Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 9, 1877, Page 12

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1” : THE CIIICAGO 'TRIBUNE: SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1877—TW, < " SANCIIFIED LUS THE OLD WORLD. . An Elder Woman's Glean- ings Therein, hnrled agalnst him h{ his ‘‘oncmics," than the multitmle ate willing to admit. From tho timo that Rumaniam, in the name of reliclon, farbade the clorgy to marry, on down through all the accts that have Interfercd with the normal relation of (he’[ux", to *'Shakertam "' In onr vwn day, the polydndry,’ promiscaity of Frees Inveism and Church Familfam, in our own coun- r{ Mormonism reca a enatom that haa come to be A law which pives thom alt the right to reguiate the relationd of the aexes, and thercfore rerents any law of Conurers panishing polygamy o8 & crime, Frnrthermore, Congress not only allowed but fos- tereil pol,vpmy for more than twenty years. To fay that Congress haa fostered nnlywnm{ at any Ltitme will aound strangoly in many ears; but facta are atabbarn thinga, and the facts In this ca<o scem nted and reiterated th theatre when an ro ia ho Gentiles of Ufan hegan to bo realiy alarmed, 'Tho Governorof Utah, who s really a conservative man,~who hanbeen and st in in cloto And strong Aynipathy with' the conecrvative Mo Iike l|n|{pr';. Efdriige, 111}, and Jennings, —nrzed on by tho atiacke of the extromists, Anally wrote 1o the War Department, and demanded soven com- anles of fnfantry nnd fonr companiea of cavalry: but mimultaneanaly wroto a privato letter, which em, ulilsied, (o a Chicag frlend, saytng that ‘*'The alacm waa merely aensational, and all non- rense.'" fint hiacall for troops had, of conrso, oxagyerated the panie and incrensed the escite- t, mfi-'-‘- add_to this mmh‘le. both the Unlted and y Ing T was sent for to the Elysee, and Via- connt d'llarconrt came for me n the Marshal's broagham. *Well, Monsicar le Dae, do_yon feel ;nnmll Mrong cnongh to Auncceed MY imont' Buch waa the queation pnt to me by the Prestdent, 1 replicd that the task waa a heaw, ona, ‘Hut,’ I added, ‘If you realig think that can be naefal to France, T will sacrifice myacif to her Intereats.' ™ The Tlake do lroglia was then invitea to bronkfast st the Palace, & meal at which only ohe othor hidreon wan present, namely, M. Da onrton, Turing the tepnnt, the dixcasvion tarned upon the ‘[mr"n 1o _which the Duke de Hroglie *bonld hold. Tho Maralial nrged him to take the Interlor, lnt the Dnke objected that hla colleagae had 4 firmer hand in adminietration than himecif. **The appolntnient of M, De Fonrton to the Into- CORA PEARL. The Anglo-Parisian Phryne, Having Bettered Herself, Holds an Auction, o, are not Lo ba told, ~Madame i tAking them the now l‘wmn- ‘' Onre naw stahiea in ng Aven-“: Marlgny, * sayn one of the honest fellows prondly, asthonah It wora fomehow 4 tiso In 1ifo and hla lmprlnun were tdentified with the pros erity of the hionse, The hammee-clotha Dear hmfvmco of A haraa'n head, Inclosed in fonr balf-monna, ‘ench of which alno form the lotler G, with thie Leneath em: ** Parcere rnblectls ot debellare auporbos,” ** 1t Is Madamo's motter, * grinn the boy, Rcnann Winreina, e S HAYES’ POLICY. Tha Dnty of tho Iowa Repnbliean Convens Medning Polygamy as Prac- ticed in Utah. The Voyage Across the Atlantio--Bea- Sickness and Entertainments, How to Solve the Mormon Problem. Her Books of Devollon, Iighly Moral Palutlngs and Uenerally Incons Bruous Accessorles. The City of Liverponle-sIts Docks' and An Episcopal Clergyman Takes the to juslify the assertion, in A quallied sense, if | States Marshal Dietrict-Attorney, rior," he added, ‘'will produce the best cffect —_— tloh—-Viaws of United Btates Eenntoy 3 ., ! W ro ced with the suporeasion Benceyolent Institutions. upon the comniey." ., , After a short 3 o Matter in Hand, P el o fasla o That parLof oD, T ool Iy o converantion tha “decleion” wis soms t her o Corremondence New York orld. Kirkwood. Whon Congress gave to Utah an orpanle act, | onstrated that Trigham Yonne had, by letines to 8 ho PAnts, May 23,—~Tho Rac de Chailot 19 one of the quictest atreols In Potls, and it 11 n ono of the best quarters, —near tho Champs Elysces and the Areli and within an easy walk of the verdant Hofs, To-day, however, It is fnhstate of commotion; cartinges are driving up to one of iy prettiest housos, and then forming in fong Q1o in the Ave- nae Josophino after thoy havesct down, Thora 15 acrowd about the doot of tho house, chiefly of work-women who hava Leen to feteh ther chil. dren from tho nalghboring achaol kept by a plous alstarhood, and who passed ot thole way homa to see tho company and the sile, It s, Inatort, a Reeal afMaence of tho gentle and the simplo, and tho caude of it 14 that one of tho most diatin. guishied Inhabitants of tha quscter, Mile, Cora Pear), Is abont to sell hee farnitaro nnder tho ham- mer, and has thrown open hot modest manslon to public viow, Letnot virtue givo way to precipitate elation Inthe prospect of rain or reform, Mademolsclio Is slmply selling prior to her romoval to 8 more 1m- nosing dwelling in the Champs Elysees, Slcr old furniture has ceased Lo pleass ber; nad If alio {a bo- Rlaning a new life it 11 only by having new tables and chairs. Tho simple, being also the ‘penniless, aro not allowed to pass hor door; the genlla aro vety clvilly recelved by a numerons body of serv. ants, and are shown thelr way from raom to tooin, bomo of them huva to exorclae consfilerable ingone the Duke de Nroglio Aould form his Cabinet a plenred, and that ho shonid take the portfolio tnoat convenlent for him. The Duka then tooka memorandam-book from hia pocket and tore out s leaf, which ho handed to the Marshal. It waa tho new Cabinet, conatifuted Mn]rundyfinhh-hml. with Uifs difference, that there was s Minister mote, At the bottom of tho list wan the name of M. Du- cros; made Minister of P'olice. M. Do Nroglie ex. plained that he hnd long entertained the dea of ceeating that Mintatry, which nrpenrcd to him nec- enary, tepecially sinca tho agitations of the Radi- cals'were fncreaning, The Marshal formally op- poscd that fnnovation, Ife would not have any police fn hia Cabinet: ho alone sufMced for {hat mission, *1am, and wish to be.' hasald, *the fiest polleemnn In Feance, That 18 why 1 was elected, and 1 ahntl not cedo that post af honor to another,! The Duke bowed. Ha passed & pencil thraugh the naine of Ducros, and nothing further weas sald about & Ministry of Police. The correspandont of the Pail Mall taselln wrlln: 'Gen, Derthaut,” when ho fenrned that Marshal MacMahon "had dismineod . M, Jales Simon, went to tho Elysce, flung his kepl on the tablo, and asked the “Marshal in langunge more mllilary than polite 1f ho wanted war, Another story reprosents (Jen. Derlhaut ah no sct thal ho wept on learning what bud occurred, ™ —————— CURRENT OPINION Tha ** diger man than old Grant. merond #s lio was before the Goners England.~—Denter Tribune (Rep,), Th the Fditor af the Darenport Gnzette, Towa CiTy, 8., Juned.—In your letter of (ho 20thult. yon ask mo to furniah yon, for phbifea. tlon, my views of the proper policy to o pursund by the Ttepublican party In this State touching what {s ealled the President's Southern polley, 1 am not at all suro your readers will caro to know tny opinlon on that subject, but as you weem to think they may, I comply with your requoat, In my judgmont eny action by the Republiean Btato Conventlon elther approving or disapproving tho Presidont's policy wonld bo untimely and on. wito. It fsavident thatan attempt to posa any resolation on the subject would prodace divisior and disscnalon tn tho Conventlon, ana ancl resolution, 1f pussed, wonld not be held as bind. Inw*y thoso who dil not favor It. ; ‘The actlon of the Presldont la final in this mats ter, #0 far as ho has acted, ~what ho has dona cany. ot bo nntdone. Those who do not approve hia ace tion may find fanlt with 1t, but they cannot, noy can he, reverse It They may scolil bitterly s but my obsetvation has been that scolding la not s very uscfalor & very decorous employment. 