Show V- - Sjii false gall! It £tlmb ‘cntMUiUclih Cflcgni’A Fimily Pincr eireol-everj settlement in the Territory in Uir’t lvotci l' ohtiolriehtsof the reoph (UBLtSHfcD IK APVAKCK: neliTcretl annumihre at residence in the City Pi Months 17:00 Months $4:01) fiuai“-Dsi- t nriiDi IS APTAKCK: aaussrfy' TAl-- A if WITH BRIGHAM YOCWG” “Jlonnoniciu” is ever a prolific submembers of the press but it let for so since the ‘laying been unusually rail" on the Pacific railroad af ibe last event brought a large that interesting to the Bohemian fraternity juinber of have who indulged in this Territory to lengthy communications numerous which they represented he papers Utah and its people list and west social customs and their peculiarities been handled in as have religious views naked ways as there were pens engag-- i the that we have of latest £j ()ne found in the Sun eornc across is whose Bulletin corresponof after the fashion dent so personages prominent some reporters has had popular with uniuteniew and a talk witi President of which he purports to give losing occupying the sulrtiinro in an article He tells of a column limns his the age of ’resident Young dc scribes his personal char-tMatures irtcristics and otherwise tries to make the account of his visit to interesting he greatest man of the age During of die interview the subject fame up and here is his statement jf the rental ks made concerning it: conversation and the President said The jack The turned then it upon store system was a mistake to institutions would oppose that these affect business outside Territory of the Ihe people would wear as many coats and require as many blankets as if there The only stores ri sere no eo operative idifierence would be the manufacturer' would sell to one great wholesale house whirl their goods would he distribuinstead of havited over the Territory ng to n:n into every little town after Merchants and ustomers sell in larger parcels and their money would he more easily I ('Sail Francioco would make calculher puces for Utah in currency ate their profits and keep down the cities oqs as merchants do in eastern he thourlit San Francisco would got a oiMita'itbie share of the trade Even 'rom friendship however they could orders receive for to iot expect goods which coming from Kan Francisco would laid down in cost more Salt Lake City than they would from Mhicaan As one of his homely this may be quoted: “My (turning to the person jn his light) may have a horse that will suit me iking my friend I seek him irst I like the horse but lie wants 500 for it Another whom I man “hardly know has as good a horse which tie will sell for &400 and I buy the kt-- r J am on the same terms with my bend he has Ids horse which he worth $'00 and I have one that suits me as well that only cost $400" The lqural of this and Brigham i oimg says nothing without meaning cems to be that Brigham himself hard-knows where the trade will go and ‘hough he desires to give it to Kars Pranciscoand build up a closer jio does not want our leading men md politicians to make war upon the Konnon Church if we do not get all the trade wc All heavy and expect general European goods and all Asiatic goals consumed in Utah he thinks will nine He through Kan Francisco poke particularly of English hardware an crockery as being nearly as cheaply transported to Kan Francisco as to Vw I oi k The heavy hardware of the New England States Te thouc'iit would come via Kan Fran He particularly mentioned nails id agricultural mauchincry of those Koine they do not manufacture 'tour own line woolen manufactures 4Vc attrii ted their attention and as au n nun liincij is not employed niu'is win (hey will liecomo jR Mission Fiouecr and bin tn California mills hi tlh " the jjci pie arc supplied hundred dots not at m "i a of goods they quantity " aid one wholesale store that ' d !'h the pMceipiil trade of the 'itiioi i( tjH business of mi basis infinitely more satis to uiam’sficfuiors and heavy r llir' who sell to supply the trade d‘ Thai trade will of course ' any h s as a result of bn the same people who made h' isiness before are hcr“ still have in and are increasing 'applied 'Amber "huh will make increased ClSlness Or (out se so important a point as could not but become a topic a conversation Hero is the tinier in which he represents the Ptespeas of Ogden:” city is1vh d hen 1 asked what would be the Centra! Railroad if carried out the threat riieir ©witch side track sBUllIr0ViIi£ J ll:e ’01u Ogden to Deseret or President Young ii tho Union Pacific will not us a Ration at Ogden mid connect Us the Central will finish their mo? MONDAY TERMS—IS — —- N0 THURSDAY ADTJlXC: Per annum $8:00 'Fix Months Three Montlis 0:00 —— ni A OGDEN CITY MONDAY graded road from to CAIIFORXIA Promontory AID THE UTAH Ogden and connect with us” He con TRADE firmed the opinion of the dent of the Utah Central Railroad that The San Francisco Times of the 21st they could get their iron