OCR Text |
Show 'lJ TIIK UTAH COUNTY TIMES. School Teachers Examination. We direct attention to the advertisement in another column of the Board 1S74. 12, Nov. Thursday Evening, of Examination, who will be ready to receive applications on Saturday next, UOLD lOTATlO.NV November 14th. We understand tha this w ill be the last examination for SALT LAKE. til is year, and those wishing certificates -- ir .selling Authorised Agent. The following aro the names of the Times, in Agents for the Utah County the various settlements in Utah County, as for as heard from: JAME M AUOHBANK. Sprinville liLnisli Fork CHARLES MONK. ISAIAH M. COOMBS. Vavson ELI OPENS AW. SahtiMiuiu G EO. 1IALLI DAY. Pleasant ( rove Wm. ORANT. inerieau Fofk PRVEY. JOHN Alpine ROBERT II. DAVIS. SaiVm 1 1 1 should attend. Samuel Buckley, Professor of Music, begs to announce that lie is prepaid to take pupils for the Pianoforto and Organ. Residence, one block north of the Meeting House, Provo novi The Provo Times, a very sprightly paper before it went into Enochs Or- der, is now telling its readers how to increase a flow of milk. The poor thing is completely emasculated, and is jibbering in its dotage. Salt Lake ROBERT TILL. Goshen Tribune. II. II. I'l.l'FF. As the editor of the Tribune Bunin hasnt been weaned yet wo would suggest West Branch The Stock. Taking Mercantile Instu-tio- n that he writes an essay on the subject. Provo has been closed for a few days j-iIjost. In this city, somewhere taking stock, but we understand are in the Second Ward, yesterday afternow ready to wait on their numerous noon, a leather pooket-lroocontaining some thirty dollars in grecnlcks customers again. and some old tax receipts. The finder Beaver Suits just received by will be rewarded by leaving the same ut tho residence of John G. Wilkins, sel2 M. Livingston. Second Ward. nolO. The Walker Work.' at Burglars Utah Western Railroad. It is House bar. Salt Lake City, wasentered track-layin- g announced will com..oaMondaynight hv burglars, and the mence Gh'-th- that U. WT' It. It; J00 of of till robbed currency. upwards The supposed burglars have been ar- seven ears of rails having arrived yesterday, and tiro balance of the iron for rested. the first twenty-tw- o miles of the road en now followroute. The Tho road is exbeing Utah Mining Stock. bo to stocks Utah of pected completed to Iake Point in mining ing quotations on tho London market are given by the December. Mining World of October 25th : Emma) cr The Report is True that H. 1VJ, 1?' ; Flagstaff, 1 4, 2; Last Chance, Dinwoodev sells FURNITURE, Unit 6. Lake WALL ?', VAi Tecoma, ?, PAPER, FEATHERS and Herald. BARY CARRIAGES very cheap, to the dealers. Nos. 75, A ZJS Every variety of plain and fancy 79 1st South Street, half a block west of Job Printing executed with neatness Z. C. M. I. comer, Salt Iake City, and dispatch at this Office. may 16 fir e Pleasant Again. We are again having delightful weather for this time of year, Old Sol shining out brilliant during theday. This is a fine opportunity for pushing tho railroad. "We are now likely to have fine weather np to Christmas. to-da- We again return thanks to Messrs. Miller, Shelton A Fleming, tho enterprising newsdealers of Salt Lake, for keeping us supplied with the latest newspapers. Should any of our citizens wish to subscribe for any Eastern or Western paper or magazine, they should send their orders to this firm at jr2T Go and examine those elctrsnt w Chinchilla Beaver Suits and Overcoats once, ho ran fill their orders promptat se!2 at Livingstons. ly, publisher's prices. Try them. Great Western Iron Company. This eomjsiny have been sending