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Show lam si trail ''Ihe VOL SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, OCT! )I1HI 1. ('OMIXG. For I know he is coming shortly To summon me. And when a shalow fulls aci. ss the wiii'iuw i f my room, it tvcit or a mldtili'Ut. or ,.t ue the morning V rusy - w the euua.o, A hen the work of the ha w Jon, And jou hare time to s;t in U.e twilight Ami watch the sinking: ton, While the long bright day dies slowly oror the sea, And tut hour grows quiet and holy With though U wf me; It i,.le you hear the Tillage children laMUg along the street, Among those thronging footsteps M ly come the sound of my feet. Ther-foI tell you: Watch By the light of Ihe evening star. When the room is growing dusky As the clouds afar; Let the door be on the latch Jn your home, Fur it may 1ms through the gloaming 1 will come. g 7 W i r 'I 'IIOHU' ij' ,U tl" (Ml year ago the 'Unkcf this month a in the communication of mine apm-arMethod!1 containing those words; Tt io not at all itnpiobahle t Lat tim Mormons rnav consent to an aincwlment to the L'onstitutiou pinliihiting polyga-mo;i condition of Statehood. Once a sovereign State, with kerUlative, exc-'-live and jadieiai powe: in their hands, they will nuliifv any laws preventing the carrying out of their schemes, while their missionaries ransack the globe to increase the population who obey counsel in voting, in anything, in everything, from the tie of a shoo or the color of a ribbon, to the blood atoning of an obnoxious Gentile. Oppose any amendment to the y u- Oou-stitutio- die AiOi g And the i 1 .i ,h V, u iirt i -- ng d,i s . jmllitris I 51 1(111 rsu Up With the CLL, the ue glows come n, to talk a little of ad that ms. fit be done, uber Hint I may he the next To ovsii in at the dimi, call j 'to fiom ad jour l.u-- work I or o'.eniore: you work jour heart must watch, toe dooi w on the lat- li And I stood still in the doorway, I eaning against the wall, Not heeding the fair white roses, Though I crushed them and let them fali; Only looking down the pathway, And looking toward the sea, And wondering, and wondering. When Le would come heck for me; Till I was aware of aa Aagol Who was going swiftly by, IV oh the gladness of one who goeth In the light of oar bod Most High. He passed the end of the cottage Toward the garden gate I suppose he was Come down At the sotting of the sun 1 comfiu t goaie one in the village At hoe dwehmg woe deso.aK And Le aueed before the d sir Beside u.y foar-)- , n,d the likeness of a smile Was ou Ids face' VtMip pot, he ai ! for onto you g.ven To Vi tl( h -r th f iMimg of his feet S bo tl e glory of our Idesms heaven; f- ! ! If very n thi'ik !' ! 1 n "h i i .! I (V .1 W;P !uiJ u'j i i hlll'O pJ'riJb1' v , i .. I k , U , ts p hini"g "f? g - u I. -- G"-'"- ' igt. I i -- ' ; . itv Ctli , 1 ft t'o-.ii- . ! le'.-L- t i, vv i t 1 1 - 'A !' it j'i'-- i - ( -- . j a mi 1 ne iHt I Mt.t 1. OK, . "ti v b f ( Wall ie-- nolle if the ( t' tin .T. t t-- M p t w,'!i i ii !' .. , !; 1. '.I. VV !"?. tt' '1 .1 t; :1 lie ",k v m, sJO'iy-HKi- h-- , - an-sthe- n- n fai-iea- ad-d- or ,'ne- 'it con v vr-o,1Oul't take ;!s i'tC. Big I'!'!'' it,') ,, tl v r.iiH'l pei.leiHt a tiMiik the Perl was ck, tim h'r H v -- j v al-a.i- i'i-tit- -' i 1 i i lb-fe- a Eng-b-Lai- l. ii , e-- I , ;i -a i 1 t H-c- e book. Beginnincr when he was twenty-fiv- e years old with his defence of Turner in the tin first volume of Modern sometimes of notes vlar though iasping his genius hm kept up thesteady ringait during mote than ingJ5 tor a higher 5 nan none nothIf Ruskm loitv years. volumes oi this the five but wiite ing one serifs, the woild must be gnu'tbd to him. Outliving the aversion j excited among the devoted disciples of the old mnstei by tin magic oi us eloquence and the soundiv Ss ol its matl'T, tie MM , ,.s have largely made the p! eent sta'Us stud cliaactci Not only !id ii uirymit its J liy, p upo-- f to prove the bupenonty it n laiuisi ape painteis I'vcr the it ev but olutioni,ed aims li,, is, id ui! b els, an gav e the w oi id such a st'iit , if yiiistic and svnibolivn) dcs.nip-;L-- i s fmnure, lb it in knowledge, in imago at!' e genius, and elegance oi sty le it ,- i- r.n t nml in jiurf oi veise. B.itvvtillo Ids stork and his Influence po.'innit'ui in ait circles, it ("cs not end here, lie was a teacher in ethics, in p dibcal economy, and o, pluhinthi'spy, '1 !m of the old school cv oi e opponent painters, the