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Show ee RTE a 3: be found in the United Bice and would be a magnet for numerous ex cursionists during the summer months from the northern , The Millard Pub. Uo., Props. — ; - = >... SUBSCRIPTION RATES: PIOTIVG LL Wea was iccAcer «see» - (Payable in advance), : ene oe ee 82,00 Editor, Hntered at the Postoffice of Oasis as second-class matter. : WEDNESDAY, BLADE MAY 8, 1895. SALT LAKHS : Below is a list of our agents,who will Yaceiye subscriptions and receipt. for ear m. Chastain, Ibapah, Tooele Co. Joseph A. Lyman, Oak City. — Hyrum Adams, Meadow THE LAN MAN wes CGCRAZY?”? pret Blade office. An editor, or aayane plese, who will make such a statement that there is a ten per cent. opposition to woman suffrage in Utah, comprised of Saloon-keepers, gamblers, whisky-drinkers, cranks and fossils and invites the Opposition to take its choice, is making a Statement without the least foundation Blade published a squib, ostensibly an analysis by the Blade “devil” of the status of the opposers of woman’s suffrage, and it has taken the Pyramid all that time torub its eyes and wake up to the fact that the squib contained something to get mad about, and to find that its proper place in the “‘list of ten per centers” is among those labeled “cranks,” _ If, when the Pyramid. office, editor up, is Blade fool-killer visits he has to wale. the ite ineditor addition to killing him, will die of old age before is aware that bis ita the (olsPyramid jaculy i man dagen GREED. and ¢] i cured oe Hy He proportion that Salt Lake is getting sheet that bas no claim vt eet , 2 to he ealled a ee a ET ened En appearance. THE D. & R. G. W. EXTENSION, been proven beyond question SEATS EE was being ay ee ar ta period the Nebulous age, and which also of condensation; age next (3) in order are fowls or witaimals or true air breathers. It \remembered, that in a former arthe first winged by sists, called creatures were, Pterodactylus(wing- fingfhe creationof winged animals or 9? closes the ‘‘fifth’’? Mosaic “da creation. Ang to Geology the air was sufiy purified after the Age of Repo permit of the larg higher forms of existence of air-breathers. Thai was the case is amply proven by tnains of Mammalia, brute creation'beasts of the fields,’’ as the writGenesis has calls | previously couli. well have them. pointed But, Hart 1 it was presptr rather, fully then, intferentially, e, declares prepared tells of changes for his in the phys'htures of the Barth that would have‘led Man’s cotemporary existence tte been an act of seeming unwisdorthe part of his Creator. Geni i osis alioclaims the fact that Man was the reg? the last creative act of Him that irhe first ray of cosmical “‘light”’ ae a suspend; eS labors and ey passses A A naysite 343 ° tooring decline that the As long, parties and by the BLADH’S trial of woman’s Webb & Moody Will make CASH advances 9 fight| their sil- challenge to a/ THE suffrage. however, as we have the en- dersement of the ladies, we are reconciled to the abuse of | her political intelligent those that liberty. women in ninety-nine would cases out and The to very by many Of a hard ‘‘blow’? it lulled thought old a body of | a proposition, of one hundrea logically right. ee Storm. us. and when RAILWAY! withold Whenever endorse they will be morally a It from, preceeded the: south-west RIFIGENT RAILROAD SCENERY” everybody hereabouts |: 41u Boreas had er prognasticatious merely savant that has Blade dry his sanctum, and of windy stopped to |. IN headquarters he began in itant,’’ than and it began to gratefully as Three angel, or four birds and meadow sooner rup a clear up, rain. the EACH a but usual, rain, a good, old-fashioned, and in addition fields and range, of any quantity ‘matice.”? aie tine eouictaant aHo-Wwill cond fabs of Man’s intellectual Home it to has of its been mud 6 ; AND DENVER. an black- |, to ¢hirthey ) RAILWAY> were ‘away off’? on their weather predictions. ‘Tt was BEITWHLN ane Gently, the seemed as ess Trains Daily’ WAY N, GALT LAKE had Visit of times larks WoOorRLpb. 