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Show Jn another column vill be found j the ad vi'i tinmen t of the Keandina- j vian ball to he given in the Second 1 ward hall r,L-xt Wednesday night. , Tlie b.inie gentlemen are in charge who g.;t up no successful a 1 benefit ball for I'. Sorenson a , i short time ao. This insures a ' J large turn-out. j j It is reported that three millions 1 of dollars in gold is now en route , from Europe to the United States, ' ' to he paid out for our farm pro-j pro-j ducts, whie.li will increase the total to a liitle over 2o ,000.0' 10 for the ! past three months. The American One of i. ur doctors iiif.rms us! tliat it if not a good j lan for news- j p:ipcrti to make mention of every i person that is sick. Ho says that friends read the item? and then call on those indisposed, very often, I by these, visit;-?, causing a set-back j to the patient. A h tur dated at Bear Lake a week ago, conveys the almost incredible in-credible information that the snow has come and the sleighs are out there in full force. The hells jingle and thii bob and the cutter glide through the streets, vainly striving to out-do each other. farm, r jgs along with t he rest of the world, and it takes gold to purchase pur-chase and improve his land. Many old bachelors remain old bachelors because they hear so much complaint about babies. The fact is, that a baby is not one-quarter the trouble it ia charged with being. Any young couple can get along with one if they try. Papa can sit up half the night with it and mamma can sit up with it the other half. What is simpler? Ex. The Primary entertainment given in the Second ward Wednesday night proved a very pleasant affair. The children, without an exception, The people have now nearly all moved into the many residences which have been built this summer. sum-mer. The innumerable conveniences convenien-ces gained in these new buildings will go a long way toward helping the long winter to pass by more pleasantly than usual. . j The mammoth quantities of; grain that are being shipped from this and sui rounding valleys lately, arc beginning to give rise to the prediction that this may cause distress dis-tress next year. No one can foretell, fore-tell, but the overwhelming chances i arc that it won't do anything of the I kind. While taking a b-title of hot ; ti.irpentine from a stove, a Kureka lady had both itrm.-. in .k and breast fearfully burned by the ex- plu.-ion of the bottle. Mrs. Alfred Weaver, sister of Miss KiUie WillianiHon, I'rineipul of the IV'sbvleriun sehool, is in the ; Cily of lionren and wilUpend a l.x weeks v, ith her si.-ter. Our salt industry out at the bike didn't make nmre'n a hundred miiliomiirts in llrigham this sea- son, did it? That business should be work' d f r nil it is worth. j The speakers at the Tabernacle j Sunday afternoon were Klder Willard Voung, who is out laboring labor-ing in the interests of the V. M. M. I. A., and Counselor Chas. Kelly. Theatres and dances arc all the go now. But the young people mustn't permit their minds to he ueeujiied more with these relaxations relaxa-tions than with their school work. A good teacher in the art of painting could secure f large and enthusiastic class of ladies in Brig-ham Brig-ham City. Du.ens of our fair girls are "just dying" to take lessons. les-sons. Our City is improving every year; new houses are being built probably about fifty this year and other improvements made. Every one seems busy from morning till night. Cold went her suggests charity work. You who are comfortable, what have you done fur those who are just as good as you, but have. been beset with unfortunate circumstances? circum-stances? It is said that to immediately place a burned finger against the back of the lobe of the ear is a quick and eUcctive way to remove the pain. Try it, you unfortunate housekeeper. The Taylor-Brough Dramatic Company will hold forth at the Opera House one week from next Monday night. The company, just organized in Suit Lake, is said to be a good one. Be careful about catching cold in the fore port of the winter, as then the membranes of the throat become be-come tender and you are apt to be subject to one cough after another all winter long. Manager M. H. Mix, of the Snringville Independent, was in acquitted themselves in a very praiseworthy manner. Their j parents, nearly all of whom were1 present, must have been proud of; the unusual display of talent. The house was well filled. The officers of the association deserve congratulating congrat-ulating for the success of the affair. af-fair. "Life fur Life," one of the greatest great-est comedies ever written, will be presented at the Opera House one week from today, by our talented local club. It is undoubtedly one of the best, if not the best, comedies ever gotten up in Brigham City and will, as a natural consequence, draw a jammed house. Every one will want to see it. The manuscript manu-script coBt the club considerable money. W. H. Hanson's dairy, near Collinston, is in a flourishing condition con-dition this year, although not operated oper-ated on quite so extensive a scale as formerly. A first-class quality of cheese is being manufactured this season. The dairy has always had an enviable reputation in its production of good