so tenaciously cling to
-that which he remembers of himself yesterday, and is
-rather interested, on the whole, in accepting some possibly
-new transformation of his being. The locality
-seems to him sufficiently well indicated as being, according
-to his first impression, simply somewhere in the magic
-and witchery of space. This address might not be accepted
-by the government postal service, but even that
-heretofore indispensable matter in some way fades into
-comparative insignificance. What does one who has an
-Arizona sky, and a bewildering shimmer of color afar on
-the horizon that might be</p>
-
-<p class="center">"A painted ship upon a painted ocean"</p>
-
-<p>or almost anything else,&mdash;what does he want of the
-sublunary detail of eight postal deliveries a day, beginning
-at half-past seven in the morning, with his first
-dawn of returning consciousness, and ending with midnight,
-when he is, very likely, summoned out of his sleep<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
-by the rap of a bellboy delivering more mail,&mdash;more,&mdash;as
-if he had not been under an avalanche of it all
-day and had sought refuge in dreamland for the very
-purpose of escaping the vigilance of his national postal
-service. But one may as well accept the fact as one from
-which there is no appeal, that in the heart of civilization
-he cannot escape its burdens and its penalties. He can
-only evade them by going to&mdash;Adamana, for instance;
-Adamana, the metropolis of the railroad water-tank, the
-station, and two bungalows. Even these are too many.
-One bungalow is enough. He cannot repose in two at
-the same time; and as for neighbors and news,&mdash;has
-he not the stars and the sunsets? What does Emily
-Dickinson say?&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"The only news I know</div>
-<div class="verse">Is bulletins all day</div>
-<div class="verse">From Immortality."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>There are no birds to</p>
-
-<p class="center">"... carol undeceiving things,"</p>
-
-<p>as in Colorado; but there is, instead, intense silence,&mdash;a
-silence so absolutely intense as to be, by a paradox, fairly
-vocal; and if one does but catch the music of the spheres
-for which he finds himself listening, it must be that his
-powers of hearing are defective. One recalls the lines:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"Who loves the music of the spheres</div>
-<div class="verse">And lives on earth, must close his ears</div>
-<div class="verse">To many voices that he hears."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>The "many voices" are stilled; one has left them at
-least seventy-five miles away,&mdash;in Gallup, for instance!
-Gallup, that for the time prefigures itself to him as his
-New York, his Paris, his London. It is the source of
-all his possible supplies; and that it does not assume
-an overwhelming importance is simply because he does
-not want any supplies of the particular nature that
-Gallup&mdash;or Paris&mdash;can furnish. He has achieved something
-more than the power to satisfy all his (former)
-multitudinous wants; he has eliminated them.</p>
-
-<p>To be sure, the Chinese have a proverb that it is not
-worth while to cut off one's feet to save buying shoes.
-Yet, if instead of depriving himself of feet he has
-achieved wings, why, manifestly, there is no need of
-shoes. There are, when one comes to think of it, a
-vast number of things in our late civilization for which
-there is no special need.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="indent1">"For a cap and bells our lives we pay;</div>
-<div class="verse">Bubbles we earn with a whole soul's tasking:</div>
-<div class="indent1">'Tis heaven alone that is given away;</div>
-<div class="verse">'Tis only God may be had for the asking."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>In fact, when one comes to reflect upon the aspects of
-his former life (as he sees them in mental panorama from
-Adamana), he can only arrive at the conclusion that life
-is unnecessarily choked and submerged under an ever-increasing
-burden of <i>things</i>. Emerson, of course, whose
-insight saw the universe as a crystal sphere which revealed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
-to his vision its entire working mechanism,&mdash;Emerson long
-since announced that</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"Things are in the saddle</div>
-<div class="verse">And ride mankind."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Why should one be ridden by things? Why should
-he enslave himself,&mdash;mortgage his entire powers of achievement,
-such as they are, to pay his bills to the butcher,
-the baker, and the candlestick maker? Is not the life
-more than meat, and the spirit than fine raiment? So
-he may dream for the moment, gazing meditatively at the
-water-tank, the station, and the two bungalows that comprise
-Adamana. Good for that day only, at least, is its
-contrast to the bewildering din of <i>entrepôts</i>, of ports, of
-custom-houses, of the general din and warfare of the
-world he has left behind.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p276.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">SAN FRANCISCO PEAK, NEAR FLAGSTAFF, ARIZONA</p>
-
-<p>Holbrook, the other station for the Petrified Forests,
-is twenty miles away. Flagstaff, a very thriving and interesting
-Arizona town, famous as the site of the Observatory
-of Prof. Percival Lowell of Boston, is one hundred
-and fifty miles to the west; and one hour of railroad
-journey beyond Flagstaff is Williams, the town from
-which runs the branch railroad to the Grand Cañon over
-the rolling mesas crowned with the beautiful peaks of the
-San Francisco mountains, a distance of sixty-three miles,
-the journey occupying three hours. The nearest town
-to Adamana station, in which a daily paper is published,
-is Albuquerque, in New Mexico, which is nine hundred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>
-and thirty-five miles to the east, almost as far as from
-New York to Chicago. The metropolis to which this
-region looks as its nearest large city is Los Angeles,
-twenty-six hours distant. So here one is out of the
-world, so to speak,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center">"The world forgetting, by the world forgot,"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>with the vast rolling mesas, with sandstone cliffs offering
-an uncanny landscape before the eye, with the eternal
-blue of Arizona skies bending above, with a silence so
-deep brooding over the desert that one might well feel
-himself on the moon rather than on earth,&mdash;a silence only
-broken by the semi-daily rush of the long overland trains
-and occasional freight lines that pass.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>John Muir, the famous California naturalist, explorer,
-and author of valuable books on the Western parks, passed
-the winter of 1905-06 at Adamana with his two daughters,
-the Misses Wanda and Helen Muir, and it is he who has
-discovered the new Petrified Forest which he calls the
-"Blue Forest"&mdash;all the specimens having a deep blue
-tone, while the other three are simply quarries of red
-moss, agate, amethyst, topaz, pale rose crystals gleaming
-against a smoky green ground. The landscape effect of
-the "Bad Lands" from the little bungalow known as
-the Forest Hotel is of fairy-like enchantment. A shimmer
-of rose and gray and gold and emerald, it gleams on the
-horizon. Lighted by a blazing sunset, it might well be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
-the gates of a New Jerusalem. Anything more exquisite,
-and more ineffably ethereal in coloring, one might journey
-far to seek.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"Moreover, something is, or seems,</div>
-<div class="verse">That touches us like mystic gleams,</div>
-<div class="verse">Like glimpses of forgotten dreams."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>These lines may, perchance, come echoing around one
-in the air as he loiters at night on the low, long piazza,
-while the myriad meteors of Arizona skies blaze their way
-through the transparent air and a sky full of stars contends
-with the moon for brilliancy; the unearthly, delicate,
-ethereal coloring of the "Bad Lands" gleaming
-resplendent on the distant horizon.</p>
-
-<p>If the wanderer has fallen upon particularly fortunate
-days in his horoscope and found Miss Wanda Muir&mdash;her
-quaint name coming from her mother, the daughter of a
-Polish nobleman&mdash;to drive him out to this marvellous
-"forest" of stone, he will have a pleasure enhanced by
-interesting conversation. A graduate of Berkeley College
-in California, and the constant companion of her father in
-his wanderings, Miss Muir is indeed an ideal guide, and
-under her hand one June morning the two horses sped
-along over the rough, stony ground at a pace to set every
-fibre tingling. One of the features of the Arizona desert
-is the arroyo, a dry stream, a ready-made river, so to speak,
-minus the water. Some of these even have a stream of
-flowing water, only it is under the bed of the river rather<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
-than on top of it, for Arizona is the land of magic and
-wonder and of a general reversal of accepted conditions.</p>
-
-<p>"Sometimes in driving out here," said Miss Muir, "a
-cloudburst comes up while we are in the Petrified Forests,
-and on returning the horses have to swim this dry stream.
-Once the water was so high it came into the wagon. Not
-infrequently, when we go out to the forest, some one comes
-dashing after us on horseback to warn us to get back as
-quickly as possible, or the torrents of water from a sudden
-cloudburst will cut us off altogether, perhaps for a day and
-a night." The pleasing uncertainty of life in Arizona may
-be realized from this danger of being suddenly drowned
-in the arid sands of a desert, and being confronted with a
-sudden Lodore that descends from the heavens on a midsummer
-noon. But, as one is constantly saying to himself,
-Arizona is the land of surprises. No known laws of
-meteorology, or of any other form of science, hold good
-here. The mountain peak transforms itself into the bottom
-of a sea, and the sea suddenly upheaves itself in air
-and figures as a mountain. Arizona is nature's kaleidoscope;
-it is the land of transformation.</p>
-
-<p>Of the three petrified forests, each separated by a mile
-or two, the first is reached by a drive of some six miles,
-while the third is more than twice as far. The second is
-the largest and most elaborate, and in the aggregate
-they cover an area of over two thousand acres. The
-ground is the high rolling mesas, and over it are scattered,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
-"thick as leaves in Vallombrosa," the jewel-like fragments
-of mighty trees in deposits that are the wonder of the
-scientist. From the huge fallen tree trunks, many of these
-being over two hundred feet in length and of similar proportions
-in diameter, to the mere chips and twigs, the
-forests are transmuted into agate and onyx and chalcedony.
-Numbers of these specimens contain perfect crystals.
-They are vivid and striking in color,&mdash;in rich Byzantine
-red, deep greens and purples and yellow, white and translucent,
-or dark in all color blendings. Great blocks of
-agate cover many parts of the forest. Hundreds of entire
-trees are seen. When cut transversely these logs show the
-bark, the inner fibre, and veining as perfectly as would a
-living tree. And over all these fallen monarchs of a prehistoric
-forest bends the wonderful turquoise sky of Arizona,
-and the air is all the liquid gold of the intense sunshine.</p>
-
-<p>At Tiffany's in New York may be seen huge slabs and
-sections of this petrified wood under high polish. A fine
-exhibit of it was made at the Paris exposition in 1900,
-and a specimen of it was presented to Rodin, the great
-sculptor, who was incredulous of the possibility that this
-block, apparently of onyx, could have been wood. Through
-all the forests are these strange rock formations called
-buttes, rising in the most weird shapes from the sand and
-stones and sagebrush of the vast desert. What a treasure-ground
-of antiquity! This region, which seems a plain,
-is yet higher than the top of Mount Washington, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
-altitude insures almost perpetual coolness. Scientists seem
-to agree in the theory that the petrified forests are a debatable
-phenomenon whose origin eludes any final conclusion.
-It is possible that some mighty sea suddenly arose&mdash;perhaps
-as the present Salton Sea in Southern California&mdash;and
-engulfed them. The land is partly the "bad lands"
-and partly a sandy plain covered with petrifactions. The
-third forest contains hundreds of unbroken tree trunks, of
-which some are over two hundred feet in length. Many
-of these are partly imbedded in the earth.</p>
-
-<p>All around this high plateau rise on the horizon surrounding
-cliffs to the height of one hundred and fifty and
-more feet, serrated into ravines and gorges, variegated with
-the sandstone formations in all their shimmer of colors, and
-indicating that this basin was once the bottom of a sea.</p>
-
-<p>It is the paradise of the ethnologist as well as of the
-geologist. Besides cliff ruins and hieroglyphics, almost
-anywhere, by chance, one may find traces of submerged
-walls, and following these, a man with an ordinary spade
-may dig up prehistoric pottery, skeletons, beads, rings,
-and occasionally necklaces. The pottery, both in design
-and in scheme of decoration, shows a high degree of
-civilization. Who were these prehistoric peoples who had
-built their pueblos and created their implements and
-pottery and were already old when Plymouth Rock was
-new? Much of the symbolic creation here still awaits
-its interpreter.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>From these millions of tons of glistening, shining
-blocks and segments and tree trunks the tourist is not
-allowed to carry away specimens <i>carte blanche</i>, as formerly.
-The Petrified Forests are now a government reservation,
-although not yet one of the government parks.
-Small specimens, within a reasonable amount, are permitted
-the tourist as souvenirs.</p>
-
-<p>The Petrified Forests are quarries rather than forests;
-the great fallen logs, branches, and chips, lying prostrate
-on the ground, are seen glowing and gleaming like jewels.
-So far as the eye can reach there is not a human habitation.