1 feo} per. foctly sure 1hat in doing what le has dano i Fresldent han done that which he belleved wonls but promota the puhifa welfare, and 1 nlncerely hope that time will'Anow that he has Judped cnr rectly, Dat, if tho reault ‘shall show thal hie lias madeamistake, Iconld not condemn him forhaving dono what e honently belioved was tho right thiy todo.” On tha athor hand, 11, a@T think st anl lygamy was not forbldden by that net; and yet t was nototfonaat that time that polygamy was Not only preached, hat extensively practiced. in the ‘Territory, This, 'to the nn‘:re udiced mind, in tolerahly d evidenca that that Congrees ander- #toad the Constitution ta forbid legistation on the wubject of ruligion, polyganions though it was, At this stage of the Inquiry the question in pers tinent: If Congress did nut mean to foster polygas my, aa it fostered evory other interpst of the Mormons, material, moral, and apiritnal, by thas glving them & baals of government, why did they not sey a0, and take vigorous steps to crnsh tho infant evll beforo 1t had time to grow into the hydra-headed monster that it 1s, able to shock and lAnrrHv n,m moral zense of \Wostern Eutope and merfca Tenpposo that the reason why they A4 not wae becanse the Conetitution was in tho way, Later on the Government declared war agalnst (he Mormons, not on acconnt of polygamy, but for other allexed irregularitics and_outages, At the clore of that war,” when the Governmont recog- nized the bolltgorsnt rlrh\n of the Mormons by ecnding Commissicnora to troat with and a Goy- ernor to rule ovor them, sald Governor and _Com- missfoncrs wera entertained by lirigham . Young and danced with his many wives. Inall there acts Garvernmenl not only recognized, but foatered polygainy, Inthat 1t was conacevod, at n timo when a little statosmanthip cunld havo cast it out 88 an anclean thing, If there hiad been no Conetitu- tlon In the way. To ono In this Terrltory who atanda aloot from rulltlcll radicalism on the ane hand, and fthe ro igious fanaticiam of Mormonlsm on the other, — Ma). Dame and Mr. Malght, ardered the Mountain- Meadow massacre, jolned with {he Governor and the antl-Mormon press to exaurorate the dangor, so that they wmay retain thefr ofiices to punish Brig- ham Yonang, whom, 1t fs charged on oath, they un- dertook ta protect antd serve. ‘Thus thero ara three elemonts of discord In Utah atwork to Alarm the people, atrest Immigration, and frighten away capital, viz.: flest, corrnpt ofticaholders, 1ike the earpet-bayrgers in Lonisiana; sccond, fanatieal, reeklcss Uentiles, who oxint only on attacks upon the Mormon people; and, third, extremists among tho Mormons, who, under the lead of Drlrhnm Yoang, would friuhien awny Gentlles. 1t Bricham Young weore indicted for murder at tha Mountain Meadaws, and conld bo triedat once, tho writer knowa that lie woukd sar- fender himeelf and go to trial. Dat, as murder 18 non-baliable, and ns the Disteict Attorney wonlid have hin: confined in that horeld Penitentiary before trinl, which could not take place untll fall, he would, In all probabliity, scek a temporary home In t. Georme, 400 milea’ sonth of Salt Lake, and #0 there nnder tho military protection of his falth- ful Nauvoo Gnard, During all this turmoll, the New York erald ro- porter in writing most abmard lotters, nending day )y (dny dispatchea founaod merul‘y on the fames of Wine and uther stimnlants on his brain; and finally ho cames ont with the protenso that ho was fired at. in the strects on Sunday night, and assaulted by & yuwlc-l«nlh In broad ‘day.licht in the Walker 1ousce, —charges for which there i nnunhly‘}wmnf save his own cxcited fancy and dellrious and dis- eared Imagination, 4 COhestor Oathedrali a Btruoture of Great and Anolent Fame, And Iandies It in n Btatesman- itke Manner, :I!de;l Hall : & Conntry-Sent of the Rich What an 01d Resident of Utah Says Aboat Duko of Wostminster, the Reoent Troubles, 1. Written for The Tridune. Cngsten, Kng., May 18, —Mra. Komblo has for eome tima past contributed to the Atiantic Monthly certaln papors which sho modestly charactetizes ns “'An Old Woman'a Gosslp." 'Thess papers foll much concérning the brilliant English soclety to which her bwn talonts and those of her family havo Blven her access, With n like' madesty, T will in- traduce the following schca of lettotsns ‘An Rider Woman's Gleanings in the Old World," wlierd 80 many lilerdry harvests have already been reaped by descriplivo teavelors hat a Iate-comer must be content with finding & golden sheaf here and theeo. In the Infinita vatiety of human natare, ©otwo hands (of dierent persons) ever gathor exnctly the same fhing. And so, even on this triteat of toplcs, an European tour, one may hopo tonnggest momething which bas not become abso- lutely stercotyped in the volumes which are already An Alleged Interview with Old Brigham Young. 110W TO SOLVE THE MORMON TROBLEM. Totha Editor of ‘Ihe Tribune. 8ALT LARE City, Juna 2.—After a restdence of more than elx yenrs in this Territory, nnder cire camstances the mort. favorabloton just and fale wtody of the Bormon problem, I am forced to the conclunlon thnt that problem will never ho honor- nbly and matisfactorlly eolved by Congressionnl Tezislation, ** epcelalty destaned for Utah," while onr Natlonal Conetltutlon remaine ns It Is, To reach {he exil of polygamy, andat the same time denl Justly with & rapldiy-increasing popnlation that already ontnnmbers that of roma of the Btates, tn my humble Judgnient, a constitatlonal [12 Tho cool Jndimont and carcfal examination | gone before, and easliy lost from sight, Weagteawith the Vicksburg Commercial that | ity o mkoboitave that thoy wARE & conductor; | mon hope, the President’s noh:y.mnmm.m. amendment that will amend and oxplain Art, L | studylng tho situstion, s fac as he moy, intbe | of Gen, Bmith, Us B. A.. paw nt once that A1l {lria Blarting from American life, theta Is no good reanon why a Sonthern Congress- | ail find it a Fare opportunity of oponly Inapecting | cess, would It not be rather awkward for the Ite: ° of the Conwtitutlona) Amondments proposed by the | &pirit of & Christian philuroplier and etaicaman, — | excltement was basciass, shd hoso roportedio Gen, . ntan should not bo electod Speaker of the Houso, an establishmont wiiclt hitherto, of conrao, no ono can be supposed to havesecn. Lot ns mako onp with the public of fashion and of taste; nuw that eyer, hn.l{ else Is going thore, wa may go as well 3t wiik uelp us to underatand tho Paris—perlaps tho woreld—of {o-day, 'he house llu’ porfect nest of luxneiona come fort. It Is not Iacge, —unly two atorioa high,—lbut thora 1a mora than fuom enouzh In it, oi & vory ilberal allawance for onc and o fricnd. "1t in tastos fully distinguishod from ita naighbora by its gilded balcony, and §ts open ports cochere gived o view of o rangs Of solidly-ballt siablon that might not form a bad lodging for even the most fastidious poor, Before we reach thom we have fo nass the *waiting-roon, "—In this cade n veritable anto- chnmber of the great, Its duurwn( Is 1o tho left +of the arclied entranco, atd opposita to It Is the door of tho house. Iero wo are, litorally in mar- Dble hulls, o may survey the acone on the vesti- bule for 8 momeat ‘fram a I"'iu Gothlo clialy, in old oak, which may onco have lormed pars of 'the furnitnre of a convent, and which, as wo ahall presently sce, im not the only arilels on the Rremlnu aexaclated wilh the flea of holinecas of life, Now wo will pass into the bllliard-rooim, —we aro stlll_on the ground-floor, 1tia somewhat sombra In effect, in spite of 1ts divane of red moroccy, and its fonr l|‘|]lrflul ofl X"""“l" of tho horses *\/]'ri- color,” t* Black," and **Muaty, " and of a_lap-dog that has mado his bed insldo’'s mun's white hat, The noble owner—we cannot apeak too civilly of fier now we are under lier own roof—adores horses, probably by right of birth, for her father lot them out to hire; and Parls, which has nover had tho bLad tasto to aduire her for her beauty or her wit, hins alwaye adored heren Amazone, ~Wo IRy nOw pass up-ataivs, across thu rugs of lon, tigor, and boar mkin coverlng the lall, or, ok the auctloncer will no doubt esll thom the 'dny afier to-morrow, tho spolls of the chase. iore, on the first flour and at tho back of the house, wo find_oursclves in the dining-room, It 18 roomy, for Parls; and, In its rich brown-oak paneling auc- wnounted by a'wali covorlng of leathor arabosquod in black and wold, very pleasaat to tho oye, In this room, with Ita thick carpet, its heayy curtalns of rep and ita Indercribabie alr of massive luxury, goud digentlon might certalnly be cxpucted to wilk onavpetite, in 5o far ne thal “blossing may bo do- endent on repowt of body and mind, At prosent t losca much uf its proper efoct by boing sct ont iblican party In Jowa, §f it shonld havedenonnced hat polfey in adrance?. Tha truth, ne [ nndees stand, {8, that tho Prosident himself regards hir policy as o somo extent experlmental, = an eoxperiment rendered necessary, 13 his ndgment by _ the = failure of the former volley {o effcct what all deslred and do- sire, tho rostotation of good feoline botween the difficront scctions of our cuntry and the protee. tion of all lpnrtlv:, acex, and L’c"l)nl inafl thely tights, eivil nndrulululll. and ho and his advisers have great hope for a hapyy result, I confesn [ uiz not very hopetitl—my fears of fafluro aro Rreater tian my hopes of success, but I amivitlingto waft, and no ono will refoico more than nysclf if [t Aha} Appoar that my feara atc unfonnded. The resulf now teals Inrgoly, It not whally, in'tho hands of tho Boathern hemocrata, and It dcems to mo that {n view of the cxperionca of the Iaat twelve yeorr It requires a very vigarous excrciso of all threo of the virtucs of fallh, hope, and charity to connt confidently upon, stich conduct on t| cir part as ihelr own good and tha good of thio conntey require. There fs one thing connected with (be President's actlon from which zood must necessarlly reault, [io tad, before hu acted, tho positive pledges of honor of the Bouthern leaders for the protece tlon of all tho civll dfinllllcnl righta of all Enrnam In these Blates, thoss pledgos shall . o kept, £ood must rernit, T those pledgos ahalh not be kept, It ahall appear that the Zouthern Iondern und the Bonthern veapla have had 1n view n making these pledies only party success and not tha pablic good, and that they will uae the power thus placed in thelr handa for the purporo of Op= preesion and fufdstice, still, 1 think good must roe sull, Tho persiatent but utterly unfounded asecr- tlon that the Republican party ‘has ncted tosarde thie Sunthern peoploin a spieit of vindictivencss and hiato has produced an effcct on many well mennlnlflmo)nlu. 1n my judgment tha bhistory of the world doc not show ‘an fnstance in which Government after putting down a rebelllon against it has deait na gencrouely as bas ours with thoso. cngaged o robellon, ow If 1t shall appear that this ndditionol act of genotostty and contldenco by our President shall be minconsirned and dlsrezard- ed, and has been used unl,y 10 mako and keep s '*rolld South,” I think we ahall find- 4t and kefli a ‘{eolid North,” and & ld - Rorth™ {s the stronger. 