73 the predicting No a the usual weather-wise expression ef face been assumed and opinions as to the weather swapped with the ‘‘oldest inhabaweetly EME the meteo1 ological spring. a a surprise was eatch his breath. With that strange fatal- | ity that has ever characterized the weath- the ee rec- x a : ; i PISSTONS \ ; re es: zs e eas af pee weCeeCdING aruicive, ai UN Psy hd honest effort has been made al aefi fact of our arguments, ence The recent stormy spell was eee ree but had not appeared, hence the I Na Ls Rielle Be gS sD) inemeaaal TU Appar e Lue any to narrate the then ‘proceeds shy as Geology : watcheer the destinyi of theeae Harth Gad mene Wadhie oes of life othe ghat the ‘‘image and likeness’? ae oe S ee Ts Wat Him might have an environment ie a a befititnis exalted intellectual .endow“|ments., his capabilities of infinite oe _The closing of the aL. ae the advent of Man g Be, OF pertod of fire, was aj ine ‘Si day’? of Genesis was comsecond individualization of the Marth. leted ain hi 3 the Geologi Genesis conspicrous out, subsisted. info®; that Man did not exist until afteljystem of purely animal life had ha its apex. Geology also points ont tgsons for his absence from’ the present Ree Ae, vanished.) J. M’Moopy ¢ H. M. WEBB. STOCK— that a cireumambient ceean covered the entire surface of the Marth. The land was entirely . Paid for OATS at the me CORNER STORE. v246 lORNED Then ib wants the semi-annual confer- have et Tite, AO 2O ee bithe-paying RN TTS absorbed, that the only legitimate definition of the | at may fly pve. ie car oe ‘‘day’?? as used by the Mosaic ae me vigorous articles, ee ee writer’s attentiog has been drawn, and writer, is ‘tan indefini i : i ; we thank him very much for his able delapse ot time pation Gee eae t ae ae a A ton : a fense of the principle, and : for his kind Tt e) nésis Says | thixa@ creature that hath life.’’ events.” Thus: the writer writ o f Genesis ti a as , and gracious words for all women. _ The following extract is from his editorial of the earth was without form and void ‘Thature. ot air-breathers 10, 1895, which we take great satis- | ae ‘‘moving’? we have a sig: and darkness was upon the face of the Imrd Pe action in copying ax it gives a dignified deep.’’ The foregoing brief description of niistinction between the helpless, statement of woman’s true positions the infinite diffusion of the earth’s matter mithat preceeded the age of fishes Tne above graceful acknowledgment of and the darkness that, unchallenged, had ametive, finny inhabitants of the the Blade’s defense of the rights of the To be delivered in June when thé balangy reigned while eternity, unmeasured and ofjptirchase price will be paid. wat were capable of ‘‘moving’’ sisters to equal suffrage is as fuliy appreunrecorded had moved silently forward, (subout at will. Then (2) in order is as graphic, complete and truthful as Weat whales or monsters of the ciated as it was entitely unexpecied. any that science esuld possibly give of denny of the latter were capable of The BLADE has been soundly abused by Calf oti; or address the same conditions. According to Gene- bre both water and air. That WEBB & MOODY, Sis, the first creative act was ‘‘light.?? for life predominated during the at least two papers—one of those attacks is republished in this issue—but it isa} According to science, the law of gravitapeimed by Geologists the Reptilian Oasis, Utah, rich. Of course Salp Lake can’t help included all that period of seperafion into concentric rings, and it, because of its “location.” Now, th e€ the evolution of firey and fluidic globes. Blade hasa reasonable pride in Salt That period of darkness to light and the Lake, nor does it begrudge that City unfolding of the Solar system would a legitimate accumulation of wealth. have presented a gradual transition in The Blade’s complaint is found in the which there would have been no line of insatiable averic, selfishness and. the os demarcation until the individualéation of the Sun and his attendant penurious spirit manifested by manySalt Lake business men, and voiced by the worlds, Genesis then proceeds to describe the Tribune. For years the Tribune cried oat for frée schools. The writer of next division of time, the closing of which was the forming, or making of the this symmpathised with the Tribune's sé firmament,’ and which the text plaindesire for free education. The Tribune iy states was the dividing of the ‘ waters finally got all it asked for and is yet which were under the firmament from Itis alternately in tears as tera SS were above the firmaDel MApEy. or th , 6 open pee firmament of] quad tantrims. becanse in the free ma school system