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Show THE cipla he related a dream Tl OVERFLOWIIB. Thrt Apcatlaa, tha Presiding Biahop, Btaka Praaiianoy and 8 taka Biahop-riei-n Attsodanoa Bynupda of tha Beiawna Delirarad. OBBOM SMITH reported the condition of Cache Stake as follows: We have a corps of home missionaries at work in the Stake, visiting from house to house, and all Saints will be visited by them before their labors are finished in March next The work being done in the Sunday School is doing muoh good, much benefit being derived from the graded system recently adopted. There is an increased attendance of parents. The work being performed by the Improvement Associations was commended. Religion classes and the beneficial nature of their work were referred to, and any bishop who doubted their utility was advised to visit some well organised class and see their methods of instruction, when the necessity of such classes would be at once apparent. The State Presidency aud High Oounoil had. decided to organise the Sterling and Baxter shool districts into a new - ward, which would bo known as the Sterling ward, and to join to Benson ward the Riverside district. A meeting was held at Avon next Wednesday, when a name will be presented as Bishop, in tha place of Bra. H, W. Jackson, removed. A spiritual improvement waa noticeable, and the fact that 98 per cent of the tom for 1894 had been paid, 'there having been but 21 sales of property for delinquent taxes this year as against 81 last year, proved that there had been a con aiderable financial improvement. to-b- e -- . XLDXB L. B. Felt like adding his teatimoiy HATCH l:i . y i . si The-Sainta of the Presidency of the Snow Flake Stake of Arisons was the nest speaker. He referred to a conference known as the Pice Top" conference, held in the open air on top of a mountain in Arisons, upon which occasion Pres. If we do not Cannon remarked: have a good time together, it will be something very nnueual. The speaker thought this remark applicable to the present occasion-Hwas at one time a resident of Cache valley, ' and remembered that in the early history of the valley the people bed great faith were especially diligent in donating for emigration of the poor had known where the last cow had been given for this purpose, and in every instance the donor was blessed for his liberslity. He believed tbit if the people generally had obeyed the revelation given to Pres. John Taylor, their trouble would have been averted. Great stress was laid on the necessity of Temple work, for the redemption of the deed, and the qn eel ion asked: "Are there any here of the Saints and officers of the Church who have not entered tk Temple we should remember onr deed and the Lord will remember n. Elder Hatch concluded hie remarks with an exhortation to the people to pay their tithiug, and assured them that the promiaed blessings wonhl follow. Ia sneaking of this pria- , through immorality, e . THE CHURCH AUTHORITIES Odwt-Fnii-de- noy When the quarterly oonfeienoe of the Cache Stake convened on Bnnday last, aerrioee were commenced by the singing of Come let na anew by the choir and congregation, followed by prayer by Elder 8. M. Molen, and singing by the choir. FBESIDENT APOSTLE A. H. CABMOM I thought to what had already been said, and entered the Golden Gate and waa particularly endorsed the remarks General and Cache Stake there told, this ie the tithing de- made by Brother Hatch in regard Offlcera partment; and I said well, I have to Temple work. Aa illustrative a right here, for I have paid my of the subject he related the extithing. perience of a brother with whom he IS SOBTBIIED AT QUUTEILY CONFERENCE FBES. O.D. FJELDBTED was' acquainted, who came so he waa of keeping near deaths door that spoke of the necessity The RisMUat and His Council, With the covenants we have made, and actually suppoeed to be dead, and All General Church of Cache Btska and Of. of each individual member puri- preparations were being made for returnof of all Quorum and when his funeral, signs is as or herself, for, fying him, Association. and observed were animation the case with the body, if one ing s recovered and related he atrange member Lecame diaoaeed, all were