President Heber C. Kimball has exhorted the bishops to gather around
them the young men and teach them the privileges which they enjoy, and
try to lead them in the right way. Bishops, I wish you to hearken to
this piece of good advice. I will give each of the young men in
Israel, who have arrived at an age to marry, a mission to go
straightway and get married to a good sister, fence a city lot, lay
out a garden and orchard and make a home, and especially do
not forget to plant a proper proportion of mulberry trees. This is the
mission that I give to all the young men in Israel. And I say to you,
sisters, if you do not know how to milk a cow, you can soon learn. If
you do not know how to feed the cows, you can learn. If you do not
know how to feed the chickens, get them and learn how, and if your
husband takes you to live in ever so small and humble a cottage, make
it neat and nice and clean, and set out flowers around the doors, and
let the husband plant fruit trees and shade trees, and let wives help
their husbands that they may be encouraged to take hold of more
important business that will create an income sufficient to sustain
their wives, and by economy and care become wealthy in a short time,
and have your carriage to ride in. What a satisfaction it will be to
you to know that what you possess is the result of your industry and
economy. "It was not given to us by grandfather, or by father, or by
mother, or any relation; but we have got these comforts by our
industry, saving, and the blessings of the Lord." By this means our
young men and maidens will gain for themselves credit, respect, and a
name in Israel worthy of the admiration of all good persons. How much
better is this course than the opposite, to spend precious time to no
profit, always being in a state of dependence. Were the Lord to speak
of such conduct, he would use terms to show that He is not well
pleased with it.
I have a short sermon for my sisters. I wish you, under the direction
of your bishops and wise men, to establish your relief societies, and
organize yourselves under the direction of the brethren, and establish
yourselves for doing business, gathering up your little amounts of
means that would otherwise go to waste, and put them to usury, and
make more of them, and thus keep gathering in. Let this be commenced
forthwith. Ask your husbands to furnish you some straw for hats and
bonnets, and when you get it put more than three straws over your
head, and make a hat that will shade you from the scorching sun. I
have a great desire to live and see the prosperity of this people, and
one thing among the rest, I would like to see the time when our
sisters will take more pains to beautify their children. When your
children arise in the morning instead of sending them out of doors to
wash in cold, hard water, with a little soft soap, and wiping them as
though you would tear the skin off them, creating roughness and
darkness of skin, take a piece of soft flannel, and wipe the faces of
your children smooth and nice, dry them with a soft cloth; and instead
of giving them pork for their breakfast, give them good wholesome
bread and sweet milk, baked potatoes, and also buttermilk if they like
it, and a little fruit, and I would have no objections to their eating
a little rice. Rice is an excellent food for children, and I wish some
of the brethren would cultivate it in these valleys. Upland rice will
flourish in this country. Train up your children to be beautiful and
fair, instead of neglecting them until they are sunburned and become
like the natives of our mountains. Let the sisters take care of
themselves, and make themselves beautiful, and if any of you are so
superstitious and ignorant as to say that this is pride, I can say
that you are not informed as to the pride which is sinful before the
Lord, you are also ignorant as to the excellency of the heavens, and
of the beauty which dwells in the society of the Gods. Were you to see
an angel, you would see a beautiful and lovely creature. Make
yourselves like angels in goodness and beauty. Let the mothers in
Israel make their sons and daughters healthy and beautiful, by
cleanliness and a proper diet. Whether you have much or little
clothing for your children, it can be kept clean and healthy, and be
made to fit their persons neatly. Make your children lovely and fair
that you may delight in them. Cease to send out your children to herd
sheep with their skins exposed to the hot sun, until their hands and
faces appear as though they lived in an ash heap. I call upon my
sisters to lead out in these things; and create your own fashions, and
make your clothing to please yourselves, independent of outside
influences; and make your hats and bonnets to shade you. I wish you,
sisters, to listen to these counsels, and place yourselves in a
condition to administer to the poor. Get your husbands to provide you
with a little of this and a little of that of which you can make
something by adding your own labor. I do not mean that you shall apply
to them for five dollars and ten dollars to spend for that which is
of no profit, but manufacture something that will be useful, as well
as beautiful and comely.
