Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 March 1883 — Page 5
MORMON EVANGELISM. Talk with the Head of the Southern Branch —Who and What Are the Elders. Special to Cincinnati Enquirer. Elder John H. Morgan, the High Priest of the Mormon evangelists of the South, being in this city making preparations for the grand e.’odus of proselytes from comfortable childhood homes to the land of many wives and fewer husbands, your correspondent today called on the gentleman at the Florentine Hotel for the purpose of learning something about Mormons and Mormon habits. T3ie elder states that the Southern mission comprises sixteen States, divided into conferences, each State constituting a conference, which is divided into districts, one elder presiding over the entire mission, with elders of lower degree to assist. There are at present eighty-five elders in the Southern Mission— Tennessee, Virginia and North Carolina predominating as to numbers. So rapidly does the work extend, however, that there now have to be five to fifteen added to the force annually. The missionaries are men from the various vocations of life, embracing merchants, farmers, mechanics, day laborers, etc. They are not preachers in the general acceptation of the term, but men who are willing to leave their homes for from one to three years to labor for their chosen cause. They* pay all their own expenses, both going* and coming, as well as tlieir expenses while out. When arriving at Chattanooga, which is the headquarters for the whole Southern Mission, they are assigned to friends of labor by the chief elder. They preach to the people in schoolhouses, private houses, on the roadside, under trees—in fact, anywhere that they can get men to listen to them. The elders do not use tea or coffee or tobacco, and are strict teetotalers as to intoxicants. They believe that illicit intercourse between the sexes, with murder, is one of the unpardonable sins, and lie says that if bis church had the making of civil laws they would punish sexual intercourse outside of the marriage state with death. The elder claims that no missionary has ever been proved guilty of adultery, though men and women in the great body of the church sometimes go astray. There have been 330 baptisms during the last twelve months, wnich, with the children, would make an addition to the church of about 700 people. Tennessee, Virginia and North Carolina yield the largest number of converts, who are mostly farmers and mechanics of small means, who sell all tlieir real and personal property to obtain funds to emigrate to the West. They go with their own free will, which they prefer to remaining among their former friends, who proscribe them for embracing an unpopular belief. While converts are received from all denominations, more or less, possibly over half wiio join them are persons who never belonged to any church. These, the elder says, will listen before condemning. The missionaries have encountered more or less opposition from communities which they visited—not only in newspapers and from the pulpits, but on several occasions masked men have, at the dead hour of midnight, attacked those who had joined them, as well as the missionaries themselves. Even assassination had been resorted to, ns in the case of Elder Joseph Standing, who was killed by an armed mob in Whitfield county, Georgia, July 21, 18119. Elder Joseph H. Parry, a traveling elder, while in Clay or Cherokee county, North Carolina, was taken from his bed by a mob and brutally beaten with hickory switches. The houses of the members were raided by a mob led by a Methodist preacher named Green, who dragged men, women and children from tlieir beds and beat them with clubs and switches.
James Harrison, an old gentleman who had formerly stood well in the community, was so badly treated that he died from the effects a few months afterward, llis wife, aged seventy years, for months carried on her person marks she received on the same occasion. This whole branch, the elder says, was forced by the disbelievers to leave that section of country. They made their way into Georgia, near Cartersville, where they remained until relief came from Salt Lake City, when they emigrated, and were located in Colorado, where he says they are now living and prosperous. Regarding this persecution, Mr. Morgan says: “We would not be understood as believing that the Southern people indorse those things. On the contrary, we know they do not; and I will here say that a more kindhearted, hospitable people never existed than the mass of the people who inhabit the South. We have found the latch-string on the outside and the last crust of bread at our service.” In reply to the question as to the effect the recent legislation of Congress has had on the church, the elder savs its only effect was to disfranchise all who were or had been living in plural marriage, hut as they were only a fraction of the community it did not affect the elections in the least, the Mormon candidate for Congress receiving 20.000 votes, while the Gentile candidate received but 4.000 at in election that occured after the disfran•ohisemen t. An emigration company goes out twice a vear, general Ivlin November and March, the last leaving to-day, when a company of 150 took their departure. Mr. Morgan claims that the fortunes of his sect were never more prosperous than now, and that in no other church organization are