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Show - ssss In t specs beexuso articles made of many NEWS. EVENING home materials DESBET .GEORGE Q. CANNON,. ' iDITOHiAND PUBLISHER. Aapit CHANGES THE BAIIROAI Y1LI 10. IMS. ntODUCE. T The rapid progress which ULelng made both cmI and. west In the construction of the railroad glrea us the assurance that la thapace of a few short months the continent will bo f panned by the ir n bands, and this city be In railroad communication with the Atlantic and the Pacific. We hear It said that by the 1st of October, and some assert by the 15th of September, the U. P. B.B. will have reached Green Hirer, and before Spring it wili hare reached this valley. We trust these hopes will be verified, yet we scarcely think they will; for if next winter should commence early, bat little, if anything, can be done after the first of November, between Ham 'a Fork and this valley, in building the line. If the snow should fall as it does usually in the Wasatch Mountains, it will prove an insurmountable obstacle to the construction parties. ' But if the Iilne should even be completed to this Valley by July next, it will speak high ly for the skill and enterprise of the com Dan v. and be a performance of which every man who has any of the re. sponslbility of superintending and bnlidlog the Ilne may justly be proud. Predictions respecting the changes that are to be effected in .this Territory by the Pacific Railroad are freely, circulated. It is to do for us what mob violence, persecution, expulsion from houses and lands, and In some instances, even death itself, have failed to do In the past. It Is the agency destined to break down and totally remove our peculiarities and to bring us to the level of civilization. These are the anticipations Indulged in by some respecting it; and so long as it gives them any satis faction to indulge in such hopes, and they do not hurt us, we are quite wil ling they should derive all the comfort from them they can. We have our own theory about the effect the Railroad will have upon this Territory and people, and we feel assured that time will bring us satisfactory evidences of its correctness. We may say, however, that if the Railroad affords easy facilities for those who axe not Litter-da- y Saints to, emito grate this Territory, it also presents equally good opportunities for them to take their departure. The same railroad that brings them, can, with equal ease, carry them away again. But there will doubtless be very great changes effected by the railroad in business affairs In this country. Those who hare resided here since 1847, 1S43 and 1310, and even later, can look back to those days and contrast them with the present. The change is a very striking one in many respects. It Is but natural that it; should beeoln settling a new country like this. But with the completion of the railroad .the changes will be greater and more rapid. The disadvantages which we have had to contend with, inconsequence of our great distance from the marts of the world, will be removed, and we will be placed in entirely different circumstances. Goods, etc., can be brought from the sources of supply In as many days ns they formerly required months. Many articles which have been difficult to procure, or when procured, have been at exorbitant rates will, by means of the railroad, be easily obtained and at comparatively cheap rates. With these inevitable changes In prospect it would be decidedly unwise for our people to make no preparations to meet them. The railroad will not be an unmixed benefit to us unless we pre. pare for It. It will not put an abun dance of money in circulation for us unless we lay the foundation of branches of business that will bring it to us. It is a mistake to suppose that the Railroad, in anu oi useu, is going u maxe our country great and its people wealthy. hue there is a demand for labor upon Its construction, and we have that la bor to supply, money will flow into us; but when this demand ceases, and we have no products that can be transported at a profit for which money can be had in return, we will be in a worse position than, if we had no