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Show ME EVENING NEWS. Job 7, ! fond itx AND settled rulo that mero Irresularitiea in selecting imd cmpinnclic tho grand- jury DEATH can only be taken way, advantage of in onewhen viz: by challenge to But the array. In tho case of tho people r." Thomas the objection to the Juror relates to his for somo reason which would Brannlgan, Jack Larelle and Charles qualification render hint incompetent, convicted of murder in gularly eummoned and had he been reHoward, recently in the first degree, defendant's attorneys filed that case advantage can beempanneled,. taken of it, on a motion in arrest of. judgment, upon demurrer, motion to quash or in arrest of which His Honor Chief Justice Wilson de- Judgement. . The array not having been challenged livered the following ruling on and tho irregularities being simply in the Saturday ' ' last: t empanneling of the Jury it Is too late, at The defendants in this case having been this time, to take advantage of the Irregucomplained of, if any- exist. . Tho convicted of the crime of murder in the larities second point is therefore overruled. The first degree, by Terdlct of the Jury, by their same answer will apply to the third point, attorneys filed a motion in arrest of judg- which is also overruled. The fourth point for by the defendants is that the ment. The first point made in the motion contended to allow them to file a plea in refused Court is, That the verdict of tho Jury finding tho abatement but compelled them to plead to defendants guilty of murder in tho first de- the merits. The record shows, that after gree, is erroneous, .for the reason that the the indictment was returned into court; indictment charges murder Jn the second the defendants filed a general demurrer to degree only." same, which, after full argument, was In order to determine this question, we tho then appears overruled It the by the Court. are led to an examination of the statutes of that the defendants demurrer withdrew tho Territory. On page CI of tho Laws of and offered to plead In abatement, which Utah, title secona. section jour, muruer is offer was refused by the Court on the defined tar ho Tho killing or a human ground that by demurring generally to the being with malice aforethought, either exthey therebya waived their which is merely de- indictment, pressed or implied,' to afterwards plead dilatory plea. right tho common law; or, in other By all1 rules of pleading claratory of dilatory pleas words, It is tho common law definition of must bo pleaded at tho earliest opportunity, murder. This statute, in tho opinion of or are waived. The Court sees noth-- 1 the Court, does not alter the law of mur- Ingthey case to change the general rule, this in u satisfied der. What was murder before its passage, and upon full investigation, is murder now; what is murder now, was that bo error was committed in refusing to murder before the statutes was passed. allow the said plea to be filed. The fourth Sections five and six of the same statute de- point must therefore . be overruled. clares tho penalty for murder In certain he fifth point was not on the argument cases: Section five prescribing that when in arrest of judgment, very strenuously concommitted in certain Specified modes or tended for, but the Court has noticed the under certain circumstances therein men- same in its Investigation nd Is fully satistioned, the punishment shall bo death; fied it is untenable. The reasoning on the while section six provides that, in all other first point is applicable to this also and fully kinds of murder the convict shall bo pun- settles tho same. , . , ished by imprisonment for life, or a term As these questions seemed to involve the of years. It is a well settled general rule, life of three persons, the Court has devoted that in an indictment for an on'enee created an unusual amount of time and labor to by statutes, it is sufficient and usually nec- their examlnation.and after a full and careessary to describe the offence bathe words ful consideration of the whole subject is of the statntes. or their equivalent. Hut convinced no error has been committed when tho statute is only declaratory of what which has that to tho defendants dono was previously an oiicn.no at common law, or for which theinjustice should, be judgment it has been held In numorons case tw high authority, that, notwithstanding tho The motion in arrest of judgment Is therestatute, it is sufficient ir tho pleader define fore . overruled.' the offence by statlnsr tho common law In were then ordered to The three WEXTESCE or 1 Wm.H. Hooper. , LOCAL OTHER AND HATTERS. Tiieatre.