Show uti ’vhus2: YUij'riM wuxriaaaii SUNDAY TUB The San a: $ MORNING TRADES OP" BOATIRO 23 mil A Francisco Times haw a on that increasingly interesting The Timn theme — the trade of Utah thinks that the San Franciscans might have exerted then) selves and manifested more enterprise in the matter than they Jhvci although their hands have been tied a little orng to the incompietiou ®fR K freight tariff arrangements that 0 icago has the first foothold here that Utah merchants are well disposed toward California geographical position and State policy favoring that at most California can expect only a portion of thi trade that nothing can he done merchants with Utah uutil California shall arrange their prices on a currency tisis that the Salt Lake traders are teen business men and have taken cognizance of the indolence of the merchants of San Francisco that it is not Tory creditable tn the sagacity of San to oiler goods at Francisco the same price in gold as Chicago does in greenbacks that California the traded Utah for heavy imwoollens California goodported wines frui s and several other classes of goods that California goods are better and v ill fetch mo'e than Eastern ?t II 1 If: h (?1 II that goods art ide r in inns! Chicago will retain the ascendancy that with a huge muu her ol articles the height hemes will settle the busine— that the C must help in this that perseverance promptitude and cue’ erv with a ihoumgh acquaintance with Chieat'o prices and an of Han Francisco prices tn its moderate figuiesarc necessary o help on the California trade and that this ing done with the harmonious aid of theO 1 California will be likely to do well in its relations with Utah There is much good sense in the observationof the Timrjt The lemark is correct that lie difference between gold and greenbacks does not help California in regard to securing the Utah trade This difference must bo bridged over in some satisfactory way r it will continue to be bad for California articles protiuccd in California have the reputation of being superioi to articles of tho'C classes produced in the East and this gee a long way with some people lor the best article is most the cheapest in the always end but with some other people low pi ices are though oden unwisely the groat THE CKMETHV Thenarc but few pots on this earth which an held unuv sacred than that when- icpose In ashes ol our dend parted tiicud- many surviving relatives of the itorlve much consolation veil if it be but ttoii oiwiNond visits to the of tlin'i witie mean no cm by lino and jgtill Ciulo ired to ties It is plui'ing to vi tit i lie in most nation- uiilitl piopcily spends portion very ik ol'th- mu rh i painone and to eon pleasurable creation is that of boating but objections are urged against it and with atjustice because it is too frequently tended with considerable peril Sudden squalls arise hitches happen and eailore arc at Wat but laughable aw kward animals on the domains of Old Neptune lienee upset occur which are too frequently attended with loss of life The residents of Salt Lake City are more favored by nature iu having a und safe locality in which to enjoy the delightful Tcereation ofboating than are the residents of this city True the great Halt Sea is open to all is a somewhat treachbut the said erous friend not to be implicitly relied onv at all times and although its broad and expansive bosom usay appear calm as a summer day upon starting out yet that placid' surface but moment before so invitingly tempting for a sail or becomes agitated by row frequently squalls that suddenly without warning and swoop down from the mountains what n moment before was art calmly beautiful as a vast mirror is suddenly lashed into seething fury and the who trust themselves upon its surface in their frail bark place their lives in peril and arc more likely to meet with a watery crave On the water- of the now famous Hot Spring Lake at no point of great depth this risk of drowning by an upset is measurably if not entirely obviated and pleasure and health seekers can freely indulge in the favorite exorcise of boating without the dread apprehension of meeting with an untimeAs we passed the locality a ly end day or two since we saw a number of sail and filled with happy joyous people gliding like things of li!! upon the gently undulating surface of the lake The day is not distant when the annual Hot Spring Like Re will be as famous as those at gattas Sandy Ilook Cowes or the Thames i Accidents to animals on the Pacific Railroad appear to have been frequent Mr Hellcwell of