A few words to the Latter-day Saints, and especially to our young men.
We have a great deal of time to spare over and above going to the
canyon, and working in the fields and in our shops. It is true this is
not exactly the time of year to establish evening schools and lyceums,
but we wish our young men to make preparation this summer, and send
east to procure the necessary articles for the formation of societies
in this and other cities throughout the Territory for the purpose of
studying the arts and sciences. Now, if a man in the North, say
sixty-eight or a hundred miles away, should have a limb broken, he has
to send to this city for a surgeon. It is all folly; there is no more
real necessity for it, if men would devote their time to the study of
such things, than there is to send for a man to put a rafter or joint
on his house, or a panel into his door.
As the subject of education is open, and has been from time to time
during this Conference, I will now urge it upon the people—the young
men and the middle-aged—to get up schools and study. If they are
disposed to study physic or surgery, all right; they will know then
what to do if a person is sickly, or has his elbow, wrist, or shoulder
put out of joint, or his arm or any other bone broken. It is just as
easy to learn such things as it is to learn to plant potatoes. I would
like to urge these matters upon our young men, and I am convinced this
meets the feelings of all the brethren. I do hope, and pray you, my
brethren and sisters, to be careful to observe what br. Wells has said
in regard to introducing into our schools the Bible, Book of Mormon,
Doctrine and Covenants, and the Standard works of the Church, and all
the works pertaining to our faith, that our children may become
acquainted with its principles, and that our young men, when they go
out to preach, may not be so ignorant as they have been hitherto. I
would like very much to urge upon our young people, the sisters as
well as the brethren, to pay more attention to arithmetic and other
things that are useful, instead of acquiring a little French and German and other fanciful studies that are not of so much
practical importance. I do not know how long it will be before we call
upon the brethren and sisters to enter upon business in an entirely
different way from what they have done. I have been an advocate for
our printing to be done by females, and as for men being in stores,
you might as well set them to knitting stockings as to sell tape. Such
business ought to be done by the sisters. It would enable them to
sustain themselves, and would be far better than for them to spend
their time in the parlor or in walking the streets. Hardy men have no
business behind the counter; they who are not able to hoe potatoes, go
to the canyon, cut down the trees, saw the lumber, &c., can attend to
that business. Our young men in the stores ought to be turned out and
the sisters take their place; and they should study arithmetic and
bookkeeping necessary to qualify them for such positions. I would also
like our school teachers to introduce phonography into every school;
it is an excellent thing to learn. By its means we can commit our
thoughts and reflections to paper with ease and rapidity, and thus
preserve that which will be of benefit to ourselves and others, and
which would otherwise be forever lost. This is a delightful study! In
these and all other branches of science and education we should know
as much as any people in the world. We have them within our reach, for
we have as good teachers as can be found on the face of the earth, if
our Bishops would only employ and pay them, but they will not. Let a
miserable little, smooth-faced, beardless, good-for-nothing Gentile
come along, without regard for either truth or honesty, and they will
pay him when they will not pay a Latter-day Saint. Think of these
things. Introduce every kind of useful studies into our schools. I
have been urging upon our young men for years to get up classes for
the study of law. The laws of this Territory, of the United States, of
the different States, of England, and foreign lands. Do this instead
of riding over the prairies hunting and wasting your time, which is
property that belongs to the Lord our God, and if we do not make good
use of it we shall be held accountable.
Now, my brethren and sisters, I feel to bless you in the name of the
Lord Jesus Christ, and I pray my Father in heaven to continue His
mercies to us, and I pray you, in Christ's stead, be ye reconciled to
God in all things. We will now bring our conference to a close.