OCR Text |
Show j IHIPS. ' j M?re snow and a'ee1-! a'ee1-! "Hold your dry goods." Arizona want; more women, i A bouncing baby Rabber doll. Tne Ontario has resumed shipments. ship-ments. Not a thing at the police court yesterday. There was a beautiful crop of blue noses yesterday. A d?g fiht was the great sensation sensa-tion yesterday aiternoon. The Utah Southern was thirty minutes lte ist evening. Is it n;,t strange that a man of, icc-se hJibits so often gets tight? The tabernacle choir meets at the Council House at 7 o'clock this evening. even-ing. The trial calendar in Judge Emer-eon'a Emer-eon'a court will be resumed ou Mon- dy. Query: Can a man who loafs around a bet stove be called a grate man? A runaway yesterday from tbe front of a beer saloon. No one injured. in-jured. The Ogdeu Junction of Thursday might be termed the "Fowler bigamy edition." Black eyes in ladies predominate in England, says a writer, Huab&cdi shouldn't hit so bard. The ebb and flow of the tied refers only to the married men who go out early and come in late. Ogden merchants are about to emulate emu-late some of those in Salt Lake, in olosing stores at an early hour. Two hundred years ago tbe term "Miss" was a title of positive disrespect, disre-spect, never applied to good women. A little boy, when reproved for breaking a new rocking-horse, said : "What's the good of a horse lill it's broke I" That waa a very suspicious-looking article resembling a demijohn that a federal official carried up from tbe depot. last night. The Washoe Indian dries his grasshoppers, grass-hoppers, mixes them with mashed pine nuta, and bakes a sort of bread whioh be considers delicious. There aremeasageB at the WeBtern Union Telegraph Office for J, M. Caldwell, May Lord, Miss Kate E. Sbeehan and F. J. Herman. An Ohio man was bo angry when he was presented with twina, that he refused to give them two names, and ao be called them both "John." The man who got in a barber chair, pinned the newspaper around bis neck, and began to read the towel, may justly be called absent-miuded. The Utah BDd Pleasant Valley Railroad delivers a train load of coal in Spriugville every day, at 5.50 per toD, and, it is said, is unable to supply I the demand, by about one-half. Mr. JohnTullidge is painting eorue mountain acecery to order from bis original eketchee, for the Walker Broa. The Cottonwood lakes are the subjects, and tbe pictures promise to be master nieces. Mr. A. Ward, of the Phiiomathian Literary and Debating Society, will 1 deliver a lecture in the M. E. Church parlor, under the auspices of the society, next Tuesday eveuing, at 7,30, Subject. "What Science has Done for the World." All are invited. James Dwyer received by last even ing's mail tbe "Humboldt Library of , Popular Soieuce Literature," a series ! of interesting lectures on scientific topics; Nos. 638 and 639 of the Seaside Sea-side Library, containing the first half of Thackeray's "Pendeuuia," and " Sketches of Young CoupleB," by Dickens. It is a rather strange thing that any action ahonld have taken place in the district court renardiug the Fowler bigamy case, and yet no minute be made of it. Mr. Fowler bimeelf was the source from which the Herald ohtaimd its information, and if be doesn't know it would be pretty bard to find anyone that docs. Dispatch: The travel toward Montana Mon-tana is now quite heavy, notwithstanding notwith-standing the prevalence of large quantities quan-tities of enow that have already fallen in the valleys of Utah. Thursday morning the train goiDg out ou the narrow guge road, took out a freight car fiiied with provisions and cook-ine cook-ine utensils, to bo in readiness in case of a Enow blockade. Man nennt mich Kleino Bulterb'.ume, litbo Kleino Uuttcrblume, Obwwhl ich nie Rowusit warum Doch nennl man liuilerbiumo, micb armo Klrino tfulterblumc, , Suebo Kleine BuUerblume, ich. |