considerable of their Iron to Salt Iaike, a sample c? which was tested at thefonu-dr- y of Davis, Howe A Co. on Tuesday evening. A number of castings were made, among them a couple of street R. T. Beall, attorney-at-law- . lamp posts, and all were smooth and sound and of excellent quality. With Tho highest a little more experience they w ill soon Eggs Wanted. market cash price will lx paid by M. be able to compete with the le.st imLivingston for 00,000 dozen eggs. ported. nov7 Dismissed. The Beaver We understand Deputy Mar-- f says: sliai Duncan is dismissed from the roll of Marshals for misapplication of the money sent by Marshal Maxwell to defray the expenses of tho court, and intrusted to his care, in connection with Entn-pris- c v t We again call the attention of our patrons to the necessity of paying up their subscriptions. It is only a small amount to each one separately, but taken in the aggregate it Is a large amount to us, and we aro in need of it to successfully run the paper. Come forward at once and settle yoqr accounts. To Subscribers. Liddell A Brown, Commission Merchants, and wholesale dealers in Groceries and Provisions, 28 Main St., Salt Lake City. Utah dried fruit and f-- ol3 eggs wanted. Arrest of John I). Lee. We take the following special from the Herald of yesterday morning: Beaver, 10. John D. Ioe, of Mountain Meadow celebrity, w as arrested at Pangw itch, a settlement on the Sevier, thirty-fiv- e miles east ofthis place, yes- terday, by deputy IT. S. Marshal Wm. Stokes, and readied here this morning al8 o'clock. It is said that Mr. Ixto was Indicted by the Second District Couit grand jury, on the charge of murder, committed at tho Mountain Meadow massacre in 1857. ZdT Just received by M. LivingBroke Hi? Leo. Yesterday Thos. ston new styles of Winter Clothingand was of the 16th Ward, gambolSlight, ing and wrestling with another lad, hear the railroad depot, when ho fell, his leg being tw isted under him, breaking the bone above and near the ancle. The injury was attended to by Dr. W. F. Anderson. Deseret Noes. pB Lost a sapphlro ring, the set sur- rounded. with small diamonds, some of them gone; the ring is also broken. The finder will be rewarded by leaving it at this Office. nolO Freights Raised. Tho following special order has been issued by the Union Pacific Railroad Company: General Freight Department, 1874. Geuts Furnishing goods. no3 Goods News From Tintic. The Herald has advices from Tintic which state that the principal mines there are sending up large quantities of ore of superior grade. Tho mills and smelters are running on full time and turning out much bullion. About 10,000 worth of bullion is shipped weekly, and tho prospects are that this amount will be increased shortly. From all we can gather we predict a bright future for Tintic, which, we think, is destined to become the leading mining camp of the Territory. JAT. Another new arrival of goods Just received at M. Livingstons, conOn 'and after November 12th, 1874, sisting of everything required for the until further orders, the rate upon base outer and inner man. se!2 bullion and lead In car loads of not less 0 than 20,000 pounds, nor more than pW New Publications.' The Philfrom Ogden to Omaha, osophy pounds, of Marrage, a new edi'ion, a will be 75 cents per hundred pounds. trea'ise on the laws governing life, exUpon ore In car loads, as above, 70 planatory of the causes and symptoms, nts per hundred pounds. with Instructions, for the successful Special order No. 40 is hereby re- treatment of weakness, low spirits, deP. E. pealed. VixtNG, spondency, nervous exhaustion, mneu-la- r Genl Freight Agent. debility, and premature decline In . manhood. Price 25 ets. Address the , bill heads author I)r. Beck. West Temple srcct, T Posters, cards, lotieis, receipts or three doont South of Townsend House, dera, Ac., Ac., done in the very best Salt Lake City, Utah. "Flo of the art at this Office, at Salt Consultations daily from 10 till 3, nnd lake City prices. Call and examine from 6 to 8 p.m. Sundays 11 to 1. a Ojnaha, Nov. 5th, SPECIAL ORDER, NO. 52. 