OCR Text |
Show 4 f - w ' j - i ; . sseSBSWM THE EVENINGiNEWS. To-L- y alyt W4 A, It wi -f .- A .4 ,. . " w IiJi no ordinary; derre pleasure that we opened a package this morning:, which the mail brought to us, ami found therein a book bearing the title of "The History and Philosophy of Marriage ; or, Polygamy and Monogamy compared, lly a Christian Philanthropist." Our pleasure has Ita origin In the f;ut that one, owning the came of Christian, hai born' found sufficiently bold to lubllh a book In the city of TJoeton, in thetat of Masaachusatta, on IhJs subject, la which comparLons are drawn between the system ofj4u-ralit- y of wire and Monogamy. A'fuan's advocacy of or opposition to patriarchal marf iago doe not affect Its truth If It wr opposed to the laws of Xature, whic h are the lawaof God, 1U practice by all the inhabitants of the earth would not make it true or Its effect other than hurtful. On the other hand, being true und of heavenly origin, In fact the correct order tinder which mankind should live it would ftill bo unchanged, though ail the world should decry and and refute to admit It prac- j -- : lm-lrta- nt ( in de-uoun- eelt . The system of patrlarchial marriage be Lug the true system .under which mankind should live, If all the nations of men were to assemble In solemn congress and declare that Monogamy should be enforced, God' law would till be Immutable, and Monogamy would be found a failure. No true and permanent development ana progress can be secured to an individual, a people or a nation which lives under a law that does violence to or comes In contact with a law of nature. Yet It Is gratifying to every loverof truth In these day when Instead of worshipping God men bow down to the shrine of popularity to see a man fear leaair tP forward and declare the aln cere conviction of hie eoul, though In so doing he come directly in contact with the prejudice of the age. The views of the writer of this book are con sidered peculiar and startling; but he is credited with sincerity. Hon. G. W. Curtis, M.A.,Profeeocof Itecent literature in Cornell University and F. B. Sanborn, M. A., Associate Editor of the Springfield ISepubliccm, who read the proof abeeta of the work, say that Ithaa the curious distinction ef beluga Chris tian plea for polygamy; but that the an thor has treated a jrery dimcult and delicate subject with knowledge,candor, and evident honesty of purpose, and while It advances opinions with which they oanoot agree, they cannot quarrel with IU spirit, and as itt statements and arguments are founded on ex ten lve obeervatloQ and reading it is enti tied to attention, respect and refutation, not to be met with mere contradiction but with arguments. ThU ! fair, and an evidence that the o like this. The free world move. discuMion of the principle of patriarchal marriage must liave the effect to familiarize men with the reasons for bellev- iug and" practicing it It la men'a Ignorance of tho subject that has been the chief dlffleulty tho Lnttcrnhvy Sainta have had" to 'contend with." Let there be a free discussion of the subject, and their position in regard to this principle will be everywhere better understood, and the abominable falsehoods and mis representations which now find ready circulation will have no believers. "With the author of thU work we say: tice. 4 . ' . t .'V sty ' -- .A i v f i Hi t , , "it4 , i i ' "Modern writers, whose works are tbe exponeata of European clvllhmioo, hare hitherto said ererythios njrainnt that social Ttetn which wrmlu plundltjr or wire, mod nothing or it. Bui bare it almost without they examination or debate, rather because It Is straars than be cause they have proved it to be it fault. No one has given to the subject the time and research necessary to Its fair elucidation, llut aa a Teaerable institution the social ajatein or polj$rmy doea not deaarre much treatment, ttuch treatment, auperdlloua tMAldea being nnlast, U nnphiloaophlcsi, and unworthy a liberal and an enlightened az. lu great antiquity alone should entitle it to sufiiftient respect to be heard, a! least, in IU own defeoce. It constitute an part In hnman hUtorr. It U a important Itreat fact that cannot be Ignored; and as such. It must be atudied and known. To insist upon the condemnation of this svs-tewithout hearing lta defence, is opprW. alon. ir