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Show THE PAST AND PRESENT. times, that which else will be taken THE BLADE. later on." the growth (C) These tuings being so, of democracy, tbo power of the bates: subscription the demands of the Socialists 00 Per $2. year and of th3 independent labor party, (Payable in advance), are) not, without a sinister significance; Pole Leo XIII would not have writEditor. jf . F. 6IQ3S, ten his Encyclical Kerum Novarum if he bad not been aware of the extent to Application has been made at the Nephi labor questions are coming to for transmission through the mails as which tha front. We cannot put our ears to gvcond.ulass mail mattes. the ground and listen, without hearing the low murmur of tha swelling tide of SATURDAY MORK., NOV- - 2, 1SQ5. th4 people. ' INow, iamid ' all these grave conditions, is there any hope? We know, work-ingme- n. post-(,fU- c .; t . ' When we reflect on the magnificent resources of bur fair territory; on its fruitful valleys: on its 'majestic mountain from which emerge the crystal streams that, with songs of rippling gladness, come to quench the thirsty soil and cause it to teem with every needful blessing for man; on the rugged .mountain! sides, gashed with veins of the precious metals, and on the practically inexhaustable beds of coal for the reduction of the gold, silver, copper and iron; and inhale the pure air that comes laden with the blessings of life and vigor, we aannot help but concede that! the God of naturo was not only generous but prodigal in His gifts to Utah.! When we look on the people, once a neterageneous mass gathered from all the nations of the earth, and speaking a score of tongues. with habits as dissimilar as their speech, but eventually fused into one great homogeneous body with the same hopes here apd hereafter, bearing in each brain a common faith and in each mind a common purpose, we look' upon a religious and social miracle. As we take a retrospective view of the people and note their struggle for the first con." quest of nature; see them beating down the doors that bar the passage to the chambers of mineral wealth, and become prosperous and contented, we cannot but see the strongest evidences g of design on the part of an ; BLADE AQENT3: and many yeais ugu mxi, vjiououuuc elo "It is Below U a list of our agents, who will quently reminded us, that: receive subscriptions and receipt for against the ordinance of .Providence, j jPayrnents: is against the interests of man, that Tooel Cq. GUa,'staln, Wm, Ibapah, immediate reparation should be possi evils had ble when City. Joseph A Lyman, Oak ' been at work? for one of the strongest Anderson, Fillmore. ' Christian Tuo3. Meminott, Scipio. O. A. Bates, Holden. safeguards against! misdoing would beu Chris. Orerson, Leamington. removed, if at any moment the conse-qGeo.- Crane, Kanosh. ' James Hatton, Petersburg. ?nce of misdoing could be repaired." Virgil Kelly, Burbank; But if there be no hope of an immediAdams. Meadow. - Hvrum James S.iClake, Hinckfey. ate Utopia, is there no hope of gradual amelioration? Yes! there is, if nations remain true to the lessons of the Oos-p- e . It is the only gospel for the many POME PROBLEMS OF THE AGE. and for the poor. They can look to no other source of help, hope, or comfort. The Very Rev. F. W. Farrar, Dati of Can- Sc ence has no gospel for them, and in the North America Review for terbury, .' October. can point them to nothing but vast, Our daily familiarity with the condi- mysterous, inexorable laws "which tions of things around us pften hind- have no ear to hear, no heart to pity, ers our due apprehension of .them. anid no arm to save." Politioal econoLet us theb glance briefly at some of my has no gospel 'for them, but the Providence those problems of the clpse of this cruel demonstration that the weak y We 'see them battling agaipst a Gom-mo- n foe; shoulder to shoulder with nineteenthj century, which it is blind- must go to the wall, and that those , J ness to ignore, and madness not to ap- wno I, stumo:e in tne race can ouiy uo steady faith that they were right and ' the Almighty