Haralson banner. (Buchanan, Ga.) 1884-1891, February 16, 1884, Image 1

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    VOI, 1.
HARAISONS RANNER
PUBLISHED BVERY JHATURDAY.
LB LTS,
EDITOR AXND PROPRIETOR.
SATURDAY AFEBRUARY [, b,
TERMS OF SURSCIIVEION ¢
S Loy
One ol e Yoo, . s b e
One copv six monthe, . . .85
e m}»_y‘.t.hxwy{;m'm.flm, S ek A
PROFYVASION & 1, CAREIN
; Y IEVEN LY
W. W, FITTY,
, ca-DRALER fn—
Drugs, Pafuts, Oils, Qlpsa, Rooks
and Stationary,
CARROLLTON, . . .. .GERORGIA 1
¢ > A k ¥ 1
g ? 4
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, 1
BUCHARMY. i .pivviawrs - BAY
Practices fn THaralson and adioin
ing Uountles. ik |
_ Office in Ciur Houew, |
8 ©RE* > f N
Q! wl} 1\!1031\1 l}‘llai [)th
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
SUCHABIN G -ch v en Dol Lia
Wil Practico In the Tourts of the
Rome Circuit, snd in Onrroll and
and Douglas Countlos,
SMITH & RICITARDSON
PHYSIOIANS & BURGEONS,
RUOMANAN, 0 8
Dffor their services 1o the people
of Haralson county. Obstetrics e
specinlity. Office south of {he sour.
house, at theirdrugstore.
Y 2> NIPE N & w 7
W, P ROBINSON
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
BUCHANAN ... .. . GA,
Claims Collocted, Titles to Land
jooked after and Indruders ajecied,
Office in Court hovse,
g - . 3. % 7Y v £
W. F. BROWNX,
ATTORN EY-AT-LAW,
CARROLLIUN ;- oo boonn Homs
Wil practice iu Carrodl, Hhoadson
and adjoining Comntho.
Collection 4, specindiiy.
Wo~ "1- ].i.}‘ju!\ i),
. ATTORKEY-AT-LAW
BUCHANAN . ol GA
Will practice Invthe Boane Cireuit,
and MCarrol) andd adgaining Coui
fies. Also, tn theFedoral Courds if.
Atlanta. Office tn the Court howe.
W, W, & 0. W. BERRELL,
LAWYKRS,
LCABBOLITON, . s .Q}.'t.fl
will sttondy 01l thee Terme of the
Huperige {Toury, for Haraleon
(lounty, v any where ol where ‘
_business mey rall thom. Wipuity
and Land Litigation's rqn,-(:in,lit.y{
«—o—-».———-——‘——w-m——-——--—“——""
PR LN OT TN “In 1
GONOTICES
R e : :
Cull ¢ the Drug stow of Wwe W,
Pite for | pandert seds, PRIGSH
and '.PUIA&E—«;IUW;; mand g grass
st of new wop,~Sehool - Dooke:
.and Staiionary—all cheap for
cagh, |
-~ Also Drugs, Tubeovo, Lamps,
_and Lamy fixtures,. Odls, Painds,
“rtaees dec., e chonp ae ol odse]
wherd, e ~ ,{
Y aleo call specind atgenrtion of]
those who bave not setéled o~
counts by cash ornote, and 1 will'
:iy,w thent to come and satthe, 08;
ffoso matters must-be arranged.
W. W. FITIH, 1
Carroilton, (_laq‘
C.W. PARKHR, |
BREMEN (. . J.O dhe. . 64,
Oifers his Bervices as Physivian of
fhany years egcémrimm. Cases
troatod at hls Office nt moderate
charges, for cash or barter. He
keeps h‘fedicim and Lamps for eale.
s Saahseribo for the Bawxsw N #
ly sl.,'4’§‘:'v. wEr
HARALSON BANNERS
MORMON REVOLT,
Cincinnati Enguirer. |
Manassa, Col,, Feb. 5, ;
Thepg 18 o g voyolt
hore of the Kentuckians und Geor
%‘i:ms from the Morman chureh,
The Mormons inthe Colorado col
any are nearly all from the southern
stutes. There are, asnearly as 1 ean
make out, about two hundred Mor
mon migsionariep gegtlored throug
put the southern states, working
like beavers for the glory of the
Mormon church, The class they
work upon is mostly the comforfa
’hlo, solid class of small farmors
}who have hames of their own, and
without much ambition to rise in
the world. hayvo always bhaen gbove
want and have the means, by tur
ning their pyoperty into cash at o
ruinoys f-x,z\_urmlmp when the Mor
mon eraze strikes them.
