OCR Text |
Show LOCAL LINES. Conference is coming. Subscribe for the Leader. Providence theatre next week. To be successful in business advertise. Do not ask any more, Who is Utah s Governor. The U. & N. pay car makes everybody happy. Every train on the U. & N. is now running on time. Diptheria, of a dangerous type, is not unknown in Logan. Read the notice to land holders published in another column. Under the Gaslight and Lancashire Lass at Providence. Phil. Margetts will make you laugh at Providence next week. A Fine pair of antlers now adorns the front of the Logan meat market. The Quarterly Conference of this Stake will commence Saturday, Jan. 31st. A Handsome appearance is now presented by the new round house at the depot. Read the notice to Seventies and Home Missionaries published in this of the Leader. Owing to the illness of Mr. Bullock, there will be no theatrical performance at Providence this week. Two boys were yesterday brought before Judge Cranney and faced $3 each for creating a disturbance. The U. & N. pay car went north yesterday. All the boys are by this time as happy as mountain oysters. Utah s new Governor is solemnly declared to be the handsomest man in Kentucky, his native state. For a few days the boys had to suffer the deprivation of having no good snow with which to attack passersby. George Bywater, the skillful painter, has got a new son; and now, by George, he don t take Water for anybody. Is the anniversary of Bobby Burns birthday to be celebrated in Logan? Are the Scots going to allow the 25th of January to pass unnoticed? Copies of the two issues of the Leader, containing the very interesting letters from Apostle Moses Thatcher can be obtained at this office. Several severe snow storms have recently been experienced along the line of the U. & N. R.R. but none of the trains have been delayed thereby. Measles in Millville. There are already not less than 20 cases in that village. Several families are seriously afflicted by having all the children attacked at once. Don t ever let this fact slip your memory that the job office of the Junction Printing Association does some of the best and cheapest work in Utah Territory. To the party who wrote A Warning: It can, with very few exceptions, be stated that any person who sends anonymous letters relating to private individuals, is either a fool or a rogue. Persons arranging for balls should not fail to call at the Leader office and order some pretty tickets printed. All the newest styles of paper, cards, &c. and the cheapest and most fashionable work are warranted. On Tuesday last, in front of Z.C.M.I. two youths jumped astride an untamed steed, and for the space of twenty seconds, spectators witnessed a performance equally as interesting as that ever given in a circus. A pitched battle took place last Tuesday on Main street between a number of white youths and several Indian boys. The missiles were snow balls, and the contest seemed to afford considerable sport to spectators. Phil. Margetts and the Providence Dramatic Company will play Under the Gaslight, and Lancashire Lass at the Providence Theatre, on Friday and Saturday evenings, January 30th and 31st. Jan16-3t Joseph E. Wilson, Esq., traveling agent for the Logan Leader, will visit in turn all the settlements of this valley, for the purpose of making collections and canvassing for subscriptions and job work. Be courteous to him. On Tuesday a train of one open carriage and four new top buggies, in charge of several men, and accompanied by a number of fine horses, passed through Logan on the road leading north. One of the buggies bore the legend For Sale. Deep, dark mystery. On Saturday last, a horse attached to a cutter dashed down Third Street at a terrible speed. The cutter stopped in a dilapidated condition against a post in front of Goodwin Bro s store, but the horse and shafts went flying on. Nobody knows where it came from nor where it went. On Wednesday morning a man who was working at the Sand Bank near Logan discovered three Indian skulls, and a basketful of other bones from the bodies of savages. They were very much decayed and gave evidence of having been imbedded in the soil for many years. Doctor Norcross has been very ill for some time past from the causes stated in last week s Leader. So dangerous has been his condition that on Sunday his friends became very much alarmed. Yesterday he was very much improved and a strong hope is entertained that he will soon entirely recover. Ezra D. Carpenter, Esq., Manager of the U.O. Foundry on Saturday last met with an accident which caused him considerable pain and disabled him for a few days. He was walking through the snow and pulling a casting weight about 300 pounds a part of one of the new U. & N. R.R. stoves, when he slipped and casting fell upon his foot bruising in a painful manner. There lives in this locality, at least one beautiful, young unmarried lady who wishes to lose the benefits of none of the privileges accorded to her sex during the one year in four. She made a proposition of marriage on Friday last to a brilliant young gentleman a trusted employee of the railroad company here. As he accepted, and the engagement was proclaimed before several witnesses, he probably will not long remain a bachelor. |