While lying in a affected. He decried the marriage experience. Following ie a list of all general of members of the Church with comatose state, his spirit had offieera of the Church, as sustained those not of the faith, for experience visited the spirit world, where the in general conference October had proven that in the majority of faces of many dead relatives and last, and of Cache Stake, as voted cases, if the one in the Church re- friends of bygone years were aeon. for end sustained on Sunday last, mained faithful, unhappiness, and These faces were averted from at the Stake conference.. We pub-ia- h frequently separation followed. him, and where ha expected signs it for the convenience and innone Usually, instead of the Chnreh of friendliness aud welcome, formation of onr readers. A copy it gaining a oonvert,it lost a member. were shown. He learned that of it should be in the possession had neglected to he because was BISHOF W. B. PBIBTOH of every Chnreh officer in Cache do anything for their salvation end one should be filed referred to the general tendency when he had ample oppotnnity, county, the to look with a lenient eye on our at headquarters of each and his conscience smote him ecclesiastical organization. own little failings .attributing them when he sensed the far GBIBBAL OHUBOH AUTH0BITIX8, to the almost unavoidable weak- sorely of hit We oen and reaching consequences ness of the flesh. Az presented at the General He pleaded strongly for should do bettter not that there negliet. of the Chnreh Oct. 6th, Conference the privilege of returning to Earth ia any compulsion, for God will 1894. to do the necessary Temple work, force no man to Heaven but and was allowed to do so aa soon Wilford Woodruff, as Prophet, because it ia right and in acand Revelator and President jeer as he had oompleted the work for cordance with the spirit that every the Church of Jeans Christ of of rethose whose names he had Latter-daSaint should be in possession of. Saints in all the world corded, ha did die. In speaking When we pray for the poor and George Q. Cannon as First of the law of tithing, he did not sick we should assist in answering 3ounaelor in the Firat Presidency. believe it right for any map to the prayer by helping the poor Joseph F. Smith aa Second withhold the tithing on his earnand visiting the sick. Whan we Counselor in the First Presidency. ings, or even to borrow it; for it Lorenzo Snow aa President of say or think the Chnreh should was the hardest debt to pay beTwelve Apostles. tbs provide for the poor, we shirk a lieved that if many brethren who to As that members of the quorum of us, were now responsibility belongs laboring under a burden and will not reap the blessing. of debt would Twelve Apoetlea Lorenzo the freely pay their Cache Stake has an enviable re Franklin D, Richards, jnow, tithes and offerings, they would oord in all respects except that be able not only to pay their Brigham Tonng, Mosaa Thatcher, of providing for tha poor. In this Franeis M. Lyman, John Henry debts, bnt would eventually have Stake more help ia asked for the an abundance Tithing should be Smith, George Teoadale, Haber Mar-parelief of the poor, than in any a free will J. Grant, John offering. The "Word other.- were exhorted Wr Merrill, pthon H. of wisdom was a subject hie had Lund and Abraham Liotfiiionr1 to settle their differences between almost resolved not to of speak Tha Counselors in the Firat themselves, in accordance with aa ao much had been said again, end the Twelve the tenets of the Ghurah, with a that the Saints were Presidency folly inspirit of love and brotherly kind- structed in the matter but ad- Apoetlea as Prophets, Seen end ness. Neglect of these matters vised the Saints to labor with Revelstore. had broken np the Church of Patriarob to the Church John each other, particularly with relaChrist in times put, and might tives. Smith. Spoke of the wonderful inHeed should do bo again. First Seven Presidents of the fluence exerted by good women in to that great and last comSeventies Seymour B: Young. reforming the habits of their husD. mandment given through the O. Fjeldsted, B. H. Roberts, bands, families and friends, and Prophet John Taylor that we related several instances