-Over the infinite stretch of sand and rocks bends
-the bluest of skies, and here and there are prehistoric Indian
-mines, and one ledge of cliffs on which are strange
-and as yet undeciphered hieroglyphics. The graves of
-the prehistoric inhabitants of this region are numerous,
-each containing rare and choice specimens of pottery
-which are dug out intact. This region seems to have
-been once thickly populated. The remains of pueblos
-are numerous. Skeletons are constantly being found.</p>
-
-<p>Although the visitor is not allowed to carry away with
-him a trainload or so of specimens, he may still be permitted
-a beautiful cross-section of an entire tree trunk,
-showing all the veins of the wood and the bark, a specimen
-thin enough to be portable, and worthy a place in
-any cabinet of curiosities, besides many chips showing all
-the range of beautiful colors which abound in Chalcedony<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>
-Park. In this park lies a vast fallen tree trunk that
-forms a natural bridge over a chasm,&mdash;a bridge that
-seems to be of solid agate. These forests are among the
-great scenic wonders of the world, and if they were in the
-heart of the Himalayas or some other especially inaccessible
-spot, all good Americans would hasten to visit them.
-But our own wonderful and incomparable scenic grandeur
-is neglected. These "Petrified Forests" are the marvel
-of the geologist. What has happened, in all the phenomena
-of nature, to produce this incredible spectacle?
-Many scientific men believe that these forests did not
-grow on the spot where they now would lie prostrate,
-but were swept down by floods when this region was a
-vast inland sea, and that they became imbedded in the
-sand; that then the sea vanished and volcanic eruptions
-poured over, and the wood was hardened to rock. Again,
-a flood of water passed over and washed away the sand
-and silt, and the erosion left these thousands of acres of
-petrifactions exposed on the surface as now; and thus, after
-millenniums have passed, we have these quarries of chalcedony
-and agate, onyx, cornelian, topaz, and amethyst.</p>
-
-<p>Every evening at Adamana disclosed a sky panorama of
-kaleidoscopic wonder. Afar to the horizon the Bad Lands
-shimmered in a faint dream of colors under the full moon.
-The stars seemed to hang midway in the air, and frequent
-meteors blazed through the vast, mysterious space.
-Adamana is nine hours from Albuquerque, the metropolis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
-of New Mexico, and five hours distant from Flagstaff,
-to the west. All the thousands of acres of desert lands
-about require only water to render them richly productive.
-But water is unattainable. There are no mountain ranges
-near enough to produce water storage, and unless the
-twentieth-century scientists discover some way of creating
-rain, these arid regions must remain as they are. Yet
-even here American life and energy and progress are seen.
-The scattered settlers unite in maintaining public schools
-six months in the year, and with only from twelve to
-twenty pupils the teacher is paid from seventy-five to
-eighty dollars a month,&mdash;more than twice the salary paid
-in the country schools in New England. In the little
-bungalow here at Adamana, where Mr. Stevenson, the
-government guardian of the Petrified Forests, makes
-tourists strangely comfortable during their desert sojourn,
-one finds a piano, a well-selected little library, and
-young people whose command of the violin and piano offer
-music that is by no means unacceptable. The children
-get music lessons&mdash;no one knows how; they are eager
-for any instruction in language, and acquire French and
-Spanish in some measure, and in all ways the national
-ambition is sustained. From Albuquerque comes a daily
-paper, and only one day behind date the Los Angeles
-papers arrive. One is not out of the world (alas!) even
-on the Arizona desert.</p>
-
-<p>It is a new world in itself,&mdash;the desert of Arizona. No<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
-region on the earth is more diversified, more intensely interesting.
-This desert comprises mountains and plains;
-it contains that one supreme scenic wonder of the world,
-the Grand Cañon; in it are Cañon Diablo and the Meteorite
-Mountain. Within its area also is the "Tonto
-Basin,"&mdash;an incalculable chaos of isolated and unrelated
-cliffs, and crags of mountains peaks that have lost their
-mountains, and general wreck and ruin. One might fancy
-that at the end of creation, when the universe itself was
-completed, all the chips and fragments and débris in general
-were hurled into the Tonto Basin,&mdash;only that, of
-course, the universe was never "made," but is always in
-the making; only that the physical configuration of the
-entire earth is always in process of transformation into
-new aspects, and nowhere is this progress of the ages more
-extraordinarily in evidence than in Arizona.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving the Petrified Forest for the Grand Cañon, one
-has a wonderful journey of six hours to Williams, and
-thence three hours over the branch road to Bright Angel,
-where the new and magnificent hotel, "El Tovar," captivates
-the travellers, and from which a stage runs to Grand
-View, thirteen miles away, where Vishnu Temple, the Coliseum,
-Solomon's Temple, and other wonders of the marvellous
-sandstone architecture, in the depths of the Grand
-Cañon are viewed.</p>
-
-<p>In waiting for the train on the branch road running
-from Williams to the Grand Cañon over the beautiful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
-San Franciscan mountains, the hour of waiting at Williams
-is made a delight by a most unique and interesting curiosity
-shop under the splendid Harvey management, where
-all kinds of natural curiosities and Indian and Mexican
-things are shown. The walls are hung with bright-hued
-blankets and rugs, the ceiling is decorated and draped,
-easy-chairs and sofas abound, and these tend to make the
-journey a kind of royal progress.</p>
-
-<p>In 1540 Pedro de Tovar, one of the officers who accompanied
-Coronado through his great expedition, passed
-through Arizona. Even then an extinct civilization was
-already old. The ruins of the dwellings of those prehistoric
-people abound near Flagstaff. In the recesses of
-Walnut Cañon there are found cliff-dwellings in great
-numbers. "Some of these are in ruins, and have but a
-narrow shelf of the once broad floor of solid rock left
-to evidence their extreme antiquity. Others are almost
-wholly intact, having stubbornly resisted the weathering
-of time." Nothing but fragments of pottery now remain of
-the many quaint implements and trinkets that characterized
-these dwellings at the time of their discovery.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Fixed like swallows' nests upon the face of a precipice,
-approachable from above or below only by deliberate and
-cautious climbing, these dwellings have the appearance of
-fortified retreats rather than habitual abodes. That there
-was a time in the remotest past when warlike peoples of
-mysterious origin passed southward over this plateau is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>
-generally credited. And the existence of the cliff-dwellings
-is ascribed to the exigencies of that dark period when the
-inhabitants of the plateau, unable to cope with the superior
-energy, intelligence, and numbers of the descending hordes,
-devised these unassailable retreats. All their quaintness and
-antiquity cannot conceal the deep pathos of their being, for
-tragedy is written all over these poor hovels hung between
-earth and sky. Their builders hold no smallest niche in
-recorded history. Their aspirations, their struggles, and their
-fate are all unwritten, save on these crumbling stones, which
-are their sole monument and meagre epitaph. Here once
-they dwelt. They left no other print on time."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Flagstaff is a pleasant mountain town some seven thousand
-feet above sea level, and is particularly fortunate in
-being the site of the Lowell Observatory, founded by
-Professor Percival Lowell of Boston, which brings eminent
-astronomers and scientists to the place. In the Lowell
-Observatory some of the best work in modern science is
-being accomplished, and Professor Lowell and his staff
-have for some years been devoting themselves to the
-special study of Mars. Flagstaff was selected for the site
-of the observatory on account of the singularly clear and
-still air of Arizona. It is an atmosphere almost without
-vibration. Never were distances more curiously deceiving
-to the eye than in Arizona. A point that is apparently
-only a few yards away may be, in reality, at a distance of
-two miles. Professor Lowell and his staff have, therefore,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
-exceptional facilities for their work, and Mr. Carl Otto
-Lampland, the stellar photographer of the staff, has taken
-impressions of Mars that seem to leave little doubt in the
-minds of experts that canals on that planet reflect themselves
-by the camera. This achievement is recognized by
-astronomers everywhere as marking an epoch in the study
-of Mars and as fairly closing the argument regarding the
-possibility of canals on that body by bringing their construction
-there as an unquestionable fact. It was Schiaparelli,
-the Italian astronomer, who first observed what
-he believed were canals on Mars. His report was received
-with incredulity; but his theory has been so reinforced and
-supported by actual results of observations since then that
-it is now generally accepted. Early in the decade of 1880-90
-Professor Lowell began a special study at Flagstaff with his
-fine twenty-four-inch telescope, but it was in May, 1905,
-that the first results of real significance were obtained. The
-light about Mars is said to be faint, and the vibrations in
-the air, though less in Arizona than is usual elsewhere, still
-produced disturbing effects on the plate. It is said that
-Mr. Lampland overcame this difficulty after a long series
-of experiments, "by using a diaphragm on the telescope,
-cutting down the aperture from twenty-four inches to
-twelve inches, as a rule. Though this diaphragming of a
-photographic lens is not new, this was the first time it was
-applied to a glass as large as twenty-four inches in diameter
-and for such faint objects. Hitherto astronomers have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
-been more concerned with availing themselves of the light-gathering
-power of the large lenses. It was a distinct advance,
-and is the one step to which the largest share of the
-credit is due of successfully photographing the canals."</p>
-
-<p>In the vestibule of the Institute of Technology in
-Boston were shown in the spring of 1906 a number of
-these photographs. To the uninitiated they merely presented
-a black ground with white lines faintly defined.
-Professor Lowell says that the special significance of the
-photographs lies in the fact that they corroborate the
-results shown by other photographers of Mars, and that
-they also corroborate the methods. That the sensitive
-plate of the camera will record a star never visible
-through even the strongest glass, and thus prove its
-existence, is a wonderful fact in stellar photography.</p>
-
-<p>Cañon Diablo is one of the volcanic phenomena of Arizona,&mdash;a
-narrow chasm some two hundred and fifty feet
-deep, several miles long, and five or six hundred feet wide,
-which the Santa Fé road crosses on a wonderful steel spider-web
-bridge a few miles before reaching Flagstaff. It is one
-of the curious things for which the tourist is watching.
-For so intensely interesting is the entire journey westward
-after leaving La Junta in Colorado, that the traveller
-who realizes the wonderland through which he is passing
-is very much on the alert for the landscape.</p>
-
-<p>Between Adamana and Flagstaff is a strangely interesting
-country. Here is Meteorite Mountain, where evidently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>
-a huge meteor fell into the earth with terrific force, upheaving
-all the surrounding crust and thus producing a
-mountain with an enormous cavity in its centre. For five
-years men have been digging here to find the meteor.
-They have excavated huge fragments of it. The vast
-hollow crater where the meteorite is supposed to have
-fallen into the ground is a mile wide. In some fragments
-of the meteor which were submitted to Sir William
-Crookes for examination that great scientist found
-diamonds in small but unmistakable quantities.</p>
-
-<p>The Meteorite Mountain is situated not more than ten
-miles south of Cañon Diablo, from which station the
-traveller may drive to this phenomenal cavity. Within
-recent months shafts are being projected into the earth
-to discover, if possible, whether the meteoric theory is
-the true one. More and more, with every year, is science
-undertaking to "pluck out the heart of the mystery"
-in this problematic Arizona. Prof. G. K. Gilbert, of the
-United States Geological Survey, has made a special study
-of this phenomenon, and it is he who experimented with
-a magnetic test, assuming that if an enormous meteorite
-had hurled itself into the earth until it was buried past
-excavation, the great mass of metallic iron would still respond
-to the test, and furnish unmistakable proof of its
-presence if subjected to magnetic attraction. A scientific
-writer who has recently made a study of Meteorite Mountain
-thus reports the conditions:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"The mountain is about two hundred feet high, and there
-are a few stunted pines about its forbidding looking slopes.
-Going to the top of this mountain, over huge masses of
-strange-looking rock, one will find a great depression, generally
-called the crater, though there are no evidences of its
-volcanic formation. This crater is a huge bowl one mile
-across and six hundred feet deep. The winds of the desert
-have blown much sand into the crater, evidently covering the
-bottom of the depression to a depth of many feet. There is
-a level space of about forty acres in the bottom of the crater.</p>
-
-<p>"When the gigantic meteor fell hissing into the earth, if
-it ever did so, the concussion must have been terrific. And
-in this connection it is interesting to note that the Indians
-near by have a legend about a huge star falling out of the
-heavens and dazzling the tribe with its brightness. Then
-there was a great shock and sudden darkness, and ever since
-then the Indians have regarded Meteorite Mountain with
-awe. Some idea of the action of the meteorite can be
-obtained by throwing a stone into the mud. When the
-meteorite buried itself far into the earth the sides were
-heaved up, leaving a rim-like circle about the depression.
