OCR Text |
Show &&t She gmtim., ith thrifty farms.; That a! ixitiiDn of thieves and murderers do not liye with out intoxicating liquors, and becoms fa mous for tho products of their d rles, orchards, and gardens. . A .ourrupk treo bringeth not forth the fruits of temper" ance, Christianity, industry 'and order. and Saturday. piMUbed ev.ry Wednesday '" .... TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. ' iMonU. - - lft.00 4,00 .: Z.UU .10 Devoted to News, Literature, Agriculture, Science, and the Arts. RATES OF ADVERTISING. rl J 5 $8 7 10 4 7 9 11 18 11 1 19 2S 20 SO &1 45 $2 $3 3 line., 10 i u 113 U01. R i $15 $ 20 $ 34 $ 60 l 70 25 18 80 21 30 60 SO 40 65 100 45 60 ttO 135 75 100 135 200 Hpor mouth. Carda Buiinw Xo. 27. a r C rH a a e - r- id for in advance. TrBsint advertising to b of this A tmrt cousiata of ten line, of typa " dvortieri allowed to change at pleasure, Yfly additional charge of twenty-liv- e imly a iuare for conpodition, but they will be P-Ter XTBA toT occupy'" ' wilk mdM tbarH retained on Notice or Advertinement ta chwpxl twenty-v- e t)w laPr te wtid per cent, additional on the above nites. AJvertiwrnent not marked on the copy witfc the n nunilxr of imertioni, will be published at our until ordered out, and charged at transient fA UV E ttTI S KM E N T 3 inserted till forbid, will be ontinuwl until ordered out, iu every inHtnine, and t,rged for accordingly. Ttie privilege of yearly and half yearly advertisers i sestricted to tlieir direct line of luin.s, and hll heg. Auction, Haul Kstate, or other advertisements foreign to their regular traite, will be charged fur separately. So Advertiseinenta from the State, will be Inserted without Ui canh ( at our advertised rates,) ioninaiiying the order, uuless from one of our rwiiktr aathorirad Advertising Agenta. devoid of interest to the AH communication, jiOMic, or intended to promote private interests, and payment will he charged ai advertisements, required in advance. If personal in character, we to rervs the right reject any article, or advertisement of this class. D. RICHARDS, FRANKLIN Editor and Publisher. 0CDEN DIRECTORY. United Stales Ollicers for VUih. J. Wilson Shaffer, Governor Secretary S. A. Mann. Milton Orr. Marshal C. II. TIcmpstead, U. S. Attorney J. E. Tourtellotte. C. C. Clements. Public Monie J. i. Over- - Indian Affair gupt. Surveyor-Gener- Kteeiver ton. al of of Land .Offict Regittrar MaiwelL George R. Auettor John P. Taggart. U. S. O. J. Hollister. C. C. Wilsen. Atiociatt Jutticc 0, F. Strickland and Hawley. CulUtlor U. S.- Justice Chief . Officers: Territorial to , - '. Deleft te William Conyre - Hooper. II. - Zerubbabel Snow. J. D. T. McAllister. Auditor William Clayton. Treaturcr David O. Calder. Attorney-Gener- al Marihal Superintendent of Common School Robert L. Campbell. .,, ll'cber County Oflleers: TrobaU Eitkards. and County F. Judge D. Lester J. Herrkkv Henry lolmes, Richard Ballantyne. CUrk and Recorder F. S. Richards. Prtucutisig Attorney Aurelius Miner. William Critchlow. Notary Publtt Sheriff Gilbert Belknap. Deputy Sheriff William Brown. Auettor and Collector Sanford Bing&!ect Men ham. $ '' Israel Ca field. Wm. N. Fife. Surveyor and Superintendent of School Treaturtr Coroner Wm. W. BarUw. City CSoTenrment: Incorporated by Actf Jan. 18, 1861. Municipal election biennially on the second Monday of February. Meetings of the City Council weeklj, on Tuesday etriings, at City Hall, Main Street. Mayor Loren Farr. Aldermen F. A. Brown, 1st Ward; L. J. Herrkk, 2d Joseph Parry, 3d Counselor James Mc Gaw, Walter Thompson, William VT. Hurton, Josiah Lcavitt, Titos. G. OdelL A. Miner. Marthal W. N. Fife. Treaturtr Aaron Farr. Asseiior and Collector S. Bingham. Surveyor W. W. Burton. Captain of l'vlic&Y. G. Taylor. Juttict of the Peace S. Eggleston. ConttabU C. F. Middleton. Jffcorcfrr Attorney PostOfllce: OgricnIsaac Moore. FottmaMcr General Delivery from 8 ft.m. to 7.30 p.m. Sundays, from 6 p.m. to 7.80 p.m. Daily Mails close, until further notice, for Salt Lake City at 6 p.m. Sfcor tho East 9 a.m. . 