Show f i 1 I f Ts ’V'T- - ? - - I s J ' A young man called TELEGKAPH Y Jerry"--rSurna- me tall light years old unknown— ibout 25 complexioned and of Irish descent i A middle aged man having a family in New full York— also Irish—a little bald-head‘ TOOUXt SUBSCRIBERS:7 t ed ' When we issued the ' first number of the six feet in height' ' t Pailt Telegraph we were as welt satisfied The latter two were machinists— the older y 4 as we ore tiiatye could not continue an engineer the younger a plummery had been tp publish a dly taper in this city pt 910 per intimately associated for some time previous ' annum but circumstances' existed which 'for- to hiring with Mr Greene nt Atchison and ced usto eicept tii&t figure To those who were apparently veiy desirous of keeping to- 'V-jhave prepaid that uhouQt we shall honor our gether massafor the of them to the the and reached deliver Greene Daily spot engagement Mr thatfierfodi but lBereafter our terms will be cre— which is supposed to haye token place ultL— on the Monday VJ for J Saturday 16th TnEDAILY TELEGRAPH: Tne bodies were at once conveyed v 816 0(V One year- t" back to Plum creckf and there decently in' v9 00 tiix months terred inscription boards being placed at the 00JThroe months head of each 'grave - '1 "2 00 V- Onerinpnth' The horsesand goods ' were token off by One week ueliv ejed the' Indians'' £ j x T':- - '15' ocSingle copies Any further information respecting this Fair some tirno wt have been urged to sup--' currence will be cheerfully furnished the our coiflitry sab cribers with a Semi-weefriends of the deceased by air Gireen(b j of tho TEXswRArH instead of the editjon '’ffy THE O YEBLANITld AIL “CT mail ar--' UMlyloJbe Cter sui t the hgemenits - througl iout the Territoiy Ve It is understood that the first stage with have consulted man of our subscribers from the mail direct from'SL Joseph left there on distant settlements now in the' city and fall the' Ut inst and may belooked for here in a with" whom wgj ha' e spoken have approved few days r'" of the change Wc shalTtherefore issue on For some time thereSrill no donbt be con' Monchy next the fir it iminberj of our Semi- - siderable disappointment experienced by cv- ' weekly to all our mail subscribers is the set- r:P Vi rybody who does noi receive everything that : tlemenis north and e aathr everybody expected but they who remember ‘TIIE TELEQBAPII that the mails have been stopped for eome Vill contain tlid eiitorials of the its weeks will probably bultiYate patience and in ’focals the market pice liasty selected stories due time they will no doubt receive all their and the telegrams re rised and will be sent to back mail matter' siye that 4hich the law ' hdbscribeiu at the ol bwi ng rates "j - now disallows yt -- v i illaving heard son ie gentlemen recently exOne year 910 00 j n i "X fi! r monilia aoo - press themselves bn mail matters we have :i T3 ior r thought that we m ght also say 'something ThreeC" A on the subject 25 Single copies The Post Office I epartmentup to the 30th Any subscriber 'l Fliouldyet prefer the last paid the Overland MailCompa-n- y y can of June :Daily went instead cf the one million dollars per annum for carrying liare it continued as efore " Our readcrs will i eodily comprehend that the letter mail' between St Joseph Mo and 2000 the scarcity of paper natcriaHy contributes to Placerville Cal a distance of nearly of the? miles Yery probably a coraputatiou 'thus change ' ' carried! was considered and 600 r A limited number f advertisements will be weight to be pounds was fixed as! the maximum daily and 'the the of into admitted columns summer and winter was j i at pices to be arranged for at the & schednle of days for of arranged In the event the letter mail not 1 Z 1 to-da- d j ru 1 v c fol-lowi- ngi - - T- - - J i S - i k- semi-week- ly - i 'T J ’ PSU-WEIKL- Y ' ' ‘ z ‘ ' ‘ - - ”r Semi-week- ly ‘Office' 11 G - SJL j -Oct CrrTt V 1864 G - THEyiRST EMI-WEEKL- ponnds newspapers to mftkft that "amount were to be taken -- " Y The Post Office Department had a right to demand that tbe contractors carry the if 4 accordance will the' above announce- - mail of that weight and within that time and we here present our first Issue of The the contractor had un' equal claim that no Weekly ELKGKArii