railroad; for the ease with which the country can then be drained, at speculator's own prices, of breadstuff's and such articles as we now produce will be a detriment to us. Being In pinched circumstances we will beat their mercy: and how tender their mercies are we have had some opportunity of knowing. We must take the necessary steps to create new industries. Action has already been taken in some directions to do this. This must bo persevered in. The entire community is Interested in the success of theso schemes. Ourmanufae- torers,, mechanics and merchants should endeavor to shape their various branches of business so as to be prepared for the comin'g change. Home manufacture must bo extensively and persistently pursued. We have artisans and mechanics, plenty of them, as excellent in their various pursuits as any to be found on the continent. This conceded. That will prevent, when the railroad la completed and transportation rapid anu Cheap, their comoetlnff ihk ; the same cliujcs elsewhere in the man- v ucu secies as we need? i i Home manufacture has languished in ' 4 H I . . I; V i rv. wftr n rt T LTV. A . were coarser than those which were imported. - But y the railroad the raw materials can be Imported, when necessary; as cheap or cheaper titan the manufactured article is now, and they can be manufactured here. For instance, many of 'our citizens have been desirous of having a finer article of furniture than can be manufactured out of. timber grown . in - this country. They have imported tables, chairs, fcc. from the States, and many of these articles when brought here have proved very flimsy and unsuitable for our dry and trying climate. They have not given satisfaction. So also with carriages, sleighs, wagons, and a variety of articles which are regularly brought here every season. Timber, and very other needed material for the production of household furniture, carriages, wagons, sleighs, agricultural Implements, glass, Ac, can bo imported and manufactured here, and' when and made up here out of work selected materials, by Judiciously men who have a local reputation to maintain, they will be far more service able than anything that can.be import ed. Chairs made here out of such ma terlals will not be unsafe to sit upon, carrisges and wagons will not need the repairs they do now; the purchaser can be suited by having articles made to his taste, and In every way will the country be benefited by the change. These are not impracticable theories; they are perfectly feasible. Our citizens should not be backward or indiffer ent about carrying them out. We have the. advantage of position; we are the first settlers, acquainted with the coun try and its, wants and are here on the ground. We should not let these ad vantages slip through our fingers. If we do, there will be no one to blame but ourselves. Labor is higher here than in the East; but when money shall circulate freely, men will be able to work at cheaper rates than they do now; and, besides, articles manufactured here, if honestly and tastefully done, will al ways command a higher price' than those that may be imported. As for capital to carry out these plans, there is no people better situated than we to obtain it by a principle that to has been found work well in carry on branches of business. many ing -, rnnstructed from the summit of .Echo to the mouth of the North Fork would Km abandoned, as this new line would strike in to that down the asprincipal tne one canon about the tame piac on the opposite side was expected to do, which had Deen round impracticable. two tunnels in the diIf adopted, the head of North Fork, and the the at vide, on both sides of them. work heavy very be will and instead a much dropped, more easily constructed line will have been found, with lighter work,' and with only one tunnel 250 feet through; but it will be two miles longer, and prea higher grade sents the disadvantage of than has to be employed in any other . part of the two canons. .Th trial of Vanaolar for of Dr. Harconrt has resulted ' 2 In a verdict of not guilty. LiOUlS. xnere Menu w ire sua Jfit.T nf robbers in the western sta-- o between Srtofthe State, aa the