late of this city tells us that on Wednesday a horse of his was struck by tlm locomotive and two of his legs were broken which rendered useless and the animal Mr M had to kill it We do not know of any other safeguard agaiu-- t these accidents than for the citizcu to take care of their stock for so long as they are allowed to run at largo they will be continually exposed and liable We would advise stockto be killed owners to either turn their animals on flu1 range or ehe put them into a herd e would ht the same time caution parent- to keep their children off the laltoad track as much a possible which may save their little ones from fa ml accidents ‘‘An oun e of preventive - better than a pound of cure" Tin: Point — A scientific friend has turned his attention to the gcographi- the rf whilh is nm who will fair ration can 'lil nt doui t si id list aid up ti u ntra! n ike hit ’'uinhink hew d le ir habitation- - and uM:e - t make th piee wuthy situ n Ofll' haul - who tl A i ha hu - plan tli unitor - i ant pu- kit I') h - child the support of an illegitimafce ten the woman who has twwhowillis receive fortunate PAUPERISM and — c of the J'th M 'V —Ties the crops in Mon m never looked more forward nor more luxuri it than nt the rv'Uit time 't’otifu! harvest L i xpeeti-Parkin-or by dona-n fiom eitizem if Helena have to a thertn m that city the c i't coinir of Main and Bridge Amid oil our accumulating phases of poverty vice and crime we are spared the curse of organized legalized in this country l’ovcrty pauperism with its haggard train of Njualid horrors is n sufficiently humiliating comBut we mentary upon civilization have no pauper class born bred and living generation jailer generation in all the rights privileges and emoluments of jwnury as it exists in Great Britain It is stated in a London paper that Mr Gladstone has “set nis heart and staked his political existence on the extinction of pauperism in Engwhich land”— a singular proposition appears to intimate the amelioration or abolition of poor people in that country— a result which however much to be desired is much more distant than the liquidation of their del narionaj millennium But pauperism in England means something more than mere poverty and it train ofunplaasant companions and its history oonatitutM one of those unhappy episodes in the march of human go to illustrate the progress which puerile and selfish efforts of man to govern and direct the future of his fellows “There wav a time ere England' griif began every rood of ground maintained its man’’ "When when men and women in danced round May Julies England” and minstrels chanted the joys of the Those were the days of peasantry villenagc and the suf for a form of external lip service to his Lord was a The rood of land on his king freehold cave him a vote parishes took care of their own poor and all went “merry as a marriage hell” IT But the aristocrat y of Henry to consolidate their powers by actual possession of the land ami his title the little to of seif though the freehold was by right of labor und possession as good as that of the Lord to the manor nevertheless the rulers released the vilicn from his bonds of si and turned him out a vagrant and a wanderer The Church liefriendod him and the Then followed aristocracy took alarm the great ecclesiastical change called the reformation ironically whereby the Church bv way of repressing the and aiding the cause of the the seized lion’s share of poor merely the plunder of the people The defender of the faith Henry VIII erected the grand and splendidly endowed Church of ngland whose millionsof risrht belong to the descendants of Englishmen twice robbed The history of this amiable reformation is the most superdamnable of together ntodurn times These serfs who were the strength and muscle of the kingdom the del vers and diggers in of prosperity being expelled from their lands which like the southern negro in this country they had earned a thousand times by their toil and blood became vagrants and laws were enacted the most infamous and oppressive that avaricious ingenuity amid devise The people starved oy the roadside in thousands Other thousands were executed in every barbarous manner suggested by fiendish malice All through the reigns of Edward Mary and Elizabeth the lust of possession raged among the upper eli"i-- in a manner which to the calm observer of events at this distance of time appears but little less than demoniacal In the fid year of Elizabeth a new plan of further and systematic plunder was dev iscd more outrageous and unheretofore