5 JForJie West p.m. ARBIVK - 10.30 a.m. 6.80 p.m. - 10.30 a.m. West .SEMI-WE- E Kir MAILS Close ior North .Ogden n Monday at ISO p.m. Tor Plain City, a Thursor JiuntgfiJJe, on day, at 6.30 p.m. Tuesdjfyjind Friday, at 8 p.m. iTrom E alt Lako City iFiom the tEaat - J Trains Leave Ogcka daily, until further for Salt Laketity at 10.5 a.m. and '6 p.m. (For extra trains see time Table.) for the East, at A.m. for the "West, at 6 p.m. Arriv from Salt LakeCity, 9.25 a.m. and 5.25 p.m. From the East, 6.25 p.m. Trom the West, 10 a.m. no-iic- e, Divine Worship Is held every Sunday, in the Tabernacle, at a.m.; and in the School Houses at 6.S0 p.m. Oqdbh, Salt Lakb anb Uta. JSverybody deeireus of learning facts .eonoerning Ogden, Salt Lake and Utah, chrotwlogical, statistical, historical and b;iMi., with a reliable sketch of and hn-ra thousnnd anrl n question waawered that are being daily cocrmn: uuo, send for a copy of Sloan's Salt Lake Directory. Mailed irom tie Jociios Office for a dollar 11 of the various Wards a a qnartr. OODllY, UTAH, NAT Vll DAY, APRIL 2, 1S70. Spceeh of Hon. Hooper t II. tht Jloutt of Representative, icism, because of its alleged immorality; March 24, 1870. The following are extracts from Hon. W. H. Hooper's speech in the House on the Cullom Bill. In addition to what we publish, our Delegate related the History of this people from the beginning, and in support of some of his arguments made copious quotations from many valuable and learned wcrks, in favor of continued revelation and of plural marriage. We regret that we have not sufficient space to give tho Hon. gentleman's speech entire. For the first time in the history of the United States, by the introduction of the bill uuder consideration, a and positive effort is made to turn the great power of the nation into a moral channel, and to legislate for the consciences of the people. Here, for the first time, is a proposi tion to punish a citizen for his religious e have before us a belief or unbelief. statute-boo- k To designating crimes. restrain criminal acts, aud to punish the offender, has heretofore been the province of the law, and in it we have the support of the accused himself. No man comes to the bar for trial with the plea that the charge upon which he is arraigned constitutes no offense. His plea is, "Not guilty." He cannot pass beyond and behind the established con clusions of humanity. But this bill reaches beyond that code into the ques tionable world of morals, the debatable land of religious beliefs; and, first creating the offense, seeks, with the fury of partisan prejudice and sectarian hate, to measure out the pun ishment. The bill before us declares that that system which Moses taught, that God allowed, and from which Christ, our Savior, sprung is a crime, and that any man believing in it and practicing it I beg pardon, the bill, as I shall presently show, asserts that belief alone is sum cient; that any one so offending shall not be tried, but shall be convicted, his children declarea bastards, ins wives turned out to starve, and his property be confiscated, in fact, for the benefit of the moral reformers who, as I believe, are the real instigators in this matter. The honorable member from Illinois, the father of this bill, informs us that this is a crime abhorred by men, de nounced by God. and prohibited and punished by every State in the Union 1 have a profound respect for the motives of the honorable member. I believe he is inspired by a sincere hostility to that which he so earnestly denounces. No earthly inducement could make hira practice polygamy. Seduction, in the eyes of thousands, is an indiscretion, where all the punishment falls upon the innocent and unoffending. The criminal taint attaches when the seducer attempts to marry his victim. This is horrid. This is not to be endured by man or God, and laws must be promulgated to prevent and punish. While I have this profound regard for the morals and motives of the honorable member, I must say that I do not respect to the same extent his legal abilities. Polygamy is not denounced by every State and Territory, and the gentleman will search in vain for the statute or criminal code of either defining its existThe gentleman ence and punishment. confounds a religious belief with a criminal act. He is thinking of bigamy when he denounces polygamy, and in the confusion that follows blindly strikes out against an unknown enemy. Will he permit me to call his attention to the distinction? Bigamy means the wrong done a woman by imposing upon her the forms of matrimony while another wifo lives, rendering such second marriage null and void. The reputation