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Show I f v ruin Christe:i:ien and Mi.-s ; I.Tji.e II un.:ikfr, dauhliT of j Hi.-iiiop Allen 1 1 u p. s.ikt-r of Fuir- , vii.'-.v. wiTf married ut the I.;piu Temple tins week. I It is churned that the Eiffel i tower in Pari attracts so much electricity as to cause great ch.'iidi-ness ch.'iidi-ness and an increased amount of rain in that vicinity. The nxt attraction at the Opera House will Be '"The Convict's' Daughter," by our talented home company. Every one seema anxious anx-ious to fee them again. Councilman II. L. Steed and wife will give a pleasant house-warming house-warming next Monday evening at their handsome new brick residence resi-dence on Forest street. Don't advertise in The Bitjler unless you wish to do some business, busi-ness, but if you want a return for '.ray eiitin-iy out -l place. Tl.ux-must Tl.ux-must be a space fur people to p;r:s from aUl.- t ai-le without disturb- . ing seated spectators. It is understood that Frank Bow- ring, son of Mr. and Mrs. 11. E. j Bowriug. will soon return to Brig- j ham to stay here permanently. lie' will make a valuable addition to our home dramatic club. In his ! line. Frank is hard to beat. j A rock bridge is being placed I i over the big creek south of the Sec- j oud ward meeting house. That is: a commendable step and the work j of improvementought to be carried a block further east and another, good bridge placed across the same creek. Samuel Young, one of the jolly old-timers of Three Mile Creek, called at our oilice Wednesday and paid for his Bugler up to 1893. .-;.vs. in "hi-, v.'iv.g up" (.iiltnore's , 'onciTt: ''Last Saturday night our I opera Louse received iv real dedi- j cat: -n and it was at the hands of : (!ilmore and his famous band.'' j Tuesdav, at least tifu-eu teams j were seen unhitched and feeding on Main street, between South , and Forest streets. This is the principal thoroughfare of the City, j jet it was being converted into a repulsive old corral-like place as fast as animals could do it that daw They should all have been ''fired" to Market square. Tub Bt GLER brag3 of a potato , dug near that town which weighs 4 pounds and measures twelve inches smallest and twenty-eight inches largest circumference and actually weighs four and one-fouth pounds. Potatoes are cheap this year, and can afford to be large Theatre ni-xt S;iUird:i v: aUenioon matinee and evening p-rforiii:une, by tiie home company. Don't tiii-s , tli' in. ; The claws of" a bird that babi- . tuallv riKists, are so arranged that' it e;innot fall oil' the penh l,ack- j ward. j Scandinavian Conference at one , o'clock at the Tabernacle this after- j noon, a, id again Sunday morning j at ten. j The Richfield Advorate is coming ! to the front. It hurt abolished its patent innide and assumed a liveli- j r uir. The coal man is tjuiiling. lie realizes tliat winter is drawing nigh. The ice man has gone into hit. hole. There were scores of pretty girls at the ball last evening. Some of the dresses worn were strikingly handsome. j "Grandma" Card is over from ! Logan visiting Mr. and Mrs. James llywatcr. Mrs. By water is her! granddaughter. ; Remember the matinee next Saturday afternoon by the home club. Let all the children attend this performance. The cool weathqr is somewhat suppressing carriage riding. In about live weeks the sleigh will be in great demand. Jupiter, the splendid leader of the starry hosts, is still our cvtn-ing cvtn-ing star, while Neptune reignB king of the morning. Assessor D. P. Burt is building a frame addition to his residence in the Third ward. Nothing like building up the City. Young's street, west of the Opera House, is being graded. That old pond-hole ought to have been tilled up twenty years ago. Wo havo had no 'Irish lemons" sntaking around yet to ''knock out" the Jumbo spud, now on exhibition ex-hibition at Tub Bugler office. A dancing club has been organized organ-ized by a few young men of the they re a job lot. rark City Muitr. A publisher who "picked up the trade," on making up the forms for the first time, got a marriage and grocer's notice sandwiched so as to read: John Smith and Ida Quay were united in the holy bonds of sourkraut which will be sold by the quart or barrel. Mr. Smith is an esteemed codfish at 10 cents a pound, while the bride has' many spare ribs for sale at a shilling a pound, Rev. Brown officiating. Parents should, as much as possible, pos-sible, know their children from infancy in-fancy up; should strive to win and deserve their confidence and love; sh6uld study day by day and year by year, their characteristics, then-traits, then-traits, their weaknesses, their heart centers, and treat accordingly. Make home the pleasantest place possible for them. Be not harsh or severe, but firm and authoritative in t case of necessity, not in anger ever j but with gentle dignity. your money, this paper is the proper way to reach the public. A number of new names have been added to our subscription list j lately. Our paper seems to be ; giving general satisfaction and is ! appreciated by the public. This and the succeeding three or four issues of The Bugler will be ; of great service to the advertisers, : as we will strike off and send out many extra sample copies. Look out for your stock; the Marshal is a dangerous fellow when he finds loose cattle and horses roaming roam-ing around the City. The streets must be kept free from them. A number of bogus silver dollar pieces have been detected in town the past few weeks. Look to the kind of"monish" with which you're filling your holiday stockings. Is anything being done toward to-ward the accomplishment of the water-works project? Now is the time to