in point George Reynolds, Jonathan G. should set onr houses in order. Husbands and wives should Kimball,. Balon S. Wells and In the afternoon, after the usual bear and forbear, and never Edward Stevenson. William B. Preston as Presidopening exercises, and while the Be pants for trivial causes if a Sacrament was being administered, wife deserted the husband to ing Bishop, with Robert T. Barthe general authorities of the whom she had been' eealed, with- ton ee hie First end John R. Church and officers of Cache out Winder as hie Second Counselor. proper cause, he would have Stake were presented and ana. the Franklin D. Richards aa Chnreh right to claim her hereafter. tained by unanimous vote. We and General Chnroh Historian Aa the congregation appeared publish the complete list in unwearied and the interest re- Recorder, and John Jaquea as hia another column. mained unabated, an evening ses- assistant. John Nicholson as Clerk of the PB1BT. J. a. KIMBALL sion was held, at which the first Conference. General Tu glad that he had done speaker waa. As the Church Board of EducaAFOBTLM K08ES THATCHER, nothing during that day to be tion: Wilford Woodruff, Lorenzo uhamnd of believed in watching Who spoke on the law of tithing Snow, George Q. Cannon, Karl one day at a time and making a diversity of opinions existed G. Maeaer, Willard Young, resolutions for the same period, in relation to this law even W. Thatcher, Anthon H. George rather than making them for a bishops differing in their con Lund, Jamas Sharp and Joaeph year and breaking them every day. etrretiona of it, and the exact F. Smith. Spoke at length on the advantages nature of its requirements. The Truatee-in-TruAa for the to be derived from keeping the law waa given in connection with of religions worshippers Word of Wisdom, and devoted the law of consecration we re, body known as the Chnreh of Jesus in some time to advising parents, aa it were, under a law of carnal Christ of Latter-daSaints view of the present growing im- commandments in this respect Wilford Woodruff. morality, to be watchful of their therefore tha law baa been largely adthobVties or cacum stake. children! associates. The prom- a matter of conscience with the FBE8IDENCT. iscuous character of tha attend- people. The requirements of the ance at many of the dances, could law were explained in detail, aud Onion Smith, President; Simp not be otherwise than injurious. the speaker agreed with Brother aon M. Molen, First Counselor, Children should be carefully Cannon wherein he said that he Isaac Smith, Second Counselor. wonkl not plead with the people guarded againat contamination high council: they should be compelled firmly to pay their tithing The Lord Gao. W. Thatcher AWin Crockett but gently, to remain at borne it loves a cheerful giver, and af- James Z. 8tewsrt 8eth A Langton C. night, except on special occasions, ter tiou wee called ta the fact that Aaron F. Farr, Jr. Niela Edlefssn and then only with the but safe- the cheerful tithe payer waa also M. W. Merrill, Jr. Alonso Q. Barber Edward Hanson Jas. A. Laiabman guards and guarantees of their a free donator to all worthy ob- L. R. Martineau John EL Carlisle moral safety. Vice should lie jects, and was always blessed ALTEBNATB HIGH OOUNCILOBB. more carefully guarded against All were exhorted to take the and if possible quarantined, that. Savior aa a model, and as far as Cbaa. H Robbins Asdraaa Pataroon Christian Laraan Jobs Jacobs Asiatic cholera or diptheria. It possible, to follow hie example. Joseph Ylorrall W.W. Maughaa 'waa far better to part with the Rkhimbxk that y6u can get al pathiabchb: body of a loved one from disease, than that its sonl should be lost kinds of Job work at this oflee, and N. Liljanqaist, Hens Aidereos dream in Arizona The Proceedings of the First Day. on the 1 had QUARTERLVJONFERENCE. subject, as follows: CROWDED NATION. LOGAN, UTAH, FRIDAY, FKBRUARY, 1,1805. VOL. 4. TMEIHKLE LaOGA N : y at the lowest prices a Jama Q. WUUe. Or FBXSIDXNOY NO. 81. ADDITIONAL LOCALS. HIGH FBIX8T,8 LITTLE A quobum: A report of Mondays conference Samuel Roakelley, President; Thomas Duca, First Counselor, Joaaph Morrell, proceedings will appear in onr next issue. Ssoond Counselor. SENSATIRH. Miss