we disapprove of their believers In plurality of wires practice ws ahould ba nMrd tn make subaUntlal objectiona to tnemi and If we wwa io taacn mem our own, we ahould be able to cire equal substantial reasons. If tbe advocates of polygamy are in the minority in the Christian wnrld, let the common rights of the minority, be freedom of debate, and the granted them. prirUegeoeof protest;toand It their aoiemn JUtened with respect, and be protect tho current records of the diy. upon spread And, oa tho other hand, if those who practice this ancient system do constitute the majority of mankind, it cannot be either uninterastlnjr or unimportant to Inquire what has made it so universal, and caused it to be adoptednearly b ao many different nations, and even different race of men, among whom are, no doubt, some persons who are Justly distinguished for their wis- -. dom, their piety and their humanity. We shall extract largely from this worg to aow our reader tbe view of a 'Chrhtlan phlUathroplsV' who hu spent fifteen; year In the study of this subject. It will be Interesting to them as It Is to us, to see the operation of the truth, accompanied m it always I by coo-detno- ed m, 1 j j the Spirit of the Lord, upon a mind which has been pursuing It own In estimations Independent of and dls ttuct from the Latter-da- y Balnts, lie their monogamy.but, no doubt, on account ef their Christianttr.Even a per retted Ro Christianity, a corrupted Christianity oeuer man laoiaxry or man Christianity Mohammed an Vim. What, then . may we not hote when Christianity ahall beoome free and purs," and restored to its pristine and glory? simplicity taone fIlistory "An Idolatrous nation practialn to exist able been never has gamy does not furnish one examDla, Such na-aa tions soon beoome so Incurably corrupt to incur the wrath of God, and are swept away from the face of the earth. - either civilisation nor barbarism; military power or pusillanimity; tyranny or freedom; monarchy, aristocracy, or democracy; lit ers tare, ext.- - wealth, irenius. or stupidi ty has been able to save them. Many such States and nations have started in the race of glory and perpetual empire; but each of them has come to perpetual decay. Such were the dUSerent States o ancient Greece and ancient Italy, many of them distin guished for having produced men of the moat renowned experience in the various arts of peace and war, and several of them Decom- achieving extensive conquests anasoon col Inir vast empires; yet they very and went to ruin. And such was lapsed the cue ofthe many scores or perhrpe hun dreds of the States of all Europe bo- fore the establishment of - Christianity. They rose, they flourished, they became Licentious, they felL Wave after wave of the purer races of the polygamlsta of Aala rolled over tnem, and aasomea tneir places; and as these. In turn, fell into their social habits, and adopted their monogamy, and became corrupt, they also became extinct, and were succeeded by newer and purer immigrations. On the other of Asia . have hand, the polygamiat nrearred their aocial Duritv. and alone with it many of their nationalities, through age, notwithstanding tneir idolatry every Such are the na and Mohammedanism. tions of China, Japan, Persia and Arabia, whose living languages and existing laws date back to the very earliest record of Christian nation antiquity. An intelligent naa never yet exiated. pracualng polygamy aim ply because the two institutions hare hitherto Deen xaiseiy deemed lncompauhie and irreconcilable. The' Gnostic noreey had ao soon corrupted the springs of Chris tian learning, and the Grecian and I to man hierarchies had so soon usurped their seat or izmstian autnonty, tnat tne freedom and almpUdty of the pristine faith were perverted, even betbre such an experiment could be made, as I shall fully demonstrate in the next chapter and 'now it is most probable that if such an experiment shall ever he made, it win oe on the continent ox tree America. , -- Westward the eooraa of amplra takes Ita way; nm so s a finioar A yd enall close toesjrsaax drama wttn the'dsy, Time's noblest oosprinf is the lask ps, "Polygamy is not barbarism, for it has been maintained and auDnorted trr auch men aa Abraham, Moses, .David, and Solo mon; wnoee superiors in all that conati- of mind and modern