22,-00- ii hand-bills- letter-head- s, pecimens. o24-Ir- The Law of '62. Sprinoville, Nov. 11, 1874. Editors Utah County Times: Is the law of 62, touching polygamy, constitutional T We answer no, for the following reason based on the Constitution itself, Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. The definition of the word religion, according to Webster is The recognition of God us an object of worship, love and obedience. This definition, unquostioiiablj, embraces both Judaism and Christianity. Under tho broad and ample provision laid down in tiie Constitution, for the worship of the Creator, the Jews who believe in the Old Testament and utterly discard the New, w ho ignore the fact of the Messiahs first advent and crucifixion, and treat it as a tale of fiction, can indulge their religious convictions equally with Christians, tliefundamen-la- l principles of whose worship a re based directly on the atonomouL This is truly a glorious provision, as it places the worship of the Creator above the power of the Government to interfere with it. Touching the constitutionality of the law of 62 I will here Introduce the opinion of Judge Ballard, an eminent jurist, and Judge o T a District Court of the United States, w ho says: ftay'WiW for all tha trim Government of the United States and the Sute differ in this particular. The legislative power of the latter is unlimited except so far as it is restrained by the Constitution of the United States, while the Congress of the Uriifcd 'StatM possesses no power except that which is received immediately from the Constitution itself. It is not sufficient that a law passed by Congress Is not inhibited by that Constitution. To bo valid It must be authorized by that instruWhat thep, let ine ask, bement. comes of the lavv of 62 by this reasoning, and who can question the soundness of the premises? Clearly and unequivocally, the law is unconstitutional, and this is the view of the law entertained by many of tho ablest lawyer of our Territory, and if that question is ever referred to the Supremo Court of the United States, there can be no doubts entertained of their sustaining this view of the question. But says an objector t lie term religion, as used in the Constitution can-- , not be supposed for a single moment to embrace Polygamy. Why not? Do not Judaism and Christianity boast o their origin in the Bible? Do they not each claim tho Bible as tho basis of their religious faiths? Where then in the Bible is Polygamy condemned? History proves that plural marriage continued through a period of nearly 4,000 year, not oRly among the Hebrews, but in most other nations throughout the world, and that monogamy is a modern and European custom,' almost unknown to tho ancient nations. Polygamy viewed in its moral aspects.. Blair in a speech made in the House of Representatives, said I submit a proposition to Christians and students of moral philosophy. If it lx true that moral principles never change and that marriage is based on moral principles; and it bo true that poly gamous marriages existed 3,925 years or a less period, by the approval of God, is polygamy right or wrong? Polygamy viewed from a religious stand jioint. The great Milton