1 should regard the diviston of our e subject Is a vnst one, Involving momontons Isanes, 1o seen upon the backbone of this grent continent A waral and noclal vxcroscnce that liag firmly taken root, and ho ||lnlnl'y foroauon thal, if the -fimllnncu that stimulate (s growth be not epecdily removed, it wilt spread_southward Into fizona and the Pacldc States of Mexico, whence the sparse populations now beckon them onward v raplidly tnat ity years may auflico o dnd s ade herents s many mlilions ks thoy now number hundreds of thousands. 1f these strange people bé not wisely and offect- unlly restrmed, and thelr all-engrossing deinslon of sanctified luat dieipated, they will sef back the moral progreea of the milliona ihat will flow unto them as they have sot back tho progrese of thelr present votaries four thousand years, and place roe igloue, aulfering woman just” where the worship of'onood, a1 Tuvenlcd 10, Abrabare, Tatad Toy in which degraded relation God in His wisdom ver- mitted her to remaln until the perfect law of matrimony, as re-enacled Ly the Havier of man. kind, rostored her to the hollnoss of sexusl love, in the sacred **one™ In *‘twaln," of man ang wite, as contradlstingniahed from the lust that dee fllreand the polygamons companlonship that do grades. AR 3 tho unatatesmantike, ungodly radical mavement axninst tho Mormons' Just now urged hy certaln Inlluential journale that deal wo lmwl, n fulachuod and oxnm."uuunn rhonid take the form of $tspecal legiala'lon dedlaned for Ulah,* the result will bo: another misiake | int of states. manship: while Mormonism will recelvo an ime petussimllac In kind, but greater (n_ dogrue, than nn{ Tornier persecution liny. {L’l imparted. What then shall bodone? My answer to this question s, Let the people of the United Stat take thia matter In and and begin aright. Take away the nlmllrrlnfi armthat yrotects allke {mlyunmy in Gtah, Freelovlsm, Polyandry, aud ’romiscuity as practiced in the Onelda Community inthe great Kiate of New York, and other so. called telizlous Inatitutions In Kaneas, and clao- where throughont the Unlou, based upon abnormat relations of the sexes. Lot Art. L of the amendmonts to the Constita- tlon which wero adopted In 1780, whicn stands thus: **Coneresn shall make no law respecting an ontablishment of religfon or prohibiting the frea cxeroley thereof, or abrldging the freedom: of #pucch, or the prese, ur tho right of the pepplo bly to anaemble and 10 petition the Goy . THE CUNARD ATHAMER Is alrvady abit of Europe. Thetalkof the officers, the drill of the servants, the noonday reading of thie Anglican servica by the Captatn, —thess things striky tho new-comor with the sensc of & new order of things. Allthia I secn dimly at first, thforgh the mist of eca-sicknoss, Dut it In felt from the moment that tho steamer leaves her dock. Qur steamer was tho Parthia, & favorite craft, with aCaptaln who rapidly become a favorite with his passengers. Wo started on onr voyago on Saturday, May G, accompanied for somo distance by two steamn-tugs fall of friends and rolatives. .Alterthe pang of parting with theso, we salled smoothly enough until Monday, the 7th, when what is called **a nasty chopping rea " awaited na, and when, tauscanother quotation, **One tonch of nature made the whole world kin, " eince the severo visltation apared neither uge nor sex. Yok ovon Ahis mirery was not withut ite_comforts, The ready kindness and sympathy of ofMicers and sitends Ants gave the heart eomethiug to cngoy. cven It another vital organ did bocome words Lhai nacless, And, when tho next qulet dny brought nsall up standlug niz1in, wo were Joyous and social, The pleasant weatlier which followed our briet triatmade it possible for us to onjoy THALH RYENINGS OF LITERARY ENTRITAINMENT, The frat was [urnished by the lov. James, JJ, Smith, 2 residont In Bancock, Siam, who gave ua an Interesting account of manners and customs In that romote conntry, Mr. John Frotnall, an Ene glish gentloman well known in our own country, narrated for na the story of Serretus, the wonder fal Bpanlaed, who was burned In Genova, with the amsent of "Calvln, for his Unitarlan views concerning the De t{. Lastly, the wiltee of ~ this Jetler . ventured to sormonize 8 litlo concerning the uso and abuse of opportagitiea and the malutalning or focsaking ane's own fdeas of righit and wrong, —the whole in view of what oar Earopesn trlp mnf nunfold. The tev. Dr. ''howpeon, of Hoston | Ighlands, sup- plledns with & inished Sandayzdiscoura on an aj. propriato subjeet; aud 8o we carried with us, aa fae s we could, the mind and customs of onr country, Auch music wo nlra had, on deck_and l{c cabln, by daylight and by starlight, ~Moody-and- Shorldan: and since then a reexamination by Gen. rook hna aflirmed Gen,8mith's report, Tho Grand Jdury has boen adjourned ovee for #ix months, for want of funds, Gov, Emory has boen summoned o Washington to answer for his donble-denline; and both the United States Marshal and District Attorney aro on trlal thero on grave chiargen for ttiele portion of this extraordinary panic, which has paralyzed all husiness in Utah, 2 n the meantime, the miners of Utah are golng Away in teglments to the Itlack Hiiln of Dakots and tha allver muuntaing of San Jaan, the sl of Salt Lake are desortetl, renta shrivoted all ralcs of bullion and oru chtirely suapended, real estate hns become actunlly valueican; while, day by day, the Gentile peopld are growing Tossan lesa, _ For this year, at ieast, 1] buainces in Utah In ended, and wige and carefal merchants, bankers, and capitalists will make no venture thete, Indeed, 1t shonld Le sated that the lending Mor- mons thers seem 10 oxult In this Gentile exodus, and would rejolce when the last une had folded his tent and goneaway, The only reform for Ulah s first to send there a Uovernor ke Clinton or Evarts, —men wio ara stateanien and lonest men; Jndgen of tho very highest grado of talent and ox- perience; 8 Marshal who should bo _**sann pent ot rans reproche;” and then ‘‘to disfranchise all polyuamista and bigamlsta, deny theni tho right to &1t on Jurles, and fram holding any ofiicen of profit ortrast, from belng Delczates'to Congreas," “This done. Utah will become the rlchort aiid most pros. porous Territory fn this Unfon. ~ [n ita prorent cundition It In Lonixiana over azaln, with a relig- lons not a colored-1ine; and all who are wiso, and want peace and proserity, will avold it s thoy did South Carolina. ix yeara' resldence there hax enabled mo to comprehind the situations and no tan who wants peace, protection, or property will go there. CLINTON, AN ALLEGED INTERVIEW. M the Kil'cr of The Tribune, SALT LaRE Citv, Ulah, June 2,—**What are all theso stories about n Mormou uprising nowt" I asked Nrigham Young, as wo sat in his private oflice in the Lion Ilouse, **All bosh, elr1" said the Prophet. ‘**Look around you. Wo have 200,000 acres of planted cropa. Some of onr land which was onco s desert firat sevnion of Congrees, held fn 17890, and adopt- ed by u majority of the States, fs ahsdlutely necce. sary, Upon ench an amendment—the eharacter of which T wiltindicate betare closing this lotter—Just and equitable leaislation conll be baced whieh wonld reachand effectually deal with, not the Mormon anomaly alone, but other communitios that ontrage decency by debanching woman in the name of ro- liglon, while etalming nrotection nader ** the-free- exercise-thereof " clansc of the Natlonal Constlta- ton, Ever sincothe oxecutlonof Johy D, Lee, one of the fiends of the Mountaln Meadowa massa- cre, wild, aensational, and for the moat part baso. Jess rumors, Intended to affect notonly the Mormon leaders, but the whole population, have been tele- rraphed throughont the country, with tho view of aroustng publle ecntiment, in tha hope that it witl take shnpe In the form of summary proceeding againat the Mormaones, Upon princinle this s all wrong, hecanse It is wirked and false; while, ns a policy, it la the old mistake aver again. Tho Mormona have only to walt patiently for tho reaction which ls sure to follow tureap nn abundant hurvestof converts fn tho per<ons of Ignorant men and women In whom a stroug rense of justice eanily ovorrides thelr im- mature reaconlng powers ond Inids thont on the sldo of the porsccuted, Every lying tele- kram sent over the wites, every falno letter rent abroad, and every illegal prosccution, yiclds some eort of retarn for the np-butlding of Mormonlem? for thelr lenders aro shrowd enough, i the Absence of actual blundshe) and Ylolence, to make tnere falne 1ennes of **thelr cnemios™ do tho work of the needed peraceniion, “*The bload of the martyrs the secd of the Church ™ {8 not only trus of tho Church af God, but it is truo of l:\'nr{ form of fales religion, Without pereecutlon they Tangulsh and dios withy persectition they fourish and prosper. 