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Show She gtku $unctimu PMiHh4 every WEDNESDAY and SATUWAY, by the Oopr. PmusHiHH Coxnxt. C'iiarlc W. Penrose, Editor. nl Ilusitinis Manager. OODEX. UTAH. WEDNESDAY, Al'KIL 8th, 1874. Sham shows its shoddy form every The .St. George Temple. where, aud "things are not what they By a dispatch, received yesterday, seem." "Bogus' may be stamped from Presidents Brigham Young and on the pretensions of politicians and Geo. A. Smith, per l)eseret Telefrapb, we are informed lhnt on the 31st of the prayers of parsons, as well as on March. t 12 o'clock midday, a deposit a variety of merchandise and consid- of records, plate containing sketch of the organization of the church, etc., was erable currency. made in the wall of the Temple at St. 0 The latest fcham of particular in- George. President B Young deposited the box containing the records in the terest, is the manufacture of bogus place prepared at the sou'Ji-eacoiner The Berlin of the building, and ottered tne Uedica-torMoabite Antiquities. prayer. Museum has a choice collection of There were present on the occasion, supposed archajological treasures, besides President 13. Young, Presidents George A. Smith, Erasius Snow, Joseph consisting of statues, vases and an- A. Young, and John W. Young; Eld-- rs tique earthenware covered with Mo Robert Gardner, A. F. McDonuld, Jacob Haniblin, James G. Bleak, Henry Eyr-aabite inscriptions; these ancient A. M. Cannon, Miles Komney, assist-ahave not the architect, and Edward L. Parry, characters, by way, of the masons, aud others. chief The collection was been translated. Tho following is the inscription enpurchased a few mouths ago of one graved upon the silver plate aud placed box deposited, a above stated, in M. Chapira. It has since transpired in the the foundation ef the Temple: that the "Moabite remains" were the "Holiness to thk Lokd. handiwork of a Jerusalem modeller "The Church of Jesus Christ, of Latter aud a potter of the same hvly city. Day Saints, was organized and established agreeably to the laws of our country, Mr. Clermont Gauneau, a French God. by the will and commandments of scholar and antiquary, is th Raul on the sikth of April, 18C0. Which commandments were given to Joseph Smith, l'ry who has poked his nose into this Jr., who was called, of God, and ordained pottery business und smelt out the an Apostle of Jesus Christ, to be the Ch .rch. swindle. Travelling around Jerusal- first Elder in the Smith, Jr., President, with "Joseph em he became acquainted with Selem his brother Ilyrum, Patriarch of the in El Karl, a painter and modeller. whole Church, Buffered martyrdomand 1811, l!7th, June Illinois, Carthage. Also with the style of his workman- the Church was driven into tha wilder 184G. ship. In this he traced a resemblance ness in "Brigbam Young. President of the to the style of the "Moabite remains." Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day And he further ouud that the mate- Saints. "his counsellors. rial of the "remains" was identical "George A. Smith and Daniel II. with that used by the Jerusalem Wells. "assistant counsellors. potters, lie learned on inquiry that "Lorenzo Snow, Brigbam Young, Tr Selim, while working at the pottery Albert Carrinzton, John W. Young and of Ahmed Alawiyed, near Damascus George Q. Cannon. "twelve apostles. gato, used to form statutes of men II vile. Orson Pratt, John Tay "Orson and animals, upon which he put lor, Wilford Woodruff, Lorenzo Snow, curious inscriptions, and get them Charles C. Inch, Erastus Snow, trank-liD. Richards, George Q. Cannon, Mr. baked at Ahmed's pottery. Brigbam Young, Jr., Joseph F. Smith Gauneau continued his inquiries and and Albert Carrington. PATRIARCH. "PRESIIUNG finally obtained the following stateeldest son of flu the "John Smith, ment : Smith. Ilyrum martyred "Since more tbnn a year Selim and "IIBST SEVEN PRESIDENTS 0 TUB his iitfhrri tb chandler, used to come st y or thk LATUISKOVKIt imiwki. isKUi.s- - THE t'Oil BUS. Dunn" the dubato in the benate on the Act, published in yesterday's J r NOTION, "concerning the practice in Territorial Courts," etc., the question of the powers of the Territorial Lishturo was brought up by Sen- ator Stewart, and his statements and conclusions on this point were not mice dissipated. Referring to the given them to regulate the of the courts, he said : ty "Those legislative acts of the Territories were fully authorized, us I believe, by the act of Confess. It would so occur to