Salt Lake City, .
REPORTED BY DAVID W. EVANS.
WE have had a very good Conference; we
have heard a great deal of testimony from
the servants of the Lord, and that testimony
has been true. The building up of the
Zion of God in these latter days includes, I
may say of a truth, every branch of busi-
ness, both temporal and spiritual, in which
we are engaged. We can not touch upon
any subject which is lawful and legal in the
sight of God and man that is not embraced
in our religion. The gospel of Jesus
Christ which we have embraced, and which
we preach, includes all truth, and every
lawful calling and occupation of man. One
subject that we are deeply interested in I
wish to say a few words upon. In the first
place I wish to give notice in this stage of
my remarks to the members of the Deseret
Agricultural and Manufacturing Society,
that they are requested to meet, at
the close of this meeting, at the Historian's
Office, to appoint their president and board
of directors for the coming season, for the
times demand that we should hold a State
fair in this city this fall.
Strangers may think this a very strange
subject to present in a religious meeting,
but we are building up the literal kingdom
of God on the earth, and we have temporal
duties to perform. We inhabit temporal
bodies, we eat temporal food, we build
temporal houses, we raise temporal cattle
and temporal wheat; we contend with tem-
poral weeds, and with temporal enemies in
our soil, and these things naturally give
rise to the necessity of attending to and
performing many duties of a temporal and
arduous nature, and they, of course, are
embraced in our religion. In building up
the Zion and kingdom of God in these lat-
ter days, our agricultural and manufactur-
ing interests are of the most vital import-
ance; in fact manufacturing and agricultu-
ral pursuits are of vital importance to any
nation under heaven. Show me a nation
whose people cultivate the earth, and
manufacture what they need, and I will
show you a rich and independent nation.
Show me a nation that lives entirely by
mining and I will show you a poor nation
—one that is ready to run out and become
obsolete. You see this manifest in the
history of all nations under heaven. What
gives England her wealth to-day? Her
coal, iron, and the products of her soil, in
connection with her prodigious manufac-
tures; and it is so with all the nations of
the earth. What makes the United States
what she is to-day? Her products and the
cultivation of her soil, and the constant
efforts she has made to supply the wants of
her people. Not but what mining is all
right, there is no fault with the develop-
ment of the resources of the earth under
favorable circumstances. When we came
here our position demanded that the very
first thing we did was to plant our potatoes
and sow our wheat, or we had starvation
before us; and I will here say that the
Saints and the Elders of Israel have gone
before the Lord day after day and week af-
ter week, and prayed the Almighty to hide
up the treasures of these mountains, lest
even the Latter-day Saints, with all the
faith they had, should be tempted to turn
away from the cultivation of the earth and
the manufacture of what they needed;
and the Lord heard our prayers, and we
dwelt here many years and filled these val-
leys for six hundred miles with cities,
towns, villages, gardens, orchards, fields,
vineyards, hundreds of school houses, and
places of worship, until we made the desert
blossom as the rose, and had a supply of
wheat, bread and clothing upon our hands.
Then, I do not know but the elders ceased
praying for the Lord to hide up the treas-
ures of the earth, I guess they did, for very
soon after mines began to be opened, and
now silver mines are being worked in
many parts of the Territory. A few years
ago General Connor and others, who dwelt
here, with soldiers under them, spent very
many days in prospecting these mountains
from one end to the other for gold and sil-
ver, but they could find none; to-day you
may go over the same places, and if you
dig into the earth you may find plenty of
silver, and you may find it almost any-
where in these mountains. I suppose this
is all right, I have no fault to find with it;
but I still say that the interest of the Lat-
ter-day Saints in these mountains is to
cultivate the soil and to manufacture what
they use.
Through the influence of President
Young we have many manufactories for
wool and cotton already established in
this Territory. He has done more than
any man living in these last days, according
to the means he has had at his command,
to establish these branches of business in
the midst of these mountains. We have
now many large factories in this Territory
that have to stand still for want of wool. I
want to say a few words on this subject to
the wool growers of Deseret. Instead of
sending our wool out of the Territory, to
eastern States to be manufactured into
cloth, and purchasing it and paying eastern
manufacturers a large percentage for it
when brought here by railroad, I feel that
it is our duty, and it would be far wiser
for us, to sell our wool to those who own
factories in this Territory, and to sustain
ourselves by sustaining home manufac-
tures.