start the ball rolling if we are to have them next spring. Several new actors will take part in "A Celebrated Case" next Saturday. Satur-day. They are, Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Dunn, B. F. Booth e, and Misses T,nvrm PpIvpp find Rpvinn. Mnrlspn He says there is no paper like The Bi'glek and he wouldn't care if he was paying for ten years in advance, instead of two. Once again Elias Jensen is haying hay-ing lime burned at the gas wells west of town. This business is not being operated this year on a very extensive scale, but it is proving beyond a doubt that linvi can be burned there with profitable success. suc-cess. Dr. Williamson returned from' Payson, Tuesday, in n critical state of ill-health. It is to be hctped the fresh, bracing air of Brigham City will soon enable the gentleman, who has been quite feeble for years, to be out again. The gas-fitters in Ogdcn are out on an inconsistent strike. They refuse re-fuse to work and refuse to give cause. The acts of some of these unions would make an interesting chapter in the old English novel: ' "Put Yourself in His Place." Two American bicycle tourists are reported to have recently made the ascent of Mount Ararat. This is gratifying as an example of the enterprise of our young Republic Repub-lic furnished to the oldest people City. They propose to give week-1 ly balls at the Second ward hall. 1 The operation performed on the eyes of the little daughter of P. F. Mud son, at San Francisco a short time ago, proved very successful. Brigham City can boast one of the most warm-hearted and appreciative appre-ciative theatre audiences in the Territory, and we are proud of it. Monday, the gipsies furled their tents, and their long train of wagons was seen moving to the outh, probably seeking a warmer clime. The Teachers' Institute-' will be held in the First ward hall today. The program to be rendered can be found in this issue of The Bugler. When shall we have the reservoirs reser-voirs in Box Elder canyon to save t he m il 1 ion s of gal Ion s of water which are running to waste every winter? Hereafter, our business directory, which is commented on as being a valuable guide to strangers visiting visit-ing this City, will appear each issue. The fame of our big potato is going the newspaper rounds of the Territory. All are amazed at the size of our four-and-a-quarter pounder. Matinee and evening performance next Saturday. Every one can go now that the prices of the Opera House have been reduced to 50 and Most of the good housewives of this City have been taking advantage advan-tage of the pleasant weather of the past month, and now nearly all have their homes spick -span clean. Reports from all parts of the country show that business, though interrupted somewhat by the elections, elec-tions, has been healthy and large in . volume. Dun's Weekly Trade Review. Re-view. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Strong are up from Ogden today, visiting Councilman Coun-cilman James Pett and wife. Mr Streng says he's going out today to put a car load of ducks to flight. Improvements on the Hot Springs resort, twelve miles south of Brig-ham, Brig-ham, are going on continually. The new management is bent on making mak-ing an enviable name for this popular pop-ular place. Only six weeks, and Brigham City will be lighted by both gas and electricity. How does that suit you non-progressionists? and; of course, there are such people now existing. The new millinery establishment, opened on Main street last Tuesday, Tues-day, is now neatly arranged and in good running order. We wish the ladies who have the enterprise in hand, success. What an incomparable bevy of of the world. An editor wrote a ball room pun' saying: '"Her dainty feet were encased en-cased in shoes th.-t might have been taken for fairy boots." But the blundering compositor made it read: "Her dirty feet were encased in shoes that might have been taken for ferry boats." Brigham City is blessed with a profusion of chrysanthemums. Nearly every home has its flowerbed flower-bed which is incomplete without this perennial. After all the other-flowers other-flowers are faded and gone, these brave little beauties watch and wait the coming of the snowflakes. The well-known firm of Browning Brown-ing Bros, of Ogden, with branch house at Salt Lake, is steadily pushing to the front. In the line of guns, pistols and all kinds of sporting goods and athletic supplies, sup-plies, few firms in the West can compare with them. Read their ad. in this issue. It seems rather strange, but although al-though 20,000,000 peasants in Russia Rus-sia are literally starving to death, yet they are exporting more wheat this year than last. They claim a stoppage of these export ations would injure their trade, doing more damage than the famine brings distress. We are pleased to inform our inanv Corinne friends that we BRIEF BLASTS OF THE BUGLER. rith Pfottia Cnnght on Ui Wing From City nml Ndffhborltooil- 'The Convict's Daughter" N;xt Saturday, November 21st; Matinee and evening performance. perform-ance. Thanksgiving is not very far off. Large flocks of gecBe are reported near Bear River City. See the new notices in our "special column" this week. The Co-op is oiler ing special bargains this week. Sec their ad. Lawyer Coombs has moved his law-ollice a block down the street. , The superb ball room in the Opera House was opened last evening. even-ing. How long the nights now are; the sun goes down before the day seems half gone. Thk lU c.i.Eij and the Demorest's Family Magazine for one year for only $.1.60. 