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Show 10 YEARS AGO . . , From the Files . . . DELTA Clarke Street continues to prove attractive to the discriminating investor. in-vestor. The latest improvement is a new building for the Clarke Street Meat Market, being built by Delbert Searle of Delta and his uncle, C. D. Searle, of Provo. The new building is being built on the block just east of the Chronicle office. It is of the tiles Dr. Stock-iam Stock-iam appears to have made popular. popul-ar. It is to he 20X30 feet in size, with a cellar. It will have refriger- i projectors believe that the appli-! cation of this flood water in the fall and spring and the use of what Deseret water they will have in the summer will insure good har-: vests. Eugene Hilton and Willis Lyman are loading themselves with 'arguments 'ar-guments for the debate with the Fillmore boys on Saturday night. Allison Stott and Clark Allred are also thoroughly primed for their debate with Beaver the same night ator and ice boxes and all conveniences conven-iences of an up-to-date market. Besides rail kinds of meats the new firm will carry fresh vegetables, fruits, canned goods, etc. Remember quimp day Tuesday, April 2nd, and get to work. Milton Moody has leased the bot torn lands below the Deseret spillway spill-way for a garden. Fifteen acres will be put in potatoes and about eleven elev-en to a variety of vegetables. It is rich land and there ought to be a 'lot of garden truck from this patch. T. C. Gronning seems to be the bus'.est man in town. The front of his shop looks like an implement factory, there are so many plows, wagons, scrapers, etc., waiting to be repaired. An unusually heavy rain visited the valley Tuesday afternoon and night. The man who has got his grain in will not have to irrigate it to bring it up this spring. A CREAMERY NEEDED One of the needs of the very near- future for the west side is something that will provide a source sou-rce of income .besides that which comes once a year from the sale of grain and hay ... A creamery or butter factory combined owned by the farmers themselves would be most profitable means for providing pro-viding a regular monthly revenue that could be devised. Bishop Max-field Max-field was over in Wayne County a short time ago and he told the editor that the farmers over there are teaming their cre.am 55 miles to the railroad for shipment to Salt Lake, hauling it there two or three times a week. The man with a little money coming in every month from his milk would have quite an advantage over his neighbor neigh-bor who only had one pay day a year. . . . HINCKLEY Water for 10,000 acres of land west of Hinckley has been appropriated approp-riated from the flood waters of the Sevier and Col Moore has this week been surveying the lands and laying out the lines for canals. Water will be taken out between October and April through one of the canals from the Deseret reservoir. reser-voir. Some Deseret water will also be available for summer use. The |