You ought to enter into the cultivation of silk. Our bench lands are
well adapted to the growth of the mulberry tree, the leaves of which
produce the natural food for the silkworm. There is no better land
nor climate in the world than we have for this branch of business. We
can make ourselves independently rich at this business alone, if it is
properly pursued. There ought to be a plot of land in each ward
devoted to the cultivation of silk, and a cocoonery built in the
center of it, and in the season thereof let the children of the wards
who have nothing to do, and aged people, gather the leaves and feed
the worms. The work is light and interesting, while the sales of wound
silk, for which there is always a market to be found, will do much
towards feeding and clothing poor persons that would otherwise be
entirely dependent. If the worms are well taken care of, the season of
feeding only lasts from thirty-five to forty days. If I cannot
succeed in getting the sisters with their children to attend to this
business, I shall be under the necessity of sending to China for
Chinamen to come here and raise silk for us, which I do not wish to
do. To pay people the wages they want here would prevent us from
raising silk profitably. We look forward to the period when the price
of labor here will be brought to a reasonable and judicious standard.
Now, sisters, go to forthwith and get you an acre of land, and get
the Bishops and the brethren to fence it, and prepare it for the
reception of the trees, and go and help them; but, be sure to wear a
wide brimmed hat while doing it, so as not to get tanned with the sun
and the wind. Go to and raise silk. You can do it, and those who
cannot set themselves to work we will set them to work gathering
straw, and making straw hats and straw bonnets; we will set others to
gathering willows, and others to making baskets; we will set others to
gathering flags and rushes, and to making mats, and bottoming chairs,
and making carpets. I pray you in Christ's stead to let gold hunting
alone, and pray the Lord to cover it up in our region of country that
it cannot be found. Those among us who are anxious to find rich gold
deposits, are equally anxious to destroy themselves, and are no wiser
than our little children are in handling sharp-edged tools. They would
not only destroy themselves, but all around them if they had
the power to do it. Instead of hunting gold, let every man go to work
at raising wheat, oats, barley, corn, and vegetables; and fruit in
abundance, that there may be plenty in the land. Raise sheep, and
produce the finest quality of wool in large quantities. By the
migratory system of feeding sheep in this country they will be
healthy, and produce large clips of wool. I hope, by the blessings of
the Lord, to demonstrate this the present season. In these pursuits
are the true sources of wealth, and we have as much capital in these
mountains to begin with as any people in the world, according to the
number of our community. Real capital consists in knowledge and
physical strength. If we know how to apply our labor, it will produce
for us everything we can ask for; it will bring to us the food and the
clothing we want, and every facility we need for comfort, for
refinement, for excellence, for beauty, and for adornment. It will
bring to us the wealth of the world, the gold and the silver, although
gold and silver are not real wealth. They are useful as a medium of
exchange, as foundation upon which to base a currency, and to use as
ornaments and household vessels; and so gold should be regarded until
there is enough of it to pave our streets. O, ye Elders of Israel who
are greedy for gold, instead of wasting your time in search of it,
gather around you the comforts of life, with which the elements are
loaded, and make yourselves rich in all the elegancies and
conveniences by means of economy and industry. I wish the sisters to
lead out in the fashions. It is very little difference what fashion
you produce. I would just as soon see you wear hats with wide brims as
not, if you have that fashion that will give comfort and convenience
and produce health and longevity. We wish to promote the longevity of
the people. Tell your husbands to get you a heifer calf or two and
some chickens, and you will feed them, and take care of them, instead
of feeding pigs, and if your husbands have springs on their land, get
them to clean them out and dam them up a little, and introduce the
spawn of the best fish we have in these mountains, and collect all the
information that has been printed, and which comes within your reach
on the subject of raising fish. And raise your potatoes and parsnips
and carrots for feeding them with, adding a little corn meal, or a
little oat meal. We can raise fish here, and the cost will be one
fourth less per pound than other meats. You may think that fowls are
injurious to the garden; but they are not. They will pick up grubs and
cut worms and other destructive insects, and the good they do in this
respect will far overbalance any trifling injury they may do to young
plants. They will keep your gardens clean of these pests, and fatten,
giving you plenty of eggs to eat. Take care of them, and get a little
patch of lucerne planted to give to your young heifer, and rear her
until she gives you her increase. This is for you young women who want
to get husbands. Tell the young men that you will sustain yourselves,
and teach them how to sustain themselves if they do not know how, if
they will only come and marry you. Now, girls, court up the boys, it
is leap year. Give them to understand in some way that it is all
right. You are ready, and you want to help them to make a good home,
to form a nucleus around which to gather the blessings and comforts of
life, a place to rally to. While you are on the move and unsettled you
can get nothing that is permanent. Tell the boys what to do,
and you sisters of experience, ye mothers in Israel, go to and get up
your societies, and teach these girls what to do, and how to get the
boys to come and marry them. The neglect and lazy habits which our
boys are falling into are a disgrace to us, to say nothing about the
sin of such conduct. They produce nothing, and consider themselves
unable to take care of a family, and they will not marry. This conduct
of theirs leaves our young women without partners; they want somebody
to look to, and something that they can do to advantage and bless
themselves, and have a home to go to. Young men, fit you up a little
log cabin, if it is not more than ten feet square, and then get you a
bird to put in your little cage. You can then work all day with
satisfaction to yourself, considering that you have a home to go to,
and a loving heart to welcome you. You will then have something to
encourage you to labor and gather around you the comforts of life, and
a place to gather them to. Strive to make your little home attractive.