times. Yet polygamy, though it be not bar bar lam. hss almost always and everywhere prevailed. where a aim plealural,ahd tn artificial state or society exists. He talk with very great plainness on and-refineme- mannersthe wrld has never known, either in ancient or. the : " - : 'I "ixruxrrr or .xodsbjt moxooaxy. The Bible prohibits prostitution. The ancient Greexs and Romans forbade- poly' gamy, but permitted prostitution. Mod era monogamy i pretends to' forbid both, but rcallv permits prostitution also. Our monogamous morality is, therefore, that of ancient rtgtnum. ana not tnat or tne uihie, and prostitution is: as much a necessary part of our. aocial system aa it .was that at Athens,' at Corinth or at Home. Our magistrates are not' ignorant of the extent of do not atPQjblio - licentiousness; but the?', seek to tempt to suppress it. They-onl-y conceal it, and confine It, If possible, within its present limits, requiring its votaries to keep it in the dark.. Our1 police Officers know almost every prostitute that walk the street, and allows her to ply her nefarious trade unmolested, so long as i she is As the Sparitana polite and unobtrusive.. are oftheir reputed to havetosaid to the youth state, in respect 'steal, but tionot thett, t caught at it,' ao the guardians of our public morals say, you insy be as licentious as you please, only make 'no public dlsplsy of your Immorality. The reason of this connivance at prostitution must be because, .our , legislators, and Judges be ileve its suppression to be , Impossible; and with our system of. monogamy, it is impossible. If there must be a multitude of women unmarried and unprovided for, there will be a multitude of and. If there are a multituds ofprostitutes; prostitutes there will be a multitude of men, who, like Shakespeare's FalstaiT, will decline marriage, becauae the can be 'better ao- commodated than with a wife:, and so the evil will go on continually Increasing and llaaix. Tn Je oondling Hospipropagating tal, the Fire Points House of Industry, and the Home for Friendless and Abandoned Women, must be built alongside of the brothel; and their numerous inmates must be maintained cither by public tax or (most frequently, by by Christian the latter): so charity that honest men moat sup- own their and wives children Krftcast-of- f drabs and bastards of nnrViltr unprincipled libertines. If we must have public let us have them openly and E restitute oldly, as the ancient Greeks and Itoman did; and let them be publicly licensed, as were under Caligula, and as they are they to said be atill In France; and let the State derive at least sufficient revenue from them to bury their murdered infants, and to up their abandoned foundlings." bring .We cart only give a small part of hi reasoning upon the evils of the monsga-mo- us system of marriage. In the appendix to hi work, he says: "I yield to no one in a most profound respect for chastity, and in a moat sincere desire to promote It; but by; aa much as I venerate true chastity by so much do I detect Its counterfeit. X have demonstrated that our present system of monogamy is s counterfeit, stimulaUng the - meat loath-acm- e rice of prostitution tzl hypocrisy; and I assert that the only effectual manner in which social purity and honesty can be maintained is by promoting . the utmost freedom to marry, and the utmost purity of marriage. All men are not alike. Let ' there be no Procuitcan marriso-bed- . If are there any who are able and willing, for the love ef God and the better service of the to a volunChurch, to devote themselves life f honest celibacy ' we respect and tary venerate them, tor it. If there are others who will each honestly and cheerfully content hlmsslf with one wL'3, and, fa noils t all others, keep hlmrclf only unto her ao long a they both ahall live.' at the same time avokilnt all mstrlnymlal abuse and excess, we will respect them but little less than the former; but, aaln. if there are others, whose measure cf vitality Is so lar9 that they cannct and win net be restricted to a single marria-- u, or whose wires are confirmed invalids, and hopelessly barren and incapable of matrimonial duty. would not oblige thess men either to mur-I der cr to divorce their present wives, or to . , - 1 a aw k 3gly K?;rP"diur j ; ' it i "If there is any truth in the Holy