so many nationalities represented as there are among the Mormons. VICTORIA’S ROMANCE. How John Brown Obtained Such an Influence Over Her. Noiv York Times. John Brown was selected bv Prince Albert to be the Queen’s gillie, or boy attendant and groom. No fairy godmother could have done better by John Bntwn than this. llis fortune was made. Whenever the Queen and her beloved consort went into the Highlands, John Brown was to the fore. And when the Prince Consort died, universally lamented by England and mourned with inconsolable grief by Victoria, John Brown was promoted to the position of personal attendant upon the Queen. From that time forward lie went wherever the Queen went. ' He was her menial shadow, her constant companion, her faithful arid inseparable follower. John Brown was the Queen’s body servant, at tached to her person, and no more seen without her than was her robe, or shoe, or glove. And so it has come to pass that the name of John Brown must be linked indissolubly With the Victorian era. The history of the nge that omits the name of John Brown will be incomplete. In course of time it happened that John Brown, who was the earthly link that connected the living Queen with the dead Prince, became to her Britannic Majesty something like an apotheosis of the Prince Consort. Victoria mourned Albert with a grief almost akin to insanity. The handsome, ready, obsequious and canny Scot doubtless made the best of his opportunities. The Queen could deny him nothing. He was only a gillie, a menial. He could not be ennobled. He could not even be knighted. The tie that bound him to the Queen of England would be sundered whenever he ceased to be a favorite and favored servant. He must be forever near the Queen. Grand ladies, peeresses, and women of high degree were scandalized by the familiarity with which John Brown and the Queen bore themselves on all occasions, in palaces, in public shows, and during ceremonials of state. The peasafit-hprn Scotchman, secure in his place, snubbed princesses and duch-
esses, and brushed aside ladies of exalted place. The future King of England and his royal brother, the Duke of Edinburg, disliked the gillie, and complained of his insolence. But roj’alty and nobility in vain protested against this unprecedented preferment of the menial. The Queen lavished upon him favors reasonable and unreasonable. He had the right to shoot over royal preserves, where only the Queen’s permission gave entrance, He could go wherever the Queen of England went. He could hear all that was said and done in a council of state, could listen at the private audiences granted by tiie Queen, and could secure for his friciuls and clients privileges denied to exalted personages by the rigid etiquette of the court. If John Brown was hated, snubbed, and sneered at by the aristocracy and nobility, and was disliked by the Queen’s children, he probably comforted himself with the reflection that a favorite has no friends. He was secure in his place as the Queen’s favorite. It was natural that years of favoritism should so inflate humble John Brown that he finally became dictatorial and imperious. He was next to the Queen of England and Empress of India. He was no longer a servant. He was a confidential adviser. lie had privileges, favors and holdings for sale. The thrifty Scotchman made money. He stood between his royal patron and the highest nobility of England. His inexplicable and inseparable connection with royalty has caused a great but needless scandal, and not a few very great people will be glad that the gillie is dead. But this unique episode in English history is only one more of many striking illustrations of the common humanity of royal folk. The unexampled prosperity of John Brown proves that human love and human sympathy throb beneath royal ermine, and that “Kind hearts are more than coronets, And simple faith than Norman blood,’* DUKES’ NEMESIS. A Branded Wanderer with No Roof Under Which to Find Shelter. Uniontown Special to Philadelphia Press, It became known to-day that Dukes was no longer in his room in the Jennings Hotel, and the next question was to find out when he had left. A gentleman was in Uniontown to-day from German township, and he said that Dukes was at his stepfathers’s early yesterday morning. He therefore must* have left here late Monday night, not waiting until the twenty-four hours’ notice was up. The gentleman said that if Dukes was to remain in Fayette county, he wanted him to stay in Uniontown, as there was no room for him in German township. In this move, Dukes displayed as much shrewdness as he did fear. He decided it was not safe to ignore the citizens’ notice to leave the town, and yet he wanted to make it appear that he atayed here longer than the twenty-four hours. He, therefore, had young William HeUer, the man who brought him from German township on Sunday night, to stay in the room of the Jennings Hotel and keep the door locked. Heller thus played the role of doorkeeper as if Dukes was in the room, and whenever the former went out on the street, he reported that Dukes was still in the hotel. This trick was kept up until to-day, whereas Dukes had left town within twelve hours after he received his notice. It is stated that he declared he would yet come hark to Uniontown and live here, but this is believed to be mere bluster. It is not thought that he can stay at tiie Jennings House any longer.
