Utah gazetteer 1892-93, containing a complete index to residents and business firms of Salt Lake City, resources of Utah and reliable business directory of the Territory, Part 87

Author: Stenhouse & Co. (1898) bkp CU-BANC
Publication date: c1892
Publisher: Salt Lake City, Utah, Stenhouse & Co.
Number of Pages: 1248


USA > Utah > Salt Lake County > Salt Lake City > Utah gazetteer 1892-93, containing a complete index to residents and business firms of Salt Lake City, resources of Utah and reliable business directory of the Territory > Part 87


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90 | Part 91 | Part 92 | Part 93 | Part 94 | Part 95 | Part 96 | Part 97 | Part 98 | Part 99 | Part 100 | Part 101 | Part 102 | Part 103


Natural gas in abundance assured immense manufacturing establish- ments of every kind will be erected here that will give permanent employ- ment to thousands of persons and add to the prosperity and population of the city. Cheap fuel is what all manufacturers must have and is the most im- portant consideration. The manufactured articles required by the great sec- tion of country to the west of here, and by Asia, Australia and the South American countries will be produced here in Salt Lake City. We will manu- facture all of the iron that is required on the Pacific Coast.


The New American Natural Gas & Fuel Co. are now the prime movers in the development of these great resources. They own and control some 8000 acres of land, and have already sunk some five wells, ranging in depth from 600 to 850 feet, the smallest two inches and largest six inches, and the results so far have surpassed expectations. The volume of the small well (known as "Tus- carora") equals 5,000,000 feet in 24 hours, and has proved a wonder to visiting capitalists, and pronounced by all as the "Biggest little well on earth."


Wm. C. Hall, Prest .; O. J. Salisbury, Vice-Prest .; Jno. H. Woodman, Sec .; Jno. W. Donnellan, Treas. Wm. H. Rowe, with above officers, form a Board of Directors.


HEBER J. GRANT,


PRESIDENT.


WILLIAM B. PRESTON,


VICE- PRESIDENT.


HEBER M WELLS, CASHIER.


THE STATE BANK OF UTAH


SALT LAKE CITY .


CAPITAL, $500,000. SURPLUS AND UNDIVIDED PROFITS, $50,000.


-


ESTABLISHED 1873.


DIRECTORS: JOSEPH F. SMITH. WILLIAM II. ROWE ABRAHAM II, CANNON. SPENCER CLAWSON. ELIAS MORRIS. CHAS. S. BUROY NEPHI W. CLAYTON. FRANK Y. TAYLOR, E. M. WEILER. PHILO T. FARNSWORTH. HENRY A WOOLLEY.


WILFORD WOODRUFF. PRESIDENT. GEO. Q. CANNON, VICE - PRES. GEORGE M. CANNON, CASHIER. DIRECTORS: WILFORD WOODRUFF GEO. Q. L'ANNOA. dos ESMIIL


ANTON IL. LUND. ANGUS M. CANNON. T. G. WEBBER JAMES JACK, 11. B. CLAWSON, GEORGE REYNOLDS. I. tr. HARDY


[ ** Open Saturday evening until 8 o'clock for deposits of those engaged unt!/ after banking hours. LORENZO SNOW FRANCIS M. LYMAN HEBER J. GRANT


INCORPORATED 1888.


CAPITAL, $200,000. SURPLUS, $200,000.


ZION'S SAVINGS BANK and TRUST COMPANY, Nos. 1, 3 and 5 Main Street, Salt Lake City, Utah.


The oldest and largest Savings Bank in Utah. Interest paid on deposits in any sum from $1.00 up: said interest computed quarterly and if not drawn added to the principal. Safety deposit boxes for rent. We guarantee fair treatment and desire your business. Correspondence solicited and all deposits received from parties outside of Salt Lake City as carefully attended to is if made personally in the bank,


ESTABLISHED 1876.


INCORPORATED 1889.


WHITE & SONS CO.,


(Incorporated.)


38 West First South Street,


SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH.


-WE CARRY A FULL, LINE OF PRIME MEATS, FRESH AND CURED .-


WHITECAR &C S.T. LAKES


" FREE DELIVERY TO ALL PARTS OF THE CITY.


