OCR Text |
Show II i.i m, mi a jr-- - "i wSifi - l i 1 N . ' , f ', - - ' N ' ; 4.4 - . . - 1? i V.. ' ' . .'. ) v i. 4 . t . A , 't , 1 , ; i ; '. , V i 1 i . . t ' . ' ' " ' 4 ' 4 ' - , 1 r, i ! ; i corinne daily journal. T7ednes day Homing, Hay 17, 1871. with disfavor on these enterprises at first, but the success of Mr. Meekers becolony at Greeley, about half-watween Chevenne and Denver, has about vanquished us. We subjoin an extract from the Greeand ley Tribune, of April 5th, ultimo, commend it to the attention of growlers, wherever they may be : Those victims who went back home last summer, denouncing the country, and calling the colony a monument of Tribune folly, are respectfully invited to read the following : were During the past month, $14, 89at the paid by the colonists for freight office of the Denver Pacific Railroad, in this town of Greeley. The amount paid was during the last week in March, tickets local for 45. The receipts who $330. Several college graduates, from were supposed to know everything, Greek to Geography, went back to their clam chowders, saying that it was impossible to raise sheep or cattle in Colorathe do, for there was no grass. During s of past four weeks, seventeen hav were shipped from this town, aged eleven months. Mr. Isaac W. Englaud, of the Sun, who pronounced our soil even poorer than the poorest Jersey s of sand, is informed that seven from month were shipped last Sotatoes pet yearling. Three carloads of lumber were sent to the Boston colony at Evans. The total number of cars loaded with merchandise, household goods, coal, lujnber, stock, etc., was 101. The local telegraph receipts were $100. Eleven months ago there was not a decent wagon road through our town, and the railroad was not finished to Denver. Now, our agent opens a ticket-cas- e as large as one of the wardrobes in and sells Judge Barnards Court-room- , tickets to all parts of the continent, while messages come over the wires from Santa Fe, Washington, San Francisco, and from lands beyond the sea. It looks hard to see men who have done nothing since last spring but bottom chairs now sell out their shares for $500 to $1,000 each, while others have been hard at work making their shares worth this much. However, they who do not sell make the most money, and they lose most who sell. A young man who sold a business lot last summer for $200 thought he was in high luck, but now he goes around lamenting and mourning, because said lot is worth $500 cash down. Another sold a lot, last June, for $175, and bragged about it, and now he is not worth enough to buy it back, and if he should work twelve hours a day he would not be able to earn money as fast as that land rises. So you see, the real speculator holds on and works, while the weak speculator only expects. y ml NOTICE I There will be a meeting of the Territorial Central Committee of the Liberal Party of Utah, on Saturday, the 20th day of May next, at 2 oclock T. X., at Salt Lake City. All the members are relocated to attend aa business of importance a ill coma before the Committee. J. , Sccy. Wjcua-Spicx- M. OKU, Salt Lakx Citt, April 28., 1 Chairman. n. td INCOME TAX DECISION. The decision of the Supreme Court of the United States respecting taxing 8tate officers, was delivered by Justice , Nelson, Bradley alone dissenting. The precise question was : Does the Constitution give Congress the power to tax the salary of a judicial officer of a State ? The 'court says that Congress can exercise no powers of legislation except such as are expressly given to it, or givUnless en by neccessary implication. the separate and independent condition of each State under the Constitution is recognized by Congress, the General Government itself would disappear from the family of nations Congress has no supremacy over the law or the J udge by which a State regulates the disposibed-era- ! tion of property within its limits, power to. tax a State J udge is a power to destroy it. The State court might thus be taxed out of existence. It logically follows from this opinion, protecting the Judges of a State from Federal taxation on their salaries, that the power does not exist in Congress to tax the salary of any State officer whatthat ever j and from this it again-folloall taxes so levied and collected are recoverable if protest was duly made. -- f I ws It is supposed by the heathen