anybody who will read the act. It says that these courts and equity slu;ll have common-labe exercised as shall to jurisdiction, is. the law be provided by law; that of thJ Territory. They have exercised that power and passed laws,and adjudications have gone on for many years." ' Concerning "tho status of the Courts, in the Territories, he argued: There is no doubt about the law; there is no doubt about their beiii'' Territorial courts under the existing organic acts, and there is no donbt about tho authority of the Territorial Legislature to regulate the exercise of their jurisdiction. It is as plain w it can be. A judge can !e removed from them; a judgo of a United States Court canas g, nt n not bs removed. They are not United States-- ' Court ii in 'any Bense.' ''They exist by virtue of the organization of over to meet me and ask me to rimke ;or them largo and small puts, and to take the Territories. , and make it into images, Thore is nothing new in all, this. and write upon them aud bring them to me ( bake for tbem, and they called Rut it comes in contact with the tbeiu 'autika,' and they ued lo make of of McKean, Ilawlcy ft af, it hundreds of different objects, puch as Mnd sustains tho position taken by birds, and hcada, and images, and bands, and aud such like; and I baked our Legislature and sustained by the themspoons, and returned tbem to them, and Courts till the advent of the judicial they gave me a bakshiih, find asked me not to mention it to anybody; tbey never lm&sionartuP. left with me any piece, however small, Tho conclusions ef Senator Stew-ar- t, but delivered tbem to me counting them, in the sume which were endorsed by both and received tbem back El IIaj 'Aud ml Baki." manner, ? from mc clay -- bouses, in ' the - passago of the Act which he was laboring to put through, bear directly upon tho question of the jurisdiction of the 1'robuU Court. The Orgauic Act aayj : 'Tho jurisdiction of the several Courts .herein jntmdcd tor both appellate and original, and that of the I'robato Courts and of Justice of the Peace shall bo as limited by law." ' "What, law," enquiro tl.ose who deny tho jurisdiction of the I'robato Courts and block Bali baked what Selim made, and tho latter sold tho ' antika" and Mr. Shupira, tho buyer, at the same time. Tho authorities at Berlin were also sold in their turn, and then the the general public. Is there not abuudauoo of reason why this should e an age of skepticism, seeing that it is such a day of shams? anti-quaries'a- nd .CORRESPONDENCE. .v . ..Amy, 29th March, I'ihtou Jcnction 1374. : i a few 'of his friends, as a tho Territory-permanent to which ho beThe law has defined their limits member of the society longs, lie proposes to inform the public and described their powers, aud un-d- of t!ae true state- of aff.tiri as they exist. them "adjudications have gone As many foul ttlan lers are afloat, the public must know that Intra are two on for many years." Unwarrantablo parties, vix.: Tin Union Men, and the interference with their jurisdiction is non Union Men. Arid the test way to get to an what hinders the course of jotieo in is this : There are too men for work there is to do, the law-lemany Utah, and affords an. excuse for and the great trouble is now, tint the n Judges to turn loose felons, re- Union men are at work. The lease criminals of tho deepest die, men not being able to send the nuiount of cool needed, and had to be discharged keep in suspcuse Buitors in cases of on that account. Hence, Mr. Crempton's va3t moment,1 prevent, in a degree, trouble. It true Unit we should give him how,.as he is a man that likes to the financial progress of the Territo- be hiaai d. The publio must understand that he ry, and hold up the courts of Utah is looking for an object iu coming before to public shame and derision. 5But the public, having an axe to grind, and V can afford to more than that. the cud is nigh. It It pleasant to see hi nam In print, wait. " - , agree-ble'concluslo- w nou-Unio- 'Joseph Young, Levi W. Hancock, Henry llerriman, Albei t P. Rock wood, Hornce S. Eldredge, Jacob Gates aad John Van Cott. "These seven constitute the Presiding A 3 IOC I S MOATlITli The'' last AXTI-niJITIE- S. half of tho nineteenth century will bo designated by pos- teritj. as the generation of humbug?. book, a Look, if tttn.e It nothing lii't. :I "lii-ass.