MISCELLANEOUS.


FARMING; STOCK-RAISING.


IRRIGATION .- The area of irrigable-arable land in Utah has been given under a previous head. Although crops aregrown in favorable spots without irrigation, yet irrigation is indespensable to the Utah farmer. With the canals and aqueducts made, watering costs at the outside $3.50 an acre. At the same time it enriches the land and assures a full crop. If water can be so distributed as to rnn over and off from the land, it is held that it will in- part more of the elements of plant growth than the harvest extracts. A certain forty square miles in Valencia, Spain, under the canal of the Turia, sustain 70,960 souls ; and this exclusive of the population of the city of Valencia. At one-fourth of this density, Utah's irrigable-arable lands will sustain 1,250,000 souls. Cultivation is indigenous only in rainless countries, where man controls seed-time and harvest. Any farmer in the world might well chose to do his own watering (if he could), rather than be at the mercy of the capricious skies which bend above the so-called humid regions.


T'en years ago there were 10,000 miles of aqueducts, large and small, watering as many small farms in the valleys of Utah. No doubt the farms and the miles of irrigating channels have both increased in number nearly 100 per cent. since the last census. The necessity for irrigation tends to keep down the size of farms, and this tends to high cultivation. With a strong and fertile soil, an unclouded sky, a clear atmosphere, an equable climate, reliable seasons, plenty of water, and a multitude of husbandmen relatively to the acres cropped, if our product per acre does not double that of the older States we have nobody but ourselves to blame.


WHEAT-Fair Utah wheat ranks in the east with the best No. 2 red, which is the highest grade that appears in most of the Eastern markets. The choicest varieties are a unique product with scarcely an equal in America. Utah wheat has a brighter, larger kernel than that of the East. and, though no handsomer than that of California, it is firmer and its nutriment more concentrated. As high as 60 bushels per acre have been raised here, but the average yield is not more than thirty.


The largest wheat regions are the Cache and Utah Counties, closely followed by San-pete, Salt Lake and Weber Counties. The great staple is, however, raised throughout the entire Territory. Utah wheat rarely falls in price below 1 per pound free on board.


OATS .- Parties who are keeping up work-horses pay 25 to 30 per cent. more for Utah Oats of ordinary quality than for a fair grade of eastern. Utah oats have ranged in price during recent years from 1} to 14 cents per pound on cars. Large farms have been known to realize an average of eighty-five bushels to the acre by high cultivation.


BARLEY .- Usually Utah barley is of magnificent appearance. In recent years brewing barley has been exported to St. Louis, Milwaukee, California and other points, where it grades up to the best Canadian brewing. It is the use of this barley that gives Utah beer so high a standard. Indeed, the White-club brewing barley will hold its own anywhere as a strictly fancy product.


RYE .- There are a few cars of rye annually offered at figures over one cent per pound. The quality is superb and the yield fair.


CORN -Utah does not rank as a corn country and rarely has any for export. The hot, sultry nights which corn requires are not characteristic of the climate. Still, it must not be supposed that farmers cannot raise corn in Utah, as 500,000 bushels are annually produced.


GRASSES .- In the improvement of Utah land there remains untilled, and scarcely prized, a considerable area of rough ground too dry for grass,


14


CLIMATE; METEOROLOGICAL; SANITARY.


and too broken and stony for grain. This is now being utilized for alfalfa, which succeeds almost anywhere in Utah. All the other tame grasses common to this latitude do well in Utah.


POTATOES .- The Utah potato has a reputation for excellence all over America, and even in Great Britain. For many years great quantities have been exported from the Territory.


The bulk of the potatoes raised and marketed are Early Rose, Early Goodrich, Willard and the Peerless. The king of the Early, Peerless and Compton's Surprise, yield, in favored localities, about 400 bushels to the acre. With high cultivation 800 bushels have been raised to the acre. With proper treatment potato-growing does not impoverish the land, some of the best results coming from ground that has been in potatoes for the last twenty years.


OTHER ROOTS .- Utah has a good reputation for carrots, which some- times yield, of good quality, as much as 1,000 bushels to the acre; also, for tomatoes, onions, turnips, parsnips, radishes, etc. Beets thrive well, and some day the large tracts of low-lying, but now unwatered lands on the western side of the Salt Lake valley, and elsewhere, will be planted in sugar- beets for the manufacture of sugar.


