| OCR Text |
Show m- AVD1 NJ. - DESERET THE XVI of LAKE SALT KEYVS CITY SATURDAY DECEMBER 21 bvt. 1929 people denominated they felt m iiwMInod, the starred preference to ther moving ruble of conscience and e'ery law f utir and humanity. That the conference entirely That the governor of Missouri satisfied wlfh. and gave Da aanc in refusing protection to hi clanH, tlcn to thp proceedings of the con- of ''people, when pressed upon by ference of th$ Twelve and their a hearties mob. and turning up- friemls held oa the Temple spot at on them a band of unprincipled Far West. Missouri, on Friday the Asael Smith, grandfather of the militia, with order encouraging twenty-sixt- h of April last. Prophet Joseph 8mith, at one time their extermination, baa brought ft That the conference did sancaM: tasting disgrace upon the slate ov- tion the miHion intended for the the "a had the- - Pioneer ar-i--" er which he preside Twelve to Europe, and Out the It has been borne in upon my HAKPLY in the 7 Thus, with expressions Of sy in ain should Id their power to valley ot lfILE number a tha of aom one oeenaanu urn ot n.y aruo- npath? and material aid. did the, to enable them to gcj. when exploration ople com. of settlements early will promulgate a work lo revolu-- j people of Quincy assist the Haintsj That this conference send ft dd act out to the north, and teach them their civii paries And bid them hope for better days, were their Utah named after of to the City gate tiomxe the woild of religious lan Washington to locate, other sites Latioi. an1 Nor waa this kindly feeling con-jt- o founders or after early settlers, taUh.- lay the cake of exiled Saints j (potential commonwealth. ' wson. excised! V'j flned families with me people of Quincy before jit guimi the government rtUenwnt' City Became 1 empor&xy i J ved general hia death ext were some (which the secured titles of Tbe Shortly tfor permanent ( i.tlaens of that, tmplenw nl. aeed and bBt Jf mpathy of ended throughout and that president Il'gdon be the l Pavla wa $ In ho waa occurred PU..,eK the when present year made .oioniaation means a the nd thta witness other it made by vulnlt) th Mate, and especially among th detavate v jiCAOU&rtCrS of old hi, aon, Joaeph mith, tather, county at the aite of what is now of March. IM Jhe lwh name Tooele, by which a inrludinjcj That Elder. William 'Marsh be !fadin,c yeaxs Ahe and BoumifuU him. ny visited of the And Residents Aided h ..melee out casts a ret. piion Governor prophet, Brajirh of Thoma Carlin Stephen appointed to preside over the proo and a stake a city Sessions county, as was known the which' that lo with a him of ullage somewhat similar . copy A Dougla. Dr. Isaac Cal!aj)d.,ac(l-Cburi- h presented M organised with John S Rigte-at Comm. re. ttttwoisr -- .. a.e now know, M.mkwl in after tin , 4 Book of Mormon. Although feeble Settlement ou", . ftev- president, and Isaac Higbee and of Tha. the rTTotiiert th. following h Sessions. the inhabitants ,.f Cla The region to the w&t and in health, he read the book and Peregrine eople Othcrs Crwm River pjmlck B. Huntington, the latter this have sanction of the entles A there hiniH?l( when .ar of Salt Lake Great fit. south hept2!(. said that he was convinced that t an ,ItM.n,.nctd Indian interpreter, In the meantime the Saint conirountj, aSliourt. to accompany the Twelve I le f.w days after his arrival in the abounded in the earliest ru.l per.e'Utlon drove tinued to cross the river from Mis- council lor. was a divine record. bunM.lora, to Europe, namely; Theodore TurANDREW JfcNaON. bulwet ,W.,V(. bundred Saint, from souri. The of in a times (,bllIt variety of the year Iiv'Novcmbrr of the amc Joseph family ley. George Vitkin, Joseph Bales Adam, county, lllnois, lb,.,r homes in Jackson county Within the name month Hector the- - Spanrush known tt. . by in re in arrived Qalncy John Valiev- Hubbard. Charles Noble, Prophet ' of a Sanpete