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Show CORRESPONDENCE. Trying To Sell ' A UiuiT other in3ects and wc think it was filled up for 20,000. The She (Dgdcu guuetion. extremely probable that they can marshal and the district attorney 1874. Brioiiam Citt, June 14, SATURDAY, and WEDNESDAY The Virginia ru!lUU. every worked together. They bought up Editor Ogukn Jukction : fl. manage with these. Com ms t. .y tho tolls the following, 7th m. the 10 a at others Lterdfy aad Sir: Yesterday of Dear vouchers the Proviin deputies r I It:u lc XV. IViH'ovc, Keillor. Supposing that our trust ii it., by i?reci!l1 !rain' brousht ernoon an excited individual, with ht on the dollar, u low as for as kindled is dence tii.il 1;um:;!,j M'i!i:u'.!r. to' our town'an excursion party about hatstaudmgon two vain; that our faith, hair, nn, in full for ?,00 in number, consisting chiefly of the and received paymt-uand renewed by past results is foundfrom their projecting sockets like Sabbath School children of Smiihfield cui):;.v. ou ,Dt0 the ed on falsehood; that our hopes and them at the Treasury Department. arid Hvde Turk, under the care of Sutho . I'imi.-iiiN- a two-bit- KATl'rJAV. jjtaii. 1874. JUNE makes Tiie New York. Triuuiv. t'lu luKowiu cwuiiueiita on the -- I rl 1 l'o-IJil- l: l!.e whole cornuunity - hu.-til- i; J -- imlu.-triou.-- s, se u. ot'uri-K-nipuloU- H auti-pulygam- y s carpet-b-iircre- de-tign- rs s indignation? Wc know that greedy eyes are looking upou "Mormon" lands aad "Mormon" homes. 'We know that lazy loafers, whoso labors are confined to lifting glasses to tobacco-staine- d l':p, and whittling sticks while they lot their niisckief, hanker after the fruif3 of our hard and successful toil. We kuow that thieving palms and fCehtUk fingers itch to dip into our treasury, and grasp the wealth wrung from tho stubboru elements by hou-es- t muscle and fsincw. ' But we . do not kuow that they' will succeed in their avaricious and hellish designs. Yt'e are of tho Dpiuiou that they will Ic miserably disappointed. We are acquainted with tho people of Utah aud kuow something of the clrcum-ttance- s under which they forsook home and kindred, contended for pent-u- p their faith against tremendous odds, aud carved out a dwelling place and a living where ordinary men and women would have perished, aud we think there is a very serious about the success f tho human locusts who are eager to devour. Utah has lived through the raid of d jult the amount of perintendents Noble aud Simmons. Our anticipations become blasted, and we When vouchers to under the direction of Supt. 10,000 were under depute before school, are left to the tender mercies of the heeded by the brass band ef V) ixora, marshal the N. gave Capt. J. Christeusen, met the excurbiped wolves who mark us for their an auditing officer, the at sionists Depot, with music and official a clerkship prey, can we do nothing? Is it pro- a son of that after which ail marched together cheers; bable that the prime movers in worth $2,500 per annum and the! iu a lone line to the Court House, banners with appropriate mottoes being untho schemes for cur destruction vouchers passed without trouble. furled to the breeze, and our brass band Jut fancy Utah in the power of aud the Simtufie'd Martial Baud played will move unimpeded into peaceairs. Short enlivening alternately ful possession of our estates and such a Judge, Marshal Mid Attorney were made there by the officers speeches folThe population of the Western Judiproperty ? Away with the vain representing the three schools that had less was cial Arkansas District of met fraternally for enjoyment and pleasthe enemies nor Neither our ly ure. Afier some singing and music had Tribune know what kind of men than 300,000 iu 1872, and its judi- been listened to, the juveuile excursion-sionist- d and and women dwell on the soil of Utah. cial expenses for the year were 321,-G5partook of a rich in was of the day visiting spent For the years '71, '72, and '73 the'1 rest and If they did the first would pause in the factory, and other cofamilies their contemplated violence, and the they amounted to 73 1,023, of which operative institutions, etc. At 5 p.m. from us with the train to other would understand that about the Marshal and his deputies and they departed witu tneir visit well satisfied home, go a like excur s revelling in the plun-o- f clerks gobbled 532,101. Allowing to our town. 500 than no of less persons from Mormon property there is, to say the population of Utah to be only sion Hero will visit Logan. 