OCR Text |
Show Wm. Budge Of Providence Was Active In Local Areas William Budge, Bishop of Providence ward from 1864 to 1879, nd one of the great men of Northern Utah and Southern Idaho In pioneer days, was born at Lanark, Scotland, May 1st, 1828. ONE OF Herald-Journ- Pioneer Progress Centennial Edition al across the country. Now there art over 700 of these groups. LaMair spoke at the 50th convent of the National Association of Music Merchants heie. New conference directors electBefore building a miik house, the farmer should consider school American CHICAGO, ed include:: Ted W. Brown, Taseveral important points. Some are required by local health laws, Kids now are learning four R's coma, Wash.; Ralph O. while others are dictated by common sense. Briefly they are: instead of Pasadena, Cal., and Rusthree, President Louis 1 Milk house should be near milk- G. Lamair of the American music sell B. Wells, Denv r, Colo. ing room or barn, but it never conference said today. should open directly into barn. Police Record These days its reading, riting, Spoil 2. It should have a smooth con'rithmetic and rhythm," he said, Tip Motorists crete floor slanted deMEMPHIS, Tenn. A police Its amazing the way musical Inch In one foot toward the A roadside RUSSELL, Mess. drive for 100 davs participation has caught on m drain. Round corners aid in part mint sign cn the highway here reads: without a traffic death was ruined schools and communities. sanitation. Before the war there were Keep the Berkshire green use when a police car, chasing a 3. Its inside walls should be hard 50 community orchestras vour esh tray. killed a pedestrian. perhaps speeder, and smooth for effective clean- HE WOULD ADD ONE MORE BIG R For Building A New Milk House Grass-muec- THE VALLEY'S EARLY ORCHESTRAS t' $; '"T Mj V, ing. j m Stratford. Covrr Openings with Screening 4. Ample light and ventilation are 0 required. A window area of not less than 10 per cent of the floor area Is standard. Tllt-i- n windows and a small roof ventilator are used. The windows must be screened. 5. Minimum equipment includes a cooling tank large enough to handle nigty and morning milk at peak flow, water heater, wash vats, racks for cans and other utensils and a cabinet lor the storage of soap powders, filter and pads, insecticides other supplies. An efficient but inexpensive milk house with these minimum requirements will enable the dairy farmer to qualify as a producer of grade A milk. Widely used because it is well designed, inexpensive and easy to keep clean is a milk hou-sided and roofed with Masonite quarter-- 1 inch Tempered Presdwood. It has a simple frame construction built on a concrete foundation. ITesdwood Easily Handled The ceiling and walls, both inside and out, go up quickly because the large panels are easily handled. They hold paint longer than wood because the Presdwood has no grain to rise and check the finish. If aluminum paint is used inside, it makes a sparkling, easily cleaned Interior that can be hosed down regularly without harm to the material. This house, which Is 12 feet squaie, will take care of a daily output of about 30 cans of milk. Greater capacity can be obtained by Increasing the length of the house and oooler. To obtain a free plan of this milk house, write to Farm Service Bureau, Suite 2037, 111 West Washington St., Chicago 2, 111., and ask for Drawing No. AFB-20one-roo- m ONE OF T1IE EARLIEST ORCHESTRAS Seth Fife. Nephi Fullmer and James E. musical group, they A were probably us"d for dance engagements during the valley 'i earlier socials and for concerts. of Yeate-j- Riih Counties, Utah, and Bear Lake County, Idaho. He was re- appointed to the ime office on July 15th, 186rf On May H. 1868, acting Governor Higgins issued to him a commission as Major, 2nd Battalion Infantry, 2nd Regiment, 1st Brigade, Nauvoo Legion. On October 61 h, 1868, he was appointed special Depcly Clerk of the third Judicial District Court for Cache and Rich counties. Shortly thereafter he was elected to the position of Superintend dent of Schools for Cache Coun- ty. William Budge was gaining Ind dependence and a good In Providence and Cache County when he was called again by President Brigham Young, this time to be Bishop of Bear Lake Valley, to take charge of all the tithing In that section of countiy. This call came in June 1870 Moves AgtUu Again William Bugde willingly moved to a new country. Here he endured many hardships, but he persisted and Was faithful In every task. His ability was more and teor evident and In 1877 he was it to Preside over the Bear jike Stake. This was a heavy responsibility. The stake then embraced what is now Star Valley, Wyoming, and all the settlements from