Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 9, Number 12, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 September 1878 — Page 1
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Vol. 9.---N0. 12.
THE MAIL
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A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
SECOND EDITION.
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Town-Talk.
T. T. hu not the slightest desire to succeed Dan Voorhees in tbe United States Senate. In feet he has no political aspirations, no favors to ask of any party or class of citizens. He has, in reality, however, as profound a sympathy with what are called the workingmen as any demagogue professes to have. But he has nothing to gain or lose by representing things as better or worse than they are. If be knew the & exact facts in reference to the condition of the laboring classes, be would give them, whether better or worse than he thinks. If be knew the remedy for aqy ills which they suffer be would urge the immediate employment of these remedies. T. T. confesses that he is too ignorant of.Ibe existing financial disease called Hard Times, to act the part of a wise physician, and be has too maoh regard for his own character and the public welfare to follow tbe fashion prevalent in this region and become a financial quack. But nothing is gained by making, or representing matters worse than they are. Facts are wanted and when the facta are known it will be easier to select right means and methods to remedy tbe ill. But T. T. has, for some time, had a growing conviction that the number of unemployed laborers
this assertion in any given community, will make no difference. If a man wants a political office, or has Bet himself up as the Grand Financial JGiastlcutns, he isn't going to let facts stand in bis way. But tke politicians and the glasticutuses are but few. The mass of the people are honest and do want facts. It is something for which to be grateful that the actual number of unemployed is from eight to twelve times less than we have been taught to believe. But while the number is not so large as to drive us out of our senses with fear and make us the easy prey of any quack politician who chances to come along crying his wares and howling about tbe awfulness of the disease he proposes to cure, it is large enough to make all men of true philan* tbropy and patriotism seek for a remedy
Topics of the Times.
-CLEANLINESS.
It has been said that cleanliness is next to godliness. This assertion is not excessive panegyric. Cleanliness not only administers to beauty and comfort, but to health also. Take the person, for example, and how much cleanliness improve's one's appearance! When the grimy mechanic washes himself, shaves and dons a clean suit of clothes, you hardly reoognize him for the saflie man you ssw toiling and sweating in the dusty shop. The superiority of a clean and tidy woman over a slovenly one is beyond the power of words to express. It is much less a question of personal boauty than of habits of cleanliness. Nails neatly pared, hair worn becomingly and well combed, a clean dress, no matter how coarse the fabric, give an air of sweetness, a charm of tidiness, that will not pass unnoticed. -True it is no small matter in a world of heat, and dust and soot, to keep one's self always clean. It requires work and a bountiful use of water and soap. But it pays. It pays for tbe comfort and beauty and health it gives. A good bath when it is needed is an elixir. One comes out of it with a sense of exhillration and is Improved not only physically but morally. *His temper is sweeter. He is more patient and good natured. A man will get angry twice when he is dirty to once when be is clean. Yet it is sadly true that personal cleanliness is greatly neglected by many people. They put themselves almost out of the pale of decent society by their habitual neglect of those oheap commodities—soap and water.
In the oountry is greatly exaggerated. As he goes about the city he finds a great many laborers who are working for small wages, some for almost nothing, but by the strictest economy and denial, they manage to live, though some of them In a very poor way. But T. T. does not find a very large number of men who have nothing to do. Yet tbe pfepers and some of the speakers have put the number of unemployed laborers in the country at 8,000,000. This is about one-third of the entire numberVpot from which his soup was dipped.