settlement a started ish name th temporary .beadquar- - Missouri f. of Tule. Haight The Keb la. Sstit Lore nto I. Young. Samuel Stephen Markham. Lit, M by few miles north of Sessions. on party The Democratic association of 1839. Shortly afterwards Brigham Scott. ters of the Church in 1139. valley became known as Tule Mulliner Willard Snow John Isaac Morle). ( harles phamway ahst -The elt', favorably known ft the (t'nrr took the lead in extending .rt.rward, known as and and an orthographicof tder. William Burton, Loren so D. alley, men other and sett ftnd leading The Taft 8th h A al mistake upon th part of Haight's t'reek, a little southwest pL.ce where ft Urge number of relief to the Mormon exiles the Church (whose lives were Barnes. Milton Holmes, Abraham M,0b Kasmtlle. site of of tbe ba.Ms met with a friendly recep- nueting was held bv this associa- - sought by the Missourians) fled o Thomas the present Bullock, pioneer the Smoot and Elia Smith, also of these At about the same The immediate objectthemselves1 tion and wre relieved from ac- lion leb 23, 133t. for the purpose rpm their persecutors and Joined following high priests, clerk, resulted In' the form of The first namely: in search of performance grazing Kowrberry In tual want and perhaps rsurvation of enquiring Into the situation of those who had preceded them has which Tooele separating spellmga HanicVs oratorio, The Messiah. pioneer tolffenry XL Sherwood. John Mur- - prevailed fro in the . is situated Oh the east tl m 1S3-the society of1". their fnen4, lands for a flock of lixestoiki befro earliest Saints and a resolution was be given between New York and to a .i a g, htiiik of the Mississippi river, 134 passed to the effect that a people was to find patsturage for their longing 10 Ezra T. days. on met Toole (alley and Saint were in a' ntiies by rail northwest of St. Louis called Latter-dathe Jordan valley being The name Provo, is said to Creek, a little south of Missouri, and 22 miles southwest fttufetion requiring the aid of the adequate for all the cattle of the.Settlement been derived from Prohave site of Tooele. Phtne- ,he present of Chicago, Illinois, of Quincy immtvrintjL people name vost an of the explorer has B. YVrlghL a mUlwright. Cyrua It is the center of eight rail- - A committee of eight was ap- - was still In prison In Missouri ande there and ha. tha region round Such were the beginnings of Ca1b some to be the believed by ba' Tolnan. Cru PI; Davis countv. and within a short road, ha some fine parks and pointed to call general meeting Brest. Brigham Young, as a Mr original .discoverer of Great When aucli men a'TRomAGroxer Orn BrafMl and time Others f nt or the'TweTveApaitles. Salt preTi "Joseph Prophet Lake. that mithTeft say th-May ir Quincy and famiiie taken had An B Wood.A incrous manufactures, and several Daniel Colonel Fremont named the sided at a special conference held j. jgay wi'h hi fai&ny. and rethere Others Witness Plates Call. Daniel C. Pavts.Cherry. immediately academies and many .Lurches John Stoker. possession, river to the southJProveau in Quincy March 17. 1639. atjmovedT to CommerceT afterwards the adjournment of the Oct- Jt bad a population of 2 3 9 In T. Pprt-aftNathan Holbrook. .Joseph the his same of time of the.Xauvoo circumstances for horse the the a'valuable About which conferente. Wben to witnesses the.ober the three 1344 about 30,000 in 1330, and the 8mith,. the Parrishes which died there, Proveau Church and the situation of thejmpj0rlty of the Saints, irbo had Book of Mormon had viewed thej.. about 40,000 in 1330 the.r,u,i. )b. Millers WHHam Kay.l re consider- - been ro kind! treat'd hY the clfi- scattered" mem ber-L natPi ahj.iit aniT many'' fm Cf.itfw. U "Isens "of QuinFv. movef lo ClI ..ritiCdpftff from whom Fremont had purcome with joy that now he carried othrs settled lesijion. in that locality ,JOSepn Qmith fet above the Mississippi