just than any They had already robbedtho serf and forced him down in the mite of pm city ami helplessness and they now taxed industry to support him were “Lm m botanic u inaugurated familiar legalized permanent condition Then commenced the ineproxsi-hlconflict between labor and capital Industry stood between the lords and the paupers— thipigeon and natural enemy of both Vi lien age was virtually restored hut the lord was fiom his part of the compact to tan- and piovidc fin his trek King turned hi' vassal- over to a new eta's whose inteu st and spiiipathu-- wen- with neither pinirty va'ilevuted into an institution with ' ami liehts The pari'h owm d tin- min body ami soul to! tlm e s manhood wa to he ufti i!y TIh'nil b pan out of his own p r nui't nut 'ink la ml mu pari'h ihiih woiship man nor play manoihi-ie pauihe per laws vim bed admiral It itmnli kduMiaai The pa u pi r could m d sta’Ve and his eal leonoin-tuhK-tin u hamis la fully together ovir t'ait and philanthiopists ml iiatted eai r ' 1'airiki” on the hack evlaiiuim'' But turn til it UKVolalk oil dtlnols oiled on trator The lahorei hiine ds iv from the lands thwent to The law of t di tun d ih n nmi lioto mi) loving hi' fin li Kol to ' and she shillings of euough to become the illegal mother three or four becomes a sort of and an eligible and desirable catch to able earn to is who laborer only the No seven to eight shillings per week wonder that such men as Sir Gladstone want matters in England leveled Real reform there must up a little Curtail the privibegin at both ends take leges offof the rich —andiiwiutrHtheTthtn the poor A Great Qi estion— The historian Froude in an address recently in St Andrews gave some hard hits at the and the work English Establishment which it fails to accomplish as a purifier of the public morals: “We have had thirty years of unexus clerical activity among ampled l churches have been doubled reviews newbooks magazines hunout been have by poured spapers side while thousands the of by dreds of' it there has sprung up an equally astonishing development of moral dis From the great houses in honesty the city of London to the village grocer the commercial life of England has So deep been saturated with fraud has it gone that a strictly hono- tradesman can hardly hold his ground against com petition false measures cheating et the and shoddy everywhere clergy have seen all this grow up in solute indifference and the great quesis which moment at thi' agitating tion the rimn-- of England is the color ot petticoats Fronde had better come to America if he like to see hose little would in us England matter' well U' others Utrut itiiii i— Ui iu Car- is serving his fiftieth year Elder in the M E Church writes to the C'ntruJ Christian from Pleasant Plains (Hi I T think quite probable that the good Lord will give me my discharge from labor ns my jubilee before our at Lincoln and if so it is my desire that this Conference remember mv aged wife Her age will be eighty next I'sth dayWe vvetc married August ISO'S She has therefore the boon the wife of a travolimr preacher the eighteenth of sixty She has borne up next August uudcrall tire hardships privations and for preacher poverty of a traveling Jat the old nearly years pioneers of the early days of Methodism the wife of a travsav what eling preacher must have gone th ough in that time for although have been a regular traveling preacher have never received next Fall my disciulinary allowance for support from the chun-but three years of that long traveling life and yet thunk would rather have the comforts (5od I have an a poor suffering and preacher than to traveling Methodist lx Pienident of the United States who twright as ‘residing The Present S rm: oi Woviw In the British Australian Suttiivci-colony of Victoria women the right to vote some tour hav y cars ago iug found that the law been o had )iuliibly inadvertently framed as to permit them It works admirably according to all rcpoi K In Sweden chiefly through the exertions of the late Bremer an indirect light of voting was in 1mall women possessing specgranted to ified property qualifications By the Italian (’ode a widow or wife separated from her husband who pays taxes is allow ed to vote tluough t?uch child or other relative as 'lie may designate In Holland widows and 'ingle vvoiiun are entitled to possessed of property vote on ail questions of tuarion etc likiv toiiflect - value Li lx1' Moravia granted the to all widows who pay tax'-In many towns of Fra'ic-:- women and exercise the rirht to vote posse" m municipal affair and m one of t Ih m it i' said that the council was recently lompo-- i ri wholly nj'woim-In voto asuobli-women cm pm and in capacity i' In some eases however a tax hey vote In pmx iluii!' n low - nd ' is bo 01 oi single !'