Butler ana xiarxuwu T "v'rrC VI iT armea men. or uwu.t.uu by several hnn- mhhed ry three several f ether slmihvr out dTedollars;occurrea in uw vuuimy rages have ! w My-x- ttairs j BARGAIHS!! CASE OF PARALYSIS. Mm. fbmmodort' Van v;H"vf struck with paralysis. been has derbuilt - Of the i i JTTTIY STUART! j .T- ; to-da- ! - fi VTTLHT NIGHT Grset Hhrtorioal Tracsdy of. .. rxenca li. w. mt.. rmri of Gen. Halnlne. y -- m. wroni! T.TrRTtuN. - - - . as . .fir me man t and larcely attended by military the a BADE IyrttCh Trscedlsans, ' ' v H societies. Government, state ana civil Differs considerably In places, but is not and adsptad to like as high as was expected. civil officers, ac RffwrittM. alterad. arrsnced anything REST. CON WAY, issq WANTS K. J. American j me ADAMS tne that informed the by Lawrence Stag Major --Jin response to an invitation highest grade in Echo Cafion is 40, exwas new he line which on the cept addreea from tome of. the Bepubll "Franc la Adams de-about to run, where from previous work and v aui i;iuwi rtaarles he was satisfied it would be 110, cllnea an active political Miss IXCE a MART STUART I into enter to while 116 Is the maximum allowed to canvass, preferring rest ana reuremeui boused. In nearly air Weber Cafion-. he declares, uowotwimium the erode is also under 40. though to- have undergone no change. jiiuujiw TUESDAY, Aug, 11, '68, wards the mouth, where it debouches MASNsl STRIKE CONTINUED.. of the Great His-The performsnee will consist Into Bait Lake Valley, it wiu;oe nigner, O VOrlClU XIUfBUJ, lii ASK, buumcvi, of the Bricklayers?beincr. as I am Informed, about 90. In The President comthe sanction rAfnsedto is much and TT.un is it road level, the places the traJ enter than might be expected.even I.. rfth the maater masons,most two the therefore, continues.thougn by those best acquainted with canons down which it runs. The max- strike, of the journeymen are at work on thel? imum curvature allowed is nine and a terms. half decrees, but they have not been rntlTH OF A MILLIONAIRE. compelled to employ any sharper curve A private cable despatch announces the HABT STL'ABT, QnB of WKtlil. tban six degrees. Miu NeUleD Colebrook Elizabeth death or isawin a. dvcvcud,ui"u" gaecn Mr MeKsnzls Leicester atParla ECHO yesterWEBER. died PROGRESS IN AND ofHoboken, who Mr J B Lindsay Lord Burleigh New the of Commodore Down Echo the grading must be more day. He was .. Mr J M Hardis . Melville.:. --Mr J E Hyde un- York Yacht Club, and one of the prinj Amius Panlet man and the .Mr J O Graham Mortimer...George finished part iscompleted, prosrresslnr rapidly. E D Crowther Ties are being got out in the vicinity of Railroad, also of nearly all Hoboken Seymour.. Executioner. Guards, Pages, Bheriff, works in public Attendants. liear river, and other places; and were and of the principal The flairs at Hoi Anna Kennedy Mrs M BowTing the other portions of the line east as Ladles uzabeth's of Court, Ac Queen and as the and near completed this cafion, with ties boken ferryU private public all at half mjt and rails ready, the pars might be run kIMI. luctc ncio cm uuiiuiuga wonThondsy Evening-- , Ana. 13. 1S6S, or a n;cno to in mouth ARRIVED. ning tne ROSHCRANS derfully short time. There Is not much Clan PoaAPTftTlH flTriV BEHEFIT of Hiss ANNETTE INCK of the line yet finished down Weber; edW..Mnnn had a he long Interview with; but as many of the men who worked in tne irreeiaeni, ana buuucuw DOORS OPEN at VA o'clock. Performance Echo have gone down Weber Cafion. it ed Seward, from instructions Commences Secretary punctually at 8. will make rapid progress there aleo. mlAtiva to American claims and the or The mode new treaty with Mexico. The General ; CONTRACTS will leave soon for Mexico. CIIABLXS F. JOXF.S, Adopted by President Young, is very Manufacturer and Dealer in superior to that usually employed for FOXtSXON. construction, especially with the class of AUSTRIA WON'T INTERFERE. Stoves and Store Furniture, workmen who are grading tne line on Also every description of a in 6. Von Baron Beust, dehis contract. In most of instances a Vienna, ftheet Iron and Copperwsre. at Tin, the SchuUenfest, speech party of men would