Show V - -'i-' v - Aww- NTS 4 y ' fc A (i: ' " h - VAKTV W w r"-- ' t v - j i V 7: V-- js j -- - - ---:-- V s rv K ':f'v i 4 m i: : r- GREAT SAIT LAKE CITYy UTAH MONDAY NO 47 MARCH 20 1865 '4 : "ri - - yoi i wv i ' f - J— TIIESKMI-WKEKLYTELEGIlAP- ' ENGAGEMENT jUE BROKEN " kt ' J LIWn ' ': ’ iPEAllSG THE TRUTH FOB A DAY o --— ud ' '' ‘ tnrsox a ” " jar S his-befroth- - a little ShO-w- as cavings fair-skinn- roay-cbce- kd ed lump of a rirt always dressed out os an advertisement to the shop ller business was to sit in the exhibit fashions and wheedle riHtoiben until her aunt should be at leisure She had a fair knowledge to receive orders and a sharp’ eye to the main chance of trade Otherwise her intellect wa3 shallow and her : ' yellow-haire- d Mae-eye- d sljow-fooi- ns - ES - - ICES ‘ for about a year to head clerk of I31ack( Jlrown Green amh Vite and heir of old John Morriss was considered quite a'catch So Miss Lizzy lie 11 had for cirl of lier class him for and angled caught him anl Mr d Morriss lieing and obliging r had easily suffered hintself to be taken The had been the Keno of ' the said ihop of Afessrs It Bs G and W where Miss lizzy was in' th(T habit of going to pur- 'diase goods And now they were- betrothed and the marriage was fixed to come off on the fiistjf the ensuing month'1' Joseph was so veiy fond ot- her that hel quits mistook her personal appearance for her very sett and supposed her soft round white form and bine eyes to indicate an affectionate disposition her dullnesa to be good temper and her lumpish immobility to prove conlie had hot even stancy and domesticity all to thi3 in her meant begun suspect that simplv indolence selfishness1 and sensuality lie 'was now on his way to confide to her tender and' faitlifjil besom’' his own great -- 1J)00 acres will be devoted to the cultivation of cotton One part of their plan will bo to erect a cotton factory bnt the principal and ruling motive of this enterprise Is understood to bo that of for the wants of Utah aiding a snficient-anppldr Hammond the purchaser of the ratate as agent for Brigham Young arrived in this city per the A His mission is to A Eldredge on Saturday last obtain the necessary tools Implements colonists etc and there is no doubt that in a few months the ' Cotton is destinproject will be in ed to become a leading feature in the exports from the Sandwich Islands as the facilities for Its growth are such as to leave little donbt as to its successful cultivation - The crop there will be double what it is in other countries and at a 'much ’less cost as it requires planting only once in four or In ive years aul wilt bcar all the year regularly two years from how their exports of cotton will amount to several thousands of bales it probably van scarcely be otherwise for the profit attending We learn that it is greater than that of sugar some 18 or 20 bales of cotton arrived last week by the Yankee from Honolulu the quality is said to --be very superior Sea Island— S F Bulletin- Signed ergy Kingston near which the fight occurred is situated on the direct route from Golds? boro to Newhernw about 20 miles east of Goldsboro and abopl 30 from New- bern It is supposed that this force 'of the' enemy was advancing from- - Newbernagainst Goldsboro for the purpose of cutting the railroad at that point Ills not probable after this repulse1 that the enemy will attack or advance Ir is likely that we shall next hear of them falling backoff Newborn or changing their coarse to some other point of 'the compass' '"This movement-o- f the enemy ivn evidently dewith Sherman tb be signed 7 New Y’ork 12 j The Herald prints abetter from Sher- CAN’T RECOGNIZE THE CONFEDERACY man to Wade Hampton stating that in of foraging parties having England says she Rocs not object to a termina- consequence can do been murdered by rebels after being tion of hostilities in the United States but nothing to hasten the peace so devoutly prayed labels attached to them ‘Death for' France is “much pained at the condition of he has ordered a similar affairs in America but can Suggest no practical to all foragers Itnsaia i desirous that the war should number of remedyprisoners in our hands to be end and is not afraid to intimate that it will end tike manner that he holds of m The Pope disposed with the suppression of t he rebellion