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  • All fields: Domestic
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Display: 20

    • Domestic Science Class

    • Domestic Science Class

    • Branch Agricultural College (Cedar City, Utah); Southern Utah University -- History

    • Domestic Science Class testing recipes. Left to right, Front row: ? Haslem, ?, Lila Higbee, Anita Thorley, ?, Ann Cox; Second row: Melba Reeve, Lillian Urie, ?, Lydia Matheson, Claire Bennion, ? Jones, ?, ?; Third row: Leona Armstrong, :, Lillian...
    • Page 134

    • Page 134
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    • to qualify. Carried. Recorder was instructed to notify each gentlemen of their appointment and request them to qualify as soon a s possible. The Mayor then announced the standing committees of the Council as follows: (The first named of each being...
    • Page 150

    • Page 150
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    • and t h a t , when notified by the proper officer of the City, he manifested great indifference as to the r i g h t s of the City. After some deliberation, on the motion of Councilman Palmer, the Supervisor was instructed to interview Fife and...
    • Page 159

    • Page 159
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    • citizens had in obtaining water for domestic use, and cited the Council's attention to the fact that all water used by said citizens, under the present regulations, had to he hauled and, when obtained, was of inferior quality on account of the...
    • Page 174

    • Page 174
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    • J u n e 8 , 1908.. . I t was moved t h a t a r a t e of one dollar p e r season be fixed f o r each tap f o r sprinkling lawns, a n d t h a t they be allowed the privilege one h o u r , t h r e e times a week. The Watermaster was i n s t r u c t e...
    • Page 366

    • Page 366
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    • request to the Council for the Highway Association 9 1 ( a committee made up of people from cities between Nephi and Las Vegas) to study the new highway problem. M r . Jenson states that this cross-country highway from Green River to Zion Junction...
    • Page 468

    • Page 468
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    • HISTORY OF CEDAR CITY BY John Urie, 1880 Cedar City i s a beautiful little village situated on the r i m of the Great American Basin and is 5,615 feet above the level of the sea. With i t s 740 inhabitants (Census of 18801, i t s 135 houses, i t s...
    • Page 472

    • Page 472
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    • scene could hardly be conceived. The toil-worn and hardy pioneers, with uncovered heads bent in reverence to the Almighty, thanked Him for H i s kindly care in bringing them to a land where conscience was free, with liberty undiluted. and asked H i...
    • Page 477

    • Page 477
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    • prove, however, that the manufacture of iron is an accomplished f a c t , and Iron County, with h e r vast coal fields and an inexhaustible amount of the best iron ore in the world, is destined in the near future to be a vast business center. I t...
    • Page 73

    • Page 73
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    • think you know more than those that are placed above you which is wrong, and you must humble yourselves and be united."18 Some of the settlers were beginning to plant turnips, beets, onions, radishes, and lettuce in their gardens. Their domestic...
    • Page 110

    • Page 110
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    • sickness. Our little number has been increased this season by some fifteen families." Franklin Richards and Erastus Snow left for Great Salt Lake City the morning of Thursday, December 2, 1852. Lunt wrote: "They have done much good while in our...
    • Page 165

    • Page 165
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    • The flood that Henry referred to was the crowning blow for the Iron Works. It swept over the site, completely submerging the equipment and buildings, and carried away some of the property. Also, with the diversion dam washed out, there was no water...
    • Page 273

    • Page 273
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    • honored and revered by our children, exalted above al1 other women. 1s this a state of slavery? If so, it is a very pleasant one. We have many privileges guaranteed unto us, one of which is the right to choose our husbands and, arnongst the many...
    • Page 324

    • Page 324
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    • baptisms were of fiequent occurrence in those days, 1 now understand that our brethren who are laboring as missionaries may justly be temed 'gleaners,' going forth, as it were, at the eleventh hour and gathering grapes when the 'vintage is o'er.'...
    • Page 65

    • Page 65
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    • George and proceeded down the main street, the cattle became restless and unsettled hecause of the commotion made by the people gathered around watching them. The result was a regular bedlam. The cattle were to be delivered to Apostle Erastus Snow,...
    • Page 71

    • Page 71
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    • ladies of the Relief Society for advice and suggestions. I will not attempt to say what good was accomplished." "In the !ear 1876 the name was changed from Retrenchment to Mutual Improvement Association. The name implied what it was first intended...
    • Page 196

    • Page 196
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    • names of the officers who shall serve until the first general election shall be as follows: L. W. Jones ................. President Henrietta L. Jones ....... Vice-president H . L. Jones ................. Secretary and Treasurer K. L. Jones...

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