river, committee reported their labor. chased the steed. Younjr wdvtrerF the SaTnts ffa ncoclr to u ntyr 1 ItTTof. and Lee of burden no all the for' mas named proof longer VtSlOft over which it commands a fine ased upon statements received (0 prest. countv The Given Of Evil Utr settle, if possible. In roropaniw.lcotint), fowa. which had been Manti. the first settlement So he expressed him Captain lanil C. Davis of thct jbv himself A bridge ... view, recently built (r un Sidney Rigdon and jtherr"in or jR 0Urh a way that they could lected as gathering places for the waa Utah of the south valley, to on hw self ac-- o after the parents the river connects it with i elation to the expulnion of th be organized into hrancht so that Saint Mormon Battalion who settled 0n pfte of hl9 trpa to tbe from the Book of WtVt Quincy on the Missouri side S imts from Missouri had viewed the sacred recmight he fed by the shep-- j Mormon name while Sanpete Quincy, however, continued to ' .Cumorah, before he was gcn tns Farmington. ord Most of the balms who fled from A series of resolution was pass- they tovnof preanat herdv for without that, the sheep jje the home of a number of amts is awariation of Kanpiteh, 9 Missouri in the winter of gold plates, Joseph Smith was given Weber County ed at that meeting setting forth would be scattered (for some time afterwards. Cm the lied stranger a vTsTonnhepowera of evd, as a while of settlement The prophrt-Jroept- r Utah nation. Thejrst Church Lives . Boggs made their titled to the aid and sympathy o! Early Lov. LHoum ...en of Weber county antedates earning to him and to ast.st him rived among the Sain? in Quincy z10n wftv organized there, of which and of settlement The river The appointment of Apria 22 1839. having at last e- -j Daniel Btanton w appointed pres-- J way as best they could Into Illinois, the people Law ot Consecration by several years that of either lo understand the powers tlwt i were named after ftgden cd and the majority of several committee was suggested The were arrayed " " from hi enemle in Ms- - ident. wrh Stephen Jones and Ezra (Sait Lake or Davis countie t Hudson Skeen again him in tbs a Peter Ogden th MisKiastppJ river at Quincy f to he composed of individual from esped, of Benson as his counselor: aloj after an Imprisonment The law of consecration, thai.greater part of that region erformance of hi work in ths Bay company agent who trap-e- d The distance from Far West, every town to secure something to soan, Miles hav-over fixe mvnth in that state. a bishopric constating of George claimed least or at by owned of residents a in times j community throughout the western from save the exiles 'from starvation, and Caldwell county, Missouri, the mni(rtry to He mZa raanycont (rere immediately taken to y Crouse bishop), Azarfah Du- ing ail their property in common., M Goodyear on a grant from 1341. the pu?e wared guard territory as early as 1825. where most of the exiles came, was a standing committee was suggest- Steps . . new location untd which tin and Sylvester B Ptoddard Mexican government given in ecur a Church in early practiced f many about 160 miles in a straight line, ed to relieve, so far as in their the Paint might gather In the UY at Fort He waa a htorv at Ktrtland. Ohio. U (coun lorsi was appointed at the5 h ou d h maJ J3' but the way the roads ran at that prwer the want of the destitute meantime Quincy became the tem- - same time flway-s- fl also lived successfully in other Hall for the Hudson Bay company f PtTrilifTP v. time It was nearly 200 miles. & end homeless, and to use their them, existed Church alout the lands. of Goodvear twenty headnuarters The This stake organization sUJ' porary places When it is remembered that the endeavors to procure employmatters until the spring of 1141. when alii rw a, miles several Important rw square and containing roads were had and heavy, and the ment for