was with them. It preciate in' their full significance. trampled pitilessly down under the- vhat a was of enormous stupea-douright that they did those things, growth hopf of! advancing generations. Soci(l)The fortunes, without any effestual al sm has no gospel for them, but only because they sincerely believed they diminutiori of thesa malarious marshes th b false hopes held out by impossible were battling against a common foe of struggling poverty, and of the waste theories, which, if even for a time they that sought their overthrow. We see re carried out by anarchic violence, the strong hand of the general govern places fertile in sorrow. When Zonea oZ plethorip riches, of seltish luxury, of wcjuld only plunge mankind into' more ment restihglupon them, and a demand materialising egotism, are conteminous unutterable ruin. But true religion made for tha surrender of the principle with zones1 uf squalid wretchedness and na i create con victiohs which will e of plural marriage, We know of the practical heathendom, such juxtaposi- sp them with courage, energy, and heroic struggle they made for what tion, as a wise Bishop has warned ;ua,J f hqpe? which by the extinction of vice they regarded as their constitutional tends to produce Cyclones. In almost and drunkenness, will give them even rights. We have seen the doors of the all the great capitals- - of the world you amid poverty and struggles, a power to penitentiary close upon them year after have fashionable churches and .million- ra sa t,hpms;p.l vs into tho true aelf-re- year. It was right that they should aire; congregations,- and, close .beside sp ect of those wio have the dignity of endure those things as a testimony to ' them, masses of torn, lost, ragged,! be- God's image upon them, and the sign their sincerity. Then without warning of the imwildered, neglected sheep in the j wil-- . of their redemption visibly marked upderness without a shepherd. And the on their foreheads, pending change of church policy, came children? AM that is the deepest horf then another characteristic of this the now famous manifesto; surrenderror of it alp! .There are children who, agh be the decay jof faith, it is the ing the practice of plural- marriage. at four years old, have learned to echo wojrst omen of all. Is there this decay Under that domestic? relation children the foul language of their parents, and of Ifaith? It is. at least a perilous sign were born and reared, and ties just as are familiar vith' their infamie- s- that, in many Christian countries, tender, and love just as pure and holy wretched childre a hal s ized , hal , thousands choose atheists, and social as any passion that ever had birth on without health, without' home, with-- : ists, and men of no religion, and men of this earth, had. been formed. Upon out hope, Then took at the girls-slatt- religions utterly hostile to their own, thousands of homes where peace and coarse, flaunting, with the to represent them in their Congresses happiness had dwelt, that manifesto on their bold and Parliments; that not ten per cent. fell with crushing foroa. Wives who wicked, leering expression and brazen features, many of them liv- of the working classes go to church or .loved thsir husbands with all the tend ing oa the 'wages of vice! Who i3 re- receive the eucharist; that in France, erness and undying devotion of which sponsible for this blackness of great Spain, and Italy Roman Catholicism woman's nature is capable; women who darkness? Two master fiends rage and on tne testimony or lioman Catholics would have died by the most exquisite riot the fiend of drink, enthroned in themselves has so completely lost all tortue rather than part with a domesandithe fiend; of ho d on the manhood of the Continent tic relation that had placed upon their glaring .'