in these parts that there is no longer anything indissoluble in the ties that bind a certain prominent gentlemen of Utah to the Mormon Church, Providence having delivered him from the bondage of polygamy, by taking away one of his women. The mormon papers make kindly mention of the desceased, but they do not .tell ns whether she was the wife of his youth, spoken of by Malachi, or the other one. If the first, the feelings of the bereaved . cauuot certainly be enviable, now that she is gone where the wicked cease from dealing treacherously and the weary are at rest. But perhaps he finds consolation in the sympathy of the .one that is left, and also Heaven save the mark ! in religion. Yet to a man of the world it would seem that the sympathy of the one that is left must be somewhat hollow, since she Can but be rejoiced at heart, poor human nature, and especially woman's nature, being what it is. And as to religion, it must . be the genuine article which can afford any consolation in such afflictions. Whether polygamous religion would have the efficacy of the genuine article, we, at least, have no disposition to experiment upon personally. Mormonism, it ' must be confessed, in determining to ignore human nature has made a strange mess of it. We remember, a few months , ago, seeing the announcement in the Deseret Neics of the decease, on the same day, of as many as three babies, of which one man was reputedly the father by as many women. Something like this they ran: Died, at St. George, Utah, Dec. 18th, George Andrew, infant son of Charles W. and Aramiuta Williams, aged three months and four days. Died, at Parowan, Utah, Dec. 18th, Jane Ann, infant daughter of Charles W. and Susannah Williams, aged one month and eleven days. Died, at Toquerville, Utah, Dec. 18th, Elizabeth, infant daughter of Charles W. and Sarah Williams, aged four mouths. Think of that, you who miss and mourn the little ones, how would you bear up under such a three-- t fold weight of sorrow ? But we suppose there is nothing like getting used to it. Divest life and death and whatever is beyond of all sentiment, and it doubtless comes easy tq take things cool. Divest life of love and the grave naturally be-comes a relief instead of an afllictiou. We venture to hope, in the case at bar, .as the courts say, that the bereaved gentleman will fiud grace to return to his to human nature, with all its wealth of affection and truth, that he will make the sorrowing madam-in-lawhat she is in fact, and endeavor for the rest of his --life to throw his social influence on the side of pure morals and true ..religion, which appear to have but little to expect from the ruling class in Utah. 3 i & f t ? 4 , I I i 1 4 t w COLONIZING. ; ,The business of colonizing, which in centurv resulted in laving the fifteenth . f the foundation of the greatest and most national structure of time, improved . .seems to have again become the rage, field now the the vast interior of ' being ' the continent instead of its border, as it was then. Colorado appears , to be the favorite although Nebraska and .Kansas are receiving- - some atten-- ' ton from' the colonizers. For nianv reasons we were iuiliuod to look 5,-2- 82 car-load- car-load- five-acr- e REMARKABLE FACTS. Dr. Latham states the following remarkable facts respecting the climate of the Rocky Mountains : On the Atlantic coast, on the White and Alleghany Mountains, the perpetual snow line is, or would be, seven thousand feet above the sea. In the same latitude on the Rocky Mountains the snow line is from twelve to fourteen thousand feet above. The terminal line of vegetation on the White Mountains is five thousand five hundred feet; on the Black Hills, at Sherman, eight thousand and two hundred, and the still higher points, ns high as nine thousand feet, are covered with luxuriant growths of grass. Strawberries are picked on the Snowy Range to the height of eleven thousand feet, and evergreen grow to the ton of the highest mountains, which are over fifteen thousand feet high. The great table lands and the eleated plains and valleys of the mountains, such as North, Middle, and South Parks, and the Laramie Plains are one and two thousand feet above the tops of the Atlantic coast range mountains, and in the same latitude, are as mild as the Atlantic sea level. Omaha Herald. This needs a few amendments to make it