and trust that it more mail matter should be imposed! upon his ! f St with gene: ul favor During the ‘ays we jhav i 'been much gratified mules and horses 4f the contractor failed there were penalties! affixed if the postmas-ter- a v iral comu udation of thje change s sent more than the at ha' re attended Conference waight the contractor could refuse stipulated -u'mm cr hi Sk been got pat under to take it ' v V tances circumi but a in ng very The eastern contractor is almost universa' aholi e better-situate-d on4 lly blamed for the stbpipage of the magazines e in eveiything where- -' and books but we jaiid professing to know dr and xttentioQ can dd so In the facts iri the case fail to see that he has j — jre tak3 pleasure' in acknow-- done more than evey business man in his sitolitioiis to the proprietor of uation would have done ’ ews” ts editor foreman and 'y His stages were jdaily loadedjby merchan- " 'forWy courtesies Tte craft is dise root contemplated in his contract-o- ver "proverbially the sul f honor— we ’realiie the stipulated amount agreed qponjhe sought 4 redress and found it The remedy that we MURDERS ON LATEINDIAN ie have to seek is in Congress ' Until the asTHE FLAIN SJ sembled wisdom of the nation provide in From Mr John Y Greene of this city who another manner for the transportation of all can never 5mrrired Wednesday from' the plains we leant mail matter across the plains there v the pariicuhirs of the) massacre ofi his men bo satisfaction Thb Post-Offi-ce Department is never like—telegraphically ahji tranced aboat the date jpto carry oar ly to a$k the present contract fits occurrence ' MrGreeue was in cl large of a train ofcoach-e- s magazines affd books' and if ever wo receive and horses for the Overland Midi Coirfpauy any more of either it wifi be after the Terribut : on account of t ie Indian disturbances tories of Colorado and Utah have made themke received instructions to make selves heard in Congress assuppbsed cthOT ' dispositions el the train Mr G’s GENERAL CONFERENCE ' teamsters claimed to lio taken to jLhis city Conference of the Chorch and for this piupose a mess team was fitted The Latter-daSaints commentip carrying also a considerable quantity of of Jesds Christ of goods belonging j to 5J rG and ethersiffthis ced on Thursday dct 6 at 10 o'clock in the Kyjf and the teamsters— five in number--- - Bowery President Brigham Young presiding The weather started eat to Overtake charnang and quite xwies ahead warm enough i C 'When about 'fourteen miles west ef Pltun On the stand we observed Presidents creek some fifty xniles above Kearney on Kimball Orson Hyide and John Young the Denver road they were attacked by the J Tajrior Geo A Smith K T Benson V Woodruff E SnowTC C Rich L now savages audthe whole party butchered as e st&to-thbodies being badly mutilar F D Richds and A Young Patrmph ted and alj scalped except thatTof James John Smith Dr Bernhisel and a nnmbjer of I others— Presidents Btshopa High Priests Vx-King ' ' defriends of the and SevenUes froinTar and nean v! v For the benefitof thei "After singing Elder John Taylor opened ceased—some of whom we were informed Conference by’prayer the mre residents in the northern mines—we api President HeberC Kimball made a very pend the names and description- - of the interesting address’ Upoii a variety Of streets ffortunate men' So fai' as r Greene could give staring that the congregation were assembled r :! them: to worship God and to hear his word ' and that the people- - generally were imJohnj3mth— about 30 years of ager from declared and in factj were in a better state for proving kt 'Minnesota'-- ' salvation three to one than ever before He 2T years j had been also 26 or ElUot— John aged spoke in behalf Of the poor particularly r if driving stage-q- n the! Lawrence and Leaven the emigrants and Invited the Bishops to ryi look after and feed them them Une worth B President Young desfred the' Bishops JamesS’-iKing— about- years of iage from Of various' wards in ' the city to appoint Ihe ' Atchison whose mother 1 supposed to be in each a teacher to seat the people ’©f -- bis re'I Bannopk CityHontan spective ward in their places in the Bowery ' either-terminu- ids-wh- o J r-v- 1 w-- the-pap- -- : : it y-- - ti I ' J - : ' I s a 'l-- semi-anna- al