cheaper via ult lets off the following on freight Kan Francisco than via New York and from this city east ami west and CaliOmaha fornia’s interest in the Utah trade The Utah Central will be built the Congress has Uecldod that Utah trade of imports and exports will theAlthough eastern and western branches of the Pacific Knilroad shall effect their juncincrease Ogden will grow in population at or near Ogden and that the fifty tion business and interest and Presimilos of road built by tha Onion Pacillo dent Young wjjl live many years and Company between the Promontory and his wise plans for the benefit of the Ogdon shall bo taken by the Central the pur Company at a fair valuation chase has not yet been consummated people of this Territory will afford matand the Union Company manifest a deter for many more newspaper articles sire to usejhls piece of road as long a while their results will continue to justthey can in the interests of Chicagoand against the interests of California It ify the wisdom which inaugurated is stated that this company havo done them their best to neutralize the reductions in freight charges made by the Central by A Voice From J krulevl — The establishing a special tariff of thirty cents per ton per mile between Ogden following from the Dmrvt Evening and the Promontory thus making the will ho interesting to our readers freight for the fifty miles nearly sixteen dollars per ton The rates of the Cen many of whom will be anxious to obtral aro loss than ten cents per ton per tain copies of the interesting pamphlet mile or loss than a third of this sum for In addition to this when it is republished We need not the same distance unfair discrimination— for the rates of urge subscriptions being sent in for the the Union Company eat of Ogden are moderate— the company is running its journey of President Hyde to Palestine trains in such a mnnnarthat they always and the incidents connected therewith fail to connect with the Central’s passenare subjects of such deep interest to ail ger trains going cast so that passengers California are detained nearly Latter-daSaints that wo have no irom houra awaiting transportation doubt a large edition will have to be T here is n spirit about these transactions that bodes no good to in and though it struck off to meet the demand — may be said that their arrangements canhave been made not last long it is possible that they may Many enquiries made from time to time of us arid lonjs: enough to make u very serious doubtless of others impression upon our for a pamphlet Utah Tire Union I’acifl- - Compa“A Voice from Jerusalem entitled ny have a yet shown no disposition to or a sketch of the travels and Ministry r of the line beuegotinto lor the of Elder Orson Hyde Missionary of the tween and Ogden though 1'roinontory Church of Jesus Christ of the Central Company aro ready and wilSaints to Germany ling to complete tuo purchase It is Constantinople said with how much truth vveknownot and Jerusalem containing a descrip- that the Eastern Company expect a much tion of Mount Zion the Pool of Kiloam and other ancient places” with many larger sum for this piece of poorly constructed road than the Western CompaThe pamother matters of interest ny arc prepared to pay and should this by Elder Hyde be the iae and any serious obstacle to phlet was published about the time of his return from that the completion ot the negotiations arise mission in 1842 and has been out of from it we think that the interests of the All who thou read Central Company which are of course print manv years connected with the commerit can easily recall the vivid impressions intimately cial inti rests of California would justify made upon them by its perusal Everythem in completing their own Jinn to thing partaking to the Holy Land is Ogdon They have already an excellent charm to grade almost the whole distance— a far invested with a fascinating Saints the work of God better located grade than the Union lias the Latter-daand it would require les than a in the past in that land the mission ot month's work to finish it lay the iron Jesus and the many blight and glorious and open the road to traffic It will predictions of the prophets concerning never do to permit the Eastern Compaits future in the last days cause the to control our business relations with interest in ny Saints to feci au uncommon Utah by maintaining an rxhorbitant everything pertaining to it Elder freight tariff between Promontory and that no Orson Hyde went there under pecuOgden and wo trust therefore 1 le vvds one of two time will be lost in arranging the malter liar ciicumstances one way or the other Apostles chosen by the Pro diet Joseph The trade of this Territory worth to take a mission to Jerusalem John But iji'o'her looking after and California ooms beU Pago was the other Hyde had the journey to perform ginning to realize the fact as the Fist alone which ho did successfully and has done for some time