Show wheat 1 1 truly has it onn often been said TH ERVy A TIMS TO ALL AIL THINGS and one of those things that demands payi particular cular attention the present seaf tv is the greatest exertions in a the culture of wheat there should if possible be raised in the vallies of the mountains ten times more wheat the ensuing sea season q on than there has been in any preceding ye year ar I 1 well yell mr editor a curious idea 1 I when there is so much wheat now that it is not wath nore more than hay half its usual value and yet we 1 l t sow tn ten times as r much as usual I 1 bisno is no more f curious than true for if the farmer d to procure fi A thousand dollars per annum t his tin i e will have to raise ten bushe bubb eat I 1 t is but bat one dollar per bushel w was a so only obliged to raise one when it was teuk alper per bushel and baye have we not seen these thes ee 1 if prices in this this valley and the farmer 1 1 I I 1 be independent if he can raise araia s 0 I 1 its price ever s so 0 small BI U a t the die eldera correspondence on dence and see the re po p cry from all quarters cc GATHERING JT ERING G I 1 suppose gl suppose the saints arise c en masse 4 nea S eaas e mon n nd wak it into the vallies by thousands and tens tells r ands what will they find to eat when thay 4 ceaf there is no more grain raised than hitherto the signs of the times portend a great and spee speedy ibe inease ease in our midst and let the cries of hunger multitudes enter into the ears lofv fase nian in the territory to inspire him taras to SAs adf af THIN raa GRAIN as i REGARD av 0 CZ v 71 shall it be said of I 1 A V day I 1 saints that they 1 are raising grain garain to satisfy their hunger and buy their pence bior for TODAY TO DAY war when a consumption and famine are decreed u upon the face of the whole earth and not one know the day or year of its beginning v suppose it were to commence next year would 1 now have be worth any the less to crould be were it now bringing ten dollars arua pter brashy bri shy R and what I 1 will you eat d during uri ng tho the famine 0 jau youko do not lay up in store in the days of plenty as joseph did in egypt and when will you ever have a better time to make a beginning I 1 to store you grain than the present if wheat were worth 10 per bushel and purchasers hungry y purchasers were at your doors every hour with cash in in hand band you could not withstand the temptation you would sell and sell and continue selling till you sold yourselves to the famine ine be it longer or sk shorter orter and when gnashing your teeth in in all the agonies of hunger you would have to upbraid yourselves with the sorry reflection that you did not store your grain against the day J I 1 I 1 need when it was cheap as it now is is and I 1 we hear of horses and cattle dying and they ar are opened for the purpose of learning the jufiar type of disease that caused their death and re is fo found un d a OF WHEAT AT iu in mch emch e coa not wonder they sickened and died and e would counsel the saints when they have raised raise irain grain to i baue ACE CARE of it and preserve every bushel and every quart though it were so plenty J Y ion you could not give it away just as though it yer vero ibe the last bushel or last quart there was in in the land laa und and you knew not the 1 1 time you could proc urany 1 more and if all the saints will be advised consel and regulate their actions accordi accordingly angly we promise them that famine i ine will be a stranger it ih their Aita habitations tiong when its ghastly visage will become 1 I 1 6 to the inhabitants 1 I 1 of the earth and those I 1 with tl thankful ank ful hearts praise their heavenly r that tr ead cad is is cheap and plenty and adm brally those who have not will get rich baian an those who are continually complaining that tha thatah tat at is is so cheap they cannot live they cannot be e WORLD for I 1 a BUSHEL I 1 wheat has been sown at all pe in these val I 1 liea from sep september to june and aces uces a good i crop THINGS WANTED A few tons 0 f vari arief ous us sizes from window b lind blind brads to twel twelve ve pennies I 1 not a pound to be had in this city for gold that we know of five hundred envelopes wanted at our office for posting official documents if there are any in this cit city y we wish our friends would inform us where consolation for the consolation of those who are living out of doors fb for want int of nails to build houses we would observe that a company has recently gone to iron for the purpose purpose of erecting a furnace and if they are successful as we confidently anticipate they will be not many years no months will not pass before they will have iron in our market then ifa machine can be procured we can make our ow own A n ails nails wi with th which which to build our houses housed but a pound of nails is so much heavier I 1 than a pound of feathers silks or even broadcloth that no one can afford to transport them for less than fifty percent additional cost upon cartage arid aid impossible to be had at that extra therefore those who may be immigrating to this place within a abear yea r or two had bad better bring NA I 1 L S I 1 if th they ey want BREAST SALE for their GOODS and as to envelo envelope P iab fe unde understand estand I 1 a paper mi mill 11 ll has commenced lab about t be built on Cotton Cottonwood woo Hi all linit of the mill I 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 ut atin in their d buil I 1 I 1 id mill as fast as p possible I 1 0 ssibyl so r I 1 afee I 1 J have A 1 envelopes of our own HOME don TURE bat what shall we ve do for all the e people of deseret save their r 1 I 1 1 I IC or op THEIR RAGS BAGS and pretty koonjy s oon ater than gold for they will b bu I 1 ails nails and pes es 11 fiut ut gold will buy neither present |