y to -- - - S El-de- rs f al-ri-dy J " r' - j ' i r -- ' : - ! I y: " : -' : ll - - ’ - - Md also that seats be provided for1 visitors ' from the country and for strangers ' He requested the members of the choir and the band with their instruments to attend the meetings of the Conference and he also invited the merchants to close their stores the 'mechanics their shops and the farmers to quit their work and to attend Conference If he could get "their bodies there by and by they might be warmed up till their hearts were there also' He requested the Bishops when companies of emigrants coin in to delegate a few men from each ward with provisions and : cooking conveniences to assist those who needed to agopd meal’ “Never mind if they apostati- the next minute let them have a good hearty warm meal and a full stomach to apostatize upon" Th° immigrants would generally go away with the teams with which they arrived but he would like them to be taken In and fed and made comfortable in the city for one night He advised every householder to leave some competent person at home while the rest' attended Conference so that their property i :' might be safe from thieves enediction by President O In the afternoon Resident Hyde Orson Hyde delivered ah eloquent discourse in which he couiphred the favored condition of the people of Utoh with that of the inhabitants pf other portions of the Union and of the world He also expatiated upon the duties and responsibilities of the members of the Church and the necessity of fit preparation for the proper discharge of the same concluding with hearers to ‘take care of recommending-hiv their substance” Elder Joseph WYouHg gave some interesting particulars of hi labors and 'difficulties in fitting out with limited means and in conducting the emigration across the plains the present season His account of the panic 'on the frontiers” was very nmnainc and not very complimentary to the coolness of tile whites of that section On arriving with his last trains at Kearney he found one or two hundred traders' freight trains the conductors of which gladly appended them to the Mormon trains for protection the whole then rolling On in close order and forming a moving column ten miles long He then wound up his address with a fervent exhortation to faithfulness - Semi-weekl- i ' '' - - f ' V j a t " -- i 4 : j ' " fc‘ s i Si - Friday 7 The conference at i attendance to-da- y There was a than on the morning preceding After the meeting was opened in the usual manner Elder John Taylor delivered an excellent discourse upon the “first principles" the necessity of being “born again" and some characteristics of the “Kingdom of God” Elder G Bywater made a pleasing address touching upon his late mission to England expressing the feelings he experienced in again assembling with the' saints in General Conference andj ng the gosp Professor Thomas' brass band filled the air with strains of harmony as the assemblage dispersed In the afternoon Elder Amasa Lyman an elaborate discourse founded upon the precept— “Seek ye first the 'Kingdom of God” etc dtolarging particularly upon the trial by riches” which’ events foresnad as closely approaching Elder Thos Jeremy followed in A declaration of his feelings and faith and in a very interesting and sometimes amusing relation of some incidents and resalts of his late mission to Wales and his journey thence across the sea and this continent President B Young related an anecdote of the days of President Joseph Smith and asked if the people had not tne salt within them— if thev did not live so as to know for themselves the things of God what were they worth? He did not core about anybody testifying that he (Brigham was a prophet unless he desired to and tjelt joy in doing it Bat he would pay if he hod not been a prophet to the Latter-da- y Saints be certainly nad been profitable to them When- - Joseph placed it upon him to direct the people ne aid not desire it bat he accepted it as his ' 10 am much-large- r de-liver- od -- ' duty ty' The kingdom mU3tfeventualIy pass into the bands of tne Saints and jiiev must honor it Tlie Elders prayed for the Kingdom of God to come but were we prepared to receive it? ‘ We were not : V In regard to being 6ne in spiritual things we were one for it was