returned to the joy and satisfaction of his brethren and friends Thinking the demand for this little Koi so— k Tm work is sufficient to warrant him in re which gives rise to phenomenon publishing it be has concluded to issue un Arab superstition occurs about a small edition providing he can rethree leagues from Tor on the lied ceive a sufficient amount of subscripKea The spot which is half a mile No family should be without it from the sen hears the name of tions Subscriptions will be received ot this or the Bulk It L about three office on behalf of President Hyde and hundred feet high and eighty feet should there not be a sufficient number wide presents a deep declivity to the subscribed for to warrant its sea and - covered by sand and surthe money of those who subscribe rounded by low rocks in the form of an The price will be returned to them The sounds which it amphitheatre will be fifty cents per copy emits are not periodical but are heard at all hours and at all seasons The place was twice by Mr The Emperor op the French — after waiting Louis Napoleon has just turned 61 A G ray On the first Paris correspondent in reference to the a quarter of au hour he heard a low continuous murmuring sound beneath writes: health “I have Emperor’s his feet which as it increased in loudbeen assured by good professional auinto pulsations thority — by one constantly about the ness gradually changed In of a clock Emperor— that his life is just as good resembling the ticking a one as that of any other man of the five minutes more it became so powerthe striking of n same age whose powers have been so ful as to resemble and vibrations clock detach to its by from taxed severely Beyond suffering When he headache the the sand from the surface his teeth and occasional on the following day he As far returned Emperor enjoys good health heard the sound still louder than beas such things can be known the EmBoth times the air was calm fore peror appears at the present time to he and the sky serene so that the external enjoying life with all its cares and recould have no share in producing sponsibilities better than most men do air nor could he find any the to jihenmuenon begin at his age lie seldom fails it could penetrate he receives crevice y which the day with state work The noise is affirmed by the people of more people privately than any Troy to frighten and render furious as well as ever did Frewhnun camels that hear it: ami the Arabs stimgcrsnand drives out rev lows troop- - the the desert poetically ascribe if to the shoots and bunts goes through the of hell of a convent of monks— wlmh conpainful ceremony of court balls and vent they believe to have been miracconceits with all the const mey of a i Tho-who nppioiirh the sov ulously preserved underground martyr another isitor attnbufi - ihe phe- as cheerful as eroign ay that ho he rolling down of the n nor nomenon to never very ever which sand lull in ('mmeofieut vtih no still communicative— very still n tains its Indian mime Moodus chance in meaning noise infamous tin the strange noises heard there — Lr Til U El OX UK 1’VIM — We clip the following from the I’ll! sluMxK Kmtiuuknt K F Bulletin I’rntcs-n- r Dickson recent!) made the few following curious experiment A despatch from T II (ioodmnn grains of barley were pined before Ngcnt of the Centiil Pacific I’ailroad eives the gratifying intelligence that hungry pigei n which at once began for tire close connec- necking During this operation the au arrangement tion at Promontory Summit has been brain of the pigeon was frozen bv means of a spray of other and the bird effected between the two companies Hereafter going east writ being thus suddenly deprived of eonpassengers and re- eeaed peeking not bo detained as the Union Pacific wiousnoss of instead of raabied for a while as if deprived train will wait if necessary At this moment the grains of starting about two hours before the life arrival of the California train and barley were all cleared away and the thus obliging passengers from this side other spray having ceased the brain allowed was to thaw the bird returned Thu number of passento wait over in a short time as it were to life and is becoming gers going through and the first thing it did was to coni- hundred very large reaching several tinne pecking lor a while though no As many as 500 have reached daily Omaha in one day from California and grains were present — Mining and $ In a short rntijie 1’ms intermediate territories —needed for the time every arrangement A Southern editor (evidently henconvenience of passengers and saving “U in rwr school pecked) of time will be made by the two comMeanwhile a large force is endays the ‘rule of three’ is proverbially panies imtrying how orach harder in afterlife gaged repairing strengthening and do we feel the rale of one!” proving the road rj JUNE 7 VOL 1869 The Food of England the America Undoubtedly and staple household dish in England is