JQfble, it teaches the innocence or polygamy ana in- the sinfulness of every form of sexual lODlf Ufa trv m&f S cmrfArl inlnmMnAl truth" in history, it riage. If there 4s any teaches the Innate fin purity of enforced which has always monogamyan impurity increased with the increase of wealth and the advance of civilisation; which jerver-m- rrttriitiantfv itaelf la powerless to premt; which has corrupted and wasted which we are driftnations; and Into many -certain inevitable with tr. and from ing which nothing but an ox tension, of the ben- efita and the safeguard or mamage cau ever deliver us all which propositions are demonstrated In 'The History ana rnuos .: .i phy of Marriage !l We are under many obligations to the -- A 4- Author of "The History and Philosophy of Marriage Ac for his courtesy in forwarding us V copy W la valuable work. It is a book that should, have i wide clrculatloir andean attentive pern air ltoth of which it doubtless will re ceive. ; t were not seriously auectea by tne arrive acknowledge of men'j 'minds. they '" was so damn. it ir promptly susweiru.-real liberal New xoric. At a meeting or citizens clamor raised j places the ni rations of France bevond a doubt. a pro held at the thousto raise waa made fifty wa TheiTlBce'S speecn rosy u va.ciuoveru position of the lrapenai and dollar for Mr. Rawlins. It aub- programme ment such as must arise when the Con carried nnnnimouslv: $15,000 was arribedon the spot. Including a thous stltutlon i reformed on a basis of na and from President u rant received Dy tlonal sovereignty, municipal self gov telegraph. The .public buildings will ernment. and ministerial responsibility and Thursday. Prince Napoleon's part In the new be closed Russia.-an enidemic of unknown order of things depends on the chances nature has appeared amongst tho cattle of the .Emperor . recovery. Should in Orange County. tbe Emperor live, a liberal ministry Tite departures of tbe Pacific Mall with Prince .Napoleon at ine head Horn nan v'j steamers, via the Isthmus would be an experiment worth trying, ihe If tbe Erdperor's absence from theCabi-nard redaced to twice a month, ' I to be indefinitely prolonged it Is and 15thr A number of men. difficult to see who could dispute the 'Philadelnbia. in the attemp lieutenaney of tbe empire with Prince charged with complicityorncer xsrooKs, Napoleon. ,The present crisis in France ted murder of itevenue were brought before the Mayor this af cannot be without grave consequences ternoon. Tbe testimony points strong- and the Prince baa placed himself in ly to John Stockton, a liquor dealer, a position where it will be no good for and two others, as implicated in the the emperor to aispens witu or over further ex look him. crime: Thev are held-foamination. Berne. The Swiss Federal Council con the This baa declined to take part in the joint evening Philadelphia. nection was completed with the action proposed by Prince Hohenllnd, pumps. Tbe fire and wrecking the Bavarian Prime Minister, with re steamer set to work discharging their gard to the Ecumenical Council. Refull capacity of 8,000 gallon per minute cruitlng for tbe array of the Viceroy of into the reservoir. Egypt has been forbidden in riwitzer Macon. The exam i out ion of the Cu- - land- ban recruiting agents has commenced be Paris. Eveninjr. The Emperor will fore United States Commissioner Aiorrm. i come to Paris La rresse Great. interest is felt in the result, par-- jaavs tbe condition of the Emperor has tlcularly by the parents of the younger improved a little since yesUrday, his recruits. streneth haa increased and the pains a 1 Boston. ".Col. Broad head, the State I mlniahed. bnt it ia not believed he will Com mis - be able to eo out of doors The liquor agent, appearedonbefore the complaint Emperor veeterdav aisned most of the aloner Hallett of Col. .Lyman, collector of tbe ninth decrees presented to him in bed. y district; for selling liquor to the town be received M. Rouher and the Min agents without revenue stamps he was isters bearing the. Senat u Consultum held In a thousand dollars ball for trial. which had jus: passed the Senate. . Defendant clalma that tbe liquor sold stated Madrid. The Enoci were in original and to the sent a note Gen. has Sickles packages that required no stamp." that government public representing Galveston. A