GREEN STUFFS .- Of green stuffs Utah annually exports considerable quantities of cabbages, cauliflowers, melons, squashes, and celery-the latter growing exceptionally fine.


Hops are also native to Utah, their trailing vines overrunning every other kind of foliage in many of the canyons. One or two parties, notably on the Provo Bench, have heeded this suggestion, and are now growing a superior quality of hops.


The net value of these garden products in 1889 has been carefully esti- mated at $2,550,000, and in 1890 at considerably more.


ALFALFA .- The greatest farm crop of Utah is alfalfa. On good soil, with plenty of water, it is cut three or four times in the season, the total yield approaching eight tons per acre. The third growth is usually allowed to seed. After threshing, it is still pretty good fodder. It is held that the ground is benefited by its growth. The roots go deep for moisture and sus- tenance, and there is aperpetual rain of the leaves upon the soil. It is not adapted to other than dry climates. Steady sunny weather is required to cure the heavy growth. It brings the grower $5 to $10 per ton, and he gets 5 or 6 cents per pound for the seed ; 400 pounds is a heavy yield per acre, yet not uncommon. Both hay and seed find a market in adjoining Territories.


VALUE OF IMPROVED FARM LANDS .- Improved farm lands in Utah range in value from $5 to $225 an acre, averaging $40 to $50. They are rapidly appreciating in price, however, and it begins to be seen that every acre subject to water, or that can be made subject to water, is intrinsically worth $100. Lands about Grand Junction, Col., entirely similar in charac- ter, and not so favorably situated as the lands of Utah and Salt Lake Val- leys, five years planted in fine fruit, have been held by their owners against offers of $500 per acre.


CLIMATE; METEOROLOGICAL; SANITARY.


TEMPERATURE AND PRECIPITATION .- The effect of residence in any country upon the physical well-being of man, is mainly a question of cli- mate. In a mountainous district, like Utah, the climate will, of course, vary considerably with varying altitudes and exposures. The inhabited parts of the Territory range, in general, between 4,300 and 6,300 feet in absolute altitude, but 70 per cent. of the population is settled in valleys not more than 4,500 feet higher than the sea, and 60 per cent. of them in the valleys of Great Salt Lake and Utah Lake. In this basin the air is dry, pure, elastic, transparent and bracing; and the temperature compares favorably, in respect of equability, with that of the United States at large, and especially with that of Colorado and Nevada, and the Territories north and south of Utah.


The climate attains that medium between the rigor of the great fresh water lakes region, and eternal summer of Florida and Southern California, which makes it both healthy and agreeable. The normal winter has thirty


15


CLIMATE; METEOROLOGICAL; SANITARY.


to forty days of moderately cold weather, with enough snow for a week or two of sleighing. Indian summer holds on till Thanksgiving, while the planting season begins in Februarv. There is comparative exemption from the changeable weather and raw winds of spring in the north and east. Only one month out of five does the range in temperature exceed 50 degrees. The sun shines perpetually, the air is invigorating, the rapid radiation as- sures cool nights. But no words or meteorological statistics can convey an adequate idea of the charm of the climate, which continues to grow upon one, no matter how long a resident.


Hardly any form of disease originates in Utah, while upon many diseases contracted elsewhere, simple residence and use of the thermal water in the city, and of Great Salt Lake in the bathing season, are more beneficial than ordinary medical treatment. There is no malaria; asthma is impossible ; Beck's Utah Hot Springs are a specific for rheumatism ; pyemia from surgical operations is exceedingly rare ; pulmonary complaints are stayed in their ravages, if not cured ; there are none of the more virulent fevers, and diphtheria takes on a relatively mild type.


People from boasted sanitariums are constantly dropping into Salt Lake City and Valley, experiencing relief, often unexpectedly, settling down and growing robust. Every Utah reader of these lines will readily call to mind examples of this, within his personal knowledge. The Territory is full of octogenarians enjoying a serene and hearty old age, who will be superseded by centenarians when the natives have had, time to become such.