They will continue to aaeeit that every third workman in the nation ia living in enforced idleness, and tbe feet that the slightest Investigation or thought, on their awn part, or that of their hearers •or readers, would show tbe falsity of
Leaving the subject of tbe person we may oonslder cleanliness as regards tbe food we eat. Everyone fondly imagines (or tries to do so at least) that tbe various culinary compounds which are set before him are as clean as they appear to be. He hopes (though with but a faint heart sometimes) that there ia no hypocrisy about them, that tbe bands which worked the pie-crust were clean hands and that there are few files floating In
of those who come under the head of laboring men. Now it is certainly not true that one in three of the workingmen ofTerre Haute, or of Vigo county, is idle. At least, T. T. could not think this possible, and so set down Terre Haute as a peculiarly favorable locality. But a recent thorough investigation of the facta in the State o.f Massachusetts, maftle at a dull season of tbe year, confirms tbe suspicion of T. T. that there hss been some wild exaggeration. They have some sort of a Yankee contrivance in that State caUed a Bureau of Statistics. The chief of that Bureau, one Col. Wright, said to be thoroughly reliable, set to work to Investigate the •mount of enforced idleness. It was declared that there were 300,000 or 300,000 people out of employment in that State. An olftcial canvass was made, beginning In June and ending in August, which, ip a manufacturing State, is the dull season. In 19 cities and S3S towna there were found 21,813 out of employment, Of this number £,500 were skilled workmen, and 13,283 unskilled. Now 21,812 men without work ia a large number, but T. T. thinks the ia safe In saying that it ia not as large as 200,000 or 300,000 men. That is, the Actual figures, bulbed with the greatest catfe show that the real number of unem* ployed workmen is from eight to twelve times less than the paper and speakers had rapreaented. Taking these figures as a basis for the whole country, iifete*| of 3,000,900 unemployed, we should have 670,000. This is a sufficiently large unmber to Instigate tbe moat careful la•qulry as to what can be done to find employment for tboea among these who want to work, and the inoat earnest effort to meet their waists* And thee# facta and figtuer, until they arc contradicted by otberi equally reliable, ought to make honest man and papers, In diocuseing tbe hard times and the cure, careful of the figure* whleh they employ. Demagogues, whoSplay upon the fears and %i dreadful leasee on this subject. It Is prejudices of tha ignorant for their own profit, |WlU pay no attention to facts.
This effort of the lmagiuation becomes most trying at certain boarding houses and hotels wbloh few persons succeed In wholly avoiding during their pilgrimage through life. At home every man feels reasonably assured that his food has been prepared by clean bands and cooked in clean vessels. Tbis assurance takes on the-form of absolute oertainty If bis wife has been tbe cook. But away from home ungenerous suspicions will Intrude themselves. If there Is anything better or prettier than a tidily set dinner table, with all the dishes bright and spotless, the cloth perfectly clean, the varioua articles of food cooked to a turn, and all presided over by a mistress as neat in her personal appearance as the china before her, we
Bhould
to be told
really like
what
it is. But the old com
plaint that God sends meat and tbe Devil sends cooks, will be heard, we fear, for m«ny and many a day yet.
How beautiful, too, ia a tidy home! Not a home where life is made such a ceaseless battle with dirt, that the broom and scrub brush monopolise tbe housewife's time to the exclusion of all other things and where life is made one uooeaaing round of drudgery, but where an air of taste and cleanliness pervades each room where there is system and order where Judgment and taete are displayed in the purchase of articles and la their arrangement where the bouse is pure and clean, both Inside and out where no filth is permitted to accumulate and breed disease. *Suoh a home to a blessed place, if the other essentials of happiness dwell there too, and th*y generally do where families live thus. If alLtbs houses and grounds in a community were pervaded by such an at* mosphert some of the doctors would Iteve or go Into other business.
And this leads us to conAder cleanliness as it effect* towna aad cities. The terrible scourge which Is now sweeping through the cities of the South teaches
well ktfown that the jaUotr fevw^lf not caused by, to at least mmriahed and fed by filth. Into a cleatf city it will not come, or if it comas, will not stay long. Bat In a filthy place It iao*s down people by scores and hundreds. Look at the prodigous oost now of fighting the pestilence-of caring for the dek—of
J"
it ilsJ*
nursing and burying them. Money by tens and hundreds of thousands to flow* ing from the generous North into the plague-stricken communities. A pittance, compared with this great sum, would have been sufBoient to 'have cleaned those cities and kept them clean and saved thousands of lives into. the bargain. But we of the North have no cause to boast. Our own cities and towna, are inexcusably deficient in sanitary regulations. Alleys are allowed to become filthy from decaying offal, deed animals are left to decay upon tbe streets, causing horrible stenches and impregnating the air with the seeds of disease and death, in short the enforcement of sanitary measures ta contemptibly weak and spasmodic. We curse the climate of Indiana for its all-prevailing miasmas. But how much of it all todue to our neglect of the laws of health, to our habitual filthiness. Who doubts that when all our swamps are drained of their stagnant waters, when our farms and houses and streets and alleya and clothes and persons are all kept clean and pure, when we use the preventive agencies which God has placed in our hands for the resistance of disease—who doubts that malarial disorders will become a thing of the past Truly, cleaniness is next to godliness.