freight train hence for will shortly compel tbe recogHouston fell through the Clear Creek opinion nition of the Cuban insurgei: u. The bridge and was smashed: no lives were Evoca urges tbe dispatch of the last lost. man and the expenditureof the last dol A fire at Nashua this morninsr d lar rather than lose Cuba. It suggests st roved property to amount of the that meetings be held in every town to $44,000. show-- the state of Spanish feeling on Portland. Senator Fessendeu linger this question. It concludes with the In the ame condition a3 last reported. declaration that the loss of Cuba would Wilmington, Del. The election of dishonor the revolution. Other journals resulted in the re city officers the dispatch of troops to the election of Valentine, Republican, for urges Island. also elect Mayor. The The note of the American Minister msforltv iu theUepobllcans Citv Council. to is simply a protest against referred New York; A special from Bcranton executions without trial in, Cuba, and says there were not less than 1S8 nor intimated that Spain cannot carry on a more than 150 people In the Avondale In any way repugnant to the mlne'when the accident occurred. Some civilized world it men who went down tbe shaft reported The has decree jorder issued regent that the fire in the furnace waa all out. Ing a circular expressingathe thank of The presumption was that when tbe the government be sent to those lire broke out the miner kept their who have complied with hi latebishop senses and having dragged the fire they against the Car list band.. Ten decree of the lied! to' the Juppe r chambers closing-thare recusant to ordered appear doors behind them. Supposing this serore tnenisnops supreme tribunal. true the rescuers proceeded on the simHavana; Government returns show ple plan ,o( forcing freshf.alr. into the thatin the skirmishes which occurred In This was cuutinud; till four In mine.: Jurisdiction of Cinco Villas during the - afternoon when a- uartv of men the August three Hundred Insurgents were two hundred feet, on open- Killed, penetrating loss to the Spanish troops a door made the discovery that the waa mucnme ing Jess. nrerwas-Btiburning mine furnace and that it had ignited the coal plied out side.! Tho5e' understanding the situation', upon hearing this' fact saw in a moment all hope was at an end.and hat SpbixqtoXvn, Sept. 5th, 18C9. all that could be. done was to drae the lost miners- - from their fiery tomb to a Bro. Cannon.' The kindness of PresiunriAiian burial.' change of opera dent Young in Informing me, by teletlons was then instantly decided on; it graph, of the sudden death of Bro. E. T. was determined to direct an immediate Benson, is appreciated; but it gave me was our brother, effort to the extinguishment of the fire. mucn Borrow.-n- o Means are now arranged for that end companion and fellow-laborin the - kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ and the delube in occupied ae night will sa a faithful minister and apostle of our wun water. gmgine mineDavid uod. But lie isi gone; and my heart is Walsh: a etreet'car Chicago. because of iti yet the will driver, shot and fatally wounded hi full of sorrow wife while entering the door of her fath of God be done.-- In the prime of talent er's house last evening. rJThe parties and manhood la he taken. I mourn, have been married about a year. Mrs. and I can not help it. I deeply sympa Walsh; who 1 young and handsome: thize with hi bereaved and afflicted uau jearneu tnat ner nusDana naa ano- xamiiy. The lxrd comfort and bless ther .wife living and had returned to her them in thi day: of their sore distress house and instituted, proceed- ana angnisn: ' parents' ings for a divorce,' Walsh several times it would be pleasing to me If the followed' and annoyed her, ,and last remaining apostles would wear crape on night deliberately shot her without a the left arm in all their public ministra word. When he was arrested he' ex- - tions ror forty days after the of our highly esteemed friend anddeath pressea joy at the deed I ' brother , Work on the Air Xdne road to Boston as a token of our oonuningled respect " of our is progressing ranldlv:' lt will be fln- - and - sorrow for' the' ished early next year and will be twen mucn JQrea jxra. y departure i x miles shorter than tho present H vX ,i t Orson Hyde, t