1f Mor. | montsm had never beon driven from hfmn, ita women Insulted, and fts prowpects slaln, it would loug rinco have shared the fats of tho 'thousand other rellious dell Tho War is over, and peace and civil law have been reatored to all portiona of the Union,—Memphta (Tenn.) Avalanche (Ind. Dem.). Thete Is no nead for more State love and Biate pride, Weanll have that, and we anotld chorlsh 1t as wealido. ' Hat we have no noed for soctionar- ism. 1Initapinco wo want aapleit of Nationatism at home, and a strong over-presont spleit of Amer- leanism sbroad.—ZLouisellle Courier-Journal (Dem.). Thore I8 an honest fnquiry for the old double Atandard, —for tho siiver dollar which was taken away, and tho silver optlon which was In existence beforo specle-suspension. In shott, the people want a reatoration to the old financlal cundition, and they will bo content with notbing olse, —San. Franclico llullqln (Rep.)s ** [ thank Qod, " ejacnlaled Ben Batfor In the Toute, two years 250, with plons anction, devont- T rolllng hia weathor-oye upward, and giating wils tha ather at tho reportera’ gallery, **thattho netws. papers did not make mo!"” ¢+ No,” enld a membor of tha- journallstic fraternity, **if thoy had, they would have made s botter job of ff,""— Wuashington Star (Ind. ltep.). To o gentleman who called upon him recontly the President satd that he had decided to sdont the Jeorsonlan doctrine of changini all foreign Minis. tera who hiad been in oflice four yoars, In reading ronia of Jofferson's works he found this doctrine sct farth at lonyth, and It met with his unherltate ing approval, and would now conatitnte n part of the puliey of hin Adminstration, **No Amorican citizen, "’ suld the I'recddont, **ongnt to ‘serve hix country in & foroin Jand longer thun four yeare, and ho uu{ht to ba content Lo retarn 4o his own toantry at the explration of that torm of servica, ' The P'rasldent aalil further that thoro would be no excoption to this rale,—Jashington Uor. New York Lrening Post, It wan the fortnna of Me. Wayne MacVengh, of Pennsylvania, to be marrlod 1o a dauyhter of ox- Benator Camcron; and It has bean hia fortano alao Lo differ wliloly from his distingmished fathersjn- 1aw on many hoportant political’ questions in the Inst fivo aralx years, These two elrcitmstancos have given polnt to a tatter just pabilahed by tion. for a too nuirarous company, to wit, tho publicof | people into pattics upon scctional lnes only les ojburn 3 s that huve died for lack of puncenl o o o on . | in tow b Irigation profucing forty bishls of Sauxey b J":fi‘n"fl'm{. ‘?fi?’"{.fi&&;;‘{:’"“.{‘.&.fl.‘:’; Dutler [n answer 1o MacVuagh'a direct donfal of Durle. All the plalo f4 én zdflln "'{'3’,‘."“ leboard, | nfortunata than o rostoratian to power of [ vlent opposltion, ment for n redreas ‘o) evances, the acre. V' ve rafsed i -AOYe " h I 'y 5 =tablo, att onr m £ 3 Kb Cobe i 1 40, and holleving that aellon— | taat s o Feoir e oF elove L Congross shall maka | non ( Bualots of \ 'singl ncre. | of rounde; and sa it caimd to-ams, 5 aidors fors | LAliehoods It Boilers tter to Saraial Pitkin, af | all i chinawaro on tho dininy:tabios tho 1atiek st make the best W can of 1 andk in 1he end Lonistana. The original falsehoods are abandoned; but one gallant Gicneral takesa noble revengo by breaking into Bir. MacVeagh's lnmllfi, and telling z&ll wil o Julenza de Rouen et de Nevers—bluw on a white krounds falence Jtalicnna and plateaux in the stylo of Loula X111, ond of his iliustrious succosmor, On tho same table, too, ato large cases mnlnlnln{ somu of the cholcost of Madomolscllo's personal balungings,—sun-shades covered with black or white lace and with haudlea of cazved ivory or Jase and onc-guarler bustiols of wheat on a xingle acre. We havo ourorchards; 81,600,000 worlh of frrie gating canal a halt-finlahed temple which will rival 5t, Paul's in London, Whut do wo 160,000 Mormonn want to fight 40,000,000 of lowins, New-Yorkers, of Pennaylranians, for? Al we want ia that tho Unlted 8iatos Judgos and Conrts Wil join with ns and put down vice and Justy ftm, docirive, nhd_atalermanliko—nan been o fong delaycd, and having an earnicat doslse to do these neople a real sorvice, —thaisgh all unap. preciated an U Wil bo by them for the present,—1 ask permission, through your ' widely-clrculating © Jonrnal,' to e dicated a snode of trentment. thas will enablo onr preat Government honorably to repalr his past mis. nu law abridging the freedom of speech or (he press, or the tof thy peoplo pesceably to an- somble and to petition thy Governmentfora ra- drenn of gricvances, of respecting an establishment of relleion orthe froe exerclso thereof ; but Congross nharl have power by up\srflpl‘llw loglslatfon to pro- hibit In any individusl, sect, or community, tho “told, that the (unnw people wore mostly sorry to have the goniafl yoyage come o an end; and fhat certain mirreptitious tears woro aied by those who had almoat despaired, In tho first days, of Hying through the voyago, " Sut land was deacried an tho eveningof tho'lenth day, and annonnced to the Captaln as. the cnnnlr{ will be safe, and the party that seeke to do tha rlght and Just thing to all onr peoplo wit trinmph. ‘Thero {8 one thing that must not ba fors gotten, We all knoyr that but for the firm, maniy, Bnd honorablo stand taken during the Presidentinl count by some of tho most prominent Bouthern men in Congress, the count would not have been nd chililren what & mean feflow thoy have and and fathor. ‘Tho lettor ta charace his admirers call {4 ** acathing. "—Zoscon or (Rep. ), ter Advertl or, fans by tho half-dozon in English paint, tos- practice of polyeamy, polyandry, hrowmlscuity, and | Jmmos ero, —Hhe s sto] me STILB OALY, BIR,"— Tho South has ita fature in 1te own hands, bt st | [ GEe ;7 She heltdoag carl, comploted, and we would probsbly have had in takes, whtle It metes it even-handed Jostico to Ita | bvery form of inme"nx'mn’wuu'm'm ey Yo- | biing "'"n‘iu hn:‘l’nklnmp 1" thay Pwant™ 1o | & mmall island on (o wort Soast of Trefand, Barly | must bo very blini not to sco that lmmluration, | {0 S0 A0d lnoth Frenter inferost, must not be Warhingion the condition of anarcliy that has so citlrens in erlminal crror, tempored with Chelste | Melom, o fight anv one, why don't they arrest Il 1lickman? capital, and nrospority aro not guing ton Blats :h‘n‘naxl moralng the pass Iately ceasod In South Carolina and Lonislona, 1f eft u they'shnll continno to act in tho same spirit aud shall ba able to carry thole poopla with thom, it will bo a hsppy thing for the conntry, But whether the pledges glven to the couniry through the Presle dent ahnll be kept or brokon, {t will wurely ba nn- a0 in us to furalah by our acts, to any who may be dirposed to bresk them, & protoxt for so doing. Iropeat, then, that, in my judgment, onr Stata Conventlon will act winoly fn lotting’ the matte slund, and that we shouid wall patiently, and, s far as wa can, hopofally, tho ovout. You also ask for niy [*ylowa dircct as to the pol- Iey of Prosident layes." That is a much more ditlicalt question; one that 1 have nelthar the time, the inclinatton, or tho information ncces: o form a final urlnhm npon. Thero 18 one polnt fir conncetlon with it npon which I have not seon any discusslon, aud which scoms to mo vital, 'ng Prosldont d1d ot declde whother Chambetlaln us Hoampton wau the lawful Govenior of South Caro- lina—whethor Fackard or_Nlchalls was the lawful Governor of Loufsians, Waa It uot his dnuty under tho Constitution and the law to decide theso very questiona? Tako the case of Loulslaua. There were In that Btate two_persons clalming to be tha Iawful overnor, Kach of thou was supporicd by what clalmed to ho a lawful Logisiatnre. Esch had behind him a full lst of Htate oficers and a Bu- vreme Court, all claiming to hold thelr oMces law- fully, One of theso **doavernors® liad by anncd force mefzed the Rupremo .Court-room, ejected. thu Judges clalming hold undor_tho ‘other ‘! Govornor, " ana inaalled his own Judges, 1t 18 well known that hie Lad ot hisecalls Inrf'n body of "well-drilled and woll-armed ttoops realy to do his bldding, The othor *'Governue™ hold pos- scasion of {hobnlldlnx uscd as a Btate-Ilonso and contalning the exceutive offices; had barrieadea the bullding, and malatalned it by defenaive pur- ose and armed forco, The Constitution ‘-mvldnw, n aubstance, that the Unlted States shall protecs cach Stato against **domostic violence," on ap- plication of the Leglalature urol tho Executlvo when the Lecislaturo cannot be convened, and, a8 I underetand, Congreas has by law dovolved this constitutional