-- A 'large audience ttnaea The xo Theatre on Saturday evening. miio Opera of Fierette tr very amusing, to fl Clella enacting the r'4 of he satisfaction of all. Mr. Jerome as Frank Howson as ipalou. ami- Mr. were alo very gOQJ. it"'(t y 1,16 Howaou sutera of "I Hie . .1,1 that my lote Mm aucz with an and Tlracity quite captivating. irotneH ballatU of "When Lubin Sings," by t, im tieiu-an- a "uome into me garden, by MUs Krama impressed the ndience very favorablv. tbe beautiful Irish drama of kata Keamey"will be presented trlth Miss mma and Clella as Kate and Rose. The Howsons will be supported by llardie. Marietta and Thorne, and Annie Want of the regular eommnr. will i performance ...... r n wlrl T'ti Pfmconclude t (by special To morrow, Tuesday evening, by the reqnesc or many patrons. the "iirande Duchesse" will be reneated. Thit mt 111 be, positively, the last presentation of hi very popular Duriesque, durinz the iKamfni of the Hovraon family, their peTtoirc beta? well atockod with other iveltien. Thla piece has already eatab- iwwn u m MTonw Will) toe pu DUO crw, ana possessing as it does, many aiitlfui musical genu, none who desire to t should fail to attend the Theatre iiue tn-no- u lul To-nisr- ,ht . morrow evening. Arrivauh asd liri, . . 1 un y, ac-nl-ed re-tWv- Vd - r- v.-- s ! n, e, ng by-oa- ' . m & m--ma fl9l Pu5ia i the-statut- " Cw tion Vnsof . . evcr-prcscr- if ?r apPf b -?'"" S A IiT ' . ' . . ' ' " sipi . ; pro-nonnc- Si. is V V V- r ; RaDE ' . . Co yds Yerlt. Rl(ti Ilaulc mr Caltrernta, Kan 'my -. ... - f3 d-- ,y " .' -- , CORN, ' STOCK NTOBE. 1 fV-- i I'iaiKT a! In Unction. t Ti t 1. - 'i And . SLIPPERS j AND 111JSKINS; . r I' 1 1 i j . ; t ' f 1 TTEXXV . CO fc 62 FVSE, All kinds of material necessary Maslln and Over Shirts Half Hose Soapend-er- s Neck: Ties Collars Handkerchiefs Tra Parasols Umbrellas, Ac., alt of Bags veling are mm can do onerea hi wnieu ooncui n -- j In the Territory. i. np EAST TEEIPLE STREET, " : STEEL, ' POWDER, r tXAMINE 8T0CX.X ifOSIEllV ' STRIKING HAMMERS, ALL IRK BEST STYLES. cLoinni&OTiisnniGcooK ; T ; ; ; i lor. Railroad, Building I or lining. 4S AnTils, Z SALT LAKE V CITY : jr4Bellows, Tlses, j General . f V - J - f 4 -- TowerMillard Sarefor : j. THI ' ' .' T I -- rarucuiar avienuoa crHiniiis Outfits fromithe Jobbing Trade.giren ,;. s:-COHPAHT BUH AH . rrns ; : SIZES, nOPE, ALL " 8TEAU DIIIZXS, Vf IT''"1" , ; . ERBICKS AND FIXTCRES, ' l'lIoitSE -- with their Btas Line and ars In connection PAJU3EL7llANK NOTES to carry prepared BULLION. GOLT3 and BlLVEIi COm and EX- the world, at PRJ33FUEIUUT,to ail rart'Of COLLECTIONS and greaUv reduced rates. COMHISalONa promptly attended to. Particular sttnUon paid to the delivery of EXPRESS LETTEU3 at ail poinU on our routes. for particulars apply at office. East Temple -- I "' ' ' .. r' x i. : ':'tL BOGGEniCSSm&lllllS Manntacturers and Jobbers of - iaiaoranyotner , i Have now received v Their TciV flnriii!? Oioclr. ! In addition to the above new good, toehave over Six Hundred thousand Doltar$ xccTth cCccoatl XXsniX material, of tool ' used in consisting of all 7:inds ' ' 'A building fhc Rop,d, ! " , market pnicrs. Manulactnre In Chicago ; . ... '. ; ff s New York and Boston en tralinsT kkt ibticu tan wmt TO - . '131 v. FROM UTiiii. ccLcrjiDO, . , , , . Wblcb tbey offer to tbe Trade at LOWEST iFarner'ItMomiFrDiitors fact .;FiunGnfeuriBi . -- : V And can b- osed eanilly veil for all MINING odeit; unsTEnn . 