the Salt Lake octopus day ? ce pe the ‘second | Telaeio ae re oe ae day, or oe the Standard . justly names iy is forced to pay annually $40,000 to assist and tells how thesis ta lores e 5 eee the free school system in as Ae over fire, and the other parts of the Territory. All that ot ures € enormous amount Of We do not desire our Mt. Pleasant ae ane eceise to want at Uno mvesetit X to think for a moment that the time is every thing in sight that is of Blade is going to regularly indulge in ee Mase Then it wants all of the the exercise that is manifestly so neces- BUnINE 60 go to Balé Lake City. (And sary to,wake up and then kick it, bey the way, since church improvefase life 4 it ioG side and. HS ton ments almost ceased outside of Salt pievigus’ bo clo very oflen-to dud a Lake City, the Tribune’s objections to _._.__ hewspaper other: than its typographical to Ithas hat carbon Secured.] time, that in Salt Lake is being centraliznd the greater portion of the wealth of this entire Territory. ‘The Standard’s article was fair, ju st | : and manly, but the Tribune jumps o n- | to the Standard and in addition to hinting that the article in question Bon, coupled with the ehemical properlacks sense, also stated that its figures t oe of matter, would have produced ‘light,’’? and science also teaches us that were false and misleading. ‘light’? must have been the first eviThe Tribune doesn’t deny that a dence that the once passive atoms had large share of the wealth of the people begun an aggregative movement. Achas been, and is beingg centralized ali eal i n cording to Genesis, the indefinite lapse of It cannot successfully de- time that succeeded the voice cf Divinity, ny that the people of Utah are bein g and the first glint of ‘‘light,’? was named Seience hus named the same impoverished in just about the same a ‘‘day.’’ The fool-killer has overlooked the Des- The above insane explesion is from the Mt. Pleasant Pyramid. No one would suspect from. the generally sleepy tone of the Pyramid, that it could get such a jerky move on itself aS is eyidenced in the foregoing clipping. Itis just three weeks since the age. The Ogden Standard recently published a strong and able article on the greed of Salt Lake and produced ample and trustworthy figures to prove its position. The article is in line with charges made by the Blade more than a : Christian Anderson, Fillmore. hos. Memmott, Scip io. O. A. Bates, Holden, Chris. Overson, Leamington. ‘Geo. Crane, Kanosh. “IS cities of eemanre AGENTS: Payments: towns and Utah. At Parowan and Cedar Cit ies, the road would enter a region tha tis capable of furnishing an inexhaustable Supply of A No. 1 coal, and destined some day to be the scene of the largest iron werks on the earth, Such, in brief, is believed to be the future route of the “‘little giant” road. The route is of unusual natural richness and will pay from start to tinis h. OC 1 y reduced the number of roadsters and. it |i 3 now only a question of time before the although that, being, slusicu GENESIS AND GHOLOGY. inditions were favorable, the air | taithtul horse family will be almost en: ‘poisoness to permit of the ex- ‘tirely relegated to the rear. Bicycles’ £ true air-breathers, and that in the problem of the street inces of an sdyancing system of will solve By J. F. GIBBS. lair was undergoing a process of railway monopolies in some cities, but {purification. Thus does Geol- how will it affect the ‘‘bike’? monopolies? ce by an examination of the facts, # * ae XIE. fich Genesis also impliedely deRecapitulation. The WOMANS’ HXPONENT, Salt Lake, ¢be the case in its statement ofthe In the preceding articles it has been 5n of life, or rather the order in has the following kind and appreciative amply proven that the meaning of the \namesthem. Leb us examine words for the BLADE: term ‘*day’’ as used in Genesis, had no tession as pointed out by the} The newspapers have been usually on reference whatever to a period of twenty|our side, but here and there oppositi9na Mter. these bursts cut—replying to seme. oO tour hours, nor to any definite period or i [Copyright D. C. DODGE, down-east benefit S:H. BABCOCK, General Manager. ‘TPrafiie FL A. WADLBIGH, Gen’l: Pass. to Manager iF Agent. productive and ‘‘rheu- | Don't Siiwie Missionairies. Hyrtbemonthe of April, Mar and -Let_the doctors administer, ‘any? more poisag io you for. \ SI June. the following dates will be { its thin and aged locks at the Standard ; Genesis tthe harmony that exists be- filled: clothing of the land with vegetation and to point , ; pecause it exhibits a manly sympathy J. D. Sutith and John Trimble— : ; names the ‘‘indefinite and progressive} teen tl detailed account of the creation with a plundéred Territory. Now that Petersburg, March 10; Scipio, April 14; Deslapse of time’’ between the definite event | a5 it is f nd in Geology, and the reeord = Or any kind of Kidney or Galt Lake has got pretty much all of which it names the ‘‘firmament,’?’ and | o¢ the eret, May 5. : 2 consecutive events as it has the wealth of the Terzitory and the the individualization of the surface of] gqme d n to us through six thousand Allen Russell and John Ashman— Scipio, March 10; Deseret, April i4; Fillmore, “dead, mortal cinch” on its entire in- the Earth with land, trees and minor years of arkness, superstition and misM y 5. assumed to come, ecclesiastical as well as commer- vegetation, the ‘‘Third day..27: Geol+ interpré tion by these who I. N. Hinckley, Jr., and Rufus Day— * cial, the. Tribune wants the haughty ogy, instead Deseret, March 10; Pillmore, Aprtli4; Hinckh> of leaping from one|pe the #le-gerents and servants of Him ‘ little burg corraled as a distinct and definite and purely feature} who in fe beginning of time revealed the ley, May 5. physical ‘In the flowing water of Deseret, James Abraham and A. L: Rappeleye— loiters | .jomentiif Geology to His children. seperate school district so that it cao of to another, arth the Fillmore, March 10; Hinckley, April 14; Hol‘hat fere are dsscrepances in the Moskeep all it gets. The Tribune’s idea by the wayside and patiently examines| Along the den, May 5. denied. aot is pecid metamorphoses|.i¢ the only: not of a free school system, is to have the in detail H.G. Labrum and L. W. Stott— ore See ~ Brigii’s Disease The Beaver Utonian last week; conon #ained a column interview article the oxtension of the Denver road southward.from Salina. Messrs. Palmer, Dodge and others were reported as being rather reticent on the subject of an extension, but the Utonian gleaned course ¢| the two streams of knowledge, sufficient information to raise a pretty place on the land, but taking that were Hinckley, March 10; Holden, April14; Ha* a Seperate school diswhere they pend away gertain hope that the road will go for-| rich set apart as also the changes and succession of ani-| there of points poor asa class, mal life that swarmed in the ocean or frond ‘ 1, but again approach and run nosh, May 5: ward, andfrom the natural interpreta- trict or class, and the S. W. Western and J. C. Webb— have the taxes of the rich oceans. In many distances. Geology divides'the ‘‘third long Holden, March 10; Kanosh; April 14; LeamparalieRfor af the interview, the road will not takeland then of the rich and day’? of Genesis into two ages, the Silur- featurepof the two Records, the harmony ington, May 5. ; the Clear creek route from: Elsinore to | educate the children generat Alma Greenwood and Frank F. Merril— ‘The first age being the poor educate the ian and Deyonian. taxes. of That|the is .weikiigh startling, and the Cove fort and the Sulphe: beds. “Kanosh, March 10; "Leamington; April 14; inethe place to as that of molluses, which form of life preAs an advocate harmo? is such will leave the energetic little city of |}children of the poor, Meadow, May 5. Mosaic the i Sea i tel dominated through Lower and Upper Silfaceabiistamp of Divinity on A‘sure and permanent remedy for al} The route |and promoter of class legislatiun, the Beaver out in the cold. It came to the children of men J. A. Lyman and Anton Christensou— The second being the Age record consistent with it- urian times. Meadow, March 10; Oak Oreek, April 14; Urinal ‘Troubles.. ghosen will be about as follows: From | ‘Tribune is entirely knew absolutely of Fishes, or that period when the finny ata they dhe when Gasis, May 5: f If the policy advocated by the Galina up the Sevier valley to Rich-|self. family had its greatest expansion. Geology, and like many other of nothiy, Joshua Greenwood a..dJ. S. Giles — adopted, it would not be The ‘(fourth day’? of Genesis is marked field, 20 miles; thenee to the mouth of) Tribune were Oak Creek, March 10; Oasis, April 14; -Petdivyingsommunications, was misunderstreet