Under the Prophet in Utah; the National Menace of a Political Priestcraft
When Harvey J. O'Higgins was in Denver, in the spring of 1910, working with Judge Ben B. Lindsey on the manuscript of The Beast and the Jungle, for Everybody's Magazine, he met the Hon. Frank J. Cannon, formerly United States Senator from Utah, and heard from him the story of the betrayal of Utah by the present leaders of the Mormon Church. This story the editor of Everybody's Magazine commissioned Messrs. Cannon and O'Higgins to write. They worked on it for a year, verifying every detail of it from government reports, controversial pamphlets, Mormon books of propaganda, and the newspaper files of current record. It ran through nine numbers of the magazine, and not so much as a successful contradiction was ever made of one of the innumerable incidents or accusations that it contains. It is here published in book form at somewhat greater length than the magazine could print it. It is a joint work, but the autobiographic I has been used throughout, because it is Mr. Cannon's personal narrative of his personal experience.
This is the story of what has been called the great American despotism.
It is the story of the establishment of an absolute throne and dynasty by one American citizen over a half-million others.
And it is the story of the amazing reign of this one man, Joseph F. Smith, the Mormon Prophet, a religious fanatic of bitter mind, who claims that he has been divinely ordained to exercise the awful authority of God on earth over all the affairs of all mankind, and who plays the anointed despot in Utah and the surrounding states as cruelly as a Sultan and more securely than any Czar.
To him the Mormon people pay a yearly tribute of more than two million dollars in tithes; and he uses that income, to his own ends, without an accounting. He is president of the Utah branch of the sugar trust, and of the local incorporation's of the salt trust; and he supports the exaction's of monopoly by his financial absolutism, while he defends them from competition by his religious power of interdict and excommunication. He is president of a system of company stores, from which the faithful buy their merchandise; of a wagon and machine company from which the Mormon farmers purchase their vehicles and implements; of life-insurance and fire-insurance companies, of banking institutions, of a railroad, of a knitting company, of newspapers, which the Mormon people are required by their Church to patronize, and through which they are exploited, commercially and financially, for the sole profit of the sovereign of Utah and his religious court.
Frank J. Cannon
Harvey Jerrold O'Higgins
UNDER THE PROPHET IN UTAH
Formerly United States Senator from Utah
and
Harvey J. O'Higgins
Note
Introduction
Forward
UNDER THE PROPHET IN UTAH
Chapter I. In the Days of the Raid
Chapter II. On A Mission to Washington
Chapter III. Without A Country
Chapter IV. The Manifesto
Chapter V. On the Road to Freedom
Chapter VI. The Goal—And After
Chapter VII. The First Betrayals
Chapter VIII. The Church and the Interests
Chapter IX. At the Crossways
Chapter X. On the Downward Path
Chapter XI. The Will of the Lord
Chapter XII. The Conspiracy Completed
Chapter XIII. The Smoot Exposure
Chapter XIV. Treason Triumphant
Chapter XV. The Struggle For Liberty
Chapter XVI. The Price of Protest
Chapter XVII. The New Polygamy
Chapter XVIII. The Prophet of Mammon
Chapter XIX. The Subjects of the Kingdom
Chapter XX
Conclusion