roast beef but it is no longer “the roast beef of old England” — it is the roast beef of old Nor mb tidy Better beef can now lie obtained iu the United Ktates than in England owing I presume to the extensive importations of meat from France The beauties of a “porter house steak” are not appreciated here English butchers cut their meat differBut although the Americans ently have better beef they cannot cook it like the English llibs and the sirloin are not baked in ovens American fashion hut are legitimately rousted upon before Go to one of an open fire spits the old London up the narrow courts leading from Fleet street and after eating rump or the Poultry steak broiled you can lay your hand below your heart and confess that you have tasted meat for the first time in By what occult science or your lifo what happy knack the cooking of this specialty is brought to such perfection it is useless to imagine Eat and you will be in no mood for asking questions Poultry i almost tasteless in England and the natives wisely eat hain or smoked tongue with it to give it a flavor With the delicious fowls and turkeys of America still fresh in his memfeels a pang of ory my countryman whenever he sees pouldisappointment try in Great Britain Perhaps ought to modify this judgment in favor of the English goose hut goose is nothing without apple sauce and genuine apples are as scarce as rabies m England In all the Englishmans of fare there are only a few points in which the Americans may not justly claim superiority American beef veal poultry and lamb are more excellent English game palatable as most of it is cannot rival American Eugli-- h Jarks are game hares surpassed by American rabbits are not so good as American uneatable fowl when wild are English compared to those of the United Ktates But in fish the English havo no equals is ten times bciter than the of tin Raritan rivei which it somewhat resemble- - English ulc-- are Engprinces among the finny tribe lish salmon excel American a)mon The John Doryisjhc king offish the more you eat of him and of Mile and of turbot the less you value the Ameri and can shad Hlirimps periwinkles prawns are altogether English and alEither the America as together good have no oysters or the English have none for what the English call oysters are so different from the American is impossible thatcompailson is that of The worst oyster however Naples because it seduces von into foml shells like the bv having expectations ami thou repels you by its American Turtle watery coppery English taste is unique the American in England turtle cannot he named with it without But reserve my most an apology energetic enthusiasm for English pork ham is a A Yorkshire and mutton iw Ameridelicacy in whose pretence can can lie moved by any partiality for A saddle of Southhis native pigs down mutton would win the verdict of an epicurean l’aris in a competition between the best dishes of all countries There is nothing like it there aro no of palate which it cannot prejudices As to the English overcome let us not waste weak words concerning them there are no other mutAn ton chops in either hemisphere-American in England Life in Faris— I Demo- ralization — A weekly publication called Ik l)iahle Qmitre has token up the subject of female extravagance and treats it so opportunely ami vigorously that four editions of the periodical it Hero seems were sold in one day are a lew of Its remarks “Luxury no longer finding a sufficient supply in direct and honest sources for its insane requirements has resorted to adultery As the husband's purse no longer suffices the wife has drawn on other men’s purses selling herself after all others (her last resource have been exhausted) to get the means ol" remaining brilliant in society where lew women now live without some stain upon them Ivuxury by adultery adultery by luxury Loaniug each on the otlu r they have grown up mining with all their strength everyand res thing which was respectable families by intropeeled disintegrating with ducing into them bickerings straits and with straitened circumstances and hatred of home It has not been a very long time since mathematical philosophy noted the disorders fomented by luxury and demonstrated the imminence of the progress of the plague Mathematical philosophy framed the budget of young married people who sot up a bouse with an income of $4000 or ¥1000 a year and it instanced the wives of as victims of tie’ passion of making a The woman who sells iplendid show herself was something absolutely unknown in tb highest soeial circles where husband and wife belonged to the most opulent families of Fram e Now this is everywhere because straitemU cricumstanecs ate cirthe rule every who" Straitened cumstances reign iu very family from that of the pretty worn l so greatly admired at one of tin- t uit official balls and who to buy u hw of flowers her little pledged at the pawnbroker's to that duchess daughter’s whose