THE BETTER WORLD.
CHURCHES, PASTORS
AND
PEOPLE.
Rev. Thomas Bacon hsving arrived, services will be resumed In the Congregational Church to-morrow.
Services will be held at Asbury Church to-morrow ss usual. The pulpit will be filled by Rev..F. M. Rule, of Rochester Ind. 1
Rev. H. N. Ogden, pastor of the M. E. church at Perrysville, Ind., and Rev. W. H. Hickmon, pastor at Delphi, Ind., will Occupy tbe pulpit at Centenary, to-mor-row, one preaching In the morning, and the other in the evening of that day.
First Presbyterian Churchy public worship ss usual. Alex. Sterrett, pastor.
The Y. M. C. A. will hold the regular meeting at the rooms to morrow at 4:15, and at 5 o'clock In Court Park. The latter meeting will be addressed by some member of North-west Indian*. Conference now in session at Braxil.
Rev. G. P. Peale has returned from hia vacation tour with twenty-one pounds of added flesh, and will resume his pulpit work to-morrow. "What is the best remedy?" aaked a preacher of a shrewd- observer, "for an inattentive audience "Give them something to attend to," was the significant reply. "Hungry sheep will look up to tbe rack if thereto hay in it."
One of the eastern churches claims that a wealthy lady of their congregation saves them 910,000 a year by the example she sets her sisters in the simplicity of her dress.
Says Joseph Cook: "I am no lunatic, I hope, as to Sunday, but I look abroad over tbe mapof popular freedom in the world and it does not seem to me accidental that Switzerland Scotland, England and the United States—tbe countries which beet oqserve Sunday—constitute almost tbe entire msp of safe popular government."
St. Peter's, Rome, will acoommodate S4,000people St. Peter's Milan, 37,000 St. Paul's, London, 25,000.
In Berlin, with a population of 1,000,000 only 33,000 persons attend public worship, and there 20,000 burlato every year without any religious service.
Mrs. P. W. Hagohrtt, Who resides in the north endoftheeity waa discovered, about five o'clock thia morning, by the watchman at the gas works, floating down the river. She was reeoued, but to in a critical condition. Some alx weeks since she gave birth to a child, Ikons which aho has not recovered, and baa been at times delirious. It to supposed that ahe went to the river this morning and in her delirium threw herself in the water.
Thb Mexloan Circus gave its first performance, lsst night, to a small aadienoa. Our impression to that the piocetfon of yesterday waa damaging to the attendance. There to a novelty about the performance that to refreshing, and eon* of the acts are truly astounding. Some of them would be big cards for Barmunor any of the Mg tent ahowa. Tbe last
from sixth to Ninth on OUb
ex
hibition will be given to-night, and there will doubtlssa
be
a large audiencfe.
Tbs lio« of march of the
A»
O.U.
W.
grand iocs—Ion oa Un 16ti» will
ba
itwit,
north on Ninth to Main, vreatna lfain to Court Park, where
ffpenohee
will
mad*. In the everting there will b* a grand ball at Armory Hail, ther proceed* logo to the yellow fever anfiererajoftbe South. r-
Gaftvnf A Dah.* have juat 90,030 copies of their Commercial Goltoge Journal, a very pretty tight page tbeat.
Ir you want a good home aee oar For Sale column.
TERRE HAUTE, IND., SATURDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 14,1878. Price Five Cents
ON RECEIVING OF'
THE PORTRAIT
Tistrue, to satisfy me. A trial tbe artist might find, Fori look in your picture to see,
Not your features, but your mind. A stranger contested might be With tbe gleam of your bright golden hair, The rose's red. hue oa your cheek,,
Its white, on your forehead so fair. But for me who iiave seen your face bright, As Peris in Eden's blest bound, And Mt with tbe guest of a soul, L.