91 Couth Water Street, - CHICAGO, Particular attention paid to DruesisU orders. dsieo " In fact, every article needed to build purpoiwu " Jr. : , - i VEDSTER, BOURBON AND RYE WHISKIES. one Jatxo andTerjr valoabla i.:,.-- . -- - rrrc crr&,. ir uit;9t Arcu(uctr : AB SKALXS I!C ' t miiDtr oraer . dll5 em 10 (Successor to Pecker & Webster) Importer of - TT, POWER and SniYEsLn ' I OVERLAND EXPRES& ' ' V. C: ' f comrji; etc. i - KtOTes, Carta, j Tho Great 7cslcrn Despatch' IaFastrre!:!itLlR9 estatlished by the lor I I . . harrows, v7Iil ShoTCls, i t And kee . ' . 1 .. - DoorTrlmmlnrf, ," STalla, ....aiaaa, , , ; Easn, vJt Basra, . 2) and - v . , 31 . C u band tbe LARGEST STOCK! OF . ' : - ; V ; '. .: Lake Street, Cor. Wabash Avenue CHICAGOv 3 J 1" GOODS In their line to be found yitjm.. ' ins xtxt ... Crovltan PitS, Elsnltets,' . UnU tedftates Express (Mmr'nr, End transporting Boston wci Hercli!"ttJ:.9 iroii Kew Yort r that will not boar Hxpress cuarca. Onr rarlJT f rota Hi Jmt fa the end of Try cheaj,' riensba, t ' Of Superior Quality, ' ' . . " - ; - t3. Orders carefully attended to, d23 9m " . tho U. IM1.IL ll t:.a &s0 c&md by s'l the prlnf Hail road tin rs. lpt v - :.: :x . i . Ffc, . i CIGAR 17AREHOUSE a --v- i And" almost r ' - 'Ion-tai- t, TS( C LT L. trcry art!:! 9 refile;! f it . ... .... O m m 4 m for Ilpnss-- r And Plilrs can ttcure liarsaina by calilajat ..i CITY . . - . ,. .. j & JTJ3T ESTABLISHED, by DEWITT C. EOOTE, Tta Toste & Ilerrick, Syracuse, sthcet, CHimca, , , CM Cm, tfl-t- f P,!!.rl UTAH. If,Y.) '. ilu.'SIS.- tlC.U.) .TTI JOB L0T3 and la rc;r.lar lines tXlotiom fijure. PirtleaUr tlte-tlrld to Cash Wbolesala Trade, and r pedal cttentlon cQzx pa!d to orders from Utah.ca fr.- - uivi-- i Donjlas Clato Company, UEE STREET CHICAGO , - ; PAPERS, BISMARCK LEAD PENCIL COMPANY, BliANKETS, ... ;; SIBLEY STOVES, At CAMP; FURNITURE 64 fromOMAHA to denvkb,8ALt1akk city AUSTIN, VIRGINIA. NevadaSACRAMENTOv Cab, and intern whale points. ' Btagea leave SALT LAKE CITY dailyVIfor abovs points, and on alternate days forSOIS& and HELENA. Montana, CITY, Idano, and other poinU in those Terri' , COMPAXr.' ITINO aml TooIh -- STAOE3 to and from the TERMIN.TAIIjY AL! US of the UNION PACIFIC RAIL.BOD of OMAHA, and the CENTRAL PACIFiO BAIL 110AD of CALiroilNlA. Passengeri ticketed Aid all material for TnLTcIin tories... tat KIDDER. STATIONERS, TENTS OP &lT KINDS, i ? : " OVERLAfJ D fJ AIL. 4 & Decker, M ASUFiCTURISG : OT .1 , AND j iixraois. Litlicirapliers, Printers :,' Ausnrs, tnfl nil Llmlfl of IJlaclisniitlt ut nnriTinnTrTTiimPinrnTTDTJiici Diiaim Duu&iiiaii uriiui uilbud and . AGENTS FOR THE j Carpenters Express Forwarders,'' . . and W1TITE We make a specialty of I7IXEXS goods. dTO em . , Planes, WELLS, FARGO &C& Wabash ATcnue, CHICAGO, - - Vs i v ' CO.; WM01.ESA1.E 1 .' STOVES, a CARSOn,PIRIE KINDS OF TOOLS. GEiVTS' AM) BOYS' HATS DKNTS'ssd BOTK' YORK PRICES, Tnicclbarrows, ; ; UVa oflSLs. - ' - a 5 C.. . lrKr,n TVffltf. I ' "' SIiotcLs, . . TUNTS, i CAZLZAXJ W A "R T?. Qoods by the Package or repacked ay Scrapers, ? Sergei Calf and Baff i- - Jixra 3PQ3j?Q32L - '. , " FINE FRENCH, EOHERIAN, GERB3M GROCERIES. :" nAND-ALL. , CALF AND KIP BOOTS. ! IILIXOLS, C TTT?.T?.TTR SPICES, k -" - ' I i-- few mora w. " Also, MSN'S, t Jlu Yrt; and..-- ifYOUTHS. . t ; r ' ; Trie best stock, of Lsdles shoes In the City. " ! I '''''! - . cnnm, GLiiss, : OF ' Carte,' Plows, . ife Co., Cnevtnoa, or L li rri Hfeaih . cars cf ci a.ta ii Co.,ic ad of U.lMi-U- piat.'o Lncconc. 1 'V ' ; Speelal IMPORTERS j AKD JOBBERS OP " COFFEE, KINDS ALL . and Children's dlove Kid, , . berg. Ooat and Calf GAITERS AND BAU.10RHLS. .. Ladies' Carpet and Kid ; ' c HAH ...... 'itn J Ida Vara. , V - ' " : , B. A. Flqnler, O. F. Bane, LAKE BTREET. 4 .;, SUGARS, ' MImwk' i rw.va'a' - . BURLEY& TYRRELL. -- , r CHICAGO. il. Morton, C. . . " - E. P. Pbelpa, d881y : ' STREET, G.UOtUnan, r t f und Kew Ilex-- I JS'trX Fre'"ht f irColenrtd.i U I) : P ATI'? :r." r re c f eo, "G ll'J AT V : T TT ' i - i- - . or cx)Ksrsniro c,.. , ai mm , tr Onhandand , in quantities to anlt purehaaers. I i:,-.