Show ED editorials ITO RIALS THE lindsay canada dost post in a recent issue jostle gives an account of the escape from a terrible death by burning of a party of seven railway surveyors they were at work in a place known as long swamp on the marb mars railway railway when the attention of the leader of the company was arrested by the roaring of what seemed to be A a hurricane worse for on looking in the direction whence the sound proceeded it was found that a nire fire was rush rushing ingata at a rapid rate towards them the men instantly took the alarm and commenced to retreat to a cleared space apace at a considerable dis dib tance I 1 but the swamp was wash full of holes suii buil and old dry cedar logs loga and brush and their progress was very slow A strong wind wai blowing the he fire in the direction they were going and it gained upon them at the rate of two yards a minute with bruised limbs and suffering terribly from fatigue they finally reached the clearing the fire then therl being only ten yards behind them THAT the inhabitants of utah the real sober citizens are opposed to pettifogging that they detest interminable law suits and all who favor such profitless things that they have no wonderful respect for federal courts and their dependants pend ants is most moat true and for this there are most abundant and most satisfactory is reasons A law suit even for the victor is not the most blessed thing on earth going to law is not the most happy the most civilized the most christian the best beat means of adjusting j difficulties on the contrary going to law seldom if ever satisfactory illy settles any difficulty A suit in court may be the end of legal contro versy but in the minds of the parties immediately concerned a 3 satisfactory solution of the difficulty may be further off than ever these are incontrovertible facts Peaceful friendly neighborly arbitration either according to established precedents and customs or according to rules proposed and accepted for the immediate occasion Js is a method of sett Bett settlement lement as far superior to lawsuits as the heavens are above the earth the law was made for transgressors and lawsuits arise because one or both parties desire injustice arbitration is adapted for ret net reasonable beings persons who want the night right t to win whether they themselves awin win or lose in any particular case that our elti etti citizens zens almost universally prefer and desire arbitration is a weighty fact in their favor for it ia is a manifest evidence of good tand land and honest intent I 1 which the desire to go to law never c can an be to any thing like the same degree it if a P man professional or otherwise wise ulbe is constantly stirring up difficult ties inciting broils egging on parties ao to engage engaged in law bulte suits he may be set down at onee once as a dishonest malicious individual a pest peat to the community he maybe mayhe may be a limb of the law a marshal a judge a gov governor efnor or any other othar officer j but nevertheless it if he is a continual stirrer strife an eveir everlasting latting inciter to lawsuits law he is a public nuisance be no smatter how grandiloquently bems bema i dilate upon executing the law and a all ali that sort of stuff atad a fact very well known and generally conceded that in no other of the territories has there been so 96 little crime among the citizens aa as in bruh ur ah xh xin xiu 1 an in no other territory has there been lem iem lebb lew violen violence ce a among the bona bohn fi fidek fido dek deb 4 i i tle tie tiene rs in no other territory there been such a peaceably disposed and ini in dust rious population in n oot herTer herwer there beeg beef been manifest such a s e deeply felt and widely prevalent res rea peet for foe wholesome laws and good order utah has never needed a lance committee all other terric tories we believe all and a number of 1 l the states at one period or other of their history have rejoiced re laced in thahir regular illegal 35 ecret secret 4 summary means of executing what has been supposed pr or at least reputed to be 1 justice ustice some territories and some 1 tates have not yet outgrown the vig i lanoe lance ance anee aw swaddling addling clothes colorado yet wears weara pretty thick and strong ries nes tightly bound around too and bod BOU of our exchanges broadly hint that a ad 6 of vigilantes is tiie the very medio medi i A tha fr new new now york needs bo so that I 1 oie uie virtual metropolis of the union has advanced anywhere near nearo gearu 0 o a par with salt lake city and utah territory in those vital particulars which which constitute a community law abiding and justice loving I 1 1 1 T I 1 1 t i 1 16 2 these thebe well known facts speak volumes in favor of the people who have settled and redeemed the barren wastes of the great basin and are an answer to the carping calumnies calum nies of those who are continually employed in looking at and expatiating in upon R the motes in their neighbors I 1 ey eyes ea there arg are spots in the sun there are faults among our settlers butali things considered si due allowan mm de fo nature show us a better people than thaw the pola poin point 1 1 cm C I 1 f f w 1 I 1 every body who reads reada newspapers knows something about the international society