. r impurity, that millions of nominal Roman Cath- brows the holy name of wife, and upon (2) The abnormal growth of; "great olics do not even pretend to follow out their heads the wreath of honorable cities. It is no mere external phenom- the most elementary exterhfcJ rules and maternity, bowed their heads in the enon; In almost all nations, by a slow requirements of their religion; that presence of a sorrow infinitely worse and hardly noticed social revolution, arnong all English-speakin- g races the than death, But the sacrifice had to the old a w'&et country ilife. is being wcjrd Agnosticism though a word of be made. The tender; ties of matrimerged into the struggling life of towns yesterday is descriptive of a wide- mony were siindeied and the associaa life which .has been called ''the spread mental phenomenon; i that lead- tions of years were discontinued. The n grave of the physique of our race," ing newspapers discuss such questions iforms of husbands and which is also, too often, the grave ot its as "whether they have not been, on the fathers no longer entered the doors morality. whole, a curse to the world?" that the where once bis coming' brought joy to (3) Is there nothing to cause anxiety "Catechism" of Free Thinkers is wide the wife and happiness to the children. in the huge unparalled growth of popu- ly spread among our working classes; Alone in their sorrow those women lation? t It ha3L so greatly alarmed that powerful governments have eras- have pursued the pathway of life. The Fiance that there, a largti family is a ed! from their Btatute books the uami only raya of light that have come to rare exception, and there in consequence ;.: are those that through the mist them ofjGod. the population ia diminishing, In Inwheth-ejrjreaders and have struggled through darkness aik may perhaps pome dia; the rapid increase of population is the object of this paper to point from thp. other side. No one but He has already caused the depression of to pessimistic 'conclusions. I answer whose sympathetic being notes the fallvast masses of tha people into almost bj no means. ."Our healing," says Mr. ing of a single sparrow, understands chronic starvation. In England, Lo veil, "is not in the storna or in the the magnitude of the terrible sorrow crowded densely England, the , births whirlwind, it is not in monarchies or that has come to the hearts of thousexceed the deaths by hundreds a day, aristocracies, democracies, but will be ands in Utah; no one but the, Father a ad what shall we do in the end there-o- i revealed by the still small voice that' has read aright the motives that ,have ? Mean while; the increase of poputo the conscience and the heart, prompted them to endure. The paslation which is going on is mainly the speaks prompting us to wider and wider hu- sionate outcries have been stifled in a increase of the Uqfit, and its ferment- manity." The regeneration of society faith. that looks forward to infinite reing and irrepressible rapidity is largely his always come from individuals; nev-- unions in the world to; come. due to the curse of disgracefully early en from committees. It will not be So quietly have these things taken marriages between boys achieved, it never has been achieved by place, tha the world has been almost and girl3 who enter on the estate1 of legislation. It- cannot possibly be or totally uriconBcie!u.s of that feature matrimony "within half a crown of bilought about by violence. Verbal or- of the surrender, destitution." Those things-twhich we have briefis absolutely powerless to acthodoxy Yet labors' are complish reformations. Ceremonial re ly referred were done in the interest of () though the actual ever being multiplied, fund avail- ligionism many and has often peace, and no one but the most heartable for them becomes a constantly dewith the most detestable less bigots Will not say those tremencreasing factor of the national wealth;" enormities. But let each , true Chris-tik- n dous sacrifices should have the reward and while'the rich are growing richer man lite up to his profession, let for which they were made, that of masses of are the great poor ";.. " J',: :j :': growing him walk worthy of the vocation where- - peace. so in that relatively poorer, The surrender of the principle of large parts vath hei3 called, let him boldly rebuke of England a considerable fraction of vice and be to suffer plural marriage paved the way for diready the