asks, On what grounds can a practice be considered dishonorable which Is prohibited to no one even under the goss pel? Reverence for so many who were polygamists will, I trust, deter any one from considering as fornication or adultery; for whoremongers and adulterers God will adjudge, whereas the patriarchs were the objects of bis especial favor as be himself testifies. Early in tho 16th century tboso great reformers, Luther, Melancthon and others held a solemn consultation at WIttenburg on the question Whether It is contrary to the divine lavv for a man to Lave two wives at once and decided unanimously that it was not, and therefore Phillip, Laudgrave of llesse, married a second w ife whilo his first wife was still living. See D Aubignes Hist. Reformation. Puffendorf, professor of law In a German University, a man noted for his learning and researches in the 17th century, safd The polygamy of the fathers, under the old covenant, is an argument we must confess to be unanswerable. In Deuteronomy, 25th chap, we read: If brethren ilwell together, and one of them die, nnd have no child, tho w ife of the dead shall not marry a stranger: her husbands brother shall go unto I ;atri-areh- polj-gam- y hnr, and take her to him to wife, nnd tho duty of ail husbands brother unto her. And it shall be, that the first bom w hich she beareth shall suceevd In tho name of his brother which is dead that his name be not put out of Israel. Hero Is a positive command of God hi favor of plural marriage. Shall we charge God with commanding that w hich is unholy or impure? Shall we impugn the wisdom of Jehovah in this command? Was not Moses whom all Christians ae knowledge to ho the greatest legislator that ever lived, himself the husband of three wives? Wore not men who communed with Deity, many of whom penned the very Bible we believe in the husbands of more than one wife? When, and by w hom, was this lavv of plural marriage foi bidden? Where i the record of its reiel? Jesus never made it, for He says I come not to deThe stroy the law but to fulfitll it. apostles never wrote such a record, and certainly the f'ntholio and Protestant churches claim no divine revelation aulbprizing them to repeal that law, and, as I have shown, Congress, undoubtedly, superseded its jhzw ers in legislating concerning it, as they have no power except that which la received immediately from the Constitution itself. Polygamy, therefore being a purely religious natter, founded on Holy Writ, no human legislation can justly interfere w ith it, and any effort to do so is an effort to interfere w ith the freooni of divine worship, nnd as such should lo condemned equally with the restrictions of Henry the Eighth or those of ancient Popery. ProioCilyJtiirliM IJcport. perform . C. I). E. pS' Who sells the cheapest ture in town ? David duff. J r. Provo Citt, November cut Flour Hurley I'.TIi, 1371. SUTVsIOO I 0 1 I'd nr Wheat " bil Corn per tr. dried. pples 2nd quality i Praehrs hi Pearlies halve IVitrhi s ip.M . in I ej,., j Plums pnro! Imniiil (In rr.i Uniter. per IX Cheese ' Fts-- S !n Peer Million Wool ft. P. ... j 7 ToN '!7 I Sec I . Anil AM 1OIST.N SOI Til nml EAST. i 'ch ts.v'a , tShoulrf lUn (hn;r Chicago MISCELLANEOUS. CLOSE SCHOOL TEACHERS North-Wester- WITH All RAHRCADS RBNillNO EAST OR SOUTH fROM CHICAGO. CONNECTIONS MADE I 'HU , .MaiiU I .'nns. N I';:i ue. . Pilin' , i h K. Imi du Bay, si. 5 iitikl. n. Cedar Kapid-- , Fort 1'oder, is. libers (Yrtitleutes for Ulali County, Imiui'.. will le liebi on Kntuiiiay, November Mill, t,Dsse, Winona, 174, In Timpm.omi, Hall, Piovo CTty, JY3STD 4irnt Th polit' if1 SH on trr commi neiiig at 9:ie a.n,. its tfai limit w.th l l i rmcji.