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TITLE: ARIZONA Highways Magazine
[Beautiful magazine of arts and nature in Arizona-- See FULL contents list below!]
ISSUE DATE: AUGUST 1956 VOL. XXXII No. 8
CONDITION: Size: Approx 9" X 12". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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FRONT COVER "MOONEY FALLS IN SUPAILAND" BY RAY MANLEY. This is one of fewP laces where one can still get away from the rush of this modern world and view one of our most spectacular scenic wonders, Supai, the home of the Havasu Indians, deep p in the Grand Canyon. Of the three largest falls, this one offers more picture possibilities. Summer's sun illuminates Navajo and Mooney falls from about one o'clock to three o'clock, the falls being deep in the canyon gorge, shadowed early in the day. The model is one of Havasu's young Indians, who serve as guides and packers to the Indian community. The nine mile trail from Hilltop is an easyhorseback trail taking about 2 hours down and slightly longer riding out. The day after this picture was made a summer cloudburst filled Cataract Creek, wall to wall, changing the crystal clear water to a surging mud colored torrent. A few days later all was back to normal, the flood having left its mark on one of the falls, changing the scene a bit but not its everlasting beauty.

OPPOSITE PAGE "STONE AVENUE, TUCSON" BY RAY MANLEY. There is a time in the evening when the sun has set and its afterglow gives even the a commonplace new feeling of beauty. Though Tucson's manmade monuments are not comparable in size with those larger cities, they are the landmarks that identifythel of city as the Old Pueblo. Here, too, busy people head for home at sundown, advertising lights come on and office lights o out. To portray this scene it was necessaryto observe the sceneg was discovered that there is a precise several evenings it period of only several minutes when a long exposure that will show car light streaks, the sky and general illumination of signsP ' will balance.

LEGEND:
"MOONEY FALLS IN SUPAILAND'' . . . FRONT COVER STUDY OF A SCENIC JEWEL DEEP IN THE HEART OF A CANYON PARADISE.

SOIL. CONSERVATION IN ARIZONA FARMERS AND RANCHERS COMBINE TO IMPROVE TILE LAND, INCREASE YIELD.

ST. DAVID PORTRAIT OF A FRIENDLY COMMUNITY ON THE BANKS OF THE SAN PEDRO.

ARIZONA IS MY STUDIO . RAY MANLEY DISCOURSES AT LENGTH ON EXACTING ART OF THE PHOTOGRAPHER.

ARIZONA'S HAUNTED WILDERNESS A GLIMPSE OF AN ISOLATED FOREST AREA FEW TRAVELERS EVER VISIT.

BOOKS, NUTS AND SHADOWS A NOTED SCHOLAR DISCUSSES BOOKS HE FEELS ARE OUTSTANDING IN FIELD.


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