Ida lone Cook of This BELIEF SOCIETY OFFIOEBZ: City is Missing. It ie considered comparatively Adalina H. Barber, President; Luey warm here now when the mercury & Gordon, Firat Counselor, Luna Y, Thatcher, Second Counselor; Marion EL Scale. Bsomkrj, EL I Crowtker, Cor. Secretary; Mary E. Smith, Traaaursr. BABBATH SCHOOL OFFICBBI: Oliver 0. Ormaby, Superintendent; Wm. H. Apperley, Wo. Q. Bseae, Samuel B. Mitton, Jama P. Lowe, Assistant; Joseph Quinnay, Jr., Sacra-tary. M. M. I. A. TIONS: OF T. OFFICERS ASSOCIA- Douglass M. Todd, Seperlntsndent; John H. Maugban, 1st Assistant; Haaa A Pederson, 2nd Assistant; Wm. O. Farrell, Seuratary; Wm. B. Pieston, Jr., Corresponding Seerotary; J. W. Hyde, Treasurer; J. E. Hyde, Muaioal Director. 0FFICSB8 OF I. L. M. L ASSOCIATIONS: Elizabeth Townsend, President; Lucy Hoving, 1st Counselor, Sarah H. Taylor, 2nd Counselor; Armenia Adams, Secretary. 0FFI0XB8 OF FBIMABY ASSOCIA- TIONS: Jane E. Molen, President; Mat-ti- e B. Hanson, let Counselor, Emma Pike, 2nd Counselor, Lamia Maughan Secretary. 8UPEBINTXNDXNCY OF BXUGION CLASSES! Ephraim G. Gowans, Superintendent, Daniel T. Hiller, First Assistant, Wm. G. Raymond, !ind Assistant TAKE BOABD OF EDUCATION. Onon Smith, S. M. Molen, Iaaae Smith, George W. Thatcher and Mosea Thatcher. Alexander Lewis, stake chor- keeps above zero. This ie the kind of weather when the mercury gets a drop on itself. In fact it takes a drop or two too much. About three mouths ago Mr. O. W. Beneon caught a severe cold, from the effects of which he lost his voice. Even now he cau only whisper. It ia to be hoped he will soon recover the fall nee of hie vocal organa. Iaaae El well has opened a tinsmiths ehop on Third street, in the quarters formerly occupied by Franklin Merrill. lie is prepared to make all kinds of tinware, stove piping, or anything in his line. He also repairs stoves, and can make old ones as good as new. The Hyrum choir, band and orchestra had an enjoyable concert last Saturday evening, which wbb participated in by several musical people from Wellsville. The concert wee of a much Ligher order of merit than usual, and the attendance was large. Captains Gibbs and Cannon have returned from their Ute investigation trip to Grand and San Juan counties. They report that there are still hundreds of the Colorado Utea there and that they refuse to go back to tbeir reserve tions. Steps will at onee be taken to have them sent back and kept there. A short time ago the firemen orister, Anns B. Phillips, organist, Susan H. Gates, assistant organist, ganized a debating class and it is already proving an interesting Joseph E. Wilson, Stake dark. future. The class meets at the vatABQtfKADV BALli Oas Will fa Given Valentine's Night by the N. G. U. fireman g avuyeurr iiinne day .alternating the nighia of their HER PBESEKTRilERERBOtlTSIS She ia in UNKBOWI. Several Thousand Djllar Short the Accounts With Her Wards nnd Action May la Coinuieno-aAgainat Her Bondsman. d The Salt Lake Argna devotes more than a column of Buue in its issue of the 26th, to Mine. Ida I. Cook. It ia alleged that W. Van Cott, aa attorney for Miss Cook's wards, Elmo T. aud Edna F. Cook, obtained a citation ordere ing lmr to apear before the Court of Salt Lake county, and render an account of her guardianship; no inventory or ever having been filed with the Court, although she has acted os gnardiau since 1877. It states also that in Noveralier, 1887, a draft waa received by her through the Balt Lake court, from the County Judge of Arapahoe Co., Color ulo, for $7,38230 on tha Cook childrens account; that her bonds in Salt Lake County, were signed by Brigham and Lizzie F. Young, and those, in Colorado, where a portion of tho property ie situated, by Briglinm Young and D. H. Moffat, President of the First National Bunk of Denver. Further, that her total defalcation aa guardian amounts to 914,000, and that her accounts with an Eastern patent medicine firm for whom she waa acting as Utah manager last summer, are $500 short; that she has absconded, and her friends have feared she had Pro-Irat- re-uo- rt j; regular practice, and discussions Argna read and other an had, The officers of the N. G. U. of matters ofessays Mercur, where it alleges she ie importance