| Show SLOGAN cache co 1 nov noi 1870 editor evening news aw dear siri find myself this evening in the metropolis of cache cliche co logan logon for the first time in three years many improvements prove movements rove ments have been made since my vast last visit not only in logan but in the other settlements of the co county n BO so far asi aa I 1 have yet visited it is really eal eai tyly slat bur sur to bee eee what has been done in this respect here taking into consideration the heavy losses the people have sustained by the ravages of the grasshoppers in remarking the changes that have lately taken place in no place through which I 1 have passed are they more noticeable than in ogden that city t today to today day is not the quiet little burg of three ree years ago ngo but a busy railroad town and it is questionable whether the change there is for the better if order and good society are aie considerations surely it abut for with the railroad road to ogden has come its roughs boughs its drinking and billard saloons and similar institutions yet withal the town is orderly and the municipal laws strictly enforced 1 I 1 was wat particularly pleased with the appearance of the settlement for formerly merly known as I 1 muskrat springs I 1 but lately renamed re named in honor of our respected delegate hooper city it is situated on the weber range midway betwee between ff the weber river and kaysville Kays ville and near the shore of the lake it ift is ls Is 18 a thrifty and well organized young settlement containing a number of good frame houses the soil there is of a warm sandy nature and well adapted to fruit growing and the settlement will without doubt in a few years become one of the best beat in the territory J X have visited nearly all parts of the territory and as a suitable place for starting a new anew farm I 1 consider it the most desirable local locality ityl 1 have yet seen the canal by which the water is conveyed ve to it Is to be enlarged therom the combing winter and much more land will then be brought under cultivation G Q 0 L ENSIGN PEAK december ath 1870 zed editor Dese reNews mews news before charles chrles the first of england would give his assent to the petition of right in 1628 1638 he sent for the two chief ju justices slices hyde and richardson to whitehall and propounded certain questions which he directed them and their Vi brethren ethren on the bench to answer one of these questions was whether if the king grant the commons petition he doth not thereby exclude himself from committing or restraining a subject without showing a cause 11 hyde reported this response every law after it is made hath its exposition which is to be leftt to the courts of j justice wk to determine and although the tho petition be granted there is no fear of conclusion as is intimated in the fuesl tion 11 in the petition of eight hight which i is s the second great charter of the liberties liberti es of england the king had bound him t self seif never liever again to raise money without the consent of the houses never again to imprison any person except in due dub course of law and never again to subject his people to tile the jurisdiction of courts martial martini the petition of right bight as well 03 as as 03 the habeas corpus act passed during the of challes the second in the year owe their origin to some extent to the famous buit suit suitor lof sir bir thomas darnel darmel and others these men had refused to pay the money which charles I 1 exacted under the name of loans they were committed to prison per special domini fegis regis by special command of his majesty in november 1626 they sued the court of offing beuch bench for their writ of habeas habdas corpus the writ was granted but while tho the preparations for the suit were going on oil the attorney general was directed by the government 0 v to sound chief justice alen randolph gd 0 lph crewe respecting hia hla opinions on the agitated points sir randolph crewe held to the opinion that the tax was illegal and that the ring klug can not imprison any of his subjects without a warrant specifying the of fence fenee with which they are charged he was immediately dismissed from office and slid sir nicholas hyde who was esteemed more obsequious was appointed ela eia chief justice in his bla place before this julge juige the su sult suit it came 1 ly v it was waa argued by noy gf eiden elden and aud i other 0 tien tier eminent lawyers on behalf of tho the by the attorney general heath beath for the crown crowland Crow nand abid itis itla sho bho bythe arguments of these thebe eminent lawyers that the fundamental immunity of english subjects had never before been so fully canvassed the counsel for founded their demand for liberty on the twenty ninh ninth section of the magna chatta charta which provides that no freeman shall betaken betoken be taken or imprisoned unless by taw jaw ful fal judgment of bis hie peers or the law of the land this principle was wag followed up by citing the statutes th that at had b been een repeatedly repeatedly enacted to redress this thib material te if grievance subh such as in the of edward III lil where it js provided that no on one shall ashall be taken by petition or suggestion io to the king or his counsel unless it be by indictment or presentment ment or by writ original at common law the advocates of this principle a after going over all the acts of carlla ment upon the subject and ril rii ali the caeg cases at common law from which any precedent cald be alleged concluded with the dictum of the thi apostle paul dial it is against reason to send a man to prison without showing a cause caused the attorney general answered in what is considered a very able speech he based his bis argument on the legal maxim that the king can do no wrong and intimated to the judges that they were placed on the bencito bench to obey rather abanto than to determine shall ishall we he said I 1 mafko make inquiries whether other othen the kings commands are lawful who shall call in question the justice justlee of his actions Is he to be called upon to give an account of them he dwelt upon such statutes as were either in direct favor of the kings prerogative or whose loose language could be turned ili in favor of it he went over all the precedents and statutes cited on the other side ingeniously contending that t hey they were either inapplicable or con coni i arary to law whenever I 1 hear mr Edi edl editor tora I 1 a judge commence his opinion or becis sion bion with a predence pretence pre tence to extraordinary reve reverence gende fende for the laws that he Is bound by the most sacred of oaths to observe them etc I 1 always imagine ima ginet that I 1 see mischief in ili his eye I 1 suspect that he uses such language only as a palliation for trying to run a personal enemy or to crush a party that anay differ wih bim him in matters matt matl eTs of religion or politics or whose great forfeitures would fill the treasury so that his party not notwithstanding withstand ill ili g great leak leakages ages ageg may use the plank great ninan finan ciering id lit their platform at the next election I 1 shall not mention what extraordinary language is required when buch such a con judge feels himself embraced by that lovable matron bribe chief justice hyde commenced his opinion with expressing profound reverence for the laws that ho he and his brethren on the bench were sworn to administer justice equally to ail all peopled etc said baid he the court must be goat erne A by precedents I 1 iland lland then declared that the precedents that had been cited were insufficient in the mind of the judges to deliver dellver er the prisoners by a habeas corpus in this court for ild be added we know not the cause of eom com mitt ment 11 he concluded thus what wha whai can we do but walk in 12 the steps of our forefathers mr attorney hath told you the king king has donet e it for cause trus trust bim thim in ili greab great matters he is bound ai lahe bids us is to proceed by bylaw lawyd we are gre sworn to do so and sois bois so is the king Wern wein we make akeno no doubt the king lri Irl knowing sowing the cause causa why you are imprisoned will havu have mercy on these grounds we cannot deliver you but you musa must bo remand eu ea mr editor with your permission I 1 may return retain to this subject again KRANZ kratz MINISTERS OP THE GOSPEL WANTED speaking liking or the appoint appointment mOnt bythe los lios angeles conference denomination not gilven wen of the rev mr proves to fabor labor b or at pre Pie pj escott scott A LAL T the tho arizona winer of the ull ulu says can it be that we are going to have a minister of the gospel hope hops so if he be a good one we should judge from the above that there is a splendid baening for missionaries narles in arizona we have two or three hereabouts who profess great anxiety for the welfare of souls among the saints there ia is really no show for their benevolence while among the sinners in the great majority of cases their labors would be more useless still for lor the territory ia is just jast now dow infested with a miserable horde who aro are entirely restitute of souls or if they do possess any there is not enough to be saved arizona is a splendid field for missionary efforts if unsuccessful among the white sinners martyrdom a glorious thing hr A missionary could be ea silye ildred among amon the s savages dav i e 9 we recommend this to their consi consideration i t |