accurate. First, there is no perpetual snow line on the Rocky Mountains in the United States. They do not attain a sufficient altitude. Second, evergreens do not grow above an altitude of 12,000 feet, while vegetation continues over the tops of the highest peaks. We have often marked the trails of wild game among the thick grasses and flowers of rounded summits, between 12,000 and 11,000 feet above tide water. Third, nowhere do the Rocky Mountains proper reach au altitude of over 15,000 feet. The bighest peaks are not more than 14,500 feet. Edwin Booth's Theatre. Edwin Booth is now ostensibly the manager of a New York theater, but by no means owns the theater which bears his name. When he began to build the theatre he thought his $200,000 would suffice to create it. But, when more money was father-in-lanecessary, he called upon his Mr. McVicker, who took a mortgage of $200,000. This soon melted and then a Mr. Robertson put in $400,-00Mr. Booth is now hampered, and has been severely pinched to pay the interest, and even a small part of the principle of the enormous mortgages which iu cumber the theatre. w, 0. ir sea-wash- If ed t - ob-fil- Arizona News. The Prescott Miner has the following intelligence ; The Indians recently attacked the mail carrier east of Tucson, but he succeeded in getting back to Sulphur Springs, where he remained until the next day. Col. Hunt and Lieut, llomur, with 50 men, are scouting in Turnbull Moun tains. Col. Green has taken measures to secure tho capture of the murderer of Perry Ravmond. rnnseay cf cmKxsd e&tiocs are too important to permit suehan equitable Eastern papers adjrtmeut of eoateEdv; We have not to debated. Treaty of Washington. room for it, and so givemr readers the summary, which we fiud in the WABOTHOTOH. the TREATY OF publish the text of the 4 following i Chicago Ti ibtine: as one a such might The settlement is both where parties have been expected were desirous of peace, and disposed to deal honorably with each other. There were a number of questions between the two Governments requiring adjustment 1. The claims for damages sustained by American commerce from Confederate cruisers sailing from British ports. 2. The claims of British subjects for cotton and other property seized by the United States. .3I. The use of the Brit- ish fisheries by American vessels, with the privilege of landing. 4. The navigation of the colonial lakes, canals and rivers, and curing their fish. 5. The San Juan boundary question. The treaty ' disposed of all these ques-tion- s in a way that will be generally acceptable to the American people. A tribunal of final arbitration is provided for, to consist of five members, one to be designated by the United States, the other by Great Britain, and the other three members by other sovereign powers. Certain fundamental principles, with rules and regulations concerning the rights and duties of neutrals, are established and by these rules the liability of Great Britain is to be determined. The responsibility for actual damages in the case of the Alabama is conceded, and the amount of the damages is to be ascertained and determined upon proofs, and in case of disagreement, to be referred to the arbitra- na-tbdqK- b Si? 'V. solemn. Thiers, however, moaped, lamented and wept, then commenced a speech, which lasted an hour, during which Bismarck said nothing but took seat at a farther end of the room, evi- - "T notoi. 4 "i. '' coumsiaTJaini emuir rlPn ha The following interesting account of low Bismarck obtained the French signatures to the Peace preliminaries, is 'urnished by Ur. Irily, one of the three South German Ministers who wre present at the conference. He says : We were all assembled in the parlor, when Bismarck enterd, chart in hand. A morose bat dignified . deportment took the dace of his usual pleasing and obliging manner. He spread the chart upon the table; and said : Gentleman, here you see the boundaries which we require, now . i , e resolved. Jules Favre appeared very quiet and rJUS ! .TELEQRAPI1JC mien q mratiD, j. AmitbnrAoinfciiMir. KJ rieton. -- T 4' Owi&j to the storm list night, br : this CC7JTWA OTficET, dispatches arc somewhet meagre morning. UTAH. Versailles, May 16. Sixty cannon CORINNE, n were found in Fort Vanvres on its I by the Varsaillista. The battery at Fort Hoatretout continues to cannonade the inrsrgsBta weeks, and is both