SALT LAKE CITY A PERFECT HIGH ALTITUDE RESORT .- Dr. H. D. Niles, M. D., of Salt Lake City, prepared the following : "The sanatory advantages of Salt Lake City are-


"1. A distinctly local climate, apparently possessing in a marked degree the popular requirements of a high altitude resort.


"2. Unexcelled salt water bathing, the peculiarities of which may indicate unusual remedial virtues.


"3. Hot, warm and cold sulphur springs, of alleged marvelous cura- tive properties.


" A high altitude resort should possess the greatest possible dryness and equability, an elevation of from 3,500 to 8,000 feet, the greatest number of sunshiny days during the year in which the invalid may enjoy outdoor life, comparative freedom from wind and sand-storms, a proper temperature and certain other qualifications not of a climatological character.


"DRYNESS .- First in importance is dryness of the air, as indicated in- versely by the relative humidity. Salt Lake City's air averages 48.9 per cent. relative humidity, and consequently lacks 51.1 per cent. of saturation. El Paso and Santa Fe are the only places in the United States where observa- tions have been taken at which the air has a greater absorptive capacity than at Salt Lake City.


"Recent investigations have strengthened the prevailing opinion of the absorptive and aseptic qualities peculiar to dry air in the treatment of pulmonary diseases. It is well known that warmth and moisture favor de- composition and the generation of - micro-organisms, and lessen the vapor transpiration. Dry air, on the contrary, destroys or retards germ life, in and out of the lungs, and increases the amount exhaled. The moisture thus ex- haled may serve as a vehicle for the removal of effete matter, wasted tissue and germs of disease.


" Dr. Dennison, whose original researches have added much to our knowledge of high altitude climates, suggests an ingenious method for cal- culating the excess of moisture exhaled in a dry, cool air over that in a warm; moist air. In this calculation Glashier's estimate of the weight of vapor in grains in air of a given temperature is adopted, and it is assumed that the dew-point in exhaled air is 94 degrees F., and that it is saturated. Apply this method to the air of Salt Lake City and Los Angeles in the case of a good-sized man, who, we will suppose, breathes twenty times a minute and thirty inches per breath on an average, and we find Salt Lake's excess in transpiration over Los Angeles to be about four ounces daily. The remark- able aseptic and absorptive properties of the air of Salt Lake City unques- tionably have a favorable influence in cases of surgery."


16


MONEY


TO


LOAN


AT REASONABLE RATES ON


IMPROVED


FARMS.


WRITE FOR PARTICULARS TO


Graves & Vinton Co.,


607


McCORNIC


BLOCK,


SALT LAKE CITY,


W. H. DALE,


MANAGER. UTAH.


DIRECTORY


OF


PRESIDING OFFICERS OF THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS.


P. E. means Presiding Elder.


Where a Ward has no post office of its own, the nearest post office to it, und the one at which the residents obtain their mail, is given in parenthesis.


GENERAL AUTHORITIES.


FIRST PRESIDENCY.


Wilford Woodruff Salt Lake


George Q. Cannon Salt Lake


Joseph F. Smith.


Salt Lake


TWELVE APOSTLES.


Lorenzo Snow Brigham


Franklin D. Richards. Ogden


Brigham Young Salt Lake


Moses Thatcher Logan


Francis M. Lyman


Tooele


John Henry Smith Salt Lake


George Teasdale. Nephi


Heber J. Grant.


Salt Lake


John W. Taylor .. Salt Lake


Marriner W. Merrill Logan


Anthon H. Lund.


.Manti


Abraham H. Cannon ..


.... Salt Lake


PRESIDING COUNCIL OF SEVENTIES.


Jacob Gates


Provo


Seymour B. Young


Salt Lake


C. D. Fjeldsted


Ogden


John Morgan


.Salt Lake


B. H. Roberts.


Centerville


George Reynolds.


Salt Lake


PRESIDING BISHOPRIC.


William B. Preston


Salt Lake


Robert T. Burton.


.Salt Lake


John R. Winder


Salt Lake


PRESIDENTS OF STAKES AND BISHOPS.


BANNOCK STAKE.


President : T E Ricks, Rexburg. Counselors : Wm F Rigby, Rexburg; Jas E Steele, Iona, Idaho Falls.


