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Show EVEN TNG NEWS. I. fkMUJUi Daily, ftmAiyt AmjM, rODR O'CLOCK. A PUNTED PUBLISHED ND BY THE jDESERET NEWS COMPANY, i W. PENROSE, CHARLES EDITOR. February 21, 187. Jtendaj, THE IiAW AND ITS PKBVKB- SION. Thi Supreme Court of the United States, In announcing the unanimous decision reversing toe ruling of the Utah Court on the segregation question, necessarily touched on the mean-La- g of the term "unlawful cohabitation," because that was the , offense which was sought to be aegr. Rated by the Utah courts, so as to comprehend as many offenses as a grand Jury or a District Attorney might feel Inclined to make of it. The main point of the decision is that a defendant can only be prosecuted for one offense of this character up to the date of the Indictment against him, and the Court explains the principle and the wrong perpetrated by the Utah courts in this . , -- way ' v "It is to prevent such an Has obot penal laws that the raleapplication tained that a continuing offense of the character of the one In this case can be committed bat once for the par-poof indictment or prosecution prior to the time the Indictment is inse stituted." This Is so plain and emphatic that a attorney, even though a fool, need not err therein. It leaves no loophole for any pettifogging dodge or feat of Judicial gymnastics to pass by or Jump through to escape it. It settles the segregation business for good, divided indictments, multiplied counts and the rest of the wretched perversions that the Utah courts sustained ai law. j3o much for. the chief question at Isaac. As a feature of the controversy, the signification of the term nsed In the creation of the offence was also considered and passed upon. The principal point was its continuous character, the next In Importance was Its nature or essence. Here is what the Court said on that subject: "The offence of cohabitation, in the sense of this statute, is committed if or there is a as husbandliving and wife.dwelling It is together a continuous offence, having Inherently duration, and not an offence consisting of an isolated act." This definition of the offence created by the Edmunds act of 1882 is the law In Utah and the other Territories. It may not be the law in the States, because their statutes are not framed or Interpreted for a special purpose, , And as 'explained by two Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States on a former occasion, the term was never before nsed in criminal Jurisprudence - without comprehending that intimacy which common accords to understanding fee-maki- ng anti-"Mormo- n" O M IlJj F? Ul u . The supremacy Cf . the la ffCAQ.-neve- r be promoted by a perversion of the law. Anything that savOFs of persecution renders prosecution measurably futile. Excesses In society cannot be corrected by excesses on the bench.. And while the lower courts evade the rulings of the higher, it is not to be reasonably expected that their decisions will gain respect or that offenders will refrain from such evasions of law as are possible under any circumstance. There should be no legal wrong without legal remedy, and it may be that those who planned and consummated the Iniquity of segregation under the mistaken assurance that their deeds were beyond rebuke, will yet find themselves in error in persisting- i the course which they are now pursuing and which is equally unlawful and unreasonable. Let the victims to the wrong have patience; Justice lives and is not asleep, but time and perseverance are needful to determine, the final issue. We will watch, and wait, " and work! - WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY. Is the lMth anniversary of the birth of the great patriot who was "first in war, first In peace, first in the hearts of his countrymen?' George Washington. Like Cincinnati, he was called from peaceful pursuits to the field of battle to achieve the sovereignty and independence of bis country evolved out of dire the and placed . at necessity front by Providence Itself, for, notwithstanding the fact that in later years, when the British had been overcome and withdrawn from our shores, it was. seen that though obscure and Inapt at first, bo was the man for the time, perhaps the only one who united in himself the wisdom, sagacity, firmness, ..hardihood and sterling qualities of leadership neces' a sometime forsary to lead Whether lorn hope to victory. overin the councils of war, his to all plans opposition coming by the forceful and Convincing logic which on so many occasions threatened bis downfall and with him that of separate nationality itself, or in the carnival of death enshrouded in smoke and facing unmoved the piercing shot and the crashing shell of the enemy; whether seeking nature's repose upon a bed of frozen, bloodstained snow or forcing a passage through gorges of surging and clambering ice no matter where or when, what the danger, the peril or the strife.his commanding figure never lost a Jot oi Its dignity nor his fixed and determined purpose a tittle of its unswerving directness. Originally opposed to the war because of an innate love of i the mother Country, he forsook the : friends of his youth that the youth of his friends