OCR Text |
Show i 4. CORINNE DAILY JOURNAL Wednesday Morning, July 19, 1871. HEGtLAK LIBERAL KOflllXATION roil fOfXf IUMR9 jn Tl.E TERKITOF.1VI. LII8L VTfRF. 13 r . : Silt Lake County, WALKER, SAMUEL KAltN. Torw-County, WELLS SPICER. Srmn.it County, A. C. BECKWITH. THE REPUBLICAN PAllTV Oquirrh House, not favorably responded to by the leadand Locnst Ctrttl ing Boston journals. The Advertiser Cerntr thinks he is rather hasty in declaring his TOOELE CITY, - UTAH. readiness to accept nominations to be Fanilicb. Good Acccnnodatioa made so far ahead, and intimates that S. S. FOOTE, Proper, jelStf Gov. Claflin may be induced to accept t the nomination. The Journal says that there is no question tgut that the RepubOPHIR CITY, UTAH. licans in convention will act with proper EAST CANYON, BEGUZAB STAGE HOUSE. discretion, and nominate for offices gentlemen who strengthen the party, and ACCOMMODATIONS IN THE BEST at reasonable prices. Gentlemanly nud continue a beneficial rule. J. Washington, 18. The latest revised tables at the Censue Office show the folOverland Blacksmith Shop, lowing aggregate of the population of all States and Territories. Whites, THE CAVE PAT O'NEIL, Foreman, Is not turning out as hopefully as was colored, 4,879,323; Indians, la Prepared to do A.il Kinds of Cnrria.ce MakWagon and anticipated as a cave, it is a success, al- 25,733 ; Japanese. 55; Chinese, 63,196. ing and ain tin g.Amino though not quite equal to the Kentucky Total 38,549,887. making affair. But caves yield no profits, and Nashville, 18. Valuable gold mines harness in all its Branches. speculators have no spare cash to iavest have been discovered in Munroe county, Blacksmithing DeNorth of Track, opposite Diamond R Freight in them, and unless they can strike chlo- Tennessee, and Gen. Vaughn calls for a pot, CORINNE. ride in it, it will be dead stock. .How- hundred men to work them. New York. 18. Jim Mace has issusd ever, it undermines the Blue Wing, Mountain Lion, Bilk, and many other a card waiving the decision of his ref- Blacksmith & WaeoimuJiw Shop. North Froht St., Corihk. mines, and must be certain to strike. eree in his favor in his last melee with CALLS ATTENTION OF It is pretty much of a Corinne affair, as Coburn, and offers to fight the latter for THE PROPRIETOR Teamsters, and Farmer, to his work. our old town boys, Capt. Ike F. Evans, five or ten thousand dollars a side within superior facilities, low rates and good celebrated for and aalerthe hand on Constantly John M. Wallace, Al. Garwitz and Lu one hundred miles of New Orleans, and in the event, of Coburn declining be is Le fever are the strikers. Mannfactnrers of all kinds of M agon and CarTIIF. TOWN willing to transfer the challenge to riage Material. and Is flourishing, and it is now a settled OBaldwin. Blacksmithing Horseshoeing, on Notice Short Kcpairtstg fact that this is bound to be the best Baltimore, ISt A negro named Manufacturers of the CALIFORNIA BRAKE. was to Hammond will and in a Utah, caught attempting camp give Ophir Mis3 Clay. commit on a It was Give me a call and satisfy yourselves. both herself of account rape good financially ,Jell-t- f found that he had previously attempted and politically before snow falls. to rape a girl of 13 who he caught in Spicer. better to be born lucky than rich with the laws at his commaud, and we or handsome- - either. . I would like to were hoping Governor Shaffer would swap of my good looks for an equivalent xprove an exception to the general rule. of good luck, I would then put you alL Gov. Shaffer did prove an exception. down for feet in rich chlorides. He attempted to exercise his legal funcAMUSEMENTS, SPORTS.1 t tions as Governor in nominating certain Lakes Circus exhibited here last Territorial officers, and in commanding to about 600 persons. The honest the Territorial militia. The new Judges, night miner, bummer, and all others, irrespecon the same principle, attempted to tive of age, sex, religion or moral status, sweep away the illegal Mormon courts enjoyed themselves hugely, and good and officers, ami to be something more order was maintained. The great Lees of the than ornamental mouth-piece- s Atlantic and Pacific Circus will be here Mormon machines into which the polygon the 22d; that is said to be the best amists had- - transformed their own circus now on exhibition. Utah has yet done what was possible It AND POLYGAMY. The New York Tribune, in a recent isue said : The Republican party has everywhere within the sphere of constitutional possibilities earned out those schemes of reform upon which it came into power." The Republican party, at its first national convention in Philadelphia, A. , courts. 