Show N Q CANNON EDITOR AND PUBLISHER sher SHEP W wednesday august 11 THE fallowing fai fal lowing arrived in thi city last night i 1 I FOUNTAIN GREEN august 13 1872 to Q G IV ir J addge dge U S indian agent the indians have pot leh left yet and dont calculate to they are aro stealing our horses horbes and killing our men whenever they get got a chance and when they please can you send troops to drive them off our border I 1 as they are no longer friendly As boon soon ai you gave orders s not to feed them they began to gotman get got mad and we would very much like your assistance in protecting us and our property please answer immediately what you carldo carido can cau klo kio S R jj jonnson JOHNSON on the strength of this dispatch governor woods woos madg made a requisition upon general morrow worrow for troops to be sanpete to restrain the indians but it hp appears pears that general morrow is ill prepared rrt pre pared so far as the right kind of troops atel arb concerned ed for aej adlan expedition of course the general ean can an only bend send buch such troops as lobai hobai he bas has r lf if he lias ilas hab has cavalry he e can kond kend camry cavalry but if he hebbs Ws nol not he cannot there is only a fraction of a porn ooin company pany of cavalry at the post all but this fraction having baving been ordered to accompany aleut wheeler ln in his hii expedition and therefore the general in comma command lid tid if he senu bena any troops can only sand infant infantry rk to the relley relief 01 of the settle bettle fl those who are aye familiar biffi indian raids and their thein mode of ivar warfare fare jil n this country have a good idea of ho how little use troops who have to do their marching afoot are in pursuing in the canons deserts und and mountains n talus boutah lof lat utah gan gen DH a wells 1 I is a I 1 in n receipt r 1 it of bf ia a dispa dispatch tW froin col B N allred alired of spring city under date data of thi the alth till stin in Ih anstin itAf WIC that tabby serida senida word to all the tho thi hat bat aiu atu he 16 can control his nad men ap no longer he walo wab was in spanish day J with ith a detachment bro brought ight the herd berd from thistle valley yesterday having started as boon as I 1 got word of the raid at fairview T the he wounded boy stewart ewart BL is dead there is ibea inea meaning lift in aleis this notice of Tabby tabbye Tab byg bya fal fai aud bud it to is so plain a warning that ane settlers cannot not with safety d dis dib is reg ardit they should neglect no precaution to secure their stock and them selves against indian depredations and attacks it is well weli enough to cal Lupon the proper omm off meers leers for aid but they abati should luvot not forget Torget theold theo d yale fable fabie of bf jupi tor ter and the tue ted teamster and while calling cabling up upon on jupiter ilot liot forget to put thear own shoulders to the wheel ja in other words ards trust in providence anc ant keep their powder dry and nna gurls guns pro properly loaded I 1 and enforce the tules rules in the Ivar various lobs bettio settle settlements mants which were round aund so safe during war years gie THE hottest part of the season is rn manifestly ni passed but we are in the midst of the dusty beason it is dust duet dust everywhere destructive to apparel fur ni fort font good tem health and where thero there is most congregation of humanity and the animals and road conveyances used by humans there is the most dust almost constantly to a disagreeable extent and frequently toa to a choking de degree grel gyer son the streets dividing the most busy baseness ba elness siness blocks the wafer water aprin sprin kier lass lays the dust and there the condition of the streets is more satisfactory but in a city having such spacious streets as this has a city of such dis distances as this is the sprinkling of all the streets la Is not to be thought of the expense would be bd too great what then is to be done perhaps there might be a little more done than has been and done to the advantage of many among the dustiest and consequently the most uD unpleasant pleasant of our streets is south temple street from the temple block to the railroad depot and this because of the multiplication of the traffic and travel that way 1 1 now would it not be a good thing for foi some arrangement to become be come to for the running of a street sprinkler upon the them ralls ralis of the street railroad probably the company would concede the use of the road for this purpose on account the resultant benefit to the road and pleasure to the passengers in the cars A sprinkler could be constructed to throw the water smartly on each side of the railroad a fair distance upon the treet if not both sides at once then one side at a time and this would spahn kle and lay the dust on quite a large extent of the most frequented portions of our streets no now w as to the expense Ther there etre two ways of meeting it each singly or both jointly one Is by subscription that falling failing wholly or partially the next is the one which everybody resorts to in an emergency as aa expressed in scripture phraseology 1 I will arise and go tomy toiny fath fathera rather erv eru 1 happily in this enlightened and liberal country the city is not restricted