V K SECTION SIX Pages 1 to S; Magazine Section VOL.. XXXIII. t ), i' 7 if;s i V PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 22, 1914. ,,nvSTONE FALLS Lower yeU 1 v . J V ' a 4 X i rsri v own, , jtxx;- - is 4i ft--? AFTER its mad plunge of 109 feet over the Upper Falls, the turbu lent Yellowstone River hastens to its greater leap of 308 feet into the great declivity of the Lower Fall, i The grandeur and sublimity of this creation of nature have been both the inspiration and despair of ar tists and orators. Below the Lower Falls is the grand can yon of the Yellowstone, which, while not so long, so deep or so wide as some other canyons, contains a more wonderful combination of colors and a more weird and interesting variety of sculptural effects. Both the falls and the canyon are accessible from the roads and paths of Yellowstone Na tional Park and annually are viewed by thousands of tourists. ( X 7 M wim ITHI 107.2 NO. 8.. ( ) J i ..Ka. rx