It will aid thoso nni‘znnili:u“\'ith
the methods of the Mormon chureh
to propagate its faith ta explain
that this liggionary labor is not
the sacvafice, the sublimo abnngw!
tion of private interests that on ite
face it appears to be. Stripped of
all sentimoental drapery, the nuked
facts show it to be a scheme of
BAVING BOULS ON PERCENTAGR.
Every wmissionary goes at his
own expense. Why (l)tr) they want to
go? W}\y do they clamor to be
sent? x
The man who clamors to be seat
as a miggionary considers the litéle
perquisitos, the shabby honors, the
tinselod glaries and the fat divi
dends. He wants to go on the mis
sion, beeause tt is the firat great
{stvp to preferment. ’
Prosident John Taylor, the suc
coseor of Bringham Young, began
life a poor mechanic in Toronto.
but he hag served so {aithfully in
tic Lord’s vineyard, keeping a pru
dent eye meanwhile on the Lord’s
imw‘nm}s, that he is able to live in|
la palace at SBalt Lake at an ex-|
pense of $50.000 or $60,000 ay -ar.
te began a poor misgionary. lie
lheld the post fcr many years of
missionary agont or of emigration
at New York. |
| PERSECUTING A REVOLTUR. |
A Georgian, one of theparly oon
verts, had sottled with hig faily
in Spring valley, a reniote and isd
lated region. Last summer, becom
ing thoroughly disgusted, ho apos
tatizod—stood up oponly agains
the church, His cattle began al
once to come up mussing. His gate:
were found open, his fenees hroken
his crops trampled and destroyed.
Noxt the diteh was broken when i
was his turn to lrrigate, He
knew what it all meant, and it only
made nm the madder and the morc
determined. He conld not sell out
}nn body would buy. Hemight hav
got away if ho had gone quietly be
fore the sun rose and lelt his prop
erty behind him, hut he could not
do that. He was o man of spirit
and he began {0 speak his mind
He said that as soon as ho coule
oot away he would go back ta Geor
sin, and he'd like to see the Mor
mon church vt any more convert
froms #mat rozion witor ho had told
his story in the newspapers, In De
¢embor this bold man died. Hi
died away from home. lis body
was found two or thre days after he
was missed, The coroner’s jury
sard it was snow-stide. The covo
ners jury wore all good Mormen:
They -were also good neighbors:
for they insisted on laying him
out and fixing him for the grave
themseives, to save his wife’s fecl:
ings. But the wifc moddled when
left alone with the corpse, and dis
covered o hoda in the broust just o
ver the hieart : but sho was a wo
man of senge, and shoe let the fu
neral proceed quiotly. A moddio
some friond who took it upon him
soif to investigate, discovesed tha
the body had been found sixty rods
from the snow-slidg, and a judee of
Utah snow-slides, gave it as his o
pinion that i tho-man had heen
canght'in sueh o one ag that, he
would have boen pulveriged. That
was in Utah, 1t is not g 0 difficult
#o got-away from this Colorado col
ony, for it is only mnine miles to a
“Gentle” villago, The fare, howey
er, back te Kentucky where many
of the colonists are from, is about
SSO for cach individual, and to a
poor man with a family this is some
thing of an obstacte. To Tennesee,
Geergia and Virginia the obstacle
i greater, :
; '%his colony ‘was founded six
| years ago, and thd groater number
mumber of southern converts since
then have been sent here. Praba
' bly two thousand in all have come,
but there have never been so mas
avhore at once, and it is doubtfal
|eo e o
L w ik
SRS e I B LY AT vt
BUCHANAN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1884,
on gm’m*nmmnt- land, and ofhers
have dispersed to diffegent parte of
tho state. Of the sixteon hundred
inhabitgnts algimed for the colgny
at ‘present, ahoyt fwar fifths are
from Utah, They ape sent here be
cause they understand the Mor
mon motive better than it pan bhe
imparted to goutherners,
'{i‘nlly half the sputherners in the
colony haye lately broken into o
pen ravolt, and thero is every reass
on to hope that all will soon join
in denouncing the cruel deception
by which they were induced 1o
leave comfortablo homes in a mikl
climato and caome o this gleyaiggl
and frozan rogian, harren aind tim®
berlass, whose firewood hag to be
hauled nineteon miles, :
TELLING PEOPLE HOW TO VOTE,
Ahont two onths ago there
was a disturbance among them on
L:wmnmt of arbitrary leapurcs cni
ployed ta campel them to voto the
ticket in the November election
which the priesthood had dictated.