- Ladle', . 29 BaKDQLPH & CHICAGO, ; Frmselifft. Co., , .. , i. i and Provisions National Ilank, Clileaa;o. ' ITnlen St. I.onls. llaaketl A NOW ' i - S t,v 'T COIt RESPONDENTS . . to-lit , r PROHPTLY AMD f REMITTED. fc i v. i i . ' : Ijtnd Warrants, " COLLECTIOKS " j iii h K V . ir t X - V - 27 . K.C Clement,, Coin, N i. ' Gld Dust, ccl Having disposed of tho legal questions involved in your case it now becomes the painful duty of the Court to pronounce upon you sentence of tho law. Have you or either of you anything to say why it should not now be pronounced? (Each of tho prisoners having made a brief stateproceeded.) ment, Judge Wilson You were in dieted? by a grand Jury of your countrymen for the murder of ono Calvin F. Russell, upon which charge you have been tried and found- - guilty t by an impartial jury. In view of the enormity of tho crimo charged against you, tho Court would have been gratified if the facts eli cited on your trial had warranted a different conclusion; but I am compelled to say that the evidence was clear, convincing and conclusive showing the murder to have been colddeliberate and premeditated. without one mitigating circumstance in your favor.and, in the opinion of the Court, ruiiy warranted tho verdict of tho jury. The Court feels that yon have had an Im partial trial. You were defended by the ablest and most diligent attorneys at the bar. bv whom vour rights were well euard- edfand every point and question that could poesiDiy avail you, preserved. The court and Jury gave you the benefit of every possible doubt and after a fair and careful hearing before a patient, honest and humane jury you 'nave been pronounced guilty of murder in the first degree, the for which the law declares to punishment be death by hanging, shooting, or behead cither or which modes tno court win ing; now give you an opportunity to choose as in the statutes. (The prisoners Erovided choso to bo shot.) The Court is fully impressed with the fact that the words it is about to utter will limit your earthly career, but sad and solemn as that duty is it must be performed. Whatever may be my convictions as a private individual, or whatever may be the sentiment ot the people on the subject of the death penaltr.lt is not my province now to consider. The law says the penalty of your crime shall be death and the Court, sittimr simnlv to administer tho law as found in the statute boek, has no power, if it had the disposition,, to make, change, or modify it. It is an old and true maxim "That ho who presumes to bo wiser than the law is a dangerous citizen." How much more true when applied to a Judge sitting as a Court, sworn to administer the law as it is prescribed by those whoso sole province it is to enact it! It therefore has . no alternative and can adopt but ono course and it is that which tho law prescribed. , i Tho Court feels it to be its to stato dutycare that it has examined with great the evidenco as well as the law in your case, and with that candor and fairness with which it would speak to dying men it says to you there can bo no escape from the awful doom about to be pronounced. In the spirit with which the Court weuld address a dear friend nnder the most solemn of all circumstances it entreats you all not to waste the little precious time still left you, indulging in vain hopes that can never be realized, but studiously devote it to prethe last great trial in that paration for above from which there is no High Court are never made. mistakes where and appeal There you will meet your murdered victim sent Into the presence of his Maker bv your hands without one moment's warning or preparation, and to whom you refused mercy, although with his dying breath lie appealed to you in behalf or his wire and children, hoping thereby to awako if possible one spark of humanity in your souls. You heeded not his dying voice, but by one more fatal shot ushered his unpreCat, notwithpared soul Into eternity. standing you hearkened not to the cries for pity uttered by your poor bleeding victim, still you may yet hope