combine together, own material made up to ad ran Merchants' interfere not would clared Austria that and work it as take their fecond West Street, between Court House in German affairs, and that the Empe partners. They did not tie themselves t522l 1m ven of ror Old Fori, Salt Lake City. and to policy any ignores nor kill did they endeavor utterly to hours, as little as possible, espe-- geance. time by doing Ia11 wVion tits ivaj waf tiia uw jJ'lwoa" Ull tv mv MORE REVOLUTION, ETC., IN MEXICO uiaii t uou off them: for everyj man had as deep an The Herald'a Mexico special of the interest In tho completion of the Job as 31st says the lion. Horatio jjemoriquez the "boss" had, whose particular busi- has pronounced against the government PROPOSALS ness was to direct the work. In this way in the State of Vera Cruz, and had seized the amount of labor performed in places of the villages along the railroad at times would seem almost incredible some was a heavy tariffon his own He AT were it stated, every man doing bis account levying come into on had that freight OUR . LOCAL'S CORRESPON- "level best" to complete the work in the his hands. shortest possible time. Of course, too, were going on in the State DENCE, No. X. FORT BBIDGEB, U.T. such a thing as a strike was not to be ofHostilities but insur Fuebla. the in Queretaro of under such circumstances: THE RAILROAD IN THE CAKON8. thought been compelled to submit. indeed I have not heard of a strike on gents hadand Patone had been released President Young's contract since the Ortega Juarez. by Echo, Aug. 2. commencement of the work. The blockade at Mazatlan had been MOSQUITOS. Assistant Quartermaster's Office, raised. ABSENCE OF PROFANITY The great American humorist. A. Disorder; or quarrels, in the camps was The Vomlto is severe at Vera Cruz. Fort Bridger, U.T Avff 3. 186SL one on remarked of but the words. "I'm highly 'gratifying. In Ward, HATTIEX." camp ATX. In duplicate, wlU be saddest when I sing," that the man who less than anunaream.n.ouior between Telegraphic advices from St. Domingo SEALED PHOPOS Office unUl 12 o'clock: M., at thla thousand the two three in and working de- Aug. 15th, 186S, for the dellyery at this Post of Baez state uttered them was a fool to sing at all. two been had and that Hayti caHons, did I hear proranity; and feated at Lay bo by the Cabera revolu But night before last I made the ac it Is not to be tolerated there long. tionists. likely y attended two very interhave a of I number crea of happy quaintance Salnave still held his own in Port au 300,000 pounds of Barley. Bishop Sheets' Prince, and is said to be gaining ground tures that sing when they are about to esting meetings, onehisinown hands and attended by bo busiest, and do not seem to compre- camp those of John W. Young, and the other in the interior. 150,000 poundA of Oats. hend what sadness is. Lively and well at Kimball & Co's camp opposite Hang LUSIUNGTON DEAD. London. The Blrht Hon. Steven IN SACKS. occupied when most people are asleep, ing Hock. of of is Court the come Arches, "WOBK Lusbington, around In the happiest mood. THE MAGNITUDE OF THE they and would almost make onn thlnlr-fhaOn the Pacific Railroad cannot be well dead. Delivery to commence immediately after the HORSES WANTED. Contract Is awarded, and t he fall amount to be by reading about it; were 'harmless, musical comprehended men are seen at work in Paris. Gen. Fleury has issued a cir- delivered on or before the 31st day of Deo..or18G8. When a gang of to inspection by the undersigned his creatures, with no interest except to one then a nuie lurmer on cular calling for the purchase' of addi sublect place, audand aniuorized agents. amuse vou. I would like tn wll h another anostill further on tional supplies of horses for the army. ' Each bid to be gang, accompanied by the pi ace wnere jl sieptforon riuay nignt ther, with another beyond that, each notguaranty 'of two or more responsible bidders, SUCCESSOR parties, PROCLAIMED. the musical in which eancr that la be contract Level," executed If the will doing "Mosquito that faithfully sects were wimout number. anil their would engaged The Sublime Porte awarded. Constantinople. ordinarily