OCR Text |
Show 52 ANTI-POLYGAM- JUnli-Hotyga- Standard, vjg SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, OCT., 1831. Y the earth? There can be only one answer to such questions. It is simply the effects of the demoralizing institution which makes of woman STANDARD. PRESIDENT ial business to inquire into the other side of the question, and consequently a large amount of space in late issues of the journal have been devoted to the subject of Mormonism. One number contains a long letter from Mrs. Paddock, giving numerous incidents of the beauty of polygamy, as well as examples of the virtues of the Saints, theirreverence for law, and the purity of their mor- GARFIELD. The tidings of the great national a cross between a galley slave and a calamity was received with profound Postin the Sal at Entered Office brood animal. The Mormon policy sorrow in Salt Lake City, and we second-class mail of Lake City , Utah , as building up the kingdom, that doubt if the dead president had matter . is marrying wives and rearing chil- more sincere mourners in any part dren whether a man is able to sup- of the country than among the ioy-j- J esned montly by The Standard Publimiino Compcitizens of Utah. The sad news art. The Orau of the Women's National port them or not, is a more infamous Society. doctrine than the majority of peo-- ! was received about 9 oclock in the TERMS: pie are apt to think of or realize, evening, andimmediately the Church als. In regard to this article the $1.00 One ear, in advance 50 It is a doctrine that crucifies Six months every bells commenced to toll, notifying editor remarks that Mrs. Paddock 25 Three mouths n feeling of a woman, s na- the people that the blow so long has spiked the Cannon of the North REMITTANCES: for it teaches her that to love dreaded, and which they had so American Review. Another issue Remittances may be made by dra't, money order or regis- ture, tered letter, at our risk. Give Post Office address in full, her husband as her heart prompts earnestly hoped would be averted, has a magnificent paper entitled including County and State. her to do, and to feel the natural bad indeed fallen upon the nation. Mormonism The receipt of the paper may ho considered the rec ipt Arraigned from the or the subscription sent us. and child woman felt it pen of the Rov. Geo. W. Gallagher, jealousy that comes from seeing her Every man, husband marry other womenis wick as a personal grief, and the next day, formerty a Presbyterian Minister in Advertisements inserted at reasonable rates, and should the entire on and the a ined, from 20th, her own reach ns on or before the 15th of each month, to insure Utah. city put Still another republishes only springs sertion in the succceeding number. the thafshe stores were entire a complete chapter from Mrs. must crush mourning garb, depravity, and Address all communications to Tiie out and annihilate all such feelings closed, and the crowds which Paddocks new book, Madame La . Standard, P. O. Box 335, Salt Lake City, Utah. Correspondence solicited from women in all parts of the or be forever lost. It is a doctrine thronged the streets were almost as Tour called Utah printed Territory, which must have the name of the writer, not of children quiet as the grave itself. All the from tbe advance sheets. In all of necessarily for publication but as a guaranty of good faith. that brings thousands into the world with the brand of il- public buildings and stores, as wel these numbers, the editor, in additMich is the Mrs. Ann Eliza Yomg, of Batte and with a as a large number of private resi- ion to his own comments, publishes general agent of cue Standard, aod is duty authorized to legitimacy upon them, and contract for advertisements. recede birthright of hatred and wickedness, dences were heavily draped with extracts from other newspapers, children that are brought forth in die habiliments of woe, and in passrecommending that vigorous measOllicers of the Womans National the sorrow streets and remoter and of in are cradled through ing tears, ures be enforced immediately Society, Salt Lake City, Utah. the inand the observer could And as an city misery iniquity. against tbe disgusting twin relic, A. President. notice a evitable Coons, Sarah of mourning and the badge result, these poor children M. A. Hamilton, country freed from its shame (.y Presidents a. at house. Jennie Fnonmn, their and fathers the nearly every During and disgrace. The Gentiles ofUtah grow' up hating Mary a. James, Recording ecretary. the Harriet k Rane. Corresponding Secretary. the and wives day people sought expres- have reason to thank the Rev. Kimchildren, and worse plural Jeanaetts C. Lawrence, Treasurer. in sion different than all, they at last come to feel ways for the grief ball, for althoughgh he is without EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. Laura C. Docglas, that if their parents live in such an that could not be repressed. Julia A. Kdiball. The doubt the paid emissary of the Mart A. Lloyd, Cordelia A. Smith, M. E. Pisuer. Selina Boukof ky, unlicensed manner, they too have a J. B. Me. Kean Post, Grand Army Mormons, yet his letters have opWoman's National Soelety. to of the Republic held a special meet- ened the way for a complete expose follow their own evil incliMeets on fst Tuesday in each month at ladjpeudent right lla l at 3:30 ?. m. nations. Thus this infernal system ing, and in theeveningagrand Mass of the infamous system and has aris accelerating the very condition of meeting, of citizens convened in oused a feeling against it that will r LEASE ATTEND TO THIS. society impurity and evil which front of the Walker House, at both not easily be quenched. Occasionally wc receive ail order to discontinue the Mormon leaders have declared of which gatherings appropriate the Standard from a subscriber who is in arrears What Polygamy is Responsible For. for a number of months, or perl, a os who has not it At the prevented. No w'onder that the resolutions were passed. paid the subscription at all. Of course persons have a right to stop the paper when they choose, but it is Mormon women look sorrowful and Mas? meeting, several brief, but afalso onlv just that they shouldpay for those numbers I know, as Rev. Mr. Kimball of such and the children equ- fecting speeches weremade by promthey