not necessary to'preach the first principles to the Saints but we had got to be one m temporal things even as we veto in spiritual things He did not mean tlit we shonld be one in :ht and features but one es of truth and in action revealed any of his pur-ravciy manwould say Amen hnd put 'orthhis hud to bring it about The general authorities of the Church Were presented to and sustained by the Con- ference’ Emanuel' E Morphy and Thomai Jeremy were voted i for to fill vacancies in the High' Council He hlessed the saints and the good in the name of Jesus Christ 'and invited idl the members of the Priesthood to attend a Priesthood meeting in the Tabernacle in the eve-- -- nin -- 4 f'rS'i Satobday® Ms number a portion had so occupied their ime in herding stock and gravitating between salt Lake City and the South that they had been able to ao bat little or nothing in cotton ' : raising FouowingElder Snow Presidcnt ll C Kimball declared it obligatory' upon the poo- mgthen and sustain tne Soutliei pie to mission lie also exhorted the people in the store theif surplus northern settlement grain Amotion was carried unanimously to rein" force the Southern mission In the 9fternoon in pursuance of the mo-io-n of the' morning tho names ' of a num- ber of persons were presented as missionaries to the cotton country —among them a goodly number of the oldest and most sponsible citizens of Great Salt Lake President B Young addressed the Conference touching' pointedly on the necessity and design of amusements: in which ' connection he ofiered some timely bintsT roMivn the conduci of thejfheatre EASTERN TELEGRAPHIC NEWS IS TRICE MARCHING OS ROLLA! Ih SAINT LOULS FORTinCATIOXS MANNED! CAPTURE OF A TRAIJf BY GUERRILLAS! In New York 4 -!jie ThesTimea special says the "impression that Grant bolds CnaptiCa Bluffs and that Fort Dar-ling is flanked is incorrect Our forces have taken from the rebels and hold the line of works on Chapin's farm Which is below the bluffs M New YorM tw The following the Tribune's accouat of-th- e rVB repulse ofthe rebels on Friday About breakfast JiTU time on Friday an ' active movement seen amongst tho reoels A column of about ten toon- ipi sand just from Tetersbure by the cars were seen ibe marc! mg along to join tueir brethren of the pre-vio- hs day's tight rreseniiy the head of the column emerged from the wojnids and moved directly'-upobur works GenWeitzel had been assigned to the command of the corps over night and had ! i changed Hickman's division to the left to prevent Dn a flank uioiemeut h'yiu thau direction itjjaving been found inipossible Vi hold the star fort and ' orao Jhe rmrtain on: account of a very heavy lire front ‘' emi Suxday 5 the rebel batteries on the other side ofthe river bflr Elder L Snow delivered a lengthy discourse As the rebcUapproached they met with as tub-bo- rn Fe advanand resistance but and certain again again they peculiarities of the servants upon ced to the s&sauU and again and again were they Frr Y'God of Kingdom wa1 repulsed and' were forced tv retire? leaving their President II C Kimball made an interest dead and wounded bn tlc field Stannard was hp c figure of the clay and shot through the arm by asharp shootcr while-o- n ing At also' said that about a liun-- the parapet directing the yperations of r his troops tbepo)tter Hemerchants rain command of his division devolved upon Col of dredn and men of -- proper The riv Colling- who finished the fight aa the brave Stan-nar-d had began it ty had been selected to strengthen the southi ern settlements Not that those called were nan Prisoners said that Lee commanded In person nadi North took The Carolina behind desired to south troops reftige but some of go necessarily 'orr and were seen wavmg thcir handkerchiefs their means was wanted to assist in that mis- trees ars in token of amity As soon as they were beckon- -' -sc sion to by our men they left their coven and- ran In the afternoon Elder E T BensoiiT Pa- ed lineal The ground was covered with rebel Into our gniE ' triarch John Young and Elder W W Phelps dead and wounded Ileadqnancirt Annr Potqpiac 2 addressed the congregation No fightiag'has occurred on this line todsy :: After anTnteresting address - from Presi- The rebel fell back to their1 main rfeF dent Young the Conference