25 cents. The theatre tickets have heen reduced re-duced from 75, 50 and 25 cents, to 50 and 25 cents. So all can take in "The Convict's Daughter" next Saturday. The man who hasn't yet paid his poll tax, must have been in his hole. The Road Supervisor is diligently dili-gently running down all such delinquents. de-linquents. Miss Sarah Rich, daughter of Councilman John T. Rich, came home from the Loun college last evening to spend a few days with her parents. Various predictions arc now afloat as to the kind of winter we are going to have. We shall be able to tell best next spring about this matter. t Bear River City boasts the coziest cozi-est district school house in the county. We have none in Brigham, Brig-ham, we arc sorry to say, that will compare with it. Better get all your apples gathered gather-ed and securely packed in cellar or pit, or old Jack Frost will drop down one of these odd nights and bile a hole in 'cm. vVU of the girls around town were grumbling with a prodigious grumble grum-ble this week at Gilmore because he had so many ''horrid, ugly men" in his band. ! The sheep will soon he moved 1 from the mountains to the winter ranges out in western Box Elder. The first snow storm will drive them out pell-mell. Miss Virginia Snow is the drawing draw-ing card of the home dramatic company next Saturday. Miss Snow v. on fame on her western loveliness all the beauty of Brigham Brig-ham City collected together would make. The City of Homes is noted for its many pretty girls, therefore it deserves this note. Now's tho time to begin to pull for the Holiday trade through the columns of The Bugler. The merchant that doesn't advertise extensively runs chances of losing considerable business. One of our Three Mile Creek friends was in to see us Tuesday. He said he really couldn't live without the cheerful Bugler in his house. That's the way we like to hear our friends talk. Several young men of this City make quite a smart little sum of spending money every fall, by killing and selling the ducks and geese that feed in the fields and sloughs west of Brigham. It is understood that several mining min-ing claims have been located in the vicinity of Plymouth and Coll in -ston within the past few years, but nothing has been heard of them of late. Is there anything in thorn? It is 6aid that gasoline fires can be quickly and effectually put out with common wheat Hour. Water should never be used ; it spreads the oil and fire, increasing the , danger, while flour absorbs and S smothers like magic. j I If you are troubled with fleas, place a sheet of adhesive fly paper ! on the floor of the room infested, j with a small piece of fresh meat in i the center of the sheet. The fleas will jump toward the meat and ad-: ad-: here to the paper. j The row of seats in the Opera House that is screwed on the par-, par-, tition undei the gallcrv, is in the l I have engaged a special correspondent correspond-ent to report that city. We have secured a worthy representative. Hereafter, The Bugler will have more to say of the promising burg across the Bear. ; Who is going to build that big hotel? It is understood that the property and building, long known " as the '"City Hotel," will be sold before long. We hope the right parties will take hold and erect a building of which our progressive City can be proud. We have arranged with one of the most popular magazines of the day. the Demorest's Family Magazine, Maga-zine, so that Bugler subscribers who pay in advance, can secure that invaluable monthly at an unusually un-usually low figure. Every household house-hold should have it. See the notice ; in another column. The Scandinavian benefit ball at the Second ward hall Tuesday i evening is said to have been a great success. Most of those present were old people, but they danced their ancient dances like youths of twenty. A neat little sum was netted to send to Elder Peter Soren-sen, Soren-sen, now on a mission. There is nothing so valuable to the merchant, and professional men generally, as advertising space in the local paper. An advertisement advertise-ment should be of such a character as to explain to the people what you have to dispose of that they want. Keep them reminded of the ! fact that you are in business ancL where your headquarters are. The new Brigham correspondent for the J ft' raid appears to enjoy n sneer at oar home dramatic troupe. In his last communication he City Assessor O. Petersen says a good portion of the City taxes still remains unpaid. Tho delinquent county-tax list will be published in the next issue of Thk Bum, eh. Monday saw a large addition to the attendance of the district schools of this City. j Old papers, that can be used for : putting on shelves or under carpets. for sale at this oihee. j The railroad time table and the ! arrival and departure of mails will be found in this issne. This week Dr. Carrington removed re-moved a piece of bone from the leg j of the little Philips boy. j Road Supervisor Johnson is doing a "tall" lot of flying about the town these line days. Elias Jensen, the rustling furniture furni-ture dealer, has a new and : enlarged ad. in this issue. i The speakers at the Tabernacle j last Sunday were Stake President' Clawson and Counselor Kelly. Matinee at the Opera House next j Saturday afternoon. Prices: chil- : dren. I5cents; adults, 25 cents. j Tho Co-op is now beautifully j illuminated by gas. The heaters : will be in operation next week. Attorney P. II. Jones has gone to Washington, D. C, to be absent on legal business for s.veral weeks. lias our free reading room pro-jeet pro-jeet gone to the sweet bye and bye not to ?how up again this winter? How does every kxly h t everybody know things now days? Why; they advertise in The Bugler, of course. Mr. and Mrs. I.eman Johnson's r n. . -.vj j.-. -vwrely kicked |