and happiness of a too confiding woman are thus forever blasted by the fraudulent acts of her supposed husband, and he is deservedly punished for his crime. Polygamy, on tho contrary, is the act of marrying more than one woman, under a belief that a man has the right, lawfully and religiously, so to do, and with the knowledge and consent of both the well-defin- law-maki- tnag-ligna- wives. nt or a law to annihilate the Jews for that they are Jews, and therefore obnoxious? Let that evil door once be opened; set sect against sect; let the Bible and the school-book- s give place to the sword and thebayonet, and we willfindthehumanity the humanity of the darker of y ages, and our beautiful Government a mournful dream of the past. This is not only philosophically true, but, sir, it is historically a fact. In making the appeal I stand upon the very foundution-ston- e of our Constitutional Government. That they might worship God in accordance with the dictates of conscience the fathers fled from their homes in Europe to the wilds of America. For this they bore the fatigues or perished in the wilds of a savage-haunte- d continent; for this they poured out their blood in wars, until every stone in the huge edifice that shelters us as a nation is cemented by the blood of the martyr. Upon this, however, I need not spend my time or yours; a mere statement of the proposition is a conclusive argument from which the people, in their honest instincts, will permit no appeal. In o ir Constitution, still perfect and fresh as ever, we have a clause that cannot be changed and leave a vestige of a freo In the original instruGovernment. ment we find this language: "No religi-ouste- st shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or publio trust under the United States." But this was not considered sufliciently comprehensive for a free people, and subsequently we find it declared, "Congress shall make no law inspecting an establishment of religion or prohibit the free exercise thereof." Upon the very threshold of my argument, however, I atn met by the advocates of this extraordinary bill with the assumption that polygamy is not entitled to be considered as a portion of our religious faith; that under the Constitution we are to be protected and respected in the enjoyment of our religious faith, but that we are not entitled to consider as a portion thereof the views held by us as a people in reference to the marriage relation. One eminent disputant, as an argument, supposes a case where a religious sect might claim to believe in tho rightfulness, of murder, and to be protected in the enjoyment of that right. This is not in any sense a parallel ease. Murder, by all law, human and divine, is a crime; polygamy is not. In a subsequent portion of my remarks I shall show that not only by the authority of the Old Testament writers, but by nur of th Chriatian merous letlin church, the doctrine of polygamy is justified and approved. The only ground upon which any argument can be maintained that our views of the marriage relation are not to be considered as a portion of our religious faith is that marriage is a purely civil contract, and therefore outside the province of religious doctrine. No sect of Christians can, however, be found who will carry their beliefs to this extent The Catholic church, the most ancient of the Christian churches, and among the most powerful in numbers of the religious denominations of our country, upon this point is in accord with the Mormon church. Marriage, according to the faith of the Catholic church, is one of its sucra nionts: is not in any sense a civil con tract but a religious ordinance, and the validity of a divorce granted by a civil court is denied. And not in any Chris tian church is tho marriage contract placed on apar with other civil contracts, with a swap horses or a partnership in trade. It is a civil contract, in that a court of equity for certain specified causes may dissolve it; but not otherwise. Upon the marriage contract are invoked the most solemn sanctions or our Christianity; the appointed ministers and servants of God, by their presence and aid, give solemnity and efRciency to the ceremonial, and upon the alliance are in voked the divine guidance and blessing. To most intents and purposes with every Christian denomination the marriage ceremony is