President of route. . r Apostles. (Washington. A' special say the fill- nnstarlntr crnMi nn rntm M.iwn rim. V. has been captured by the United States . Marshal, ' the steamboat conveying the n inraay, tne ;h iDntTot iV. Sill party having grounded on 'a sandbar rr5""" acn or 'WUM aiaca Q. nd jwniie descending the river. u. rsieater; ared 1 year, a Kooert aiary months and S runlesa the proposition pending with day tipain result In an armistice, d urine Anjust 3lat,orof bowel com- wuiuu' iub issue . Detween ZrZtzri i ueorte A. and (UHitour a fv question J,Q s!.. 1 rear. 10 months and 7 vuoa mil opain ue an jus tea, it is now ?rf?7 Linoolnt ei regarded certain, that ; a proclamation ulU of diarrhea, Loth- wiii ue issued recognizing the Cubans -Al.Moronl'0J1.ih.88lst uma Draaammltl; a bellge rents. - Kaita 11 per, aed months ana 10 days.Ann f Chicago. The annual meeting of the . AarastCS. lSd9rrr'KIlzabetb. AtBnntlfqT, American; Pharmaceutical Association oaacmer oi ueerv and Ann l commenced its session in this city yes- V linger, agi !... . ever JiapieVTeo"terday. It being the first held In the west, there waameeting a large exposition of chemicals, chemical and p harm ace u ileal articles, and apparatus connected therewith. Most Trr a Set Jacket Bitter ara tha afU amd countries have specimens In European exhithe aalklcauninjaataaj tbe Jtcsu appeUxor yet bition; and tha display Js highly credi- discovered, as sll.wto have uted them will table. The most important business was a proposition for a bill regulating testify. Tney are! solcj Uy t; drnrtUU and the practice of pharmacy to be submit- dealers throuhout the country. Take our ted to the State Legislatures for enact- word for it, acq try a bottle. ' ; ment, designed to prevent the employ- ; Btatockbt Blaitw ror sale at tnU Ofllee.'See ment cf Incompetent persons as dn: our ad verUsemeot la another column. gist and thus to avoid rcldenU.f The bill is quite .elaborate wdgjeji over for Deeieys Chec;teal Yeast Cahln ia a consideration. baklnspowder luloita inmsrkeL enteni'S A party pf officers of the United States urand Xtodgre of Odd Fellows leave this last l Bvr full to tnafce UoA' mu Jji morning for San Francisco. varleues wliU uniform nWW?rir, ff".' J?i "i1 i sub-treasu- i I'll! vu jt) iij "Hi I j (Sraciat. to thi DESERET iiiii v 1 i i . NEW-- 1 TO TUG 1 to-d-ay ry to-morr- ow An ' - - et Fine Scenery! ' iSplendid Appointments! Startling Effects! . THIS EVENING, Inwh'-c- b AXNIE XOCKITART MIa Will sppear in her beautiful impersonation MARAH, A CIP8EY GIRL, ECPPORTXD BT THE FT Lt DKAMATIC COM PAS 1 . For Eynopti set rotten cnul Trogrannnt-Door-s o'clock, reifortfloiu. t,. open et si r THURSDAY EV'G BENEFIT Mr. J. . - piety, wisdom, a nt cud happlneea. It la not on OX Auwkn . fc . aa m MM fTf Europn monogamUti hsre hitherto 1M, amused eil other men tn civilization and aoooont of a rnumix PlllXJtXTIXBOrUiT riVRALiu or WITE. f. T.fr ; EOtTOR AND PUBLISHER. ' Tneir NEW mas of people I the Xmperor'a condition I lohbiEHTS livo a life of tcitrfmcinlal brutality, or of rHent prevail, and the r i n waruuuua iMtt mi wiMi iu w.wf i u kAb ins r t ha riE ..k wonid I grant desperate licertioai3eas;but an nnravor- ThsttrnMinprsare saved at last. II temnsranw. h&ra exercUed the them the tight to raarry agsm, aa mo Dest t progress possible altersaUve. And I insUt that the Itseem Idle! to peril life by any farther 1 eble influence la retarding; tne aa and man who ahould thus openly maintain his attempt to rendering Aa the of hi down. long convalescence; ma.ri T7 - vorAf . - go an . a. TJvlaS - -. v v as aa sa rrtfiv v w a we v assi n i wsi an fti honest samasa' s w life, aTSS HU BLI UiJal UU HvWaa4 hJ9 vati natural rights, and live . aasViO NYCI 7e iui r aMuv but I would still be worthy of publle confidence to reach the main door or penetrate the unable to walk i out yesterday and reanect-- Rnch men. bv takintr addi the outer gangway is cleared passed an easy night, has arrived in Letsttt and Manager U.B.CXawtom t jm T c tional wives, would beoome the most cl-cie- mine until Prince Gortchakofx how long thi Harris. Treasurer, TAVimo,, for ofgsj It 1 uncertain prompter, W.T. benefactors, by rroyidlng public the Orchestra, Geo. dareinm of to no are Leader Will'take. nope There ground the otherwiae homeless and abandonod io-i-y eaiiea