that tho Great Ruler of the Universe will have mercy on your souls, if with prayer and true repentdying ance yon even now approach the Throne of Grace. I exhort you, then, as dying men, to endeavor to prepare yourselves to meet and earnestly seek for that benign your God can alone mitigate your great which mercy crime and meliorate your sad doom. I beseech you as men standing on the verge of the grave, with but a narrow span between time and eternity, that you devote every moment of the law dajs now left you on earth to earnest preparation to meet Him who alone can tern oer eternal, iustico with infinite mercy, liear now. the sentence of thelaw. It U entered end adjudged by the Court that you Thomas Ilrannigan cad you Jack Lavelle and you'Citarles lloward, having been convicted by a jury of your country decree, cf the crimo cf murder in tha firstMarshal bo taken hence by the Territorial to some and pctire place and there in Eolilary confinement until Monday kept2Cth and that on tho cf July, A.D. that day between tLa hours cf 0 rum. r.r.l 4 r.tn. vou be taken bv the Territorial Mar- seal to come suitable place and there executed by t cinj L'.:ct until yen era dead, and may Cod have mercy on your aouis. M nr., , 4. ' .. - nCALKKS ' FURHISMIHG GOODS - Bo wf n' ItnlldlMa:. O 10? Y. AKE ; prisoners stand up," whereupon Judge Wilson tho following r-.- And Dealers in t . -- anH,1110 r llanolactarers and Joboers of it EAST TEMPLE STREET, v - v l tr iii;6IaaiCo: Co I , A & . uaionPaciflG Railroad - w soni-inspin- - U S. UlUa rwredje, ELDBEOGE HOOPER, r 1 11-t- IT.R. : Elders Kjrjro Ike and Johan Carl Larsen arrived Liverpool, from Utah, per steamship on Thursday, the 13th ult. "ity " a had prosperous journey, and enjoy .hy KJder Larsen proceeds to healths jcttlnt i ofnrmir,ti 10 samui i Tenia em jeewe X. South; l.kicr. Lake uas. been appointed lm Ubor in the Nottingham Conference, uhder the lresldencv of Klder I. W. Short- MtY.Milt. Star. gredients necessary to its consummation. It necessarily follows, if these conclusions - Nkw York. We extract the following are correct that tho averments nocessary to make a good indictment at common law, Klder would iterftinr items fromSOthal letter "ofYcstcT be sufficient under the statute. This, ult. V. 1. Miles, dated the then, leads lis to innniro what would bo necessarily an- indictment at com il.iy at Xl o'clock p.m., the following nam-- mon All lawvers will at once miionar!es sailed from this port, on admit law. material averment of an tho that the Cir of Antwerp, for Liverpool, KIders Indictment for murder is that the de,iAm Toonc,' John Tuddenham, William fendants feloniously and of their malice Tnvlor, Tion. Komney, Geo. II. Dunibrd, aforethought, did kill and murder tho de ceased. To determine, then, whether the Al l, ahumway, Chas. Shumway, I Tarn '. l'arfc, Jenkln Jones, Georjfo Noble, indictment In the case at bar is good when SJ.M. Price, pier lea Echo City, Friday estea oy wis rule, wo Have only to examine the tilst. ut 4 o'clock a.m., arriving at New he first count of the name. (Here the and Court read tho first count in the indict York, Thursday 27th at 7 o'clock a. m., took rooms at ho Stevens House, Broad-wa- ment. until arrangement- could be made The Court is of tho opinion that this in ir their vera pee. By the way, I wish to dictment contains all the material averat My one word, in behalf of the gentlemanly ments necessary to its validity, either Proprietors of that establishment, their common law or under tho statute. . If a should be good indictment for murder.it must neces Curtesy towanla our people noticed by your paper, and a recom sarily follow and be held to Include all de i actuation given, in order that our grees from tho highest to tho lowest; also brethren who are traveling, to and from includinsr manslaughter. The Court is fullv Knrope, may know where they can be sure satisfied that the pleader when drawing an of cood treatment, and reasonable charges. naicxment unaer tne statute need not des-"All of the above named brethren wish to express