duty on the Presifent. Now, ono of thero **Qovernmenta' was a lawful Gove ornment; the other was a uaarpation. One of tho Covernors was & lawful oficer; the othor was s rebel. It wos not the case of an ordinary tested glectlon, whero ono Iwrmn held the ofico by a prima facie title and the other contested his l’&hl bofors tho tribanal provided for Illllémr. poss, There wers two antagontstic oV~ eruments, complete fu all tholr parts, oxe isting ot thu same tlmo in the wamo Biata, 1tke merey and concern tor the fnnocent victims ot A renwuous, rellzious dolunion, 1ark (his permission in the hopo that somo renl #tatermun, already [ (he National Leglalature, will take thopalna to verify my statements, anid hen urze upon Congrosa the adiption of the plan wlser and more cathollc if The cor ent whysician fical Informs te the nuture of hle patlent’s disease o fore preserlbing for him, Yolluwing, then, the example of the physlelan, Tet un indgiire o 0 the charctor of (his fronbloes some Mormon malady, and_geb the testimony of tho-c under the dominlon o) the disterapor us to ite efects Upoh [hemselson, Atibe very threshold of thin fanalry, they in- fosu you thid they know theie selielon eamo fraum (ud, because 1t wins revealed Lo them through the Prophet doseph (Smith); and thoy assert with caual confidence that polygamy iy right, bucanse It s compunded by God tirough the trophict Joe I ;inu tor Quaoeiistown nd the rest of us salled sll day in the company of varlous stately shipa and encrgotlo stosiners, artiving soon within aly! which Is much diversifed in holght and character, Onu evenlug moro of talk, and lsughter, and faro- woil-songa, and thon catne in the night's moment In which tho great machinery ceascd to thron, and the yoyage wai dead. ~This monient awoka uy all, aud niade us long for ono mors uvcmnfi of our ocean-cradlo. 1ut the daylight came, and the tug, and wo went on shore, many of ua fouching the ancesteal sofl of England for tho Orst $ime, LIVERIOOL, Of this great commercial city lltlo can ho malld or ncon by thu mnititude who meruly pass theough it ou thele way to London, It lias, howgver, msny aubstantial micrits of Ita own, known mastly to bitvineas. travalers anl rh(llnlhml!llll. ‘The ¥ur- mer will Lo aure to vislt the extnsive docks, from Which even Americans stlow that much mAY bo teamed mmcamlnrz tho convenlences proper for the accommodatien of the world's shipping, The Jate ter will wish to seo the numerous catablishmonts of Lenevolencu and rofarm witich the city boasts. Homuo of us may considor ita groutest glories to ba found in the reshlency of 3irs, Jonsphine Butlor, Lhe lady whusa namo ju lusttious as the foromost oppanent of Togal onactmonts which scok to do- grade hior aux liolow the loves of humanity, Dear us thurs oblects are to s, wa canmiot now ay to tnanifest our allegiauco to them, but must haaten, after a night's rusl, ta Chuster, w;n known aa ong fir tho alduet uf English towns and as embellishe Yo UATIEDRAL OF GHEAT AND ANCIENT PAMD, Apartof this church datos av far back na the tloyoulh conlur{,-—-uarw n{y of It later than the fourteentn, 1 havo visited " it twico before this tine, anl, on enturing It ow, am puasled to And it much altered. Tho plasteeing ot thie Intorlor has all boun torn away, and In Its place appenrs the Lrown stone of the odlfice. §look in valn fue the aucicut soats of the monks, which I romemboer ad carved fu wood black wilh sge, matched by that of tho screons and stalls, ‘Tho Verger aliowas us thosa avate in the color of modern aak, and tells us that tho whole ol this anclent wood-work has hl.'ctl Lalled m potash to restore it Lo 1ts proper color, now take noto of the old, familiar designs, many of them wrnmquu, and somg of thow carved with llcacy, 10 whow tho memory of lllllluru known ux}mllfl»n of the Cre Wo learn that the coub of this monumont waa in great “y? de~ lrn{ed b{ tha Eplacopal clorgy of the United Statos. 'I'ho Bishop s represented In trae modi- 1 apecity In the proposed amendment tho ahnor- mal relations of tho sexes, becauso mc{ are known 10 ba tho basia of a number of so-cailed Tellglons under the nsme of **Clhurch ¥ " 4¥ Mar. rlago Reform,™ *$Progress, " ctc., cic., Which flaoding the cunntry from Now York, Tos other great centrua of population with literatura mora vile and corrupting than the wildest ravines atd conrrest harangues of Mormoniem on the sub- Jeet of polvaamy. Upon such an'amendment 2 natlonal law could be based that would effectually reach ovory forin of vica now rmcllmd with tmpunity In tho sacred namo of religlon, 2 . The cathollc chinracter of tho law would divest It ©f the natura of persecutiont for, fnstond of being tapicial™or tCelaus ’eulllnlhm * it could bo ln- beled unireraal logisltion fn the Intercst of marl- Ity throtzhout the couusry, Thin would take the wind out of the Mormon's £ails: fur ho wonld And himeoif tronted just aa othe ef cltizeny aro treated, —something ho han never expeniencod sineo the rire n{ Mormonlem, and sonethling, lnm‘ add, that thelr leadars iread more than anythine clso, fur thoir persecntion would coaso, and thoy, perforve, cetso to by tho ** pecudlar peopld of God," aud he teiod ne coms mun criminain aro tried, Ar (0 e punnltica atfached to the proponed law, 1 wunld make them quite sevore, Including fneu anit Imprisuminent athaed Inbor, and | would ninke cohabitaliun proved evidenco mnflleient to convlet, without reference to inacrinie ceremaules, "Thix In the lame point In the proseat law, cven it L proves constitational; provf of marragy is nece cnsaty, and that is very hand to get, fortho pnat I would glvo almost entire fm. y 3 Indlieslui no greater punishment upon tha polygamist 1han to reqnire him by ith and pravide for his many wives and children tho ro- mainder of his natural lfe, with no power (o make other dirpositton of s property (han an vyunl divbulun minong bis wivos and chilldren, This stale of thinge I would permit, not that 1t would be anmized with ovily but brcaiiso it would be u fess exil than tho abandonuent of the women, wmch would el Lo prostitation and the canse: quent disgrace and bastardy of the ehlidren, ‘Thua wonld Feryatallize the souud morel sunse of tho hatlon Into o Juat and nniversal law that wonld onvienn Mormonism with un imoawsabla barrior, wver which it canld no longer leap In thw namo of religlons and with IL] woutd_encirels al) Kindred famm, xuferiug only that which fs paro and of Kool reprt 1 vacufio, Imprisuning o ices nid itmoralitled until they rot ot und dixapuear wiih e natural lives of such au have dlsgruced the . whero a family are shot dawn andihore fs no like. 1thaod of anybody's bolng pumished for na or that the reat of thie country will not fool much disposed to hielp In the desired” matorlal improvement of & eection that lets barlarlam go unctiocked, Inves- tigation wiil vory likely show that solitieal motivos formed but ong oloment In a lmux-nundlnu family and nolghborkoad foud, but, whatover it might do- velop, thore can ba no possible oxcnss for not muking the moat vigorous m:]"ulr{. We arc plad Lo wea growing evidenco that tha Domoceatic pross of the South is at last reallzing this, and c:llln}. upon Gov. Slona o do his duty.—Springfel (Hass,) Hepublican (Ind.). ‘There are many questiony comln’g lefore the noxt Conaroes upan which It witl be Important for the Weatorn and 8outhern men to combine, and In which combination will bo eqalvalont to success, In many cases the measnres o bo secured will ba ontsida af parly abligations, ~ The Itepresentalives of tho Weat of politicul partics, and thefiteprosont- atives of ench Southern Stato owo it to thelr mece tione to stand together In insleting upon the bin. provement of the Mississinp!, and tho construction of the Toxas-I'acific Nallway. In tho latter effor they will havo to_strugzio” ugaluat the moneyed! power of the Jay Qould monopoly, which hins ale rendy exhibitod Ita auccers In subwldiaing o Indu- encing most of the Nurthurn press. 1n both of theso great public works thoy will huve to contend sgainat a volid apposition from Lhe great Gastorn Intereats, which aro growlug fealous of the pros- vuruy of the coinmorclal power of tha Misuissippl alldy.