ind The water is soft, pure and sparkling,’ ad misinterpreted until the magic ersburg, May 5. about 20 miles;|long before ‘‘Brigham” by the appearance of the ‘‘greater and the Sevier canyon, aud possesses the Most REMARKABLE | avenue of Salt Lake lesser lights,’’? or the individualization sdice of mortal intelligence delved ‘James MeMahon and Charles D. Smith— thence up the romantic Sevier gorge | “Blue Blood” SGLVENT PRGPERTIZS which dis-, the and Oasis, March 10; Petersburg, April 14; Scipio, e hidden recesses of the past and of the heavens and with which definite sdélve and carry out of the sysFrom Salina | would form one school district, (0 miles to Marysvale. May 5. term all impurities and forprove that which its either be forced event the day closes. Geology plods aloug| yy j discoveries G. AnpErson; Stake Clerk.a { . fo the mouth of the Sevier canyon, near | poorer classes would ' eign substances. 8g have ever ‘proclaimed it to be— their children from the through the same period and describes Joseph City, the road will passthrough |to educate iForbD or Gop. from poverty, or let them in detail the dhangesin the forms of life : gne of the richest agricultural districts | taxes wrung Kidney and Bladder Disorders: in the ocean, notes the introduction of Below is the U.S. Voluntary Observicdeamnsceoemamenlersa ee ‘The same polthe road | grow up in ignorance. ee At Marysvale, th Utah. er’s Meterclogi¢cal Record for the month Are caused by the clogging of the, with benefit to animals that could breath either air or |’ would bein the heart of what will be|icy could be adopted water; and minutely describes the inchannels of, the body” with lime™ of April; 1895, at Deseret, Utah? HDITORIAL NOTES. the United States. sediment.’ The “the Queen mining district of the West; | the rich throughout creasing complexity of vegetal forms, call the cowmay The Tribune TEMPERATURE. | and iells how the poisonous carbon gas and in aregion. of natural beauty un-|. whe way in did was absorbed and the sky so cleared of had her own ip'|Deseret Flowing Water Sa Lake has From Marysvale | county legislators ‘held-ups”’ as it % WwW surpassed in Utab.. It may call the Standard’s the © | contest before now, when Hastern and clouds and vapors that the sin and moon | ©?! south to Circleville, 22 miles, The valley. | a year ago. in alecade from more thickly Dissolves and carries it off, nature| becomes justice to other parts of the could look down through the changing Bout ern Utah i} narrowed in and. largely occupied by | plea for then heals the patient in a perfectly ’ upon the face of Nature that had bgethed, the capital will be located more Along the river | Territory, socialism or anarchism, but| itis natura! way. % dry, gravelly bench. the States of center the in : neaty will not avail. | patiently awaited their coming. Geology social are pumber|it a There quite are however, . Jottom, Tt: above ig from the Provo Enquirer, the Carboniferous, epoch that day|nasnamed some that, work, at * there are factors at sf ranches, aad the entire region is rich | forces now right. is andit central-|age ‘ sane At Circleville, | will grind its pet combines, its ib natural pasturage. Genesis:then goes back and picks up in Southern Utah that will yet aristocracy che Sevier river “forks,” one of the|ized power, its blue-blood the thread of animal life, and in strange Nts Along | 2:: chaj (e the center of population. ‘ Yranches called the Bast fork affords | to powder. t coincidence with science, traces it forward pas Tribune’s the’ tthe increase in num bers the feeling To illustrate with marvelous accuracy in its sticcessive | Wi an easy wagon road to, Southeastern| Doesi jog its memory. that now exists over the Except for freight. « Just, observe tes forms and in complete harmony with the a Liyeness Utah, aud Circleville would be an im-| greed, we will the folldwing iastructions: A few miles southerly.