their feelings of pleasure, at the words "Wilful, deliberate and premedi kind treatment and warm reception, tated.' or either of them. Bnton hearinsr to them by Professor. O." Pratt, who the cvidenco the jury have tho right, and in occupying a room In the same hotel. their duty.to enquire and determine wheth- They met together in his room, and with lor, his friendly counsel with t is murder in the first or second desrreo or iii (iod speed them on their voyage to the Held of their labors. One of the number, cordingly. JTho indictment in this case Hamilton i. Parks baring a brother living Dsmg good, the jury was authorized to find in Philadelphia whom he had not seen in as It did. The Court entertaining these --'0 years, availed himself of the views must therefore hold that the first opportunity of visit by a four hours trip on tho Rail- point is not well taken and it is accordingly -! road, the- meeting, interview and departure overruled, v v to the writer after his return, Tbe second point contended for trr defend relatxl ;md was intensely Interesting; best given ants counsel lsrrhat the indictment against by himself, and in his own words, which I said defendants was found by a Grand Jury or only seventeen (17) persons, of presume yon man have - from his pen here- composeu wnom aix were after. talesmen summoned from "lira. G.lIJbinell remains in this city, un the bystanders." - Owing to the many imtil the next company arrives, having been perfections of our statute,tho Court has had indisposed nearly ever since his arrival; no little trouble in arriving at a satlsfactonr ht u, however, improving at present. solution of this questlon,and has been lead "liro. Naisbltt. preached yesterday after-u- to a full examination of the statute as well in our Hail to a good congregation of as numerous other authorities. ( Tho 'fifth N:tint and strangers, taking for his text an section of the thirty-fif- th chapter of the ilitorial from the Jieraia,oi wan day 50 ta statutes of Utah, page sixty-ninprovides on the religious tenaanctes of the aire. That when a District Court is to be held, a A perusal of the article, would give'some Grand Jury of twenty-fou- r persons shall uiea, tnrougn me insptrauon of the same be summoned at least thirty . days before spirit possessed byj the speaker, of tne tno commencement or tho term." The same statu to interesting nature of the discourse. In the eleventh section of, the CI to an able, and nrovidas that after the rand Jorr evening also, we listened seraon. on the restorauon have been empanneled,sworn,etc., they, ot tif the Jews, and the second coming of any twelve or tnem, may, upon what seems beloved brother Elder Orson to them good and sufficient evidence, find ,'hrist, r I'ratu i see it announced by your paper an Indictment. - This statute, while it received mac uaer Staines is on his provides for the summoning of twenty-fou- r jusi TV to nitfind to tha Mnltmtlnn m. vrHl persons.does not require that number to be welcome awaits him, all are anxious to sworn, but does provide that twelve mar find an indictment. In the examination of if am or the time of. their deliverance." this question tho Court has had occa . to examine the statutes . of many rAitOTjr. Elder W. C McGregor, aion different In which similar provisions States, writing from Parowan on the 28th ulL.9 are found. In somo of tho States tho law "the prospects for raising a crop here requires that not less than sixteen jurors nnyi mm season, are very gloomy, at present; shall be sworn; but there is no such require in our statute, we nave, tnererore, the grasshoppers eat our grain as last as it ment to some seek outside of the statute. .lomes oui or tne ground, so that at present established by rule, acknowledged our fields are as tore as the first day after which to bo governed In tho authority, bv empannelLhg of aave ang aeep trenches a piu uig. uauy is contended bv counsel it grand jury, around their land, and hare driven the lo- - for defendants, that twenty-fou- r grand juhsh into them and burned them with rors