population is living continually on fqr the truth's sake,patiently and then that salt vision on party lines, It rendered un. the dim borderland of pauperism. of sincerity has not lost its savor, and necessary any further union of church (5) And it must, I fear, be sorrowfulwill be adequate for the regeneration of and state, or rather an united vote of one bad omen of admitted tha these t ly the world. church members againat those who days is the deficiency of adequate charwere not members. Prior to the time ity. On what is called "Hospital Sunof the surrender, that which appeared day," in every church of erery relig- li Correspondence Cotton PI ant, Wa aro to be a union of church and state was ym toaay over a volcano. ious denomination, London is appealed Thr iB imperative, Since then there has been la npw progress Ambitious the among to in hundreds of earnest and even ioaasrs 01 parties, on both the Eastern an impression that there are no bars to western, continents a conspiracy of impassioned sermons. What is the re- aria "" gioitkesfc msgaiiuae mat nas ever been the people joining either or any party. to sult? Oaly from 10,000 50,000! organized by human or that During alj those years of trouble, the and the next day you read thai .78,000 has ever been promptedingenuity human ambi by lor us object th eubjuga people had regarded the national deor 100,003 has bean emulously poured tion, oi itcnenaswnoie The only civilized world to tho mocracy as their friend. tipn out by a handful of rich people at dpmiaion ot the voices money In power. that congress, were raised in A Christie's to purchase buhl, T.his monev power is greater than defense of the Mormon people were or Q aee n Anne plats. Ye t a n exper- Kings, Emperors or Czars and it is those of democrats The only ones ienced civil engineer warns us thaf'we steadily fastening its poisoinous fangs who asked that the enforcement of the are on the verge of a revolution in into'the vitals of the people. Will the laws in Utah might be tempered with thought and practice, and the only way. strong mim submit to being robbed mercy," were democrats. 'When ex to make thisjevolution harmless,: and when he by a movement of his muscle post facto laws were enacted, and ev eo Derteiicai, is to the constitution strained as a means to give, freely and be- - ca!n overthrow such tyrany? , , ; i , ' ed long-continu- A - , ' j . over-rulin- i ; in-r- j . j t. ) - . f-- f-f- ed ernly j gin-palace- s, - j ! t well-know- ' ' , i i it -- : half-develop- ed - f j co-exi- cQ-exist- ed st ' -- . ' : : j . bric-a-bra- c, an end, and the Mormon people carried those same laws to the Supreme court, the only ones in that august body that declared for a strict construction of the constitution,' were the democratic members. The only ones that voted against those acts of were the democrats. The people of Utah learned in those decisions of the Supreme court that the democrats were strict constructionists of the constitution and that it must not be strained in order to accomplish even what waB regarded by the nations as a laudable end . The people of Utah learned that the republican party was williugto trample under their feet that great paladium of the people's rights that was inspired by Jehovah and written by Thomas Jefferson, Thus, the people of Utah had learned a great and practical lesson in the first two principles of democracy, viz; personal liberty and a strict construction of the constitution. Thus it happened that the people of Utah became over It was not whelming democratic. because of their ignorance of politics, as has been charged by many smali-soulpoliticians. At the time of the division there was a republican administration. It was desirable that Utah go into the union at the earliest possible date. President Joseph Fi Smith voiced the feeling of his party .when he said that if he were the republican party, knowing as he did that Utah was democratic, he would shut the door in her face: In order to insure statehood to Utah it became necessary that Utah politics should be in line with the republican administration. Thus it was that Apostle