Paris to Evanston, Wyoming. This count'Y he had to tour with a wagon or a sleigh, as the foot-hol- t-i- , illansen. the VBl'ey is shown ebove. Those music makon date ao fat ack ai 1897. From left to right they a e Alma Fuln.ur, rror. Bunn, Israel Locally Gathered Herbs Were Used In Early Medical Treatments By MYRTLE W. MORGAN Weston, Idaho As told bv ming Sam Whitney When Cache Valley was very young each home had to he its own drug store. Some medicines came In by freight wa ton tr"m Corrine and Montana, but owing to the difficulty of transportation, especially In winter, the John Nicholson, Charles W. Nih-leHenry H. Rolapp and James H. Wallis. President Budge remained in Europe for two and a half years, during which time the branches of the church were may, terially strengthened and In ad- dition many members emigrated to the valleys of the mountains. President Budge was released ar.d returned home in November 1880, In time to journey to Bol e. Idaho and take part as a member of Rethe Territorial Legislature. turning home In the spring of 1881 he devoted a large part of his time during ine year In assisting tk railroad, which wav building from Granger to Pocatello, In procuring a right-of-wa- y. Bear lake From 1877 to 1906, a period of circumstances required. twenty-nin- e years, William Budge After having labored one year served as president of Bear Lake as President of Bear Lake Stake, Stake. This long service he faun-full- y William Budge was called by the performed In every detail. First Presidency of the Church Then In 1906 he was called to to preside over the European preside over the Logan Temple, a at position he filled until his death, Mission, with headquarters Leaving his Liverpool, England. families In Bear Lake, he at once proceeded to his field of labor. Arriving In Liverpool he found some able men to assist him, among whom were Henry W. Naisbitt, with dignity and honor. His pass ing occurred at Logan, Utah, on March 1, 1919. He was in his 91st year. He left a large and splendid family, many of whom have added honors to his name. TOM TO1 3a&innSE& to OB i 2J3S nesr-K- 71 CS01.3I34 pioneers for the most pri had to look after their own ne-by gathering and curing herbs in ds season. They always had to1 be picked before the dog days, which weie July 20 to August 20. used The most common were catnip and madweed, sometimes called foolscap, used in fevd and honey, for ers; steeped for cough; he-b- s hore-houn- may-app- cramp; kitty-ka-n- le ic and potawa-tam- y plum bark and grape root for blood purifier; wild sage tea for spring tonic; hollyhock root for kidneys; burdock for disinfectant, and asifedity worn around the neck to ward of sickness. Most of the early Cache settlements had midwives. Before Dr. Ormsby came to Logan and w hile he was the only doctor in Logan, Sister Burgess lived in Providence. She was the midwife. Sam Whitney (remembered as Peg-le- g Sam) always kept a racing stallion in his stable. Everyone in Millville knew that he was welcome to saddle this stallion and ride him in an emergency. Or sometimes he was hitched to the cart. My father (young Sam Whitney) remembers more than one occasion when there was need to go flying over the roads to fetch Sister Burgess so that she could assist in ushering a little newcomer into the world. More than once Sister Burgess, who had been called from her bed, finished dressing in the cart. Father would put his arm around her waist to keep her from falling and give the horse the rein. By the time she reached Millville, Sister Burgess usually had her shoes on. The horse would stop on the word whoa, and father would spring from the cart and set the midwife on her feet on the ground. She always landed running and always had her little black bad ready. They : P i hi n h e 5. Inflation Advised DETROIT It can cost a motorist one cent extra for every mile of driving If his tires aren't Inflated properly. A test showed that when tire pressure was four pounds lower than specified, cars average one mile less per gallon of gas. h SAVE MONEY Insure with Farmers District Sales end Claims Office 477 South Main Telephone 600 L0GAN Don Buckingham Icon D. Hardy Grant Sorenson S. Keith Stoddard Edwin Tolman 600 t:. HYRUM Robert W. Bowen SMITHFIELD 1729-- R 2058-- R U79-- Scth T- - GodfreY 41 LaMar Nelson C. E. Wilson Utah's Leading Writer of Automobile and Truck Insurance Standard Form Prompt Claims Service 80ts,icE LOGAN AUTO BODY UST irJth. ,l,m x rsrtf On Hoppers In Modern Day 31 n 'M 1 THE HOME OF NIEDERHAUSER'S LOGAN AUTO BODY SHOP We do the same type of baked enameling for your car as was done originally at the factory. Our enamel is actually baked in. 200,-00- as they go. For