to the principle of mono paternity but is blessed with a plurality of fathers and therefore stands an excellent change of a gracious answer to ali ail reasonable requests THE tre recent displays of aurora borealis northern lights appear to have beel beed witnessed over a large area of country and to have been very extraordinary they are supposed to be caused by the reflection of li light or electricity upon minute crystals of ice iee in the hir air in the polar regions and to indicate serious atmospheric disturbances resulting to in storms and hurricanes oftentimes of bf great violence PRESIDENT grant is represented anted as saying to a new york berald correspondent that he the president was not anxious for a second term of office but lid he consented to io receive the nomination because he be thought it would be the best way of discovering whether a majority of his coun countrymen a really did believe all that had bad bl been alleged eged against his administration and himself and he ha thought that the asperi asperities ties of an AH election campaign would furnish opportunities port unities for his political op opponents and personal enemies to say all they could against him the merald is not satisfied with jil ill this isi but reminds the president that in lif the election of the ruler ofa of a great nation there are far more weighty consid e ra eions to be entert entertained affied than the pu public blie endorsement or co condemnation of the present inea inca incumbent mb annand and thereupon proceeds to rea read d ulysses asses tai fei a sharp lecou lecture re after the following fashion we submit to president grant that if the iesue issue involved in this ca campaign insaf go Is really so narrow and personal as he lle seems to suppose be should fi at tonee tonce once rid himself of the policy and the clans who surround him and bummer buffer the people to decide the question upon his own merits alone xe him loosen the im military lil lii ill grasp frog from the throat of the th southern people change his cabinet 1 drive from him the coun counsellors wh who have led him into all sorts of dilemmas and break up his military corps at the white hoube house he will wil wll lothen then stand in the position he occupied when the nation bestowed upon him its high est honors four years yearb ago at present he is hidden bidden from view by the men who have caused his hla administration to falsify ail nil all ali the professions profession s he be made and all the sentiments he be professed before hi hla hib selection election to accept him the people must accept secretary fish who has made us the laugh laughing I 1 tle tie stock of foreign nations Secre secretary boutwell Bb who hab hash alivo g the southern states stites in confusion con custon caston ston as he be has hak brought upon 7 us financially the politicians who bave have sough sought uto tto to keep alive the thet hatred and bit bitterness torness of thie the war and aud whose motto has been let let lot us is have no peace esce 11 vf if the president will do justlee justice to himself by casting ott oft the trammels in which he hb Is held by the radical politicians b by suspending the fihe operation of the thib ku jpy eluz klux law so as aa to prove his willingness to return to tiie tile generous impulses he once felt towards the southern people and by changing his cabinet for the purpose of initiating ii a change in hief hia foreign and financial policy he can call then justly and safely y apply to the people to endorse his personal character and condemn his blan bian derors IN california and especially in san francisco youthful under the new name of hoodlumism has for some time been makins makino head bead headway war un il 11 it las has arrived at buch huch a pitch as 09 to force itself upon the serious consideration of society and imp impi d l the civil au thorit lesto adopt measures mea mba kures aures to restrain noc bof f to repress it tit thib thia Is s is a dt bm a di grave reflection reflect iop and the tho u m eds ess iq f beneral and tind deeply deeff felt that sot soi something must be deneto V project protect society from the juer increasing asang y youthful rascality lity i 0 in that baity city the ke bev rey v dr O anning tam ham bam recently preached a sermon upon thib this h subject io in the course of which he be made homme borne startling observations he stated that the of crimes committed in that city were by boss and youba men who were hardened biu ain sincera merb wera old meen teen in 16 wickedness committing every elvery deed in n the dark catalogue ot crime thousands ot of mothers io in the higher corces of society were filled with griet grief because they thoy could not nol control their boys I 1 talk taik talk walk a as we might of our christian civilization in this country lawlessness and viciousness prevailed to a great extent in our oan american youth some parents were too much engrossed in moneymaking money making and ind had no time to look after the moral education of their children or to train them to industrial pursuits the majority of the american youth were growing up in idleness they went hunting fl ining finning and visiting the lowest dens of vice all from a want of having an industrial education and it was therefore to see so much