cheese. Moroni Mortcnscn, one of the ambitious young men of Bear River City, has gone to Salt Lake to attend the Deseret University. He was an appreciated correspondent correspon-dent to The Bugler. There is a bright future before this young gentleman, and we wish him success suc-cess to his heart's content. y In the delinquent tax list pub- ; Hshed in this issue the Collector wishes us to make mention there may be a few names of those who have paid their taxes, but whose credits have not been transferred from the stub receipts to the tax books. A word with the Collector will straighten that matter. Box Elder county can justly lay claim to the best and most noted hot springs resort in the Territory. It is understood we arc to have an- The work of covering or fluming the irrigating ditches across the sidewalks is progressing rather slowly. There is an ugly hole in the middle of the sidewalk near the Bakery that needs repairs. It has been there for weeks and it is surprising someone has not broken j his leg in it long before this. Whose hole is that? Since writing the above, we see some one has claimed it and plugged it up. Here is the brightest, smartest, quickest, shortest and most sensible sensi-ble thing ever said on the subject of the Sunday-closing of the "World's Fair. It is from thai 1 quick thinker and rapid writer, Editor Quinn of the Butte Miner: ''Every time a vote is cast for the closing of the World's Fair on Sunday, Sun-day, the devil grins. He can catch more souls on the streets and in the dives than he can in a temple of art and science." The Bugler says two hunters from Brigham shot sixty-four ducks with two shots each. Each BRIEF BLASTS OF THE BUGLER. Frh Note Caught on the "Wing From City ami Nolghborhood. "Life for Life" next Saturday. Electric lights by Xmas, sure. 'Rub ! Mortgage blanks for sale at The Bum leu oilioe. Think of it; Brigham City has a school showing of 700 pupils. "Water works or no water works next spring? that is the question. Mrs. C. II. Davis of Samaria, has been visiting friends in Brigham City this week. There is a rumor afloat to the effect that the town is soon to have , a fairy entertainment. Nels Peterson and family of the j Second ward moved into their new residence last Thursday. Wo havo nut heard anything new from the Willard mines of late, how are they coming? CI. R. Williams has taken his family to Coveville, Cache county, where they will spend the winter. B. M. Young is talking of getting up a grand character ball, to be given in the Opera House ere long. Win. Christie, one of the old '"stand-bys" from Willard, was in Brigham City, Tuesday, on business. bus-iness. The other day, a Jew in New York brought $2,500 damage suit against a paper for calling him a Christian. Mr. and Mrs. Judge Johnson of Corinne went to Suit Lake, Monday, Mon-day, to attend the funeral of their grandchild. What have become of those blooded, self-dubbed "Independents?" "Indepen-dents?" Have they pulled up and blown away? Everyone interested in mining min-ing matters should attend the meeting for re-organization, to be held next Monday evening. ''How I sufla," cries the fat hog now-adays when the butcher gets a strong rope around one of his legs and begins to string him up. Eighteen inches of snow on the Divide, near Logan, north of here, is a report we can hardly ''swallow," as the saying goes. At the theatre last Saturday evening. eve-ning. Corinne, Bear River City, "Willard, Mantua and other surrounding sur-rounding places were represented. Several people are complaining of h-siiig s:mo of their fattest chickens of late, by dogs. Some fear the dogs are hite. two-leg ones. The '"silent steed" will soon have to be laid aside for the winter. The s::ow will frig!: ten him oft fir her favorei - t, l!:u sk;'t" and the OK's'.ing sled. town, Monday, and gave The Bcgljck a business call. "We are always pleased to see our quill-pushing quill-pushing brothers. Theatre one week from tonight; don't miss it. The play will go ' with a roar; it is full of comic and startling situations. The duel with knives by moonlight will be intensely exciting. Will Critchlow, the gentlemanly ; young representative of the Con-I Con-I tributor, has been laboring in this J locality this week for that journal. ! He gave The Bugler office a very ' pleasant call, Tuesday. ' It is understood that the great Salt Lake tabernacle choir, 300 J strong, will visit Chicago during the World's Fair and compete for i the first prize against the most cel-I cel-I ebrated choirs of the world. Eastern doctors predict that an- other "grippe" wave is about to pass over the land. Look out for it, that it doesn't look out for you. La grippe isn't the nicest fellow in the world by whom to be caught. So the "fence or no fence" election elec-tion has been called for December 2Sth one month from today. This will "dry up" a whole lot of busy tongues and end many a frisky squabble on field and plain. Enterprising Corinne seems to be rapidly over-taking and on a j fair way of surpassing Willard as j the town of the second largest ' BiGLKii subscription list in the I county. Wake up there, fair "Wil- lard. j Before going to town to make any kind of purchase no matter how trivial just pick up The j Bugler and run your eye over the advertising columns and in this way decide which store you will patronize. There are about 105 women to every 100 men; one-quartftr of the ; population of the world dies before i the age of seventeen years, only j one in 1,000 lives to be 100 years ; old, and only six in 1,000 reach ' seventy-five. j Elder Willard Young has been J laboring among the cities and settlements of Box Elder county the iast two weeks in the interests j of the Y. M. M. I. A. He has j spoken in Brigham, Willard, Man-; Man-; tua and other places, j The bee keepers will hold a con-, con-, vention at Salt Lake Dec. 3rd and ' 4th. Brof. A. J. Cook of Michigan and A. J. Root of Ohio, will be present. For further information, address John C. Swaner. 