1993
Joseph Fielding Smith
September 1993


“Joseph Fielding Smith,” Tambuli, Sept. 1993, 2

Joseph Fielding Smith

Joseph Fielding Smith
  1. Joseph Fielding Smith spent many hours riding his horse, Junie, and he took good care of her. After a ride, he always walked her and brushed her. At night he was careful to lock her in her stall in the barn.

  2. But Junie was a smart horse. After Joseph left the barn at night, she used her nose and teeth to undo the strap that held the door of her stall shut.

  3. Whenever she got out, she never ran away. Instead, she turned on the water tap in the Smith’s yard, then walked through the garden or across the lawn.

Joseph Fielding Smith

4. If Joseph heard the water running in the night, he knew that Junie had unlocked her stall—again. Joseph’s father teased him, saying that maybe the horse was smarter than Joseph.

5. Joseph’s father decided that he would lock Junie in so that she could not get out. He buckled the strap around the post and under a crossbar. “Young lady,” he told the horse, “let’s see you get out now.”

6. As Joseph and his father walked back to the house, they heard Junie walking along behind them. Joseph couldn’t resist asking his father who Junie was smarter than now!

7. Joseph Fielding Smith had a good sense of humor, and he enjoyed life. Many years later, when he became the tenth President of the Church, he encouraged other Church members to enjoy life.

Illustrated by Paul Mann