Bingham County, Idaho. WARDS BISHOPS. Aline (Haden). M W Pratt Alpine (Haden), Lysander Curtis, P E


Basalt.


A O Inglestrom


Burton (Kaintuck) ....... J J Johnson


Cedars (Idaho Falls),


Henry M. Perry, P E


Eagle Rock (Idaho Falls,


James Thomas


Egin.


Harry H Smith


Fall River (Berry) .. Hyrum J Brown


Grove (Hayden).


....


.. Jno Paul PE


Iona (Idaho Falls) .. Joseph Mulliner


18


PRESIDING OFFICERS C. OF J. C. OF L. D. S.


BANNOCK (Continued).


Iona, South (Idaho Falls),


A M Rawson


La Belle .. Wm F Walker


Louisville (Taylor,) Richard F Jardine Lyman (Independence), Sam'l A Wilcox


Marysville (Berry), James H Wilson Menan (Platt) Wm N Stephens


Parker (Egin). W M Parker Camas Meadows (Kilgore),


J T Brower, PE


Rexburg, First Ward (Kaintuck)


Thos E Ricks, Jr Rexburg, Second Ward (Kaintuck), Casper Steiner Rexburg, Third Ward Kaintuck). Timothy J Winter


Rigby Geo A. Cordon Riverdale (Blackfoot),


Geo Wintle, PE Salem (Kaintuck) ... Geo H B Harris South Louisville (Taylor),


A Dabell, P E


Taylor (Idaho Falls) ...... Wm Priest


Teton.


John Donaldson


Wilford (Berry)


George Davis


Willow Creek (Idaho Falls),


A B Simmons


BEAR LAKE STAKE.


President : William Budge, Paris. Counselors : J H Hart, Geo Osmond, Bloomington.


Bear Lake County, Idaho.


WARDS. BISHOPS.


Bennington A R Wright


Berne ...


John Kunz


Bloomington


Wm Hulme


Dingle


Sam'l Humphreys


Fish Haven.


John Stock


Georgetown


H A Lewis


Liberty


EN Austin


Montpelier.


Wm L Rich


Nounan


Jno Skinner, PE


Ovid ..


.Philemon Lindsay


Paris, First Ward


Wm West


Second


Robt Price


Preston


Chas G Keetch, Jr


St Charles.


J A Hunt


Bingham County, Idaho.


Soda Springs


Daniel F Lau


Uintah County, Wyoming.


Afton. Chas D Cazier


Auburn J H Holbrook


Cottonwood.


Wm Parsons


Fairview


John C. Dewey


Grover ..


James Jensen


Glencoe W J Titensor


Rich County, Utah.


Garden City Robt Calder


Laketown. Ira Nebeker


Meadowville Joseph Kimball


Randolph.


A Mckinnon


Woodruff John M Baxter


BEAVER STAKE.


President : Chas D White. Counselors : M L Shepherd, J F Talton.


Beaver County, Utah.


WARDS.


BISHOPS.


Adamsville


FT Gunn


Beaver.


Geo Mumford


Greenville


Jos S Morris


Milford


E Tanner. PE


Minersville


Sol Walker


BOX ELDER STAKE.


President: Rudger Clawson, Brig-


ham.


Counselors:


Adolphus


Madson,


Charles Kelly, Brigham.


Box Elder County, Utah.


WARDS.


BISHOPS.


Bear River City


.Carl Jensen


Brigham City, First Ward,


Henry Tingey


Brigham City, Second Ward,


Alvin Nichols


Brigham City, Third Ward,


A A Janson


Brigham City, Fourth Ward.


Jens Hansen


Deweyville ..


J C Dewey


Honeyville ..


.Benj H Tolman


Mantua (Brigham ) ..


.... P C Jensen


North (Brigham) .... Thomas Harper


Park Valley


Wm H Mecham


Snowville


A Goodliffe


Three Mile (Brigham) .... O A Perry Grouse Creek .. Charles Kimber. Sen Willard George Facer


CACHE STAKE.


President: Orson Smith, Paradise. Counselors: Simpson M Molen, Hy- rum; Isaac Smith, Logan.


Cache County, Utah.


WARDS.


BISHOPS.