- " Mr. Editor hope you will insert this in your widely circulated paper. One of those I hare introduced to you is not even known to your subscription, and let me further add, Col. Hart and bis arrangements have our notice. This will sultice. "A Mat Flowee." iuK for tUi. P atlvertlJeiiLt! PRODUCE HiW Smiley was iu agony, and when thj babies began to cry, no words can dcseribi. his misery. All the passengers were looking at him, and as he dandled the babies up and down, one on each knee, the perspiration streamed from every pore. This kind of thing continued until dark, and then, as the conductor refused to have anything to do with the infants, poor old Smiley put them in his own berth, and tried to soothe them. But the more he tried, the more they howled, and he sat up alongside of them the whole night, utterly wretched, while the other passengers swore at him, and threw boots at his head, and called him hard names, because he wouldn't keep the youngsters quiet. Py this time the morning came, Smiley was pretty near crazy, and the twins were almost starved to death. Ho aad nothing to give them but plug tobacco and bay rum,which he carried for his hair, and ho knew they were not healthy. The first time the train stopped he bolted out and bought a pie. When he returned one of the twins had tumbled oft the seat and had a broken nose; but he stuffed them both with the pio gorge. Then Smiley was in a worse case than the very verge of insanity, and his reason was all but dethroned when a policeman entered the ear and seized him on the authority of a tdogramfrom Pittsburgh,on a charge of kidnapping. He spout the night in jail; aud was then released on bail. He wants to fine the father of tho9e twins. He yearns to tell him somc-tlnand to fumble among his hair. g, . hi M Ht:wA y lor the purchase unJ o " STl!ET, ALL KINDS OF PltOI)rCK Garden und Crass At his BOOK STOKE adjoinih.v all the Periodicals and N the day, al,o full Block of V""P-lrfl.ieI.ll,Pr- VT" a;. ' Seeas, of WIL80JJ ewisg 1iachine THIS CELEBRATED MACHISL which is just as gooJanJ X Twenty Dollars Chraper thm any other first-clas- s iu the market, Machin, HAS JUST TAKEN THE PEIZE! AT THE Vienna Exposition, AS T" BEST IX DE3 Family Sewing Machine Xxx World. t3b.o With Cover, BOYLE & O'HABHETT, AGENTS, 3Iain St., Ogttcn. Praying by Telegraph. From the Springfield Republican. Chaplain Sunderlaud has been fiS5Cail and see it. d299-t- f THE SUN. SEMI-WEEKL- Vice-Preside- lu pBrt' SToS Council over all the Seventies. Each mixing the newspaper business with quorum of Seveuties has seven presidents his Senate prayers. It occurred to him after he had left the city with to preside over the quorum. the Sumner funeral cortege that ho TTEBKLT, "PRESlUINCi RISHOP. had omitted to name the THE WEEKLY SUN "Edward Hunter, President of the in his prayer for all the officers require any extend Aaronic Priesthood AXI) KAItJL nt it too wi.iely kuowa l nvommeiulHtion; but tli rcii.toiu which have ul ready givan it fifty tliuuant HUbucrikurx, and which wilt, we ho., give it many thomnuil more, are briufly , MImws: It is firt-rat- e inwiajHT. All the nowncf the day will 1 totiud in it. comleaH when unimportant, at full Irngtk whon of moment, anil nlwfty presented in clear, intelligible, aud of the Government. After a failure to secure a despatch to the Associat"Leonard W. Hardy and Jesse C. ed Press, asking that the words "and Little. the might be insert"St George Temple Block was dedi- ed in the iminm-r- . proper place, he was obliged cated, November 'Jth, 1871. is a. It to consult one of the special corres- jnirt instructive family paper, full of entertainbij "Engd. by David McKenzie." reading of every kind, but The following is the list of books pondents, and crave his assistance, nothing that can offend the most acrnpa lwus taste. papers, etc., placed with the plato in and thus tho prayer was amended by It is e atory napor. Tho lest tab the box the telegraph, and in Brother Sun- aad romances of enrrent literature are carefully Bible. i elected and legibly printed iu its piitfe. derland's eyes made complete. It if a agricultural paper. The most Book of Mormon. freh aud iilnictiT artir!s on agricultural Doctrine and Covenants. "U1S t'Ol'NSELLOBS. Vice-Presiden- t" - tirM-rat- e first-rat- '" trst-rat- e Hymn Rook.' Compendium. Cafe :hism. Spencer's Letters. Voice of Warning. K. 11. Snow's Poems. Orsoa I'yde's Tour to Jerusalem. Three Sermons on Polygamy ' ' Answers to Questions. Two volumes Millennial Star, I and XIV. v One volume Journal of Discourses. "One copy "Mormon" Question. One copy Plural Marriage. One volume Juvenile Instructor. One copy Laws of Utah. ' A file