-sI. M. di)MIN. g1 r nI hi ib Ihf 4m iiiilurrnnU uUpt. jiik Uij 1 H. Jt lx kp FuRBUS, , All THE MOOERR IMPROVEMENTS. J. K. IU XlTIf. r , l.-- t rvulu. art? 1 KxTnil'. noli Roomily Provo City, Nov. J2, 1374. r?o ml Df Dr!oj-Rnr)- Ct( 8f Ini, 'Ctrl IVr'- f:..., ItnT Tmokiaf too Ptai alsit Air firtksi rn. Clote Cotosct tl sb but lut Flstf Co'jfi.uind7rwtrfTr CtMnfweC. Ft UVUF.P.ciGNFD, HWING From 9 to 10 i)isiln'e.t hv lie Ron. Pmhnte Dkitv orer lie rri TrF,TnF. been i 'FrVr nnd LoitkId at Jnoc rnloo DetKX. So Car Ferry TrBaiferrr Spoed, SaJtcy, tod Abso- ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Exprooa Trains rrn esrh Wny uf uits thus wnnnp bo us Litre B1C IW.vie sure ful A'lmihfstrrrtr.rv Df Uuia 1a BJtr to Jo L i dLi uij the F.slute of Andrew H. Seolt, uheen.Heili, tKtm 7 t our td 'icktti livvt? rr th,rt hereby ithe noliee to all person win) have t tke ruins tAhrr. el ll ms s M K.stilte, to present t hem to us uPhlii Ihlin i.Jl U:it N from dale br MARVIN KUCHITT, W. H. CTEHNETT, settlement, nml all p- rsons owltitf snll Oeo-- r i! rs"' Om I SupsrloUodem. i'fr .f nl. are hereby reitilr-(- l to pnv said Tleki'ls for sale ' us ui'.bli. n!i! tune and save lake City by 'A. II. Davl, Ticket Agent; U.P. R. It. alsout olj-i- y . J 4 M KH W. 15 V F I.ESM, 5 Udvu. I rrsfrComilY.' ftr CE te Imleh-e-lness- t) t . - Administrators. J iM's, C. StOTT, ) Provo City, Nov. ,r.:h, s"74. no" M HU.IiT GFOlGK PACIFIC COAST ACCNCY FOR THE UNEQUALLED NOTICE. n herehv given, that at a meet. In? of Provo Manufartur-In- g Company, held In Provo City, on the Srd No. tiny of November. 171, an i I Ci of.5t.Gl S.x Iadlnrs per share, ubs levied upon the iiittro Capital Slot uf kihd Company, payable in three Insialltn ns, 1S74. on the 3rd dav of viz: ru t 3rd on 2nd, 3rd day of February, 3rd day of Maroh, 1X7.5, at the offoe of Albert Jones, Treasurer of said Company, In ProvoCItv, at the time here In specified. Any stock uion which This assessment shall remain unpaid on tin- 3oth dav of R Ttrb Intn7DT March, 177, will lx- - delinquent, nnd adverBUicvmvtiiaratlliLd in the lot. ry t,f tised for sale at public auction, and unless Maimfai tnr. Th-for (i - V Is made will he sold on pavm-n- t and burnt iH4 i f Ton. , isn l),4r.t , thelltli day of April, 17'-- to pay del assessment, together w it It cos's of advertising nnd expenses of sate IIFN It Y A. dXitN , Si erelnrv. Nonet: oftbi-liineio- rB fi'i Up) is s ;?''? .7M - - H v P 1 ,r u.i 1 , !' ' 1 celebnat:: 1 7.1 rV !,T7 NEW MILLINERY. W. 't Wilkinson, I i v I-- l; 7. -- 1 , -- r V; : e't1; -' u' i s. sf - - . . i . :) :.r : i i . t ' ' -- i.'iirxv' - 7 '.if . : ; , . : . .w. yfrragrwgf , m a. Choiub Family Groceries, Rolognas, smoked Salmon arid other delicacies to In? had at Livingstons 12 HOW IT IS lONF. IX TW m I.i- tu r ' ii - ; m t n SHERMAN. ds HYDE. GErn.tr jtirxrs, . SVN Whirh she will sell at the lowest cash GRAIN. AN1 PRODUCT: TA Ki;N. 1 P.M J.,v.u. SHERMAN & HYDE, 411 IX A. and Suiier Sis. Cor. Kearny SAX FRANCISCO, The best varieties of Imported Printing h, i; h prices. SAVE TIME AND EXPENSE! book in China is done as follows; Two pages are written, by one trained to the business, on a sheet of thin paper, divided into columns by black lines, and in the space tietween the two pages are written the title of the work and the number of chapter and page. When the sheet lias been printed it is folded down through this spaee, so as to bring the title, etc., partly on each page. The sheet, when ready for printing, is pasted, face downward, on a smooth block of wood, made usually from the pear or plum tree. As soon as it is dry, the