OCR Text |
Show The court house is up to the square. Snow birds have made their appearance. We are promised a copy of the registry lists of Cache County for publication in our next issue. Our citizens awakened last Saturday morning to find it snowing in a very winterlike style. W. L. Webster & Son of Franklin expect to remove their goods into their new store about November 1st. An English correspondent informs us that Elder Geo. (George) C. Parkinson succeeds Elder Jones in the presidency of the Liverpool Conference. District conferences of Y. M. M. I. A. promise to be among the most interesting meetings that will be held in the various wards of this Stake this winter. There are many ditches and holes across or in the sidewalks in various parts of town that are really dangerous to pedestrians, on these dark, rainy, autumn nights. Cover them or fill them up. The next attraction to be presented by the Logan Dramatic Club will be the drama entitled: "The Seven Clerks." It has a unique, thrilling and romantic plot and we believe is new in Logan. On Saturday night last, George Graham, a boarder at the Cache Valley House, fell from the stairs in that building, breaking his arm. One or two steps had been taken out of the stairs, which partly caused his fall. The Journal does all classes of job, stereotyping and blank book binding. Send on your orders. Now is the time to get your fall work done. Our prices are as low as any in the Territory. We guarantee the count. Several of the wooden crossings on Third Street from Main , going west are in a dilapidated state. In one is a hole sufficiently large to suggest a probability of broken limbs, a circumstance which would be a serious cost, when compared with the value of a piece of board. A new meat market has opened on Fourth Street, half a block east of Main, by Enos Osmer, an enterprising young man of the Fourth Ward. The place is neat and tidy and will prove a convenience to the people of that part of town. We have certainly had an unprecedented duration of rainy weather. Scarcely twenty-four consecutive hours have elapsed since Sept. (September) 25th, during which moisture has not fallen in greater or less quantities. Today, however, it looks as though fair weather has come again. A quarrel occurred yesterday near the foundry between two Millville boys over a bet. One struck at but did not hit the other. The first to offer a blow came out second best. He complained and the successful pugilist was fined $5 and costs in the police court yesterday afternoon. Postmasters are required by law to notify the publishers of newspapers, sent to their offices, which are not taken out by the parties to whom they are addressed. Some of the postmasters in this region are sometimes derelict in this duty, occasioning loss to publishers, and trouble between them and their subscribers. A recent dramatic criticism that appeared in the Journal has had, so we are informed, a discouraging effect upon some of the players referred to. Such was not the intended effect of the correspondence. It was written for the good of our amateur actors and contained suggestions which they would do well to heed. An actor or actress who cannot hear an adverse criticism occasionally cannot hope to succeed in the histrionic art. |