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Show NAISDITT & IIINDLEY Are prepared to supply their friends from a GOOD STOCK of - ' .i3 imr 2 bk m. PtlERCH A N DISE. r wmcH. !.'. WILL BE AGAIN AUGMENTED .... , IN A FEW DAYS. '., ." ; TUB . GLOBE WAUEHOLSB, MAIN STREET uiisS2tf. . :r STUBBS& KIRKWOOD, Centre St,, Provo City, RETURN tUftuks to their many frlcnd9 for Patronage, and hope by utrlct attention to business to merit a continuation of the same We have constantly on hand A FULL, ASSORTMENT OF i. Geneva! Mcvcsv(iVsc, CONSISTING OF GROCERIES, DRY GOODO, , EAUDWAEE AND QUEOSWAIt Boots, Shoes, Clothing-- , &c, &c, j and a very large stock of F.ACY NOTIONS, . All of which wiir be sold . LOW for Cash and Produce. ALSO nt our Store in GREAT SALT LAKE (opposite Salt Luke House,) A FULL ASSORTMENT OF sxs as ti--a: svs jx: m. tmi Aud Family aud Fancy ; 1 AT LOW HATES. STUJBS & KIRKWOOD. sSl-t- f i IDE PAPER FOR THE M1LLI0.V. The American Farmer, ThcmPractical Farmers Own Faper, Tlio Olicnpcst and tlio Best AGRICULTURAL AND HORTICULTURAL JIJCA I TJJ-- L JLL Y 1LLI 'STJiA TKI with Numerous Engravings of Farm BulldingH, Animals, Frnlts Mini Flowers. 4 Only Ono Dollar a Year! A GEXTS WAX TED EVERYWHERE. . IVFo Cub Trice, List of Valuable Pr1ie open to ai , &c, Address , - , JOHN TURNER, I'ablisUer and Proprietor, ' Itochesfer, N. Y. . ..SS13W : . MATHEMATICAL SCHOOL. The untlcrttiynctl proposes to open, in Great Salt Lake City, a Mathematical School, in which 1hcfoltowig Hraiwhes iv dt be taught. FIRST COURSE: Common Algebra. . - Pratt's Cubic and Biquadratic Enua-- I lions. . Elementary Geometry. Plane and Spherical Trigonometry, .Surveying. SECOND COURSE. Analytical Geometry. Analytical Trigonometry. Higher Orders of Equations. The Newly Invented Higher Algebra, Ouaternionx, invented ly f ir Wm. Hamilton.) , : Conio Sections. Higher Orders of Plane Surfaces. Dillerential and Integral Calculus. Calculus of Finite DM'erenees.' Calculus of Variations. Dillerential Equations. I Application of the Calculus to the ! Physical Sciences. I Practical Use of the Sextant and Circle of Reflection in Celestial Obser-vations. The School will commence, when twenty students shall bu obtained. The undersigned will furnish a room and fire; but the students must furnish their own seats, desks, and hooks. Hours of attendance from 10 to 12, and from 2 till 4. (Saturdays excepted.) Pratt's Cubic and Rlquadratic Equa-tions can be had at his residence, in the 17th Ward, at $2 50 per copy. TERMS: For any f those branches, mentioned in the First Course, $5 currency per month, or $6 in Merchandize, Produce, or Wood. For any branches of the Second Course, double the above price. Students from every part of Utah, and adjoining Territories, should for-ward their names as soon as possible. ORSON PRATT, Sen. Great Salt Lake City," ) Oct. loth, 1SG7. . """ Florence, G. Parliament is opened. 'Tbe.vpa's speech justified Garibu'di's Mcion in his illegal attempt at in- - surn va3lon, but declared it as inconsistent for tif$p"io hold I,o6se89i,,, 0f Paris. I,arl8) (i the Corp Legislatif, 'Minister EouVr ably defended the Emperor's po- - ffon the Komau quest on He ttJ the unity of Italy Is deal- - Slt bSt it9accompn,hmcr,t Italy Sou never go to lie"ltrmB of ' The fchip Lord Brougham, from the death of 7J passengers K&ollra in the ship, in a 4S days' She brought 382 passenger IS'is attained at quarantine. , Richmond, . The Convention adopted a resolution requiring the members to report wheth-irthe- y are disfranchised by tho action of Congress- - .This movement toward oustii)"- - tlje Conservative member?, will ' give rise to rtrlous trouble. The Convention will probably favor Radical repudiation of debts con-tracted the before the war. New Orleans, b. . The Convention adopted an ordinance foreverprohibitiug capital punishment, New York, C. The 2V('6i''.s special says a number of prominent Democrats, - including John D. Haskiu and Jno. Hickman are in Washington consulting with regard to the candidate for the next Presideu-- 1 cy. The chances of Johnson, Seymour, Pendleton and others, were severally discussed, but they decided to take upa new man, and Hancock was agreed on. Several other political details are said to have been agreed upon. That the prefenco