might have "that station among the nations of , the earth to which the laws of nature, and of that nature's God entitled them" freedom might have an anchorage, independence a home, and religion a bulwark. He did his work nobly and well; he did it as only one inspired ot God and aided by His power can ; he desiroyed even "the germs of tyranny and planted the banner of Liberty upon the land consecrated to its name and set apart for Its full fruition. No matter if the attrition of later years has somewhat bedimmed the lustre which adoras the name of Washington; no matter if the precepts he espoused and the principles he lougut to maintain have of late bfa nearly lost sight of ; no matter if for a time it seems as though the revolution which he put In motion had turned backward; no matter if the political hucksters who existed before and after are more numerously arrayed in Liberty's temple than at any other period in our history, there will as surely come a time when they will be lashed out like their prototypes in the temple of Jerusalem as that they are subversive of the principles for which Washington fought and so many of his compatriots died for those principles are Imperishable and will be maintained at last in all their native purity. Then let us do honor to the natal day of the Great Commander who led the Colonists to victory and handed dowc to ua that glorious heritage which we shall yst enjoy, the right to freedom of worship, freedom of speech, exercise of conscience and government within the terms of the great charter. To-morr- ow , . as it the may, paragraph quoted above stands as the law on this subject in all places over which the United States claim exclusive Jurisdiction. ' 'And it Is certain that nothing less than the conduct described therein can possible constitute the offence marked out for- . punishment. "Cohabit" to t or dwell together; nothing less and nothing more. If persons live apart they cannot possibly co- . habit.1 People who reside together in the same family, cohabit, In a broad and general sense all people cohabit, that is, live together, or at the same time, for they live at once in the same world. Bringing the term into narrower limits, they cohabit if they live at "the same time in the same town, or (neighborhood, or street or common in the But house. sense they d not cohabit unless they occupy the same apartments, for often, several .families, particularly in crowded cities, live separately In the same tenement house, and they are not understood to cohabit, because they " dwell apart. . For the purposes of the Edmunds Act, cohabitation, the Court of final appeal says, means living or dwelling together as husband and wife, and that living together must be continuous The meaning of the very language re quires this mutual habitation. The parties must dwelt together for some continuous period or they do not co HE RECENT STORMS. habit in any capacity. A man who has a plural wile, one who is not a wife In From all sides come reports of the law, but whom h considers and claims unprecedentedt force and protracted storm. Our Bear as his wife before God and the Church extent of of which be is a member, must live or Lake correspondent t writes that it has dwell with her as a wife or he does been practically continuous in that renot and cannot cohabit with her, gion since the first of January. An either in the meaning of the statute as exchange says : Some weeks ago Fos authoritatively defined or the phtlolo ter, the Iowa weather sharp, said that glcal and popular, signification of the among the most important .storms of 1887 would betbose of the I first eigh : ... term. A visit to the plural wife or to her teen days of February. He said children, an occasional meeting in so "Daring the whole year no eighteen ciety or at a public gathering, pecuni days will giver a greater variety of ary support, attentions that may be weatner, or a neaxaer tan ox ram or innocently bestowed upon a friend or snow, or mora violent gales, taking chance acquaintance, anything short of the whole country over. There will be storms later in the ' dwelling with her as a wife for some more destructive continuous period, is not unlawful co season, but none more general." lie habitation though a thousand Inferior predicted that the principal disturbreachltheMisslseippI, mov Judges thunder it from the bench, or ances would on the east, 1st, 8th, 13th and 13th, ing with it lor the pur distort language ur hours of sun pose of sending men to prison, to. grati Inst, within twenty-loTo he has been corthis date down. a and fy malignant, bigoted revengeful spirit. And every man so committed rect as regards locality, ne said i "The to the penitentiary in- defiance of I storms of February 1st and tttfc are ex the ruling of the Supreme Court pected to be the heaviest and cover United the of States, is a the largest scope of coaatrv. The first victim to Judicial wrong. lie is false- storm will probably fach the nlnetv- ly Imprisoned. His incarceration is aa flrst merldiaa by sundown on the 31st outrage upon law, upon common sense of January, which cornea within the and upon human liberty There is do time predicted." For the 13th we cerJustification forflt. Ifc is fan