Paul , London. that a single life remains, .livery oouy women.' and by furnishing the only possi them up; nothing probably rs ble preventative 'of tne great social evu. gives Night ot mams to oe uone, duc to recover noaies. THE The time has .gone oy wr aewpuny wo on otners and Mr. m ontward Drofoaslon of sanctity: WO went Gladstone ence men down this with LaUat The r. Ft Cooke Prize Dratna , evldeace of .its posses- evenlngand reached the furnace which the release of the Fenian prisoners. require substantial entitled reach to', accord tpj round aiurignt except it wa etui ; The Time in an article on the Prince sion; befom w i consent tney nonors. tneir claimants proper burnintr. Thev could not succeed in attnatfrm aavs: m an v think that Tfa adds ' arranging the water hose. Thi time Napoleon's speecn was oniy , ; t r" to-da- y. bu Ueti T0lrIng nd iutiUatUtloC theory: Mhicli our people hvf me carrying Into practical effect for, weanll pMttwenty-!xyeA-r. and first w make only fw xtncU; ball glr lh author argument that hair-mou- nt of C. GRAHAM. for HXOeV BI-OWl- " I s. '"a Jan .at &. es w . 1 GENERA!. Ban Francisco. 7. -- In theTccountof the second ward there Is c. greater dis crepancy than in the first, freeman independent. iralns oae .hundred-- ahd McCoppinone; It will probably reoulre the balance of tbe week to complete tbe recount. Colfax reached Fortiand, uregon. yes ... . ... t asm. There win be a pubiio reception. tnis evening. Late Arlsona advices say rich placerrold mines have been discovered. PeoVM wnue fine - I z ratine xrom eie are em there. There are numerous report o Indian outra ire. Idaho advices say tbe grasshoppers are devastating tbe ' Washington. accordance with In country. circular from the Executive office, the head of departments have directed the business be suspended In all the bureaus and Thursday, until after the funeral obsequies of Secretary Rawlins t shall be concluded. - Hcranton. Special trains rau from hereto Avondale thIs'a-m- . every hour until eleven o'clock, , when became aa dense thev .obstructed itue relief parties. - The whole' commublty is thrilled with horror here at the great calamity, end alt work is suspend ed In the mine lu thls,viclulty. Nearly, the whole force of miner have gone to Avondale to" remain until their breth ren are brought out dead or alive. " The whole country around is flocking to the scene of- disaster. The atreetsS are thronged with women, the rrers lives and friends of the men in the Avondale pit. eagerly beseeching very 'person aiV for information.Their weeping riving fllis the air. Mining, cannot be re sumed at any of the works of the Dela ware, Lackawanna and Western Rail road company within a week, or not at least until all the. funerals of tbe Avondale dead are over. The fact of tbelonsr and severe strike which has Just ended adds greatly which will follow the calamity. The widows and orphan will number pot less.thau 600. At eight p'clook the crowd ' wab cl eared i from Uhe ' fope enclosure .made i around t tne mouth Of tbe shaft by the police. The engine and fan got to wors at v.w, aua sportiy after was connected with the canvas conductor that Yeacbe to the bblton, 237 feet. 8ope rln tended of Walston tnlne, and J; P. Davis carpenter, of Avondale descended tone hundred feet and lowered four lump to within fifteen feet of the bottom of tbe shaft. The lamps burned freely. After remaining in the abaft forty minutes they returned. Afterward a coqimittee of miners descended the shaft with a cart. In half aa hour they ascended to the mouth of the shaft reporting that after leaving the plat form' on" which down, they; proceeded shoot they went feet into the gsngway, and findthirty ing a great deal of carbonic acid gas and black damp they retreated, arier convey Ins the end of tha large cartyria air conveyor ai far into the' mine., they went. The damp waa between two and three feet deep on the bottom of the mine. Thereupon another miners committee began-t- ' descend Jnto the ebafUt The fan was kept constantly. in motion all the time, forcing fresh air into the mine. During these proceedsome fifty volunteers ings at the shaft formed and " were lrsularryr-otneereby miners, to descend and recover the bodies of their companion. A committee of twenty citizens canvassed the throng with a subscription, book