must be empanneled and sworn, and straw, etc.. but still they have conquered that a less number a Is not lesal If Jury. a dms far. Ve had a heavy snow storm on sucna ne me t or true construcxiierai a u3i reading mm moan mm tiui nui tion of this statute, it 1 manliest that it " v v uu mo sun came out. tne wonia aereat tno ooject or tno statute woitsU seemed reinforced and hanBiar than ltself.no provision havlncr been made for ver. It is snow in or aiin tui.v A drawins talesmen the bystanders. In loubt these storms will do to the grass case of the absence from of any one of the t wen ty- on theranse, and perhapsgood trill bring no rour snmmonod we would bo compelled to ctl th "wheat again, though some dismiss those who did and de thus appear is killed, prive me court ox a grand jury and In effect others tM1 soma rheat of it willentirely come Tip yet. uo away wun an criminal procedure In tr. Q uite a number of the brethren com- tho courts. The Court is not prepared to so dangerous a rulo, but prefers to menced la from one to establish putting one two acresyesterday adopt with reason apiece of wheat, all la one patch, and thus more In consonance rather than uphold, and they intend to surround the nullify, tho patch with clear intention of the legislature, 4 stream of water, which will prevent vbu that, the the statute requires twenty-fw r.v 1 1 ' nLuiu tey are youcr. from notwithstanding our persons to be summoned, no more Ketttng on to it, and they Intend, unitedly; than twenty-three should bo sworn and .tC.?mirl the seasonr-Sdurtnz Ptch otherwise a complete jury of empanneled; " y raise some least. We potatocslSd corn. All twelvea might find a bill, when, at the same time, complete jury of twelve might dispeace with us at present, but we con- sent ignore it, thereby defeating the a stantly keep up guard aainst Indians, of Uw. and It from the .weight of all appears "om foar wjfatraea, night and day.'' authority examined by the Court that a of any number from grand jury twentv-threcomposed Cache Vallet. BLshon Bad e. twelvo to Is a Icral rrrand idencc, Cache Co., called in this morning lury. The Court, therefore, holds that the uu bvo us a report or things in general in indictment in the case at tho bar. was Conned by a legal number of grand urors. Cfiche Vallay. The grasshoppers are j for doing It is also contended : by counsel a. lively business In the south end of the defendants that a part of the grand Jurors makes ialley; their depredations in the north are were talesmen, and as no provision for supplying tho panel by not rmit have not yet this mode, the Jury in this case was not a ttun to tlyibut the wholeThey mass seems bent legal grand Jury. Tho answer to thl3 ob thfSJ??tion westward. Notwithstanding jection is this: by the the Organize Act of inJo6.801116 f0Tr IniproTementsare the Territory, mo consuiuuon and laws of lxiSfr'Sa1H1 Popi generally, axe in the united Mates are extended over this spirits, and with the exception of Tcrritorr and mitdo a part of lis law. . Tho ndjossesa more of every kind of' wealth common law fcavirrt become a part of the nforinerfv. They are planting much law of tli United i :iis it is, so far as it is quantities of corn and potatoes Una a part of th.t Lnrr, a r irt c! .) cf tha lrur cf these articles rarely suffered much this Territory. Tiio stntnte of the Terri in nwJ?e ravages of tho winetxl provided any method of tory not having Is bcln pests the panel by talesmen selected up filling lUthfully out by the people of that section of from tho bTstinJrr3,wo Era coinpcllcd.as in the School of the other cases cf f ijitutcry cn'-'n- ns, to resort PriIZ' 13 eld it rUi3 or tho common trMI1 eTer7 Saturday at Lo?an, to the law which cutliorir' Mmcn to be sumJ aetUemenU around. vafi As a moned and thus expedites and renders Cache County practical;! 3 Uia admlnlstritlca cf tho law. tho bencilu P.at wiictlicr this vierr ba ccrrect cr not offered 7, the homestead there is still n other crjrrrer to tho question which s::n:3 to t? decUlTe. It li a well A rroixTMKT. ( tzix: - - ; - |