those who were able and and vouncil stakes outside of Hancock log rjL Root of Mnte Were attended to in th DCCOI11CS rlUSt DlSFlOp Pl.ket (art enclosing a i weal he- - extremely cold, it is no willing to work This good work of the Church Zion of Has Various cabins was on the right bank ty. Illinois, and Lee county Iowa wonder that a number of the ex- commenced by the Democratic as- nillesk At a conference of the Church discontinued and all who the Weber river about L : Revealed to Prophet ile compelled to leave their homes . n Edward Partridge was appoint-- ; wag onilnul hv thnt CnurcI "the orwtl-T- cvmp-- ' ihVcoantr of above ,he junction of that stream meanings th.'Treiihvtpriaa In the winter, succumbed to their ganization and substantial in Church the d the 5 firt bishop 'with near Quincy. May 4 and tuted Church authorities rejnoved river. the Ogden ground, the summer of 1624, During 4 The word Zion i and sufferings, and ance was given to the suffering 3 1839 it was unanimously fe- - to hi appoiniment coming Feb employed theo place. the revelations received bv found an untimely grave before Joints Church an.org i 1SJ1 Othej bishops were subse- - variously in Mormon aa late " , .olv.d th.,. Notwithstanding More Resolution i. history Sometimes it is ued to they could travel that distance and That Almop W Babbitt Erastu Februarv, 1843 t when a conference "L,ltfy ordained beginning with mean jg48 bv Captain Janies' Brown th Prophet Jos. ph Smith; words the pure m heart teach people who would give them at At a nubsequent meeting of the Snow and Robert B ThompMip be VRs held at Quincy, the branch iii Spanish dmib- - of Moses were given to the young Whitney in December me t lb iter. it refer to a city, anJj icons j er thal rsociaUon held Feb 28, 1839, the appointed a traveling committee j Church there constated of 77 brought bv Captain Brown prophet This revelation tux later near to at other the still times htfl While the names of most of following resolutions were adopt to gather up and obtain the members rom gan j.rdncivo two high in tho " (augmented and appear including Jerusalem those of the Saints who were killed ed libclou The aptain and hi sons Jsse pearl of Great Price as the Book reports and publication priests, five elder one priest and- C 1J- - ClUnr Cmtulrv u reMoroni That we regard the right of which had been circulated against 0fM right during the Missouri perof information standMoses, and Ah William in zander good giving deacon, mostly secutions have been recorded, it is cxinscience as natural and lnallen-th- e established their residence there girding the account of the creation FlTSt SeTtnOn Church, as well a other his- - jne Preached not so well known how many died able and the most sacredly guar- - toriral be-of the re followed later bv the world. matter connected witn aid Friendly relation continued oe the Journey, fleeing from their sr.teed by the Constitution of our Church that thev possibly might tween Brown- Is Church Practice Karrs. Canfields. Moores Herrick the iittaens of Quifiey and The first public discourse piach-fre- e persecutors, nor how many subseobtain government. Hhurthff Wests, lone a the latter Hng the Hamt lh Miracle W th. That we regard the act of alta That Elder Oliver Graneer be remained In Illinois and nuMii 7. f quently closed their eyes in death Bap tarns fop the dead "have been Pee As, .Richard am! oihr settler F irst Church la consequence of their sufferings mobs In violation of law. and tho o go to Kir land Ohm time of the exodus from Nauvoo Church was on Sunday. April It, in the ordinance who laid the foundations of tht Performed in April, 1830 appointed part prominent and exposure at the time of the who compose them. Individualtv and take the charge an.l oversight Wood an.il630 when Elder OBver Cow dery work of the Church- - The first such 'territory j,n igt Mayor John exodus. responsible; both to the