OCR Text |
Show -- warn t 1 She i)gtlcn Imutumr KS DAY itory. and SAURDA PeOlisha i wjr WEDS by the Oobex I'UBuamxo Compant. C'liuile KiI)i:. t f"' T ', m ler ' , But a Probate Judge was wanted in the "ring" interest, and one must e; had at all hazards. So the meas ires which have recently been takti W.Icnroe, Editor. anil DitHiiiesa MiuiHEf. . 1 iau any taxable property in uie , The valiant Major wha did tit got a seat in Congress d even upon his camp stoo1, marched to the "seat of war" and was as successful in scaring the Tooeh farmers as he was in convincing Con gressnien at Washington. An armed mob was brought from tho mininsr camps with no better effect, aud so they had to work the case in court. In adjudicating the case Judge denied to Judge llowborry and his clerk, It. Warburton, the common and constitutional right of trial by jury, notwithstanding the request of their counsel; he took the position of attorney lor plaintiff as well as judge; he overruled the legal objections interposed; insulted counsellors who have grown gray in honored service as judges aud practitioners at the bar; and, final y granted a peremptory mandamus to compel the surrender of the books, records, sea), &c, of Tooele 'County to the illegally elected, ineligible "Liberal" candidate, who has not even a certificate of his election as required by law. Now where is the aroma against which we should "hold our noses?" It arises from the whole proceedings of the radical "ring," aud reaches a point of steaming stench from the "stew cooked by the Judge of the Third District Court. Tho vapor will arise and spread throughout the land, and add considerably to Judge McKean's national reputation for biased decisions,, illegal rulings and prejudiced,ipiteful attacks on the people of Utah. "Hi 1 J your noses." were resorted to. UTAH. WEDNESDAY, SEPTXUUEIl 23, 1874. ? three-legge- HOLD YOU II XOSK. Hold your noses. That miserable Mormon stew in Salt Lake City threat en to spill itself again. The turbulent miiut.1 propofe to secure possession of the County Court record?, and the United States Marshal has been obliged to oppose them with an armed force. The above is all that the donkey who, does the paragraphing for the hder Ocean knows about affairs in Utah. He should ask homebody to huld h's ears and keep them out of his eyes so that he can see and learn sutnething. It is evident that the Tooele imbroglio is what the scrap of nonsense we have clipped refers to. The facts in the ease are that the County records of Tooele are in the handa of men who have held theni fur year?, by right of tho offices to which they w re elected by the people, and that of the efforts to secure pscs-hitbeen have armed force chew by an ou the part of turbulent non-Mormo- who have made all the "stew" that has been cooked, and raised all the effluvium. The Tooele contest is thc'result of a "ring" conspiracy which has been known to several persons for a long s time. We have wade several to it in tho Juxction, having beeu posted on tho subject from The Poland a reliable source. bill gives the 1'robate Judge of the county iu which tho District Court is to be held and the Clerk of the District Court power to prepare a jury lifct from which both grand and pet't juries shall be' draD.' Tho evident object of this provision iu to give the "Mormon'v and "Gentile" allu-f.isn- Mc-Kei- u - STK IC G LI X d IXHJISI 4 XA . ho-call- population equal representation in j uries. liut the ring saw that if one , County in the Third Judicial Dis-tricould be secured iu their interest they could subvert the intention ot Cougress iu this respect, and obtain power to at least harass aud annoy if not ruia aud imprison leading "Mormons" whom they. hate with u st by-Ge- if. ?qt y Jbuv in 5 a perfect j hatred. Probate Judge as well as a District Court Clerk to work tegelher a jury list could be made up1 to suit their purposes, and, the plot which was tdnvered to pieces by? tUi Supremo Court decision in the Knglebrecht " -- ed 1 v;. U , Qov-ernme- ut j(In tblivering the State House and other public buildings to tho ; Gov. McFnery and Lieut. Gov. Peun stated that they did so as the lawful officers of the State, submit' ting to tho demand to i avoid the alternative of couflict with the y miU-Fary- mili-tVr- forces of thV lL S. THcy4 also addressed a written protest to Gen. Emory against ' the orders of Presi- tue "ianerai cauuiu;oe. ; 1.0 vest) n tion proved that some of his supporters were so" Hibcral" as to cast ten dent Grant," taking the ground that j apiece for his election, aud thero were upwards of nine hundred rvotes ballottcd in Ophir, Dry (JJnnon, etc., which were illegal and void, because the voters were non residents within the meaning of the law. This gave a very lare legal majority in favor of Judge ltowbcrry, who ;had held the office for ten years! Further, tho "Liberal' candidate, Brown, was not eligible to the office, not being a taxpayer, having denied tyi . the awessjQf