bkulc professoi ol iuic aits at Ovfoid, the kind but uncompromisimr adviser to young ladies, had a warm la art within him. He loved God, and labored hard to help his fellows. With all his fidietited wealth, and his father and him something like all lii- literary invostiuene-:-, which have made pioStablu returns of late years, with an easy fortune, he was often poor for the sake of his unfortunate countrymen. Time ami mind and money he gave to their needs. On tlm one hand, ins interests took the practical form of rows of model tenement houses in Lonk was the monildy' don; on journal Fots Chwige'cr, sowing its seed to promote the conservation and elevation of the social life of the people, and especially to rescue the laboring classes! from the evils which have rose 'ted from the modern industrial system. His inter os in education, and in all benefits to young people, mental and moral, was always fresh and generous. ITe was not too great to write priwiers of eciance, or to travel a tor.g wav to address a small grad-uaticlass. To bestow gifts on his school and museum at Sheffield, he oven sold a groat ninny os his art treasures. May the Land be stayed that would coldly spread out the details of theaffhe-ti-that has finally fastened itself permanently upon this mighty mind. Again and agnm it hie? been drive a Lac a, but its destiny was to stay fit last. Intense, erratic, original, lung, and alway-a at work, culling change of woik play enough, the man made a practice of irta!:.g his bum. It product d more, both m quality and quantify, thai r oi t,.!-- . am, ytt S'e my inn ( j t 1 , i ' i . 4 y. JueSsll I.itf liei'j - ln-- r i ' 'lyj I poverty- - 1 , Mv-e- 1 1 j every Gentile enterprise, whetluw in ehunh or in trade, and they will do it. Should there be indications looking towards this, flood Congress with petitions against it. Go to Washington, a the Mormons do, and interview the Congressman of your district. There ought to be no party politics in this matter anywhere; there is none Imre. Democrats and Republican j in Utah are one in opposition to the admission of Utah into the family of Slates until the devil of lechery and of treason is cast out of her, atd she sits clothed and in her right mind,' This afternoon, as in the light of current events I ieaJ and copy these words of mine uttered so long ago, I fool more than ordinarily satBRed wirii my prophetic instinct. Since the recent death of John Tavlor, the organization (church?) has been without tin official prophet. Taylor, Young, Smith, tu none of their that I have mad, ever gave uttmauci-men e striking proof of proplmtic ability tb.'.nlc vvoiusl have quot d from my form' i Utiooi would jcetn to in liMte. Ordinibiv I have to 'iirr'ct mv r Illv I il'l! p?i-lv I'lV hi, III I,, i ?r !' wools tl to iuve wl'lort; n t e Ii a i! v ii'ci at u 'li. i' c ', I f 'in m oi ig t of M. a itiO ' j l ill", t.at and not th,J do in,! Urc. niV'Ue'l me ..i'tn M' t LY., tlni the r. hov -a ' L" : i ul n i'. to 'll he passed down nsy Collage garden, jty th path that leads to the sea, I id he came to the turn of the little road Wheie the lurch and laburnum tree Lean ner and arch the way; Itieie l saw him a moment stay, And turn once more to me, As I wept at the cottage door, Ami lift up bis hands in blessing Then I saw bis face no more. i! Yolk lay-nn- lu yourriom, 1 . s 1 into Statehood. Thevv iiave been acting with this in view from the very beginning. E ory Christian minister or sliould carefully watt h to prevent this Being don. The Mormons know how. once this made a State, to cripple And it may la) m the morning I will come. li.e wo'k a' witch!ci "li '1 BU e ;r! hOfi.; Hu hi .i h his i ''ur ;n J H- tvint. hi r Tin deb-gate- u Xovt inbei. e1' r i f b',,i . the-- i Weeds, y L.rh v. ei . of , fauna' v it- in 1, 1 si; isvi published The Mot moils me watciwi.r who Jvr t y-- for she opening-)- ' tie dooi y ! .si.pb''I. i wmtef f'l'i u, a I i - u a mass meeting in the Salt Lake Tabet-nacl- e to protest against the manner of the eveciition of federal laws against polygamy in this territory. That meant alsmiply to protest against their execution body unanimoudy, forfthe at all. A paper was read at the meetways vote one way, an! then submitted it to the people. Between TOOL and ing which Le afterward presented to the V'QO Mormons Lave voted fwpt, and Piesideiit of the United ,MaTes. JnhiiQ, Cannon, the repres.'ntaiH e about 4U0 votes, neatly equally divided