One of the first commands given to
Adam, after being placed in Eden, was to
dress the garden; and he was permitted to
eat of the fruit of every tree except one.
After a while Adam and his wife, Eve,
partook of the fruit of this tree, and the his-
tory of the Fall is before us and the world.
After Adam was cast out of the garden the
Lord told him that there should be a curse
on the earth, and instead of bringing forth
beautiful flowers, fruit and grain spontane-
ously, as before the Fall, it should bring forth
thorns, briers, thistles and noxious weeds,
and that man should earn his bread by
the sweat of his brow; and from that time
to the present mankind has had this curse
to contend with in the cultivation of the
earth. In consequence of this the inhabit-
ants of Utah, in their agricultural operations
have to fight against the cockle burr, the
black seed and sunflower, as well as thorns
and thistles and many other noxious weeds,
which, if not eradicated, speedily take ad-
vantage of us, and to a great extent, mar
the result of our labors. It will pay us to
pay attention to these things; it will pay us
to dress the earth, to till it, to take care of
and spend time and means in manuring
and feeding it; it will pay us to gather out
these noxious weeds, for the earth will
then have a chance to bring forth in its
strength. This, with the blessing of God
upon our labors, has made the soil of Utah
as productive as it is to-day. I wish to see
this interest increase in our midst; and I
hope, in addition to this, that those who are
raising sheep—our wool growers—will pay
attention to and carry on that branch of
business systematically, and that we will
sell our wool to those who manufacture it
at home, instead of sending it out of the
Territory to be manufactured. I feel that
this is our duty and the course which will
promote our best interests, and it is a prin-
ciple which is true, independent of relig-
ion, in any community or nation: it is a
self-sustaining principle.
God has blessed us, he has blessed the
earth, and our labors in the tilling of the
soil have been greatly prospered. As has
been said by some of our brethren in their
remarks, when the pioneers came here, no
mark of civilization or of the white man,
was found. If those who are now so anxi-
ous to obtain the homes we have made, had
seen Utah as we saw it, they would never
have desired a habitation here, but they
would have got out of it as soon as they
could. It was barren, desolate, abounding
with grasshoppers, crickets and kiote
wolves, and these things seemed to be the
only natural productions of the soil. We
went to work by faith, not much by sight,
to cultivate the earth. We broke almost all
the plows we had the first day. We had to
let streams of water out to moisten the
earth, and by experience we had to learn
to raise anything. The stranger comes
into Salt Lake city and sees our orchards, and
the trees in our streets, and he thinks, what
a fruitful and delightful place it is. He does
not think that, for twenty or twenty-four
years, almost every tree he beholds, accord-
ing to its age, has had to be watered twice
a week through the whole summer season,
or they would all have been dead long
since. We have had to unite upon these
things, the Lord has blessed our labors,
and his mercies have been over this peo-
ple.
If we had not cultivated the earth, but
had turned our attention to mining, we
should not only have starved to death our-
selves, but thousands of strangers, who
have passed through, would have shared
the same fate. Utah Territory has been
the great highway to California, Nevada,
and all the western States and Territories,
and they have all looked, in a measure, to
Utah for their bread. Nobody but Latter-
day Saints would have lived here, and en-
dured the trials and afflictions that we
endured in the beginning; none others
would have stayed and fought the crickets
one year, as we had to do year after year.
Any people but the Latter-day Saints
would have left this country long ago. Not
only so, on account of the things I have
already named, but I will here say that no
other people could have lived here, no, they
would have knocked each others' brains
out on account of the little water they
would have had in their irrigating opera-
tions. When men saw their crops and
trees withering and perishing for the want
of water, the selfishness so general in the
world would have worked up to such an
extent, that they would have killed one
another, and hence I say that none but
Latter-day Saints would have sto[o]d it; but
they, by the training and experience they
had before received, were prepared for the
hardships and trials they had to encounter
in this country.