and aud of its projector dr karl marx the leading revolutionary spirit of the age for far the international society the creation of his brain may be called the great le velling organization as it designs to completely overturn society to deprive kings and rulers of their power the rich of their riches Jan landowners downers of their land to abolish class privileges and distinctions and to place all men on an equality wild and chimerical as such schemes appear they wera were all embraced in the gramme pro of the internal association the society numbers its millions of members and branches in every european country also on this thib bide side of the atlantic and to its workings the life and doings of the late paris commune are said to have been due and its operations have already attracted so much attention among the royalty and aristocracy of europe that it has been the subject of diplomatic comment between different european powers and at the conference of emperors and ministers at salzburg as the telegraphic dispatches stated yeat yesterday erday it was resolved thet the international society should be suppressed such a resolution or a 96 series of them may be passed but the most probable result of an attempt to carry them into efm eff effect act would beto be to precipitate the troubles shadowed foreshadowed fore and threatened in the pro ro gramme of the internationals but just while bile hile kings and ministers areu are cogitating tating on the subject the that thai the projector and organizer dr marx mar of the society is dead and this may render the project of suppression more feasible for in such a movement the power on the throne to direct and control the workings and movements it cont contemplated is of immensely more than the power behind it namely the millions of members composing the organization the effect of dr marxs death on tb abe e f future odthe of the society he organized will soon be seen and as his connection with it and with everything else sublunary has ceased a short biographical sketch of him may not be uninteresting bora noua in treves in isis 1818 he studied law in bonn and berlin be gained his professorship fessor ship in 1841 he subsequently turned his attention to philosophy and to politics and political economy in 1842 he became editor of the first paper published in prussia in opposition to the government this was waa soon su suppressed essed eased and marx was compelled to T fay fly ils els hib his country he went to paris where be he became joint follit editor i of bf one antl anti bian sian paper and coutris contributor titor to another hib his writings deroso obnoxious to prussia that on an urgent demand from the prussian government lauis philip banished took hp bp his resi resl residence deuce in belgium where he lived until hen upon the revo lation occurring which droye drove the or leanis kanisty ts from france he xi turned returned to paris he shortly moved thence fo to cologne where he be started apayer called the neue neu 6 which whid iiron on account of brits its radical sentiments bopa sopa crea teda sensation kr A revolution occurring the next n t year yeah e a r in it i beveral several or the german G erman principalities p itt 1 M was w as suppressed I 1 annj be lie was again agair banished from germany he returned fo france but receiving an intimation from th the authorities that he must be silent or instantly leave fraade france he be cho chose sethe the latter and went to where he recommenced the publication of theau neu which rth kept up monthly until 1851 he continued his political studies and kave cave gave the subject f trades unions considerable attention and they finally suggested to him le tie ti e idea of an international society the theor theon organization of which he su succeeded in feeling in 1864 A correspondent of the new ne york yui yoi k world who interviewed marx in london in speaking of his hia personal appear ance says pays dodou do remember the bust of socrates t the man who died rather than profess his hib belief in the gods of the time the man with the fin tin aine fine s sweep of profile for fon the forehead running meanly at the end into a little snub curled turied up feature e i 0 i W like a bisected pothook that formed the nose take this bust in your minds eye color the beard black dashing it here and there with puffs of gray clap the bead thus made on a portly body of the middle height and the doctor fa Is before you sou throw a veil vell over the up per part of the face aad and yo a might be ur in I 1 n the company of a born vestryman be re veal the esbe esse nUal feature the immense braw r iad eyu know at once that you have most formidable of nil nii a all composite a 8 dreamer who thinks a thinker wh who gho 0 dreams are ams amB 01 01 1 i our c am dearl biarl f a nearly all over the country of late have been rev reveling eang in disgusting details concerning womans comans weakness and mans wickedness until some of the papers have become almost loathsome and sickening we will here present a different piet picture ure for the emulation of ali all our maidens and mattens matrons who feel disposed to admire it and bud benefit themselves thereby mrs 31 F butts I 1 a regular correspondent of the new york berald herald JS erald reviewing her past career speaks thus