- s ell '! nl Me tla a mg mi uf In !l nl ui " Li) tin nit nb la - 'Ik - m im initliui Kim Uli ote- - l'n ii in o o ii m eou ai In m nl vvnliuli iled In and ai ad In Women iind lilici ii im n Hnude ill'll it'd lb iii'imi ibe sane' numlin tin puli' hi lam 'Oi iii'i aie it ? threedaw At a distance of voyage from nd ncary ir tomefc! with this important port on the coast ot South America is tWLH of Juan Fernandez whWobmT a tune Alexander Selkirk during tary banish ment of four years the material for Defoe’s Crusoe” This island little thZfi by the inhabitants ef the Chilly Slf !:8 lately betome of some by the tact that in December 18" was ceded to a society of Gwae?fef der guidance of Robert WetrW f engineer from Saxony' Germany u the purpose of colonization r trepreneur ofthK expeditions " lnk JO inf I f ' fi'lm-lb' am of tie lllZatlnli them o" linn vniiiin iiioWi flluutraLj world over: t u 11 Ip XlVpt o ’M m pi art- r and til i" 'i n fill 'loll In 11 ed t lie mvll!fts’ the dirtiMtj urn takcv thri !y goveinri! "I on" wonmnTb Mill ntniu n 'ii ui !' e 'm nr uiiei- it 'inj hr i‘ii(iin iif itJ mi thj Nut nml pm ip(iii' on In (ill hie a la) tluit nit nt‘ ll t belongs to tliowit‘( la lievi i' m it Without and ail atlirlion to the female bout so u polMq see wo uf iiiuillies comprised9 d and In ol couni predulKupon m tin m Iu n nu vi hh Liami they upoose toa l'n i a :i good am! orderly ig tli-jtl'o' (o ' wikliii lill out a nuno pr of IHil Iks is a fundamental Mot mo mu that nu"oo in ipirt me ini om ilete aa'1 Tlii y wow Do1 !fi ome leet pci l'n! ind ineii to "come together j ” Tin' I w it In lor In r b i' puillll'i theiii'i lve ii 2SE358B&&?i£ since passed several years in Ea served as major through the WarSl republic against secession and J§ sequently engaged as engineer neetion with the riiliw in South akmerica He and his ®eW about CO or 70 individuals havetjj possession of the island which isij scribed as being a most fertile andloJ ly spot They found there county herds of goats some 30 bngJ and 00 donkeys the latter anwi proving to be exceedingly shy Thi brought with them cows and other® tie swine numerous fowls and ally various kinds of agricultural ism)' meats with boa t s and tihing appai tt to engage in different pursuits and of The grotto made potions as Robinson’s ahoile situated in a cions valley covered with large field J wild turnips— a desirable food fnrswi has been young Chilian gentleman to care of the porcine part of the social stock has been entrusted and he a! his doing very well in§t 3Vivu Tin-Ucioit Workinu of new proteges are Juan Fernandez krf quarters Boston have come to he sui face to of stations where the whaling make one more protest before going — £r The facts presented to take in water and wood under finally in regard to the uvothe Legislature — With most liersoL rage wages of seamstresses and other theie is an epoch in life when fneepf classes of working women are appalling It an Think of makimr a flannel shirt lor become slightly flattened from a diminished activity ten cent' some other shirts jiffy cent a probably the secreting vessels The consaqr! is that the globe is not keiwiterf oil or distended with fhiiife as(i cruel'’ It would seem as if the rela- completely and middle age There is fe tions between capital and labor had axis of vision an A bed § elongated faintillumined the with been not yet held off be to further read RaM est beam of Christian light (utilities' flattened more heeoiiiing bythcsfefl slavery is even worse than this wretchwithin the difficulty isi inactivity ed state of affairs hut this is so atroon convex glasses Thssl ciously unjust and intolerable that no Ly putting the waning ision of ago It howl thoughtful or philanthropic person can imperfeetioa ¥ I I do not wonder when that advancing pardon or palliate it first realized individual the persists ha often suggested that Communism itself a the way out of thi horrible! the attempt to keep the boos ja wilderness and considering the tunny old focus of vision — even if hi rk valuable points in human nature it under perplexing disadvantages m is no more wonderful that every ex- relaxing he but perseveringly proceeds did when his eyes were ha boon a justas periment in that direction meridian of their perfection thfiibij sorry failure vessels will at last come up to his One plan propoed