OCR Text |
Show Subscribe fur Thk Bt'i.Kit. Ytstcrday, Postmaster A. If. Snow whs smith on business. There an over oUO student? in attendance at the University of Ttah. Forsn. P-'.'::.L:y whip. Left at ; Biolku olli.u by Eugene Wade, f A good many young people were at the masquerade ball Christmas night. John Ilorsley was in Suit Lake City, Thursday, as a witness in the election muddle. j Several of the district schools of , this city participated in enjoyable dances this week. Get a "Punch'' at Eddy's Drug Store. t A nr,r(in nff'nmnniiv T"l o-M mil On Christmas day, Mrs. Zhia ' Wool ley of Salt Lake, gave birth ! to a girl b.ihy. A valuable find of onyx is report- , ed near Manilla, IVx Elder. Fill-' i more Progress. 1 ill Ci. Fai rell has been appoint- ed U. S. Commissioner in Logan. Congratulations. j The stockholders f the II. C. j Poller Mills will hold their annual j meeting next Tuesday. Wednesday evening the young people of the Second Ward had a j jolly dance in the ward hall. 1 The stockholders of the Prigbam City Co-op will hold their annual meeting M nday. January 7th. S . L . Miller has moved from Mink Creek to Marvsville. Idaho. r.,tu. n Christmas afteraoon and gave a 1 highly interesting street drill. 1 A number of the newly elected county and precinct otticers have received their commissions of elec-; elec-; tion lately. The inuch-talked-of iron plant will be built one mile south of Hot Springs. The site has been definitely defi-nitely settled upun. J. G. Smith and wife leave Monday Mon-day fur Brigham City to spend the holidays among relatives and friends. Preston Standard. Oti Dec. ISth a St. George, Utah, correspondent was out gathering roses fmni his lawn. The weather was warm with occasional pleasant showers. Vanti:i. Load of good straw. Apply at once at 13ugu:u office, f In placing your advertisements, bear in mind the fact that The lii'oi.KU has more than three times as manv readers as any other paper in the county. f Fouxn. In Boxelder can von, a where The Blglku will visit him each week. A happy New Year to all our readers; may peace and prosperity rest upon each home that harbor? a Bugle it. Mr. and Mrs. Thompson, of Brig-ham Brig-ham city, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. I'eck this week. Malad Enterprise. Arthur YVixom of The Bugler's mechanical department, returned, Tuesday, from a visit with relatives in Salt Lake. Christmas day passed off quietly quiet-ly in Brigham. All the business houses were closed. The day was bright and crisp. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Bowring have been in Brigham City this week visiting Mr. and Mrs. II. E. Bowring. Bowr-ing. Henry has also been in from Wells, Nevada. This week Miss Hattie Doremus and her brother Henry of Salt Lake City, have been in Brigham City visiting their relatives, Mr. and bag of books. Left at Bugt.ek office. D. L. Eddy, school teacher of Terrace, has been spending holiday week with his family in Brigham. lie expects to return to his labors tomorrow. R. H. Jones has discovered a silver mine at the lower end of Dunn's canyon, near Brigham City. A 3say 3 run 20 per to n . Ogd e n Standard. Hood for Uicy. . ; The Stake Sunday Schools will give a grand concert in the Brig- I ham Tabernacle Saturday eve,, January 12. See their ad and the j program in today's Bt'or.EU. j M. W. Snow, the dentist, was an out-going passenger on Saturday's j stage fur Salt Lake. He mado many friends during bis short visit here. The Lodo, Lamar, Nev. A long pole at the top of which the weather signal flogs will float, has been erected on the jail building. build-ing. The signal service boys seem to hit the nail on the head nearly every time. Miss Eugene llecder. a resident of Brigham City, and one of Salt Lake's young ladies, Miss Isabel ltomney, are on a short visit of ten days or more, with the anticipation anticipa-tion of enjoying some of Brigham's skating and a few of the balls. Several young runts who think U's being a man to get drunk were s?een on the streets, Tuesday. They ought to have been clapped into jail before they could walk ten rods in public. Too much leniency is shown such characters. The harm- Mrs. E. V. Dunn. The Co-op adjusters are still hard at work. They will probably settle matters by the forepart of next week. The store may be opened in ten days or two weeks. The loss to building has been settled at $1,100. That" part at least is placed extremely low. The branch house of the Brigham City Co-op is in a flourishing condition. con-dition. Its general manager, T. M. Evans, expects to make it one of the best paying institutions in the county. It now ranks among the leading business houses in Rex-burg. Rex-burg. The future of that business is unquestionably great. Uexburg Gazette. John T. Rich was examined at length yesterday before Referee H. E. Booth, as to his bill for services as trustee, in gathering and caring fur the sti'ck involved in the suit of the State Bank of Utah vs. Put-rick