restore influence to use he “aa his will peace says 1000 rebel prisoners and can stand it ns it Is his most earnest wish that all nations may be united in the bonds of charity peace and love” long as Hampton The King of Norway and Sweden says he “most jThc rebel General responds thatlie confine himself to'a declaration to the Commissioners that the Government of Sweden and Norway knows nothing' of such murders and that is resolved to maintain a in the past the most for every soldier executed by Sherman strict neutrality in regard to the deplorable strug- he will execute Federate picking out the gle which has sprang up between the State heremakes the officers as tho firsfvictims-li- e tofore forming the great and powerful 'American Confederation at the same tirno that its earnest a long story jibout the barbarity alleged wishes are (or & cessation of so disastrous a conflict and for an arrangement that may meet the just lo be practiced by Sherman’s army and claims of each of the States that were members of concludes by stating that he shall hold 66 the Union withSrlxich flrom Its beginning thee Government of tho United Kingdom has'entertain-- prisoners as hostages' for those' ordered to 7 d the most cordial relations’’ The King of the be executed by Sherman Netherlands simply instructs his Minister tor acA' rebel dispatch dated Mobile Febru-- 7 of the (Conknowledge the receipt of the circular ' federate) Commissioners without expressing any ary 28 says 22 steamers andT six Missis-"- 7 Viropinion or offering a word of sympathy sippi river transports are in the Lower r ginia Enterprise Dau- Bay and a large number of troops onindicat THE CASCADE OF DISCREDIT phme Islafid and at Pensacola an early attack on the city The New York Herald ih &n article on big fig1 ‘linj letter of the 27th announnres and paper money gives the following concerces the arrival there of 2000 exchanged In 1700 just alter th ning prices ' 7'Reign' of Teitgt” when assignats were printed prisoners from Texas including a num--: 7 by the ton and a ' hundred million franca of new ber of naval officers the thrown was in a market currency upon day Tho rebel papers have an article onthe For accord 'of wood four thousand francs for passage of the new enlistment acf dhying 'N two dozen coarse towels fire thousand francs: for a straw hat four hundred francs for a 'necktie it is a measure of necessity and notof eight hundred franca for1' a linen handkerchief choice Wigfall during the debate de- one hundred and fifty francs for fire qnill pens nounced the Legislature of Virginia and three thousand francs for a pound or common tbe demanded francs and for all the other candles ninety-eigresignation of JeffDavis comforts and accessaries of life in precise proporThe speech of Senator Hunter iir the ' ' tion rebelSenate is printed He t voted for ' In those days says a writer the woman who thouhe hill to arm and emancipate negroes cried vegetables through the streets earneda sand francs of paper- money in one day’ and the under instructions from the Virginia legjourneyman who had condescended to work an but his he entered islature a hour ‘was paid by bunch of assignats bigger protest against than ‘hts two fists” Of course the result of this it its an abandonment of the contest and was that ail property holders who had signed leas- of the es pf their houses or- estates or lent money on ground upon which lhe South secebond and mortgage previous to this depreciation ded He also flowed from statistics that of the currency were utterly rained—the annnal no considerable body of negro troops rent of the finest house in' the Faubourg not being sufficient to furnish its proprietor could be raised?in the States over which with even a day’s food it any ordinary restaurant the government had control without strip-It was at this time the — gold gamblers of the Bonne controlled everything on one day in the summer ping tiie country of labor absoluiely nec- of 1706 running up the price of the gold Louis to essary to produce food and stated that the thousand francs in paper currency “The brokers were at tills time”— we quote from command of 090 scripts with the authority the CenseurJes Journaux— “the tyrants of credit to ‘impress 20000 stares had smce last the arbiters of price they controlled the pulse of able to get