taw otof fhe House o? the Lord leading mn of Quincy took! spoke during a W meeting in the- baptism were performed in thei In March of 164 John S Hg Th first miracle performed in Poosewdoits Stole. God and man. for every depreda-- 1 ide over the general affairs of, an active hitmer In Fay- open air in rivers of the middle bee. one of the original pioneers , part in trying to brine home of peter The Saints who were stripped of tion committed upon the property the Church In that place. Church was during tho sam a peaceable settlement o! ette. New York fbx persons were west, but they were suspended planted a tolony in I tah county about nearly all of their earthly possesThat the brethren living fn thelthe difficulties existing brween baptized after the meeting ganizcd, April, the Provo river there later rights or life of any citizen. since dtvine inkiruc-to- n (month P wa sions by th Missourians, - were That the inhabitant upon the j caern spates he counseled 1830 when the Prophet Joseph j Invited TImhi tlon Indians ordinance the these that contending parties. required necwsarlly in s deplorable and wsiern frontier of the state of move to Kiriland and vicmitv anq1 On that occxmoo the citizens of fleeing away from tbs borders ot .should be performed in a temple j He went not onlv upon instruc-- , Smith. cat a levil out of Newel wanting condition, when they.1 MUsouri and their late persecution settle that, place as a stake of Zion substantial aid while they were 'Civilisation. iontv. President Young but also Knight 'non Quincy, Illinois Was thfe m ns have violated vU Joseph Smiths Grandfather Had Faith in Prophet "Gerks Mistake su Gave To Tooele Refuge For Saints In Time of Trouble Its Present Name dall i Pioneers Settled More Sites In 1847 t w at ipred dre i broken-hearte- h- - d ."' I i JEttt-Dia- Liire.. Tlie-Chu- rch e i j. ''as . 1 1 QBy First 'Messiah in West Given Here lke fm .. .1 r t'o-stoc- k. a y M-- prei-Tahc- Happy Mho er 1 we 1333-133- wer--en- them-croas- j. ; xi j to . or-o- asiat-hardsh- ... , t ip s mh-F0- jt 11 , V,i j t f ... k tine Yeaf er-vic-e - v- 'J, .V V yaws- before the march of piogieis ol the bans and the e if y in 11M0 when the pre.-estructure was bui'L rt National While the growth of the has been lapid from it beginning, one of its big-gepan-io- n sleps was in Dtxy when t'jiejic.eret Naviugs Bank wa organized bv storkholdeu of in hand vs it It the Ntale of from its infancy, '1 It. National Hank tmlay glands .jnijodtoal of GlttAMNtj A tho state - iiQifSinwi! hand i itsdf nt Iv-ei- f-- e-t ' It and de,i't Tho bank lr.ts been associated mz c.mmninilv with tho piobtenw of ihe rirtuafty since tho boynmtm:. It lias catered to fhe needs of business and indu-- li tat enterprise, of the state ami placed an important part in the development of I tali general!. The fareeing gioup of pioitects who guided the bank through its early dajs no douht in the welfare it in its important of Hie coiiniinnity fodaj. Many readers of the Uiristmas Ldilion of The le.eret News ami Ihi. article bate had dealings with the cations offt-te- rs f the institution and through it had some of (lie stale. pari m the adam-ernen- t f.irf-tro- w the'lie.piet pl building on Hie ..tnie spot where it now stands. It handled the needs of the a it handles them now. V deal that fman-ri- ai would seem small ronipared lo preent-da- v deals, was handled Ai the sanie ronserv alive bais a traos.tr to ms of (mljv one-sto- iy rom-mun- ilv TIk rupiat alifiia! hatk bad its (nt I It a, A. to, in Uoptr-KI-dredk- IHoH m a Oryanird p I lifle ?lnicltiri on Iho rot nor of lirt Soillt and Mam all. rot- - Its nuKltjilbe Onp-to- ij h Growth 187 6 -- ilit'iV, nM zloji in it. ( i i: ; a., a lio n lit tho oocuiid I'holo tho htiildintr of a Uttoo s'nirtnro on tho tamo jitc. (ahtih Hit bank o nipiod m )K7ti. Irmr In H7i it kiton a Ibo Hank of lu-e-mf and (,tqlaliod .jtltzm. In tH77 a rh,nor