Brethren, there is a subject which has been spoken of during this
Conference in regard to the mission to the cotton growing district of
our Territory, to which I desire to again call your attention.
We have been instructed in the principles of the kingdom to a
wonderful extent during this Conference. The instructions which we
have received have been of a character that they may be reduced to
practice by every person whose feelings are so disposed.
The President remarked that he desired to strengthen the missions to
the cotton country by sending down two hundred more families. It will
be recollected that a request was made last year for the brethren to
volunteer to go on that important mission. There were a few who came
up and gave in their names, but the great mass of the brethren did not
feel to do so. They were aware that it was the wish of the Presidency
that certain things should be done, but they seemed as though they
needed taking by the ears and shaking to make them sensible of the
great importance that ought to be attached to this mission. It
appeared as if some of the brethren (to use a figurative expression)
had become fastened to the earth with tremendous roots, so that it was
with considerable difficulty that they could be got up, but they had
to be taken up root and branch.
We, as a Conference, voted that the President should call, but none of
us felt like volunteering. [President B. Young: I volunteered, on the
condition that the people would consent to it.] Yes, the President
volunteered, but it is well known that the Presidency are required
here; most of the time they must be present to superintend the
building of the Temple and direct the affairs of the Church in all the
world, but the Elders are set apart to go into all the earth and labor
as directed by the Presidency. It is also well known that the master
builder has influence and power here and that he understands how the
foundation, the walls, the timbers, the roof, and all connected with
the Temple of our God should be put together. It is likewise well
known that the Presidency never ask men to do a service except that
their labors are required in that new position. One particular remark
which I wish to make is, that notwithstanding the unprecedented high
water in Washington County and the damage and disappointment
consequent upon the flood, the settlements made by the last year's
mission have proved a decided success. That mission has proven the
nature of the climate more perfectly than it had before, it has tested
the soil, and accomplished many other things of immense advantage and
worth. It was stated by many that the mission would prove a
failure, that there was no country there, but the truth is, that the
elements, including the water, the soil and all that surround them are
actually aching for the brethren to combine them together and make
them into good cotton and other choice productions of a mild climate;
all these elements are ready to render aid to build up Zion.
I consider that we should feel ready and willing to do anything that
may be required of us, to lend our exertions to establish the kingdom
of God permanently upon the earth.
When the people first settled in San Pete Valley some were
discouraged, they never thought that wheat could be produced in such a
country as that; they did not believe that anything would grow there;
the white-colored soil alarmed them, but it is now the granary of the
mountains. Now, there has recently been just such a feeling in regard
to Washington County, but the past year's experience has demonstrated
more fully that most excellent cotton, sugar cane, grapes, peaches and
many other commodities of life can be successfully raised there in
that desert-looking country.
There are quite a number of men who have remarked to me that they
would willingly go if they were called on. I wish to say to such
brethren that they are called on now, and I sincerely wish that two
hundred brethren would volunteer today by giving in their names to me
at the Historian's office. By going this fall you have all winter to
prepare, and the advantage can be taken of the early spring season,
thus giving the brethren an excellent opportunity to raise a crop of
cotton the first year. By sowing wheat in October tolerable crops can
be raised, and by planting corn early in March two crops can be raised
in one year, or one good crop of cotton. The fact, in brief, is, that
so far as the country has been tried it has proven a success, and many
of the brethren have said that the country is a great deal better than
they expected to find it.
I hope all that has been said by the brethren in reference to the
culture of hemp, flax, indigo, and in fact all that will tend to build
up Zion will be attended to, for let it be remembered that it is
coming to this necessity of producing for ourselves or to go without,
and the question resolves itself into the simple proposition, "Clothes
or no clothes." We must make our own woolen, flax, hemp, and cotton
goods or we must go naked. We cannot get these articles much longer
from the States, according to the present prospect. The vengeance of
the Almighty is sweeping the land with the besom of destruction;
millions of men are forsaking their industrial pursuits for the
purpose of destroying each other. Let us each and all attend to this,
that the beauty of our garments may be the beauty of the workmanship
of our own hands, or we shall find ourselves without many of the
necessaries of life altogether.
May God bless the people, in the name of Jesus: Amen.
- George A. Smith