vheo called upon, that f he votes f Un- blocking of the courts and the tempo' ' ' T rary defeat of just iee. Submission to the law is' one ol ' the fundamental principals of ou fuith; we rejoice to see it carried out tn Louisiana as in Tooele, and we crust in Providence to control the But while we trust in God, result. we shall not fail to help ourselves all , can, governed by true principle and subject to all constitutional vve the country, and the uprising of people of Louisiana against a govern- enactmeuts. d ment established by fiaud and I KEK LOVE XEST. by oppression, is endorsed by all except carpet ba ggers and radica' The revelations of Moulton and fo all Cliiiia! ruffians. xes. Tilton, while making Beecher's guilt If Grant persists iu the policy A3TD FA3IOTJ3 POU BUSS plainer than ever, also prove that which ho evidently would like to pur BEST TO USE ; I. Plymouth Church has been for a sue aud by torec of arms crush , CHEAPEST TO BUY 1 1 loHglimea "nest" of free lovers, in dewn the people of a sovereign State, which others besides its pastor have r EASIEST TO Smtf? foisting upon them a government been "hiding" up their lecher hostile to their interest and opposed Of course they will not repudiate COOKING. to their wishes, wc are of the opinion will sustain him unBeecher. They that his chan:es for a third term will der every circumstance, and he will maany Etweofthoto,,. bo exceedingly slim. For the senti"Tickle sustain them. me Billy," etc. ment of the country will bo against SaiisflicUaETeiyiliB him, and even the horde of office holders who will vote for him simpiy COX VICTIOX OF A IJEJUTE. Especially Adapts .;To tub to save their official necks, will hurl Gonzales, the Guatemala brute temsclves in vain against the popular BUSffla who caused Magee, the British Conwill which so tyrannical and autocratic SOLID JB1T ; to be publicly whipped, was not a course will arouse like a universal sul, ' killed as but lived EXCELSIOR MANUF'G COMPANY. reported, ; , , tempest. court-martito be convicted by SUlim.SSIOX TOT1IE LAW St. Louis, 51oM and receive sentence of The President of the United five years' imprisonment with hard States has the Kellogg labor. Magee declined the nnney con-tiuue- fa MM . 6AKlBtTE PS' TinS'lIf 87BI . usurpation in Louisiana. ; The Mc- Enety Government will not resist Federal authority, no matter how unjustly it may be exercised. The or ders for the movement of troops and war vessels to New Orleans are still in force, and will not be counter-mandeuntil circumstances demon- strate that they are unnecessary., An agreement is said to have beeu made between the opposing parties for a new election iu the State, pending which the Chief of Police is to stand at the head of Government. If the election is a free thing, left to the untrammeled action of tho people, there is no doubt that the Kellosrs faction has seen its last days ofspolia tion, robbery and oppression. But f the scenes of tho former election arc to be repeated, tho State might as, well be spared the expense and ex ' citement of the farce. iJ The McEnery officials have shown wisdom in not resisting tha law, and will gain more by patience and for bearance than by opposing the authority vested in the Chief Magistrate of the nation,. .:,,t The Probate Judge and County Clerk of Tooele have taken a similar course. While smarting under the injustice of. the proceedings; in tlie Third District Court, and the illegal " rulings and partisan decision of its Judge, they nevertheless submit to the voice of the law and have handed over to the Marsha! and bogus Probate Judge and his bogus Clerk, all tho records seals, furniture, &c., of the Couuty Court, as required to do But by the peremptory mandamus. bathave the not given up they tle. They will resort to every measure tho law provides to vindicate their course and obtain those rights of which they have been deprived by The struggle chicanery and fraud. tor th? right has only just commenced. 'Brown has not, a path of roses before him, and his lerk will find the office he has fought for anyThe thing butva paying concern. having been duly elected in 1872 and installed in 1873, and the people of tho whole state being loyal to them, theirs is the ouly legal government in the State, and that there U no insurrection to be j queUod, not , of the Kellogg usurpation remaining. . ..They further state that if compelled by military ; force to abandon the power rightfully and in fact vetted fa them, there ii no of the SuU ito take their a vestige . Gov-erncia- nt al compensation required by his gov- ernment If Magee hid been a consul of the U. S., would anything have been done in the premises ? We doubt it. And where is there a U. S. official who would decline money S3 . M. O. X., Ogdeii, Utah. ? d A 5 Despatches from New Orleans and Washington show that the revolution in Louisiana is complete, so far as the overthrow of the bogus govern meat of Kellogjr, and the instalment of the people's officers under Governor McEnery are concerned. But it appears to bs the . intention of President Grant Ho override the action of the people," to ignore the rights of a sovereign State, and by force of Federal arms to the overturned usurper. A demand was made yesterday Emory, iu behalf of the United States, for tho retirement of all armed men from tho strcets,;and the return of all public arms to the arsenal. To this Gov. McKncrv j ..: .J' i A as he maintained though the acceded State had overthrown the usurpation of Kellogg, they had no conflict with the general Government. Gen. J. U. Brooks was appointed to receive the State arms, and tho city of New Orleans was placed under his Jthe. .city and State could be organized. . 