of herself I 1 thank heaven that I 1 know how to work should anything happen to my literary prospects is I 1 could make m my Y living as a dressmaker dress dregs maker milliner seamstress housekeeper I 1 cook or la undress I 1 have done my own house work and gloried in it have made my husbands shirts a and nd washed and ironed them not on only y because I 1 could realy fealy do them better than a professional laun iaun laun faun dress but in order to eke out oat a reporters meagre e salary I 1 now theus theeb the sort of woman for a wife worth more than a ballroom ball room full of the sort which can do little else than put on style in public and lounge on the sofa in unkempt dishabille at homet home eleanor ein kir k in the elizabeth N jj J herald thus lauds mrs butts mrs butts butta Is the only woman employed on the regular stair staff of thib paper and la Is a brilliant and painstaking journalist the husband of this lady jady wab waa formerly connected with the bame sheet and after his death ehfe made application for piece work wah which was cheerfully furnished her her thoroughness dispatch and unusual intellectuality i were the subjects of co constant U cm comment ment by those whose business it is to look out for talent and the result was an invitation to join the staff stamn mrs butts hasa has a bright I 1 winsome I 1 essentially I 1 Y woma womanly il ay f face ad a although I 1 t houg ii judging by line and measure measure hen her her features would be tae very far from regular during daring the few very few years ofard of mrs butts domestic life she wrote a great many poems and short shorb articles artl arti cleb clee which were laid away for future use although at the time she bhe scarcely expected to dig dispose of any laby of them since her debut into journalism these have all been bean sold prices and now there theitis eis is a market for everything which comes somes from her pen before the ladys mar man marriage riago she w was conn connected ec ted with a young ladies ladles seminary in where she taug taught french and german fo fon for ra a year and bud a half with perfect success such I 1 versatility of lot talent and adaptability of temperaments temperament mily mity maybe be uncommon blit but it certainly demonstrates the weakness wesie wesle nets neos of one system of education to Td know how to doone do one thing W well weli is certainly a great accomplishment t but in an these days of competition and ness it is by nome no means ans aus enough mothers see to it that when thedac the day 0 trouble ble bie comes your daughters shall shaik be prepared for itt yes yeb mother see seb to it as much as you reasonably can it la Is not every woman that can write poetry we are liapi nappy to say but buti every woman may cultivate sueh buch such abilities BS she hase hasi has and many women may make themselves much more helpful and useful than they are the girls developing into woman hoo hood d especially w would 0 uld do well to take this to heart I 1 I 1 0 1 t JUSTICE is 18 justice laws taws 49 law the twos two are re often cinfo confounded undo but deiy very frequently their natures are as diametrically op eL as the poles probably pro Fro bably babiy there is no community where justice is more thoroughly respected than in this and probably there akere is no community where that kind hind of law that merely apes justice is more cordially despised if law and justice were invariably one as they ought to be tempered only onix I 1 with BO eo much muel mercy as would maru matu featly tend to the general good then this community would rejoice inlaw in law and would at all times naturally honor bonor i HU the administrators thereof unhappily the administrators of the law low the tile imported administrators in utah sometimes are not of this class instead of seeking to td execute as much ustice justice si th the w law 1 i will allow they of ter tea seek to execute te aa as much is car caa be out of the law lav and sometimes to trample underfoot the law lav as ft a thing of naught in the face of the high mightiness of a petty yetty official tro tto now sow w as to courts indictments we wc are fully confident that there is not one citizen in the territory of any suy sort of standing in the community who if legally legall k charged with tran transgression ig rem rew I 1 or 0 of f I 1 the law woul would d not ilot sunhe unhesitatingly 8 it tingly e come om e forth and voluntarily unta rily t take ak 0 his hib trial triai if he iia lit luethe athe slightest idea that he would have anything like a fair and honest trial b by his peers but when whon charges are maliciously hatched when cases are mal featly prejudged when it Is well understood der stood that judge and jury and mar max and deputies are all bent on con diction at all hazards when juries are aie chosen by an enemy from among the enemies of the accused and neld he is con that he has not the rem remotest niest cause to hope for a fair trial and the tribunal which tries him holds the is sues of life and death to the convicted tiit vilt without hout any further appeal then thed the accused may well say may wo no thank you and may conclude that there is some virtue in the adage that self preserve tion is the first law of nature if lf courts an and d their appendages wish to be res |