. History of Utah: comprising preliminary chapters on the previous history of her founders, accounts of early Spanish and American explorations in the Rocky Mountain region, the advent of the Mormon pioneers, the establishment and dissolution of the provisional government of the State of Deseret, and the subsequent creation and development of the territory . his term of sentence, and is too poor to pay his fine: andupon the rcconimendation of all the officials who had anything to do with his conviction, and alao bythe Governor of the Territory. - o • j 11 ,Pg pledged himself to conform to the


. History of Utah: comprising preliminary chapters on the previous history of her founders, accounts of early Spanish and American explorations in the Rocky Mountain region, the advent of the Mormon pioneers, the establishment and dissolution of the provisional government of the State of Deseret, and the subsequent creation and development of the territory . his term of sentence, and is too poor to pay his fine: andupon the rcconimendation of all the officials who had anything to do with his conviction, and alao bythe Governor of the Territory. - o • j 11 ,Pg pledged himself to conform to the laws, and having dissolved connec- Ten-iTory plural wife, and on the recommendation of the judges and district attorney of Idaho 1,1. « Because of his age, good standing, and apparent desire to obey the laws, and his having paiddIstHct atorneT * ounted to $; and upon the recommendation of the United States andnnontren,?monnjJi^ * his fine and having served nearly four months of his sentence, and upon the petition of a large number of citizens of Utah, who believe he will hereafter obey the law! sentence suspended. I Commuted to 3 e^^^J? ^.yfipov^^ crrv^ HISTORY OF UTAH. 651 In another speech, delivered early in October, Delegate Cainesatirized the Industrial Christian Home of Utah—which had askedCongress for a supplemental appropriation of eighty thousand dollars—and refuted certain charges made against the majority of his consti-tuents as an offset to his speech of the 2oth of August.* The same month witnessed a continuation of proceedings in thegreat suit of the Federal Government vs. the Mormon Church. Thepersonal property of the defendant, amounting to four hundred andfifty thousand dollars, was declared forfeited and escheated to theGovernment, and the real estate in litigation, with the exception ofthe Temple Block, was continued in the hands of the Receiver. * The nature of some of these chaises may be gleaned from the following documentused by Dele


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