but 4)000 of the expiring publie fortune depressing reviving September been checking and accelerating it at will The value o whom '3500 were from vVirginia and the gold Louis was ticketed on the veal pies hi the North Carolina and the balance from A1- cooks aud the of the fuff-operatio- In 7‘ - i W- i - tensified sympathies and prowess in behalf “Ami served you right too! for indeed I of the rebellion Morgan struck with must say it was Very undutiful and crnel and the beauty and heroic bearing 'of Miss unnatural in you to say such things to your uncle and aunt— and'such n rich uncle too! Mundy at once consented to enroll her But and you his only nephew! ' I don't know what aid give her a desirable position could have possessed you Why did yon say on inquiring particularly in reference to her name she replied “Jerome Clark them?” ” When the merriment resulting front “Because I was asked questions and had to ' 7? his successful experiment had subsided nnswertraly as I told you before” “And as told you before the truth is not Morgan remarked “All right boys we to be spoken at all times and in this case it' will have itse for Sue Mundy’’ It folwas downright wicket! to speak the troth — to such a wealthy relative too! Why when my lowed that Clark ib the character of Sue aunt say3 to me—‘La! lizzy my dear what- Mundy rendered invaluable service to ever would you do if you were to lose me?” I John Morgan— Exl r her—‘A great deal better' withA woman in Michigan sixty-foout you aunt for then I should have every years old husunaided own labor has her all to would be that by myself although thing the truth because’ if I did she would torn banded thirty: bushels of corn" one-ha- lf me out of doors and serve me right! No I bushel of peas ten bushels of onions five answer— La aunt! don't talk so: you break bushels of beans four bushels of beets my heart If yon were to die I should cry five bushels of carrots one hundred heads troubles my eyes out and pine myself into the grave of barrel of cucabbages pickled one-hal- f She received him os usual In the little front in a'month’ ” and cumbers earned “And does she believe you?” nearly one hundred rawing-fwover the ghopaud adjoining ‘‘She bdioves that at least I think so and dollars by washing dnee the first of March tlio sW-roowhere she daily sat among :vL lace curtains' tidies and other gossamer dra- - that I am sincere in what I say and so she 1864 loves Die all the more and saves all the closers like a pretty little Attraktiwe-This an in elegant spider " ''v V web' to exhibit enticing fineries and enr-- forjne” exudation from a certain species of Calime! revolt I could not have be- fornia “IJzzy you tangle feminine Hies' pine has been found to possess ma lieved that there wo3 so much insensibility She was dressed in a redundancy of pink Nr and insincerity in your nature’ said the young nyvaluable properties and must become Bounces that made her resemble a large in important article of commerce It may man in a mournful voice in full bloom iShe wasjeeated near “It is not' insincerity-4- t is prudence and e used in mixing paints and colors works the ceutre table and in copying a engaged nature and dutifulness to parents— I veil in the manufacture of all kinds of good Parisian pattern bonnet that a mean to aunts' upon hung And bad as I am Mr Virarnishes combines with all es little pole before her : 7 tuous Indignation Ifm not so bad as to hurt sential oils removes readily and stains There was 'no one else in the room when grease The feelings of tiieni that brought me up and ' : from" cleans " entered clothing Joseph painting and gold me as somebody else did” sneered cared for -o leaf without has an agreeable 'T-injury and jou have come at lasV she said with- Lizzy " out rising to receive him f odorv7'! mis“1 had best tell you the extent of the -YesJ-J into a chief at once Lizzy for the rupture with my wearily sinking Cascarilla bark' imparts a pleasant odor chain uncle is not the ' only misfortune that has to tobacco The scent is like musk anc a PI648111 t3 Wl yoor overtaken me this day” said the young man fneudSriss Robinson to be preferred ‘to the rank and bitter last evening” desperately 7 : waa t common tobacco With casca-rill- a fumesjor “Well what is the other? You’d as well chapel” replied Joseph looking 7 in npin surprise ‘I was anxious to hear Mr tell me I am ready to hiear bark it a pipe may be fsmoked in anything now” ctarai Joseph related to her the events of the any apartment without ofienceV A piece to wait on Miss Robinson morfiing at his place of business He ended as big us a pea is enough Jto put in one 1 beueye it is mostly: shop-boy- s and servant-- P by saying— : f ull but manufacturers the —" go to hear'-thranter” “Jit “And so Lizzy by merely answering truth- Eipe-- and mix it with the tobaccogrind: 7 7 1 not clearly understand s Lizzy fully such questions Ji3 have been put to me JirUurni is no ranter and his you hearers are I have been driven forth from my employers’ ALMOST A TEMPEST IX A TEAPOT H ioinpused of all classes from the and office”':v— nobility ':vt Last week (December) when the Prussian troops Sniry clowu to the news-boy- s and street- And serves you doubly right! I think sweepera” you must have been out of your senses'!’’ ex- suspended their march in withdrawing from the nothing of JMiss Robinson” claimed Lizzy flushing deeply at this doable Duchies Prussia and Austria sent a note to the by do von reiterate a waiting-woma- n V folly 03 she would have termed it at this Diet demanding that tlie Gcrman Executive troops ne in this manner leave Holstein instantly “If no patisfaclo lizzy? - Yoti double ruin a£ she felt it to be “It’s enough shonld answer be given within live days further meash® ry ° with me without a cause to ruin your employers business I’m sure angry ures wouldbe taken” Our middle States I mean hat is the matter?” for oneshonldn’t blame them if they were to their rulers gave new evidences of 'their known your carryings bn yon sue you for slander! Aoie 'what ore you to valor Hanover and Saxony of whose troops the - eed notAhmt Executive army is formed felt sure that they I don't! - hear of you'” do?” '77: be attacked by Prussia It is really ridicumeetme with undeserved re-TittvT?’ ' would “God knows! I do not” lous to see what measures were immediately taken 1 in “I know one thing! If you had 'had the in Saxony That country boasts of an unconquerable fortress on the road from Dresden to Prague slightest regard for me you would not have the on the Elbe built on a square are! I suppose' you acted in suen a manner os to bring "yourself blockKoenigstein Suppose you of Cn sandstone The plateau 'lii Robinson have yon not' to beggary within one month of our mar of this hillock has a 1000 aew’’ of about one mile surperfice ' and contains-besidethe necessary building' a wel riage: “Yes COO feet in truth?f’ of a the for small forest of firs’ with the me blame depth “l)o you telling nevr "Well and Jere' needn’t magazine' come powder ex-in exclaimed just soil enough to raise “Oh tn you the truth!” Lizzy the necessary- vegetables' This enormous rock is fort: °® had and better make go treme disgust “Yes I' do blame you! It so steep that all wagons most be raised bymaehin you it “Y Jour lady s waiting-woma- n was sheer madness to tell the troth to your ery and to this place 'of safety all publie fandA y®® insult me!” exclaimed the young customers think they have a right were carried frpmLeipxig end Dresden inchidfn I don’t were and famous crown jewels It cause to to tell the truth to crimei1 iUC“ tone such and a with expect it If I ang7 alarm at Leipzig when the money safe of the great that the 'flippant girl became our customers we might go into the Insolvent General awS PostOfiice was taken away The Saxoni " 6 7 nocre’diteil ono word of Court an soldiers on leave were called into join their flags and ' hories were bought all for femr of a thanrk'a' vintei to her: by Jane Robinson I costtixted-bk to PniMitn inTukm And vnat vu tha end pfltf “e had acteAnpon it to irratifr iier On the 4th instant- the Diet resolved id yield to ag pain £o ho'ldins oa't “w A young man in Austria Who was paying the demands' and already on the assiduous court to the wife of a dyer haa the 6th the Executive troops began their retreat They soil and on the 7th been pajin? attention nusfortune to be caught by the enraged hus- have now all left the Holstein ' to Commi&anes the Diet the of resigned their office 1 kad a good right to think band who called his workmen about him and and gave the Government of Holstein end Lauen-bnryou i woman was in here this morn-b- n without