Show REMARKS by preside BRIG beig iea lea 1 V yo UG at logan sunday aly july 1811 1871 t U mrs MIS JU IULIA YOUNGS I 1 jt f 1 i ij I 1 liik t 11 V brother gearge tx iye ife re etta t th ba circumstance of wm mii mil ierg lerg dipota dipo to fa aldage carthage it brought to my pay mind reflections of bf the pasi past Per perhaps hiLp to relate jhb eis els it occurred would be interesting I 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 do not profess to be much ar 61 i a joker but I 1 do think this taisto to be one odthe of the hest best jokes ever perpetrated by the time we were at the nauvoo temple tempie officiating in the ordinances the mob nad bad learn leardi enthat mormonism was not dead as they had supposed we had completed the wall walla sot of the temple and the attio attic st story efy from about half way up of the first windows window in 14 about fifteen months it went up like magic and we commenced officiating in the ordinances then the mob commenced to hunt for other victims they had haa already killed the prophets joseph and hyrum in carthage jail jall while under the pledge of the state for their thein safety and now they wanted brigham the thel president of the twelve apostles who were then acting as tho the presidency of the church 1 wa in my room roon in the temple it t was in the southeast south east corner of the upper story I 1 learned thata that a posse was lurking around til the temple and that the united states marshal was waiting for me to tome down dowid 11 whereupon I 1 knelt iown lown and asked my lla ITa father thorin therin jn heaven in the name of jesus to guide guld wano wand and protect me that I 1 might live to prove rove advantageous to the saints just aa as I 1 arose from my knees and sat dowa in my chair there three came ame a rap nap pa at my door I 1 said comena come in nj and bro george ceorge D grant who was then engaged driving my carriage cariago and doing chores for me entered the room said he be fl brother young do you know that i a posse and ad the united states marshal marshai are lire here 31 I 1 told him h I 1 had heard so on entering the room brother grant left the boor open nothing came into my mind what to do until looking directly dIrect lT across the tha hall bali 3 saw paw brother william miller leaning lemIng against the wall As I 1 stepped towards the door I 1 beckoned to him higia he ho came dame said I 1 to him brother william wi in the marshal is here for me will yoa you go and do just as I 1 tell you if you willi will serve them a trick I 1 knew that brother mil ver vec or was an excellent man manber per estly reliable and capable of carrying out my project said I 1 here take my cloak I 1 but betit it happened ened to be brother heber C kimballs Kim balls our cloaks were alike in color fashion ana and ana size I 1 threw throw it around his shoulders and told jold him to wear my hat bat and accompany brother Prother george D grant orant he did so I 1 sald said ald aid to brother dran grant oran t george you yon step ster into the carriage and ana look towards brother miller and say sa to him as though you were lid iid addressing dressing me are you ready to ride you can do this and they will suppose brother miller to be me and proceed accordingly hordin bordin gly 41 which they did justas justus 33 rother brother miller was entering the L barriager barria gei geu a the marshal stepped up to him and had placing his bis hand upon his shoulder wd said t you are my prisoner brother william ila lla entered the carriage and said bald to the marshal 1 I am going to the mansion house wont you ride with me they both went to the mansion Mansi oh house there th eo were my sa sons ma joseph A brigham jr and bro hf asand by sand others who were i looking anand alt all seemed at once io fco understand tand and partake 6 ot of the joke they their followed the carriage to the matis maris manson jahson lon ton houer ant anc gathered around r miller with tears in their theli eyes father Fa or br president young where are you going go ling brother miller looked la at them thui kindly but made no reply and the marshal really thought he had bad got brother brigham I 1 lawyer edmonds who was then staying at ht the mansion house housa and appreciating the joke dolunt volunteered egied to brother miller to go to 10 carthage Cart hagg haga with him bim and and aud aee see see bee him safe through when abe they v arrived within two pr three miles of 0 carthage the marshal with stopped they arose in their att ark lages buggies and wagons and like a tribe iribe tribe of indians going join gInto into battle or as if they were a pack of demons yelling and rhoul phoiL ting they exclaimed v wove weve got nim him leqve weve got him weve rove p ot t him I 1 11 lyp when tea fea chedi chodl carthage the tho marshal took he supposed brigham into an ari upper room af f the botel hotel and aud placed ecla a guard over ovar him at A the ther same time telling those around that thit he had haa got him Brother brothen 1 miller remain esi esl tuf tuu d the ghe he room yoom uin until jintil tin til they bid him edme come to aupper supper while here parties patties came oame ari aa one arter after the lothen lother and asked for brigham broiher brother miller was as pointed out ont to them atheni I 1 so it continued contini led