-As the meteorite sank into the earth it must have crushed
-layers of red sandstone and limestone. It is believed that
-the white sand found in the crater and on the sides of the
-mountain is from the sandstone pulverized by the meteor in
-its descent. This sand was blown skyward and afterward
-settled down on the mountain, covering it thickly. No sand
-like it is to be found near the mountain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>"Men searching the ground surrounding the mountain for
-a distance of several miles find small meteorites. Several of
-these weigh as much as one thousand pounds, and others
-weigh only a fraction of an ounce. The largest pieces were
-found furthest from the mountain. These meteorites have
-been proved to be practically non-magnetic. This may explain
-why the immense body of iron in the buried meteor has
-not shown any magnetic properties. Needles taken to the
-mountain have not shown the presence of any great magnetic
-attraction, and this fact puzzled scientists until it was found
-that the fragments found near the mountain did not possess
-magnetism.</p>
-
-<p>"Another interesting discovery is the presence of what is
-called 'iron shale' near the mountain. These are fragments
-of burned or 'dead' iron. They might have been broken
-from the meteorite at the time of the terrific impact, or they
-might have been snapped from the larger body owing to a
-sudden cooling process. Inasmuch as the Cañon Diablo
-country was at one time an immense inland sea, another
-interesting theory has been brought forth,&mdash;that the meteor
-fell into this sea, and that the great number of splinters of
-iron in the neighborhood were caused by the sudden cooling
-of the molten mass. It has been discovered that these small
-meteorites contain diamonds."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In the immediate vicinity of Meteorite Mountain several
-tons of meteoric fragments have been found of which
-Prof. George Wharton James has one, weighing about
-a ton, on his lawn at his charming residence in Pasadena.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>
-There are also found in this vicinity large amounts of shale
-which scientists pronounce analogous to the meteorite, but
-"dead"; yet this shale is highly magnetic and possesses
-polarity,&mdash;one of the most mysterious and incomprehensible
-properties of electricity.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Gilbert did not meet success when he tried
-the magnetic test, and in discussing this matter in an
-address on "The Origin of Hypotheses," delivered before
-the Geological Society in Washington last year, he said:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Still another contribution to the subject, while it does
-not increase the number of hypotheses, is nevertheless important
-in that it tends to diminish the weight of the magnetic
-evidence and thus to reopen the question which Mr. Baker
-and I supposed we had settled. Our fellow-member, Mr.
-Edwin E. Howell, through whose hands much of the meteoric
-iron had passed, points out that each of the iron masses,
-great and small, is in itself a complete individual. They
-have none of the characters that would be found if they had
-been broken one from another, and yet, as they are all of
-one type and all reached the earth within a small district, it
-must be supposed that they were originally connected in
-some way.</p>
-
-<p>"Reasoning by analogy from the characters of other meteoric
-bodies, he infers that the irons were all included in a
-large mass of some different material, either crystalline rock,
-such as constitutes the class of meteorites called 'stony,' or
-else a compound of iron and sulphur, similar to certain nodules<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>
-discovered inside the iron masses when sawn in two. Neither
-of these materials is so enduring as iron, and the fact that
-they are not now found on the plain does not prove their
-original absence. Moreover, the plain is strewn in the vicinity
-of the crater with bits of limonite, a mineral frequently
-produced by the action of air and water on iron sulphides,
-and this material is much more abundant than the iron. If
-it be true that the iron masses were thus embedded, like
-plums in an astral pudding, the hypothetic buried star might
-have great size and yet only small power to attract the magnetic
-needle. Mr. Howell also proposes a qualification of
-the test by volumes, suggesting that some of the rocks beneath
-the buried star might have been condensed by the
-shock so as to occupy less space.</p>
-
-<p>"These considerations are eminently pertinent to the
-study of the crater and will find appropriate place in any
-comprehensive discussion of its origin; but the fact which is
-peculiarly worthy of note at the present time is their ability
-to unsettle a conclusion that was beginning to feel itself
-secure. This illustrates the tentative nature not only of
-the hypotheses of science, but of what science calls its
-results.</p>
-
-<p>"The method of hypotheses, and that method is the
-method of science, founds its explanations of nature wholly
-on observed facts, and its results are ever subject to the
-limitations imposed by imperfect observation. However
-grand, however widely accepted, however useful its conclusions,
-none is so sure that it cannot be called into question<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>
-by a newly discovered fact. In the domain of the world's
-knowledge there is no infallibility."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Sir William Crookes has been deeply interested in the
-phenomenon of Meteorite Mountain, which must take rank
-with the Petrified Forests and even with the Grand Cañon
-as one of the marvels of Arizona. The meteoric shower
-which seems to have accompanied the falling of the
-huge meteorite&mdash;if the theory of its existence is true&mdash;has
-recorded its traces over a radius of more than five
-miles from the crater-like cavity. The experiment of
-Dr. Foote is thus described:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"An ardent mineralogist, the late Dr. Foote, in cutting
-a section of this meteorite, found the tools were injured by
-something vastly harder than metallic iron, and an emery
-wheel used in grinding the iron had been ruined. He examined
-the specimen chemically, and soon after announced to
-the scientific world that the Cañon Diablo Meteorite contained
-black and transparent diamonds. This startling discovery
-was afterwards verified by Professors Friedel and
-Moissan, who found that the Cañon Diablo Meteorite contained
-the three varieties of carbon,&mdash;diamond (transparent
-and black), graphite, and amorphous carbon. Since this revelation
-the search for diamonds in meteorites has occupied the
-attention of chemists all over the world.</p>
-
-<p>"Here, then, we have absolute proof of the truth of the
-meteoric theory. Under atmospheric influences the iron
-would rapidly oxidize and rust away, coloring the adjacent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>
-soil with red oxide of iron. The meteoric diamonds would
-be unaffected and left on the surface to be found by explorers
-when oxidation had removed the last proof of their celestial
-origin. That there are still lumps of iron left in Arizona is
-merely due to the extreme dryness of the climate and the
-comparatively short time that the iron has been on our planet.
-We are here witnesses to the course of an event which may
-have happened in geologic times anywhere on the earth's
-surface."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In this desert plateau of dull red sandstone worn by
-the erosion and the storms of untold ages, does there
-indeed lie a submerged star? And if there does, buried
-so deep in the earth as to elude as yet all the research
-of science, what force projected it, "shot madly from its
-sphere," into the desert lands of Arizona? To visit these
-extraordinary things&mdash;the Petrified Forests, the Meteorite
-Mountain, the Grand Cañon&mdash;is to feel, in the words
-of the poet,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"These are but seeds of days,</div>
-<div class="verse">Not yet a steadfast morn,</div>
-<div class="verse">An intermittent blaze,</div>
-<div class="verse">An embryo god unborn.</div>
-
-<div class="verse"><hr class="tb" /></div>
-
-<div class="verse">I snuff the breath of my morning afar,</div>
-<div class="verse">I see the pale lustres condense to a star:</div>
-<div class="verse">The fading colors fix,</div>
-<div class="verse">The vanishing are seen,</div>
-<div class="verse">And the world that shall be</div>
-<div class="verse">Twins the world that has been."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>Not the least among the phenomena of Arizona is that
-Emerson, who never saw the Great West, should have
-left on record in his poems the lines and stanzas that
-seem as if written from personal familiarity with its
-unspeakable marvels of scenic and scientific interest.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X</h2></div>
-
-<p class="center"><strong>LOS ANGELES, THE SPELL-BINDER</strong></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"<i>This is the land the sunset washes,</i></div>
-<div class="indent1"><i>These are the banks of the Yellow Sea;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Where it rose, or whither it rushes,</i></div>
-<div class="indent1"><i>These are the western mystery!</i></div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"<i>Night after night her purple traffic</i></div>
-<div class="indent1"><i>Strews the landing with opal bales;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Merchantmen poise upon horizons,</i></div>
-<div class="indent1"><i>Dip, and vanish with fairy sails.</i>"</div>
-</div>
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Emily Dickinson</span></p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"<i>In what ethereal dances!</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>By what eternal streams!</i>"</div>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Los Angeles</span>, "the City of the Angels," is invested with
-the same poetic suggestion in its name as that which surrounds
-Santa Fé,&mdash;"the City of the Holy Faith." A
-terraced street is known as "Angel Flight." Any retrospective
-contemplation of Los Angeles gives one the sensation
-of having been whirled through the starry immensities
-of space. During even a brief stay one afterward discovers
-by the unerring logic of mathematics that within a few
-days he has perhaps travelled some four hundred miles by
-the electric trolley cars, besides his motor-car journeys
-when shot through space from old San Gabriel to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
-Pacific Coast, or from Elysium Park to Hollywood, and
-far and away on the opposite side of the city. Were one
-caught up in an aëro-car, journeying far above the clouds
-for ten days, it could hardly seem more unreal. One can
-only think of Los Angeles as the City of Vast Spaces.
-The town has laid out all the surrounding country, one
-would fancy, in beautiful tracts (there are over four
-thousand), each tract containing several acres,&mdash;laid
-out under alluring names, with streets, sidewalks, and
-lamp-posts.</p>
-
-<p>The "boom" is something tremendous. Companies
-and corporations run free electric cars to points forty
-miles out of town, as Redondo Beach and other localities,
-for people to inspect the lots offered,&mdash;lots at
-prices from "four dollars down, and four dollars a
-month," with the entire cost from ninety dollars up
-to that of several hundred. If all the world is not
-supplied with homes it is not the fault of enterprising
-Los Angeles. The incomparable electric trolley system
-renders the entire region within fifty miles around
-eligible for city privileges. People think nothing of
-going thirty, forty, even seventy-five miles by the
-"express electrics." Over an area of a thousand miles
-in length and perhaps one hundred and fifty in width
-there is scattered a population less than that centred
-within city limits in Chicago. The world is wide&mdash;in
-Southern California. There is nothing of the dreamy,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>
-languorous old Spanish atmosphere in Los Angeles. It is
-the most electrically up-to-date city imaginable. The city
-limits comprise over twenty-eight thousand acres. The
-streets are paved and oiled; the lighting is wonderful,
-most of it being done from tall towers rather than ordinary
-lamp-posts. Not even New York has any street or avenue
-so illuminated by night as is Broadway in Los Angeles,
-where, as in the boulevards in Paris, one can easily read
-by the street lights. Los Angeles has twenty-one great
-parks and innumerable hills and valleys in the residence regions.
-This diversity affords natural facilities for landscape
-gardening which are utilized with fine effect. Spacious
-boulevards, artificial lakes, and series of terraces everywhere
-enchant the eye, seen amidst the bewildering luxuriance of
-creamy magnolia blossoms and the graceful pepper tree.</p>
-
-<p>The enterprise of Los Angeles is equalled by the refinement
-and culture of the people, and the schools, churches,
-libraries&mdash;the social life&mdash;all reveal the best spirit of
-American institutions.</p>
-
-<p>That this is one of the spellbinding cities goes without
-saying. Everything is in gleam and glitter and
-glow. The electric car and the telephone system are
-here developed to a higher degree than perhaps in any
-other Western city except Denver. The growth of Los
-Angeles is something fairly incredible. A leading park
-commissioner, Dr. Lamb, has described the beauty of the
-four thousand tracts of land (each tract comprising many<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
-acres), all laid out, ready for buyers and builders. Of
-the twenty-one parks, one comprises more than three
-thousand acres, and another, Elysium Park, over eight
-hundred acres of hills and valleys already decoratively
-laid out with terraced drives and beautiful shrubs,
-flowers, and artificial lakes. The trend of the city is
-rapidly toward the ocean, some fifteen to twenty miles
-away, and it can hardly be five years before from
-Venice and Santa Monica, on the coast, to Pasadena,
-ten miles to the east of Los Angeles, there will be one
-solid city, one vast metropolis of the Southwest. The
-public library is ably administered, and it is one of considerable
-breadth of resources, with the advantage of
-having for its librarian Mr. Charles F. Lummis, the
-well-known writer on the Southwest. Madam Severance,
-who in 1878 founded the Woman's Club, a large and
-influential association of which for many years she was
-the president, and Mrs. Rebecca Spring, the friend of
-Margaret Fuller, are two Boston women who have
-transferred their homes to Los Angeles and whose lives
-emphasize Emerson's assertion that it is the fine souls
-who serve us and not what we call fine society.</p>
-
-<p>The rush and the brilliancy of life in all this Los
-Angeles region transcend description. Broadway has
-more than two miles of fine business blocks, the architecture
-being restricted to some eight or nine stories.