offence tainly had storm enough for Foster or any other man. It was the first dav in against reason and Justice. It demands over a year during which the sun was a righteous retribution. And it will not at some time between ris visible Is as there Eteraa sure as receive it, nal Judge ori an everlasting principle ing and setting .i Foster's next storm is set to. cross the Mississippi within of compensation. twenty-fohours of sundown on the 1 Je Tvnfc n v maam a If the detention of prisoners in the lftth 1flslst ai. predicted for tha int ami itt J9 penitentiary for more than six months storms which money, f25wa to be fori',ted on the fale theory of segregation was unlawful, so is the conviction of de- case of Jftil&re. fendants unlawful which is predicated on the ruling of the Utah Courts upon the meaning of "unlawful, cohablta Wtthwe-rWsttere.w- lll tlpn," wherein it conflict with bo the definition, announced by the Bkttch b Joel in the land Chandler Harris, a .tory "Cordon!" highest tribunal And It is only continued, for the T. K. Sullivan, jthr' purpose of punishing 'Mormons' in laid la Paris, aad - mtMrw to life by Hobert Gordo,, Butler. The excess of law, because & is believed . -. M 1 - . w Al. n una se nnappeaiauje frontispiece to;the March-numbvtp wvt ot of ikribner Mif ottiM wm h. . review. The segregation Infamy would, in all In of th r'riking portrait of Thiers probability, never have been perpe- by Healy. T which la in the' possession trated if it bad been thought suscepti- oi (iter M Wtihhnnie. M ble ot higher adjudication. No lawyer otu i handler Harris has recently of standing believed it to be sound. It """JM-etea story of a Very dif was used for the unlawful punishment ' of "Mormons" because Its users .(A "v uslv dorift. which h rlta Ann thought they held invincible power for juntain'a Prisoner," and which wIU the purpose.' It was the arbitrary ex- - appear in the March Scrilmer's., :The wise of might .over right. So with,.' "prisoner" is a Union soldier who, be the imprisonment of "Mormons" o- ing wounded and cared for on a Southrulings that are in violation of the dev fl ern plantation, is drawn. Into closer nltions TI me nigness court in ; relations with its owners, and allying country. What a manly aad he or bis interests with theirs, by his energy able and dignified and respect JeMd and ability transforms the old; place coarse, Is it not, KDa into a profitable estate.il from men to prison simply bee auM M Its excellence as a story Apart It has a pe eon do so, and legal .tec anlcallties culiar Interest as portraying one phase only prevent the righting of . the wrong? oi tne "Hew South," with which Mr. A Just and simple people ; ugh surely Harris shows himself to be in thorounth reverenceito sv xn an embodl-ae- nt sympathy. jo bowofin law and autr of lofty II the politician would dteeov- -r hn principle and answer Tllxg many men would stand hv him k. h nbled! impartiality ar but.to slide to a bar and call for drinks. tstegritj ; ma - . . cr j the-presen- 1 - ": ur . -- i , . , V. 1 1 er . ; -- i d law-abidi- ng pisses, t to SOtpe pabet It tniJtht WASHINGTON. I Bears-te- a Ctreataa for Sloro of tb Bill ' BeasT - hiVe been ex cnaable and would have been combars tlvelv harmless; bat when It was sent broadcast over the country by a prelu- oicca agent ui tne w estern Associate a mm SPECIAL SALE! I TUm Xlsl M. ll G. LAKE TnEATRE. SALT xLUwrm" Prss,U was an outrage. The object of ! JDlaappolBteO vA Ju that association is to collect! and disWEDNESDAY f nstd Able ArtlelerXte. tribute news with fairness and impar.f r ... Is and It to but simple Justice tiality, it without fear or favor say that it does Naws' Special Correspondence. in this city, as well aa in a vast majoriThe Musical Eyent of tbe Season ! places. There are aexcepty of other Washin'oton, Feb. 13, 1887. to all black and tions rules, however, On the outside of the wrapper of a - ONLY APPEARANCE will manage occasionally to Ret paper published by the Baptist organi- sheep into the herd. In this instance the .Of the World's Greatest Contralto, Mane. Z. enseems to be the represenblack "sheep zation in Utah, is the begging note closed. The paper is being gratui- tative of the Western Associated Press at Salt Lake Cltv. prejudice tously distributed at present. It may or hatred of the Through Mormons the disbe worth mentioning that the sender patches from that point are purposely The Champion Vtlionist, M. Onde of the Dote makes no claim (bat ibe couched in language calculated to create a most unfavorable Impression Journal has any merit: of these people. The editor of tbe And the Celebrated Pianist, 11 err Paul Dkab F1kku. We send you a sampS Salt Lai. Tribune, as. agent ot the copy of the Mountaineer, with the hope limt Western Associated Press, most cer! you will subscribe for it. The price is only tainly goes fifty rents a year. Perhaps you wjttl kindl v j EVES'a, j TREBELLI! FIVE THOUSAND iviusirj, send us, on a postal card, the names' of a OUT OF HIS WAT few acq uaintanees and friends to whom we send sample copies, and thus aid the to stigmatize the Mormons as traitors, might canoe. Tbe three Territories represented until they are proven guilty of treason by tbe paper are the most