100,000, far below the actual number, the least, a very serious doubt. lours, respectiuiiy, A. Chiustesses. bill see what the proportionate would be for this Territory to foot Excursion. under a similar set of cormorants as Logas, June loth, 1874. Utah Territory under a Legislature the "ring" in Arkansas, and under An excursion party, numbering about and officials elected by the people, the provisions of such a bill as the 400 persons principally Sabbath School children from Brigham City, arrived in has managed, in spite of the antag- Salt Lake "ring" fixed up and placed at 10:30 a.m. Ihe Brig- Logan onism of Federal appointees, to keep in the hands of Poland for the pur ham City B.ind filled the air with sweet music, as the cars drove up to the depot; out of debt and ccuduct its affairs pose of making the same kind of a as soon as the band ceased playing ihe with the strictest economy. As a financial stirkc, or in plainer words, Logan Sabbath Schools between two or under the conductorship three consequence the taxes are light. We to opeu'thc way for similar jobbery of Bro.hundred, Wm. Knowles, Bang the "Pic-Ni- c hare no local politicians scrambling and wholesale plunder. Glee," and another sweet song, thus wel l)ut the people of Utah are wide coming the citizens of Brigham City, for office and no jobbery nor official with cheers and song to our Logan awake to the. little game now being stealing. hearts. The crowd, for indeed a crowd it was, As a contrast to this and an played for big stakes, and all the cards and big, blazing iu all the htfes of little the be arc not in the hands of indication of what political the Tainbow, might were duly arranged in expected under the rule of the gamblers. They haven't got their procession, and marched to the Presistrains of the band greedy crowd now striving for su- fingers on the "pot" yet, and will dent Young, jun's. mansion, past thence to times the hall and the spacious bowery, where premacy, take a glance at the affairs have to shuffle and cut several of the District of Columbia, as ex before they win anythiag. Meantime an hour or so was occupied, while the children were resting, iu singing, short posed by recent Congressional inves- wo can afford to watch and wait, and addresses, etc., when they were dismissed to stroll, visit, and to tigations into the. deeds and doings should make it our duty to unite iu for a dance. prepare of the corrupt ring in that juvenile saving the Territory from being At 1.30, the seats having been moved brought under ring rule. and all things made ready, the assemgovernment. bly began dancing, and a jolly set they The District is 521,000,000 in MILITARY w. CIVIL. were, an uanciug wno wisneu to, as there was room for sixteen sets to par debt. Contracts were let for "imof the the The of ticipate at once, if that many felt dis question right provements"' at exorbitant prices, the posed. solmunicipal authorities to arrest At three o'clock the superintendent leading men in all branches of the of violation was thought best to return to the traiu, and ordinances for diers government participating in the jobs get seated before starting time, four under the cover of otther contractors' argued in the Supremo Court yester- o'clock p.m., and the party were dis1! Tilford and missed, having enjoyed themselves fully on appeal;. names, and the board of public works day as they expected, and better too, Z. Snow fbr Salt Lake City, and as well the visit to Logan, and with pressing inexpended 812,000,000 in excess of 11. Mcllride for Gen. Morrow. vitations for us to visit and associate the estimates made and amounts au- J. with them, they started for the train. thorized. The scheme for the organ- Judge MeKean gave an opinion Having got comfortably seated, the Concurred in by his asso- whistle announcing their readiness to ization of the District into a territo- which was is a start, the"good byes," ''God bless yous," rial government was made with a ciates, of which the following "now do come and see us," and similar summary: expressions of love and kindness, were view to pickings and plunder, and 1st. That a tolJicr of the national uttered, the train moved slowly off amid tho sorely taxed peyple now swelter music, cheering, waving of handkerarmy can be demanded by aad surrenunder this heavy debt. At the next dered to (be civil authorities, to be tried chiefs, ete., showing that the party were the city equally as buoyant and session of Congress the present form and puoisbed by them, only when be is leaving charged v?itii an offence, in time of peace, full of spirit as when they arrived. May of government will most likely be 'Such as is punishable by the known they live to enjoy many, very many. laws of the land," that is, by the laws such pleasant excursions, is the wish of abolished; tho thing is too rotten to of the United , , , Spectator. States, or of a