-The beautiful parks, with their artificial lakes, their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>
-date-palm trees, their profusion of brilliant flowers,
-attract the eye. There are residence sections of exceeding
-beauty,&mdash;the lawns bordered by hedges of rosebushes
-in full bloom and perhaps another rose hedge separating
-the sidewalk from the street.</p>
-
-<p>From the high plateaus of Northern Arizona to the
-blossoming plains of California is a contrast indeed. In
-Arizona these thousands of acres need only irrigation to
-become richly productive. The climate is delightful, for
-the elevation&mdash;over seven thousand feet&mdash;insures coolness
-and exhilaration almost every day through the
-summer. But at present there seems no conceivable way
-to procure water with which to irrigate. In California
-precisely the same land is irrigated and has also the advantage
-of a rainy season, and the vegetation and fruits
-abound luxuriously. Orange groves, with the golden
-fruit shimmering on the trees; lemon groves, olive orchards,
-and the avenues and groves of the eucalyptus tree make
-fair the landscape. An important industry here is that
-of lima beans. Tracts of fifteen hundred acres sown with
-these are not unusual, and the crops are contracted for by
-Russia and Germany almost as soon as sown. On one
-of these it is said that the owner had made a princely
-fortune within two years. The creation of the city in
-imagination is in great favor. Vast tracts of country
-from one to ten miles outside the city limits are
-staked out, as before noted; avenues and streets defined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
-and named, lamp-posts erected, an attractive name given
-the locality, and lots are offered for sale from perhaps four
-or five hundred dollars up, on the terms of "fifty dollars
-down and ten dollars a month."</p>
-
-<p>The trolley-car service in and around Los Angeles
-is said to be the best in the world. To Venice and Santa
-Monica, on the beach,&mdash;at a distance of some seventeen
-miles,&mdash;there are electric "flyers" that make the trip
-within thirty minutes. Venice is a French Étretat. The
-little rows of streets at right angles with the coast line,
-running down to the water, are named "Rose Avenue,"
-"Ozone Avenue," "Sunset Street," and other alluring
-names. This Venice is a veritable (refined and artistic)
-"Midway," with its colonnades of shops offering every
-conceivable phase of trinkets and <i>bijouterie</i>; its concert
-halls, casino, gay little restaurants, and every conceivable
-variety of amusement. It is the most unique little toy
-town of a creation conceivable, and the electrical display
-and decorations at night are fascinating in their scenic
-effect.</p>
-
-<p>Santa Monica, some two miles farther up the coast, is
-still, stately, and poetic. Here the blue Pacific rolls in in
-the most bewildering sea greens and deep blues, and over
-it bends a sky rivalling that of Arizona in depth and
-richness of color. The entire Pacific Coast is an idyl of
-landscape loveliness.</p>
-
-<p>But of life. What are the people of this lovely young<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>
-city of two hundred thousand inhabitants doing and
-thinking? It is not a question to be answered in a
-paragraph. Life here is intense, interesting, full of color
-and movement, and its many-faceted aspects invite consideration.
-As one sits, for instance, on a Pasadena
-piazza, with the golden glory of the sunset seen over the
-Sierra Madre, and the rose hedges, the orange groves, the
-great bushes of heliotrope that are almost like young trees
-pouring out their mingled fragrance on the evening air,
-one falls under its spell. As the twilight deepens into
-darkness the great searchlight from Mount Lowe, directly
-in the foreground, a picturesque panorama, may swing out
-with its weird, sweeping, dazzling illumination over the
-scene. When this searchlight is out, people at the far-away
-beaches can see to read by it at distances of from
-twenty-five to fifty miles. Quite near Mount Lowe&mdash;one
-of the adjacent peaks&mdash;is Mount Wilson, on which the
-new Carnegie Observatory is to be located. This will be
-fitted with the largest telescope in the world and will have
-the advantage of every latest scientific appliance.</p>
-
-<p>Pasadena, like all the California towns and cities,
-covers very large tracts of country. There is a thriving
-business centre, not very far from which are the great
-Raymond Hotel and other winter resorts for the throngs
-of tourists who are almost as important to the revenues of
-California as they are to Italy. There are both North
-and South Pasadena,&mdash;each almost a separate city in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>
-itself,&mdash;and the most beautiful street is Orange Grove
-Avenue, with large estates on either side and spacious
-lawns. On Fair Oaks Avenue, in a pretty cottage, lives
-Prof. George Wharton James, the famous explorer, scientist,
-and notable writer on the Grand Cañon in Arizona,&mdash;and
-the greatest interpreter, indeed, of the entire Southwest.
-The books of Professor James, "In and Out of
-the Old Missions of California," "The Indians of the
-Painted Desert," and "Indian Basketry" (besides his book
-on the "Grand Canyon," which is the accepted authority),
-interpret the many phases of life in the Southwest in a
-vivid and accurate manner, rendering them invaluable
-to contemporary literature. Professor James makes his
-original explorations, taking with him an assistant and
-his own camera, and going through varied hardships,
-almost greater than could be realized. In the vast
-desert spaces, remote from any human habitation, he
-has had to swim large, muddy, inland lakes, where
-vermin were swarming; to go without food and water,
-and to endure the intense fatigue of long tramps. In
-perusing his books the reader little dreams at what
-fearful cost of energy all this original material was
-obtained. In his home Professor James has a most
-interesting collection of the <i>objets d'art</i> of the Southwest.
-One must travel over this part of the country in order
-to appreciate them. They are as distinctive of New
-Mexico, Arizona, and Southern California as the old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span>
-masters and other phases of Italian art are of Italy.
-There are brilliant Navajo blankets and rugs&mdash;soft,
-rich, and vivid in color, with curiously decorated designs;
-the most interesting array of Indian pottery&mdash;the
-many specimens from the old tombs being far finer
-than any pottery done by the modern Indians; and at
-the entrance to his lawn Professor James has a huge
-meteorite from Meteorite Mountain in Arizona, which
-weighs over a ton. He has a large section of a tree of
-the Petrified Forest, and the finer specimens that show the
-bark and the fibre, and also the crystallization. His
-library is large and fine, and comprises many autograph
-gift copies from other authors.</p>
-
-<p>One feature of the life of Professor James is especially
-helpful. In his spacious library upstairs, on every
-Thursday evening, he gives an informal talk on his travels
-and explorations to his friends and neighbors. His
-personal experiences in studying the phenomenon of the
-Salton Sea and the vagaries of the Colorado River, which
-is a law unto itself, are most interesting.</p>
-
-<p>The call of the wild is not more irresistible than the
-call of the desert to Professor James. He has lived on
-it and with it, and learned to read its hieroglyphics.
-The desert spirits have companioned him. He has explored
-vast spaces of the Grand Cañon; he has encamped,
-day after day, even week after week, on the Painted Desert;
-he has wandered in the grim strange Tonto Basin, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>
-sailed (of late) the Salton Sea,&mdash;this sheet of four hundred
-square miles of water, this impromptu lake where
-but a little while before was a deserted hollow of a long
-extinct volcanic sea. Nature leads man a pretty dance
-out in this Land of Enchantment. No one would venture
-to prophesy at night just what stage transformation
-might take place before morning. This very uncertainty
-of any particular tenure of mountain, sea, or desert perhaps
-tends, unconsciously, to so react upon the population
-that their more real life is thrown forward into the
-future. For instance, Los Angeles lays no particular stress
-upon her present population, but announces that by 1910
-the figures will undoubtedly reach the half-million mark.
-Nor, indeed, can the observer doubt this in any contemplation
-of the present incredible rapidity of progress in
-every direction. The city seems half made up of millionnaires,
-and the latest municipal bank clearings amounted
-to almost four hundred millions of dollars. Los Angeles
-is really an exotic, for the latest census reveals the astonishing
-fact that ninety per cent of its inhabitants are from
-the East, leaving only ten per cent as native Californians.
-Never was the advertising of a city carried out to the
-degree of being fairly a fine art so wonderfully as in Los
-Angeles. In the Chamber of Commerce there is a perpetual
-exhibition of fruits and flowers in season, and of
-the products and manufactures of the country.</p>
-
-<p>Los Angeles, like most of the other more important<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span>
-Western cities, is deeply concerned with irrigation schemes.
-This region of California supplements its rainfall with irrigation,
-and between the two the whole country is in bloom
-and blossom. Los Angeles is now arranging a gigantic
-scheme to bring water from the Owen's River, two hundred
-miles away, by means of tunnels through mountains and a
-huge canal. This fall of water will not only entirely
-supply the city with water power of immense force and
-volume, but it is estimated that it will also irrigate a
-hundred thousand acres. The scheme will employ five
-thousand men for some four years, and it is estimated that
-the cost will be twenty-five millions. No undertaking
-daunts the Western city. If an enterprise is desirable, it
-is to be achieved. That is the law and the prophets in
-the Land of Enchantment.</p>
-
-<p>Los Angeles, like Colorado Springs, is the paradise of
-excursions. The trip up Mount Lowe to the observatory
-offers a magnificent panorama of landscape, including Pasadena
-Valley and Catalina and Santa Barbara islands. Old
-San Gabriel Mission and the San Gabriel Valley are infinitely
-interesting, and the famous bells of San Gabriel still
-ring in their quaint, rude stone framework even though they
-are jangled and out of tune with the lapse of years. The
-Sierra Nevada Mountains rise from the San Gabriel Valley.</p>
-
-<p>One of the excursions has a feature that is new to every
-visitor,&mdash;that of glass-bottom power boats which give a
-view of the marvels of the ocean. These boats run from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>
-Avalon on the coast&mdash;an hour's express trolley ride from
-Los Angeles&mdash;to the submarine gardens adjoining Catalina
-Island, and they have a capacity to seat over a hundred
-passengers around the glass. In sailing over these
-submarine gardens the boats move very slowly, that the
-passengers may enjoy the view of the strange seaweed, the
-marine flowers, the varied aquatic vegetation. Catalina
-Island is a favorite sea resort, lying in such convenient
-proximity to the city.</p>
-
-<p>Los Angeles seems to be the paradise of every one
-who has a new idea&mdash;or ideal&mdash;for the betterment
-of humanity. There is an atmosphere of idealism.
-Among the recent institutions is the Pacific School of
-Osteopathy, with a faculty of thirty physicians, men
-and women, who base their therapeutics on the scientific
-fact that the body is subject to chemical, electrical,
-thermal, mental, and mechanical treatment. In the line
-of ethics Rev. B. Fay Mills has established a comprehensive
-movement of "Fellowship," including religious
-services and social intercourse, with a large and enthusiastic
-membership drawn by this eloquent orator and
-preacher who for many years before in his pastorate in
-Boston preached to large congregations who gave him
-profound appreciation.</p>
-
-<p>A most important centre that radiates sweetness and
-light in infinite measure is that of Christ Church (Episcopal),
-whose rector, Rev. Baker P. Lee, is not only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span>
-eminent as a preacher, but as a leader and inspirer of
-a network of organizations connected with the church
-for the betterment of human life. Christ Church parish
-is a large one, numbering over two thousand in direct
-connection with the church, with a list of communicants
-of over twelve hundred. Within the past three years
-the parish has built a magnificent new church and a
-rectory, and the holy earnestness of the young and gifted
-rector makes the work one of vital spirituality.</p>
-
-<p>No city can offer more beautiful homes than those
-of Los Angeles; more attractive parks, more enchanting
-scenery, or more delightful excursions over a network of
-electric lines which aggregate above five hundred miles
-of single track and reach one hundred towns and villages
-from Monrovia of the foothills to Redondo by the sea.
-The world has but one Southern California, with its cool,
-soft, gray sea-fogs in the early mornings, followed by
-its cloudless days of blue sky over golden sunshine; where
-the sea-breeze gladly brings its health-giving ozone in
-exchange for the odors of orange blossoms and roses;
-where the mountains stand glorying in the ruggedness
-of their rocky cliffs until, touched by sunset's wand, they
-glow with pink lights and purple shadows; and over all
-comes a golden radiance that changes the forbidding
-outlines of their jagged peaks into radiant beauty,&mdash;fitting
-features of the vast panorama of nature to hold
-their eternal place in the Land of Enchantment.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI</h2></div>
-
-<p class="center"><strong>GRAND CAÑON; THE CARNIVAL OF THE GODS</strong></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"<i>What time the gods kept carnival!</i>"</div>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Emerson</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"<i>The earth grew bold with longing</i></div>
-<div class="indent1"><i>And called the high gods down;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Yea, though ye dwell in heaven and hell,</i></div>
-<div class="indent1"><i>I challenge their renown.</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Abodes as fair I build ye</i></div>
-<div class="indent1"><i>As heaven's rich courts of pearl,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>And chasms dire where flood like fire</i></div>
-<div class="indent1"><i>Ravage and roar and whirl.</i></div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">"<i>Come, for my soul is weary</i></div>
-<div class="indent1"><i>Of time and death and change;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Eternity doth summon me&mdash;</i></div>
-<div class="indent1"><i>With mightier worlds I range.</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Come, for my vision's glory</i></div>
-<div class="indent1"><i>Awaits your songs and wings;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Here on my breast I bid ye rest</i></div>
-<div class="indent1"><i>From starry wanderings.</i>"</div>
-</div>
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Harriet Monroe</span></p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">One</span> takes the wings of the morning and arrives at the
-uttermost parts of the earth to find&mdash;the Grand Cañon,
-the scenic marvel of the entire world.</p>
-
-<p>Only to the poet's vision is the Grand Cañon revealed;
-only to the poet's touch do its mighty harmonies respond.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>
-For this sublime spectacle is as vital as a drama enacted
-on the stage, only its acts require the centuries and the
-ages in which to represent themselves. Whatever one sees
-of the Grand Cañon,&mdash;it matters not from what commanding
-view of vision or vista, one sees only an infinitesimal
-point. It is the Carnival of the Gods. "Prophets
-and poets had wandered here," writes Harriet Monroe,
-"before they were born to tell their mighty tales,&mdash;Isaiah
-and Æschylus and Dante, the giants who dared the
-utmost. Here at last the souls of great architects must
-find their dreams fulfilled; must recognize the primal
-inspiration which, after long ages, had achieved Assyrian
-palaces, the temples and pyramids of Egypt, the fortresses
-and towered cathedrals of mediæval Europe. For the
-inscrutable Prince of builders had reared these imperishable
-monuments, evenly terraced upward from the remote
-abyss; had so cunningly planned them that mortal foot
-could never climb and enter to disturb the everlasting
-hush. Of all richest elements they were fashioned,&mdash;jasper
-and chalcedony, topaz, beryl, and amethyst, fire-hearted
-opal, and pearl; for they caught and held the
-most delicate colors of a dream and flashed full recognition
-to the sun. Never on earth could such glory be unveiled,&mdash;not
-on level spaces of sea, not on the cold bare peaks
-of mountains. This was not earth; for was not heaven
-itself across there, rising above yonder alabaster marge in
-opalescent ranks for the principalities and powers?...<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span>
-In a moment we stood at the end of the world, at the
-brink of the kingdoms of peace and pain. The gorgeous
-purples of sunset fell into darkness and rose into light over
-mansions colossal beyond the needs of our puny unwinged
-race. Terrific abysses yawned and darkened; magical
-heights glowed with iridescent fire."</p>
-
-<p>If one pauses for a moment with any sense of obligation
-to himself to gain some <i>rationale</i> of this cañon; if for a
-moment he turn from rhapsody and ecstasy and the dream
-of poet and painter to grope after statistical estimates,
-what does he find? One comparison is that,&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"If the Eiffel Tower, which with a height of almost a
-thousand feet is the tallest structure in the world, were placed
-at the bottom of the cañon in its deepest part, five more
-towers just like the first would have to be piled on top of one
-another to reach the rim of the plateau."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>And again:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Could the cañon be filled in for a building site, it would
-furnish room enough for fifty New York cities. Indeed, it
-would have an area of sixteen thousand square miles, equal
-to the whole of Switzerland, or the states of Massachusetts,
-Connecticut, Delaware, and Rhode Island combined."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Statistical comparisons are, at best, a necessary evil
-which, once confronted, need not companion one further.