Seeking truth it has never found,
f!ii
The pencils that paint must be plamllC FroinLove's own Immortal wings clipped, In biushes yet rosy and warm,
And suhuitne 01 loving eyes dipped, "'F. A. VOX M08CHZIBKEB, M.
V.
People and Things.
The cucumber does its best fighting after it's
down.:
Fernando Wood says we are on the eve of our greatest prosperity. Lunch fiends are called "colonel" because they are always strapped.
A doctor's fees, for instance, would you call them IU gotten gains .... Philosophers are discussing whether a newborn child possesses any intellect.
A tramp calls his walking shoes, "Corporations," because they have no soles. A Mormon has just married, at one swoop, a mother and her daughter. Has be a mother-in-law?
A newspaper announces the death of a lady celebrated for tbe "purity of her character and complexion."
A great bore 1s he who talks at a great length about himself, when yon have something to say about yourself.
They test a drunken man now by getting him to pronounce Keokuk Constitution, and to spell Ottiwel! Wood.
General Tom Thumb denies that his father to a pauper in Chicago. He died fifteen years ago, leaving an estate worth 970,009, and a lofty monument marks his last resting place.
Tonrgueneff says: "In a century there won't be a King in Europe, except, perkaps, in England, and there will be nothing but a pageant—a political mummy shown to the populate at so much a head. ,V '•*,. ~L
A clergyman in Bath created consternation at a funeral by praying earnestly in behalf of "the bereaved husband and tbe one to come who shall fill the place made vacant by the death of our deceaaed sister." i«
One of onr largest brewers nas recently brought on a man from Cincinnati to superintend his brewery, at an annual •alary of more than twice that of the President of Harvard University.—Boston Herald.
When a rosy looking girl backs up to a stranger at a country dance and asks fallm to whack that mosquito which Is gnawing her between the shoulders, it is no time to read up on Chesterfield.— [Free Press.] One versed inBackstlr's Sainta would be best.
Base ball has been a dangmns game since the introduction of "dead," or hard, balla and th$ practioe of extremely swift pitching. few days ago James Berry, (he catcher of a club in Boonville. N. Y., was hit in the (riomach and lnatantly killed.-- %'wi
An Indianapolis lawyer has invented a novel opera glass, which by. means of an oblique glass will, by proper adjustment, enable the holder to see either the actors or the audience at will while tb^ glass Is leveled at the stage. The adjustment is made instantaneously and without observation.
When riding on the cars if cinders annoy you, persuade your neighbor nest In front to close his window that to where they enter. Yon may keep your own window open with impunity, unless your neighbor behind to a trigger man and compels yon to close it.—Bingham pton Republican.
The relationahip of a man and woman in rainy weather to easily discovered. II they are lovers the women will have all of tha nmbrella, and the man -wont care a flg bow wet begets. But if they are married It la just the opposite. Marriage makes the dflferenoe, that to all.—New York Mail.
Bocosssfal fishing cos* John Scull, editor of the Somerset (Pa.) Herald, Ida life. After securing a string of some thirty pound* of fiah,hetied them to hto wiiitand waded In tha river with thaw. Filing Into a deep hole, tha weight of the fish drew him underwater, and, although an aspert awiamer, be waa drowned*
Theater?of Chad**Samnatfidomeatietio«tto*» la told by Goorge W. William, a colored orator of Cincinnati, wha waa la Sumftsr's law ofl^e at tbe
Widow Alloa Hoopea haoamaMrs. She waa vivadooa woman, he'*ys,~»s attractive fti aodetyaa Sam* net waa cold and dignified. Mm.8qmn#r waa food of fl*aaias parUM arhSdb she would enjoy henalfwhilaherlord and master waited aotamnly at one slda. He would often make special requests for his wife's departure, which ah« would, grant at her pleasure. In her desire to manage household afikiro, also, Mrs.
