BY: R. C.

THE prospective visitor, wishing to spend all or part of a Winter in the Old West, will receive adequate travel information by writing to any Chamber of Commerce in Arizona, the Tucson Sunshine Club, the Yavapai Associates at Prescott, the Roundup Club at Wickenburg, the Arizona Highway Department, or by calling at recognized travel agencies and transportation offices. The area is served by two transcontinental airlines, the American Airlines and T. W. A. Two railroads systems, the Southern Pacific and the Santa Fe, operate several trains each day into the Old West and every outstanding railway line in the United States takes reservations for this area. The Rock Island has been particularly active in this respect. Two major bus lines, the Pacific Greyhound and the Santa Fe Trailways, send daily units through Arizona. In transportation as well as accommodations, Arizona is as faithfully and amply served as any area in the country, and is tightly knit with all of North America in the great webs of transportation facilities whether by air, rail or highway.

We have tried to portray herein a glimpse of Winter in the Old West. Merely by way of postscript, may we point out that the state is not lacking in winter sport facilities for such are available in the higher altitudes, all within easy driving distance of the Empire of the Sun. Orange blossoms to ski jumps! May we cordially invite you to a Winter in the Old West.

The sign on our gate reads: "Welcome to Arizona!". . . R. C.