son of ids father, was wish Caine apbetween and Momma-- , point'd lo visit the President, Yenim woie east aua'iir-- t it. Had dm non- - M c meiuded ti vote thie wouhl Cannon vvusthen sui')o-,s- t to P u t at le.i-- t he was Mutmnn, h.n't Leon u veiy A'1 oe L"ieiar,i- iv that Since then the p! tiv ei v.aOTtU.st the IlI.iV iMI.ti; but Wisoiv t e amil't jv t ' I 's J - vou'ig gentleman to','' m1 i lin. men a Iv, a t Pent o in the Tab- iSLtoiea tei s i i'v pay no altci't'oii to tin iv a'teniii'in, in o?tii r li fit. to a m of suet'' it m iti pio'-tiuconst The piee.Mit announces that po Ji bt ioie lbo ctiut-lo- ; Lints, piiygamv. lU'i"iy and bigamy bung consi lciil Cleveland !"',tr v ifii a j.ad tiies,. fm m of I'Compatibl" Republican 1 f :u bidden ji niin liocent. to be a mis bo.'imor, 'vims' commissi a is jinuishable liy hue or iogii i m men ?." Jnothei words, they have pat inm 'i'lbnsvo np fini tnou proposed uiganic law a modification cn enants made in holypiacts f tinnol the nufiageous Edmunds lavv. Both thi-- c emne- - ate punishable imw and eternity! Hoirible! bv laws flamed by the Congress of the eetion p!( Now, a inonogamou1-con- i wholt-eals a administered United mates, by Jederal po-capost iy, and the oroflicials. of Satan, that They are t be punished, gan of thus if callthe e'hurch, cay that it is s when Utah In Cwines a State, by courts piesi led o' or by Mormon judgi s, purely political movement, and argues v hos jmies will be composed of Mor- that, having played thU farce totlc end, made the constitution, and submitted it mons monogamous (?), of course. to the monogamic Moirnon ballot why To read the Monnon papers they apdedid not the polygamists vote? that this fraud will believe that to pear ceive the Congress of the United States Congress must believe in their sincerity, and that as a corn pen lion for the ad- ami settle the Mormon problem by admission of Dakoia, their knocking will mitting Utah into the Union. Pear rerdcr, do not be deceived by be heard, and sitle by side they will lie made sovereign States. any specious argument that George the Mormon Ticknor Curtis, the great mormon atior. The Ihitrcl Xein, Church organ, pronounces the movement ney, may publish in any of the newsthat newspapers may present a purely political one undertaken by papers, or in iavor of this Statehood in editorials monogamous Mormons, who have betn movement. The Mormons, tnouega-uiou- s in the providence of God, i. e., Adam, or polygamous, have not the faintmercifully preserved from the bonds of est idea of giving up polygamy. Read plural marriage, that they might, at this this blasphemous quotation from tl eir critical moment, at this propitious hour, J Smith, whose e cry meet in ccuvtntion and perform this prophet, word as divine; they regard very necessary part in the history of this new and everIf receive not ye Now and church this everykingdom. covenant (of polygamy) anl abide body here know, and everywhere else lasting in this law, then are ye damned.' not would know, if they knew anything woith My own view of the curt Aw Mormon-Uthat this knowing about Mormonit-in- , r was stated in every and s that I delivered while East laM maneuver to make a Suite originates Mormon an wintu, A ten itmidl rvumaission such with the pi lest hood. tic- - Loubinna p.ire'hn-- e as eroverne all c,ivnanU-- l Me mens. They Lave t i L arid these bail-,c- be I'uMif tu ndow n.ciu hou-e- s in their to elrbi.itUa ar.d liberty made to b; n g f rth fr'.ir meet f ,r r ntm, t. q ,.v if n.,t d,av ire .1 " iim-! !, L- uion-ognuift- v nil lil'K'd. as the hod. 1 - . -- i Mo-im- ! udly ne f h ! 'ging Moeliy k sui 1 r', hK 0 e Ihe luor: ! , s i Hu i the '(i- 1 , pas-- law as will pm by this Tuiiuuy. Keep it a Teiiitcuy under vow control thi'wgii until redeemed Utah, as a Congo'-Sshall bean i lenient tf :i iipii to bt; to, the Union, be, aime homiurtio ns with it in institutions an l.iv s. sound the ab'in Tno hour m lull oi ecii nwst go down, 3l,u I'tit n deiends on tlie jieople to say Ijom-A ,t. t of igil.iiiee aiid Mwooniiii! i i.iy 1, V, si I'u'i' a in v i so too i. , ') impud 'i'b and sn fap's; a1 that Its de'ilh st! iiiiiii mav delude ! lf n may propose. Instruct y oar servants tu - p that Mot monism exits friends C, lhuc., o Out- - I..'