John Henry Smith took the stump for the republicans. Thus it con-fisticati- on . d was that George F. Gibbs carried a let- ter to Cache valley," said better containing the declaration that it was de- sired by the first presidency that Cache county go republican because of the good influence it would have on the re- publican administration. Thua it was that President Joseph F. Smith'secur-e- d a! recommend from Bishop Stevens of Ogden with which to assist in the election of Frank J. Cannon. Thus it was,' but enough of such unholy m and ecclesiastical interference. Thus it was that the word 'went out to hundieds of devout democrats that "Zion needs your votes in the interest of statehood." Thus it happened that Utah went republican. That kind'of inspiredj politics missed fire Jin one particular, and which is found in the election of President Cleveland,. But it was too late for a retreat. Silence and would have been the policy of wisdom, , : non-interferen- rtjy&ieiitii and asj3i i. Good Sample Rooms for CommercialTrav- e'ers. Hack Meets all Trains, Free to Patron to and from the station . OFFICKi.... Store. Co-o- p HOURS Hf GOLDSBROUGH, li - At Itsidne' Second door East 2 Proprietor, to 4 p. m. r NephJ, r Utah. ' Tiio Missouri Pacific R'y - It yon are going to Kansas City, St, Lonis, Nephi Her Resources, Advantages and Attractions. Chicago,' N8W York, t Geographically, Nephi City ip situatod almost in the center of Utah. Its latent natural resources are practically unlimited. Its active resources consist (1 of Agriculture ; (2) of Horticulture (3) of the Sheep industry and (4) of minerals, To 'the! North, West and South is a large area of aS fine agricultural lands as can be found in Utah. Abundant crops of cereal3 and alfalfa bless the labors of the husbandmen. To the North,;housands of acres of natural meadow, watered by large sprinjrs, emerald carpet. The spread out like a great of Nerjhi :; are- - unexcelled vctable in the west. Its fruit and that of its contiguous towns, is as perfect as can be grown in can this latitudes In order to illustrate what necbe accomplished here with bees, it is only, essary to state that a Nephi farmer last season, shipped; 8,700 pounds of fine honey, and " the apiary is merely Jan adjunct to his farm. of The wool industry of this locality, and is such as to demand the largest in Utah, of two wealthy firms' and large aention warehouses for the storing and handling of ; the product. 4 near A couple of miles ieast of the city, the mouth of Salt Creek Canyon, is a veritable mountain of pure crystalized gypsum.millConfor venient to the quarry, is a complete in which grinding; and refining the toproduct n the shipped being continuously statfs of the Pacific Coast,- - 30J tons last month being the' outpu. Up Salt Creek canyon and, north easterly from about nine miles, pure, salt springs gush the mountain" side, and. by means of lone of the most1 complete 6alt manufactories"; ib,1Lhe United States the brine is converted into - table, and packing salt hat has but few equals dairy and no superiors in1 the world. The brine is 35 per cent, salt and the supply .practically unlimited. In aiddiljion to the manufactured product, jlhere are several mines or. quarries of rock salt; the extent of which cannot be computed. Ab a distributing "point, Nephi recognizes but one teuperidr in Utah. It is the key to Southern Utah, jand with the advantaga of two railroads stretching out to the east and soiithin, the best aoint furnishes, wlthui question, of manufactories Utah foi the establishment . anjj wholesalehouses. The attracticjns of Nephi; as a residerce town, are uniqxije in heir variety. It isthesitudiated on almost tthe highest portion of of waters north into vide that turns the flow into the Sevier rivUtah lake and sjouth-wa- rd er, thence onward to the Sevier lake the dead sea of Millord County. .Its altitude, 'gravelly soil and perfeef drainage insure the best of in fact, ihe conditions arts such, that health, occurred in but two cases pf diptheria have five years among a population oi nearly 3,000. Its citizens are khrifty and progressive. The