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Show i Having passed the meridian of winter, we are now jogging merrily on the road to spring. An eastern exchange says that the oilier day a man froze to death ) while sawing wood. Probably he j was working out some out-lawcd debt. i The Marshal of Beaver City ,t sports the unusual name of Kuss. No 5 doubt he gets there with both lips, j This is not meant as a fling at the s Heaver girls. J Some op Utah's new legislators k seem decidedly more concerned about the number of bills they intro- t duce than in ihe quality o( the same. We lrust,however,there are enough cool-headed, conservative members in each house to cut the eye teeth of these ambitious record breakers. When the citizens of Brigham turn to, build reservoirs and store; for summer use the millions of gallons of Box Elder Creek water which run to waste during the fall, winter and spring months each year, then, and not until then, will the cry for "more water" cease. The editor of the hrisk little Kaysville Eagle is probably the most versatile newspaper man in the Territory, He not only runB down locals, writes and sets 'em up, proof reads the same and turns the lever of the press, hut his paper also contains an advertisement advertise-ment under his name which says: "All kinds of whip lashes and harness har-ness reparing neatly done on short notice." According to statistics, says an exchange, Massachusetts has 871,-240 871,-240 more females than males. Thereare 220, S00 more marriageable girls than can find husbands, to say nothing of 132,321 widows anxious for a No. 2. Tho number of young men in the state earning over $15 a week and in the market is only 2,107. There are camped on the trail of these young men exactly 220,000 young women and : 150,000 widows. i . |