State or be remedied. Territory. or ordinance 2d. That a city to ThroTrtr n Train Another specimen of what a nest is not in this pense a law of the land; Attempt From the Hock Island s will dor when they but that a soldier who, when off of duty, Track. hatch out in any locality and get their violates the ordinance of Salt Lake City drunkeness and disorderly From an operator who heard the claws ou the people' funds and their forbidding conduct, may, in the absence of a probeaks into tho body politic, is seen in vost guard, be arrested in the act and the dispatch ero over tho wirea w restrained by the civil authorities, but learn that about 12 miles this side of tho Western District of Arkansas. may not be tried and punished by them. Iowa city, the engineer at about 12 3d. That incuse of such arrest and o'clock Wcdnesdav ni?ht. The Committee on Contingent Exdisenverpr" ' restraint, it is the duty of the civil aupenses in the Department of Justice thorities to deliver over such soldier to some obstructions on the track and havo reported to Congress on the the military authorities, on the demand immediately put on his air brakes in milita- time to save the train from being of enormous expenditure in that Dis of the latter; and the duty the him the wrecked, and then ran back a milecr ry authorities to enforce against trict under the administration of law military forbidding such offence. so to a small station and eent on a 4th. That if the civil authorities, after of five on horseback to see what Judgo Story. Buch offender, refuse to deliver party arresting was the occasion of the material beIn three years the marshal of that him over on such demand, or proceed to district and his deputies had received try and punish him, the military author ing piled an the track. They found ities may take him by force. that there had been five the sum of 482,101. Just think cf oth. That if, instead of resorting to from the number of freshpersons, horse for marshal's foes! force, the military authorities present a tracks found, who had done the SlGO.iOO work, petition to a Federal court or Judge of and The costs of the court for its actual the themselves foiled in their disfinding must be the Territory, prisoner sessions was Mr. charged from tho custody of the civil purpose, had made tracks. A party 2,500 authorities by the writ of habeas corpus. was raised to pursue them but at latSpeer, in reporting to the House, Mr. McDride excepted to the est accounts nothing had been heard stated that the district had started from the pursuers. It is so far as it relates to the arrest thought with a co'rupt judge who had ad- ruling that these were the veritable James of soldiers by the city authorities. and Younger brothers, of Missouri, mitted to bail persons tried and conwho robbed the train last fall. Had victed of capital offences, and then A good many of the doctors of Cin- they succeeded in ditching the permitted them to q free; who had cinnati must have beco educated at they would not have found it sotrain, easy bought tho certificates of jurors and some time when the public mind was a matter as they did before, for the witnesses for from forty to sixty nffitated on the ouestiou of mixed men on the train ire all armed with the a Derringer pistol, and are pretty cents on the dollar; who was charged schools. One of them certified other day that his patient hid died $f well skilled ia loading and firing with admitting a nolie prosequi for a "information of the bowels, ana an them, and will give them some troubbribe of 2,500; and who had signed other recofded a case of "spindle men le if they havo an opportunity, Council Llutft Xenpartil. a blank marshal's veuchcr, which ingitis." ! one of the va!ar.b!o n.ot privileges of citizenJ hip, an lutKlhem at the mercy of and anry minority. To a UTi'i' tau'l what the dr'tct of this will be. wo mut eoJisllor the char-i.- i tor of the population of Utah. The Mormons, as a class, are thrifty and and whatever the Terri-tui- y of physical beauty and agricultural wealth they have crea-tiThe Gentiles ure few in number, and among them are naturally i,)he found u largo proportion The iu venturers. law will ciiallo thcue meu to ruin any Mormon ujon whose fertile fielJ-- or comfortable house they have cast a covetous eye. Does it need a prophet to foretell what will Can there be any doubt liuppen' that h three or four years the real tattlers of the Territory will be crushed or driven out, and revelim; iu the plunder of their property." Ws, there is a very serious doubt about this in the minds of the sturdy workers who have struggled with the fterility of the mountains deserts, and who have comjuerei by the force of doL'"ed determination and united