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Show PROBABLE PROSPECTIVE PIONEERING. I'or somo forly jears tho Mormons lli wo been acting as a kind of national 3i oncers. Ohio, Missouri, Illinois and Iowa in turn enjoyed tho bonclita of their westwurd wundcrings, and settle-moots settle-moots and cities followed upon the hoels of their onward march. Then 'tho American Dcsorct" was orossod, ar.d settling in tho Great Basin they ttado a base of supplies for opening up this interior rcg:on with its vast wealth and illimitablo resource?. Undo Sam, through his representative, representa-tive, President Grant, apparently seems to think that tho Mormons hould continuo their pioneering. They havo had on unusually long spell in coo placo ; in fact, a quarter of a century cen-tury may bo supposed to havo partially tnorvatcd thorn, and rendered them unlit for tho travol and hardships, tho tnako-killing, road breaking and bridgo building incidental to pioneering, and tho talk ia now that thoy bo "weeded out of Utah." "Weeded out" is not by any moans happy phrase ; firstly, because- tno Mormons actually form the human crop of Utah; and, secondly, because they have boon a productivo crop, and their yield has added largely of woalth to the national treasury. But as thia "desert region" haa been re-c re-c laimed, mining Territories around made an assured success, oaoals dug to irrigate with, tho great overland railroad rail-road built, and tho interior of tho west made habitable by the Mormons, where aro thoy wanted to movo to now ? AVhat desert to bo crossed? What waste to bo explored? What wilderness wilder-ness to be penetrated ? And whore is it desired that they should nest pitch their tents ? For years tho vaunt was that Mor-mouisui Mor-mouisui would melt away beforo "advancing "ad-vancing civilization," and tho building cf railroads ; and again and again it has it been assured that the strongth ofMor-monism ofMor-monism was rapidly waning. Now, however, it is discovered all at once that the argumentative pjwo:a of mior general tho Kev. Dr. John P. Newman havo been unequal to tho desired work, and that unlicensed un-licensed liquor saloons, protected prostitution, pros-titution, bedizened harlots walking the streets, and tho theology of tho San l-'rancisco Birbary Coast and New York Five Points, have not been potent in convincing tho Mormons of their Own immorality and the beauty and purity of tho "civilization" thus presented pre-sented to them. And so tho strong srtn of power is to be invoked to mako them "move on" like tho "Wandering "Wander-ing Jew." The spectacle is sublime! Forty millions of people cannot wait tor the process of conversion wheh they have been assured is so certain, and pet to work to dragoon, or drive into the wilderness, or out of tho world, a hundred and twenty thou;aud people whom thoy have failed to convert, even with tho brauJy begotten eloquence elo-quence of the overwhelming Newman! Britain is not quite so energetic in the ptwclytiuog busiocs?. She has an empire of about a hundred million jiolygamists, and idolaters at that, over whom her rule was extended by conquest; con-quest; but she bears with them, and neither aucm pta to dissolve their marital bouds cor to drive the people to destruction because they love and abide by their own domestic do-mestic . institutions. Bat Undo San: is becoming a more fiery missionary. He se.ureda portion of adjoining territory ter-ritory by conquest, and he would cow whip the people hj helped him to the conquest icco breaking break-ing up all their family relatiaa?, or drive them aain into another exploring ex-ploring and pioneering expedition. We respectfully ask again, where is the region to which the national pioneers have to go? And before they figure closely on s:artinc, how much will the old man give the boys for tho little ' property they have gathered around Item during tho kst quntec of a cen tury? Tho women will go with them, fur they never for Jake kind, loving pirtucrs; so there in no aae figuring on them. And there ia no need to cay aiything of the millions expended in labjr for which the reaulta are not very apparent. But how much will the old man pay for tho houses, and farms, and orchards, and factor k-, and roads made, and canals dug, and other little et ceteras that go to make up a fJ'juri.-hing location ? Then there will be a chance to figure oq the pioneering pio-neering bu.iinets, and to study maps ol the stretch ot couulry north where the miners haven't been able to make it pay, the gjld being too far from a base of floppier,; or southward, where the "grcaner.i" and untamed Indiana make prospecting anything but a heaitby excitement. |