for ihe orphans and widows of the victims lost. Experienced miner gave up all hopea of finding any one alive In the mine. Forty-si- x miners were enrolled under competent superintendents, with, two experienced miners' a adviser; 'they have direction of. tha after the descent la. made.' operations Three hundred miners from Coalville r have, .arrived. There are thousands upon tho grounds la the .ImmtdUtt Tielaiiypnesrly on half are women and children. At one p ro". theecond party re turned as had the first. They penetratedafe)y the gangway to the distance of seventy-fiv- e feet and found the, large door iwjda open. They then went one .hundred feet farther 1h one of the pasacjahd found tbe small door closed. After air opening this to give a circulation of door they returned. Had this small been peni there .might; have been a thada of. hope ns.the gas, rnqkecnd( fire wcali havo had fr c e r to arc ami the circuit and out saln. The main haa not leading - to the mine doorway reached.aet The third of men, been yet down and came four in number,-wen- t back la fifteen minutes, two cf them ta overcomes with the c fleets of tha gas that they are being restored with mttch difUcnlty. Qas is coming out of the outer mine very fast since the passage waywas openeo. aco wimcas , forty-eigh- t; . aa a A a a . a m a to-morr- ow , tbe-peoi- Ue - to-thees- ' to-tl- tl - - -- , . o -- -- ? ; en w. WILL, BK PAID FOR I 1 to-da- y. Mil Cotton Clean to-d- ay To-da- to-d- ay Delivered at the DLLSEKT KEWS OFFICE.- - CEO. Q. CANNON. swfSaCilt - -- to-d- ay war-ther- e " . t e . FLOUR DEPOT ADD Two Doorn north of Hooper, Eldrcdgc at Co. llank, Alwava Selection of e ILLEfi'S SUPERIOR v OATS, FLOUR, - I1AUI.EY, 8IIOUTS choi i'i;r:o. ii a -- Orders rpectfnMy so! felted rrom partus wlshlo a choice article or Flour for farolty ORDERS OF FIVE 8ACJCH AND tTPU ARbs D2CLlVELtCi AT ANY PART OK T11K CITY. FREE OF CAUTAUK. :&$uTo injure Ihe public against fraiui, I shall hereafter paste a label (d. it. AtLr.i) over the viouth of all my XXX (Triple) ami XX (Double) branded flour sacks. er a a CASH PAID FOR WHEAT AtPreVt. ' - ' -- f- - ty-si- -- tho-Twelv- . , t?245 3 - Sw a a J- - . ' -- T?!?1'1rt8 third to ft naif lets thn taose of ordir arr r T,. utaeinre. Far tale by grocers generally; 7 Eondon. Nothing hnproves the acnearanea of ih f.tr that the cotton crop In the Int- BonnchaaBorntl'sCdaoaloe. report - erior-of is excellent both n A Fashionable Comparison. "As Lsypt sweet as quality and quantity. Fl crime!,' There hi s rreahnefis In this next perrciae session lisnin.Attne of the ound in no other. : Prussian Diet the Idherai BarntU's Cologue Water received flrat r ministerial mlum at Illinois State Fair. a voa wa 9 f ,j haton cures eruptions of the akin 'XhtUonitcur complain thatit Is rfim SfJfi11 Whitco cab's Asthma Eemtdv obtain any authentlo advIrWf -w and U good far auy cpprmloa cf the chest, , r ponciarj. D Is natch es from AlAvaniri. iLtIProPosIUoa 1 , . - . " j ltttT. U City. Sept. 7. J8C9. faiimZJl BnOSlLET nOUSE, i EC3IO ClTt, .Near tAe JTJ 22. Depot. VKaHEHaxnat, ; 4 , t propki k ion. Public can 3r?.l!?iI?U2 aeoauta always natea wltn first claaa board by toe bmat, tay.or weeavBooma families. Barber Btun, is coanecuon withfor i diXif the Hoteh . - -- JOE SIMIIOXS, Revere I. Proprietor of the House Salcwt, rJITTERUINKO to please very body. Be J act received an importation o' BaivrJ, P .Oo.'a celebrated AJLE sad POBTtf t J?. TLVon 10 LAG EK BEER, OYTfcK. lOKGTJE. PIOa FKl?f fcf JAK rl ? Ax. Serves Lanch at all boars. d!71-t- i ; ImportanV to tha Public; KEEP. YOUR MOB! A WJIVSW GREEN, HA.TJES8 aU to mannitnre . LABOR AT BOOTS JJNT SHOES and can aell them, wholesale nr malLotPno more Lew than tueh goodi hate ear oee oxtemithfy to offered the people of Utah eeore. ahip their goods cannot be exeeiledi ' ' . Oenta REPAlRtNO ; . ' Boota aoled ud liefcled for tl&L Closed UuDer aJways en band. Ready Groeibeck's Buildig$ JLast Tmplt Tir9 doors south of CUyLtq nor Sure. d21S-.Sn- a j. GOOD -- a- -i l 2 QTRAYET .Torn M.B.8htpp'ln the y m since, one small CX) VV. J- jor wu o icu "n branded G W on iot Bi- .back, aT, A. HIPP; Htre, will be thanklnlly wceived. B. . "" :tf ' NOTICE, e mua. R Yonng's Mill, Big Cottonwool, at D. It Allen's Flour Depot. 8. L. Ci y. . -- BRANDS OF J AND JO.SrJI3Il: BT. 1" |