Use lime freely, and let your houses nestle beneath the cool shades of
trees, and be made fragrant with perfumes of flowers.
These are practical teachings; they are things which this people must
be taught, for if we do not learn to take care of ourselves and save
ourselves who will do it for us? Will the Gentiles help us, and care
for us? Will they do us good? No. And I tell you further, Elders of
Israel, that you do not know the day of your visitation, neither do
you understand the signs of the times, for if you did you would be
awake to these things. Every organization of our government, the best
government in the world, is crumbling to pieces. Those who have it in
their hands are the ones who are destroying it. How long will it be
before the words of the prophet Joseph will be fulfilled? He said if
the Constitution of the United States were saved at all it must be
done by this people. It will not be many years before these words come
to pass. How long will it be before they will be coming here for
bread, for the bread of life, and for the bread which sustains the
body? Do you know this? You do not. This community live as it were
from hand to mouth. They must learn to lay up food. Notwithstanding
all that has been said to the people on this subject, not one man to
thirty has bread sufficient to last him one year. As our mechanics are
paid, they might have laid up their hundreds if not their thousands a
year. Brethren, learn. You have learned a good deal it is true; but
learn more; learn to sustain yourselves; lay up grain and flour, and
save it against a day of scarcity. Sisters, do not ask your husbands
to sell the last bushel of grain you have to buy something for you out
of the stores, but aid your husbands in storing it up against a day of
want, and always have a year or two's provision on hand. A great
abundance of fruit can be dried. There are but few families in this
city who do not have the privilege of drying and laying up fruit. Yet
the majority of families in this community, instead of using fruit
that was dried last fall but one, are using fruit dried last year
when the grasshoppers were here. A year's supply should be kept ahead,
so that families would not be compelled to eat fruit that had been
injured by grasshoppers and other insects. We should accumulate all
kinds of nutritive substances, and preserve them from worms, which can
easily be done. If we do not take care of ourselves, we shall have a
very poor chance to be taken care of. If we will hearken to the
counsel that is given to us we shall know how to sustain ourselves in
every particular. Mothers in Israel, sisters, ask your husbands to
take care of the sheep they have got, and not willfully waste them; but
multiply them and bring our wool to the factories to be manufactured,
or trade it for yarn and cloth. The woolen mills which we now have in
the country will work up a great deal of wool if they can get it. Who
is there in our community that raises flax? Is there any attention
paid to this culture? I think not, but it is, "Husband, sell your
wheat, sell your oats to buy me the linen I want." We shall in the
future have flax machines here to make the finest of linen; and we can
make the cotton and silk in abundance. I would urge the brethren of
the southern country to plant cotton sufficient to supply the wants of
the factories that are now in the country, and let us continue our
labors until we can manufacture everything we want. All this is
embraced in our religion, every good word and work, all things
temporal, and all things spiritual, things in heaven, things on earth,
and things that are under the earth are circumscribed by our religion.
We are in the fastnesses of the mountains, and if we do these things,
and delight in doing right, our feet will be made fast and immovable
like the bases of these everlasting hills. We ought not to desire
anything only on righteous principles, and if we want right, let us
then deal it out to others, being kind and full of love and charity to
all. My brethren and sisters, I have occupied considerable time; but I
have not spoken one tenth of what I wish to say to you. By the
authority that the Lord has granted to me, I bless you in the name of
Jesus Christ. Amen.