—New Urlauna Picayuna (Dem. ), ‘The Ohlo Democrata are ovorhaaling the timbors of tlio fit. Louls platform to see if any of them are aunbstantial cnough to work into thu stracture which thioy proposo to fabricate for the full can- vara, Tho rasnite of this Inapection are rather dishearteninz, o ominenta Demacratic author- ity as Mr. \Vattersun asmorts that **tho Sonth* has haon fininlly eliniluuted s a political factor, and this doprivea the party b ite capital themo for stronuous campaign sthetoric. ‘Tho Monkollan uestion can hiardly bo digniied Into an " **faane, ' 1"0! tlie dextroun dodainz of the late House of Itepresentallves on the Tarl gqueation, it would ba nauseomly to mako uny *‘declaration of princi- plos ** on that subjcct, oven If shey wero quito anre hoy had some principles to declate, The 8t. Louls currency plank was epliced amd venvorod originally, And now (hat Mr. Dorshelmor s not thero to withatand A, Evine to hls face, and make 8 ‘*squarc {saue™ boforo backing Into a compro- mlse which did, aftor all, **learo somo Lass of ovorlookod, ~Mademotsolle’s Leautifully fllnininat- od book of devotions I tha French tunguo,—s praylng viegin on the cover, and .xreat store of angels on every hroadly-margined pago, * 1t stands open at the words, **let mo soon liear the volco of Thy marey, for in 'heo in my hupe, Thy splrit of goudness will lead mo In tho straight path. Make me tlvo ufter tho law of Thy Justice, Lard, for the mlory of Thy name.” A cerfaln stufyncas which Becuin Lo pervada the room after the reading of the pansave will moke 8 movo Inta the froer atmonss phere of tho landing a rolief. ‘This place, too, I8 antefully fuentahied; ita chalrs aro Incrusted with ivory, It ts draped with Urlental tapestry, nnd t Tios o sort of door portor for the ade Jacent ealons In & statuc of the claesleal Paria 0f the slze of life, and dating from the time of Louis XV, Anotber stop and wg aro In the Iagger druwling-room, ond liere I must take lcave to yuoto larpely froni the calalognie, for none bul an suctionace conld hopo to describo the Leantivs of that aparimont and du‘]ulflcl to tho thome. Ita generad effect 1 obtdined Y{nllvllh 186 of crime £on and goli—the Intfer in tho cornjoes ant_ srood« work, the formor in tho curtulns and cumrlm‘n of couches and chalre. [ere, according to ‘my nauthor,** are two ohnndeller In Algerian onyx and gildod branzo: +'an elegant jardinlore in richly decarated nbon{ with ornamonts fnely chased {the winner of the medal of honor In ita class at the Exhibition of 18157), with gronps In marblo, In motal, and In porcelain—P'yeche and Love, Horculoa und sainebody wiiom wo will call sn acqualniance, and—I bave no time to e what elsc. llero is & Chinese con- trivance for burning porfumos, and n flower-stand In Homan mosale, “ropunomlnxbn monament in raios, " Hull!plfi theso extracts by a couple of dozen, apd yor will have suma Idea of tho numbar of ubjects, rich and rare, la this hum- bleabodo, The amaller drawing-room showa the ke diversity and profusion, lere the furnitnre n I the stylo of Louls XVI., the wood-work black and gold, the cuverings of, sea-ureen satln wiih llowerud ornamenls in white, ‘Thore are two baoks in the raom, the only ones bestdes tho work of do- votlon already mentloned een fn the hous =Doru's '*Don (}ul:nw.' ind **The Iloly Bible lllustrated by tlio samie hand, “Une fanclos it wonld be 8 graceful thing tabuy all three in on the rt of A friond, and soud thom on to ?I:n new catabiishnient In the Champs Elyscos —they would not take up much room. lut nearly leaving the ealon without a very fine ofl patniing of modern dato, nt workinanahip, and most irroproach- moral," .1t Hlustrules Lafontalno's fine (a- Ues killed & doxen nien, and walka our streots in deflance, protected by United States Judges. 1f weo had our way, wo'd arrost BN flickman b an honr, No,' slf, the Nehting tho Mormonn will do will by with fvlmu and shovels, und that azainat the sdll. ~ We'll fight woods, butn hrush, not villazges, ani diz potatoes, not earthworka, " ** But they say thiat the Mormons are all armed ~—that they all have wuna?" sYes, ‘and ro they have slways had, Wa drilled rearnayo to kevp o the Indiane, 1 sup- osa thero s adun to overy ploneer in the Turrl ory. \Why, 8 man withont a gun in_Utals wonld bo “like n woman without & houp-skirt in New York. They aroa necossily, sie,™ 8 thicra'no trouble In your famillcar Nonc to speak of. 1 hiad Lhirty-five children— e, under 1o—at liomo ot anv time, Teat elster, who has lived In every Stato ale in the Unfon, sald sl never waw s qulct n fly. Comie np to-morrow and,go thrauii the Lton House with me, Let mo tutroduce yoa to my wivew, and childs and grandehildren, and sew for yourselt,” 3 Thanking the Prophet for’ hiw courteny, and romiding to coll at 2 o'clock to-morraw, § bde im guod day, B PEnkiNe,” e AN IDYL OF THE FOX. On awelling banka of windiny 1'ox Dwelt tho hrave hut gentls tannah With sot: brown eyes and raven lou And lipa that wero eweelest manna, Wart Ieathen ofd on Minpld Pox, Then wero she the nympn Diana, Who chaa'd tho Iduds up sylvan rockas Delng lclln.rmlan. ulio's the **Oid Squlre's Han- nal. soph. at this stage of the Invostiention yoo will dine cover tial tue averaze Mormon is not amenablo (o rtehtroasons for ho'will veliemently eontend thag Mormiontam §s true becanso tie Known 38 1 trige, 10 wsked Zo bie knows (8 ko b teite, o will quicke Iy tuforn rnu that the eptat of traih, bearing wite Wit hix own eplelt, testifes to im thut his sl I Ao, Yua have Jurlon faiely he try to convlney bizh state of o r] ¢ the deluded yietim of his own du- ro you, und you might an well tho” inchrdnie” sulfering under u Atement indneed elirium tre- wiena thnt there are o serients besetting him, aad 10 marders eecking hin fe, wr to try to' Feason o Mormon out o3 hiw relizlous belfef. duatliere |y b permitied to venture un oplntun us 10 the'oclkln” of Mormon rovelutions— not the lovk of Marmon, that § heliove te be the realtofaconsclonnfeawd—und the pracess hy which they are obtuin Chin opinfun s foundid upon a cirelulwtudy of the paychologieal condition of the Morwon miwl, ‘Fhete” revelat lonn are Wlentlcal b chucacter with so-ealled Splritualimtic ruselations, and both aro the renult of untecedent deeire in t Leart and mind for the ting sought to be revesle The thin desired, then uxpected, sl s it ds the resnlt of strone deslre nnd expectancy, otherwlso called faith by the Mortnons, Tlis “secounta for the fact thit Nothing unplearant o distresainz has overbeen ros vealed 1o a Mormon o suirituiiial, Coutrant these modern rvvelations with thoey ro. carded 40 1he ML fretelling tho me Iumities that were to befall 3 *Twore yoars oo, Ly dimpling Fox, O hor father'n broad savanna, 'Neath trollle'd bower of hullylocks, ‘I'hat & ired cought glinpeo vf llahuink, 1 metting wun glow'd flowing Fux, When Corlls, the brother of Hannal, . Lyd e, "twecn lutvura and bord'riny box, "T'a the fato of the boy and mnsn—Aht Un that Jung ‘ll{: cloar, rippling Fox, Tow 1 clayy'd Lrown fiand of llun uh, Asatio tripp'd it over thy seigy rocks, And thy tde tim'd my hoart's hosanna, when the revelution c Klngs, and nations, snd hope™ for hari-money men, it {s bardly probable able W ed foe such cons vval wtate, by & recumbent fignre with mitre and i i e fot, bloof **The Antand the Grassnopper, only the | There was not any tribunal {nnv) d 0 L eons ' Faites tovelation will ap- | tton and poliuted the nawe of Christian by detiling | Thon, thoro wild plamy on creoks of Fox, ¢ ¥ ihat the Ohlo economlats will express any ansioty | b0 vident fnsect In represontod by & woman | ditlon of affulrs. One of tha **Governars' and et i, mnifeet tha falsa aud go- | fo.ely uaimnnder tho gutes o FllEion. ol T Sioughtfal Hanaal, e ol uuile 1 et Wit kot | o™ remora Lindrancin o remamytion. . /non the atanding, all 100 seantily chad for warnah o o | o B e oot el iy Battauy 8, Duxs, Were awector fur thay Gunther's box Ol caudled croatun, or lud's Lunaus, In Dundce village, on marm'eing Fox, E'en L achiool-ma‘anys red bindaws, And tho diowey Habbath, orthodux, Wers evor glamour'd by lannab, Coulil 1 anco more, on bank of Fox, ltecling at feot of mild-oy'd Hannaly, Methinks that past this prusent CKay I'dall recall, but now §**cans whole thore s very lttlo of pdor littlo Marble's material which can be worked over or utiiized to suy advauisge, **(ircenbacks and Subnidles* would make & stlering hattle-cry {n Ohlo, and so It would In Tnrkoy; bui theroare Democtats of an cldor day who wonld feel uncomfortable in thelr colliue when It was shouted ovor tholr graves,— New York Ivibune (Hep. ). Nuver had the Boulhern peoples heltor nr- portanity to retrieva tha ereors and disastors gf the aet than under the Adminlstration of Presldent rlrlyun. 1le has reniltted to \hem culns:lmo control over tholr own alaire. If the interposltion of the Foderal suthority was an obstacle tothule prospen- ty, that hs beesi removed, ‘Thoy aro now masters of their own fortunce. 