was (akon out I h vi irj inouiis t'Hod i ii ih if llio ban, into its jnoont .rno-tui- e t'i'lu'od at ii.,l)l a t)ijilonni(ii .it buibhn. wtih a H loti rtf tCkminiuzi oij m fj, ..nno gtrurture is ttio rYo.orr). Smoit bank, whnh is raintjtiyod for lrtuttm. d ro..urto. of ihrso i ouanu,it.on (oiiay i, i.SPJIPf fcll-Hp- na-m- ( 'Ottimiod iliiKVl 11" 11 .if T. v i r Realization 1930 t 1 V Ijhi-gte- ss A1.U i iu uiLasLLumiiiiuiu ge 5 nme.l beginning in a little struelnre. presents quite a marked coolra-- l to Hie present thirteen-stor- y building which now stands on (he i outer of irt Siuth and Man Ireet. The first building occupied the same site upon which the present institution stands., Ererlrd Three -- slorv- Building In 1S73. In 1875 the erection of a fhree-slor- y building was started and was first occupied by the bank on January lt, ittTfi. This structure finally fell -- mm (hartrr ' e, - The fust offn ers of the fw.Tet Saving, Bank were John Sharp. President: J ime. T. Little, Nice Presnletil, ami Liras Mr Smith Smith, po.du.n of Nice President. Ihe growth of the Ijee(et Saving. Bank ha been comparable to that of Hie De.e(pt National Bank. At fir-- t the new enterprise rented a ui of Ihe Iieseret National Bank m wlmh lo do business. However, when the new budding waa erected. 1 lie Ieeie( National Bank n ne.J ds et of Ihe structure and Hie amgs Bank owned 'This ownership pi-- ( at the pre-ei . lime,' (.a-lii- i now holds the or-li'- (wn-Hur- one-thi- (,ap-t.n- li ashter. Ms very i tn Tim bitoflj ttuiiunario- - tho 'un'tt of this institution both In pietuir anti t o rv from its orsanization in tho Id. moor tiavr lo its prosonl cosmopotitan apo,-t- . vw In HC2. 1 he bank was launched under a national charter in PC- - and becanie known as the Ueere National Bank. Brigham Noung, who led the band of Mormon' pioneers inlo this valley in it17 was named as it? firt President. Mpfam Hooper was made amlNJw is . Hills, t rain-ialu- lom-bino- Nalionrl ls9 Lic-er- for Ihe et ritoiy of Halt, logiitjter with tbnaie n Kldreifge and foniis S. Hills. tirgantzeiL Hie hanking ltotise of tk rim-ian- v, 1 lie batik functioned for a few jears under Hits name, until a Territorial charier was taken trjl under The name of (lie Bank of Deseret. Hoopei-Kldt-ed- fitliiiitH jlltivii ald rtzlil liand t!pT m--. liii'i Ttr- - 'L'lw' talird for siinrfm gintimg in lh In u ring Ihe earlv .ari of the jear 1 J. WiHijiii H. llmiper. then a delegate to In I his action became neces-ai-- v m older to ar- ointiimlaln a clientele who were dialing in real estate and who requited tai.s upon leal and lo more adequate! deal with the clientele. Each stie kliobjer in the Deseret National Bank was entitled t subset die a propotlionale amount of stock in the iJeseict Navmgs Bank. ed "V hen the gieat tide of civilization begail mj. National Bank was jtoti.ed mg we.t, Iheifie-er- National Bank liesere I Savings Bank Organized (xt-iln-ni tn a : n! nt 'lrn was r jWanizcJ the -- g. Iwet.t saving. Bank ?Bytnni. Jvpan-io- n during capitalized for recent ear, lias riiade if Tierc.7ai) lo'ili. ra(ufali7ation to Tgi.ij.ii. rea-- e the rr es tif I tie two in.litijlioni (aimbined Ttas grown lo the tremendous total of f l,70.-i.g,t- .J. laqiosils of the two banks at the present tune lota! 95. The growth of both the besefK National and the Deseret Savings Banks has been marked by a rule of conservatism, which has been r ha racier. .lie of their progress. The officers of the I Naliitjl Bank, at the piesent time, are as follows: lalgar one-sto- ry kins. S. Hills, president; Edward E. Jen- Wm V. Armstrong, Necond We President; Edward Third Nice L. (I. Noung, President; Royal 0. Barnes, Nssi-taCashier. N ; nt The officer of the iJeseret having Bank, al the present time, are as follows: Edgar S. Hills, President; Elias A. Smith. N ic President; Richard NV. Madsen. NVe President; Radcliffe Q. Cannon, Crliier. |