until an japo apostate state py the namo nam o thatcher who had lied cited in la qu oo 00 came ca in bilt sat sixt down do n and nd askea asked the landlord landl landi lira lora ord where brigham was the landlord pointing across the table ta brother brather th or miller swiff said that Js s mr votra rh atcher hatcher replied rp Plied piled where Z I 1 cant see any one that looks li like ilke brigham 11 the told him it was was that fat 11 esby fleshy xuan raan 62 eating tang loh oh lob hem exclaimed thatcher not tha miller one 0 e of rayold ray old neighbors upon hearing bearing tats the landlord wen tand tapping the ibe sheriff on the shoulder took hima gim a few inep tepa to th one side hide and ba yori have bave made i a mistake mt ake that ignot le not brig brigham Drig am young it Is wm millor of nauvoo 1 the marshal very heaven sl and passed fon foe brigham he the took bro brij miller into a room roomi and to him hien said what what wham tn irk hell bell is the reason you 01 dig not tell teil me spur name bro miller replied you have not asked uld trie iny xay fay name harbt 11 well it 11 said the sheriff mth foth another gath oath ja houi name name hamb li he ro replied plied wit ilah llah miller said ahe the marshal li 1 I your p name 1 a me was brigham young do dd yon ton bay sit say this for a fact Ceita certainly twy lwy ido I 1 do sai sal aBro miller then theu said the tho marshal why did you yon not tell moe roe this I 1 before 1 I 1 I was wah no obligations obligation to tell yme you F replied erd miller liller A as you ydel aid did not ask me then the marshal marshai ih a rage walked the abord ty by bro bib miller who walked off in id company with lawyer edmonds sheriff backenstos and others who took him hing across lots tos to toa a place la d of safety and this is ig th the tho real pith of 0 the stor story y of bogus brigham Brig ham bam as far as I 1 can recollect ina IN lna a recent lecture delivered by mrs mra stanton in san sau francisco she madche ma dehe debe following remarks marks ie which are bro so ad full of sterling common sense that we wd mend every lady young or old into whose hands they may fall to read I 1 mark learn and inwardly digest every one of them we must ea acate our daughters first to regard their own lives hud aud bodie sand the laws which govern them second their duties aa as parents third their duties as citizens fourth to tn supply eife with its luxuries and fop perles but now we reverse this order our daughters learn music and worsted and SILLY BILLY ARTS AND accomplishments but bu t not a thought or word is agven to their development as wives or a ag citizens we who have reached and passed middle life ilfe cannot do much in this matter to remedy it as concerns ourselves but we can for our children so train and teach them that their coming lives will fill grand positions in their various spheres I 1 would have mothers feel that their daughters bave have fulland tuli full and equal rights in all things with their brothers and that they are en titled to be so bo considered in the wor worlds lda ida idd opinion it is a divine right of woman that she may do and do rightly whatever it Is right that a man may do horace greeley has hag said that what we want is SIXTY THOUSAND GOOD COOKS instead of sixty thousand men voters well I 1 know we do and I 1 propose that we educate the men to do it eap CAP applause and laughter men are adapted to this work they can stand any amount of heat they dont mind any amount of smoke A dozen of them will wilt get got together and smoke a room toom so full that you yon cant see across it they like smoke and cooking will give them plenty of it men are the best beat cooks now the best book on cooking ever written was waa written by a man dian the quickest quickest cooking I 1 ever knew of was by y a man on shipboard he only had one spoon which he would dip into everything and between flavors he would ilek lick il A woman have done that she would have dirtied a dozen towels and consumed vastly more time butt but in sober earnest we must reverse the modern education of our daughters our girls must musi be ta taught u lil ill first their own happiness that no their ir womanhood was the first consideration wifehood and motherhood were mere INCIDENTS OF their treib 1711 R LIVES the preservation of their own womanhood was the one prime object of their lives As it ib is now we look tip to wives and mothers I 1 and down upon womanhood i this is wrong vur var daughters are nouns not adjectives I 1 have bave a rover Tover reverence ence euce for such women as harriet hosmer for susan B anthonys anthonyy BAn thony and odd for fur the fostof women who haye have dene done great things in a this world even though they have not b borne 0 rne any children are there DO no child children ren except the hildrea of or the fleshe are there thard 40 phildren of the brain ah a higher civilization than thib this will realize that a pradd thought a and idea is worthy bf of its homage homade and its admiration we must educate our girls that they are chatin that in the society of the refined defined they may be happy harpy 4 that wa they may inay anve peaceful glorious lives and take hah high 9 seats in heaven WITHOUT EVER SEEING A mahd MAN the idea that woman la is weal weak inherently tsa iso ta a grand