find" ' . thin ' ' 1 dcmoUshiag he enc&nte of Paris and Govprotecting the approaches of the 5' ernment troop. Otherwise there is no lxi news of interest. London, May 16, Bonds of the city All Mali and Dxprai Coaches ' y" ' of Paris loan to the extent of 150,000 start ffcomtSUs ZXmua i A warning francs have been stolen. against their negotiation has been sent i to all European banks. t 7 TO AN The Echo of this morning has a disFH0H THU CARO. patch from Berlin, which gives additional particulars of the, treaty of peace just negotiated at Frankfort. The document The liar I Stork trlthl the jiert contains several articles and three sup' ' plementary clauses. The French are to WINES, restore all ships captured during the LIQUORS and CIGARH. war, or to refund tlieir value in cases where the vessels have been sold. The in the Th Uble tltraji rapplied with tt, bat nuutit. navigation treaty of 1862 is to be main41 - Neatly furnished rooms and (rood, tlan . inyZdtf tained, and all duties are to be abolished 1U. i pccu-patio- Trarcloro will , V Tlouao Eqitol to any tho Territory, ? FREE BU00 V . v dently not listening to Thiers harangue. At la looking at his watch, he jumped rom his seat, and, watch in hand, came toward the table where we were sitting, and said wi an icy composure : it is now 12 1 oclock, in twelve tours the armistice expires, there is no :ime for sjpeechmakiug ; we must act; at the expiration of the last hour our batteries will open upon Paris, and like an avalahch'e our armies will sweep down upon defenceless France. Yes if a nation who insidsously attacks iin Alsace for six months. WALLACE Cx CO., peaceful neighbor while asleep, and SISSON, 16. Pacific The 8an Francisco, May whose reward for so doing would be tors. Honor and Capitol, then your pa- Hoast Womans Rights Suffrage Conven-io- n All other claims by citizens of both pers would be worth negotiating. met at Pacific Hall this morning. - - TJt-uliThe Lord exercises Right, Honor and The attendance was thirteen females and Corinne, countries, arising between April, 1801, and April, 1865, are to be ascertained Truth in His great Universe,and through which was subsequently JOBBERS IS by an ordinary Board of Commission our instrumentality has mantained these seventy males, increased to about one hundred. ers, to sit at Washington, whose decis principles and preserved Europe. I have now to leave you, for I require ions, when unanimous, are to be final, John B. Gough lectured this evening and, in cases of disagreement, to be de stx hours sleep, two hours for my meals; to an immense audience at the Pavilion. termined by the arbitrators. No claims this leaves you four for your decision for A goneral rain .fell throughout the on account of slave property are to be war or peace No more speeches; I State, causing great improvement in the considered, and claims for cotton by crave resolves which, lead to actions. were who British subjects actual, resiThiers disparittgly declared that they wheat crop. PRO vision 8, dents of the rebel States,' and subject, to could not possibly appear before tfie In Prison. Mrs. Fair the contingencies of war,' are also ex- National Assembly with anv proposition cluded. This cuts off all cases of as- involving the cession of territory ; and if d Liqtoxts, The cell in which Mrs. Fair is signment by the rebels, to unnaturalized this is to be ultimatum, he and his colhas bepn whiteued and furnished British residents, of cotton and other leagues would have to resign their man-catTOBACCO, satisWhereupon Bismarck replied : so that it is much more cheerful and property. The fishery question is factorily adjusted. Great Britain cedes I now impart to you my last words. comfortable thau when she was first CLOTHING, to the United States the right of Ameri- Rather than continue these negotiations mirfixed A and bureau there. placed can fishermen to take fish on the shores, much longer with a France sans author stand and three chairs have been HARDWARE, bays, harbors, and creeks of the Prov- iee, I will give up Belfort, but not one ror, a i it inces of Quebec, Nova Scotia and New inch more. In your hands now is con- added, and some rugs have been laid on AND j Brunswick, and the colony of Prince fided the fate of France, to decide upon the stone floor. Still, she complains of J i Edwards Island, with permission to war or peace. If the former