-It is beauty, it is sublimity, not mathematical assurances,
-that really lays hold on life. The inexplicable impressions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>
-made by this spectacle are mirrored in the following
-words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"As I grew familiar with the vision I could not quite explain
-its stupendous quality. From mountain tops one looks
-across greater distances and sees range after range lifting
-snowy peaks into the blue. The ocean reaches out into
-boundless space, and the ebb and flow of its waters have the
-beauty of rhythmic motion and exquisitely varied color.
-And in the rush of mighty cataracts are power and splendor
-and majestic peace. Yet for grandeur appalling and unearthly;
-for ineffable, impossible beauty, the cañon transcends
-all these. It is as though to the glory of nature
-were added the glory of art; as though, to achieve her utmost,
-the proud young world had commanded architecture
-to build for her and color to grace the building. The irregular
-masses of mountains, cast up out of the molten earth in
-some primeval war of elements, bear no relation to these
-prodigious symmetrical edifices mounted on abysmal terraces
-and grouped into spacious harmonies which give form to
-one's dreams of heaven. The sweetness of green does not
-last forever, but these mightily varied purples are eternal.
-All that grows and moves must perish, while these silent
-immensities endure."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The majestic panorama dominates every detail of daily
-life. As when in Bayreuth for the Wagner music-dramas
-alone, every other consideration is subordinated to these,
-so in life in El Tovar, on Bright Angel Trail, one's hours<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>
-for sleep and for any daily occupations are held strictly
-amenable to "effects" in the mysterious splendor of the
-Titanic underworld. To see the cañon under the full
-moon; to see it when all the pinnacles of rock are leaping
-in rose-red flame under a sunrise; to see it in a dream of
-twilight as the purple canopy falls,&mdash;all these hours,&mdash;all
-hours are made for the magical transformations. With
-every breath of change of the atmosphere this celestial
-beauty changes. One is hardly conscious as to the special
-ways and means by which he finds himself in an enchanted
-world,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center">"From the shore of souls arrived?"</p>
-
-<p>It is very possible. Nor does he know how&mdash;or when&mdash;he
-shall depart. The past is effaced, and the future recedes
-into some unformulated atmosphere. Life, a thousand
-lifetimes, concentrate themselves in the present. A
-supreme experience has always this peculiarity,&mdash;that it
-bars out all the past and all the future. When one is on
-the Mount of Transfiguration, he is not scrutinizing the
-pathway by which he came nor that by which he may
-descend.</p>
-
-<p>Even if one has seen the Grand Cañon before, he is surprised
-to find how absolutely newly created it is to him
-when its haunting magic draws him back. No enshrined
-memory can compare with the reality. In seeing the
-Petrified Forest one checks it off as a thing accomplished<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span>
-for life. It is definite. The great logs of agate and jasper
-and chalcedony lie on the ground as they have lain for
-perhaps thousands of ages. It is a wonder&mdash;the seventh
-wonder of the world, if one pleases and&mdash;the paradise of
-geologists, but it is unchanging. Not so the Grand
-Cañon. The cañon is a perpetual transformation scene.
-Its color effects rival those of an electric fountain
-under the full play of the spectroscope. It is rose,
-purple, amber, emerald, pearl gray, pale blue, scarlet&mdash;according
-to atmospheric states. One leaves it in the
-late afternoon with the rocky towers and pinnacles and
-battlements all in glowing scarlet, seen through a transparent
-air. He steps out upon the broad hotel
-piazzas an hour later and, behold, the uncalculated spaces
-of the cañon are filled with a half-transparent blue mist
-which envelops all the curious sandstone formations that
-gleam in pale rose and opal tints through this thin blue
-mist, and assume wraith-like shapes. Major Powell well
-said, that really to see the Grand Cañon, a year is necessary.
-Yet just as truly may it be said that even for two days it
-is worth crossing the continent to enjoy this most marvellous
-of spectacles. Only the scientist and the specialist
-dream of seeing it in anything like completeness. For
-the tourist and traveller a range of twenty miles is quite
-sufficient to disclose its representative beauty. A day's
-drive by the stage to Grandview Point, Hance's Trail, and
-Moran's Point is easily made between nine and five o'clock.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span>
-A drive of two or three miles in the opposite direction
-will include Rowe's and O'Neil's points. One day will
-allow the adventurous tourist to "go down the trail." Still,
-after doing all these things, the best of all, it may be, is
-to live into the atmosphere. To draw one's chair out on
-the broad balcony of the new and beautiful hotel, El
-Tovar, and sit and dream and gaze and wonder, and
-wonder and gaze and dream, is, perhaps, the greatest joy
-one can have in all the time passed here, especially if
-the solitude can be the solitude <i>à deux</i>. No joy, no interest,
-is of much consequence until or unless it is sympathetically
-shared. As a <i>décor de scène</i> the Grand Cañon
-is unrivalled. The magic and mystery of all the universe
-broods over its Titanic spaces.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p316.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">GRAND CAÑON, FROM GRAND VIEW POINT</p>
-
-<p>The air is the most bracing, exhilarating, and exquisite
-imaginable. The great rolling mesas covered with pine
-forests are more than seven thousand feet above the sea,
-and their exhilarating and tonic properties are beyond
-description. The entire atmosphere is fragrant with
-the pines. Throat and chest are bathed in balm and
-healing. There can hardly be any difficulty with the
-bronchial and breathing mechanism that cannot find its
-cure here. And the charm, the utter enchantment of
-living on this rainbow-tinted cañon, a mile and a half
-deep, thirteen miles across at this "Bright Angel" point
-(and this is its narrowest place), the joy of life is to steep
-one's self in the atmosphere of enchanting loveliness;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span>
-and this perpetual play of color is an experience that
-finds no interpretation in language.</p>
-
-<p>On first alighting from the branch of the Santa Fé that
-runs from Williams, Arizona, to Bright Angel, at the head
-of Bright Angel Trail on the Grand Cañon,&mdash;a three
-hour's ride of transcendent beauty among the purple peaks
-of the San Francisco mountains,&mdash;on first stepping from
-the train up the terrace to the beautiful "El Tovar"
-built on the very rim of the cañon, one objects strenuously
-to entering the hotel. His eye has caught the
-Vision,&mdash;a "celestial Inferno bathed in soft fires?" or
-the "Promised Land?" or the mystical vision that John
-saw on the Island of Patmos? The hotel would, presumably,
-remain; but this spectacle,&mdash;what can it be save a
-mirage, one never seen before on earth and perhaps not
-to be too confidently anticipated in Paradise? Would
-such a picture remain? Can one safely leave a sunset
-which is all a miracle of splendor while he goes in to
-dine? Can he safely turn away from the heavens when
-a young moon at night is winging her way down the sky
-and expect to find her midway in the heavens? And
-could one safely leave this most marvellous scene of all
-while he should bestow himself in his rooms?</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"Would the Vision there remain?</div>
-<div class="verse">Would the Vision come again?"</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p318.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">ZIGZAG, BRIGHT ANGEL TRAIL, GRAND CAÑON, ARIZONA</p>
-
-<p>Could it be, in the very nature of things, any more permanent
-than any other momentary revelation of an enchanted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span>
-hour that would fade into the darkness as night
-came on, like the splendor of a sunset, the color-scheme
-of a rainbow, or the glory and the freshness of a dream?</p>
-
-<p>Instead, the Grand Cañon prefigures itself to one as an
-apparition, and while he may gaze upon it under all
-changing lights of dawn, of noonday, of sunset&mdash;and of
-moonlight&mdash;he cannot come to any realization that it is
-there all the time. His room in the hotel may look out
-into it and over it; and, waking in the night, he rises and
-leans out of his window to see if it is still there. One
-does not expect a vision of the New Jerusalem, a palpitating,
-changing, flaming, throbbing sea of color&mdash;in its
-rose-reds, its greens, its amber, gold, and purple&mdash;to remain
-like a field or a forest. It seems a thing of conditions,
-visible at one moment, vanished, perchance, the
-next.</p>
-
-<p>Think of a chasm a mile and a half deep, from thirteen
-to eighteen miles wide, and as long as from Boston to
-New York&mdash;two hundred miles! Think of it again as
-not merely a deep, dark chasm, but as filled with the
-most wonderful architectural effects in the sandstone formations
-which simulate Chinese pagodas, temples, altars,
-cathedrals, domes, and towers so perfectly that one is
-incredulous of the fact that their shaping is nature's
-work alone. Add to this the color scheme, now an intense
-royal purple, again flashes of rose and green and
-ivory and a rare blue; or again a "nocturne" in silvery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>
-gray, with hints of lingering rose and amber shimmering
-in the air. Until within a few years the Grand Cañon
-was so inaccessible as to quite account for the general
-ignorance of this most wonderful scenic phenomenon in
-our country, and, indeed, with no exaggeration be it said,
-the most wonderful in the entire world. Twenty Yosemites
-might be thrown into it and make no impression;
-and as for Niagara, it would be a mere tiny waterfall in
-comparison.</p>
-
-<p>In the trail leading downward into the cañon the first
-level is just five times the height of St. Peter's in Rome,
-or the Pyramids of Cheops.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus_p320.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">A CLIFF ON BRIGHT ANGEL TRAIL, GRAND CAÑON</p>
-
-<p>From the brink one looks down a mile and a half into
-towers and pinnacles; one looks across eighteen miles
-in the widest place; and one looks up and down its
-tortuous length, as its complicated system of cañons revealed
-themselves as far as the eye could see either way.
-One gazes, not into a deep, dark cleft, a Titanic royal
-gorge, but on and into a sea of color and a wealth of
-architectural wonders,&mdash;cathedrals, towers, mosques, pinnacles,
-minarets, temples, and balconies exceeding in variety
-of design, in extraordinary beauty of grouping and
-splendor of color, anything of which one could dream,
-even in his most enchanted moments. The red sandstone,
-the brilliant white of the limestone luminous under the
-setting sun, the green of pine trees or of copper rocks, the
-gray and ochre tints of gravel and fallen rocks and débris,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span>
-the soft, deep purple mist enveloping all as an atmosphere
-in which all these architectural marvels seemed to swim&mdash;the
-strange, unearthly splendor of it all&mdash;holds one under
-a fascination that can neither be analyzed nor described.
-This, then, is "El Grande Cañon de la Colorado." One
-stands speechless, breathless, as if transported to some
-other planet. Suddenly all life&mdash;everything that floated
-in memory&mdash;seemed confused, unreal. Was the past
-(whose running series of incident and event and circumstance
-already seemed vague) a dream, and was this the
-reality? Or had there never been any reality in life before?