1 and sot to c;u8 coiild be $ ' ' its foul work again. V Tooele County was tfiked on as i h most likely . spotr because of ihc number of uiiners within its limits and its proxtmily to the ' ring" Gov. Wuods, Marheadquarters. shal Maxwell and lawyer Baskiu stumped the Couutry, aud the wires were laid to pull aud poll enough votes to swamp the "Mortuou" element at the election. The result showed a majority in llvitr of Brown he city is quiet, the mails are !inintemiptednrid there is no thought fa collision, with the U. S forces. Vet President Grant conferred, ye.--t 'rday, with Admiral Reynolds ou; he propriety of sending war vcs:-e-l 0 New Orleans, and it is generally oclieved that he will undertake to This course Kellogg. by he leading journals of J -- A ring may proceed with their little game, and develop the. rej t o their plot. But" they wilt find snubbing don't posts at every turn, and, if miss our guess, their only success Je will be, , what they have through. 'acecmplish-e- d MeKn befortbe Piteous Story. The New Orleans Times of the S.T-1860--X instant tells a very interest-insbut pathetic ttory of the life of an oranjro planter named Landman. Thirty years ago he came in posses sion, as a squatter, of the Island . of Chemere, on the Gulf coast. He was at that time very young and full of enterprise. By hard labor, year after year,he succeeded in raising one 2-lt- the largest and finest orange in" Louisiana, although he worked alone for years. After a time he married and took his wile to the island, and for years they enjoyed one of the happiest of homes. Children were born to them, and their work was remunerative, so that they laid up a handsome sura. Then sickness came, and one by one all tho family died, until the father was left alone againl " Brooding upon" his troubles, he fancied that, the spirits of the dead, were about him, and soon he beeame an ardent believer in At this moment some Spiritualism. greedy land speculators discovered that he had no v. lid title to his land, and set about in the courta to dispossess the ,old man of his island home. He would not retain counsel, but relied upon the, spirits to help him manage his case. " Of course there could be but one issue to the case. There was practically no de; fense at all. His s did not help him. He lost his home where he had lived for thirty years, and whero his wife and ch.ldreu were buried. When the Judge announced his hnding and decree, ihe poor old man afttese in court,' and his sole reply was: "Please your' Honor, thore is no redress for me in earthly court; I therefore appeal my cause to the higher Court of the third heavens." This is an appeal which cannot and will not be set aside. His compen sation will come. 01 ;or-char- . spirit-friend- - Trenton llntchers. Memphis, Tenn., Sept. 11; The men arrested at Picketsville on the charge of complicity in the assassination of the negro prisoners taken from the Trenton i ail. arrived here this afternoon under a cnard ni soldiers, and were taken to jail. They . Mill V. - " examined Detore the United Statet Commissioner 8 - . .. ' M . L d3 jpi TEE - r GELEBEATED TO MIC ASTD APPETIZ T8 PtTEELT ER, A VEGETABLE PREPARATION. composed tilmply of wnll-k-n own ROOTS, ad FRUITS, comMned with othv fropertloe, which iu their nature are Cathartic, HERBS Aperient. "Nutritious, Diuretic, AltoraUve s. Tao whole is preservtd to quantity f npirit from ther SI'GA-CATf 7G o keej tltem 1th any climate, whick euffl-cie- nt Anti-Biliou- V ' aasiesthe LAIT1TIIm ITTERS onoofthe xaoet dclrabl athartics in th trictJy aaa world- - Tonics and CTkey ro intcull 11 , .Temperance 'Bitlcis medicine, and always only to be used a to directions. of the feeble and They are Mm gheet-anehliver, and diseased a act debilitated. They upon acUoa ttaula.li to rech a degree that a healthy wh to a remedy U at once brought about Ai Women are eapeciatty aubject it i Aa a aeding every other eUmulant no equal. hare Tonle ther or Sprif and Summer well aa t They a e a mUd tod gentle Purgative are Tonic. They purify the blood. They Bplendid Appetizer. TheymaketheweakalfW They purify and invigorate. Thef JT ItSil pepaia,COMtipUonaadHeiache. Mie CJ 1. HI ci tmderminetheboiayatreiairf Iheaalmalapirfta. , |