! t Ini'' tr")g, g Hltl ilig Laij.iij Milt ti i dl.v t He! tht Id lie law I, , tt heu the Hu'o O'e hi t ,1s pie, i ONE WORD 310 HE AGO IT 3I0R31ON1S31. It may be at the cock-croWhen the night is dying slowly In the sky iocks calm 8nd hoij, r,d the Wading for the dawn of the gulden sun Which draweth nigh: Woen the miis are on the valleys, shading The rners chid, is f idmg, fading An 1 my linirmng-sta- r Over the hi!: unto jon; Watch. hei 1j I m on the Like Ted the U iu pour hum-- . Cl'l't b fo;e the dawning, In Jjt'tv. ce. t se u gh; ,u d OiufLlUir, I ICVJ (o' (V n! NO. X3II. 14, 1SST. BUSKIN'S MUrOKTUMi. Gooijt J. (.Villi' !' stvh's, lilt in, slimov J R iskm w ii!- -' no. The sweet engigedt penivin pwsJiiiiinarv rl'he had just as nun h uht to h 11s t Lat vv,-- hate nocistf'n'cd take pa ii tlie-- e pioi'ei d:ngs as l!ic in - i' Mi hardily now and then in HKno:!!e..sts Lab (tidy at lavvin! t'iiui intense t'liim hip-- ', winch have t.ous iUetiley io!uiilli-- to vote; hi at last foie, jtugled occasionally only legal ufliees they an not hold. hoptlcss-l- out of tune. It is sad news, Why tin n were they not present at the and many say mournfully, Alas! what iulciiettis hole ocitliiuvrn! preliminary mentiug, and Ly those aA mightywho-e man very fibre was intellect to the and cultme. A meetings ajipointed as immense man who-constitutional convention? The reason cu!i'cumsness of the difference between is obi ious. They did not propose to himself and other iaen, and whose desire commit themselves to what, if sincere 1 1 see tkers on his own level, was the of some of his worst faults. Arroupon the pair of the monogamous con- secn't and impatient of other opinions vention, is a wholesale apostasy from thtj gant than his own, and still move uf laziness and Mounon church' ami faith. Inanity, often erratic and way ward, he was Polygamy is, according to Mormon still a man whom the world must always revelation, a holy state instituted of God remember as both good and great, as one of the most devoted of Englands in these lat it r davs lor the i as the king of of his kingdom on earth. An estate to philanthropists, as well her cri'ics, the maker, we might almost last throughout eternity worlds withsay, of modern opinion oa art. Ife who out end, whose progeny is to people Hung thunderbolts at the rich and arUto-CXnew worlds yet to be created. The 10 with his light hand, was ready to his left to whoever might need it. lend of this that president convention, Now it whs to build up a school, nw to ft amod this new constitution, John T. life itself into the mouths of a Ca;ne, Utah's icpresentadve in Congress, put -stricken family, or to give his aid a little over a year ago, was instructed and his name to a young lady friend success in publishing a by the Mormon conference to get up doubtful of 1 Wfieiei am working my Aipmni 'ark, my head to watch the j lf! f.i. ; If he is come; And rite Angel answMS swee'ly In my lionie; Imly a few more shadows, And he will come." I may be when the midnight Is heavy upon the land, And the black waves lying dumbly Along the aaad; When the moonless night draws close And the lights are nut in the house; tVneu the fires hum low and red, Vnd the watch is ticking loudly the bed: I hough you sleep, tirod out, on your Coach, till jour heart must wake and watch In the dark room, I or it may be that at midnight I will come. 'll invite mo to the vacant s.u, fur whilst nm have prophetic gift-,- , I tiu-- t thtt I Uek iay eualifieations neecisa v to that -- La i eminence,' that a study t i the characters of the prophets oi ha- - revealed to me. Well, the Mormons huv I ha 1 a convention and adopted a c nsutution in view of Statehood. Anywhere else but in Utah such a proceeding a this would have been preceded by discussions in the newspapers and in public assemblies, but here not a dturu was heard, not a faneial uote, as they hurriedly made their preparations to bury polygamy, bigamy, incest, and all other sexual sins in view of a place in the family of Stales. Suddenly a call was published by the ehaii man of the People':; the name under which the arty, i. the Mormon Chuieh carry of priesthood out their political devices, appointing a day for mass conventions for the purpose of appointing delegates to a conThe call wa stitutional convention, sent to the chairman of the Democratic and Jit publican, organizations, inviting them to appoint delegates at this pro-As a mattious time for Statehood. ter of course they both declined. But the Mormons went on, held the convention, and passed the constitution in that I lift re 'It is great, hut the laborers are ft ic j b-- c |