-Was this a dream, wrought under some untold
-spell of enchantment? Would one hear the water nixies
-chanting their refrain if he listened? Or was this scene of
-Titanic grandeur the abode of Wagner's gods and heroes?
-One watched for the sacred fires to flame on Brunhilde's
-rock and for Siegfried to appear. One saw the ship
-which had borne Tristan on his ill-starred voyage, and
-the garden where the lovers confessed their intense and
-instant love, and the fatal potion scene rises before him;
-and again he is lost in rapt ecstasy as the air seems filled
-with the passionate drama of Lilli Lehmann and Alvarez.
-For let Ternina and other younger women come and go
-in the Wagner music-drama, and yet where will that absolute
-perfection of dramatic action, that passionate exaltation
-of emotion, ever again attend and invest any singer
-as they invest and are identified with Lilli Lehmann?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"The Fairest enchants me,</div>
-<div class="verse">The Mighty commands me."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>In this most sublime of all earthly spectacles there are
-aërial landscape effects as delicate and evanescent as a
-cloud-wreath, or as a fog that advances, wraith-like, to
-melt away into dissolving views. "The region is full of
-wonders and beauties and sublimities that Shelley's imaginings
-do not match in the 'Prometheous Unbound,'"
-wrote Charles Dudley Warner.</p>
-
-<p>If the world realized the marvellous effects of this very
-Carnival of the Gods, the infinite spaces of the Grand
-Cañon itself could not contain all who would eagerly
-throng to behold it. The statistical record of the increase
-of visitors is rather interesting. In 1900 there were eight
-hundred and thirteen; the succeeding year, six thousand
-eight hundred and eighty-three; while in 1903 the number
-increased to nearly one hundred and twenty-eight thousand.
-Since that date the number of visitors has multiplied
-itself after the fashion of compound interest. The
-establishment of all the conveniences and comforts, not
-to say luxuries, of modern travel may be one of the
-most potent factors in this increase of visitors. Until
-within five years the Grand Cañon could only be reached
-by a stage ride of seventy miles through the Coconino
-Forest,&mdash;whose dim gray twilight reminds one of the
-forests of Fontainebleau,&mdash;and which drive, however romantically
-beautiful, was attended with too great terrestrial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span>
-discomfort to commend it to general public service. Until
-1906 the hotel accommodations, also, while offering a
-modest comfort, were essentially primitive; while now the
-superb new Harvey hostelry, "El Tovar," built at a cost
-of a quarter of a million dollars (and the Harvey name is
-a synonym in the West for everything admirable in dining
-cars, refreshment stands, and hotels), insures to every
-traveller any degree of luxurious comfort he requires.
-Even the man who, after visiting all the enchanted points
-in the Land of Enchantment, in its prehistoric period of
-twenty years ago before Pullman cars climbed the mountain
-peaks and the Waldorf-Astoria type of hotels sprang
-up, the man who, after a trip through these wonders of
-the world, returned to New York and declared that he
-would rather see an electric bell and a bath than all the
-grandeur between Pike's Peak and the Pacific, would now
-be fully reconciled to Western sojourns. He would find
-his electric bell and his bath to be as much a matter of
-course as in Fifth Avenue, besides also finding that there
-were spectacles,&mdash;as that of the Garden of the Gods,
-Cheyenne Cañon, the Petrified Forests, the Grand Cañon,
-and the Los Angeles electric trolley system (which quite
-deserves to rank with the modern "Seven Wonders" of the
-world), and which Fifth Avenue by no means provided for
-her votaries. In fact, "El Tovar" is so inclusive of comfort
-as to be fairly a feature of the cañon, commanding, on
-one side, a magnificence of prospect without parallel in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span>
-world in the mighty chasm on whose brink it stands, on the
-other side the fragrant Coconino pine forest,&mdash;the largest
-belt of pine timber in the United States, and which has
-been made a government forest reservation.</p>
-
-<p>There is now a project to erect a memorial to Major
-John W. Powell, the pioneer explorer of the Grand
-Cañon, to be placed on the rim at the head of Bright
-Angel Trail at El Tovar. This most fitting plan to
-honor the name of the great scientist and explorer whose
-research contributed the first authoritative knowledge
-of the cañon is the thought of the American Scenic
-Association, which will petition Congress to grant the
-requisite appropriation. No monument to human greatness
-could be more ideally placed than this to perpetually
-repeat to every visitor and sojourner the name of the
-explorer who successfully achieved the most startling and
-heroic journey in all history,&mdash;that made through the
-complete extent of the Grand Cañon.</p>
-
-<p>It was in 1869 that Major Powell, with four boats
-and nine men, inaugurated this expedition, starting from
-Green River City in Utah. He was dissuaded and importuned
-in the most urgent way by those most familiar
-with the region not to attempt the feat. The Indians
-especially insisted that no boat could live in any one
-of the score of rapids to be passed. There was also a
-tradition that for some hundreds of miles the river lost
-itself in the earth, and Major Powell and his men would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span>
-thus be imprisoned within a Titantic fortress from which
-escape would be impossible. But men of destiny do not
-hesitate when they are led to great achievements. Major
-Powell set out on May 24, 1869, with his nine men and
-four boats, and landed on August 3, with four men
-and two boats, at the mouth of the Virgin River, after
-having sailed the boiling torrent of the Colorado River,
-at the bottom of the cañon, for more than a thousand
-miles. Mr. C. A. Higgins characterizes this feat as "the
-most wonderful geological and spectacular phenomenon
-known to mankind."</p>
-
-<p>The first authentic knowledge of the existence of the
-Grand Cañon dates back to August of 1540, when the
-Spanish friar, Alvar Nuñez, after years of romantic wanderings
-among the pueblos of the Southwest, returned
-to Mexico with tales of this mighty chasm. Coronado,
-who had discovered the Seven Cities of Cibola (of which
-now only Zuñi remains), ordered Garcia Lopez to take a
-band of men and Indian guides and search for this chasm,
-which he succeeded in discovering; with the more difficulty,
-surely, in that one has to gain its very rim before he has
-hardly an intimation of its proximity. The spectacle of
-the cañon always presents itself as a sudden surprise. It
-was not, however, until 1884 that, by the building of the
-great transcontinental line, the Santa Fé, the Grand
-Cañon became accessible. Then for some twenty years it
-was reached, as has already been noted, by stage from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span>
-Flagstaff. Now one can travel in his sleeper without
-change from Chicago to El Tovar, and thousands of
-tourists annually visit the extraordinary scene. Not the
-least of the interesting data regarding the cañon is this
-gulf of more than three hundred years that divides its discovery
-from its taking rank as the most phenomenal scenic
-resort of the world. The mills of the gods grind slowly.
-The visitors to the Grand Cañon present singularly cosmopolitan
-groups, there being hardly a country in the world
-that is not represented at some time during the year.</p>
-
-<p>For the cañon has all seasons for its own. It is almost
-as much of an object of winter as of summer pilgrimage.
-One season is found, on the whole, to be almost as enjoyable
-here as another. It is cool in summer, and it is
-warm and sunny in winter. Sometimes there is a fairy
-snowfall, but hardly more lasting than a spring frost,
-and when it comes it only adds another flitting variety
-to the stupendous scene.</p>
-
-<p>With untold tons of the water of the Colorado River
-pouring itself in torrents through the bottom of the
-cañon, all the water used for the table, for toilet, and
-for laundry purposes has to be brought from a distance
-of a hundred and twenty miles, and twenty thousand
-gallons are in daily use. An electric-light plant furnishes
-brilliant illumination.</p>
-
-<p>The Hopi House, built in imitation of an Indian
-pueblo, with a group of quaintly garbed Hopi Indians<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span>
-within in attendance, is a curiosity; and besides the
-Hopis there are Navajos and Supais coming to sell their
-handiwork,&mdash;that of pottery, silver ornaments, blankets,
-and baskets. Cataract Cañon, forty miles from El Tovar,
-is the home of the Supais, and it is a place that well
-repays visiting for an entirely new point of view of the
-vast cañon that it affords. There are peaceful Indians
-to be seen daily riding their horses through the pine
-woods, journeying from El Tovar to Grand View, to
-"Hance's Trail," to "Moran's Point," and other localities,
-to sell or barter their wares. One old Indian who seems
-to roam about alone has developed an ingenious manner of
-procuring food when he is hungry. He enters the hotel
-office and seeks the proprietor himself, recognizing with unerring
-instinct that this gentleman's liberal endowment of
-sympathy and unfailing generosity never permits him to
-"turn down" a request for aid. The wily old savage seeks
-him out and makes conspicuous overtures of his affection.</p>
-
-<p>"You is heap my son; pale face heap my son!" the
-dusky visitor declares, and when this assurance is emphasized
-to the proprietor he realizes that it means he is
-"heap my son" because his visitor is hungry. These outbursts
-of devotion occur only when the old Indian is at
-his wits' end to know where to procure something to eat.
-Once fed he is off, and thinks no more of the man whom
-he assured that he was "heap my son" until hunger again
-assails him and stimulates his parental affection.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span>So the little trifles and pleasantries of the <i>comédie
-humaine</i> assert their place in the general life even on the
-rim of the sublime spectacle of the Carnival of the Gods.</p>
-
-<p>For more than two hundred miles the cañon offers its
-innumerable panoramas, no one ever duplicating that of
-another. There are thousands of cañons in it&mdash;it is a
-complicated system of colossal cañons. Every wall is an
-aggregation of hundreds of walls. Every pinnacle is
-formed of hundreds of pinnacles. When the sun shines
-in splendor on the vermilion walls, the glory is almost
-beyond what man can bear. When from the trail below
-a star seems to float in the air and rest on the verge of
-the cliff, what words can convey any image of this ineffable
-beauty?</p>
-
-<p>The cloud-effects are another of the phases of faëry. A
-rain creates a panorama of clouds creeping out of one
-cañon and flying into another, all "as if they had souls
-and wills of their own," says Major Powell; and he adds,
-"In the imagination the clouds belong to the sky, and
-when they are in the cañon the skies come down into the
-gorges and cling to the cliffs and lift them up to immeasurable
-heights, for the sky must still be far away; thus
-they lend infinity to the walls." The cañon mirrors the
-color and the state of the sky as water does. This is one
-of the most curious facts connected with it. "Yet form
-and color do not exhaust all the divine qualities of the
-Grand Cañon," continues Major Powell; "it is the land<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span>
-of music. The river thunders in perpetual roar, swelling
-in floods of music when the storm-gods play upon the
-rocks, and fading away in soft and low murmurs when the
-infinite blue of heaven is unveiled.... The adamant
-foundations of the earth have been wrought into a sublime
-harp upon which the clouds of heaven play with
-mighty tempests or with gentle showers."</p>
-
-<p>Major Powell, the explorer and practically the modern
-discoverer of the cañon, remains its most complete
-interpreter. His journal narrating that remarkable
-voyage through the Colorado River in a region "more
-difficult to traverse than the Alps or the Himalayas,"
-is fairly an epic in American literature. He had the
-vision of the painter and the heart of the poet.
-He felt that infinitely complex variety of the cañon,
-and he read its sublime inscriptions on a scroll not
-made with hands. He pictures one feature especially
-that has hardly been touched by other writers,&mdash;that
-of the perpetually changing aspects. "One moment
-as we looked out over the landscape," he writes, "the
-atmosphere seemed to be trembling and moving about,
-giving the impression of an unstable land: plains and
-hills and cliffs and distant mountains seemed vaguely
-to be floating about in a trembling, wave-rocked sea;
-and patches of landscape would seem to float away and
-be lost, and then reappear.... The craggy buttes
-seem dancing about.... The sun shone in splendor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span>
-on the vermilion walls. Shaded into green and gray
-when the rocks were lichened over, the river filled the
-channel from wall to wall, and the cañon opened like
-a beautiful doorway to a region of glory. But at
-evening, when the sun was going down and the shadows
-were settling in the cañon, the scarlet gleams and roseate
-hues, blended with tints of green and gray, slowly
-changed to sombre brown above and black shadows crept
-over them from below.... Lying down, one looked up
-through the cañon and saw that only a little of the blue
-heavens appeared overhead,&mdash;a crescent of blue sky with
-but two or three constellations peering down upon us.
-Soon I saw a bright star that appeared to rest on the
-verge of the cliffs overhead, and, as it moved up from the
-rock, I almost wondered that it did not fall, and indeed it
-appeared as if swayed down by its own weight. The star
-appeared to be <i>in</i> the cañon, so high were the walls."</p>
-
-<p>So the wonderful story of Major Powell's runs on of
-these atmospheric phenomena of the cañon, effects that</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">"... give to seas and sunset skies</div>
-<div class="verse">Their unspent beauty of surprise."</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>It is from Bright Angel Trail that the Grand Cañon is
-the most accessible. Parties of men and women, mounted
-on sure-footed burros, go down this trail with their
-guides&mdash;apparently under the special protection of the
-bright angels of the celestial host, as no accident has ever,
-thus far, occurred. Prof. George Wharton James notes, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span>
-his invaluable work on the Grand Cañon,<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> that this trail
-was originally used by the Havasupai Indians and that
-the rude irrigating canals that conveyed water from an adjacent
-spring to a so-called Indian Garden in the near vicinity
-are still to be seen. The view from the head of Bright
-Angel Trail is one of vast extent and a peculiar sublimity.