Put-rick Ryan, the Ryan it. Ream Cattle Cat-tle Com pan', ai.d others. Mr. Rich's claim amounts to about $5400. Tribune. During the past four weeks we have been neglecting the local news p?rt of the paper in order to rush the work on 400 copies of a 50-page booklet we have been printing. But as these are now finished we promise our readers a larger amount of home news hereafter. here-after. This week a Buoi.kr reporter was in the store of one of our heaviest advertisers. "We buy but lit NOTES OF THE BUGLER. Contribute to Tn k B u g i. k it 's "item box."' Henry Wiht was down from the Teton country this week. Fresh oranges, lemons and ba-nunas ba-nunas always on hand at The Bakery. Sidney Biddle has returned from Preston, Idaho, where he was working work-ing for awhile. Mr. and Mrs. Nephi Anderson buried a little baby, only a week b-wipo1c, Sunday afternoon. During the past, eleven months,1 Salt Lake City !ias expended $919,-H.'ili.St). $919,-H.'ili.St). The receipts including bond sales were $1,108,339.21. A year's subscription to a good magazine makes a nice Xinas or New Years present. Subscribe through 1). L. Eddy & Son. f C. K. Snow received a letter last wci'k informing him that a disastrous disastr-ous lire in the Denver News office had destroyed his MS. of "Love's F- iters." Mrs. C. L. Savage and Misses Venice and Stella Pun ford of Salt Lake, came up to the masquerade hall, returning bright and early ne:;t morning. tie now that is not home-made goods," said one of the clerks. That is the right kind of policy that will result in the building up of our Territory, and ought to be followed, as far as possible, by every merchant in and out of Brigham. Brig-ham. And the people should ask for the home-made article every time they wish to make a purchase of anything manufactured in Utah. Buor.iins will be wrapped ready for mailing at all times at this office, and we will send them to any address ad-dress in the United States for 5 cents a copy. Leave your nickels and the names of your friends at this office if you want them to have the Brigham City and Boxelder County news. f Every farmer, stock raiser and fruit grower in Boxelder County should be a regular reader of the American Farmer & Farm News, one of the most largely circulated general farming journals published in the United States. Remember it can be had absolutely free by paying t lie regular subscription price of Tin-: lh;r;i,Kit in advance. ful effects are apparent. Speaking of Utah, the Age says: Whatever millions of gold and silver sil-ver may now be extracted from her mountains to be pointed to with pride as the values appear in tables of statistics, the fact remains that her true greatness, her abiding prosperity, pros-perity, have sprung from and are based upon the small farm watered from the irrigation ditch. A slick swindler is making the rou nds of some eastern towns with a brand-new swindling scheme. He offers the prospective victim $1 for the exclusive right of painting his advertisement on the farmer's barn or fence. The victim signs a receipt, re-ceipt, and in a week or two he i& sure to receive a notice from the local bank that they have his note for a good sum. The people of Utah claim for their Territory that it contains every known mineral, and that the richness of such deposits, coupled with its capacity to produce so wide ; a range of fruits, grains and forage j in immense quantities, constitute i such resources that if the Territory j wore completely cut off from Ihe! j rest of the world, she could slill ! j sustain her citizens in the comfort- j j able enjoyment of all the necessities , j and luxuries of civilized life. Age. j It is almost four years ago that ! the Pappoose heg;in its career as a '. representative of Uintah County, 1 'Mrs. Kate Jean Uoan, editor. It; j was a little litre? column a flair, hut : ! its editor prophesied that it would , be a big chief some day. Mrs. , Bonn sold the plant at t lie end of I the first year to the present man-I man-I ager of the FjXpress, who being an 1 old bachelor, did not like to he : : guied about his P:ippoose by tlio brethren of the prev. changed its j mi me. Vernal Express. ; Hazel, the pretty little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. .lames Campkin of the Second Wurd, was buried Monday. Mon-day. The bereiived parents have the heartfelt sympathy of their many friends. The Territorial Insane Asylum is badly in need of cash, and the treasurer was last week instructed to borrow $oOO). The asylum contains "209 patients 115 males and I) I females. John I lorsley is the proudest man in town this week. A tine little youngstc- arrived, Monday. J. II. Jr., and mother doing fine. This is John's first and we extend hearty congratulations. Miss Mattie Bracken, formerly of Kansas, hut now school teacher in Salt Lake, is visiting in Brigham with Mr. and Mrs. John Kvans. The lady is delighted with Utah and it.i climate and will probably make (his her permanent home. |