Brethren and sisters let us continue our
efforts in cultivating the earth, and in
manufacturing what we want. And I still
urge upon our Female Relief Societies, in
this city and throughout the Territory, to
carry out the counsel President Young
gave us years and years ago, and try, as far
as possible, within ourselves, to make our
own bonnets, hats and clothing, and to let
the beauty of what we wear be the work-
manship of our own hands. It is true
that our religion is not in our coat or bon-
net, or it should not be. I[f] a man's reli-
gion is there it is not generally very deep
anywhere-else. But God has blessed us
with the products of earth and the blessings
of heaven, and his Spirit has been with us;
we have been preserved, and the Lord has
turned away the edge of the sword, and he
has protected us during many years past
and gone, and we all have to acknowledge
his hand in these things.
I do not wish to detain this conference.
I felt as though I wanted to make a few re-
marks on these subjects. I hope, brethren,
that we will not slacken our hands with re-
gard to the cultivation of the earth. In the
prosecution of our labors in that respect
we have everything to contend with that
man has been cursed with for five thousand
years. We should clean our fields, as far as
we can, of the noxious weeds, and our
streets of sunflowers. These things en-
cumber the earth. We have one difficulty
to contend with, unknown save in those
portions of the earth where irrigation is
practiced. It is true that a man may clean
his fields of sunflowers, cockle burrs,
blackseed and every other noxious weed
that grows, and the very first time he
waters his land here will come a peck or a
bushel of foul seed from the mountains,
and fill every field through which the
stream flows. These difficulties we have
to fight against, but we must do the best
we can. As farmers, we should clean our
seed, and not sow the foul along with the
good. One man, in a few hours, with a
good wire sieve, can sift enough seed for ten
acres of land, and perhaps for twenty;
while, to pull that bad seed out when
grown will cost from one to five hundred
dollars, for it will take a score of men days
to do it. We should use our time, judg-
ment and the wisdom God has given us to
the best advantage in all these things.
I want the brethren to come together this
afternoon and elect their officers, for we de-
sire to hold a fair this fall, in which the agri-
cultural and manufacturing interests of the
Territory may be represented and interest-
ed. Let us not be weary in well doing;
let us not slacken our hands, either in cul-
tivating the earth or in the manufacturing
of what we need. Co-operate in agricul-
tural and mercantile matters, also in our
tanneries, and in the making of butter and
cheese. One man may engage in these
branches of business with advantage if he
have skill and experience to guide him;
but in co-operation the wisdom of all is
combined for the general good. This plan
has been adopted with advantage in other
communities, cities, States, Territories and
countries, and it can be in this more ex-
tensively than it has been hitherto.
I pray that God will bless us, and bless
this whole people; and I pray that the tes-
timony which we have received here dur-
ing this Conference, which is true, may not
be forgotten by us. I can bear the same tes-
timony. I know this work is of God. I
know Joseph Smith was a prophet of God.
I have heard two or three of the brethren
testify about brother Young in Nauvoo.
Every man and every woman in that
assembly, which perhaps might number
thousands, could bear the same testimony.
I was there, the Twelve were there, and
a good many others, and all can bear the
same testimony. The question might be
asked why was the appearance of Joseph
Smith given to Brigham Young? Because
here was Sidney Rigdon and other men
rising up and claiming to be the leaders
of the church; and men stood, as it were,
on a pivot, not knowing which way to turn.
But just as quick as Brigham Young rose
in that assembly, his face was that of Jos-
eph Smith—the mantle of Joseph had fallen
upon him, the power of God that was upon
Joseph Smith was upon him; he had the
voice of Joseph, and it was the voice of the
shepherd. There was not a person in that
assembly, Rigdon, himself, not excepted,
but was satisfied in his own mind
that Brigham was the proper leader of the
people, for he would not have his name
presented, by his own consent, after that
sermon was delivered. There was a rea-
son for this in the mind of God: it convinc-
ed the people. They saw and heard for
themselves, and it was by the power of
God.
May God bless you! May he give us
wisdom to direct us in all things, and pro-
mote all the interests of Zion for Jesus'
sake. Amen.