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Show Tlie Deseret Eaoic. SUPPLEMENT APRIL 15, 1892, labor, a better home for the health seeker or a more romantic spot for the Hi Observations stud lttifcrlieN in U ah is desined to become, at no adventurer or pleasure setkei ? Surely Howard to Ureal Suit JLalie. g eat distant day, one of the greates the n:g!it has passed and the day is T n' first he ure of the srr.esto.be inland Mates in the irre.-- sisterhooa: i f dawning Wasatch Wave. THE DAY PROF- - JONESVLECTURE, IS DAWNING. u give ii bv tin Y. M- C. A. was t.v n iu tli-M. E. 0 iurca last evening oy P ot. i Junes, his theme being Like Biii) villn. F r the past tw Ive toe Professor has heen studying this gical formation auo v.iliey iu its ' waic liny: the oscillation of Great 8il Mircu . yt-ar- s government? i closi-examinati- gt-ol- Lak-- Nature seem to Lave pick ft out this spot for a reposiDevelopments in the gas belt conttory for her rares uif s. At first stent it looks as ti ug Utah had been chosen inue on an active scale, and a half dt zen new torches will gush from the bosom as natuie'-pauip- iroom, hut on wi fl nJ the deposits of of this great valley before many mouths The Brighton It cord. natural wtalui 110 xfeu?ive for samples and ve are forced to admit that are great storeth samide-room- s We belUve that the R G. W. has Los houses which are, practicall speaking, mxhausibJe. The perpetual streams Angeles as an objective point and that season toof wa er during an indi finite perio of some stir will be male this wards continuirg tae road southward time have brought down the sedernent-Manti. They will go to Joseph y remains of the crumbling Hjcky frm Mountain peaks which uas been depo- City, but here is the stumblitg block, sited in t.he valleys, f jr.u'ug &u aluvial whether to attempt Cleer Creek and a or soil unexcelled iu auyc muiry iu quality avoid Maryfcvale except by branch, At trie same run into Marys vale and let the sulphur of produc iveness. be time it hasuueu the saline suostance beds slide. But Los Angeles is to from this same material aud carried it reached. Beaver Utouian. down to the lowest portion of tae Great Basin where, when the water Some one estimates that getting has been evaporated, ure crystal alt bom costs the people of this coautry is left in great abundance. $250,000,000. antjually, netting married Our mines contain almost every $300,000,000. and getting buried $75,000, known metal; the climate varies from 000. It might be added that getting perpetual snow in 'he northern inouu-aiu- s diuukcost the people of the United to almost tropical in sunuy D x e States more ttiau $900,000,000. annuaud the 11 a of U ah is as varied, both ally, or over one and one-h- a f times as in wild and cultivated plauts, as her much as born, married and getting of the climate. Underlying the valley buried, put together, and more than Great Silt L ike are great reservoirs of all the bread and meat consumed in uaiuial ga and tae American Natural the nation. Exchange. Gay company are confident tuat they will s.'On all ike oil in itie Weils of the An industry in artificial sponges is in snores i f the lake. M. Oscar of creation Already the yes of t:ie world are process .urnd to wtiiM U ab. California, Nev- Sc .mid', prof ssor at the Uaiversity of nad great G.atz, in Siyra, has invented a method ada a .d Colo, auo hav.i olpeoph by w iich pieces of liviug sponge are xc.iem. u scaling tiiou-and- s broken off and planted ina favorable lo t!iem, t)U vVUiiU tae gUSU Of cXJib : meut was oer many ver: oolig Mt to sp.Jt. Fro iii very small cuttings of this seek other pastu es. N 1 sowitaUtih, kind Prof. Schmidt has ootained her grovvia lias oeeu slow out peima-uei- i.. large sponges iu tae course of three II-- r day ol prosperity is Ju?t years at a very small expeuse. One of -his experiments gave the result that the dawning, and who can tell what the r suit will be as tne work of development cultivation ol 4 0.0 sponges had not ds. Witu improving mei hods ol cost more than 225 francs, including iniga iwu, ai lic.al watei storage ai;d Lhe iuterest fjrturee years on the ts uur tgiiculiural aitefriivn weli capital expended. Tne Austro Hunwill be secjud to none. Our garian g )vernmjnt has been so much miwes are already becoming famous the struck with the importance of tuese ntsthatit has ollicially auworld uvei . V..ere is there a grander opportunity thorized the protection of tnis uew infor the capitalist, a broader field for dustry on the coast of Dalmatia. Ex. uuht-- - on - . -- His lecture was partly illustrated by some sketches whic'i he had made for the purpose of co!Veirgan idea of the fomiution of this great basin; first 1 as n was a g vat sei or ocean txrud-in!) iwo.'u the Wasatch and Siena m ruutaius. Tut u tht-sranges were rais..d many ibous i d f t highertban D v, while ;iitj. space b tween was a sea thousands ol f.et in depth, the bot tom of which laised up to near the of the tioitoiii of he Jake prcsriit and the bal nice ot the basin. Then the e was tutg up bv the washing down of the mount ain.--; the discharge ot t le waters of B :nevilb' thought Hed cauyou iu Idaho, and the fl lake to its pr sent size. T e saoie lines of the ancien' lake wt re described as being over 1000 leet higher tha the present lake level, and this upper Ijne ha been traced on its one unilo in U ve! for over 2500 miles. Theanci-- ii s a or lake was, 250 mi es wi le ami 500 mil s long, coveting an area ot 18,000 : quaie m les. II thii.ks that there wert ihre periods of rise and fallimiu the lake, and thiee tims that the lase was oiied up. Hi-- , tuirtetli shore r b acu iines beljwt eB uuevii e beacn, showing that many perio s of si asous ol levels for the waves to form beaches. Th. later oscillations of the lake be divides inio periods of three, uiLe an J iwent)-eve- u years each, and the now as being the lowest, since lake 1SC0, and. he predicts that it miy go two or three fet--t lower, then so tnat iu tiirteu jearsit will come up 10 the lo.vi.--r pari of the cii , and in 250 yeais cover the city. lie accounts tor the seven billion tons of salt in the lake as being tr.e concentration from the waters of the various streams, all of which hold salt iu solug e - fil-i- i laldry-hgu.ofi- he i ris-atiai- tion. Tribune. - n a 1 1 . 1 p;-cce- : pio-duc- |