mistake she I 1 ia ghys phys i 1 l calay weak because she ahe neg neglects lp ts aher her baths violates every law amature oll nature and of her god because she dregs dreis dresses dressed eif dif in a way that would kill a man mau 1 X feel fedl it to be my mission to arouse every woman to tto bring up lap her daughter r without breaking herile her ber up in doing it our female idea of dress is all wrung hyang bave have conversed idith a good amany physicians who tell me that thatis it is almost impossible to find a u PERFECT FEMALE SKELETON erem mrs stanton illustrated the dif il rence between thie the ribs tiba as they should he and sud aa they are blade moade by dress by interlacing her fingers it is a rare find flud a woman perfectly well hul hub sedan we ean can it we choose entirely revolutionize lut iut ionize this even the bible says that maternity ia Is a curse most women ac doctrine as true truest it ia Is simply horrible it is I 1 T 1 I I 1 iok ioa t 7 4 X monstrous OUS LIE the bible bibi has been beer branal translated abed by nien men mea 41 I 1 and for men will in the been made sh a lif rig in the translation n i god pod never meant such a monstrous d doc soc 00 trine tobe to be promulgated as his will we aur daughters that mother motherhood hood bOod is grand frand and that GOD NEVER NEVEK CURSED IT and dud the curse if there he be a curse may ba rolled off as man has rolled rolled ava aya away the curse eurse of labori labor as the curse corset has as been rolled from the descend descendants ailts of eram ham my mission among women as ia to preach the new gospel if you suf auf fer fur it Is not because you are cursed of t god crud but because you vi violate his laws what an incubus it would take irom wo man could she be educated to know known iha the pains of maternity are no curse upon k her kind hind we know that among in ln deans the squaws do not suffer in childbirth they will step stop aside from th ranks even on the march and return ina in a short time bearing with them the new now born child what an absurd absurdity absurdly lt then to suppose that only enlightened chril christian a tian women are cursed but one word of fact is worth a volume of philosophy lot me give you some of my own experience I 1 am the mother of df seven beven children my girlhood was spent mostly in the open air I 1 early imbibed the idea that i A GIRL WAS rust AS GOOD AS A boyr boyf and I 1 carried it out I 1 would walk five miles before breakfast or dr ride ten oh horseback after I 1 was married I 1 wore my clothing sensibly the weight hung alone on my shoulders I 1 never compressed my body out of its natural shape shans my first four children were born and ana I 1 I 1 suffered very little I 1 then made up my mind that it was totally sary for me to suffer at all so X 1 dressed ligh lightly ty walked every day lived as muc much h as possible in the open air ate no 9 condiments or spices kep kept t quiet 1 let lel listened to music look looked edat at p pictures le al r es read poetry the night before t he the birth of the child I 1 walked three in miles lles ties tha the child was born without a particle of pain I 1 bathed it and dressed it and IT WEIGHED TEN TEX AND A ralf HALF POUNDS that same day I 1 dined with the family every one said I 1 would surely die but I 1 never had bad a relapse or a moments inconvenience from it I 1 know this thia ia Is not being delicate and refined but bat if you would be vigorous and healthy in spid spite to of the diseases of your ancestors an and your own disregard of natures elb els i laws try it loud applause coneen one enthusiastic thusia stio lady lary rising and requesting mrs Stant stanton tin lon to advise every lady in the land to do the same mrs stanton resumed I 1 can only advise them to dreis dress right take baths and exercise freely every mother in the land has it in her power tobe SECOND ONLY TO GOD in making of her offspring just what it should be this is a serious responsibility but it A is to one that god imposes upon every mother inthe in the land chil dren are born not made the mothers whole thoughts its are cent centered erid upon her herl unborn chi child itis it is ia indeed a holy period and if her mind antl anil body are in the proper condition how haw great groat and grand will wilt be the result I 1 have seen been the original painting ot of which I 1 see coples coplea all over jour your land which represents the ideal wom woman standing above the surrounding objects while the man looks rev reverently brently up to her ber this to my mind ia is the J OF woman must understand her trao trae position Aitio il before bhe she esir can take the first at ate tep toward this position it is better now to learn and practice wo tho erue irue ru b laws lad of generation than to attena attend attempt pe to remodel re io model the old ola and the bid b id for q afla with them we can cau make ahe ake our children i what we please and insure the ha hapah ap pp I 1 pesi ness nesa of future generations et it ia is a sad gad thing for a mother to have a dissolute bon son or hir nur idiotic child I 1 know of one dibi family where eherd there aie sie arb are seven adio idiotic altic ob children ildren lidren why wily the fath thra byis a drunkard I 1 want to teach that the begetting of s child by a drunken or |