is chosen, the draft when and the window, through land for the purpose of drying their nets it will be the fonrth time that you cou-jur- e visited her the Bulletin of reporter and curing their fish. The same right up war first, in July, therl after is extended to British subjects on the Sedan, afterward before Paris, when the yesterday, he found the prisoner shivereastern seacoast of the United States first negotiations took place, and again ing with cold. Mr. Kelly, the jailer, HAVING RESIDENT PARTNERS IN north of the 39th parallel of latitude ; now. But one thing I wish to impress that cell is the best one in the prissays this right in neither case to extend to upon roar mind. Jf you determine for on. It is large and Would le as com shellfish, salmon or shad fisheries, or war tnis time, you shall have a war fisheries in rivers and mouths of rivers. which your country will not relish, and fortahle as a cell can lie, were it not for Chicago and San Francisco, Fish oil and all fish caught in the sea, which will frustrate your desire to play the draft through what is at once a veu but not fish preserved in oil, are to with fire. Adieu ! I need rest. , tilator and a window. When Mrs. Fair Those words were spoken with a was first be admitted into the United States IMPORTING DIRECT FROM put in the cell, jWrsons who visand to the British possessions weight of a fait accompli, and fair France ited her observed that the ceiling was free of duty. lay crushed at our feet. Benumbed at The treaty docs not determine the re tins sentence, dismayed and .terrified be- completely covered over with large and AND lative value of these concessions ; but fore such power, the' French emissaries small wood cuts, taken out of the ltlicc that the advantage is largely with the yielded to the iron necessity, and signed r j and parted to the solid . f , ' United States is generally admitted, and, the document with trembling hands and Gazette, etc., masonry. Immediately over thehca Oar fiiellftlf In Trade re not rqanllnl to avoid controversy, a mixed commis tears in their eyes. of her bed, where she could not Ire'k up bjr mmy other House In thr country. sion to take the necessary evidence, and of sum whether determine Fastest Trotter in the World. without seeing it, was a picturirrep reany money ought to be paid in addition, and if 80, The chances are that the celebrated senting the hanging of a woman. Some how much, and in case ofydisagreeraent horse Dexter will have to take a back prisoner had relieved the monotony of We BespertfulUj call the attention an umpire is to be designated by a seat before long. Yesterday at the park his days and gratified his morbid taste friendly power. The navigation of the Stanford horse was Rivers St. Lawrence, Yukon, (in Alaska) the mysterious OF by covering the ceiling with these atrois be to to free Stilline driven around the track in a sulky by cious cuts. The Porcupine, and jailer has very properly .citizens of both countries ; the Welland who has the animal in caused Yank Smith, every one of them to be removed. M o u it and St. Lawrence Canals, the St. Clair cn1c k first mile half his was The Mrs. Fair, tbe charge. In conversation with and other canals, and the waters of Lake r A Michigan, to be also free to vessels of trotted over at a moderate speed, but on absorbing themes are the recent trial TO OUR both countries, upon paying the usual the last half-mil-e Smith let him out, and and the present condition aud future tolls. he crossed the score in 1:07. Keeping prospects of her little child. The latter The provisions of the treaty are to be slower till the last visits her mother every ' morning and at a trot, on, This Point ! Largo Sttictr approved by the Senate oud the British right wonderful mile was the half all and reached, never fails to carry some new or fresh Parliament, parts requiring payments of money bv the Congress of the horse was urged to his speed, and made fruit or, something which she fancies vjill AND United States; those parts relating to the last half' mile inl:07l. His time please her. Yesterday, when the door OCfcr intercourse with British America and them our Goods at as low figure noted by several reliable and expe- was opened to admit her, she exclaimed: the fisheries are to be approved by the was aseau be laid down lsera firoiu whom may be Mamma, here comes your little