Tlie Chief of the Engraving Bureau. Washington Special. Judge Folger is now sitting up. He wrote a letter to Don Cameron, notifying him that he could not appoint the man Superintendent of tl>6 Bureau of Engraving and Printing whom Cameron had expected that he would appoint, and Judge Folger added that he had never thought of appointing any one not connected with the bureau. On this Don Cameron will be Jikelj’ to join issue with the Secretary, ns the Pennsylvania senator claims to have a distinct understanding, both with the Secretary and President, that a certain Pennsylvania man should receive the place. It is now understood that Burrill, the disbursing officer of the bureau will be appointed chief. He is a comparatively new man in the bureau, who comes from Folger’s town in New York, lie is said to he a capable man. and his integrity is unquestioned. Ignorant Criticisms. Boston .Touroal. There is a good deal of loose talk about the corruption of the newspaper press which does not call for any response—it is so obviously ignorant and malicious. The people who assume that the opinions which they read in their journals are bought and paid for are, as a rule, people whose porsonal honesty it would not be safe to trust. If they would put their theory to the test by an attempt to buy the editorial opinions of some leading journal, the reception given to their propositions would teach them a wholesome lesson. An Essay that Creates Interest. Washington Special. There is great curiosity here, in social circles, over an essay, for which a prize has just been awarded Lieutenant Calkins, by the United States Naval Institute. The subject of the essay is “How may the sphere of usefulness of naval olfieers be extended, in time of peace, with advantage to the country and the naval service.” The curiosity is to know how he has treated a subject so intimately connected with Washington receptions and germans. Singular Ignorance. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. A certain amount of distress has been caused in religious circles in this city by the discovery that an alleged “Anthropological Institute” has been selling bogus diplomas to would-be D. D.’s, but we fail to understand the difference between a genuine D. D. and a bogus D. D. A Great Country. New York Mail and Express. That this is a great country is incidentally illustrated by the fact that while, a fortnight since, the ice in the Straits of Mackinaw was twenty feet thick, corn was ten inches high in Georgia. An After-tliought. The Graphic. With the money spent on that ball on Monday night what a noble hospital could be built for the care of maimed and mangled employes and passengers |of the New York Central. _ Business for Bob. New Orleans Picayune. Bob Ingersoll is liable to lecture on “Some Mistakes of the Japs,” as soon as be gets out of the star-route cases. The Japanese religion recognizes 130 distinct and separate hells. Development of si Home Industry. Chicago Inter Ocean. Twelve years ago a Carroll county, Missouri, woman started untried life without a child. She has now eighteen. Facts Versus Theory. Martinsville Republican. Freetraders deal in rhetoric. Protectionists deal in facts and figures. That is the difference, exactly. The Red Bandanna in the Breeze. Cincinnati Enquirer. Senator Thurman is not too old for the “Young Democracy,” but just about old enough. Found Guilty of Manslaughter. Greenfield, Mass., March 30.—Conductor E. L. Hosley. of the New Haven <fc Northampton railroad, has been found guilty of
THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 18S3.
manslaughter for disobeying orders and causing a collision on the State road last September, in which three persons were killed and others wounded. Exceptions were taken. Artists Protesting Against tlic Tariff. Boston, March 30.—Edward King cables from Paris to the Journal that a very large meeting of American artists was held this afternoon to protest against the new tariff rates, which imposes upon the productions of foreign artists an ad valorem duty of 30 per cent. A petition was adopted requesting Congress at its next session to place tiie productions of all foreign artists upon the free list, the same as Americans. They hold that foreign countries threw open their art galleries to Americans without cost, and it is but justice for the United States to recognize their liberality. Arrest nf an Absconder. Cincinnati, March 30—Detective Wappenstein this afternoon arrested at the Burnet House, Cassius C. Markle, the absconding member of the Pittsburg paper manufacturing firm which recently assigned by reason of lii.s withdrawing a largesum of moneyfrom the partnership fund. He came here Thursday and registered as C. F. Overholt. He says he has been to Chicago and St. Louis. He has been drinking heavily. Mr. Lippincott, assignee of the firm, is here, and identified him. Nearly $28,400 was found secreted about his person. A Rich Harvest Egan & Treat reaped a rich harvest thin week, taking clothing orders from the delegates to the Grand Army, iho Bcottisli Rite and Editorial conventions which have been in session here. The reputation of this house is first-class, and parties from a distance know when they leave an order it will be filled satisfactorily. They hare all the novelties of the season, and are always glad to show customers their goods and styles. Give them a call. - - ■■■• Tartar are barnacles on the teeth; at first creamy, then crusty, then movable only by the dentist. It loosens the teeth, and makes the gums tender. Don’t permit it to gather; use Sozortonr, aud keep the mouth clean and the teeth heulthy. Forty Years’ Experience of an Old Nurse. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup is the prescription of one of the best female physicians and nurses in the United States, and has been used for forty years with never-failing success by millions of mothers for their children. It relieves the child from pain, cures dysentery and diarrhoea, griping in tiie bowels, and wind colic. Rv giving health to the child it rests the mother. Price *25 cents a bottle. No short lengths in Cortloelii sewing silk. “Bociiu-PAinA.’’ Quick, complete enre, all annoying kiuney and urinary diseases. sl. It is more economical to buy Durkee’s Salad Dressing than it is to make a dressing; besides this, it is made of better materials than yoa can buy at the stores. Everybody likes it.