interesting and in open court. field of oar country ; important ismissionary The Constitution of the United States this true of Utah,' which has especially defines treason, and the, Morbeen receiving the attention of the Chriatiaa clearly mons, while they may be fanatics, have world of late years, and to which the bill is giving unusual promi- as yet done nothing of a treasonable ' nence at the present tine. The dlpaTcTriirom- - SaltLake published In tho eastern newspapers that a - 8TKONO MORMON LOBBY was coming to Washington to pose as monogamist Mormons willing to give up polygamy, created quite a breeze of excitement, and some newspapers went so far as to give editorial mention of tbe statement, using it as another illustration of the corruptness of the Mormons and their disposition to treason. I see that Delegate Caine has 4 Hlven u a llat denial, and that a and gingerly correction was made tardy from Salt Lake. For all this, however, the original statement is accepted by of the people as true, and this is how the intelligent pnblic is being enlightened. Speaking of the Associated Tress agent at Salt Lake, a member of the Associated Press here asked if be was any worse than the Tribune butcher who was here some time since. exclaimed a Mormon, "Worse," "worse ! Why Lan nan's angel's wiugs are sprouting, half developed. Why, as compared with the agent there, Lannan is actually a gentleman." 'Great 'heaven!" exclaimed the man of news, "1 do not profess, to know much about tho Mormon problem, bat I do know ,a gentleman when I see Mm, and if well, I will close the shatters on the subject." Of course, you are more or less familiar with the nature of the bill as the ninc-tent- nature that people in this section have , beard of. ,. . The second dispatch refers to a portion of an editorial which was to appear in tbe Salt Lake Tribune, whose editor is the agent of the Western Associated Press. As editor he writes an article for publication la. bis own paper, and as agent of a powerful association of newspapers he heralds tbe editorial from one end qf the land to the other aa"news,"nrgingCongress,in terms which can only be characterized as a glaring attempt to bulldoze that body, to burry and agree on and adopt act. directed against the a stringent Mormons. As editor he has a perfect right to publish his opinions, but as agent of the Western Associated Press he certainly goes - ' hs MAGNIFICENMPROGRAMME Mubeeribedl S1O0.000 rr.A.l 4. SM1TIC. Kg- - No extra charge for Reserved Seats. Tickets for sals at Theatre and Union Ticket Office, at 10 a. au Doors open at 7 !30. , Concert at 8. Seey. end Tream. DIRKCTONS. i lltttirr Dinwoodev. 4 John Henry Sn.lik, I I John C. CutUc, Oeorge Roroney, I s 1 uoa. J4. waoow, P. T.' Farnsworth. iwuv, XT. JT. OPtASfT Km$t TtnpU CREAM BALM ml Cures COLO IN HEAD, Cents per Yird, by tha PIECE ONLY. This is a Great Bargain. Call Early for Choice Selection. ijielief at Give otice ECRU, CatarrH ELY'S REFERENCES. . CO., Agenta. St.. Soli Cat City. OJtaa; 40 Yalenciennes Laces & IN WHITE, CREAM AND to 9 Yinls li 10, 15, 20, 25 30 and , 40 , COMBINATION SUITS, CATARRH, aV VJSJIY CIIJSAJPI From $10.00 to $17.00. m HAY j FEVER. Nat 4 Liquid, when be sends out such stuff breadcatt and calls it "news." The gentleman not only misuses his SECOND EDITION, ENLARG trust, but abuses the confidence re- rpHE ejd and improved, of this most excel posed in him by bis superiors in the Associated Press. .The Sunday Gazette lent work, has lately been published uses tbe Associated Press dispatches, and is well acquainted with the per- and, Is now for sale at the sonnel of the association bore as well as in New York, and it believes the officials, to a man, in this part of tbe DESERET NEWS OMCE. country, are honorable, gentlemen. Not one of them wonld for a moment stoop to use his office for IT IS personal gain. All are animated by m high sense of honor, and the remark to Mr. William applies particularly Almost Txidispensalile In Hnrv Smith, the. Keneral manager COVMITTKE OF COKTEUNCB New York. anf McKee, the manTO on the Edmunds-Tuckbill have ager here. But to return to the Moragreed lo report it. The more it in in- mon business. vestigated the more It will be found to THX TBUTH IS be Mr. EdmuBds' frill. In Tucker's EvBry Home and Foreign Llissionary substitute, much of Senator Edmunds' that for many years the only tews by bill was incorporated, and there are the! Associated Press from Utah has but two things ot any moment in the emanated from theofneo of this same and is a desirable i acquisition also to measure as understood to be .agreed Tribune. It has always come poisoned toe with prejudice, and is always one- every student ot theOloay and other upoD, that were not in it as it leftsec8enate. Tbe two are the test oath, sided. tion and the appointment of trustees The Mormons may be a very danger- person who values the means of advoChurch property. The ous people, and their to control the ideas former was put in by Tucker, and in are certainly to be polygamous and defending scripturally and condemned, but tbe latter Mr, Edmunds has surren- they are human beings and are entitled cating are These dered. the only points to at least common Justice. This the