regarded as a religious ordinance. Upon this point, therefore, and a vital point in the discussion of the question before us, the Catholic church in fact, and the other religious denominations in theory and usual practice, are with the Mormons in their position, that the supervision and control of the marital relation are integral and essential portions of their religious faith and practice, in the enjoyment of which they are protected by the Constitution. The Mormon people are a Christian denomination. They believe fully in the Old and New Testaments, in the divinity of Christ's mission, and tho upbuilding and triumph of His church. They do not believe, however, that light and guidance from above ceased with the crucifixion on Calvary. On the other hand, they find that, in all ages, whenever a necessity therefor existed, God has raised up prophets to speak to the people and to manifest to them His will and requirements.' And they believe that Joseph Smith was such a Prophet; that the time had arrived when there was a necessity for further revelation, and through Joseph Smith it was given to the world. Upon this point of continuous revelation, whieh is really one of the turning points of the eoatroversy, we are in accord with many of the most, eminent divines of the Christian church, and with the roost earnest and vigorous thinkers of our own day. I suppose, Mr. Speaker, that in proclaiming the old Jeffersonian doctrine that that Government is best which governs least, I would not hav even a miwhen I say nority upon this floor. But such that in a system of demothe to looks purest that at ours, Government of cracy, and seeks to be a th people, for the people and by thea, the guar-diapeople, we have no room for the master. I for all, above nor, can elaim the united support of both to parties. T have such a Government, we strength, its in purest retaia such must leave all questions of morals and religion that lie outeide the recognized code of crkne to the conscience of the citizen. Iu an attempt te do otherwise thaa this the world's abiding plaoes have been washed with human blood, and its field made rich with human bones. No Government has been found above strong enough to stand unshaken when the throes of religious fanatieiura drivon to the wall by religious persecution. Ours, sir, would disappear lu the "baseless fabric of a vision" before the first blast ef such a convulsion. Does the gentleman believe, for example, that in aiming this cruel blow at a handA man ful of earnest followers of the Lord in he act Smith; more a justifiable Utah he is doing and God, a of majority than wouH be, in the eyes 'fit to admit of our citizens, a bill tp abolish Cathol vi-itor- has arisen named Joseph claims to be a prophet of a numerous community see tho justice of such claim. It is a religious VOI- - I. Mr. freraker. those wha have been sa kind and indulgent as to follow mo thus far will have observed that I bayeiedr ' as best I might, to show 1, That under our ConmltmioTTtreare entitled to be protected in tht full and free enjoyment of our religious faith. 2. That our views of the marriage re lation are an. essential nqrtiotr of tur" . , religious faith. 8. That in considering the cogmranc of the marriage relation as wuhin the1 province of church regulations we arts practicolly in accord witn an other . Christian denominations. .n4. That in our views of the marriage relation as a part of our religious belief we are entitled to immunity from perse" eution under tbej Constitution if euch views are sincerely held; that' if sueli views are erronopug, thein eradicatiwa must be by argument and not by force. 5. That ot our sincerity we havtf.Tiotu by words and works and sufferings, given for nearly forty years abundant; vinment further provided that "no person sect; it has dicated its right to live by works and halt be held to answer for a capital or sacrifices which are the admiration even otherwise infamous crime unless on a of it enemies. It brings forward cer- presentment or indictment of a grand tain new doctrines; of church govern- jury, and that "in all criminal prose ment; of baptism, even for their dead; cutions the accused shall enjoy the right of tha marriage relation. Upon what o a speedy and public trial by an im point is it more probable that light from partial jury of the State and district