1). 1856, resolved: That the Constitution confers upon Congress sovereign power over the Territories of thv United States, for their government, and that, in the exercise of this power, it is both the riht and duty of Congress to prohibit in the flerri-torie- s tho-- e twin relies of barbarism and slavery polygamy lias the Republican party carried out this scheme of reform as regards polygamy ? Or isnt it within the sphere of constitutional possibility ? And must polygamy, in the unlimited and incestuous Utah form, take rank with the recognized political and social institutions of the country ? be answered, No, and Jt will doubtless j urged that the Republican party has been and still is earnestly seeking to fulfil this part of the pledge upon w'hich it came into power. Seeking, it may be, in a general, judifferent manner, to do so, but not with any degree of earnestness. Certain! v. almost as soon as it nttain- ed power, it inhibited polygamy by law. With the rebellion on its hands it could only give it incidental and trifling attention. President Johnson went over to the Democrats soon after his inaugura-t,ion- , and the Republican partv ceased to be responsible for him. He appeared to think polygamy as good as anything, and acted accordingly. Upon the in- maker. His successors in tbe same policy, which, once inaugurated, cannot be abandoned without surrendering, the entire position to the polygamists, come in for the same condemnation. A Republican Congress refuses to make the necessary appropriation to defray the expenses of the courts, thus making them a farce, more contemptible and powerless than ever, an obstacle instead of the means of enforcing the laws, as they should be. At tiie same time this Repulican Congress appropriates $20,000 to pay the expenses of a session of the polygamous Legislature which does not convene winter. A Republican Department of Justice abems and haws over the matter, says it isnt according to precedent and usage, says it is .doubtful of its legality, in short, putters and pothers a refusal to furnish the Judges the means of running tlieir courts. After the Government, in spite of the President, has thus defeated itself and made martyrs of its faithful servants in Utah, comes the influential pxcss and whacks and thumps round wildly in the confusion, careful only, as it would seem, to give the polygamists the soft end of the club, reserving the bard end and the hard knocks for the soldiers of its own side. So far is the Republican party from having fulfilled its pledge of extirpating polygamy, it has made no serious effort to do it, and as if the Fates were on tbe side of polygamy, it always interposes in its favor when anybody would do it. It is a species of blindness that is very curious. No wonder the polygamists interpret it as the result of the Lords silent intervention in their behalf. , un-tiLne- i auguration of another Republican President, who had announced as peculiarity his policy the impartial enforcement of the laws, it was generally expected that serious attention would he given to the extirpation of polygamy. The new President did his part. He superseded all polygamous Federal officers in Utah by monogamists, aud not succeeding at first in securing a corps unanimously in favor of bis pQlicy, he again superseded e one or two, and notably tbe of the Territory. lie allowed the old figure-heaGovernor, Durkee, to serve out his time, and then replaced Chief-Justic- d him, at the suggestion of Gen. Rawlings, by J. W. Shaffer, a man in the last stages of consumption, but who answered his purpose. These men found that polygamy had entrenched itself by making nonentities of all Federal executive and judicial officers of the Territory. It had created courts of its own and conferred n them such powers as it pleased, all powers. It hd created an attorney and a marshal for the Federal courts, and had provided machinery for selecting just such juries as it. wanted for them. It had ignored the Governor's prerogatives, so far as it could, from first to last, Including his right to control the militia. Thus fortified it scrupled not to hurl its open defiance in the face of the nation, declaring that it would follow its own will in spite of any earthly power, branding the new Federal officers with all the vile epithets at its command, and