331. 10th . East street. S. L. City. There should be several literarv societies organized in town this winter. Every organization of l that character tends, to a greater or lops degree, to elevate the morals and to euhlvaU' thft tastes and in-Mle.-t -.fa e -imr'-itv. other like resort next summer, twelve miles north of here, but it will be some time before we shall have one that will rival the one a dozen miles to the south of us. There seems to be very little sickness in the City and neighborhood neighbor-hood this fall, compared with other less favorably located parts of the Territory. For this we should be thankful. There is no affliction like sickness and disease; there is no god-send that will compare with a strong, robust, healthy constitution. constitu-tion. Most people, in cleaning lamp chimneys, use a bristle brush with wood handle or cloth wrapped over a Btick, both of which arc liable to scratch the glass, making it break more readily when expanded by the heat. A sponge the size of lamp chimney tied to the end of a slender pine stick ia better than either. Our correspondents in the neighboring neigh-boring towns are beginning to "show up" right lively again, as a glance at our third page each issue now exhibits full well. We are right proud of our excellent corps of bright buglers, as a better lot of newspaper correspondents cannot be shown by any paper in the country round for miles. The boss tax-kickers will soon have a lovely apportunity to hop on the neck of the old Legislature and spur 'em right villianously deep for their cruelty to animals, in the way of "socking on" the taxes. tax-es. Them's the fellers to kick; and do all your hind-footing it while the Legislature is in session, or close your mugs forever more. Thoso actors in "The Broken Vow" who "flew off the handle" at the mild criticism given them by The Bi'gleu; we take pleasure in referring them to their criticism which appeared in the Logan paper last Saturday. Shorn of its conspicuous conspi-cuous attempt at metropolitan, I'm-from-Salt Lake sarcasm, the criticism criti-cism was quite a just one. The Richfield Advocate says that a matrimonial cyclone has struck the little town of Joseph with such terrible force that eight of its most promising young people have been blown headlong into the eternity of the marriage relation. A number of our young sports rose up in their might last Wednesday, Wed-nesday, it being a propitious day, declared war against the duck tribe, hied themselves thither, waltzed in and made a tremendous slaughtering, so they say. The main wires of the electric lieht plant will run down Pleasant, ' Main and Young streets, north and south, and dowu Forest street, cast , and west. Of course there will bo numerous "loops" branching out : from the principal wires. had a double-barrel shot gun. and fired at a flock of ducks killing that number, or sixteen to a load. We don't like to doubt The Bugler, but they should be careful about springing that kind of a yarn on people, we are used to fishing stories stor-ies and wonderful tales about snakes, but would rather have it touched lightly on the duck question. ques-tion. Manti Sentinel. Ever' drunk seen on the streets in this City ought to be '"pulled" and "cinched" to the full extent of the law. There is altogether too much leniency shown in this matter, which appears to be fast getting worse. If a man gets drunk, make him pay dearly for it. That seems to be the only sure cure, if there is any cure. The time to call a halt has arrived; let the officers do their duty with an iron hand; they will be upheld by the people. The Brigham Bugler takes the Daily Miner's hired man to task for locating Brigham in Weber county. Of course it was wrong to give Weber county the credit of a town which can support a $15,000 opera house and as bright and newsy a paper as The Bugler; but the mistake was the result of an impression that Ogden claimed everything in Weber and Box Elder counties. But then The "Bugler need not be so fussy about that word "city" as to necessitate the use of italics. Bark Daily Miner. ESTSAY NOTICE. The following described animala, if not claimed within ton days, will be sold at public auction at thcestray pound, in Brigham City, Monday, the 7th day of December, 1891, at 2 p. m. One blue roan yearling heifer branded on right side, hole in left car, upperslit in right car.. One red and while three venr old steer, brand resembling on I left rib?, square crop oft' boiii ears, i Brigham City, Nov. 27th, 1S1U. j J. P. C. Johnson, j 2-t Estray Poundkeeper. |