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Show THE HEBER HERALD PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY. melts; and the child in hot haste drew his mother from her fire and warm cm h- icns down the terrace steps an J into the high-railecourt lie caked his garden. The air was keen and cohir and the . gilded railings sparkled with icy drop.-All the hushes and shrubs" were laden-witicy fruit. The mother drew her velvet mantle close about her as the boy led her on, smiling at his eagerness; bat when they reached the corner where he had keen playing the day before, she stopped in silent amase-men- t. . ered by any other person who has yet had a good education, and who is, a he education of a person brave man. is the beauty of him; an eduac-tio- jnd d is the best thing any body can have Jo matter how little his educaation it is 'better than none. . h Bert Ether a miner in the employ of Mr. Seabolt accidently shot himself in the leg Saturday .night at the DuChesne bridge. His gun fell on the ground and discharged,' the bullet entering the leg below the knee and shattering the bone terribly. Jt is fear- To be cQndaued. MARKET REPORT. ed the leg must be amputated.- lie is now at the hospital atDuChhsne. UK tail Pappoose. - cents per pound. Eggs thirty cents per dozen. 75 cents per bushel.' Hay from to $8 $5 The Brigham YounrO estate will have i 500, 000 worth of property to' divide si oa among the heirs: Paris, Feb.. 3 Michel Eyraqd the murderer of the notary, B. Geuffvas. guliotined this morning; -- per ton Oats $1.7 per hunched.. 04- 1 . f 1 Wheat is MAY - Butter twenty n WHAT A GOOD EDUACTION IS TO A PERSON. v Jhe little boys and girls all ought, to be able to write stories. F great many ..people earn their' living just writing-stories for books, and if a person has a good education, him or her who ever it might be, can be an editor ot a newspaper, ora writer of some great book,. or a clerk; of some big store, (f even be a man nvho Ins disev red some 4 The cost the of Siou : Indian war is estimated at $1,300,000 by the secretary of war . 5 great land, thUiasmever been discov- -- THE HEA T OF TIIE A tO ON. ' . I An English scientist has produce an apparatus for registering .the heat of the moon. By it it is shown that the warmth received from the moon is equal to that felt from a candle at a distance of" twenty-on- e feet. . |