threatening to expel them from the Territory as it had done before. Meanwhile the overland railroad had been completed, and the polygamous capital connected with it by rail. The world of travel began to pour through the polygamous Territory, mines began to be discovered, and the prominent Gentiles of Utah, deeming existing laws insufficient to meet the case, agreed on a bill which in their judgment would meet it. This was discussed by Congress, passed by one House and allowed to die in the other. While it waspend-ina schism had broken out among the Mormons themselves, and with the increasing discoveries of mines, the new and united official representatives of Gen, Grants policy of enforcing the laws, the Gentiles and recusant Mormons paused not to mourn the failure of this bill, but resolutely addressed themselves to discussion, that having become possible in Utah for the first time, .The new efficers, thus thrown on their "own resources, adopted the suggestion of Sam Bowles, through the Springfield Republican. who had twice visited Utah aud had given the polygamy question some consideration, and which was as , nnre. ppt. xt OlR MINING LETTER. Opiiir, July 16. 1871. It is proper I should remark at this time, upon my first appearance in the Journal, that I have not thrown off on any old friends, but will, as heretofore, give them an occasional scratch from -- I a rep TELEGRAPHIC! the wodds picking cherries. It is lieved he is or will be lynched. demonstrating how another killed himself. Last week another man was killed San 'Francisco, July 18, The re- in Ohio 'while demonstrating with a had contracted that Harry Meiggs port loaded pistol how Vallandigham killed for the shipment of 600 Chinamen from himself. That it can be done success-full!San Francisco to Peru, to labor on pubis pretty well established now. o- lic works is doubtful. The Methodist Church, a brick building costing $75,000, in Virginia City, Nevada, fell a mass of ruins last evening, burying the dwelling of a negro famity along side. Negroes ribs wore broken. No lives were lost. There was a severe fire in Marysville yesterday, destroying several prominent residences ; also Swan's Sash Factory. Total los3 $100,000; insurance $30,000. The National Guard returned from Amador county .this morning, work having been resumed in all the mines. The Japanese and Chinese contributions to the Mechanics Fair embrace an immense variety of manufacturers goods. They will be a great feature of the exhi- is now making Regular Trip with Passenger sandr Freight between C0EIHUE and LAKE POINT, aa followat , Leaves Corinne MONDAY, WEDNES- and FRIDAY, at 7 a. m., arrives at LAKE POINT 4 p. pt., same days. Returning, leaves Lake 'Point .TUESDAY, THURSDAY and SATURDAY,' at 8 a. m., arrive at CORINNE at DAY 5 p. m., asms dAys. Makes regular connections at Corinne with Express Trains of the C. P. R. R. Company, and at LAKE POINT with Messrs, Wines A Kimballs Stages for SALT LAKE CITY, STOCKTON, and OPHIR.- For the transportation of Freight, Ore Bullion to and from the above named places and iu poiat of vicinity, this route offers inducements TIME and COST, superior to any other route. BulU and Bun for the Ae. conttnodation and measure of Travel and Excursionists. ' Especially For further particulars address B. S. FITCH, Gen. Agent. -- bition. San Francisco, July 17. The wcath er is fine and warm. The city is filled with rumors concerning the Central Pacific and California Pacific railroads. One rumor asserts that the Central sold out to the California, and another that the California had sold out to the Central. It is known that Milton S. Latham has gone to London I ter Creek, California. -- Sut- It seems like truckee Lumber Vard, D. W. PARK IIUP.ST. $75,000 CURRENCY! A Grand Gift Concert $73,000 IN THE Platte Valley K rtutc I Sugar Pine, & --AND- The drawing will take place and the gifts be awarded in a manner precisely similar to that of the Concert given in San Francisco, in aid of the Mercantile Library, and under the supervision of n a committee of citizens of Salt Lake ' ' City. RAILItOAD THE and Northwestern. Chicago, Eork With Chicago and Puriilr ami Mt. Joseph and Conn- ell Bluffs Railroads, and Missouri River Line of Pockets to and from all principal Eastern and Southern Cities. first cuts AND EATING HOTELS LO Pullmans Pnlnce, Sleeping and Brewing Hoorn Cars Acj company all Trains. THROUGH RATES ON FREIGHT to Montana, Sweetwater Mines and other points, apply to H. BROWNSON, General Freight