Avon (Paradise),. Henry W Jackson


Benson


W H Ballard


Coveville


... J C Larson


Clarkston.


John Jardine


College (Millville)


Oscar Dunn


Greenville (Logan) ... N W Crookston


Hyrum


:J F Wright


19


PRESIDING OFFICERS C. OF J. C. OF L. D. S.


CACHE (Continued).


Hyde Park Robert Daines


Lewiston .. W H Lewis


B M Lewis


Logan, First Ward. 66 Second Henry Ballard


-


66 Third Robert Davidson


Fourth Thomas X Smith


Fifth 6


... .William Hyde


66 Sixth ٤٠


.. . A L Schankey


66 Seventh 66 C J Larson


Mendon .. Henry Hughes


Millville.


George O Pitkin


Newton and Trenton .... Hans Funk Paradise .. .Samuel Oldham Peterboro (Mendon) ... W D Cranney


Providence


Frederick Theurer


Richmond


W L Skidmore


Smithfield.


George L Farrell


Wellsville. Wm H Maughan


CASSIA STAKE.


President: H D Haight, Oakley. Counselors: Moroni Pickett, Marion; Wm F Brim, Albion.


Cassia County, Idaho.


WARDS. BISHOPS.


Albion. . Wm T Harper


Almo. Thomas O King


Elba .. Thomas Taylor


Oakley


John L Smith, Jr


Marion


Adam G Smith


Spring Basin ... Enoch R Daley, Sen


DAVIS STAKE.


President: W R Smith, Centerville. Counselors: John W Hess, Farm- ington; J H Grant, Bountiful.


Davis County, Utah.


WARDS. BISHOPS.


Bountiful, South .... William Brown


West. . Lewis M Grant 66 East ... Chester Call


Centerville Aaron B Porter


Farmington. J M Secrist. Kaysville, First Ward, Peter Barton 66 Second Ward,


Daniel B Harris


South Hooper Edwin Parker South Weber. Geo W Kendall


EMERY STAKE.


President: C G Larson, Castle Dale. Counselors: Orange Seeley, Castle Dale; Wm Howard, Huntington.


Emery County, Utah.


WARDS. BISHOPS.


Castle Dale .. .Henning Olsen


Cleveland. L P Ovesen


Emery W G Petty Ferron .. .F Olsen


Huntington


Peter Johnson


Lawrence


Calvin Moore, P E


Molen


Hans P Rasmussen


Orangeville


Jasper Robertson


Price


George Frandsen


Spring Glen


Heber J Stowell


Wellington A E McMullin


JUAB STAKE.


President: Wm Paxman, Nephi. Counselors: Charles Sperry, James W Paxman, Nephi.


Juab County, Utah.


WARDS. BISHOPS.


Eureka


John Beck, P E


Juab.


Elmer Taylor


Levan


Niels Aagaard


Mona


John Kienke


Nephi, First Ward ... Wm H Warner 66 Second .. Thos H G Parkes


Wellington ..... Thomas Orgill, P E


KANAB STAKE.


President: E D Woolley, Kanab. Counselors: Thomas Chamberlain, Orderville; Daniel Seegmiller, Ranch PO.


Kane County, Utah.


WARDS.


BISHOPS.


Factory.


John Covington, P E


Fredonia (Kanab), Thos Jensen, PE


Glendale ..


.R J Cutler


Graham (Ranch) ..... G D Macdonald


Johnson


John W Glazier, P E


Kanab


.Joel H Johnson


Lee's Ferry


W M Johnson, P E


Moccasin ..


Alvin Heaton, PE


Mount Carmel


H B M Jolley


Orderville.


H W Esplin


Pahreah .


John Mangrum


MALAD STAKE.


President: O C Hoskins, West Portage. Counselors: John M Mccrary, Wm H Gibbs, West Portage.


Box Elder County, Utah.


WARDS. BISHOPS. North Plymouth (Plymouth), Thomas A Archibald


Plymouth ....


Myron J Richards


Portage (West Portage),


Enoch Harris


Castle Gate ..... William Stokes, P.E . Washakie. Moroni Ward


20


PRESIDING OFFICERS C. OF J. C. OF L. D. S.


Oneida County, Idaho.