-Buddha Temple is a colossal pile that rises in isolated
-grandeur, and near it is Buddha Cloister. An impressive
-tower of rock rising in the cañon bears the honored name
-of Agassiz. Isis Temple and the Temple of Brahma are
-within the range of the eye from this point. The perfectly
-transparent air, and that absence of aërial vibration
-that characterizes the atmosphere of Arizona, conspire to
-invest all distance with magic illusion. Looking across
-the thirteen miles of the cañon's abyss from Bright Angel
-Trail, the opposite rim hardly seems farther away than
-the distance of three or four city blocks. Isis Temple is
-said to be as great in mass as the mountainous part of
-Mt. Washington, and the summit of Isis looks down six
-thousand feet into the depths of a chasm, the ledges on
-the side being "as impracticable as the face of Bunker
-Hill Monument."</p>
-
-<p>It is a noticeable fact, and one which the general
-reader may regard with quiet amusement, that all the
-writers who even attempt to allude to the Grand Cañon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span>
-quote copiously from each other; and this is the almost
-inevitable instinct of each, in order to reinforce himself
-with authority for statements which, to those who have
-not themselves gazed upon this Carnival of the Gods,
-would sound incredible even to the verge of the wildest
-extravaganza. Major Powell's vivid transcription of his
-thrilling journey through the cañon, sailing through the
-boiling, rushing river whose torrents constantly threatened
-to engulf his boats,&mdash;Major Powell's transcription stands
-for itself alone; it was not only the pictured scenes of a
-writer, but the scientific report of an official government
-explorer; but since this,&mdash;and from Major Powell's narrative
-every writer invariably quotes,&mdash;since this, the
-writers quote from each other; they use each other's
-statements as evidence which they cite in order to support
-their own statements regarding a marvel so unspeakably
-phenomenal that the most literal and statistical description
-reads like an Arabian Nights romance. Then, too,
-the array of pen-pictures is interesting. A writer who
-coined wonderful descriptive phrases is Mr. C. A. Higgins.
-Of the silent transformations of the cañon when it "sinks
-into mysterious purple shadow" he said: "The far Shinumo
-Altar is tipped with a golden ray, and against a leaden
-horizon the long line of the Echo Cliffs reflects a soft brilliance
-of indescribable beauty, a light that, elsewhere, surely
-never was on sea or land. Then darkness falls," he continues,
-"and should there be a moon, the scene in part<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span>
-revives in silver light a thousand spectral forms projected
-from inscrutable gloom; dreams of mountains, as in their
-sleep they brood on things eternal." Others who have
-written of the Grand Cañon are: Harriet Monroe, whose
-poet's pen is dipped in the colors of an artist's palette;
-George Wharton James; and Mr. Charles S. Gleed, a distinguished
-lawyer of Topeka, who thus described the
-Cañon's wonders:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Surrendering our minds to the magic spell of that mighty
-chasm, what pictures troop before us! Yonder see Gibraltar,
-giant sentinel of the Mediterranean. There on long ledges
-are St. Peter's and St. Paul's, Niagara, the Pyramids, and the
-Tower of Pisa. Bracketed beyond are the great parliament
-houses of the world. Down below behold in life size the
-lesser mountains of our own land,&mdash;Washington, Monadnock,
-Mansfield, Lookout, and a thousand others. See in the distance
-a million colored pictures of the Alps, the Adirondacks,
-and the Sierras. On endless shelves, this way and that,
-behold the temples and cathedrals, the castles and fortresses
-of all time. See vast armies, the armies of the ages, winding
-up the slopes, and great navies man&oelig;uvring in the mirage-like
-distance. Here, indeed, the giant mind of Dante would
-have found new worlds to conquer; and Homer would have
-dreamed new dreams of gods and men, love and war, life and
-death, heaven and hell."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Hamlin Garland, in one of his prose-poems, has said:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"The clouds and the sunset, the moonrise and the storm, will
-transform it into a splendor no mountain range can surpass.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span>
-Peaks will shift and glow, walls darken, crags take fire, and
-gray-green mesas, dimly seen, take on the gleam of opalescent
-lakes of mountain water. The traveller who goes out to
-the edge and peers into the great abyss sees but one
-phase out of hundreds. If he is fortunate, it may be one of
-its most beautiful combinations of color and shadow. But
-to know it, to feel its majesty, one should camp in the
-bottom and watch the sunset and the moonrise while the
-river marches from its lair like an angry lion."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Robert Brewster Stanton, a civil engineer whose original
-work has brought him prominently before the scientific
-world, followed Major Powell's explorations, twenty years
-later, with a surveying company of his own organization,&mdash;and
-Mr. Stanton is, indeed, the only explorer who has
-made the continuous journey the entire length of the
-Colorado River which Major Powell navigated for a thousand
-miles. It was in May of 1889 that Mr. Stanton and
-his men initiated this daring feat, and of one phase of the
-appearance of the cañon Mr. Stanton's glowing, eloquent
-pen recorded:</p>
-
-<p>"Those terrifying, frowning walls <i>are moving, are
-changing</i>! A new light is not only creeping over them,
-but is coming out from their very shadows. See those
-flattened slopes above the dark sandstone on top the
-granite; even at this very moment they are <i>being colored</i>
-in gorgeous stripes of horizontal layers of yellow, brown,
-white, green, and purple.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span>"What means this wondrous change? Wherein lies
-this secret of the great cañon?</p>
-
-<p>"After living in it and with it for so many weeks and
-months, I lost all thought of the great chasm as being
-only a huge rock mass, carved into its many intricate forms
-by ages of erosion. It became to me what it has ever
-since remained, and what it really is,&mdash;a living, moving,
-sentient being!</p>
-
-<p>"The Grand Cañon is not a solitude. It is a living,
-moving, pulsating being, ever changing in form and color,
-pinnacles and towers springing into being out of unseen
-depths. From dark shades of brown and black, scarlet
-flames suddenly flash out and then die away into stretches
-of orange and purple. How can such a shifting, animated
-glory be called 'a thing'? It is a being, and among its
-upper battlements, its temples, its amphitheatres, its cathedral
-spires, its monuments and its domes, and in the deeper
-recesses of its inner gorge its spirit, its soul, the very spirit
-of the living God himself, lives and moves and has its
-being."</p>
-
-<p>Mr. C. M. Skinner, of the "Brooklyn Eagle," impressively
-wrote:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"... After the sky colors, too, have faded, you are about
-to turn away, lingering, regretting, when&mdash;again, a wonder;
-for new colors, deep, tender, solemn, flow up along the
-painted walls, as night brims out of the deep. The bottom
-grows vague and misty, but each Walhalla is steeped in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span>
-purple as soft as the bloom of grapes. When day is wholly
-gone and the cañon has become to the eye a mere feeling or
-impression of depth and space, walk out on some lonely
-point. The slopes, thirteen miles away, are visible as gray
-walls, distinct from the black cliffs, and on the hither side the
-trees are clear against the snow. No night is absolute in
-blackness, but as we look it seems as though the cañon was
-lighted from within. It is an abyss of shadow and mystery.
-There is a sadness in the cañon, as in all great things of
-nature, that removes it from human experience. We have
-seen the utmost of the world's sublimity, and life is fuller
-from that hour."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>All these and many other transcriptions of its glory
-form a picture gallery which each lover of the Grand
-Cañon prizes as among his choicest possessions. Thomas
-Moran, the artist, has painted many scenes from the
-cañon, one of these paintings having been placed in
-the Capitol in Washington, where it is the object of
-the admiration and the wonder of the endless procession
-of visitors who throng the nation's centre. Painter and
-poet and prophet make their pilgrimages to this one
-stupendous Marvel of Nature. To the prophets and the
-poets of every century and every age it flashes its responsive
-message; and the worshipper at the shrine of this
-Infinite Beauty, this sublimest Majesty, can but feel,
-with Mr. Higgins,&mdash;that poetic lover of the vast Southwest,
-the lover of music and literature and art and nature,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span>
-whose beautiful life on earth closed in 1900, but whose
-charm of presence still pervades the scenes he loved and
-memorialized,&mdash;with this lofty and poetic recorder of
-nature one can but say of the Grand Cañon: "Never was
-picture more harmonious, never flower more exquisitely
-beautiful. It flashes instant communication of all that
-architecture and painting and music for a thousand years
-have gropingly striven to express. It is the soul of Michael
-Angelo and of Beethoven."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In retrospective glance over a very midsummer night's
-dream of the ineffable glory and beauty of wanderings
-from Pike's Peak to the Pacific there stands out to the
-mental vision one treasured possession whose loveliness exceeds
-that of all scenic landscape; which is more luminous
-and crystal clear than the luminous atmosphere of beautiful
-Colorado or glowing Arizona; which is more enduring
-in its changelessness than even the Petrified Forests
-or the mighty precipices of the Grand Cañon; which is
-invested with all the etherial splendor of that brilliant
-young city which the Spanish conquerors knew as <i>Pueblo
-de la Reine de los Angeles</i>: which is as sacred in its nature
-as are the sacred legends of the Holy Faith of St.