be. looked upon as a r tin era were inserted with as mur.h ce work of some magnitude; and then con has formally proclaimed the eldest son By order of - sider that for hundreds of miles similar or the viceroy of .Egypt the rightful and case as the tongue volua and of lerity mm t i If&l.l Br'vt. CoL II. A. MORROW, Cmd'g Post. canes of men are similarly employed legitimate successor fo the ! Irwvlltv. where mosnulto bars should be constructing, while ties are being got Throne in the event of the death of IsJ. H. BELCHER, Br'vt. Maj., Acting Quar- u termaster. on some is mael Pasha. at a premium, out by the hundred thousand at points Creek, bulphur T t 1 II lt d219:ld xear IOUr miles jruiu xtiver oiuuou. along the route; and that track layers CRETANS WANT VICTORIA'S HELP.are busily employed stretching their London. ON TUB BACK TRACK. A dispatch from Constan even rails at the rate of miles per day. On the return there was opportunity with tens swelling says the Levant Pott contains ahundreds, and tinople statement for Dayiutr more attention to the general hundreds swelling to to. that the Cretans haveapplithousands of men; appearance of tho country and to the while from ocean to ocean across a great ea ior neip to nueen victoria. A FEW OF quantity or worK uone, manIswhen seek continent the mighty vibrations are felt FRENCH TRADING POST CAPTURED BY not mueh from this vast pulsation; then somejust ing after details. There REBELS. work done yet, comparatively speaking, conception be formed the of mag might London. Late telegrams from 8han on Messrs. Nounnan's contract, though nitude of the work. a considerable amount or labor has been ghae bring the following: A French ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. expended in getting a "good ready." trading station near the frontier line of Yet there will be little diihculty in putCochin China was attacked on the 16th All along the line, as far as my travels work. of the Tho June is were ting throughuoes by a band of Anam country SEWING rebels; the FAMILY MACHINES extended, the utmost courtesy was e ana twenty-fivnot contained men all tne siriae post with manifested towards the representative eye roiling that monotony which a level retrion pre of the News, and the popularity of the told, who made a valiant insistence, but sents. Towards the western end of their paper seemed much greater tban even I after a desperate fight were overpowercontract the ravines begin to assume had expeoted, being spoken of every ed, and captured and massacred, A JUST RECEIVED. AL&o, that magnitude which is usually asso- - where in the highest terms. was force French subseauentlv strong ciaieu wun canons. E. L. 8. sent against the band on the 21st of June, and after a sharp fight the French A BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY. Sewing Machine OIL, succeeded in recapturing the position 1 Leaving the line of the railroad near anu aispersing tne rebels. .. For lh Df$cret Evening Xetct. the tu nut Is in Miller & Patterson's conI IN SMALL BOTTLES, by MANIFESTOES. tract, and striking up unto the rising on crrouud the north, which fnrm European mail advices to the 8th rtortlnn of the nnrtlmrn lionmlam have been received. Paris gossip states & ROBERTS ' that In, September the JEmperor will Echo, a beautiful country opens to the OENXSRAX. two maniiesioes. une will be view, rar away 10 me norm ana northMEMBERS UNSEATED. west it stretches out, undulating and apuDiisu letter to the minister of foreicm Affair SOLE AGEXTS FOB UTAH. rolllncr. inters ne rued with Innnmtmhit Sew Orleans. Two more Democratic vindicating the foreign a. policy of the '"I little valleys. Bhould this ever become members of the House have been un i.mrire. anu uie oioer nror.iamntfnn A Fine Lot Women'i and a rainy cumaie, anu me rrosts or winter seated and their places given to colored to the French people, appealing to them become lees severe in the higher lands, members. Yesterday the Democratic for a continuance of their confidence this stretch of country would support members offered a protest to the action in the dynasty or xiapoleon. Clilldrcn's Shoes and Hen's millions of