above would be given to our race than wherein the crime shall have been comupon the marriage relation? The so- mitted, which district shall have been cial problem is the question of the age. previously ascertained by law." The minds of many of the foremost men and women of our day are given to the Now, sir, is there any mcnibor of this study of tho proper position and rela- IIouso who will claim or pretend that tions of the sexes. The wisest differ tho provisions of this bill are not In i differ honestly and unavoidably. End- olation ot this most sucred loature in less re the dispute and clamor of those our Bill of , , . Rights? The trial by jury by F?of. 0. That the but in practically abol honestly striving to do away with the this bill is worse than abolished, for its sociiil evil, to ameliorate the anomalous form a ishing trial by jury, as well as in many sickening farce remains while other is unconstitutional, un condition of the wronged and suffering Us A is gone. packed jury spirit utterly tor women of And while this is so, is worse than no jury at all. The merest called for, ami in direct opposition which belief in toleration while thousands of the good and pure of that religious iu the law knows that tho essence of the nation and age. all Breeds and parties are invoking the tyro of a trial by consists in tho fact is characteristic It is not permitted, Mr. Speakerj that divine guidance in their effort for the that the accusedjury is tried by a jury drawn xne man bhould sit as the judgo of is it good of our fallen humanity, by lot lrom among his neighbors, a jury any ofher as that tho divine thus regards his religious belief. any strange guidance drawn without previous knowledge earnestly sought should come; that tho choice, or selection on the part of tho This is a mutter which rests solely beprayers of the righteous be answered? Government; a jury v. hich will be a fair tween each individual and bis God. The responsibility cannot be sUiftcd or The Mormon pcupla believe that God epitome or the district where the offense divided. It is a matter outside,, tji has thus spoken; that through Joseph is a as and thus such tribunal domain of legislative action. The world Smith He has indicated the true solu- willCharged, to no verdict such as, agree esoept anil delusion, tion of the social questions of our day; the whole community is full of religious error substantially, but its eradication is tho work Of the and while they persecute or question no would to anil if present agree taking Our man for differing honestly with them as in the trial. Any other systora of moralist and not of the legislator worover all since throws Constitution to the Divine authority of such revela- part trial by jury is a mockery and a farce. tion, they firmly insist that in their fol- The standard of publio morality varies shipers, at whatever shrine, its guaranlowing of what they bolieve to be the greatly in a country so vast as ours, aud tee of obsoluto protection." 'The moof th truth" ment we assume to will of God they are entitled to the same the principle of a jury trial recognizes fulnes or error of judge al creed the from any the hands at immunity persecution this fact, and wisely provides, in effect, is and a a the of and to the same that no person shall be punished who mockery guarantee Government, ' ',' y . , liberty of thought and speech, wisely when brought to the bar of publio opin sham. times have my people been disThree secured to other religious beliefs by the ion in the where the alleged community mob violence, and each tino Constitution. offense is committed is not adjudged to persed by t; Upon the point whether polygamy have been guilty of a crime. This most they have arisen stronger from,tUo and now the doctrine of vinloncp is can properly be considered as a part of unconstitutional and wicked bill before in Congress. It may be tho our religious faith and practice I beg us defies all these prin proposed leave humbly further to submit, sir, ciplcs, and strikes at the root of the will of the Lord that to unit and purify that the decision rents solely on the dearest rights of the citizen, I have an us it Is necessary for further tiolonoo, and blood. If so, we humb'y conscience ana belter ox the man or earnest and abiding faith in tho bright suffering, will of Him woman who proclaims it to be a