Fouiteen of them had drawn
np - potition ta the
“Kiret Counsel” of the Salt Lake
City, praying . for rodregs. Anti-
Mormons advised them not Ho
send it,but to make an independent
course and hold their ground. Led
by William L. Ball, of Bussell
county Va., IFelix B. Mayor, of
Rome; (. and J."'H. Totty, of
Hickman county, Tenn., they did
80, and now half the southerncrs
inthe colony are with thewm, and
havo withdrawn from the chureh,
and the resture on the fenoee, |
The sulferings thoge peoplo have
pagsed thmn;{}x aince leaving homie,
their religious disappointment,
their hopeless poverty, their hero
i stand forthe right when deiven
to the wall, all entitle them to the
ereatest and kindest consideration
from “the old folks at home.”
RAM UKL PRESTON, OF KENTUCKY.
“Mr. Preston, you have heard
the statement of Mr. Miller. Do
you concur in his views?” -
“fe isn’t half strong enough.
You can just say to the folksiat
heme, for me, that instead of fusd
ing ¢he Zion the Mormon missigy
aries told ug about eut here, wa've
found hell. Yon can just say it's
hell-—the worst kind of s hell. Why
thom elders back in Kentueky used
t» show us happy and prospercus
w 'd all he out here together in this
aarden of paradice; how there
wouldn’t be nothing but unity and
love between us, walking in the
ways of the Lord, and helpiwg one
another.”
JAMES M. BPRNCER, OF RFLEMiNG
COUNTY, KY.
SWhat induced you scuthern
people to broak off from the Mor
mon chuarch, Mr. Bpencer?”
. “Wo found out as sooan as wi
<ot out here faud saw how things
wag, that we'd been taken in, and
thai set as a thinking. We {ound
out that some of these Uiali poeo
-1 ‘mongst us here were practicing
polygamy, and we never ‘]ikm’x that
to beein with., Then the priesterall
by which the Moron chuarch in
wrferos in all our private allairs.
and tellsus who to vote for and
who not to vole for, was inove than
we were zoffig to stand. We didnt
want to mix teade and religion.”
“How do you incan trade and re
ligion.”
*Theso Mormons have a cooper:
ative scheme for most everything
They have a cooperative store
| They call that Zion’s Cooperative
Mercantile Institute. Of course.
Jthere can’t any body else trade
where that is, because they run
them out. 1t looks all fair and nige
Jbut you see instead of being own
ed, s yowd think, by il the peo
pla, it 135 owned by two or thre of
the priesthood—you know they
call all the officers of the chavch
the priesthood, and there's a-lot of
thom-—.nd whon they got thing
all going, they just charge you two
or three prices for cverything, and
if you don’t trade at thee-op” they
say you are weak in the faith, and
tho first thing you know you are i
to some gort of serape with them,’
“How do they treat you all since
the revol.”
“They hayve done nothing yo
bu' lie about ux. But they hate us
worge than thoy do the Geatiles.
They have always managed to
make us vote as they pleased till
lagt election. Wo just Lickml agin
it then, and the row began.”
“HTow about the fight in the
church? Were you there, Mr.