brought running a hotel. Logan have taken in hand the up. muoh talked of Aa the article boa caused conmanagementof the ?or some time past we have siderable comment, a Nation reand have armasquerade ball, heard but little from our corresranged to give one of the finest porter interviewed Elmo T. Cook, the conntry. We in pondents seen in ever of the wards, who says that one masquerades Logan, on the 14th inst., Valentines should be much pleased to receive Miss Cook owes the estate only letters from them, of the brief, aliout $5,000 that the check reDay, The dressing rooms on the newsy variety. They would con- ceived by her from Colorado was second floor of the Palace will be favor fer a on ns and the ublic,and in charge of competent awisants, j only for ono thousand and odd time at same the and practice gain free will room check and the be dollars instead of over seven under the supervision of one of experience valuable to themselves. thousand that Brigham Yonnge the sergeants. The ball room will Our foreign correspondents too, name wee not on the Colorado be profusely deoorated for the have written but little of late. bond that she is not a defaulter Surely they must see and hear in any anm whatever to the patent oocaaeion. With the check-rooon the second floor, the crush in things that would be of interest to medicine concern, and finally, the dressing rooms adjacent to the friends at home, and we hope they that he had personally investiIn will take time to sit down and re- gated the rumor that she waa iu bell room will be avoided. cord them. Mercur, aud it waa false. He anticipation of a large party of number of found a woman named Ida Cook spectators masquen,the tickets will be limited. Even at but not Miss Ida I. Cook. there, AN ATHLETIC CLUB. this early date the committees are Miss Cook is well known in Loworking industriously . to make Thar ia Talk of Organising a Big One gan, having lived here for many i Logan. this the beet affair of the kind years and been prominent in unwill in had and it ever Logan, Logan will probably soon have educational circles having at one one of the finest athletic dabs in doubtedly be a success. of the time been principal Utah or Vicinity. There is talk of waa she Brigham Young College; one being organized aud the old for Program, Superintenmany yean City Program for the Longfellow Beeae opera house, which is also dent of schools and has held other Literary Society to be held Feb. used by the militia boys, being used positions of prominence and trust. for the purpose. The membership 4th, 1895. It is true, however, that slie is Mnaio Leasing A Co. would likely number between 25 defaulter in the sum of several Edith Clemens. and CO and could easily be made Sketch thousand dollars and that her Claud Lewis. up of the young men of ' the city Recitation whereabouts is at present unknown Mueio vocal . . . .Pheobe Eliason. and those attending the colleges, detectives are endeavoring .Minnie Fisher. keeping the crowd very select. If though Paper to locate her. If Bhe does not reDebate, Resolved that crime in- the organization ia perfected, aa it appear. and give a satisfactory creases with the advance of civili- likely will be. a good outfit con accounting her wards will sation; Affirmative W. Gibson, listing of Indian clubs, dumb action against her bonds-meW. Molen. Negative, W. M. Boy-de- belle, striking begs, boxing gloves, for the amount due them. horizontal and parallel bars, etc, J. H. Crockett 7:30 at commences etc., will be put in. Such a club p. Meeting NOTICE m. sharp. Pnblio cordially in- if properly managed would be of The annual meeting of tha vast benefit to' many of the vited. of the Uuioli MerStockholders of lots F. B. Ellswobtb, pres. young men as there are be held at tha will of kind cantile Co., seldom who Sec. them Libbin Rich, get any office on Monday, Fob, would be exercise it end Company's physical 4 o'clock p. ui. at the need. We Must Be Sold at One. the 11th, 1895, thing they just Locran, Jan, Slat 1895. 50 cords pine logs, stwsd in one hope the proposed athletic club C. E- ThobitenhoN, foot lengths at 96.00 pr cord at Z, will be organized and that it will Secretary C. M. 1. prove a enccsM I . m com-men- oe n, . - |