of the Woman's Exponont. ' A few numbers of Deseret 'ewtt, containing organization of the Church. One copy of Acts of First Legislature. A few numbers of Ogden Junction. , A few numbers of Salt Lake Herald . One number of the Utah Postrn. Synof sit of Desription of the Temple at Salt Lake City, by Truman 0. Angell, Church Architect. ' Abstract of the History of Southern Utah, by James G. Bleak;' historian tf the Southern mission. . . . A , 1 " Savs Max Adler: When Smiley, of Pittsburgh, started for Philadeloccuphia, the other day, a woman with him of in front pied the seat train the twin infants. Just before moved off, the woman asked Smiley to hold the babies for a moment, while she went to a drug store across the street after a new bottle top. He took the little ones, and before tha woman returned the train starttd. SEVENTIES. - Pkar Star Allow me to introduce the wheels of justice? Senator Mr. David Miller und Mr. Wm. Crump Stewart giyes the answer, which, he ton, as correspondents to the Oudkn i.nl the object of their corwill occur Junction, to says, truly, everybody , , vrho,wilJ read the Act "the law'bf respondence. iavul Millar; writes at the request of er i The Unfortunate Smiley. Prof. Proctor anys that if an "infant were born having an arm the length of 91,000.000 miles, so as to reach the sun, and if in the cradle he were to stretch out hia arm and touch the suu, that infant might grow to the and ten years allotted to man, but he never would be conscious of the fact that the tip of his finger was burned ; ho would have to live one hundred and thirty-fiv- e years before that would be experienced. Some infant ought to just try to see whether the Professor is rijrht. three-scor- e The American Register, of Paris, speaks of the new temperance move-wein this country as a "curious and amusing illustration of the nt ex-te- at to which fanaticism can be carthat ladies engaged jn ried," and saloons at "show a lamentapraying ble want of dignity and for there is no tyranny like that of fanaticism. M. s-- ys sclf-resnec- t. , topics regularly apiear in this deyartmeut. It is an independent political paper, Mongmf to no party and wearing no collar. It fights for principle, and for the election of the best men t uflWe. It especially derate iU energies to the exposure of the great corruptions that now week en and disgrace nr eeuntry, and threaten te undermine republican institutions altogether. It has no feuref knaves, aud asks ui favors from their SHpporter. It reports the fashions for The Indies and tile markets lor the men, especially the to birh it pays pnticular attention. Kiimlly, it is the cheapest paper pnblihed. On djllar a year will secure it supscrifcer. It is not neesnry to pet up clubany iu order to here THE WEEK LY SIN at Ibis rate Any oue wjl send a eihglo dollar will get the paper for a JW. We have no traveling agents. cattle-uarke- fr A modest young husband sdnt the following message over the wires to THE WEEKLY friends in this city the other dav columns. Only $1.00 a year. No discwwiU "The ninth frmu this Kate. . of Isaiah,. sixth chapter r m i : THE SEMI WKEKLY SUN. Same site as e verse. oia Uible was ino uusty A discount of 4 Daily bun. hailed down in an. instant. and tho per cent, to cluls of 10a ayear. over. THK DAILY SUN. A large above chapter and verse were hunted of t cwlamas. Daily ciixulalioii out and iound to explain all. Thi over 120,000. All the news lor 2 ceuts. Subverse reads, "Por unto u$ a child is scription price 6o cents a month, or SO.vO a yer. To club of 10 or over, a discount of 8 born unto us a sou is gWen." ' por ceat. Addreas "THE SI X," A number of hichly rosDectahU Yrk Cll. and strictly moral vounc trentlemon of St. Louis have organized an ciotion vihose object is to furnish young ladies who have no regular Deau or escort to church, concerts, THE lectures, and places of amusement. All members have to undergo a riid examination as to character ntr fore they are admitted, and thev nb. Tho Finest House of Entertainment ligate themselves to obey all the orders of the Executive Committee. IN OCDEN CITY. Any lady wishioir an escort h:i nnl to apply to the President of the AND WITH society, namins tho evening and ACCOMMODATIONS. EXCELLENT young man is detailed for the purFor particulars apply to pose. As soon as a yountj man be comes engaged he mrxt withdiaw from the organization. W. THOMSON. ' SUN.-K- lght - - pa-- iMy-ef- ei, x .. fenr-pa- p twenty-eigh- 1 . aw TO RENT. s UTAH HOTEL, Elisilly Situated, |