corruption and dissipation it was an established establish od fact that to iu whatever community the degeneracy of youth prevailed it was wag au an evidence of lh the demoralized state of society doc soc lety the breaking through the paths of moral influence and the decline in intelligence and prosperity of a community were traceable to forgetfulness of ef god and the breaking down of parental authority tho rity american youth had lad set seb before them on edming coming to years of maturity passion duels prize nights fights political strafes and corruption Ba bachaus bace Baco cenus cedus aus bund hund hundreds reds of inking drinking di saloons venus voting free frea love iove divorces libertines extravagant dreps drefs mammon unprincipled speculation diamond seeking gold li hunting tinting everybody doing as he pleased thrilling romances tiie tile police gazette guzette bu god was forgot forgotten tel teu and iruin was trampled upon there was not nol the proper guard taken for ch the e training of the young children grew up in ignorance of their moral relations to god and man the proper training of the young was a hard tabor labor for parents but hut unless they performed this duty the children would go to ruin in the early years of the hebrew comma commonwealth xi wealth and also of the heathen the young were brought up to labor so it was in american history sons and daughters united in the bupp the families at tender ages a ani aal ud then learned their trades or probes gions they were protected from vice and temptation by their daily toll toil and the morals morais odthe of the people were then purer than now it was the duy duly of the government to prevent as aa well as to punish crime but bat it orten often protected monopolies which caused idleness and then punished young and old oid for vagrancy it protected the avenues leading to erime crime and bulit built jails jalla and prisons for dor the inmates of those avenues much reform was wanted in the civil laws jaws to adjust differences between capital and labor to remove the tiie cause of idleness encourage industrial pursuits and eind dry up the sources of vice men of experience wera were wanted to control the civil govern government men t men of wisdom of uncompromising ples pies men who would sheep out of parti zan strafes and be city and state fathers watching oyer over over and protecting young and old A social r reform e f orm arm wat wah needed and the establishment of industrial homes where those out of employment could work and especially the young be taught trades and saved from misery and idleness it was wms bilt ter that the young should learn industrial pursuits and receive proper instruction st than to be hunted down by the police and branded for life there is much good goad sense in these remarks one thing does appear evident that eventually the civil government will have to take sorpe corpe borne compulsory steps to the moral and in du of the young and the preservation of the young youil 9 and old from want vice vico and misery but this hurrying speculative grasping greedy licentious generation is not the one to dp do this needed and noble work tile tiie cause of woman suffrage does abt appear to be making very swift progress in these nit sd d states although women have heave tile the cigut to vote in two of the territories the se sex bex seem to be getting along better in 13 england trl tei gladd in the pursuit of their rights probably because they do not go to such extremes as them do in this country but are more sober and fea iea reasonable and less lebs shocking to establish ed proprieties at a meeting nib nih eting recently of oatlie the national society in london mr nir acob bright M U P presiding that gentleman presented hib hia congratulations to the members of uhe the society upon lapon the facts that women had already secured the vote in school boards and municipal elections that they were chosen to seats in school boards and that he be believed one hundred and nifty fifty about one fourth members of parliament were in favor of giving women the right to vote at parliamentary elections that la Is encouraging progress england reems seems to be movi moving ngon on erada ally but surely toward domail woman suffrage manhood suffrage equality of representation and many other needed reforms As with many other thriving western cities our own city biby of salt lau lah lake epro e progresses and improves so rad rao rapidly idly that a person who stays away olom flom it tor for A a few months hardly recognizes portions of it after his retura but to cail in the aid of the old land marks to assist bib hib recollection stores hotels and other business buildings aswell as private residences go up rapidly ana and an d the transformation of our once quiet reposeful city is strongly evident and continually going on the fashion of bf the architecture as may be expected has undergone a manifest change the ugly hip roofs with their still uglier prominent chimneys that deform some otherwise good buildings we rejoice to so se appear to have gone into disfavor and gables set offs d mansard mao bard aard and ana other good looking roof fashions are preferred which speak well for the improving taste of our architects k build ers urs and owners of houses bouses As a mattir matter |