historically .the principlesvef the .Gos amounting to anythlag in iwhicb the aforesaid editor, or rather agent, does Vermont senator has not bad his own not ccord them. The people of the pel. States "as a consequence have heard way . The section increasing the penes of the Compilers, tha alty befor cohabitation is supposed but tne side of the storv and are to stricken out. The one They should be the work be prejudiced. published without profit extending the statute of limitations is given a chance to hear both sides. also Koue; that part of the section This is but fair play and "fair play is a so as to be within the reach of every giving the appointing power to the Jewel." Walton Wold. Governor, '.et all Territorial, county, person desiring It, have been studied and precinct evenmunicipal olllcers, is also the President is only lost and in this as well as the first edition, and given the appointment of the probate LATEST DISP1TCIIES. I be to judges.was 'may say that therefore no discount except for cost permitted not a lingering there dyubt that the Senate would never uoiuent to the' of postage is allowed to dealers. glviug of such enormous patronage.to a London Merchants Awaiting GerThe book is bound In four differeut petty Territorial governor, and especially to a democratic one. Tne old Results. Election man styles and sent postpaid to any address adage is again verified that "there's many slip 'twixt the cup and the lip;" at the following and despite Mr. Tuckers howling and g labors of "Jack Morthe MURDEROUS STRIKERS PLOT. . mon" K. N. Baskin, as he is known . hers, the bill is i A Gorman; Kdit or In Trouble for d5 Cents, Co Cents, 85 Cents, NOT SATISFACTORY. " Ikying. and 81.10. There is not a thing in it that the howlers wanted. Though al) theirest had been omitted the would-b- e had rejoiced beyond measure spoilers if the A PEACE SOCIETY OBJECTS, Etc, clause giving to Caleb the appointment MARSHAL'S SALE. oi omcers naa oeen secured and become a law; and without that, all By Telegraph to the News. the rest (and there isn't mun of it) is an kxkcution to rURsrxaHT WiUttna: fr. the Verdtet. vain and empty. Baskin and the rttst 1 me directedto the Third J udicial Iis-triot Utah, I snail Court of the by may now sing with the preacher. "All r London, Feb. 21. The merchants Territory of is vanity and vexation of spirit," and I and shippers of this city engaged in expose at Public Sale, at the front doorSalt Court the the City of in House, County wuei tuts uiu Buau pass tney wu l trade with Germany are doing no busi- lAke, County of Salt Lake and Territory Of have ample time for meditation befr re and re waiting with feverish Utah, on the first day of March. 1887, at anythiog else can be got through. No ness, 13 o'clock M., all the right, title, interest, man who knows anything about the anxiety the resultIn ofthatthe elections and estate which John D. Graham country to- claim situation ever dreams that these howl- which take . place hold of, in. and to certain real estate ers will rest until they havet'ae peo- day. in Salt Lake County, Utah Territory, described as follow, to wit : ple of Utah under their heels ar.d where TImi Cur DltnecULy. of Section Fart of the northwest quarter they can tax and rob them, unmercia south, Bwze 1 east, fully. 21. On the corner of 39, Township Feb. Boston, on an bank the irrifration (of south There is no denying tbe fact that Kneel and Federal streets stands a ditob on the south of Lorin E. boundary these modifications 184 larsrely increase four rods from the claim, south the probability of the bill story brick residence block con- Forbueh's the northwest corner of the east half of said Inhabitants. of Senate and becoming a lawpassing hundreds said receivthence claim along taining section, by quarter by ing the signature r.f the President. Tbe lowest class of narrow stairs tne south bank of said irrigation ditch south 25.4 64 rods to the centre of an There is also no deg. east the fact run from both streets to the roof, furstreet north and south : thence along that it will work disguising increased hardship nishing opportunities for ingress and open south S9.8 rods to the of said street center the upon the Mormns;Ljut it is a fact that have often baffled the center of the county road east and west; that;it gives t those who have pro- egress this building, thenoe west along the centre of said county police. Oh the top ofinside moted and worked for the bill tbe nar- roadaa rods to the west boundary Una of tbe arranged in heaps Just half of said quarter section, thence wooden row and shallow coping, was east . ABSOLUTELY NOTHING conot to found by the police a miscellaneous north 43s.31 rods acres. place beginning; that they wanted. It is a fair assump- assortment of bricks and sari ne stones. taining west half of Also of said the quarter tion that it will see no greater changes. it is thought they were to be used for section,part at the northwest corner Tnere is yet another meeting to be an attack upon tne cars which pass of said beginning section, thence south 14 quarter held, but its nuroose is to nerfect the this building. Tbe possibilities of an rods ; thence along an eld ditea south bill in phraseology irather than for any