adjourned to tho line of works which run frOiumottling the head of the worka : near or side of the This to it south road the po6th day of April next sition is very strong and cannot easily be curried - A division of the 2nd xiorps advanced towards UOIIE AFFAIRS the Coynton road over which the enemy wagon their Two were lines to of works Uiy ' Petersburg supplies Ax Honorable Mas— A gentleman' living in found only a (skirmish line opposing' Uen unoccupied You the First Ward with a saw-mi- ll up Mill Creek Kan-yo- n the advance and falling back before our trotfp PfCU line formidable of worka was we believe called yesterday at the Olfice to Near Boynton a very our found behind which the rebels had posted a heavy settle for two copies of the Daily Without the force which it was not deetned advisable to kttack Dav shadow of a hint from us he volunteered to send us We fell back to occupy a safe positionjiariug lost flisn ttnf 400 feet of lumber He thought it Worth the $1G but few wounded in theadrai and on The kiHed wobnded in total prisoners and at prices when we started Of course we acFriday amounts to about- two thousand over half rebe cepted and inscribed E E on the “roll of honor” oY whom were captnrcd- This occurred in consc- - and Who comes next? quence of a gap between part of the 5th and 9th lets corns through which thb cnomy charged and th Glad to br nix —Yesterday wetoet in the sity flanked the 2nd division of 9th corpsl met jthe 3 ChasJ Leonard Esq the acting P H at Aus Headquarter Some firing occurred last nigbt wltliout liapor- Mr Leonard’s ap on ids return from the East : j tant results Wet i J- prehensions of the thieving scoundrel Jamieson ! Fort Monroe ' wor ' boat from' Point1 mail him The the Destmaater at Kearney has made many City reports heavy Our James on Son- -' ' friends We invite him to favor our readers with skirmishing on the north side' of the 4A afternoon and evening' day toe a letter - bn the subject NashvlIIv 3 f W L' Torrest with about threp thousand men was at mo An old Frikmv— YesterdayWe bad a visit from Spring at! Hill nir and that he Rid aa bid gentleman whom we met sixteen years ago designed yesterday p cftjiture reported Cfok ill on the sea coast of the south of England Ilia probabilities are that ther has bi T y The train fromXliattanooga reached here honest face in a crowd did us some service and Sw y without intcrruptiofi an we were pleased enough yesterday to remember 'EL Louis 3 one The latest reliable accounts state that Price is it It is a nice iking for ua all to look back now the t Kolia on ' columns in three under moving " and again Ui Shelby and Marmaduke the centre under himself Death —We regret to learn of the dath of Mo- the letl under Cooper The latter is mainly d for id of half breed Indiansi roni Clayton son of William Clayton Esq Ilis reAbont5U0 rebels entered Union the county seat - kid mains were brought into ther city yestetoafter-- ' pf Franklin county on Saturday- - and ' I we captured ‘ c was 100 bad the ' been taken northward He of about count' militia teaming nopuA had-GOO men under of Washington garrison sick two days ago and after a few hours illness died Col Hall who evacnatej that place oh the ap' -- and : stores -ofthe rebels and took his men garWe apologize to patrons for not inserting in proach ' Missouri river the The unlooked across in this issue their advertisements Information from Jeflersdn City to last night relia ) ' for lengthy telegrams (breed them out the ports alt safe i The depot at Jacksonville on the North liiw6ai -tw railroad was burned by gnerrillas tlis morning ’ EXPECTED IN A FEW DAYS Nothing yet has been heard from Ewing Alt toe rel Vo fortifications around SL Lfjuis aVcmauucd Isl as a precautionary measnrp th( SIX LARG E TRAJYS Louisville' 4 hu A band of guerrillas captured two upward bound freight trains at ten o’clock last jiighV between -OMT Head on the Nash- Richland Station ville railroad They burned 19 cars LADEX WITH AX Louis Till C7-mi The following has been received from Carter’s mi Station Oct IsL We arrived ber yesterddv pjn of I and found the enemy under Vaughan strongly en- OF trenched on both sides of the river After a heavy Si Cannonading and skirraisbibg all the pjn rand An-t- il noouto-day"th- e out driven of the