upwards of fifteen years this Logan Auto Body Shop has been doing rebuilding of automobile 'bodies and putting them back into as good appearance a repainting with baked enamel and balancing the wheel. When wa do a guaranteed job Xs - All our pastry is mad Own I & high quality BAN V Y CAROL LQU' KfMBALL Jis oter D. V. P.'t uorljfamow of 47 teltbjrtmi in Salt Like City from July ? ibrou gh July 24 otnmrmoratutn of Vtab Pkmeeri. with V, mm? it ii guaranteed to bo satisfactory. Estimates Given Without Obligation ELLIS EGGS. Wo insist on fresh m a job AT WOOLWORTHS j if guaranteed when they came from the factory. Our plant is one of the best equipped in the intermountain west for. replacing broken or shattered glass completely upholstering the car gg. We invite you to try our fine lunches. NIEDERHAUSER'S LOGAN AUTO BODY SHOP 715 North Main, Logan, Utah Telephone jl 10S-- t Policy ie J 14 f BWICTOM 3S long-legg- 194-- R 17S-- Nvru- -'ie bombing raids on millions of grasshopper installations today. Is July 25, when bug experts figure the hoppers will start laying their eggs. The pilots knew that either they insecticide the grasshoppers by then or It would he too late and then nobody knows how many would grasshoppers Wyoming have. It was the most comprehensive eradication program In the state's history. Federal, state and local officials joined Individual landowners in the battle to wipe out the insects. And they were pleased with their progiess thus far, but a lot of work lay ahead. Since June 30 three weeks eradication teams had sprayed 250,000 acres. They still had 0 acres to go and only a week left before the egg la.''ng deadline. The west fears grasshoppers. Ranchers know from expeuenee what they can do to fields of grazing grass or crops as they move across, eating every blade 1 : 988-- Sneak-U- p DENVER, A suadron of airplanes staged advance k, to one-four- th As a youth he heard the Mormon doctrines preached by an American Elder, and was baptized on December 31, 1848, when he was twenty years of age. Three years later, in April 1351, he was called to serve as a local missionary in the Bmibh Mission. In litis capacity he labored In Scotland, England, Wales and on the continent, for a period of nine years. In 1855 In Saxony, he converted Karl G. Maeser, who later became a distinguished educator in Utah. On November 14th, 1856, Wil-'iaBudge was married to Julia To America In May 1860, William and family began their Journey to America. They boarded a sailing vessel in Liverpool and after a tedious voyage reached New York City; from there they traveled by train to St. Joseph, Missouri; thence by boat to Florence, Nebraska. Here oxen and wagons were purchased and the weary journey across the plains was begun. Will am Budge was elected Captain of his company, which consisted of seventy-tw- o wagons. On the way he and the very his wife experienced deep sorrow of losing their only child, an infant son, In death. They buried their child on the plains and proceeded on their way. During the first week of October, they arrived in Salt Lake City. Desiring to engage In farming William Budge settled at Farmington and purchased eight acres of land. Here he was able to sustain himself; he was also appo'nt-- d to positions of trust such as Justice of the Peace for Farmington precinct and Deputy Assessor of Davis County. To Cache Valley On the occasion of the dedication of the Farmington meet'ng bouse, which occurred on January 10th, 1864, President Brigham Young asked William to move to Cache Valley and become Bishop of Providence ward. When William consented he was Immediately ordained Bishop and told to proceed to his new ward. Before the snow was off the ground that spring, three residents of Providence came to Farmington and removed the Bishop to Ills new location. There were about forty families In Providence when William Budge arrived there. He and others began the survey of a new townslte, and the construction of a new ward meeting house. For six years now he labored for every Improvement that would better the condition of the people of Providence. In addition he also held a number of positions of trust, part of which have been listed by his son Jesse as follows; Many Positions "On November 15th, 1864, William Budge recevled from the Third Judicial District Court of Utah Territory, his certificate of citizenship, and a few months later, March 22nd, 1865, accepted as Postmaster at appointment Provldenre. On March 23rd, 1866, he was commissioned by the Secretary of the Treasury, as assistant Assessor of Division number 9 of the Territorial Collection District,' which embraced what la now Cache and The Five Simple Rules Are Given 162-- W ? |