Spencer?”’ i
“Yeos, I was there. They often
give a dance in the church, tiaking
out the benches. Between Chrisi
mag and New Year's thoy give one,
and said none of wo revolters
shouldn’t go, Wo didn’t want to
go, but when it ¢ame to that seven
young fellers concluded we hal
AASHCR S UANUIRS SOV IR SACEIRTARC WS TR,
ehurch, When wo appeared at the
dance they were n)mf and Presi
dent smith jumped g a bench,
and called to theip sidoe to put ys
out, With thet the Bishop peeled
off his coat and Jessio Snuth, the
missionary, pecled off his, and said
he'd lay his " religion aside till that
job was done. 1t was a purty lively
scraimble for awhilo, :m«f there
werea good many knock-downs
on bath sides, There were over 30
of them agin usgeven, hnt we #tood
onr ground. All at onee one of the
Utah men made a drive at one of
our boys with g knife, but he sgab
bed the wrohg mau in the tumult
that war going on. A young feller
stabbod hig pwn fathor. That stop
pedthe row. The man eried out that
he was cut, and the women and
girvls flew out throw the windows
and doorspyelling and screaming
and the wounded man’s wife yeltled
{o the elders ta como and adminis
ter the sacrament. There was blood
all over the room. The man was
lying on the floor in a puddle of
blood. The man didn’t (Liiv. There
was a trial before the justico of the
peace about the case, and it turned
out justas I am tellin’ yon.™
“WVell, what do you southerners
propose to do, naw, stay here or
leave?”
“We'll leave as soon as wo 0810 ]
but we ave boor people, and it cost
ius about all we {m:l to oome out
here and make a start, and we have
only wade onp decont crop in the
six years we have heen here, Can't
raise fruit, and we have to haul our
fire wood nineteen miles.”
M. A. LAUER, QF. FANNIN COUTY, GA,
“1 am not a mormon, but my
wife is. I came oyt on her account.
About fifty converts came from
that section. There were eight Mor
mon missionaries working about
there, My wife thought she couldliv
her religion better out here in Zion
and receive the spirit of grace more
fully. Bhe has been greatly disap:
deinted.
-~ Tam disappointed in the cli
mate. Thereis commonly a good
snow here every month but July.
and we had been teld that the sum
aeeraas. a, delightiul soason and
‘that big crops were raised. Then
{the elders teld ue tnat they had an
arrangenient with God by which
the climate should. be gradually
changed hero in the Zion and made
warmer.”
FELIX B. MCYER,OF ROME, GA,
“] came west to join the Mor
mons in 1877; am a native of Lin
coli county, Tenn, but lived in
Rome 28 years ; have eight children
out here with me; ama wagon ma
ker. I was converted to Mormon
ism in 1876, There wero a good ma
ny Mormon missionaries in Geor
ain six or sevei in the neighbor
hood of Rome. You would not
think it was the same religion.
Blasphemy is shockingly common
and Sabbath breaking is the rule.
There is great euflering among
our southern peole here. Weiry to
help bne another, but it is very
Juard, and there is much actual guf
soring. Very many of them giesui
sering for food. Nobody can-maky
TR AN SR | L LB
~rops here. The Mexicans depnel
do it &nd these Utah folksean¥do
i It's too cold. Our wheat docs
not ripen till September, and the
frost generally <-iutvho~' it in the
imnilk, so that it is spoiied for flour
and is only good for feg 1.
It got rumored abeut that the
pricsthood was selling out the
Mormon vole for moncy, as wc
Mormons held the halance of pow
or in this county, and our priest
hood was eonsebueutly courted by
both parties. As iung ng: we,
thought the thing was square we
were willing to Aote tugct&mr, but
when woe came to bolieve that we
were being sold out, we revolted at
the last clection. T was one of the
tirnt revolters, and 1 was immeoedi
ately summoned to appoear before
the council for discipline for diso
bhoying tho dietatos of the priest
hood. 1 went, wnd they told me if
[ would scknowledge I had done
wrong, it would beall right, but 1
would not apologize.. I thought it
lookod like slavery, and the apolo
wis due to me instead of o them,
Thore is some polygamy here, but that
is all among the Uleh jpeople. None of
ns southeeners have taken up with that
abomination. To!l thadolks at home that
we havn’t got that low.’
B
" Monanrey [N CONGRESS.
Special To The Constitution. :
Waghingtog, Febuaty 5. The hand of
dealh has fallen beavily on the present
coagross. Three members of the last con
grens died. 'This one hag hardly begua its
work and alroady seven of its members
and members clects have joined the
St R e i
IOCHE OF WINOILE WeORE GREWIL INy R EAURERS .