attack of this nature upon the cars, 57X deg. east IS rods; thence along small 19 deg. east 6.1 rods ; theneo other purpose. The wording of the it that was the object aimed at, are ditch north the centre of an irrigation ditch south test oafh section has been changed, simnlv horrible to contemplate. A along ' deg. east 43 rods; thencs along ditob but in what way I have been unable Vo shower of bricks descending from this 63 bank and brush fenee south 63 V deg. 1E.1 learn, There is good reason to believe height on the crowaea norse cars unrods to the east boundary of west half it remains in effect substantially .as der the cloak of darkness would have S6.6 of said quarter section; thaneo north 22.1 4n formulated in the Tucker with tbe a been rods to a ditch on the south boundary of murderous result, bill; but Lorin K. Forbush's claim; thence by, said report is in circulation that It has been slight possibility of tracing the perpe broadened and made so trators. The South Boston road was claim along said ditch north 64 deg. west materially along nntiflfwl and RA the car Were 90.4 rods ; thence onward by said claim tnat no man who believes in polygamy nnf centre ditch north' 71 J degV the as a proper condition can vote. taken off eacb night, despite the public west 28 rods ofto water of the north bonndary Tbe Star of last evening has this inconvenience and police stationed in quarter section ; thence west along said the to say regarding the test oath section : the vicinity. north boundary of said quarter section 8S.4 rods to place, of beginniag, containing "it Is learned that the section of the acres. bill passed by the Aat Editor la Trouble. i Also beginning in the centre of a 4 rod House, watch excludes from the regis- ' of the street 21. editor soath two rods, and south 86 deg. The Feb. tration lists tbe names of all persons Berlin, who refused to take the oath to obey Tagsblatt has ,been sentenced to six southeast corner Carson Sb Buaxo'a surrey the Edmonds act, has been made much months imDrlsonment for print! nsr a on tne soaineast quarter or bmdos xq I. z more stringent by the conferees. In 8.. It. 1 AV., and west 70 rods and north the Czar had shot Herr Its present shape the section exclude story that the southeast corner southattache of the lega east rods, from a military of said section 96, thence south irom registration those who refuse to tldn atSt.JPetersbnrg.l quarter .h to centre support the law of 1882 (the Edmunds S on centre tine of said of rod thence street, act) or this amendatory act, or wtw street north 11 rods to centre of Heavy .'Fire. abet or avow a belief r practice, aid,The street east and west, thence on centre line 21. Feb.' conferees in adding Rugg polygamy. of said street south 86 X deg. west 91 10 Havkrrjix. Mass., these restrictions to the. original bMI block roes to piace or beginning, contaiaing one a on street, large Washington were animated by a desire to prevent fonr-stoacres of land. and burned brick structure, Also beginning in centre of street the encouragement and sustenance; of Aartv thl mnrtilnc? The 10SS Will 49 west rod from the northeast corner polygamy by persons who keep wit bin 8- - R. t thousand 89. 1 hundred of T. Section auarter one northeast reach the letter of the law by refraining fevom probably W., thence west SI rods, thence south tbe practice of polygamy while o enly dollars. 11 reus, thence east Zl no rods to cen S rod street, thenoe north en centre avowing their belief in the doctrJ.ne." of tre I feel safe in saying that (this mjy be to place of begin Tbey Wsust reoee. oi saia street u acres. wncvvuuuwa " containing one and f Washington, Pebl.-rl- n the House ning, with all and singular Uis hereditaments and appurtenances Randall presented a memorial Together belonging or la anywise apperxne test oatn wut not e maf eraore of the Rhode Island Radical Peace So- thftreanto Also all tne water right on or to taining, vessels for than is expenditures' it and at' stringent of said pieces belonging or in any wise ciety against rreintt and asklns for wise 'each . or accrued. unless in its wording, ousel iteration and f ortiucatlonK, which will submit vested be sold tbe pronerty of John f. is made which will render ifci a matter MtatesmsnshiP. .To aa Graham at the suit of James ucKnight. principle with a Monaesi.'uot to take rrvA nnftflttons of diSDUteofbetween Terms of sale. Cash. reason and too oauu, i or, not tniiiu were w u bo tioua to the arbitrament i i y: FRANK- H. DTEB, International law.