Cherry Creek ..... John D Jones, P E Malad City .. Jenkin Jones Neeleyville (American Falls),


Wm Neeley


Rockland


Isaac Thorn


Samaria Jonah Evans


St Johns ... .James P Harrison


Woodruff (West Portage),


Jos R Harris


MARICOPA STAKE.


President: Charles I Robson, Mesa. Counselors: Henry C Rogers, Lehi; Collins R Hakes, Mesa.


Maricopa County, Arizoua.


WARDS. BISHOPS.


Alma (Mesa) ... Alexander Hunsaker


Lehi.


.T E Jones


Mesa.


William Passey


Papago (Lehi)


.George Tiffany


Nephi.


Samuel Openshaw


MILLARD STAKE.


President : Ira N Hinckley, Fill- more.


Counselors :


Daniel Thompson,


Scipio ; David R Stevens, Holden.


Millard County, Utah.


WARDS. BISHOPS.


Deseret.


.Milton Moody


Fillmore


Thomas C Callister


Hinckley (Deseret) ...... Wm H Pratt


Holden


Anthony Stephenson


Kanosh.


Jesse Hopkinson


Leamington .... Lars N Christianson


Meadow (Meadow Creek)


H B Bennett


Oak Creek Peter Anderson


Oasis .John Styler


Scipio.


Thomas Yates


MORGAN STAKE.


President : W G Smith, Morgan. Counselors : Richard Fry, Samuel Francis, Morgan.


Morgan County, Utah.


WARDS. BISHOPS.


Croyden. George Knight


Enterprise


.J K Hall


Milton.


Lyman Meacham


Morgan, North


.. O B Anderson


66 South Charles Turner


Peterson John A Waite


Porterville, East.


J R Porter


West ..


Samuel Carter


Richville


A D Dickson


ONEIDA STAKE.


President: Geo C Parkinson, Frank- lin.


Counselors : Solomon H Hale, Mat- thias F Cowley, Preston.


Oneida County, Idaho.


WARDS.


BISHOPS.


Clifton


Wm F Garner


Dayton (Card) ... Stephen Callon, P E


Franklin.


Lorenzo L Hatch


Fairview


Moroni W Pratt


Falls (Riverdale).


Hyrum J Smith, P E


Mink Creek. . Rasmus Rasmussen Nashville (Franklin)


Jas Packer, Jr, PE


Preston


Wm C Parkinson


Riverdale.


Leonidas A Mecham


St Joseph (Franklin) ... Edw Perkins


Weston


John H Clarke


Whitney


James Chadwick


Worm Creek (Preston)


A T Merrill, PE


Bingham County, Idaho.


Calvin (Oneida)


Hyrum Byington, P E


Cambridge (Oneida) ..


.Wm Coffin


Chesterfield


Judson A Tolman


Cleveland.


.Ernest F Hale


Dempsey (Oneida) ..... Chas F Potter


Garden Creek (Oneida)


Joseph E Capell


Marsh Center (Oneida). Lehi Wright McCammon (Oneida)


Alanson Norton, P E


Mound Valley (Cleveland)


Eph Bennett


Oxford


Neriah R Lewis


Pocatello.


.Carl J Cannon


Swan Lake (Oxford)


George Heath, P E


Thatcher (Gentile Valley)


Lewis S Pond


Treasureton (Oxford)


W Treasure, P E


Trout Creek (Lago)


Wm McGee Harris


Woodland (Oneida) .. Henry Wakeley


PANGUITCH STAKE.


President: Jesse W Crosby, Jr,


Panguitch.


Counseiors : Mahonri M Steele,


David Cameron, Panguitch.


Garfield County, Utah.


WARDS. BISHOPS.


Cannonville


Seth Johnson


Escalante


Andrew P Schow


Henrieville


Daniel Goulding


Marion.


Culbert King


Panguitch.


Allen Miller


21


PRESIDING OFFICERS C. OF J. C. OF L. D. S.


Piute County, Utah.


Circleville. James E Peterson Junction Rufus A Allen


PAROWAN STAKE.


President : Uriah T Jones, Cedar. Counselors : Morgan Richards, Jr., Parowan; Francis Webster, Cedar.




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.