and elegant cosey cottages, Ibeautiful lawns modern public buildings, make of Nephi a; place in which ljfe is aa real luxury. system of water-wIt is supplied with complete flows orks water from which the along some three miles up the. pure springs; distant : miles; the canyon. To tbjie west about five of r easy acmountain rangf is low, rolling-ancess, and abounding with rich pasturage. To the east a coupfe of miles, the Nebo range rises, to the north east a few miles abrubtly the top of Mt. N ebo rises into the regions of eternal snow, J Without exagf rat ion and without coloring, the foregoing is a description of the lovely he Capital of Juab County in city of Nephi, which are found the mines of Tintic,; the won-- i der and admiraJtica of the Oreat West. Besides Tintic, thei : 'x mines of Fish Springs, & portion of Deep! Creek and other wealthy and Growing camp) are situated in the Western part of Juab County. fV Following is directory of Nephi'a" business pu any other peint IJast see that your ticket reads via The 'Missouri Pacific ; ; R'y Coaches, Quick Time and Superb Elegant Road-bemake flus line thePeqple'sFav-- . orite Route, d - , . 6 :35 p. m. Leave Ogden Leave Pueblo ... .i ..... . ... . 7 :00 p. m. Arrive- Kansas City.. .... . 5:45 p. m. . a. m. Arrive St. Louis. 9:30 a, m. Arrive Chicago. - - e-- iis-on- e Call upQn the nearest ticket agent or address H , B, KOOSER, Commercial Freights Pass. Agt. ' S. H.oSTINSON, : Pass. Agt. Traveling , Salt Lake City, Ujtahtj Or II, C TOWNSEND, General Pass, and Ticket Agent, f St. Louis, o. ' inter-mountai- - , - : ' J - part-isanis- BPHI HOUSE DriG.S.Hosmer5 ce . LOCAL) TIME CARD. In effect.Dec. 16, 1894. Train arrive and depart at various station daily as follows : Stations. t South-boun- North-boun- d. d Arr. Leave Leave Arr. 8.30 am 2.00 am 8.00 pm 5.45 pta Ogden.... 9.30 am 8. 10 am Ar ) Salt J Lv 7.00 pm 4.45 put 7.15 am Lv f Lake j Ar 4.35 pm ' 7.41 am ....Sandy.... 4.05 pm 9.12 am .. Fairfield .. 2.25 pm 11.05am... Eureka. ..12.45pm 8.15 am.. LehiJunct.. 3.30 pm 8.25 am Amer'n Fork 3.20 pm 8.?2am. Pleas't Grove 3.13 pm 8.55 am . ...Provo.... 2.50 pm 9.14 am SpanishFork 2.32 pm 9.32 arm . . . Pay son ... 2.17 pm . 10.35 am ....Nephi....1.25 pm .11.15 am Tl H JLvl2.45pm Arj f Ari2.3o Pm ll.Xo am Lv i r 1.05 pm Leamington 10.55 am 9.25 am Oasis.. 3.05pm 4.50 pm Clear Lake 8.37 am 7.10 am Ar j MilLv 5.35 pm 7.50 am Lv f ford f Ar 5.15 pm 4.00 am 9.40pm Arrive ....Frisco,... Leave ' Trains souh of Juab, run daily except Sc- - but the republican party had those eminent pcclesiasts by' the nose and whenever it says "dance"- the shuffling begins and continue!. The result of such infamous work is found today in a people scuttered and bearing on their shoulders the burden of inexpressible sorrow. In thousands of hustlers:, A CO., hearts there is anger and evidences of C. ANDREWS , Dealers in Wool, Grain etc. revolt. In the brains of thousands of UTAH WOOL GROWERS ASSOCIATION, E. It. Booth; Manager. young men there is a spirit of skepti NEPHI HOUSE, cism taking the place of the faith that Mrs. E. Golds orough, propr. should dwell there as firm and strong A. W. PALMER, f DATS Two trains daily from Salt BlackGeneral Wagon andiCarriage Shop, as that which has characterized their Lake tothrough all points East. smithing. Throuprh Pullman Palace Sleepers frm Sa3t parents. Thus it is that contempt and NEPHI LIVERY STABLE, Lake to Chicago without ' - j v . - rr. - 5 change . Jno. R. Downs propr. dislike have come in the placa of love UNION Improved Tourist Sleepers. . HOTEIi, Free cars. Reclining.Chair and respect. Mrs. C. R. Foote,. propr, coaches. Elegant day The We ask those who, by their unwar- GAZETTE SAIjOON, only line operatiugMining ear service. The shortest aEd fastest line to all point, r J. W. Hartley, propr. .1 ranted interference have wrought out M.. McCUNE, east, E. D. WICKINS, Aeent, Nephi. this condition tolook upon the ruing. Bakery and' Confectionary. D. E. Burley, Gen'l Agt. Passgr. Dept.,' We ask them that the causes that McNALLY & LjUNT, Ticket Office, 201 Main t Salt Lake. City Druggists. K. L. Lomax, Gen'l have led up to them lib now and for- COOPER, Passgr. and Ticket Agt. PYPtER & CO. Gen'l Mngr., Omaha iE. Dickinson, ' in Dealers Tinners and Plumb-ever eliminated, Let there be such a hardware, S. II. II. Clark, i '.. i'y;' ,W.. c y.' ers Oliver W. Mink, solemn and pointed declaration of non- GOLDEN EAGE SALOON, jE. Ellery Anderson, . Blackett Brjos. John W. Doane, Dealers in. Wines, interference inXhe future and such a Proprs. . etc.. Frederick li. Coudert, , Liquors Receiver. 