relig future of my native laud; but if our and reverently submit to the ious belief. As I have said, it is not national career, as we may fondly hope, in whose hands are all the issUuii numbered among tha crimes of that shall stretch out before us its unending of human life. Heretofore we hav suffered from the violence of tho mabj niw code recoguized by all nations having glories, it will be because of the prompt any form of government under which and decisive rebuke by the Kepresenta-tive- s the mob are to be clothed in the. authorcriminals are restrained or punished, of tho people here of all such leg- ity of an unconstitutional and oppressive and to make it such a new code must be islation as that sought in the bill be law. If this course be decided ripon I can only say thatthehandthatsmitestis framed. My people proclaim polygamy fore us. smites the most sacred guarantee of the as a part of their religious belief. If they are honest in this, however much Can it be possible that the national Constitution, and the blind Samsoi, down upon tney may he in error, they stand on Congress will even tar a moment serious breaking th pillars, pulls their rights under tho Constitution, and ly contemplate the persecution or anni- frien dand foe alike the ruins nf the ii' i State. to arrest that error you must appeal to hilation of an integral portion of our s, reason and not to force. I am hero not whose industry and material to argue or demonstrate the truthful are the nation's pride, be WARREN lirRSKT, ' ' C. t. lUllt.Elt, ness of their faith; I am not called up- - cause of a slight difference in their reli, lialeno, Nauuaa SaJt Ukt City. onto convince this honorable House gion faith ; a difference, too, not upon that it is either true or false; but if the fun dun ic ntul truths of our comuuob UUSSEYr DAHLER (0 can convince you that this belief is hon- Christianity, but becauso of their conentertained and sincerely orably ji-.uiy scientious, adherence to what was once BANKERS,' no impropriety even, but a virtue ? This object is accomplished. ! It is common to teach, and thousands toleration in matters of rel'gion which MAIN BTKEET, OGDE-Y- , believe, that the loaders of the sect of is perhaps the most conspucious featuro Latter-daAMD BALT LARK Saints, popularly known as of our civilization, arises not from any CWfV.v,!, Doalsn In Gold Dnt, Coin ut Owrsnrv. Inw Mormons, are hypocrites, while their indifference to the sacred truths of Chrisfollowers are either ignorant, deluded tianity but from an abiding faith in their Rtrliknx on San KrawUco, Muntank,' THmror, ML Louk, Maw lurk, and all port f srojj.;aj men and women or people held to their impregnability, a national conviction Collection promptly attended to. If organization by the vilest impulses of that truth is mighty and will prevail, lust. To refute these slanders I can We have adopted as our motto the sentionly do as the earlier Christians did, ment of Paul: "Prove all things; hold point to their sufferings and sacrifices, fast that which is good." The ancient and I may add the unanimous testimony Jewish rabbi, in his serene confidence K. of all, that aside from what they con that God would remember His own, was aider the objectionable practice or typical of the spirit of our age: "Ro- my constituents are sober, frain from these men, and let them alone; WHOLESALE DEALER moral, just, and industrious in the eyes for if this counsel or this work be of In this com men, it will come to nought but if it be of all impartial witness' munity, removed by . ig reaches of of God, ye cannot overoome it. wastes from the morai influences of I have the honor of representing here civilization, we have a quiet, orderly, a constituency probably the most vigor and Christian community. Our towns ously lied about of any people in the na SAMPLE fiALtSROOM1,! drinking-saloon- s, tion. are without gambling-hellI should insult the good sense of or brothels, while from end to this House and of tho American people end of our Territory the innocent can did 1 stoop to a refutation or the count walk unharmed at all hours. IN or is less falsehoods whioh have been circulatthis due to an organized police, but to ed for years in reference to the people of 'v . the kind natures and Christain impul- Utah, ihcso luiaehoous have a common ses of a good people. In support of my