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HEREDITARY BLOOD POISON. The Hereditary Blood Poison of Scrofula develops in the delicate tissues of the brain mental weaknesses and infirmities, idiocy and insanity. It enlarges the glands of the throat, impairs the sense of smell ami taste, or breaks Into consuming ulcers on the neck. It destroys the lungs, or fills them with tuberculous secretions. It eats ft way the coating of the stomach, enlarges the liver, clogs the kidneys,, creates constipation and induces piles. The muscles it contracts and renders powerless with rheumatism, while the secretions of the joints contaminated by it cause the painful gout. It loads the perspiration with its virulent poison, setting on fire in its passage the little tubes or pores of the skin, causing the torturing disfiguration of salt rheum, psoriasis and other itching aud scaly diseases which embitter life. It gathers at morbid centers into tumors, abscesses and life-sapping ulcers. It slowly undermines the constitution, and is the cause of nearly all chronic diseases. Cuticura Resolvent, the new blood purifier, is an infallible ANTIDOTE for ull humors and diseases arising from impure blood, inherited humors and contagious diseases. It absolutely kills and expels through the bowels, kidneys and pores of the skin the diseasegerms which float in the blood, mine and perspiration, and thus speedily and permanently cures when all other so-called blood purifiers only prolong the disease and fail in the end. Cuticura, a medicinal jelly, clears off nil external evidence of disease, eats away dead flesh and skin, instantly allays itcliiugs and Irritations, softens, soothes aud heals ulcers and old sores. Cuticura Soap, prepared from Cuticura. is indispensable lu treating Skiu Diseases. For Rough, Chapped and Greasy Skin, Blackheads, Pimples and minor Skin Blemishes, Infantile and Birth Humors, it Is an exquisite Skiu Beautiflor and Toiler, Bath and Nursery Sanative. What cures of Blood and Skin Diseases and Scalp Affections, with Loss of Ilair, can compare with those of the Hon. William Taylor, 8 Pemberton Bq., Boston, State senator of Massachusetts (Scrofula); Charles Houghton, Esq.. ‘2B State St., Boston (Eczema); Will McDonald, ‘2,542 Dearborn Bt., Chicago (Sale Rheum); F. H. Drake, Esq., Detroit. Mich. (Eczema Rodent); H. E. Carpenter, Esq., Henderson, N. Y. (Psoriasis); and many others, details of which maybe found in future editious of this paper? Cuticura Remedies are the only real curatives for diseases of the Skin. Soalp and Blood. Price: Cuticura Resolvent, $1 per bottle. Cutienra. 50 ots. per box; large boxes, sl. Cuticura Mediciual Toilet Soap. 25c.; Cuticura Medicinal ShaviDg Boap. 15c. Sold evervwhere. POITER DRUG AND CHEMICAL CO., Boston. ri I T r P f CURA SOAR Sales U 1 JL and 1882, 1,000,000 oak*.