1L remalns tu ba seen what they will make of thelr opportunitics, Wa regrot 1o see that, while In Virginla and oue or two other Btates, {mmizration la encouraged, & moro tolerant wpirit caliyated towards the steanger, e?unl rights are oxtonded to the incks as wellas whilcs, and measurca aro taken for the education of bLoth raceannd the malntonanceof publiccreditand of law and o dlncu{ thoe rovorse is the caso In Bouth Carolina, Mississlppl, and Loulsiann, The con- servative clavecs scemn to bo In & minorlty in those Btates, and tuo woret clements to be in the ascond- cnt, Gov, Hampton fs honestly enzazed in the promotion of the welfsro of his Stalo, but his ettarta for good aro noulralized by the old Bourbon Dumocra (. They aro dotermined Lo repudisto the Btate dobi, refusc taxalion for ihe payinent of the Intercat on the debt, and €0 dostroy thy common- schnol systew, and to prescribe Lho profession of Hepubllcanism by white men as & criw nd to make the State uninhabitable by any tut sccesslon- 1ei thelr sympathlzers, A lika vindictive and na nded spirit lemanlfested b“thc majocity of the Damocracy In Loalsiana snd Misatsstppl. — Fhitadelphia Press (Rap.). o o i s, The Alesundrian Obellsk. Alezandnia (Equpt) Oorrespondence London Ttmes. Thelr ¥o-colled miraculonm cures, which have ben the means of cunverting many senalolo peaple 1o Moruonlni. aro Lroughit aboutin the rume way, 414, by deaire sud_ Espucianey on tho part bt tck and (4o healer aa Well, OF tho {nuence W most remarkable ther curative or allordw sbundant L uperates 1o less remarsubly in enlling forth moyeinents wiiet, not ez conrclonely afrected by the person who ¢x- thew, lave been sitributed to spernataral compoules us arkv, vn belng shuwn the Lady Chpol; whether thia 1ast s rosorved for the special uso of ladice, for prayer-mectings and 0 on. Tha Verger, furlunately, doos not hear. this question, which would mako lils hair stand on ead. In an underbreath we Iull our frlond that tho Lady Ell:.,“i.l Is thy Chapel of Qur Lady, the Mothur of 2larin Soon tha Yerger sorta out our little parey, put- tlng tho Indlea i owe 0w of seaty, ana thu goatlos sien inanother, Nuw, assuming a silver wand, ha ushers In the white-rol ir-Luys, ~a Bemor Usher walting upon the Canen and Clork. The or- ganlut beging lis prelude, and prescutly we fnd oureelves In the midst of . THE CATUEDRAL-SBRVICH, all of which is mnfur Intonud, with the exceplion of the Feripture lossona for’ the lll{. Wlllcg the Canon reads from the 5"“1"‘5'—""’“1 hvon BCCOmI- ponled thither and fhence by the elder Vorger, m-arlz-&nn oxprosalon of preteruatural gravity, ‘Iho Catliedral-scrvico s Interesting to thiso to whom it Is & novolty. Ita mochanics] repetition mual becamns tizosurio fn the vstroma, 1learing It often, one slighe aud crics fur & single breath of ute trammelod prayor, ono natural sppes! of the hu. twap beart to its nearvst and dearcet Friend. Jf llkllsfilnn 11 to bave & court-langusgo of compliment and distant kamago, then the n[ul n Church bits It cxuctly, Lut tod tho Father 4 & concoption greater than God the Riug, and this ew sacrad Fathurhuod—Christ's gift to the hum ~—locs nut breathie clearly through the arl lnvolved sentences of the Anglican Litur, EDEN NALL. Tblrly-lanr:un-ro the wealthy Marquls of Woslmlustor was spuken of a4 & nontean riche,— & now rick man. Ao exlensive apccalstion in wo, estate brouuhit this colossal furtune to & Tamily of Daronels who_traccd thelr origin to tho Chiof lluntsmian of Willlsmw the Conqueror. The Ppros- eut representative of the family, the Duke of Westmlnsler, 18 tho grandson of the bullder of the fortunc. ihs domaiy s\ Eden Hall measures twene fort, though not for besuty of elfect, In the open alr, You know tho touching littlo atory,—ilic thoughtloss graswhopper chirpod through the glorl. ous sutniner-thne, without thinking of "thy bad scanon 10 coinu; the tnuolcas but pradont ant ex= pended all her energy in Inying up fora miny duy. Mhou camo tho full of the lealand tho biting biast, and tho slagur, who had done nothing but sco life, found horsolf undar the necesslty of trying (o borrow & graln or two to auatain it frum hor frlend's store, ‘2 You shinll have it back tn due thue, Interest and all—fol d'snimalt" *VAnd pray what were you doing with yourscl? in tio warin_ wosther?” ashe the capltallst, "(lll' I wan winging, you know; singing all the thno,* “OWoll, thea, now go nad dance.™ Slgnificant that wich an apologue should connend (téolf to the notlco of tha mislress of this bousc, . 1ul these (eigned histories Jose half thuie pulnt In the attemph to apply them 1o the cirenm- stunces of our lot—** {f you hadn't boen & gras hoppor you might have rutired on your furalture, yob tancy you hiear her say. Another fllght of stuirs ind we are at the door of o boudolr, having just passed through an anlo- chamber which, feom its posttion on the throshold of & lady's bowdr, contains the most oxtraordinary lccg of furniture fn thy placo—a Luge stand of atnb-bolls of various slzes, the largost of thom hurdly to bo iifted by any onw but an athloto. s it a deli attention On the partof Umphalotastupld Mercules, who, on u wet afternoon, may bo sup- wed to profera turu with these fnstruments on fi' landing to the cholco literaturo down siairs boudolr is tapeatricd In dark zm‘u nd with 1h sud {ts too solid furniture of black wood, Infald “with “fvory, s not at all plessing In stylo. In fact, not to say It disroapictfully, o cer- taln heavinesy is the nole of the nobly ownur's taste. ~ This droasing-room ldJulnll‘uj the boudolr, for Instanco, hus & tollot survice ln solld allyor thut-might sorve for tho ablutions of a glaut, 1t ty oxplalocd fu great part, no doubt, by hor En- glleh origtn—lightne: elther in character or con- inodities, belng with that II"-um" synonym for 1o profect it aralnat tho usurpation of the other, No':v, fimhaul touching the question which uf theso Govoruments wad the lawful ong, if tho acts of setting up Iu a Statoa usurping Uovernmens sgaluat the filwhll one ba *‘damestic violeuce, " woa It not tho dufy of the Preaident to decide whother the Governor making the apptication wod the lawful on if o a0 found him 10 sustain Bt [have lon with sucl ullu‘nl lluu opinton, It w ll‘lmll It, and then, of coitrae, 1 ust examibe It od carefully as § can and decido |t for myeelf, are uthier aspecis of the ;‘(‘llunl yiestion of President’s policy of great Inforcat In tha futu Dnllmunoi now discnss thom, My heaith hag not been good fol llumfiltlmn', Am!, '"'"’z""‘?a',k'"' tor than I was, I atill profer idioness to . il et Kaukwoo: ——— A TWILIGHT-GREETING, ‘When the lellfim--budmu deepen, And silvery Night steals o've w ‘Then, my darling, 1 will greet the ‘Wit thou snswer to my call? ‘ Twilt 't theo with a blessing | Y,I":':E’ewm the (h?d lbfl\'l:na Ask 1im to forevor keep thee Hafs within His arme of Jure— Keep theo safo from sin and danget. ‘v‘}flm be.ul thy dally way; Age Ask thag from tho path of Duty Thou wilt ne'or Y led astr Laus Py CuicAuo, Juno 3, 1877, ITS MIAL CONDITION, 10 the Wdilor ar The Tribune, Cmieaco, June 6 —Tho telegrams from Ralt Lake, Utah Terrltory, since about tho 1xtof Moy last, and the sensatlonal fettors aud dispatehics by Btillwon, the’ corrvspondent of the New Yurk HMerald, have so discolored und exoggeratod mat tetaln that beautlful but malndustuwtored Torsl- tory thata brief statement of Its real and teuthful condition seetns due tw thu poaple of the North- weat; and the writer of thia—who has beld ofMce thero for two yeurs under the Unlied Blatve, aud then Lwo years undor the Moron Clurch, baving bad the yery hest means to study affairs on hoth sides—vouches for the correctnuas of the follow. Ing briof narrative of events for tho lawt six monthsg 1L I admitted that tho Mormon poople, 160,000 strong, bave, siica the eseeution of John D. Lee, I Febroary last, boon much exclied, and bavo feared tbat tho fndict ot and faprisonment of Hrigham Young would follow soon, and that possibly 8 mignt ro. sult in hls couvicilon and execution. Thy exaa- peration of the publig mind throughout the Union, growlng out of the coufession of John D, Loe, woll knawn to Brigham Young and his peoplo; and, fearing, or pretending to fear, assassination, he travoled from St, Ueorge, in May, to Salt Lake, under a quad-military protection. ‘e Nauvoo Leulon—a mllitary organizstlon cicated ot Nauyoo over thirty years ago—embraced on Its master-roll nearly ull tho ablu-bodied wen among thew, rgpl Tobably could muater fo threo days 30, eibanaed 161s 3 body Liat ia fever oot B probably become my buwer. Lialoam wan Quulitlers a Mormon in 50 far ua nelf. lecepthon i concerned, atd by the slormon prme. zut peeulenion (0 go with the servunty of d ta go, beeuae thero wis inonoy © ** fughired wt the mooth of the 1 until desive und expeetation obuined per- an, bl Smith 10 llke wmanner desfred many ceaure, 10 a sensual, funatical, emotional Ahawe! Kint Bpring, on shiwi'ring ¥ox, bothy clothe i green vocl sear'd savanss, Whitwt years but Dlanch the scanly lucks B Tust 10 e and winsome Hanuah, Tut yet, If blanch'd bo our tiln locke, - Uur hicarts atill burst with lovo's rich manna, Whilst lows begond Lliat beavenly Fox Whose um'rald Gelds awalt my !u‘nn-h. Nigh forty yesrs bave woods of Fox bince *ruen'll and brown'd ‘ucath pale fans, BHill, wpicy chill akies oF earih's rudo whacke, Froali blooma this hears with flowees for [lsnnali. Culcaus, Juue b, 1877. Jus, K, C, Founkar, —— THE TRIBUNE AND THE ASSEMBLY. T Interiar, Junan, It Is ndmiitod that the procecdings of the Aseom- bly were nevor before wo fully sud accurately ru- porlea as they were at the lato mecting by Tnu Ciucago Tuinuse, An cxtea sheot was given noarly every day for thy purposs of glying com. pleto reports without crowding the other dopart- ments of the great paper. New York Loasts of Jig leadetwhip in journatism, bat, when thy Asscmbly inet there last year, none of {lio nictropolitau nows: papers had eitlicr tho liberatity or enterpriso o yo beyond a mesgry ubstract. Wo do nol supposs that Jike ble, vexnality was the chlef good. Thy same kind of desirg thiat binded the vyes of David 4 tho matter of Batlwheba produced fn Josepl Smiththe expectancy which resulted in (e reyoe Yation to take many wives, ‘The rulo therofore 14 With ol} false ruvelations, whether of Spivitualisn, Quakeelnm, or Mormonbe, antecedently to the sevelution, the tuine, and tho dealre fur it, have becn Lu the heart of the revelaor, and only needed he falae (et that Batan can cust’ upon any subject dn the anlid. or destro I the heatt, (0 cause it to e forth from the decetved and decelver as thy bt of iculty in the way of reasoning with b b ihese falvo revelations and ux cures are fead, 1l calls upon bis do- tche, eniotions, and expectatlons, and they auawer L Just ds be would have them aue wy “Tlig de-cription spplice to all slnccre Mormons; sat bl are sincure, from the Ligheat to the lowest, wilha fow exceptiony, fu the persons of cortain hole-Ox Boup, i A 1o, where tha horned stock has increass enlgl I':u x::'mom rapid ratlo than the xFupnlm ruc pe bas 7 . [ h greater than the dhuner b, Wik protond i beliove Tt | yiare, yeb it ovor slcepe. —but Roighom et s | 005 SR Abatract Wo do nol sappuse (8t o oo ot ‘weon. ae i tertmg well | povuQipETTC) mjteetho Endlb obollsk | thu wauvof autenyul chey abior, oo aro fnaa. | ton. the sunbly of Brepent g e prcao call ey iy Terierultll {"ff' darlogulecr ” 1y {50 Wieks o0 eagacia 1,12 V68 IXletnbi arunea ro: | 1urien compensation for e Frest witiey of 1ab AUore{un Adioabednow b By bt o, OF | T T i whloh o bl stome s (ovemi! o | Bisrablo klckuacks fo sils sud the roou beyan-— ommonty auolod at {*belling rata " that i the i Lhe Lio) itelligen o) ity ! 