origin a desire to plunder the Treasury cf the nation. They are the children of argument of their entire sincerity on hunt) a Urpw fttnok of the OM.ru tut with confidence appeal to their history a horde of bankrupt speculators anxious t JireilAVYAN, 1.KK KI N, CHOW, UOWH.N, AND fcHAKrS BRANDS uf to grow rich through the sacrifice even human life. During the adtmmstra I trust, Mr. Speaker, that men abler of tion of Mr. Buchanan a Mormon war was WJiisfceys;! and more learned in the law than I will in measure inaugurated, through great LA RGB of this the statements of discuss the legal monstrosities T STOCKS , Alo, Judge W. W. Drum-monbill, fraught with evil, as it is, not only man of infamous character and CASE a to the citizen of Utah, but to the nation LIQUORS. who is cited as authority in the 1'. ) at large; but I ust be pardoned for life, and ; this bill. His accompanying report calling special attention to the seventh statement, as there published, that the section, which gives to a single officer Mormons had CHAMPAGNES destroyed all the records, the United States marshal, with the of the supreme Federal court &c, papers, clerk of the court, the absolute right of CAT AW B A 8 and grossly insulted tho of tho ETC. selecting a jury; and further, to the FederalTerritory, ITC, officers for opposing such de ' ' tenth section, which provides that per I as have been informed Call and examine my Stock., , , sons entertaining an objectionable reli struction, was, unquestionable authority, one of if gious theory, not those who have been by not the principle cause of tho the of of but practice polygamy, guilty Mormon war. who have simply a belief in the abstract An army was sent to Utah ; twenty or Xearlj Opposite White Ilotisu. theory of plural marriage, shall be dis million dollars were expended be thirty as jurors. qualified fore the Government bethought itself to inquire whether such statements were A fair trial by jury by our Anglo' then inquiry was made and it was true; Saxon ancestors was regarded as so learned that the whole statement was en precious that in Magna Charts it is more tirely false; that the records were per .iu.-than once insisted on as the principal feet and unimpaired; whereupon the lit II. n bulwark of Lnglish liberty. war ended, but not until colossal fortunes u were accumulated by the hangers-oand In the original Federal Constitution it contractors for the Army, who had in :was snvided simply that the "trial of cited the whole affair. These men, and would-bof cases in all crimes, except impeach numerous imitators, long for ment, shall be by jury." Theframers the return of that golden age. They fill LL WHO DFSIRK TO AMCP15 TWEMJKLYKS of the Constitution considered that the the ears or the public with slanders and V with tli Cu. and BhIIh will Ihul tooai, with falsehoods; that murders are rife; comfortably meaning of "trial by jury" was suflicifltttii up with Ut , ., .,, ently settled by long established usage mat me ana property are unsaie in ' and legal precedent, and that the provi Utah without the presence of largo ar UliST OF tABLESj1,' lions just cited was sufficient. But such mies, ihey have even sometimes mdu was not he view of the people. One of ced Federal Territorial officers, through the most serious objections to the adop- ignorance or design, to become their tion of the Constitution by the States tools to help forward their infamous '('-- Vl. ROOMS, was its lack of clearness upon this most work. But since the railroad was comvital point, and Alexander Hamilton, in pleted, many of the American people Central one of the ablest and most carefully have looked for themselves. They see Opposite the "l "-' rnirlnn IlnilBP considered numbers of the Federalist, in Utah the most peaceful and persistentendeavored to explain away this objec- ly industrious people on the continent. tion. The Constitution was adopted, but They judge the tree by its fruits. They CALL AND SEE ME T.-- It one of and read was that a community given up to lust not satisfied; the nation i B. OAK the earliest amendments to that instru does not build factories and fill the land f to-d- -- ; y. ' . connti-tution- enn-flic- . " y GAJIN, ;;;;: Wines & Liquors. 'isp s, maiist samEET?, Ogden City, Utah, Kentucky d, r .1 ! Main Street, Ogd6h,( billiards: n BILLIARDS! BILLIARDS? BILLIARDS! -- . ' rtak I |