have received. For the information does not decisions on this a we append the And what inent citizens of our own town, and evdently wife know, how help-ally bad if not worse. matter. Mormon if she is; No 1. Any person who takes a paper regularly wonder that they look sickly and ill a few touching remarks by Hon. Mr. be the mother ofespecially from the Post Oilice whether directed to his name little children. t. or anothers, or whether he has subscribed or not when this system of building Bryce, an English member of clad, is responsible fr the payment. assurance of the sym- Under the beneficent laws passed No. 2. If a person orders his paper discontinued, up the kingdom entails all the care gave lie must pay all arrearages, or the publisher may con- and by the Mormon Legislature, a wife Great felt Britian with the of the children the by is and until pathy send it collect to made, payment upon tinue support has no right of dower, no claim on the whole amount whether the paper is taken from sorrow. nations overburdened mothers. already or oilice npt. the In accordance with the proclama- the property or earnings of her The prophet Brigham Young inHow to Stop This Paper. Consequently, if she Tt is not a difficult task to stop this paper. If it structed the fathers how much Mur- husband. Gov. tion of President Arthur, they comes beyond the time deeired, you can depend uprebels against polygamy, he can sell on it the publishers do not know that the subscriber wrere required to care for their off- ry appointed Monday the 26th of her home, and turn her and her wants it stopped. All you have to do is to pav arrearages and notify us by letter, and the paper will spring by the following elegant Sept, as a day of humiliation and children out of doors to starve. A stopped. question, does the bull care for his mourning, and recommended the personal friend of mine was put out calves? in regard to the supAnd BUILDING UP THE KINGDOM. the Territory on that day, and on the street in this manner, when port of the family a single instance sick and helpless, her constitution in should the that will suffice show whom to the people gather upon In a Salt Lake letter to the broken down by the The their respective places of public being quite Southern (Baptist an extract from responsibility really rests. dicipline to which her husband cerethe observance for of of wife third a certain Saint worship lately in which we publish last number had subjected her in order to comsad occasion. monies the of went to the the to ward becoming bishop But of all statements, her to share her home with the if could not induce her hus- Accordingly all the churches made pel he see the second wife. band to provide a little better for arrangements for a grand Memorial hapless-lookinpeople I ever saw, If Rev. Mr. Kimball visits Salt in honor Presidead service of the of her the branch She kingdom. the women here beat them all, and Lake again, I will introduce him to resand the last tribute of and was found not the dent, pay strong very the children look fully as bad as this woman, if he wishes me to do five or six little ones more pect to the memory of the wTise needs of if mothers not worse. their and she will tell him herself how Many than - states man, the pure patriot, and the so, could labor her supproperly of them are lame and humpbacked, many times she has been beaten Christian true A. James ptygentleman, and all look sickly and I over the head with a frying pan, Sister, said the urbane function- Garfield. Reciqrisat in pace. never realized the nature of the inknocked down with a chair, a stick me let does ary politely, inquire its effect nor stitution EmmsmEiEgigs of stove wood, or anything that upon society Brother S. shela with provide you as I do now. came handy because she would not TIIEJMORMDN APOLOGIST KIMBALL. and with with ter, flour, firing? Almost every visitor to this TerShe will tell obey the gospel. He does, was the reply, but the is a who disinterested obserThe truth of the old proverb, its him too, that her case is not a soliritory children need else eat 'to something an ill wind that blows nobody good tary one but that it is paralleled in ver can truthfully make the same besides and dry flour, remarks in regard to the majority they cannot has received a forcible illustration many a polygamous household Of course wear firewood or a tumbled down in the letters of the Rev. John A. throughout the of Mormon offspring. Territory. there are exceptions as there is to shanty, that is scarcely fit for pigs Kimball in the Christian Register. I cannot lorbear an additional to live in. It was feared by many that his false remark with regard to the state of every rule, but in this ease, they Well Sister responded the bish- and specious statements regarding society for which are so isolated, that it takes considpolygamy is resto a husban discover them. op, I call it pretty good erable trouble I, the Mormons and their peculiar ponsible. Hon. J. S. Boreman, late that And now the question arises, what provides firing , flour, and house doctrine, published in so influential judge of the First District Court is the cause of this hapless, God- room for his families'' Is any furth- a journal would seriously injure the said to me a short time ago, The forsaken condition which is so per- er comment needed? Verily, can cause of justice and greatly tend to polygamous families of Southern ceptible to even the most casual we not prove that to build up the retard still further the action of gov- Utah have flooded the country with looker on? What is the reason kingdom is a divine ordinance, vast- ernment against polygamy. But it outlaws. The sons of those families that strangers invariably become ly superior to the unholy ways of seems the editor of the Register, will keep our courts busy for years while letters to come. the impressed with the idea that the the people of Babylon. admitting inMormon women are diffrent from fraud of the reverend Wbatelse can ho expected as the to his columns, has made it his spec product of polygamy ' their kind any where on the face of Read Mrs. Paddocks new book. among the God-give- Anti-Polygam- to-da- y, Cre'-k-. , Autl-Poly-g- an Anti-Polyga- par-tie- s New.-pape- God-forsake- n r Par-limen- oc-eursth- God-forsake- ese n, g ill-cla- d. L5a . , . |