paer is rubbed off with greui care, leaving behind an inverted impression of the diameters. Another workman now cuts away the blank spaces by means of a sharp graver, and the block, with the characters in high relief, passes to the printer, who performs his work by hand. The two points he has to le most cart ful arut are to ink the characters and to equally with his bru-avoid tearing the paer when taking the impression. From a good wooden block some 15,000 copies may be printed, and . when the characters have boon sharpened up a little, it is possible to obtain 8,000 or 10,000 Tin V. hun fr mroLniALK ani hftnil js SHEET MUSIC, ar.s Musical Instruments, s music a i. Mint ciia XDisr.. J Orders from the lntirir promptly filled. tunirarTvZLRt or DAVID 1 1;: CLUFF, JR., roui.D nrxi'FCTn'UY inform ?? Ilte elllreni. of I'rovo and riali, Iha! II kinds of Imhe is In furtilsl, prepared liome-niinl- e ported and . h LAhK HALT Wholesale IRN 1 IT I ILK, at 'HICKS, and Detail, Thereby raving Loth Time am! Monry FURNITURE MADE TO CRDER TURNING DONE. piticrs imiwn to I'ntrontzo m F V.'CCD n.T mn timkf. Home C AND K Iniluatry! INK Of all size constantly on linnd and mads to order. G BAHT TAIILIir. Wnrerooms-an- Main Htreet; rnor. d Workshops. 2nd Fnsl Kiem.itu, Fust C(pdi'ri4iiM aggiu.m ro,ar- - Artnowlwlgctt ty MufiuUn to bo tha IWt Low rrlocd lostnimontB evor cfTcrcd for aale on thu r ! m-- MILWAUKEE.sr riter iu an English pajx-- says: By the way, speaking of waterproofs, I think I can give travelers a valuable hint or two. For many year I have worn india rubber waterproofs, but will buy no more, lor I have learned that good Scottish tweed can le made entirely impervious to rain, and, moreover, I have learned howto make it so; and for the benefit of your readers, I will give you the recipe: In a bucket of soft- water put half a pound of sugar of lead, and half a pound of powdered alum; stir this at inervals, until it clear; pour it off into another bucket and put tho garment therein, and let it be for twenty-fou- r hours; no7 rmvoCitv, Nov. h, )S7I. then hang it up to dry, without wringing it. Two ot my party a lady and gentleman have worn garments tints treated in the wildest storms of wind and rain, without getting vvet. Tho rain hangs ujon the cloth in globules. Mrs. B. In short, they were really waterproof. OF The gentleman, a fortnight ago. walked C SALT ITY'. nine miles in a storm of rain and wind, Wishes to inform th" Ijidb-- of UTAH sueii us you rarely see in tho South; (3 tUNTY that hr- will p n In IT.' Vi on and when lie slipped off his overcoat, NovetnberlMh, 7 In the i staldlsb no nt his underwear w as as dry as when ho formerly occupied by Mr. Jom-sa large put it on. This is, I think, a secret and fa- - It Ion a hi. aisnori m knt of worth knowing, for cloth, if it inn le LADIIX and ('HILDHUNS made to keep out water, is, in every HATS AND BONNETS, way, letter than what we know as Anil Isiiry Xotlon. Fealher. Flow-ermost waterproofs. Ism, Hair Gooiiu, Ac., Ae.. w 1 j r A 7 i , To ., Shel-oye.-n- ie for ii ol' nppli.-nti- , RailT7ay. n THISIS THE DIRECT ROUTE FOR M, rn 1m. islipetu'nv, Wat' Mown, 51. mis.. n, v.miv Clf , .In t men, s'. Wa'erlo.i. Pu'M.j'i--- EXAMINATION. furni- Garments Made Waterproof. , falm, I.ihM's, f) 11 25 An evstni mail L- -- 2 Vi " o - u J lb, ilrl per nxl, c a aFOE TASsF-NGF-Il- InnJ, TliMfulo, Nj- -inn hi i, !!' h nr. i rwtcMir;:, All-i- n. Yu It , ritli.ol i)ii Id !! 1st i coM' V i f Y. Iilnutun, uu. riv Halit . !: vtoi,J ru h unu Mi! JaUk'-U( ')H Ml I nt-- l), fluid iiift Ills., SI m It ' ' WESTERN ILM1AVAY, c S 7 15 S NORTH CHICAGO 70 til.i Oulu Vpph'S V iTlSCElUNcOUS. |