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DICKSONS' GRAND OPERA-HOUSE. A New Opera by a Great Composer Magnificently Presented, With Sparkling Music, Harmonious and Catchy. TUESDAY EVENING, APRIL 3. THE M’CAULL COMIC OPERA CO. In Its Entirety, from the Bijou Opera-house, New York. JOHN A. McCAULL Proprietor and Manager, Including the Following Well-known Artists: Mr. John Houson, Miss Madeline Lucette, Mr. Digby Bell, Miss Laura Joyce, Mr. Chas. J. Campbell Miss Ernie Weathersby Mr. Geo. Olrni, Miss Amy Harvy, Mr. A. W. Martin, Miss Emma Hanly, Mr. E. S. Grant, Miss Ethel Brandon. The Bijou Opera-house Chorus, 40 Trained Voices. The Operas produced under the direction of Mr. JESSE WILLI AM 8. INCREASED ORCHESTRA.. BEAUTIFUL COSTUMES. Presenting, with the Original American Cast, Lecocq’s Latest Success, “HEART AND HAND." (LE CCEUR ET LA MAIN.) ODera Comique, in three acts, by Leeocq, composer of “La Filie De Madame Angot,” Words bjr NUITTER and BEAUMONT. WEDNESDAY EVENING, “THE SORCEREPJ’ By GILBERT and SULLIVAN, the great Bijou Opera-house Success. GP Reserve seats at box otlico. ~LL-."i- 11 . . '■ " ■' ■ ■— 1 1 1 THE LIGHT I> II .A. F T TWINE BINDER, The MCCORMICK TWINE BINDER is from one to three years in advance of all others lu new inventions and improvements. A few of the best binders ottered for sale this season will compare favorably with the McCormick of 1882 pattern; but there is not one that approaches the McCormick for 1883. Examino it thoroughly before giving your order for any othor Binder. The McCormick Single and Combined Reapers, and tbe famous little Iron Mower, are thoroughly complete machines; light, strong, durable and reliable in tlieir work. J. B. lIEYWOOD, Geu’l Agent, 107 and 109 E. Washington street, Indianapolis, Ind.
The shades of night were failing fast. As through a rural village passed A youth who bore a show-card fine. Oii which was seen the strange design, BULL DOG! In many stores at evening light He saw the brand that gives delight; A shout he gave ns ou ho strode Adown the country graveled road, BULL DOG! “Oh, stay,” the farmer said, “and rest; I know the Bull Dog plug is best; Ami my supply is getting light.” The voice still rung out on the night, BULL DOG! “Try not to pass,” the croakers said, “The standard plugs that have been made, Tbe old-time plugs are hard to beat.” A voice replied tar down the street, BULL DOG! “Beware of plugs of cheaper price. They’ll say that others are as nice. They’ll claim the Bull Dog is too high.” The echoing answer gave reply, BULL DOG! A traveler now may look around. In every store the Bull Dog’s fouud; lu every dime it suits them all. And thousuuds daily join the call, BULL DOG! CHARLES MAYER & CO. BEAUTIFUL NEW LINE OF Dresden China. Japanese, Chinese and Bohemian Ware. Bronze and Brass Goods, newest designs. Elegant Wedding Presents. 29 and 31 W. Washington St.
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AMUSEMENTS. DICKSONS’ GRAND OPERA-HOUSE. Tbe Best Located and MOST POPULAR Theater in the State. ONLY MATINEE THIS AFTERNOON. Last Performance To-night. The Distinguished Comedian, SOL SMITH RUSSELL, In J. E. Brown’s Successful Comedy, “EDGEWOOD FOLKS." Benefit of Harmony Council Jr., O. U. A. M. Popular prices. Seats cau be secured at thft box office. One night only, Monday, April 2, CALENDER’S Consolidated Spectacular Colored Miustrels. Tuesday and Wednesday, April 3 and 4, McOAULL’B COMIC OPERA COMPANY, in “Heart and Hand” and “The Sorcerer,” ENGLISH’S OPERA-HOUSE. WILL E. ENGLISH, Proprietor aud Manager. The Largest, Best and Most Popular Theater in Indiana. Last chance to sec the Inimitable LOTTA! This afternoon at 2, “'MUSETT E ” To-night, at 8, her great success, “LITTLE DETECTIVE.” Three nights, commencing April 2. CARRIE SW-AIIST AS “CAD, THE TOM BOY” AND “Mab, the Miner’s Daughter.” 'brush electric Lights Arc fast taking the place of all others In fao fortes, Foundries. Machine Bhops and Mills. Parties having their own power can procure an Electric Generator and obtain much more light at much less cost thau by any other mode. The incandescent and storage system has been perfected. making small lights for houses and stores hung wherever needed, and lighted at will, day or night. Parties desiring Generators or to form companies tor lighting cities and towns, can send to the Brush Electric Cos , Cleveland, 0., or to the undersigned at luduuiapoiis. J. CAVEN.
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