4 et B Dnven uf Conrees and wock e Shomises ooty Vi and Aever soriousl IE;z ALyt ot | and road g'&:m"d In reportloy tha Aavwmibly, bat | floyey | was staulsbed now anlaGreat park of | 4 Wa dava AKG (breatorcd 1o ratce v irocs U% rAHh Wil fotel nlves, pinci nkatands, boxcs that wlght hold vurer-. ana boxvs that certuinly could hold nothing at sll—made 1n both the preclous metals, 1 drilling ring tu them. eutily olemens fo Utabh—not wore comprehensive management eraus, A it by e practice uf polygaut, ey Wiil which dictated it fs the kind of managemont that nfm! £an bo realized for thole bides, burns, bools Ll tnfur yon “that Conzress hav wo power to make tng, We bad scen A garden fu Chi {uw, otc., for exportation, Iu large estal £ ot oramontsd with scutylicel heads which bls Logln, o o the Slawribultons s e u Iy brokon off, sud obatacles to ite depurturo, lle Y‘“ & palieade Hus round the kround, sud refused to allow anyilung to tho public witl wustain witn equal liberality, i tocelvad w heavy hidemuity | witha frée usoof every dovice known to Parlelan { ments, dovutod (o preparing thoss utliizable vor- el iawa, 1 e e i 00 ) sppeared to Lave Leen ru 4 M % ee, an Im- B gy fue Jhe wtuple buazon (hat thi St | than 10,000 stong, (R yumon—la - Witich were #aid 1o hate corss foro pamibyand proceedingsogiowyai ncousivicut | fogonulty for lucrvasiuig tholt cust, If mok thoir | tions of (he bullock, thero was, of cour luus; tial pulyzuiny 1 pars of thele religion, L. uding clolm for, dam: 4 on ac- | besaty, with vreclons stunes. Inone of the mnany minlature frames wo bave a photograph of & thoruughly coimnonplace person whoss essenilal A his people; aud they Rave becn, aud still are. dai) very claimorous for bis indictmuat, arrest, trial, {.‘l‘a‘uvlcflull. aud cxecutiong and, thraugh & most Couilng to this place now, we fuund ouly the wails slindlog, to our disappointment. Wo were al- lowed 10 visit the G110 gurdens sud conservatorles, gl il ripdi PREPARE FOR DEATH. asta whon tho ox went futo the melting. m’:‘:-fi m‘l‘- 1064 fs now in & great messure nwld~ Lz commundcd of God through tho Prophetdoneph, ed Ly boiling the aulnal &2 once into soup, of con- y bouling 5 rumoval, A forluight wud that they have 8 right (o practice I8, At this [l | tleman arrlved from Enlhml lo #rrauge for the 4o & gone nnmensy Al Lolulig Bty bullacks ot a tirac. Ju sdven hours, during” which they aro subjected to 3 m-ll“ E‘!'t! ure of Uftven pounds tu the square incly no ip, 'Tho steaid Prepare for death! for cut belik, und ie was unpleasanily | vulgarity of aspect L cuhanced by her Tudor cos- | contraled estract of beef. After tho bead. iy Moo aeme 10 e (o avantaie i | bittersud Ulicivs Jape, chuy e sois sy By | Booa et fo the ?fl"lfi.'."{.‘ i home, e e & vt pie; Corsses o whioy ula | SEbESSE uf fho hellak, Snd by was susletsanily | vuige nui-l'unhz;.lnr:v 5y 4 rhich frwa aort | Biius ol clc,Sra Tomoved 1 et st iy e LNy "l a o " = ¢ i N I 3 eces, the Cuntitution dues gunrantes to alb **tho freo o Grand Jury summoned at the May teru, tnll:l?:un::.bl‘Il::h:“-lllcn‘lhfil: 1ot fogsadvioon | cavter s Homotn it wiahtaof ‘i Furk um Iy | Uhe way, owarers wotwitiuianiing”toa istay | ofaccondthima or ihe ¢ Liing when' he nable | In gt doilblo cylinders, capable uf waerci-e ™ of thele renglon, whatever that may wean, U the Mormon mind the conclasion la perfeetly slearaud fogd Polypamy witn Ala is not a erire, but ou cirius, commanded of uf hoatilities, Mr. Dimitri bes aftor all proved a tiead, and ‘ot da euuy. Atior sererid Tater vl witl ¢ obely: ey, v uodsome) Withirow “all ‘oppunition’ on’ Sundition thrt bo whoald be probably a wentorial of the Uine when tha noble ownee, thinking there was uo limit o the Inilule gence of the Parielang, trled to charm thein on thy slago—only to find thal ehe bad for once reckonvd \ by chiauce coutsiuvd ouly three Monuune und, by chiullenge ur otherwise, thesy thrce wers takeu ofy which It vuly o clear Geotile Grand Jury, —tho Brat of that kind 1n svera) years. - 1o vulued at several thousands of pounds. il fs & powerful and llnflw{ creature, of 8 ing cheatnut color, aud with geatle eyes. Wu asked bls kesper f hic was not a very kind borse, snd were answered Kbt for deuth for e e drawe nigh ¢ ¥plel n| 5 And 100 Geth, prowss weak wiinthe poin in sy droar, consldered the donor withont hr host by being Incontinently hissod off. 9 and meat ure reduced Lo 8 pui, R of | $histate of aitiru, tho New York flevuid coree- | Gives waruloy fharihe ea b wress 15 tha stomatlvy., Helots we ol Lha groundatw | 0F 00 %) natmont. “This condigon eap | panont ooyt At rind g s B Sl Rt e G T b R aia ot Gud as 4 purt of bl rligion, **the free exerciae ™ | spondent and his active condjutor i Seit | sk City ol o Rl et i Ten Tnotie Poaroor | Wladly accopted. & deed of gilt was tirawn up, aud | bave nom o reat nterest for any but the givers; | the sucfuce, drawn olf. a pulp'ls reuroved sl gf wbleh the Constitution pusratees. — Aud when cuminenced sendlcy dispatches, sunouncidy tbat | Prepare for desthl for h fatal day A o hoatd wule 'adorn 'a modest ville ts | the Ensiiab nation insy now feel quite mure of its | and. to Judzo by the peculiar mnlo with which | placed in u howesful pro eb aqupesca out (0 {({;j'.l.‘;.“;:;{ J}"}.f‘,,‘-’:"‘;f’“.: fl""’;‘"fl:fi. Lva-oléll; {ioFue N‘il-llmxb:xx lon s d;ll{mm all over the ,lrm“;- Bear when 1bo spicit wings its way T P R TR & reatdenco 1o Chacjers | oropert . 88 butl thio Klidive, nwn;rfil n;o!c.:g:l.v foule of ticun ary rc arded; there must be a few of soup. The L‘:.‘fl"gf,"r owere but 7ot R 4 spitation, deals § & ¢ recch- Bt wer 0 the glorious re. ] A e tra 3 treasure, r. bimitrl, | th tors of Lo-day. outracted, and. ende viotect 1l yeople. 1o, Lracticiug what M has ree | Dol and vy 1o (o Moruion people: that the | O the dackns aver o thy waater x%"u‘é'.'t' towu Navy-Yurd, - Sicdrandit gloria mundl, Snaor ¥ 3 whera the_tees : "Ficre fo tow nathing 1o1t oo bt ta retraco our ccuilarly-consitucted bollez, thers reduced by Eikuuration, snd Sially rua o o bladgors. Wien celd, the csecnce ts svil-transparent. »* } rich xlmldll -I;N\u:fitalur, nn{m -‘qulw m‘u ;‘lf.m and tawte, sliost like confectivncry. A batlock, atter fwlnflhn Ir('Alu.L)h.lgl but tweaty pounds uf soup. ~Buchangs, .- 2 Sudled 10l latterUaya, ' wiist wonder I they tand endeavor o evade sll Taws of Congress 1 10 their ataud.poing violate the nrlmul the tubou? The uupeludiced, pbilosoptical Beilid eecowore of Justice i the MOruon's dufense sgaust tha chargy that Lo s & chronle law-bresker owner of (he land where tho trcasure lies, have ¢achin the most formal mauner alundoped all thelr rights bu favor of Eugland, Jt now oaly re- walns fur Mesars. Dixon tosend oul sheir doalin steambox |ul1 pack up thelr obolivk sad carry § orer tho smillng surimer seas to1ts Joew howe” on tbe banks af the Thanios Geutilew were guictly preponing (o soud away thelr fawilios; and that a secund 1. Bartholo; was 8000 (o wash the Vallcy of Kalt Lake witls Gentile blvod,” "Ths ooly jourual u Utah which ix tho omuuof fbe fauatical Geatllo elewent took up eav storlcy, and in every exsggerated (orm dtaze steps, dlefore leavinyr, thouzi, wo by take o lanco at the wiqbles and coach-Loase, with the coupo and the threo othies carrdages, nnd tho hozacs Dauiy, Aruold. pimiico, Halobow, a3d {fucen, va Well knowa to erary ‘fiequenter of tho Bols. Thuse, aa {be Baglish statle beips I8 cbharge tall J. W, ——————— ‘The Formatlon of the Now Cablues, Tha Parls Guulols gives the following nsrrative ©f tho formalion of the new Ministry e Lake do Broglio bimsalfs . ** 4410 Prepare for deatlh] You do not know Wheu the volce of God wi'l bid you gos Ba be prepsrad (Rat you 1.y slaid 18 the Judyment-Day st God's falt hand, Mosnan Yonis, Wise Lo &, Osnonwz.

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