of twenty-fou- r "Mormon" elders on board the ship would soon attract the c uriosity of some of our fellow travelers, we expected as a matter of course; and it was not long before a minister of tho Method-ist Church requested an interview with your humble servant, which was par-ticipated in by several other gentlemen of the first cabin. It would be perfectly superfluous to recapitulate here all the various topics discussed, as they are familiar to every elder of any experi-ence, but my arguments and ideas ap-peared to my interrogators of fcuch novel-ty that, at their particular request, the (list lntti view was soon followed by i many more, each one occupying some-times several hur?;on allot' these oceas-- j ions, however, these Grangers riever vio-lated the respect which one gentleman I owes another, nor made nny remarks in J the lenst indicative of animosity n gainst our principles, polygamy excepted, up. on which latter, beyond my testimony to its divine origin, 1 had declined on the 6tart any discussion , as I had been ent to preach the first principles of the Gospel, which instruction I calculated to adhere to until otherwise directed. jTbc.--e gentlemen went even so far as to request the captain to give us permis-Isio- n for holding a meeting on deck, is which, at the close, the reverend gentle-jma- n addressed the brethren jn words that not very often may have been spo-ken by a Methodist minister to mon"congregatiou,and which did honor to his heart and principles as a man. If the beginning of our voyage pre-sented us with all the indications of a pleasure trip, we were destined, never-Uheles- s, to experience rough weather almost all the way through; and the usual cold spell and stormy weather near the banks of Newfoundland put on extra airs at the occasion of our proach. Rut, to complain of the incon-venience of a voyage across the sea now that you can do it in a steamer in about two weeks, instead of, as formerly, in a sailing vessel being obliged to endure it for nearly three times as long, vouId be unjustifiable even in a steerage passenger, with ship-cracker- s for supper every day, and hard dump-lings for dinner three times a week. Every journey leads, finally, some-where; and so did ours. We arrived at Liverpool, being welcomed on board by President Franklin I). IT!'-htrd- s and Bros. Preston and Penrose. Tims ends our voyage across the sea, and its des-cription, and the material for my next communication lies before me:"Througli England." Karl G. Maeskr. tf'orvejspcmilcnrr. . j From Our Fun ijn Cvrrcxpondcnt. FROM TIIK KOOKY MOUNTAINS TO THE ALPS. j ACROSS THE SEA. The good English steamer 'Manhatt-an" was the vessel that took some of usTraveling Elders across the sea. If some of those who went down upon the sea the first timJ may have realized an uncomfortable feeling in the beginning, it wore oil" when the beautiful summer afternoon unfolded to us the magniii-centseeuer- y of New York harbor, which gradually receding and sinking down into the immense expanse of water, , presented solovelv an asnect that everv- - ' IIerIs'AU, Cant. Appenzall, 1 ' October L's, 1VJ7. J . body cheerfully accepted it as a good omen of a prosperous journey. BepubJicanism, democracy and all the principles of the modern school of, politicians are ji'v.t (y on board a ship. There it lias been foun.d expedient to retain the old monarchical system, I without even any of those constitution-al modifications that have been the yeast in the political bread-bakin- g of Lurojie for the last century. Even the society on board has its distinct caate ' inasmuch as the captain and officers' only with the first cabin pas-- 1 wngers, as the aristocracy of the little1 Kingdom; while the steerage passen-- , Eers, as the plebeians, are left to the care ' ot under stewards, whose attentions are in exact i roportion to the little conside-rations you may feel inclined or able to bestow from time to time. The crew ! i contained as beautiful specimens of the ?emw "rufllan" as the most fastidious1 forlr ofIvater could have wished; A great portion of the other steerage passengers being from the Green Iie, returning thither under various pre-- , tenses, we soon found out some real live fenian3 who seemed willing to go the, l?nStu for the redemption of