Agent, Omaha. T. I SASH, E. SICKLES, General Bnperintendent, Omaha. W. MEADE, C. Assistant Genefal Superintendent. FRANCIS COLTON, General Ticket Agent, Omaha. my2-dt- f Metropolitan FOR CASH. W, Hotel, 1XALSH & GBEENE WALD, Office t STEAMER LANDING, laku point. je21tf HOUSES At convenient points on tin line. try-FO-R OF BUILDING MATERIAL CONSTANTLY ON HAND AND SOLD of Utah previ- PACIFIC O :m: .A. !E3: A. ALL KINDS The ous to the day of drawing. - Proprietors, r.iOrJTANA STREET, UTAH. CORINNE, well-know- :o: 60,000 Tickets will be sold at $2.50 each The tickets will admit the bearer to the Concert. Tickets for sale at all the principal business houses of the Territory. All orders tor tickets and draffs for moti'-- to be addressed to CHURCH A CO., Salt Lake City, U. T., P. O. Box 657 Tickets for sale at thn fhamond Q Billiard Hall. N. P. MINER, Agent, Corinne, Utah. jyl9td NORTHERN MILLS, XXX FLOUR, J. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, RICHTER, Proprietor. Bran and Shorts Hand. Always on For particulars inquire of C. Krezdorn, at O. II. Elliotts', Corinne. Best Brands of Hour Constantin on Hand. PRICES REA SONABLE. --S3 IJyistf Uontana Street, Freighters. Good Saddle and Carriage Horse. For the accommodation of Freighters and Campers, a good cook house, with free wood and water. STOCK TAKEN TO RANCH. jell-t- f . H. P. STEWART, T.l. D., Physician & Surgeon, 0PHIH CITY, . - CORINNE, (east or th . t All Mall and Express Conches Htart from this Ilonse. UTAH, orm hour.) FREE BUSS Wholesale and Retail dealera in TO AND FR0H THE CAES. QUEENSWARE, ThBar is StoeJeed with the Best WINES, CHINA, and LIQUORSCIGAI18. GLASSWARE, The table always In the market. and CUTLERY, - Neatly ftirnished myitf best supplied with the Is - J. N. PURCELL, - - Montana Street. jMJ ill commodious corral and stable accommodation of Has the Stock Dought and sold. Travelers will flail tlii House Equal to any in. tlio Territory. D. CONWAY, UTAH. jclStf life! IB IQmr,i furniture, Eastern Made 1, WARE, i - Jlouoo.. Fnrnichlng Goodo ! I mvSdtf jJ? SflJ5ja MAD tt HH Fmrulture, u atonu bo oW bd- - LAMPS, chandalmers, PLATED good, clean rooms beds. CORINNE STABLE. j Direct communication made nt 9 DOORS $75,000 the First National Bank Forming in connection with the O : $75,000. will be deposit- - PASSENGER TRAINS, Sea. PINE AND REDWOOD ' ROW RUNNING X . LTJMBEE,, CO. SHINGLES , 1317 PRIZES, AMOUNTING TO (IRK VT ANI Redwood CURRENCY, MOULDINGS, AS FOLLOWS o- -- All Rail Ronte to Callfornlr Rough Lumber, O OA ST P ACIFIC San Francisco to Through Timber, Mining IN LESS THAN. FOUR DAYS! Avoiding the dangers of the Clear Dressed SALT LAKE CITY, U. T., September 1, 1871, During be Distributed among Ticket holders, Amounting to car. NI REDWOOD FINISHING CHURCH the Concert, 1,317 Gifts will A. union pacific railroad CENTRAL Independence Hall, & dissolved jc21tf of Oregon Pine Flooring, BY Sc Munro, Creighton mutual consent. John by this day where he will be pleased to meet old friends. tR WILL BE GIVEN AT . EX. H. IV . OLD STAND, W. PARKHURST & CO., OPR IETOE S. A Full Assortment aud California Lumber Co., it is necessary that his books be clo-e- d up immediately. Therefore, all persons knowing themselves to le indebted to him will please call at his several offices and settle without delay. jylS-t- f between John A. Creighton and Munro, under the name, style and firm of Corner Sixth and Uontana Streets, ! nnl Lake Point Lumber Yards to tlo Utah Lake HERETOFORE THE AT Tn TO-DA- Y. undersigned having discos ed of interest in the Truckee and Corinne, Salt The ! JOHN A. CREIGHTON, --AND -0- NOTICE DiSSOLUTlOn NOTICE will be The onbusiness by LAKE POINT seeking danger afar off, when Piocbe is within his own jurisdiction. White Vine News. He has returned from the seat of war D. on Sutter Creek and gone to the seat of war at Salt Lake. Anywhere but the State of Nevada. Carson Register. NEW CORINNE, U. T., WINES A KIMBALL, Salt Lake City, Utah. Or Messrs. je27tj J- - 4 Senator Stewart has been visiting Corinne J of the firm and Creighton will pay all liabilities collect all accounts due to the sumo. JOHN. A. CRET0IIT0X. W. II. MUNItO, Cobinxk, U. T., June 7, 1871. - )' of City I Vallandigham killed himself while REPORTED SPECIVIXT TOR THE CORINNB RAILY JOURNAL BY THE WESTERN UNION COMPANY. g 4 be- Kle-sa- nt teamer, -- Spicer. It is easy enough for me to keep all markets supplied with these hieroglyphical ebullitions, but sometimes extremely difficult for the compositor