sunrespective Dominion and Provincial Par rienced parties, among mentioned Charley Shear aud George liaments. Market .f The difficulty in relation to San .Tuan Gilhert. Lelaud Stanford, the owner of light Mrs. Fair reads but little from either is a very simple one. Tho treaty of 1846 the also There on was the horse, ground. books or newspapers and keeps her bed provides that the northwestern boundary 3-- Orders promptly tilled. ' Purchasers from this time been about doubt no is having most of the time. Her mother and physhall follow by the middle channel sepaMontana routing to CorluMy are rrunitel rating the continent from Vancouver's made, and it is tbe fastest on record. A sicians' vfsit her daily. S. E. Bulletin . to call and exaalm EtockWd Ptire. Island. This was intended to be final, well known sporting gentleman who saw but, upon examination, it is found there the trial offered to C A. BROADWATER, wager $1,000 that he H. G. MACLAY, are several channels falling under that CABSGLL STEELE. r week and or, more Properly, two copld take the jiofse fora description, PRINCIPAL OFFICRSi Great Britain drive him a mile at 2:15. The horse has middle " channels. that the true boundary is the Rosario a somewhat romantic history, and, like California Street, Bmm Francisco. island of San the which DRR gives Straits, in this country,, his elevaW n reend Street, Sacramento. DD Juau to Great Britain, and the United many bipeds D work aud obscurity to 18 Ekbtern Iveaue, States claim that the true boundary is tion from hard JW, Chicago. w DDDD ' the Dellaro Channel, which makes the fame and ease has been rapid and re? ' ' The markable. Not many months ago he island au American possession. UCIEID M LLL facts, proofs, &c., are now to be laid be- did service in a butcher's cart in this . fore the Emperor of Germany, by whom IsOTJIH .. IB , city, and was sold for the paltry sum of the question is to be determined. The treaty, as a whole, ought to be rati $150. Stanford paid $3,900 for him, Barber, Shpp A Bath House, fied. The Alabama claims are specifi and could probably get $39,000 for his ' ' f i eally recognized, and to be paid, upon bargain. The pedigree of the horse is XL O. rtXCLAYC: COProFrittcra. n. X7. p, CPEXTCZn, - - Propr. proofs of their amount. Great Britain in have best who the those but dispute, Tin IS THE recognizes, in the treaty form, the law he is St. a know state that to reason makes her which governing neutrals, ONLY EXPRESS LINE HAVING liable in that case. How far the other Clair. ?Sac, JteparrUr, Hay 1 Cih and ba tiisi cases fall within that rule is to be au Eastern Connections. thoritativcly determined upon the merits Captain Moore and Company F, Thirt Through V .t xyj of each case. succeeded in killing thirty-tw-o Cavalry, will personally If British subjects, not residents of the some wtvs LsOw desiring Baths. A paehes ncestly, say thirty-fou- r rebel States, were despoiled of their Crcri Carlaaa'to MONTANA ET3ES. this the CORlSJiproperty by the acts of our Government near Pinal Mountain. For thanks Cap" : cf al ,ny2d;,n1. during the war, the same law which we tain and his men merit the , have enforced against Mexico, Veuezu civilized ela. and other States, requires uo to BEAR RIVER HOUSE, In make similar compensation. U Ui go. justice arid hohorable paymen Coring of others; we cannot refuse , to act with mmtb ! Geu-leme- n, 4 I . t f GROCERIES, 1 con-ine- e. n Chinese; Goods. v CHINA jkPA'N t - , - ( , t ut a I) r 1 -- at - , OVERLAND R RI m11 a- aAtXT EXPRESS LINE, 5 , - Hot f cold , --0-0- Cap '-- Jfci emanding : equal honesty toward those to whom we are responsible. In the matter of the fisheries, we are large gainers, not only in a pecuniary sense, but in the wajro haring that constant source of trouble The right td fish definitely settled. once secured will lie no longer open to discussion or controversy, and will produce no International conflicts, temporary or otherwise. The treaty is likelv to meet with some opposition in Kngland. and perhaps some in the colonies ; but the peace am swett Leonard a w x xtLlquorb, as,. Foreign Koehnes .553: Jk J1 T . t Ccrmcn Bittern Wf ' '';-55a- Via 37c? rssktf is 4 hi covctf'crAirxC - - Caaar D Kt BBvr, - AinrAywjJ e: a 4 V P V h rS f ll and no m y UTAH. C0SIXXK, myS-dS- m fnyftUf 1 comfHrtaUe. T CiJ wtt tr sjulA'f make thr ' tie djoUrs hrau C Uxan. WJ - |