hi euewyiwere 1 will burn the -forts and fled towards Zlolicofier ki nc bridge and dc troy the raifroad from this point to resourres of the EkikfennesM from b prevent being WE ARE NOW SELLING used in support of the rebellion ' A C CILE3L (Signed)' Schofield has inmrmatlob received that Burbri tr BELLOW T H E"TT SU A L RATES bi captured the salt works near Abington Virgin1 ' til With little resistance i r" ’ i I BLLimbr O MAKE ROOM TO The train which left Hmuribsl yesterday morning di FOB THU for the wesL rau oft the track IT miles front Pal U to rayra and was soon afterwards visited by a band of gnerrillas' who searched the train for soldiers j c R Seized the express containing fibout $20000 took 50 revolvers from the poengers and then :eaDK V nelled one employe on th train to fire- - the ears P tl The freight train which arrived shortly after 0 accident was also burned Three soldier were on the cars but through thJ aid of the' passengers WOODMANSEE uniforms forcitizens BRO’S t they tuanaged to change their J o S dress and escaped An official dispatch from Jefferson City says: GO of Col Fletcher’s men ‘ot Twing’s command M v reached Hermann Gen lowing with the - princi-r-put' tht ' ( " of hie troops had arrived at Rolla part ' All is quiet at Jelftnon City no' enemy has-- ' in that vicinity ‘The rebel army between the Pacific and South West branch of the railroad IMMEDIATELY NORTH' OF THE with & train of 200 wagons j is apparently aimingat ' : X-- ' - -- 1 k - vu jl I i -- - - i-- rt - - i m 1 -- -- 1a -- 3-- J -- to-da- to-da- ' the-righ- com-pose- a : j 1 to-da- y1' Fit THE EAST and-Foniia- - ' - 3 MERCHANDISE : N GOODS E W WALKER BROS 83-1- & -- gala STORE " ‘ MEW T JS Jb JS a RyJL O JF JET ’ al - ’ F I CE The Best atof Ooods9 FAIR PRICES J A V In ' our - 8tock toQl be found GSNEBAL ASSORTMENT OF SfDAPIjE' AND DANCY i This moraing tbe qssembled multitude in Jthe Boweiy was addressed by Elders Richard : DRY G0PDS j B A missionaries returned Bentley Shipp MADECLOXHI1VC and Erastus Snow— the latter giving an ac' Vj :HATS CAPSt &c &c count of affairs in the Cotton: country and qustity of heavy Sheet Iron for aaled f urging the necessity large accessions there of enterprise and capitalin order to make cot-to- n DISSOLUTION OF COPARTNERSHIP rairing— for which mainly as he nuder-stoo- d firm heretptoreaxietlng undw tb stylejof Iw- the colonies of Southern Utah were rriHX Cot ta this day diMolved - The bad-wi-ll m Newman be emtinued at to eainehMM hjr their formed—ra success Not more than d Seott Karr 4 Go by whom nlso the tnuV ofthe numberwho were called two years ago o efn their eedeeeeeoee wfll be eettled 'i-'L'e tyfiept r Of aud soutb P0WIB4 06" raMAN hqd actu&lly responded fttf togo BEADY : ' ‘ fe 62-tfK- one-thir- l - 1 c£ The Pacific roa(l-f-a tepocted not materially IqJiH ' ed but the South Branch! almont entirtlysia the hands of the rebels- - The depots and other railroad property at Saint Clair Sifiliran Harrison Cabs and the bridges across theMenimac have been burned'and nearly aH the gbods in Franklin have been takenby the rebels and many private dwe! liifirs plundered Ironton mid Arcadia ha completely gutted and Irondale and tPr ally sacked after Price's Chief of stall officers had assured citizens that prtva ' ? would be respected - A dispatch from Cape GTtordeau say Iyer commanding there has and sent a force of Bloomington cavulr the country in all directions r ' ‘CineL ‘j Gen Hooker has relieved Hefntzlemai sumed the command pf the Northern Dei : : New X The Aspinwall steamers are hereafter to W: aished with naval convoy I The North St ester y day accompanled by the gunboat G The Hnald London letter says gigantic p are now receiving signature to go to thePr ofthe United States praying for peace TI probably receive a million of signatures Prominent Poles-herdeny the statemen c r 1000 Poles’ are to be forxdraed the ConfeC my i The Tribune’s Shenandoah special says sc i had been :tbe pursaitthatwe captured the n II -- e vu 'j'' f- ' U'l'' : - - y : I v-- v vi - f- ' - red ap-pea- sr “J ts n t rv-- ---' :v:- b on - y ' I on Be x’ : ' r : - ' A y -- ft" TrTT October io6i nxosro&irjipRN7SGt "v-T- -- ! ' - V I r K ’ — SEMI-WEEKL- 1r ' : i 5 - THE s V v ' s'' - ' £ t : ? - ' 7:1 -- f ' ! ' ' IM ‘ f: 1 -- I? f r " |