cfl'urt. They understand the of tho above mentioned carpetsub-n- 't baggers, but do not propose to quietly to their covctousncsa. It will be a bigger job than i.s imagined i) "crush" and "drive" the people vim have wrought tho wonders of industry that meet the cyo for hundreds of wiles at the feet of the everlasting hills. Patient submission to insult and wroug for years, has not Leeu thi effects of cowardice or timidity. Consciousness of right and ex-- j utation of redress, have calmed the fpirit of rcsentmcut and restrained (he inpulso to active resistance which have often made strong hands clench iihd bright eyes gleam. Dccauso' wc can endure, are we incompetent to resist? Which arc the most formid-ibl- j when aroused; the men who flare up in a moment when insulted or falsely accused, or those who keep cool until patience ceases to be a virtue, and then give vent to their Saint-- po.-se.s.- s 1 pic-ni- 3. c, w carpet-bagger- to-d- soul-cheerin- pic-ni- by-la- carpet-bagger- ar w c, g Z rrVn , Ti. Holmes. .. Voiron- er is by profession a dentist, Dd hi3 ma uiuui.Mii, as ne glanced at tho man,was that he was i with the toothache hV J!" soon undeffivfd - . x. , nun i i' tlae frenzied individual cried out, L soou as no couiu get nis breath after vm King up the stairs, been iuUr. well-nM- v "A man been murdered?" criud the Conner; "how? where?" "In a garden, I believe; with a club or a rock." "How long ago?'' cried the Coroner, seizing his hat and cane. "Keen done a good while, and no police nor constables has never done nothin' about it. Never had no Coroner set on the body, nor uothin.' of the kind; no verdick " "What's the dead man's name' Who was he?" cried the Coroner. "His name was Abel." "Abel! Abel who?" "Don't know. Xevcr heard nothin' but his first name." "Well, what is the name of the man who killed him? Do thcyfnovv? Any one suspected?" "Well, I've heard that a follow named Cane put out his light. Cane was the brother of Abel, and " Coroner smells a mice, and flourishing his cane, cries: "You git down them stairs, my Sne fellow. Get, aud don't show yourself here again!" With a loud guffaw the fellow went down the stairs three steps at a time, the Doctor calling out after him: "How dare you trifle with an officer in this way, sir?" There is a story of a traveler, who, wishing to reach Taunton, ia Massachusetts, had somehow got turned round and was trotting very composedly in the opposite direction from the right one to that town. McctiDg a farmer in the road he drew up and asked, "How far is it to Taunton, if I keep straight ou ?" "Well," said the farmer, with an intelligent twinkle in his eye, "if ye keep straight on the 0 way ye are yoing now, it's about round miles; but if ye turn right and go t'other way, it's about half a mile." 23,-00- Estfay Notice. HAVE IX MT POSSESSION THE FOLLOW-i- s descrilieii animal, which, if uot cliilmed aud taken fiwiy, will be s.lil to tbe highest biildnr at the District Stray Pouud, at Oi;den City, Wedniasduy, Juue 20, IS'i, at 2 p.m. Od bay iinre, 4 years eld, branded on left hip. on On aorrd are, 4 ywn old, branded left kkoulUer. Wm. N. FIFE, district Poundkeepsr. s4'J-t- f d230-t- f Osden City, June lflth, 1874. I 0-- Estray I jSTotice. HAVE IX MY TOSSKS5IOX THE FOLLOWING described luiinmln. which, if not claimed and taken away, wil l told to the highest respen-sibl- e biJflor at the District Stray round, Logani Cche County, Saturday, Juu 20 1874, at 1 o'elockp. ui. One red yearling steer, npper crop in riglit, crop off left ear, One rtd yearling steer, crop and riit in riglit, npper slope in left -- ; -- It. II," on left hip. Que red and white yearling heifer, no marks or brands. One red three year old cow (and calf) white on belly aud flanks, slit in right, crop in left ears, brand on left tide illegible. One re yearling ateer, brand on left hip illegible. One red keifer calf, no marks or brand." ALVIN CKOCKETT, District Pouudkeeper lOffan, Juue, 10th, 1874. d2i!8-l-at- l- DISSOLUTION NOTICE HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE & Walker has this day beJ dissolved. by niatuul consul. Tha bus'ness hereafter be comdncted by the Brigham City Inlate operative Inst. All demands apainstthe to firm, should --it presented to J. W. Walker, whom all indebtedness should be paid inmiediate- NOTICE ofISSmith ,y' 8AML. L. SMITH, J. W. WALKER. d22i:3t Brigham City, Jone 6th, 1874. PJRODUCE STOKE. G. W. TUKXER. Haa his old Btand on FIFTH STREET, for the purchase and sale of ALL KINDS OF PRODUCE. Garden and Grass Seeds. At his BOOK STORE adjoining he keeps all the Periodicals and Newspapers oi the day, also a full stock of Stationery, Wall Paper, Tictuies, Framw, etc. .28-6- a O. W. TURNER- - |