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Show CACHE OUNTY CROSS CUTS New Lime for sale at the Temple Block. Je18-tf Work on the new building of Zion's Board of Trade, is progressing rapidly. PROF. HERMAN'S Vermin Destroyer kills bed bugs. On sale at Ormsby's PROF. HERMAN'S Vermin Destroyer cures scab on sheep. On sale at Ormsby's. PROF. HERMAN'S Vermin Destroyer Cures blight on plants. On sale at Ormsby's. PROF HERMAN'S Vermin Destroyer kills mice, moths, &c. On sale at Ormsby's. DAILY arrivals of fall goods are being received at Z.C.M.I. in immense quantities. On Thursday evening, Sept 23d, the play of "Ten Nights in a Bar Room" will be repeated. REAL estate in Logan commands good figures. There are more buyers than sellers. Couldn't have a better sign of good times. An important letter, mailed in Salt Lake on Sept. 6th addressed to us reached here on Sept 13th. A compliment to postal employers BROTHER John Parry has courteously handed us two letters from missionaries, which are crowded out of our present issue to appear in our next. Go and see that fine, touching moral play, "Ten Nights in a Bar Room," to be performed in Logan Theatre on Thursday evening next, Sept. 23d. LAST week Dr. Ormsby amputated the first joint of the second finger of the right hand of a young lady whose home is in Wellsville. She had had a felon upon it causing the bone to become diseased. THE flipper nuisance, recently suppressed by law in Salt Lake, is still in vogue in Logan. Probable consequences: Broken windows, runaway horses, extinguished eyes, and multitudes of other casualties, besides execrations on the head of the small boy who uses it. THE articles named in the list of premiums to be awarded at the coming fair did not include all that is desirable to have placed on exhibition, by any means. Any person possessing any article, specimen of handy-work, or products of the soil, etc., which is suitable for exhibition, should bring it along, and a place will be assigned to it. A GENTLEMAN who has lately advertised his business by having handbills posted about town, complains that they have been torn down by mischievous persons. While such mischief makes work for the printers, we protest against it on general principles simply because it is wrong. It is the wanton destruction of the property of another, and should be stopped. FROM a gentleman who has lately arrived from the terminus of the U. & N. we learn that tracklaying has been pushed forward there lately at a rapid rate, from three-fourths of a mile to a mile per day having been laid. There are less than eight more miles of track to be laid before removing the terminus, and it is thought they will be completed by Oct. 1st, so that the new terminus will be fixed by that time. IN order to close out my stock of photograph albums for the purpose of getting an entirely new stock for the fall trade, I offer during the month of September only, my entire stock of photograph albums at 15 per cent. From regular prices. As my stock of albums is the largest kept in the county and my prices low, this is a rare bargain. J. T. HAMMOND, bookseller and stationer. LOVERS of musical exercises should attend the children's concert, to be given tomorrow (Saturday) evening in the Tabernacle. A chorus of 110 voices, all the singers being under 14 years of age, will render a fine programme, in addition to which there will be a number of duets and choice selections by adult singers, Evan Stephens, Esq., has the affair in charge. He has, for a long time been training the children and we bespeak for the concert a grand success. A GENTLEMAN who has frequent occasion to pass from Logan to Benson, complains of the frequency with which the carcasses of animals are allowed to remain near the road to pollute the air. He says there is one now, near the slaughter house, that creates a terrible stench, the full strength of which is experienced by passers by. Those carcasses should be buried. We believe it to be contrary to law to allow the carcasses of dead animals to lay by roadside unburied, and the owners of such animals are the law breakers. A GENTLEMAN, who, with his wife, came to Logan on the recent excursion, complains severely of the carelessness of some of our drivers. While himself, wife, and little child were walking from the depot to Main street, they were very nearly run over by three different teams, and once when crossing the street they found themselves between two teams coming from opposite directions, that were approaching each other rapidly, and the party were in great danger of being struck by one or both of them, and yet the drivers did not slacken speed. By a great effort, the pedestrians succeeded in avoiding the teams. We can only repeat the threadbare legend, "drivers should be careful." A GENTLEMAN of our acquaintance, a few mornings since, tied a calf to a tree in his orchard where lucern was growing quite luxuriantly. On coming home in the evening he found the calf dead and very much bloated. Investigation satisfied him that eating the lucern, on which a heavy frost had fallen the night before, was the cause of death. It is said that feeding lucern to stock while a heavy frost or dew remains upon it, is very dangerous to the animals. They should not be allowed to eat it till the frost of dew had been entirely dissipated by the warmth of the sun. Those who are in the habit of feeding freshly cut lucern to their animals or who allow them to graze upon it uncut, should remember this. |