-Francis. This treasured possession is that of the friendships
-formed during this enchanted journey; of the generous
-kindness, the bountiful hospitality; the exquisite
-courtesy and grace constantly received from each and all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span>
-with an unfailing uniformity, including those in widely varying
-relations and pursuits; those who, according to outer
-standards, are the more, or the less, fortunate in power, resources,
-or development,&mdash;the treasured possession of all
-this sweet and gracious friendliness is imperishable; and
-in this priceless and precious gift, which is not only a
-treasure for the life that now is, but also for the life
-which is to come, is there crystallized all the charm of
-summer wanderings in the Land of Enchantment.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">INDEX</h2></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="xlarge">INDEX</span></p>
-
-<p>
-Acoma, New Mexico, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>;<br />
- <span class="indent">theory of its origin, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>;</span><br />
- <span class="indent">its antiquity, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>;</span><br />
- <span class="indent">rivalry between it and Laguna, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>;</span><br />
- <span class="indent">Charles F. Lummis on, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Adamana, the gateway to the Petrified Forests of Arizona, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">origin of its name, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">the simple life at, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Adams, the Hon. Alva, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">quoted, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Agriculture in Colorado, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">in New Mexico, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Albuquerque, New Mexico, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">excursions from, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">a "smart" town, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">characteristics of, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Ames, Rev. Dr. Charles Gordon, on civilization, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Arizona, sights of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">a treasure land, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">visited by the Spaniards, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">a land of magic and mystery, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">its resources, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">irrigation in, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">rainfall in, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">its attractions for men of science, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">flora of, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">cacti of, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">grasses of, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">climate of, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">as a health resort, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">meaning of the name, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">history of, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">separation from New Mexico, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">rivers of, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">capital of, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">towns of, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">safety of property in, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">citizens of, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">festivity of the "Snake Dance," <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">the "Painted Desert" of, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Petrified Forests of, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">desert of, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Bear Creek Cañon, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Bell, the Hon. John C., and the Gunnison Tunnel, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.<br />
-<br />
-"Ben Hur," where written, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Boston woman characterized, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Brooks, Bishop Phillips, on the superhuman, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">quoted, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-California, Southern, features of, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Campbell, Rev. Frederick, on Glenwood Springs, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Campbell, Prof. H. W., on "dry farming," <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Cañon Diablo, Arizona, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Caruthers, William, on resources of Cripple Creek, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.<br />
-<br />
-"Cathedral Rock," 74, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Cheyenne Cañon, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">Helen Hunt Jackson on, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Cliff-dwellings of Southern Colorado, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">bill in Congress for preservation of, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">opinions concerning, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">at Flagstaff, Arizona, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Colorado, splendors of, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">a second Italy, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">people of, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">woman suffrage in, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">developed a demand for specialists, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">employment in, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">revenue of, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">railways of, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">C. B. Knox on the future of, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Major Pike's description of, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">has larger percentage of American population than any other Western state, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">waterfalls of, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">irrigation of, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">yachting in, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">mountain climbing in, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">agriculture in, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">ranching in, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">"trip round the circle" journey described, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">engineering feats in, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">park systems of, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">industries of, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">stone-quarrying in, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">mineral resources of, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">population of, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">progress of, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">towns of, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">northern, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">coal-fields of, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">fruit cultivation in, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">labor in, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">forests of, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">sport in, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">public school system in, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">literature and art in, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">its future, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-&mdash;&mdash;, pioneers of, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>-<a href="#Page_181">181</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">contrasted with the Pilgrim Fathers, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">"Denver Republican" on, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">their unselfishness, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">environment of, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Nathan Cook Meeker, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>-<a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Colorado College, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Colorado Fuel and Iron Company, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Colorado River, Arizona, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">Prof. N. H. Newell on, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Colorado Springs, gateway to Pike's Peak district, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">climate of, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">excursions from, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">as a tourist centre, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">summer and autumn in, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">the town described, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">life at, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">founded by General Palmer, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">buildings of, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">park system of, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Commencement ceremonies in East and West contrasted, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Cripple Creek, towns of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">gold resources of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">mines of, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">character of miners in, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">favorite excursion from, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Denver, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">metropolis of the West, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">climate of, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">its buildings, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">residential district of, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">the Capitol, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">City Park, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">homes of, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">telephone service of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">women of, and politics, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">election frauds in, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">smelteries of, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">growth of population, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">future of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">City Arch, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">spirit of the city, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">enterprise of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">an early opinion of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">a convention city, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Art League of, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">institutions of, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">education in, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">churches of, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">life in, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">should replace Washington as capital of the Union, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">electrical supply in, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Denver and Rio Grande Railway, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">scenery on, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-"Denver Republican, The," quoted, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">on the pioneers of Colorado, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-"Dry Farming" system, discovered by Prof. H. W. Campbell, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">Professor Olin on benefits of, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">extent of, in Eastern Colorado, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">success of, in New Mexico, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Eliot, Rev. Dr. Samuel A., quoted, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Emerson, Ralph Waldo, quoted, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>,
- <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Estes Park, Colorado, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-"Fairy Caves" of Colorado, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Fellows, Professor, surveys for the Gunnison Tunnel, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Flagstaff, Arizona, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">its antiquities, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">the Lowell Observatory at, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Franciscans, mission churches of, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">their labors, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Frost, Colonel Max, on old New Mexico, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>-<a href="#Page_193">193</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">his influence in New Mexico, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">his career, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Secretary of the Bureau of Immigration, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-"Garden of the Gods," Colorado, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">gateway to, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Garland, Hamlin, on the Grand Cañon, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Gilbert, Prof. G. K., studies Meteorite Mountain of Arizona, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Gleed, Charles S., on the Grand Cañon, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Glenwood Springs, Colorado, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">its mineral springs, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">bathing at, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Rev. Frederick Campbell on, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">hot cave of, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">"Fairy Caves" of, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">scenery at, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Grand Cañon, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">scenic marvels of, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Harriet Monroe on, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">compared with the Eiffel Tower, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">area of, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">always revealing new beauties, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">atmospheric effects of, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">approach to, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">architectural effects of, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Charles Dudley Warner on, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">visitors to, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">hotels of, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">proposed memorial to Major John W. Powell, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">earliest discovery of, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">the Hopi House at, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Indians of, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Major Powell's journal of his exploration of, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Prof. George Wharton James on, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">eulogies of, by C. A. Higgins, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>,</span><br />
- <span class="indent2">by Charles S. Gleed, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>,</span><br />
- <span class="indent2">by Hamlin Garland, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>,</span><br />
- <span class="indent2"> by Robert Brewster Stanton, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>,</span><br />
- <span class="indent2"> and by C. M. Skinner, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">paintings of, by Thomas Moran, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Grand Caverns of Pike's Peak, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">memorial to General Grant in, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Grand Lake, Colorado, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">its yacht club, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Grand River, the, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Grant, General, memorial to, in Grand Caverns, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Greeley, founding of, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">constitution of, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">population of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">educational establishments of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">churches of, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">buildings of, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">life in, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">the Meeker Memorial Library, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Greeley, Horace, and Colorado, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.<br />
-<br />
-"Greeley Tribune, The," on irrigation, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">foundation of, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Grenfell, Helen, record of, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Gunnison River, Colorado, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">plan to divert, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Gunnison Tunnel, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Hammond, the Hon. Meade, and the Gunnison Tunnel, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Higgins, C. A., on the Grand Cañon, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Hosmer, Harriet, on travelling by night, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Howe, Julia Ward, quoted, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Irrigation in Colorado, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>,
- <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">in New Mexico, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">in Arizona, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">in California, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Jackson, Helen Hunt, quoted, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.<br />
-<br />
-James, Prof. George Wharton, on Californian missions, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">on Indian life in Arizona, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">on the "Painted Desert," <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">home of, at Pasadena, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">his love of the desert of the Southwest, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">on the Grand Cañon, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Kansas City, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Kearny, General Stephen W., occupies Santa Fé, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">memorial to, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">quoted, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Kirley, the Hon. Joseph H., on Arizona, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Knox, C. B., on Colorado, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Lacey, Representative, on the Mesa Verde cliff-dwellings, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Laguna, New Mexico, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Las Vegas, New Mexico, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">hot springs of, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">its attractions, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Lindsay, Judge, on woman suffrage, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Lookout Mountain, Colorado, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">scenery on the ascent of, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Los Angeles, the "boom" of, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">trolley system of, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">lighting of, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">its parks, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">public library of, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">climate, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">irrigation in, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">life of, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">population of, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">as a centre for excursions, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">idealism of, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Pacific School Osteopathy at, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">churches of, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Lowell Observatory, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Lowell, Professor Percival, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Manitou, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">mineral springs of, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Manitou Park, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Maricopa County, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Mars, photographs of, taken at Lowell Observatory, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Mead, Prof. Elwood, on irrigation, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Meeker family, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Meeker, the Hon. Nathan Cook, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">his career, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">his visit to the West, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Horace Greeley encourages him to establish a colony in Colorado, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">founds the town of Greeley, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">his work among the Indians, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">massacred, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Meeker, town of, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Mendoza, expeditions organized by, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Meredith, Ellis, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">her literary work, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">her ode to the "Short Line," <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-"Mesa, the Enchanted," ascent of, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">described, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Mesa Verde, cliff-dwellings of, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">Representative Lacey on, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Meteorite Mountain, Arizona, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">theory of origin, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">discovery of diamonds in, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">description of, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">experiments of Dr. Foote relating to, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Monroe, Harriet, on the "Painted Desert," <a href="#Page_263">263</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">quoted, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">on the Grand Cañon, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Montezuma Well, Arizona, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Monument Park, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Monument Valley, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Moran, Thomas, paintings by, of the Grand Cañon, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Mount Massive, ascent of, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Mountain climbing in Colorado, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Muir, John, discovers a new Petrified Forest of Arizona, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Munk, Dr. Joseph A., on the cacti of Arizona, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">on Arizona as a health resort, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Murphy, the Hon. N. O., opinions on the union of Arizona and New Mexico, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-New Mexico, features of, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">climate of, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">a land of surprises, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">its mixed population, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">scenery of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">ruins of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">its ancient civilization, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>-<a href="#Page_193">193</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Franciscan mission churches of, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">archæology of, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">its progress in modern ideas, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">French expedition to, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">compared with Algiers, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">hotels in, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">resources of, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">irrigation in, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">railroads of, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">opportunities in, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">fruit growing in, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">mineral wealth of, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">under Spanish rule, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">records of, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Historical Association of, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Newberry, Dr., on Arizona, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Newell, Prof. N. H., on the Colorado River, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Newspapers of the Southwest, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">"Greeley Tribune" quoted, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">"Denver Republican" quoted, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">"The New Mexican," <a href="#Page_225">225</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">"The Eagle" of Santa Fé, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Night, charm of travelling by, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">at Pike's Peak, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Nizza, Friar Marcos de, missionary labors of, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">expedition of, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Oñate, Juan de, founds Santa Fé, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-"Painted Desert," The, of Arizona, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>-<a href="#Page_266">266</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">Prof. George Wharton James on, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Harriet Monroe on, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Pajarito Park, New Mexico, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Palmer, General William J., founds Colorado Springs, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">benefactor of the state, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">residence of, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Pasadena, California, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">home of Prof. George Wharton James at, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-"Pathfinders and Pioneers," Governor Alva Adams on, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Patterson, Senator, career of, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Petrified Forests, the, of Arizona, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">a visit to, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">atmospheric effects in, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">towns in neighborhood of, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">metropolis of, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">discovery by John Muir, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">difficulties of visiting, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">three in number, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">area of, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">antiquities of, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">preservation of, insured by the Government, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">the marvel of the geologist, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">an arid region, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Phillips, Stephen, quoted, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Ph&oelig;nix, capital of Arizona, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">a tourist centre, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">attractions of, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">winter in, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">school system of, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Pike, Major (afterwards General) Zebulon Montgomery, discovery by, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">his ascent of Pike's Peak, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">his career, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">diary of, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Pike's Peak, region of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">gateway of, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">winter at, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">the mountain described, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">sunsets at, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">at night, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">cogwheel railway of, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">ascent of, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">its souvenir daily paper, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">summit of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">discovery of, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">centenary of discovery celebrated, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">favorite excursion in vicinity of, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Pilgrim Fathers, contrasted with the Colorado pioneers, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>.<br />
-<br />
-"Point of Rocks," Arizona, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Powell, Major John W., explores the Grand Cañon, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">journal of his expedition, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Prescott, in Arizona, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">mines of, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">the "Point of Rocks" near, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">surrounding country, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Prince, the Hon. L. Bradford, on New Mexico, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Pueblo, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">home of Governor Alva Adams in, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">its amenities, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">club-house of, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">climate of, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">library of, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">plant of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company at, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Ranching in Colorado, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Raton, New Mexico, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Routt County, mineral wealth of, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Salpointe, Most Rev. Dr. J. B., archbishop of New Mexico, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Salt River Valley, Arizona, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">its mammoth dam, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">fruit-rearing in, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Salton Sea, the, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Salton Sink, the, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>.<br />
-<br />
-San Xavier, mission church of, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Santa Fé, consecrated by holy memories, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">founded by Oñate, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">centre of archdiocese, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">church of San Miguel, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">visit of Diego de Vargas to, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">buildings of, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">inhabitants of, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">oldest town in the United States, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">occupied by General Stephen W. Kearney, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">governed by General Lew. Wallace, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">"Ben Hur" written at, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">old palace of, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">society in, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">precious stones in vicinity of, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">chapel of San Rosario, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">history of, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">buildings of, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Santa Monica, California, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Seeman Tunnel, the, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">claims reached by, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-"Short Line" trip, Colorado, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">homes along the railway, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">hand-car journey on, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Ellis Meredith's ode to, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Skinner, C. M., on the Grand Cañon, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.<br />
-<br />
-"Snake Dance, The," in Arizona, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Southwest, scenic attractions of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>-<a href="#Page_14">14</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">characteristics of life in, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">travelling facilities of, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">gateway of, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Stanton, Robert Brewster, on the Grand Cañon, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Stone, Lucy, and the emancipation of women, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.<br />
-<br />
-St. Peter's Dome, railway up, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">excursion to, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">ascent of, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">view from, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Sugar, cultivation of, in Colorado, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Teller, the Hon. Henry M., career of, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.<br />
-<br />
-"Temple Drive," a favorite excursion in Pike's Peak region, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Tennyson, Lord, quoted, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Thayer, Mrs. Emma Homan, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">her "Wild Flowers in Colorado," <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Tonto Basin, mammoth dam at, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">entailed the destruction of the town of Roosevelt, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Vaca, Cabeza de, expedition of, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Vargas, Diego de, visits Santa Fé, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">his vow to the Virgin Mary, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Wallace, General Lew., governor of New Mexico, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">writes "Ben Hur" at Santa Fé, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Walsh, Thomas F., on Colorado and Philippine interests, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Warner, Charles Dudley, on the Grand Cañon, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Washington, may give place to Denver as the capital of the Union, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Water-power, in Colorado, and electricity, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Webster, Daniel, on the worthlessness of the West, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Whitman, Walt, quotation from, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Woman suffrage, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>;<br />
-<span class="indent">in Colorado, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>;</span><br />
-<span class="indent">Judge Lindsay on, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Yachting in Colorado, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Zumacacori, mission church of, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> The Life Radiant: Little, Brown, &amp; Company, 1903.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> The Old Santa Fé Trail: The Story of a Great Highway, 1897.
-The Macmillan Company.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> In and Out of the Old Missions of California, by George Wharton
-James. Little, Brown, &amp; Co., Boston, 1905.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Arizona Sketches, by Joseph A. Munk, M.D. The Grafton Press,
-New York.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> In and Around the Grand Canyon, by George Wharton James.
-Little, Brown, and Co. 1900.</p>
-
-</div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="transnote">
-<h2>TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:</h2>
-
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Archaic and variable spelling as well as inconsistencies in hyphenation have been preserved.</p>
-
-<p>All illustrations have been moved to paragraph breaks and therefore may not appear in their original positions. The list of illustrations has been updated to reflect these moves.</p></div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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