to translate them (bursts of profanity from, on business connected with the California Pacific. Work is stopped on the printers). cross roads of the California Pacific RFl'UCTION WORKS Are becoming the chief characteristic of from Adelaide to Petaluma, and it is ruthis district. The smelters have made a mored that the surveying party of the magnificent success in their line. The California Pacific from Davisville is last one erected, being the third one called back. Well posted parties think completed at this place, that of the Ophir that neither that road has sold out, or M. & S. Co., of which Col. Weightman will sell out; but that the Central comis President, John T. Earlle, Chas. M. mencing the air line from Oakland to Hoyt and others, Directors; and which Sacramento 'compels the California furnace was erected by that gentle whis- Pacific to hesitate about building the pering inventor Mr. Gerrish, and on his through line from the same point. The deaths last week in this city were patent improvement fired up for the first time July 4th, and is still successfully fifty. There have been three cases of running, and that too on Silver Shield small pox, but no new ones for the last ores that heretofore have been deemed four days. New York, July 16. Daniel Gobin, useless here, and which failed to pay expenses of shipment to Reno. Now they proprietor of a drinking saloon in Brookflow beautifully and the bullion assays lyn, in a quarrel last nighfc stabbed $143 per ton. This furnace has been Michael Campbell dead with a large emptied of its charge and again put in sheath knife. The quarrel arose from a full blast inside of two hours. No choke difference of opinion concerning the rechisel out to their cupola. It is cent riot. up THE VERY LATEST DISPATCHES Bueno. OThe furnace of Abby Schofield & Co., MIDNIGHT REPORTS. o the Pioneer concern of the camp is still in successful operation, and the stream Baltimore, 18. The employees in of bullion from these two furnaces is the prominent shoe factories of this city now flowing into Salt Lake City by tons are on a strike. The cause is the atcounted by tbe tens and huudreds. tempted reduction of wages. The Wasatch Furnace has not yet Washington, 18. The Commissioner made a go, but bucks ateach starting. of Internal Revenue is rapidly reducing the number of assistant assessors, and stamp mills Will soon be running. Walker Bros other subordinate Revenue officials of big mill will start up with 15 stamps the different items. Board of Police dismissed all com. coming week, and the Brevoort Milling Co.s mill, with Dr. Farnhams Patent plaints against officers for the violation Steam Stamp Battery will of rules made prior to the sixteenth inst., go in about the same time. Peck & Churches, in consequence of the meritorious duty and Lomaxs arastras are both putting rendered by the police on the 12th inst. in their work to a good advantage. The result of the census taken at midAs soon qs these works once get their night Sunday, April 3, 1861, throughout work in, and help the miners out a little Great Britain, has just been officially with cash in hand for their ores, we can announced. The entire population of look foe lively times here. England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Prince Island, and Isle of Man, includPROSPECTING Is still being extensively carried on, and ing the array and navy and in the meroften with good success as many new chant and marine service abroad is, and good things are being struck. Yet males, 15,549,271 ; females. 16,267,837 ; follows: il Couldnt Gov. Shaffer employ him- bear it in mind, that it is not all who total 31.609,910. The preponderance few for a better Advantage self to hare this luck, for there are hundreds of of females over males is 718,568. months in strictly and impartially en- men here who have worked hard ever Boston, 18. General Butlers exenacted than in forcing the laws alreadynew oned? It 18 since November last, and Us yet not pressed readiness to accept the nominaurging the passage of Governor of seen the color, nor the &bow for a cent. tion of Governor of Massachusetts, is A hobby of ours -- OREMS O. Tbe Companys New and bain wagon. to-wi- t, . 0; J. i HOTEL PIONEER 33,-561,68- What is the result ? Shaffer was denounced by the great organ of the Republican party in tbe East as a mischief GALT LAKE Ctoaa CJbvfocticn Conjpany. i specialty U m m FOR SALE AT Zfl W Hucssll & Caggies Paint Shop T. Fifth .St., Corinne. U.RUPSUM J, jyll-t- f e E. S. |