any ceremony the gallant was plunged a into the hands' of the ia in for Schleswis1 i- Yesterday these gentlepassion and said you had' into a' cauldron prepored for imparting a true men Messrs von Lederer- and vonFedlits anlove to herl” blue color to various fabrics' In a second the in the Official Advertiser for Holstein and nounced youth had acquired such & tint that he dares Lanenburg that in their hands was now united “A11® tlid'nt not appear iff public’ His friends implored the government of the Duchies Schleswig Holstein ulTiat'did say it she hinted it” she say?' to his and Lanenborg and that they will for the presentthe aver to restore the poor fellow in the Schleswig town or Flensnatural hue but the pitiless answer ' was : “It continue to reside dismissed immediately the re- has Saxony burg relate what really did is impossible He is a beautiful color and all reserves called in at the begtnningof the work “SP1 and thereunonlie described I can do for him is to change him to a green and thns suspended its martial bearing— (Cor the Liilv ccae Ictvccn himselr ' ' 'r or violet” Alta Cal and Bobtnson good-nature- - : : IhMs don’tr-aeswe- NO ft : ' i - - ur : : ' - -- ( - - 7' V m An-Orlean- -- - ats ' ' ' newly-discover- - ed -- :ed I -- - - :sox - ' ‘ - v - SITX -- i ytl at oth : - 7‘ l- t m twenty-thre- e J- windows pastry passerby who bad read the figures one thousand francs at noon might read one thousand five hundred franca il ENT : - s - IDS fy? - J - - - - the-costl- J ‘T ! Hi? j k - - The staked fa each game upon the torn pf as ace! This for'Daco- is rather ahead we think of anything yet related of Michigan Surveyor-Gener- al own oitr of shoddy or petroleum aristocracy but tab Territory and Lyman of unless means te taken to check the “Cascade of Associate Jnslice for the of Connecticut' kow-long con we discredit’ now threatening ns hope to be exempt from prices follies anj distress Supreme Court for the Territory of Monsimilar to those which prevailed in France during tana ' ’17' the period to which our several quotations point? ow - r I - i E-Muns- on - Pruseio-Austria- n ' The following were confirmed as Judi- ciafufficers for the United States for the ' District Courts of Nevada-- A W Bald- win Judge Robert M Clark"At ttorney 12: Edwin lryineMarshal J Washington r The Ricbmond Dispatch of Friday con- In Paris an enterprising woman Ma- lainsthe folio wing dispatch fromLee: j dame Robert 'furnishes a dinner dailyjo v:i 6000 workmen for five sous each-- her Headquarte rs March 9 slice °f To Breckinridge: Bnjghrports that bilLof fare being cabbage sdupa wine he attacked the enemy yesterday four boiled beef and a glass of TELEGRAPHIC g ‘ i Com-misMri-es Anstrio-Fneeia- - - t'i'r -- - s' tdw B— ? note c I — - ' s — v t i 1 ' a s 5 I - - : ' - - - ' to-morr- r trop-draw- -- “ V ‘ feeb-Aig- h ! J- A 'A--- ‘ - less abama Hunter also argued that the negroes an hour later” would not volunteer anAhosn wedid getr As the came causesererywhere and in all cases would find desert to the enemy who can offer 7 we this that excessive produce like 'results ' issue of paper money and the consequent distresses them better v prices to which the great masses of the French people ' fi were subjected at this period gave rise to a swarm ' 7 Washington 12 of speculators who “made haste to get rich” and John G Nicolay the President’s pri- were successful — at least for a time — in their accumulative efforts Thus we read that “clerks who ate secretary was nominated yesterday but lately arrived in rags from some distant prov- for the post of Consul to Paris to fill the ince now possessed palates so pampered: that their tables must be spread with golden pheasants vacancy created by the promotion of John" n with lake trout amlVith pineapples front the the late incumbent: to the post were ics they tbrongh the streets by twelve Bigelow hones and some of them paid two milliona of of Charge de Affairs at the French courts francs for a waistcoat They were also— to their The- nomination was unanimously con ’ marital credit be lt remarked —so lavish of pin ' " 7'’ money to thefr wives that the- latter would spend firmed- their evening playing cards with a million francs Senate has confirmed Geo D Hill ' I - ' m-J- 11 h ! ' -i t ST! I : - - — ’ - - - he-repli- it f - : - - : : ! -- ht - -- s In'-Franc- " v cab-bage-r-ose SO!' ’ : m E’ - - - DS co-operat- ive ‘ - LLE 1 - maii-fishi- ng Goods : cajf-tureda- nd Jo-aq- A c ‘ j an-stfere- 7 n - - j- U k - education superficial She had been engaged Joseph 3forriss who- - as Ho disputed the ground twin re- from his position took line three n Dejv obstinately and miles from his first ' We ca ptured th reo pieeba of artillery and ' 1 500 prisoners TJie number "of the enemy’s 'dead and wounded "left on the field is large Ours is comparatively small: The troops betad already purcUased the eUU or Thomas haved most handsomely Gens Hill and Of Thi' property consists )ougherty at ljile 0000 seres and was bought for 112000 j - About Hoke exhibited their usual zealand eh I ed i Y- Kinston: and drove him On the ceipt of some very interesting intelligence still in 30tu of January the A A lUdridge vjras' in o'clock two sail was to at ortbat expected the afternoon of that day Everything pertaining to commercial affair was rapjdly pn)iiiigv ahead anl settlers from abroaJ were arriving in : large numbers-- ' The Mormons intend ti start a Cotton colony on that bland and for this purpose they : : mil-lin- er - By private advices from Honolulu fwe " r: tfoxTisfUElf all Gown with the measles” plise sirshould’ntlike to catch it get Thea I who ” refused the said having Joseph r him tossed crown a and then a eniiy his own to the tho bestNQy way Angel and Gridiron to find iis warmest welcome at nusn' He engaged a room where he posited Xiis parcel to remain until the evening and vent to call upon Iiu? Hell was tho niece of a thriving in the next street and the heiress pre- snmptive of the fihdp the business and the : Ci r - rB- - JISTKN 1IOUSK Editor xniles in front of THE SANDWICH ISLANDS Tizzy laughed heartily She was malicious SUE MUNDY the discomfiture to of enough keenly enjoy the abigail when' her fit of laxmhter wixs We have it from good ' authority that over she wiped tho tears from her eyes Sue '' Mundy is not a female as is gener7 looked up and inquired — is :inreolity’ Jerome “Bat what possessed you to tell her that?” ally believgd Hecause sne asked me and I had to answer' Clarka son of Hector M Clark of Simpy ' 77 son County Ky and cousih to Hon Bevtrulv : “llut my goojl gracious alive the truth is erly L Clark also cousin to Tandjr Clark not to be told at all times rtisn' prudent now in the State Prison ' for robbing the Now you’ve made a mertal enemy of Miss ‘mails I He is about twenty-tw- o years of Lyle’s confidential attendant' ana shelf go age of medium female stature small feet and persuade her mistress not to deal at your and hands face beardless and quite handV shopK— or mine either perhaps” v “i think it quite likely indeed Lizzie And some voice soft and feminine— altogether th at is not the only scrape have got into making a counterfeit s© perfect that even this morning cither’’ sighed the young man John Morgan on a certain occasion mis-oo-k “That is qnite enough but what else?” -him for a female ‘ 7 He belonged to ' Morgan's command Joseph related the breakfast scene between himselr and his relatives that ended in his ex- and was with him on his raid through pulsion from their house Ohio His first attempt at deception in “And so dear Liny” ho concluded was played ofi upon his comcause in answer to ah observation that was female attire made tame I admitted that I should not be manding General He was neatly dressed in Bloomer costume wore a fancy milita- quite inconsolable if my aunt and uncle were' to die and that the legacy I expected from ry cap containing a trig of female hair him would help to comfort me for their loss which in long tresses flowed down carehe has turned me oat-o- f doors and disinheritlessly over his shoulders Thus attired ' ' ed me!" he was introduced to his cluef tain by some lizzie did not laugh now She was quite of his comrades in arms as Miss Sue Munsensible of the pccuniaiy damage she herself' as Joseph's wife miglit sustain in the loss of dy who under the irresistible promptings that inheritance tier face flushed deeply of patriotism was earnestly solicitous to with displeasure at this loss- but she took up obtain a positionjn his command’ favorable to the development of her highly inthe tone of virtuous ipdignation os she Ih kbuiued evehv mosdataxd xnunsDAT i J ! K — |