The caplital has often been put to funeral
yses, It has always Leen customary to
hring the remains of congressmen jnto
the capitol for fpneral services, even
when they are huried outside of Wash
ington. Thaddeus Stephens was huried
at home, byt his remains were honored
in thocapitol. Chayles Sumner’s coffin
drew thousands of people to the capitol,
whenee it was earvied to Massachusotts,
While Garfield lay in state a line of men,
womon and children sgreched for more
than a mile waiting their return to go in
and ¢qze st his shrunken forin, Itis not
generally known that John Quiney Ad
ams died in the eapitol, Astor his presi
dential term expirved he was clected to
the houge and sgt there sixteen yeavi‘.
s death was quite sudden. e was
borne from hig feat when the {atal attact
cune, and died ig gna of tho ante rooms
of the old house, which is now nsed as
the clerk,s ofiige, A marble bust of him
atands on a pudosial in the wall over the
spot where he expired, 1t beara the in
seription, “‘John Quiney Adams, who af
ter Bity yoars of publie service, the last
sixioen of them in yondor hall was aum
moned thenee to die in this room PFebra
ary 23rd. 1848."
e L
| RUN OVER AND KILLED,
- Yestordoy morning about seven o’clock
a tramp named Frank Leßoy was run o
ver and mangled into an unrecognizable
masg by two sections of No. 5 on the
Western and Atlantic raitroad. The ac
cident oceurred in Sewel’s cut, a mile
and a half north of Marietta,
Whon the foremost gection of the
sehodule entered the cut several fram;s
were scen, Two of them attempted to
hoard tho train. Leßoy, who was sixicen
years old, missed hig footing and fell un
der the ear. The entire train passed over
him. the next section did nat sce him in
time to stop, and his train also passed o |
ver the already horrible mangled body.
Braing, blood and particles of flesh were
seattered over the engine and all along
the track for a hundred and fifty yards.
Young Leßoy was accompanied by his
hrother, who stated that they were
rrataping from New Orleans to Liberty,
Va., iheir home. The rear train stopped
and veent back to Marigita and botificd
tho coroner, who held an ingquest yestor
day and a verdict was made in accord
ance with the facts. 5
Condnetors on all the roads report o
nnusaal number of {ramps along thei:
lines within the last woek or ten dayt
Atlanta has been troated to a regulu
“hower of thom and othor teorgia citic
have suffered in o eorrosponding way
—CONSTITUTION,
t‘ BRICK” POMEROY ONCE MORL
“Thope i acvoral wees to got yiel
One is ta elimb g tree and stual chlocken
auother isto steal sheep, another ig 1t
g+t into polities andfrom there inte con
ress, and from there into tho publicirea:
ary. But you can’t do this unless you firs:
ot into the whiskey ring, and oneo in -
while that ring will ring you out an
writig %du into prison.’” Brick Pomens
told the good Sumaritans of New Hay Wi
ecently, by whom he had been engage”
to lectur. ““Another wayjto get richis
publish & nows paper, L tried ity 1 foun
that 1 was contipnally . making abor
half the people se abominablo mad abn..
that it was daugerous for me to pass
through a town wheremy paper was read
after wwhile I took the advice of Hooraes
Greoley and went west, Lweni just asfi
west a 8 T could go, and broug’ . up it
Colorado, against the backbone of the
“American continent. This backbone o
rose 4,500 feet above the streamns ab At
base, and stretthed away hundreds ¢
miles north and gouth, and Isaid thand
God something has got & backbone to &
and was neyer drennk. lam called »
wood fellow—buld headod men usually
are-—and perhaps I aim. "Tho past he
peen give wod take with me; but L neve
was 50 good to any fellow. Never thoughs
s 0 much of any one as myself, Bome mes
dare not be in love with themselve:
Why ¢ They wish to market themgelver
w Lot advaviagoe. T have always wisher
to make the mostof myself. When I
beyone the groat divide, I wish {0 g
posgessed with all tho intellect, all the
frosimess und vigor L ever had.” 5
| e
A ease was tried rocently in Jelforso
gounty ngainst a gentleman wha invest d
in Condedarate honds. They sued him o
it and the jury found for the ward to the
amonnt of what the Confederate bonds
were worth at the time investment was
mado. o M
e ” o
Clss eounty, m.?} girl whose
heart is loeated on the right sibe. The
medical socioty of tfiefi&my' %
with thoproblem. .
Ee oel B s T % : i
Thore havo boon 20 murders and ho
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