Ire-- w t owt sir' itasi'otthofirsttime' met champions of independence; fnQtf, revolution, having done something i that line myself once; but I always amik'e "nder the impression that in hrtt ai ai.r? Uot on,y muscle but also ldes a Plan for tearing down Ift?r f ! a9 .ne for builJiK UP again, and calculations for success in fight of plated peace-- are auispensable requisites of a revolution; n mi?Wevcr' 1 observed of the second f,Lrfposition nothing at all, and enSwK 0Dvery little tojustify any tmSfma,MWse in such an en- -' fnref n and bU,y 8hor rise up be-th- e ttn urging from the desert of '".u.and such a country PeS!in,hRbUed l,y a freaaud pros-SS- S wh&' t9 U once hasleen. lxe h.ave Produced the pre- -' quKr1!.0' Ils iabitants would to Vpafe t0 discuss than I have PKOSPECTUS OP THE Dcsercl Evening IVcws. In the course of a few days the under" signed proposes to commence the publi-cation of a Daily Taper, under the above title. We are satisfied that the issue of such a Paper at the present time lis necessary to meet the wants of our subscribers. The Deseret News is the Pioneer Paper of tho whole Itocky Mountain country. It should be a Daily Taper. Our intention is to have it con- - tain four pages, the pages to be of the ',8izo of the Weekly Deseret News. The subscribers may rest assured that the Editor will spare no pains infilling :its columns with all the current subjects jof interest, and he will use freedom in expressing his views respecting them. He wishes each subscriber to get more than the price ofhis subscription is worth in pood, isolid, reliable information. He will have for his aim the promotion of the welfare and various interests of the (people of this Territory. It will be his province to advocate and defend their rights social, political and religious; to make the Paper the fearless exponent of the truth, and the liberal advocate of every plan that has for its object the elevation and true development of the people. The latest Telegraphic Dispatches and current local items will appear daily in its columns. It will also con-tain interesting correspondence from all parts of this Territory, from the United States and foreign countries. Com-bined, as it will be, with a Semi-Weekl- y and Weekly Paper, which are widely circulated, and the circulation of which we hope to still largely increase, it will be found an excellent advertising me-dium which we presume business men will readily perceive. TERMS: Subscription, for one jff, - .10 00 &'jf months,... -- v 6 00 t TJtree moiUh - 3 50 GEORGE Q. CANNON. Great &t!t Lue titji, XM-enile- Vith, 1S07. FOREIGN NEWS. Turkey It is reported on good au-thority that the Sultan is making un-usual preparations. It is stated that fifty thousand needle guns have been j recently purchased by the Turkish War!j Department, while large shipments of rirled guns have been made to theTurk-- j ish forces in Asia. It is also known that the government has been restoring thecitadel, completing the walls, and otherwise strengthening the fort i Ilea- - ' tions.. - ' Maycncc, the famous fortress, by the; laying of a cable under the Khine, hasj jut been connected with the telegraph! network, which places all the fortresses of the Ithino in communication with Uerlin, cr in case of necessity, with the, Commander-in-chie- f of a Prussian army. This will bo of great value to Prussia if hostilities break out next year. j By the new-pos-tal- . treaty w'iitli has bocn negotiated between Belgium and the United States of America, the rate of postage on single letters weighing hall-an-ounc- c or less has been reduced to fifteen cents. . Tho Archbishop of Paris, in a letter to the cures of his diocese, denounces the late invasion of the Papal States by the Garibaldians, . and lauds tho interven-tion of France. Late : advices from TetsiD, China, represent that great hostility is shown to "all foreigners in that neigh-borhood. An English gunboat and an American steamer have been attacked. Serioua trouble was anticipated. Fenianism keeps bursting out in snots all over England: and as far north as Aberdeen, in Scotland, apprehensions have been entertained of trouble from the organization. . . . The pardon records show that all the Kentucky Generals have been pardon-ed except Breckenridge and Btickner. |