tind wi months to borrow $100000 m th nrldal diamonds of his wife Straiton-circumstances have penetrated ev ry household openno the devouring ing every door to ulcer has alnornei) rything-every!ut when we see thing to this exton a princess playing with her dolls vve may affirm that ov i' these days (if nothing counter lets he plague now herself for general) sho will prostitute a few yards of hum Nobody will deny t hat in all the highest 'lasses of society nlullery ha become a social principle Per sfAHWD— CASH IX ADTAROK: Months annum 17:00 Three Months 92:50 Sit tiOO i:00 War with England — Who want tbo Irish thou- Second it? First sands of dissatisfied and restless men who served on either side during thd rebellion and who can find no congeTTriraS nial employment during peace tlio shoddy and all other speculators Fourth frothy politicians who can only the surface so keep on long as the national pot is in a condition of fierce ebullition ' As to possible results we nught inTbo Canadians have not vade Canada as yet evinced any great enthusiasm for ami their reception annexation like their climate might he cool There aro d Ktates South and ten not whstt thov might do should a strong English force bo thrown on their coast and eoinmuiiieation kept open with of military Europe for the reception Then? supplies it is not for ns to say might he lot of fighting on the sea between the respeetiv e nav ies of the two countries and steam vs steam would ut last ho Well tested We iu California might have something else to think of besides petting gold for with Canada on One side and the South in revolt on the other the energies of the East might be well taxed and It might be tired of us to look al’tcr our own salvation despite the facility of transit afforded troops by railroad if our Enfive glish neighbors eould concentrate or six at Victoria and on the first flash by telegraph that war wan declared send (bent along this way and ibggy creep into the G olden Gate somefurnishmorning our dailies might he ed with ft topic equal to a first class If earthquake perfect security is expected from Firt l’oint Alcatraz and the rest of our harbor defenses it would well to recollect even the one item of the passage of the English turn New Orleans on the Mississippi jetweon lines of opposing batteries and against an opposing fleet a passage effected bv wooden as well as iron vessels iot our English brothers get once past Alcatraz in the upper part of the bay vessels n ml with a few dozen guns and they would hold Kan Francisco by the nape of the neck— Figaro Olive Logan on Trovvskrs— 'ho tSnn reports Miss Olive Logan’s at the woman’s speech at Brookhn as follows: “I reject the meeting and scorn trowsers with contempt lien cut a sufficiently ridiculous figure in them themselves The trouble ist they don’t like tliei ovui costume and are envious of our laces jewelry frills Tin: Sahara or North America— anil dresses 'Trovvsers forsooth of the New Yoik trowsevs’ A correspondent Shake not thy ridiculous No so long as wo mu Herald writing from Vhateh sta- garment at mo our silks satins and shawls vve nave tion gives a very disparaging estimate will repudiate your absurd biftmatod oft he country on the railroad — Look at your swab unvvhispurables I know not liovv it has been built by hats: and you coats whom or through what tuuns hut if wear our hair so short some of you the land grants therewith are consider- that you look precisely like monkeys ed a big thing for the respective commil t don’t wonder that one of your panies t can only say that I wish them number has written a book showing of that animal to he the father of his joy of their bargain for all I havo passed through 1 would not ace” This speech was greeted with take at any price not even for a gift roars of laughter and applause it is utterly worthless — a dreary waste Great Velocipede Feat— The that nothing can ever bo made of it is the Sahara ot North America— a coun- fastest time ever made on a velocipede try that appears blasted that looks as in Europe or America was made at the if it might at one time have shared the Jersey City Veloeipcdrome by W II fate of Sodom and Gomorrah on a thirty six as if Ilussell of this city inch wheel Southmayd A Co s machine condemned to be for all time a soil un times t productive and unable to support even Mr Bus sell rode the boasts of the field or the birds of around the rink one mile in the unthe air What a fate it would be to precedented time of two minutes and be condemned to reside for any lengtli and comparisons of this gait with of time in such a wilderness King Dexter’s or any other trotting stock Earthquake in Helen i— Monta- King would be a paradise in comparison will be odious Up to this rime J:0C rimo atlndinapolis was the Kan Fran- and death a rdiof almost from such na has had an earthquake fastest in America and Morel's time cisco need not plume itself any longer life one mile and wnenteen