| not remember the last general confer- narrative’ given by Geology. Genesis arrigance i and greed of Salt Lake will be portant point. When y t wil Tiley ostatement of that whichGeology river | ence held in St. George? (It was a short ftom Circleville, the Sevier Large wholesale houses ds inteasifie ; Young’s death. ) proves as Provo emerges from another canyon of about | time prior to President be “jatablished at such points that: 12 miles in length. ‘The canyon ‘is, Does the Tribune not remember bow poisonéus to permit of the existence of monopoly the Nor angpteph and destroy only dertain forms of animal lite. however, wide, with bottom ‘land: for it raved and tore its hair‘over that connow had on the trade of South a them to you FREE of ALL CHARGE — Up ference because Salt Lake was ~being does Geology state as a first postulate, ex- | saifLake coat Utah. road-bed and an easy gradient. o for thé waier and trouble. the atmosphere And- it isa consumation dethat swindled ‘out of its usual semi-annual ost inferentially, To those that depend more on the : shat canyon there will: be found: but was too impure to permit.of the ex: M. D.s than on common sense, the Dees it not hoped for. be t6 vortly animals: | few obstacles. At the head: of the conference collections?’ g air-breathin of will tead ‘fishy,’?? but; foregoing also remember how it accused Presi: istencé ee eR fos: e can furnish you with affidavits examines the eunyon, or about 20-miles from Circle- dent Young of boy-cotting the’ Salt Geology carefully features _ of those that have been permanently unexpected most @ne of tne that lie} ville, the road wili vurn westerly,and Lake merchands, and that the motive sil- rewains of the animals cured. ene, . enlarging use of bicy~Wow don’t write nonsensical let- pass up Bear valley. which affords an for holding the conference in St. George’ embedded in the lower strata of the Car- ofthe énlarged and ters asking us if the above is ‘‘realy . If it Boniferous rocks, and then points ot exeelleut. opening and uniform grade was ostensibly for that purpose? is thé effect it is having on street car true??? what the ‘cost is??? etGn does not it: can refresh its memory by the fact that no air-breathers are to be clés, tothe top of the range that seperates looking over its back files. of the Denver lines recently Please follow instructions and for found ‘aniong them. Beginning at the triffic. One ward your casks or demijons to Bear Since the Tribune ‘‘joined: the very base of the Carboniferous formation, reduced the wages of their ‘employes 20 Panguitch and Parowan vallies. and working * hand-inoon valley ridge will very likely. need ‘a ehurceh,’? Geology patiently and with conscientious ner Gent. in order to meet the reduced glove with the powers that be to cenPe the ; At the point where ever short tunnel. SUMMARBY.—Mean temp.t 49.1, Maz. ty un +, x Editor MILLARD CO. BLADE, Warnings caused by the use of 6,000 adtralize thé wealth of the Territory in exactness, climbs the stairs of the road turns from the Sevier into Bear Salt Lake City, it has céased ‘to weep ascending system of life, and notes at ditional wheels this season. An eastern temp. 83, date 18th; min. temp. 15, dateot | Deseret, via Oasis, Utah, éth; total precip.* inches, 84; =e step the changes that yalley, it‘would leave Panguitch about| and swear only at intervals, when the'| each successive 12, clou dy of land animals. In friend of ‘Gurs; says that in Battle Creek, days—clear 17, partly cloudy 1, NW. : 15 miles to the south, but would bring doctrine of free schools is forced on its | preswge the coming et | 1; prevailing wind—direction, sire attention. : sincluding rain, hail; sleet, and melted af its investigations, Geology notes two imMich.,acity of over 30,000 peopie,the the road within easy distance of the : NM. B.—l the water is putina coc), The fact of it is, in getting free portant facts, viz: That at the beginning ea be} been forced to suspend ope r |sn OW eae foe m, 5 and minimum read- place, if will remain sweet and wholés55 .. Prom “mtaximu largest and best pine forests to schools the Tribune got an over-dose, of the Carboniferous age there were only car line has number ¢|._t#ro nee "the large daring and the ‘even of river weeks, for same’ account ues Missouri on but it will have to take its own prethe ROGERS» rs ations Ee o* | ings: i féund between wéntintaty Observer. | westher-* animals; second, that by hing ete Ph ah en caer ty Se st. z Panguitch lake would be scription, and it ought to’ do so vith: | water-breat sheets in-nser: "Bikes? havé also preat™] @aliférnia. LAE SE 7, Geati-and Nuriar Ur cAwe” out making-sueh-wry fases>'wowt.tha greatest. Summer resepts-to4 Bladder Trouples,: ilTatuime Eee Distilled. FREE, oR men ar oo ener _ It won't cost you acent,. J. F. GIBBS, |