'disciplining of George F. Gibbs, Apos- M. P. KONG, Cabinet and Coffin Maker. tle John Henry Smith and President-Josep& ALLEN, . F. Smith and others, as wtll OSTLER Manufacturers of' Harness and .Saddles and dealers in all kinds of hovaa furnishing convince Mormon democrats of the abgouus. solute sincerity of the determination to V TT fiTTU set down on such nefarious work, and Butcher. then wait for another quarter of a cen- W. M. STOUT, of Boots and Shoes." tury for time to undo the great wrong Repairer that has been committeed. and to re- CHAS. FOOTri A SONS Dealers in General Merchandise. , store the coufldence that has been so NEPfll COOPERATIVE m shattered Nation. the MERCANTILE INthoroughly STITUTION. ( j i ; '; - 1 ' - . ; " "j . .. , h . . A i IBM ... A -- . T.H. G. Pslrkes, Supt. W. H, PETTEGREW, Manufactur of and dealer in Harness, Why should not free America aid Sheep-Men'- s and Saddles, supplies. " every effort in behalf of freedom, no JNO. S. PAINTER, Dealer in General and' green Groceries. matter where in the wide World? Let ORD BROTHERS CLOTHING CO, the cry be for the oppressed and let acDealers iniClothing and Gent's furnishings. tion sustain the cry. Liberty is the OSTLER & OGKEY, ,.,' watch ward that should be our guiding H. Butchers. H. HAWKINS, as we and. follow men true should star Boarding bouse and Kestaursnt. C. OSTLER, the star to the uttermost end of ., the j.M.Boot Shoe maker. Earth in behalf of the poor and' op- H. THILLand & COMPANY, Merchant Tailors. pressed, then indeed "would American FRANCIS SELLS, freedom be a light set upon a Furniture and undertaking. that would enlighten the BIROHALL & OSTLER, Clothing dealers. World. NEBO SALT SAN PETE ' YALLEY '. ... ' ; . "' . ; RAILWA17 . . TIME TABLE NO. 14.' mountain-top Effective Thursday ; in General Merchandise. The continued withdrawel of gold is ' Dealers W. Paxman, Supt. a matter that concerns the country's PEXTON & CHASE, Blacksmithing. welfare. It could be stopped at once if A WEBB, KNOWLES Secretary Carlyle gave notice that he Wheel Wrights. would hereafter execute the law in let- HYDE & WHITMORE, General Merchandise. ter (and not according to his idea of its GEORGE HARDY, Boot and shoe Maker. .spirit) and pay; out Silver as well as , Gold. Such action of course would THOS. 'BELLISTON Mt. Pleasant Marble Work. Agt. not be approved by Wall Street and BIRD & BOOTH, Dentists, consequently gold will cont:nue to go - out. August 1st, 1095. Souths North. MANUFACTURING CO. A. Cazier, iSupt. EXCELSIOR MERCANTILE CO., , No. 1 Pist-MaS- i James 10.55a 11.20a 11.50a 12.05p 12.23p 12.40p 12.50p 1.23p 1.45p '43.0 38.0 33.0 29.0 23.2 19.5 16.0 8.0 Dist. from Stations. Nephi Ar. It.SaltNehpl Springs i Holloway Fountain Green Draper Moroni Chester Ephraim Ar. Manti Lt. . 5.0 10.0 14.0 19.5 23.5 27.0 35.0 43.0 No. 2 Daily 10.10a 9.56 9.42a 9.23a 9.00a 8.40a 8.25a 7.57a 7.30a Trains leave Mantl for Sterling.Funk's Lak and Morrison at 2:20 p. m., Monday's, Wednesday's and Friday's. Returning arrive at ' Manti at 5:25 p. m. Direct connection at tfephi with Unio Padific Railway from and o Salt Lake City Ogden, Butte and intermediate points, and all . THURMAN & WEDGWOOD, What right has the Government to Attorneys - at - Law. pointe East and Wett. deliver mail to Joseph Tapper because Stop on signal. in a lives Clod he city and compel John THEODORE BRTJBACK, to ride Pres. & Gen'l Manager, five Room his. miles This for 3, and Hopper Bank First National Salt Late City, to Bnilaiay. be the jist of the free Rural seems II. S. Kerr, Mail delivery matter. UTAH. pRoro, Supt. & G. F.-- JP. Agent, U&nli' . ; 1 - , |