yards in two Heleon its terraqueous pertmhalious mn onds the fastest Formerly there were in Parisian minutes rival Ornette The of high life menage a trois now there in Europe na comes as a The Kouthmayd maelihit? which are menage a gua're consisting of the has a cogwheel combination the “Id ult says: the At exactly thirty five minutes past husband the wife the rich lover who triples the speed with shock gives her money to pay Worth’s bills velocity of the treadle movement and six yesterday morning the — aftie K who shares her double N Herald one and the power poor of earthquake was experienced in Heleand confessions fections receives her na since its occupation by American- An English journal contains the folt to west lives upon her iniquitous gains The oscillations were from lowing commentary on the fate of greatAs near and lasted about 4o second' n A movement is on foot in ness: “The Countess of Momingtoii as we could learn lioin those who expeTennessee to restrain widow of the notorious William Foie couuty rienced the vibrations from kissing the bride they were magistrates Tylney Wellesley Earl of Mortiington in their union with a sort of when performing the marriage cere in her Tilth yeaivulds who died Ii was tly fell mony gyratory motion lint the Judge says ‘‘If (ho an incidentrecently to the romance of the peerby quite a number of re'po!Mblc Ooirt knows itself her vested rights age After the ruin into whith the the Lame shall not lie taken t slinking in away" reckless Earl’s nHiirs !!!! some fi) years building' in the line of the brief time an “You must admit doetor” said a atro this lady was I'oi motion the sime a ihat wli'ult would inmate of Kt u'ooveo’s worklionse ami lie produced bv the full ti of nine pun lady to a celebrated doctor of divinity whom s!ib was with arguing theques more tlnn once hud to ippiv at police derails body ag linst the 'iipi Yet relief of the of b lourtsl'or next tioii the equality and timporaty Several persons became in rom“you (died unman hs affei ted with slight nausii train the must admit that woman was created iniiriit liae descended Irom the effect produced In the almost inaudible before man''’ “Well really madam" Shu was "1 must and greatest ol all the Plant: low rumbling noise a ihe crust ol' In- said the astonished divine “That llei mother (wife off Lionel Patterson) earth undulated making it vibrate with ask yon to prove your case" of that ilk ratne nn l’orteiiield Wasn’t Eve Several gi uilenn n eau be easily done sir an uneary motion first tbe maul' through Boyd Uumiinsrluun Glenraim were of the impression that thiswas a‘ from and Hamilton Mary Stuart they expressed it '’the tail end of t may be a c jnteated point whetli of daughter King James the Second of vere shock in some otlu r nouum of the er moefirn civilization is more producand setenlh m descent from continent” But we ire of ihe b lid tive ol' human happiness and moral- Scotland The Kdwdu! the First of England that it Ini' t origin in an iindeivronnd ity than of misery and vice It is true earldom extinct in the of Mornington No damage as oe that culture and refinement volcanic current whil has lapsed elder line of the Welleslejs on sinned to life or property save somethey broaden tha scope of joys an i to the Duke of Wellington what of a scare duties and stimulate the moral and intellectual attributes must increase Miss Martha J Ovirnes who shot xu announcing A Kentucky editor The edu and killed her seducer of crime capabilities Nicholas himsed as candidate for city clerk the villain accomplish more than on the Kith of April lnat at stutes that he will devote his foes to catel the ignorant knave can conceive The Garrctsville was acquitted Maryland sustaining his paper heart of the cultivated and refined man on the rttli ult after a consultation of The following is current though can feel keener pangs than the be fixe minutes by the Jury Good AU sensibilities of honor to Mis Uairnes for blunted and is man mghled not in the papers: having the Largo But nerve to deal the primitive boor can imagine punishment upon the looking at a painting in a window hereiu may lie the fallacy: It is not scoundrel andjust to the Jury for their big man pushes him large man turns increases dispro erdict round indignantly “Io you know that enlightenment “Ira portionataly crime over virtue sorrow whom you are pushing sirF’ A Kentucky paper mentions a man and I don't care a”— darn “Sir I over gladness but that it illuminate “Are you? Well and brings into such hideous contrast wboilaitns to have once traded horses am James Fisk jr T am John Heenao sr “Oh! ah! the extremes so that we forget tha with Uiysses S Grant and to bavo look lived w© while room make for bright neighbor to him in Missouri lmentinly up indeed Permit me to on the dark side of the pictne— sad yet is not going to apply to him you to look at this charming for an i ftice Judge Bennett in he S- F B'd'niri cn t VI k J I' ‘t t’i |