- Referred. any appreciable change in the condi'": U.S. Marshal, tions froni what they are at present. j Dated rebrnary 9th, 1887. ne kit at xeatnres ar to e receiver's suit will oat ol. the forfeit-- , St. Louis, Feb. 21. The resignation ure "of Churchgrow orooertv and the disv- United m.ochlsementof women The House of J udze Samuel Treat, of the; Eastern l b .11 adopts largely the r lews of Sen State District Court for the ator Morgan, who so rjgoronsiy opposed the bill as it passed the Senate warded to the Presidents in 1886, because of Mr. Edmonds' Rmltraaa SIeeIws trustee plan to run the Mormon Church, REGULATOR and hence will probably provoke no Nbw Tork, Feb. 2l. The annnal 11 opposition in that quarter. There meeting of tbe Delaware, Lackawanna VSTsT be pomeopposionto the all Diseases of the For may, however, and Western Railroad was: held to section board Of directors, with Mrer, kidneys. Stomach and Spleen! day. Tbe old of j DisnuNcnrerno women, Thia aarsly Tt: stable prepW. W. Phelps, who is the exception aration, now 9 celebrated as , though I have no idea that it will succeeded byQW. B, Astor, was a Family ted prove successful. An it stands at pres- chosen. Thel report of the year's in the SW in 18x3. It act , f ent, the great danger soems to be the business . shows that 7,164,209 tons ot geathr citM Bowels and EteV were a of .test will 6,711,634 earrscts aers oath coal that of aetioa transported, against formulating a.4 ana theuarerore. is, every Mormon: from voting. tons the preceding; yean The gross preventsnau sseeiei , do a one, we wiu near , no floating debt at the end of the year was xi tnat mora the necessity for farther legisla- $600,700.09, of wtnen3i27a.iw nas al mir ! tion atrainst the Mormn. Securing ready been paid. V , diseases it wUl, fauusisted hy , , the offices, the howlers will glut them" say other Bwdlclne. afiw 4 selves and will too only too anxious to ' sseMf emre. I keep matters qudet. The Begulater is safe te administer la say from all over the Territory un the matter of Associated Press Of Montana says of the system, and smear ae eirewav tosses to tne cat' condition tnat taaeea eaa It so bra. It will invigorate lute to Irom Salt Lake In regard dispatches tie industry will be very heavy. a glass of wine, bat is ae intoxicating beverthe Mormons, I send herewith an at. article from this morning's i There are said to be 23 different age te lead to intemperance; will proa headache, aad geaarally tea Washington Umzxtte, which is singular-l- y causes 'of headache, which, strangely g(Mttoa,oialais t aav. Tbe dose is small, set systasa. clear: enough, is about the number 'of popa- - rlaaaasrt, and iU virtue undoubted. lar alcoholic nooeverages. nut, , oi K lass at tlaut, ae latamra. Fara Play is a : Jkwxl Th i tlea r staypaga et aahMss ,' Conduct of the Knxmixs coarse there is connection. taking the Regulator. of MoRStoNisar m Utah. Two very ' Printers might like to know that the . ' , while . Children complaining ef significant dispatches were published eutire Scriptures contain 2,775,209 ems v Colie, Beaaaeha, or Stek bmnx the past week Joy papers receiving the In diamond and 2,807,840 ems in nonparaea. a leaaeoonrui et more Associated .rretm - service irom tne eil.- It would take a printer a year and West-- They were both sent by the a If to put the Scriptures In type at tlenta exposed to MA at Salt Lake City, Utah. Tho thebait agentwas rate of 6,000 ems per day. , will expel the poison and pro-to the effect that "a strong first wicm irom aiacg. Mormon lobby had left here yesterday - A man who has kept account of the A rargiajjr's (Monday) for Washington to work number of kisses exchanged with his opitiox bill. against tho Edmunds-Tuckwife since weir . anion consents to its Aside from the improbability of this publication,, as follows : . First year, li s. 9 nini story, owinz to the lateness of the 8e 600: second year, 16.000 j third year, Liver Regulator, prompt and eReetnw-l- y session and the stage the bill bad ar- 3.660r;' 'fourth' year 120y fifth year, 2. moms meve tbe Liver te acliesw and at the same rived at It bavine passed both houses lie then lei t off keeping the record. , time e aid (.instead et the of Congress and being In conference and aaaimilataveweakamiair) et the erstem. power BelsnumVha a makinar law passed utter showed Its The Jnanirr falsity. a crime. Any person found I M, UllOM, at. D Washington, Ak. . disp&tch concluded. The Gentiles drunkenness outside fals own doors is hers are much discouraged at the de Intoxicated tco kt na csxrm. ; ' A second clause fined and to another failure and Imprisoned. dread, begin lay ot the bill hits the seller of th llrnor. of Congress: to asserf Itself against In Switzerland a man cannot get a drop TmSASOW.' MOKMON t of liqoorexcept through agents authrr.icst- , It this dispatch had been a "special" orized by tbe government- ' 4 Snuf.ior i ). The-wish- nec-essnj-- lry FBIOESi life-lon- Pow- der. Free from USA. injurious Drugs Offensive and ER HAY-FEVodors. A paxticle is applied into each nostril and greuuie. mciw conu at iirugguu by mail, registered, 60 cts. Circulars free, sku8., imiggisu, owego, . i iVo FIVE 'HUNDRED" PIECES ALL SILK SASH RIBBONS ' CITY TAX SALE. THE CITY TAXE9 A8- -: WHEREAS, Ueorgena the Jennings, for ana year I8W, amounnng to cme ienar necaino aeimqaent on tne ir, Mnyot,cna, November, and still remain unpaid day Collector of Therefore, I. M. W. Taylor, Bait likta lUtty, by virtue or tne antnomy of Section 17 me vested in by tbe provisions of An Ordinance to Provide for Assessing and Collecting City Taxe," passed March 12tli, 178, and by the provisions of Section 6 of an amendment to said ordinance, passed March 16th, 1830, have levied upon the loi lowing named property, to wit: Seven and one half (7H) by nine and one third (H) rods of Lot (1), and all of LoU Two (). Three () and Four (4), Block Cit Salt Lake mn Plot i.D, four will (W), m.. Ninety ...... VmA r.w mr. 1IUI VJj UI j ...Va aaH.v, " mv to pay the as may be necessary, thereof Taxes and Costs, at Public Auction, in front of the City Hall, Salt Lake City, ou the 10th day oi Maren, lain, at 'rweive o'cioca aa. CI . T M. W. TAT IX) K, Collector Assessor and Col toe tor's Office, No. 8, City Hall, salt Lake City, rcoruary mn, lesi. t v ' '' CITY JCAX SAL.K. "XTTHEREAS. THE CITY TAXES AS V sessed to Richard Crackles, for the Dollar, became year 1886, amounting on tne nrst nay oiwovemoer, delinquent and stall remain unpaid ; Therefore, I, H. W. Taylor, Collector of Salt Lake City, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the provisions of Section 17 of " Aa Ordinance to Provide for Assessing and Collecting City Taxes." passed March 12th, 1878, and by the provisions of Section 6 of an amendment to said ordinance, passed March IRth, 1830, reave levied upon VJie roi lowing named property, to wit: Six fin bv Seven (T) Kods of Lot Three (S) i Block Ten (10), Plot G. Salt Lake City will sell the same, or so much Survey, and thereof as may be necessary, to pay the in front Taxes and Costs, at Public Auction, of the City Hall, .Salt Lake City, on the 10th Twelve o'clock M. day of March. 1887, at TAYLOB, MjW. ' I Collector. Assessor and Collector's Office, Mo. 8, City Hall, alt Lake City, February 12th, 1S87. e ' a. Ja- -' AAJ-'- r - X The GREATEST BAJIOATX ever offered in Salt Lalce City t 3D WA I ClBt, IjIJR.X133arkIp COniCt COICB! HANDY PAINTS. T PAINTS QUALITT WUiimia Orlaa Oary, A Mea Parka; ufarturara ef faints. M. L aad Ita by K. OLOE8. O 13L ILST 4 'V 1E9 CHQSS FlfliEB. oiHiaAOo-FEPOJS- mw? ' i AT z at. ed - er ftSOO.OOO Capital, arsusi up uapiiaj. X. OR AST. BZBKR . AMES Bit A HP. OtJT OF BOUNDS blgb-mlnd- Eleiaut Oriental V ! and .GOcta. 73o- - PRICKS, 91.00, Short Lengths, of Manufacturers STEIN DO RFF YARDS, a rr sal 0 Eitraoriinary Special Bargain Sales! r Positively for OS WEDNESDAY WE TWO DAYS OXZiY, & THURSDAY; FEBRUARY 23d & 24th. BARGAINS : THE FOLLOWING OFFER WILL Remnants of Table Linens from 1 X to A yards In .different Qnalltlra and Varieties, at 25 PER CKNT L.K8S THAN COST! l Will Spoak for Thonisolvcs. Prices , -- THE ' i 1 ait-aat- e r B&ii),LIilTaiites&SLPaolR'y - THE BEST ROUTE a.-- . " J anti-polyga- Vll-laume- , , ch - ROM OMAHA TO THE tw nunrs HS.rXV. nmu osiha Aixy AKD saau DahMaa rraeparii Jfts.saa, I Wlaoaa, ' ailwaak. Cadar BaaMs. Baraai ei t, Backford, Jaaasrllla, La Qraase, rolnU Beat, Korth bUMapolta, ' j Doecb ALL URRN, HuckToweK at 75cU. per notea. 1000 Yard White Pique, at Get. j 60 Pieces, 42 Inch Oaanmere, (beat colors) at 25eta. per yard. at 27cts. per yard. 88 inch Cut Cashmere, 25 28 " All Wool, 42 Inch French Dress Goods, at42ct., reduced ... from 76cta. 2 Pleoee AA Inch All Wool Camcl'i Italr Canvas Cloth and 42, inch'".'?' French Plain Drees Goods, la Dark and Tan Shades, at Socta. per ' worth 9125. yard, 24-lnBaglish Drees Goods, In patterns of 12 to 14 yards, at 01.65 V ' ,:t'each. Cotton German at Dozen Hose, (best colors) 60 fjadiee Ingrain 20ct, 4St. ." per pair. 50 Dozen SMssee' All Wool flose, (best colors) at 2octs. per pair. ' Kid Gloves, In good shades, at COcts. r :v lOO Pieces Hamburg Rmbrolderies, at 3cts. per yard. 10O at 7cU. per yard. , lOO , at lOcts per yard. f TiO Dozen LAdies' Llneo Collars, at 7Kcts. a piece. 25 Boxes Handsome Crape at 25cts. per yard. t'.. 25 at 25cte. eacli. 1! " "p ' AH Wool Jersey Caps, at 1 Oct, each. 25 GO OMAHA & CHICAGO JLtsse-Ruchin- .'! ether Important eaat ana soatneast. Ver thTeefk tiekeu call ea tha Tirt Afeat at felt Laka Otty, VUh. PVaAMaji Slkkpkrs and tha XTmkst L)is aro run on ttu lire CUna nr th woku) MilwaakMaad St malai llaaa of tha C3kleaa. Faal Bailway, and every attention ia paid lTl1 1ITtt,f1 wm"V I of ihi vurtaoas employes aaaifara by U uoanpaaiy. B. ' J. ' Sr Numerous other MAR GAIlYS will be . offered this Sale, which will positively be limited to x f 7 CiBPIJlT B, woavaral Manager. Gen'l rasaenjeor A g't BXdi. B. HIAFFOBn, T. TVCKZB, A. T., H. ,Xn.LlB, - (., WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY KEXT. Aaat Oeml Mamaer. Ass't Genl Pass. Afl J.T. CLABK. Oeai Seperlateadent. 5-- 0 1QQO. 0 34-1- rv 5 5-- ! a-i- e BOOK AND JOB j 55-io- , o ; to-d- tene-ment- a, '! ay Printing Establishment. 'mm Palace, p tat f J largest aad VULIN 'AITJ WAUCY A;K hh SIMMONS 1MB ITff t BTBBT MMmiPTIAB I .4.! V J O B PE I IT T I IT Q MUSICAL I1ERCHMDJSK .West ol Cliicago .('., I Best Stock of j !, . - ' 1 t I ' i(i H '. KXK0UTCD ..". ....' 5Tnmm IVROMPTLT rHinrrniFic ; CTrrr niicr inn: uionrf in . - irt - ; - . , ; - o& The Best Style of the Art ., -- or-ijrin- the most Eminent Makers of the day. '. LK W TZ 3H t.-i- cCs HI . I If 11 sr " J CHASE, AlfO TVirXXTTEY.. i In1b-rxNgiB- "V7032LD Mason al asr ca-.a- i i . j- , ; er 1 , ,t i- n - V - We carry eYerythlns aecessary PAPER RUIxINP , in AUi ITS DRAROHII -- We Aa Guarantee all Goods, ana defy compctltl&Ht " .'QUALITY and PRICES. t dir-tiv- . - to lilt r- , j.i.zDU3ia,f:u:ELr::uL tor the eondaeUaf a FIRST CLASS EIUSIC ; BUSIISS. f -- Ccc:rct Cotv3 Ccol-tiade- rj Sr--i V 5 " & Tim ADDKES3 - .,1 1 '$?: First So uth. Street, NEXT TO DUf1YOODBY8 -- v AOTE , p OJ- irTJTriTCILK STORK. v.. ' . |