by some of the tance and the original focal disl&i leader of this agitation is to procure a g tract of land near the city and give will he This statement will unqucstiftai5k needy women an opportunity to learn combatted by thtsnsfuc'F make energetically and it a living by gardening affestea? will use it bo But glasses (lie Legislature tn help for They forensic powder because tlw ward the project and if the experiment WedoMfJi beyond cavil could be fairly made and the enter- established jiretend it will be a lecessful m e?eija i prise he managed by skillful and men there stance but generally' if glasses afiswf ? seems no reason why it should not suc- resorted to tlien the opportunity ceed any way the Legislature is not doing without them is forever loft Very aged men may lie noticed! its bounty on many oblikely to fine and ladies too print of its consideration and ing byP§ ject so worth ho resisted glasses at theageof! aid to vvlio enjoy all the corif Why trill poor folks crowd to a rity andstaive instead of going into the of distinct vision mid they will like the deacon’s chaise every gtid a delountry where there i' alvav mand for labor which if not the the vehicle fails to pieces at the time pleasantest certainly drives the wolf Therefore begin with a tula tw away Iron: the door and a legion ot temptations fiom the daily path uf the turn never to use glasses of any b for reading or writing The wretched pool?— hr know about such eontrivan — nothing 4 if they had Imre would have h Sol I! Y Yolk andoecu&fc iu r abundance )uvertj eyes !i t' effort' of meet a gieat erime and the the emergency Cicero Kb every mail and woman's life is to of imperfect vision rt wealth Society in this lity is aue of He even wreStif much like that oi' other large mcriean ist letter by torchliuht on the e't ities except that money is tin- chief being jrat U death by the waiting' In other cities poor lienHumboldt died at ninetyf! I men w)i can boast of being having never been embarrassed of a family which cniamnnd respei liir tbo-- e inoilein contrivanees luntf Y its talent or other good qualifies or John (l nil tey Adams ilhistriotn j who have merit ol' theii own ar Wi 'i hoia r—lii p at a ripe old age sav into whil :ne calieil '‘'olnl out them Indeed it would bo ikj ciriles” vvitli as liioeli warniili :i' ions enterprise to collect acatabgK im'lion-nrin tiaiugh they the ' of literary i New mk men anlvoiiiin ot men and women who were me jidged by tlk'ir haul ’lb di nt — Or U C most illiterate boor tin t raiorin rv Ii iiionible ipled Knave film! 'I w wo 'i n k 'Woman --I dooi open to him wiiiioai u wbilo Nw Lck Tt thmi' is delighted’ Si I’eter bini'i hi In ml aim e: ip” would "I it dm trim thus stated b dm jniisi- m ins Mon-' iiijlis ip a ' b il Boston llelli Ik cllll ’lb li a’ MaZ Chamberlain or his combounmissioner ever seen a band of They dress in the unemding sisters? barrassed style which for ages has been lUtilo acrobats tbo of tho costuuiQ which is very like that in which tncy were born As they stand in aline with the men hands on hips the difference of sex is at first scarcely percepNor indeed do they indulge tible in any reserve of gesture themselves such as might be cherished as a relic They form pieces ol a of modesty pyramid with the men and when the bits arc pyramid is resolving itself to held by the heels or distorted in any fashion permitted by the laws of gravobserved be also should itation It to the that the ladies are subjected most perilous portion of the business for the obvious reason that the spectators have paid their money on an of the sort implied understanding To do these women justice they do not shrink from feats that astonish as A few years ago there well as disgust was only one Menken and she had a bard time of it if she were as sentiSapphics mental as her posthumous but now we liuvo got would suggest far beyond the wearisome “Muzeppa” It is a bail sign when people hunger after cruel sport and this female if we may use the term is not bur cruel to a degree only unseemly If the women arc cIooly watched it is easy to perceive that their nerves are Behind the not lit for the sad work grin of the minute there :s a look of natural fear and distrust as if a ghastly finish to the exhibition were constantly in sight Theii- limbs too the anus tremble when the feat in especially hand must be repeated or prolonged And vvliat sort of training do these women undertio brought up from early a calling? girlhood to Has the N o) In The Fall Gymnasts Gazette says: ' way tl iVfio Radroad a’RPttperS !W J liS' |