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Show ,,.v . THE HEBER HERALD ' PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY--. Utah some parts .of crops were not worth harvesting, they were short all round. Evrybody felt ihcdoss of all or a part of their crops. The littlcHhat was raised brought a good price but there was not enough to winter., selhand keep both. One-shortand what a change. Plenty ot water gand hero plenty of water means : plenty. ,,of everything, with plenty of water we raise good crops, with good crops our graneries arc filled, our debts paid children sent to school, homes built, farms im porved, and scrub changed for better, stock. Every comfort we have follows, plenty of water and good crops. While the season of plenty remains, do like the'Egytians did, stack your hay well, take good care of your grain, get your stock and farm machinery under shelter for winter, repair your fences, pay your debts, don't sell short, but save hay and grain for seed and feed and speculation. Always be prepared for a year of ' scarcity. In . s s , The New West School House is now finished and ready for use. The build-- , ing has cost about $5,000. and is the finest structure of the kind in the county. . It is well lighted, ventilated according to the latest approved plan, and when needed will be heated by a furnace to an even temperature in all the rooms, a great contrast to our District School Houses which : are heated by stoves and vary from red hot near the stove, to freezing cold near the door, the only ventilaton being through a door or a broken window. Thfsutem is not intended to find fault with our District School Houses, but to show what can be done when, a foreign mission society deems it necessary to come to our assistance and build a school house for jus. 4They think nothings is too good fpr us, and prove it by builclingTa School .House that, cant bebeaten in America. -- nt STOCK NEWS, A: C. Hatch has disposed of near ly all the horses he brought in from Colorado. . It is reported on good authority that one million head of cattle from the Cherikee Strip vill be placed on the eastren market this fall. Westren cattle are being pushed to market, in a half fat condition, in quantities to keep the canners well supplied and the general market' low. An iron gray colt two years old, a perfect beauty, weighing about r 200 IBs. was being exercised on the street last week. On enquireing we learned that it belonged to George Cluff. George ought to be proud, of such a colt, and other horse men should try to raise is money in '.just such colts. ' There ' , them. MARKET REPORT. Eggs twenty cents per dozen. Chickens thirty cents apiece. . Butter fifteen cents per pound. Wheat nirity cents per bushel. Oats $1.50 per hundred pounds. Hay 65 per ton. - b V v r- -'- , |