inhabitants. The horizon is of the ilouse, which was directed to w . . j bounded, which ever way the gazer be returned to them. The cholera nreva.il &lftrmlnDliM turns, far as tho eye can reach In the In the Senate, Jewell offered a resolu- tha t. and Boy's Boots and Bro Tn n a t1. era . m KVA clear atmosphere or this region, with tion that a committee of three be ap w TlarKaw n. oi o,uw, aiea. i here lofty mountains whose highest summits, pointed to wait upon Gov. Warmouth BlCSkpopaisuoa UBTUU Alt. BCTCIU OiBer IOWD8. and of gonsy J ust Opened time in the the clear sun- to ascertain the place glisten "l murders which with REPORT the he coruscations and hundred CONTRADICTED. of diamond light fifty committed within- the There is no truth in the been says have peaks. . . r rpnnrf" iUm . BASSETT & nOBEETS. an- in'" tt maue iukuj leib XiOHUOU. weess. six jeweii ni psst rnm ueui HXrtCTED CHAKOE OF LLNE. tensely bitter speech. A little east of Cache Cave I was for d21Mir SUTLER FOB CONGRESS. 4 tunate enough to find Major Lawrence's NEW a. himself announces as Untler Ttn surveying party, who were Just com candidate for election to Congress he "i stoves and stove furniture. c F. Jones, 8, L. or a new line, pleting me had running been practicable, would will Kivtk itmnir nnnnnlttnn fnr thA Ra.- Bargains, and Auction which, if it have passed around the mountain publican nomination, bis principle opof Cache Cave, and poDCDk ueiug AUJIm vjitsu. ovuuuira lvlnz south-eanot far from the old emi CONaBESSJONAX. NOMINATION. down, coming road, would nave joined theune grant Ban Francisco. 8. The Union first ; Of San Francisco. California. now running down Echo, at the mouth district convention, nominated of the North orK. Hut it had been Frank M. CAPUT CA P1TAL tn Plxley lor uongress. rally found impracticable; and Major Law- Cmlm, 0M f750,0O owura im remoTed INDUSTBIAL EXHIBITION. renoe cxeairnea running a une sown tne STOCKHOLDERS PERSONALLY LIABLE. opposite side of the canon. This will The 6th Industrial exhibition', at the ! caoicK Territorial and keep pretty close to the stage road, from Merchants' Institute, was opened to- iTrrJT,. j f? me mountain which lies west or Yellow day with appropriate ceremonies. asalnst Loss Fire on terms ;lisare as any other Firstby Class Company. Creek station, skirting its western base. WASTIDkB CaW Mnta nfV.t.tL'l. 11 STORES RECOVERED. He had no doubt but this Una would be Bramntlv and uinltaM aitltAl a&d paid.- - - '. shot and shell from the t practicable, with a grade in one place of All the guns, steamer Stoanec mo wrecked be have is wouia been V " svaepwa, ana tnatexpeciea ue one now belns received at Potf Townsend, , 1 SaltLlL.city, ' redphiawoMattaerapwlCUVc i i ; ;u jdfis-lsr no TmrMqht Arm G?ral a " . BMHS!!i 1 i PUBERAL OF GEN. TIAXPINE. 4I. TiOsIas. H. B. 0Isvscs : j , t. E are now opening at the OLD miss inoe: I1EY7 YORE STORE, . -- well-season- ed NINETY THOUSAND DOLLARS CL.OTH1NG, i&c, two-tulr- us --..- .Mr Comprising, i i DRESS PATTERNS, to-da- y: SUB-LETTI- NO . CLOTHS and CASSIMEKES, SIIEETEVGS, - - IjIXEXS MIJSMXS. fc : DEMMS, &c. ; to-da- y, TAILORS TROmiXGS. sub-contrac- ts, CEOTHIXG, ww m mm 3Lo., Ac, . Which we are selling at Private and Public Sale Lower than any other House in the Territory, as enure d eiosea oat im the NEXT THIRTY DAYN. u nau Auction Sales Every Day nt II o'cloek. Si W. JOEL & CO., 0221 Im Auctioneer)!. i To-da- W . I co-operati- on good-nature- (j r -- HARDWARE! TTTE are rn receipt of a HE Ayr ASSORT NAILS, Cut and Wrought, d, GLASS all Sizes, l! : r mm i?lows, - 9 A FORKS, Vice-Reg- al SHOVELS, ' ' LM-- - SINGER'S SAWS, Mill and Circular, JIOJPJE, 1 : i all sizes, table & Pocket t 1 4.9 Cutlery, All of which will be sold Low for Cash. 1 Eldredge" & Clairson. 4 5 ! BASSETT or d219-2- i 3ust Arrived ! ... And for Sale Cheap, FOR GRAIII OR CASH AT ' sv-t- a snow-covere- at , d, KMfllL&MWiffl' A General Assortment of i 1 9 . L TO-DA- Y. UillOII-lliSOBAIICEuCOMPAIi- st y, is CJrocerleo, . .... ; I : -- j i V OABDIiEIlY and other to-ds-y, T. ! f UqcanbsbadU.4 "t rrfiT 1 . y ; I . ; 1 , It ft I rf ' i iis-'- ! ' ; I ..' .j BOOTSMnD SHOES. HATS, &c, dall - |