I. ..1(c
Sumner often vexed her husbsnd by sweeping into the waste bssket all his clippings, systematically arranged in rows on the wall and fastened by pins. The uncongenial couple did not remain long together. One day Sumner came to his office with a darker cloud, than ususl on hia brow. Soon bto. friftfs father csme in and said* in tonea half of alarm and half of inquiry, "Alice has gone T" "Yes, sir," was sternly replied "Alice hss gone," and alterwsrd Sumner only referred to her from necessity.
Judge Carpenter tella a good story of President Polk. White in tha White House two matters ware necessary for Mr. Polk's happiness—one a booming cocktail, and the other the presence of his nephew, Marshall Polk. Every day before breakfast the President dlank one-half of a very large cocktail In a taU glass, and, accompanied by Marshall, started out for a walk. Regularly every morning Marshall would forget something, ran back, and drink off the xeat of the cocktail. The Preaident never auepected hia nephew.
Another queer report of a jury baa been reoorded in England. A Sheffield furnaceman came home late and drunk, and bis wife, who was asleep, kept him waiting longer at the door than pleased bim. Accordingly he knocked her down upon a sofa, emptied a buaket of water upon her, polled her alobg the floor, kicked her In the mouth with bis heavy shoes, and wound up by dragging her into the yard and jumping upon her. The jury found him guilty, but recommended him to mercy on the ground "of the provocation given- him by hia wife."
Rev. Mr. Bartol, of Boston* tells from experience bow it feels to .be struck by lightning. "It glvee no ttmfe for fear, or even surprise, and the. aelMoss does hot appreciably last. If the blew be hqt fatal tbe restoration may be so qulok that In less than a minute's time hOrses and cows and pigs and men," escaping or delivered, all awarm together, under the flash and tempest, on the green award. A resistless weight, streaming and crowding through the frame, to tha consciousness I chiefly remember. The experience was, moreover, a single moment in wonder land. A, wakeful night and a week'a headaohe were the result,"
The Rev. W. T. Ellto to pastor of the Congregational Churoh in' Woodstock, Conn. He habitually uses violent! language in his sermons. This to only a sample: VYou low, mealy itaianthed looking wretches of tha devil, you look as though you had but now hopped out out of hell, and tha devil had atuck ydu up against the fence to dry. ft Would make heaven'a atomaeh aick to look at you." Apart cfhto congregation united in requesting him to realg$ but he refused to go. A committee and! a, policeman went to take possession of tha church. Ellto and a few adherents locked the doors. A whble nlght -wss spent in quarreling and actual figging, but In the morning the paator retreated.
MAlhr a jaded woman of family who has found too late that, In marrying tha, man of her choieefabebaa*lao married, in a sense, most of hia relatlvse, will find a "responsive ohord" vibrating on reading tha plaint of "An Over-vislted Woman," in tha New York Tribune. It to evidently a case from freai liflr, the letter being dated frojn soma Massachusetts town, whoee identity to concealed under a blank. She haa bean married fifteen years haa eeven children llvee on the old nomeetead. and every summer her husband's mother, brothers and gtsters, with their children, c0me visiting. "Once when my huaband told ine that he had beard from hia mother, and that she would be with us to-morrow, I said, •Oh dear!' 'Oh dear what said he. 'I don't know bow to take any more trouble,' said !.• 'My mother never made any trouble anywhere/ aaid he. 'I mean that I cant take any more work.1 'My mother won't make any more. All yon have to do ia to put on another plate.' I said no more. But from that day to thia, each year, aho oomea with her children and grandchildren. They alt on the oool mama, and I 000k for them over the hoi atova, with one child In my anna and another hanging at my aklrta." She thinks it tea cruel wayto treat a woman. It at least ahows that ail tha inoonvenienoea aad annoyancea of motber-in-lawism are not oa the side of the huaband.
TWISTED SENTENCES.
A eoroner*s verdict reada thus: "Tha deeeaeed came to hia death by atoeaaiva driaking, producing apoplexy in tbe nrindeofth* jusy."
A clergyman ana: "A young'woman died in my neighborhood ysstsiday, whilelwaapreaowng In a baaatly ataia of intoxication.''
A Weatempaperaays "A child was raisovarof iwurn thrse years old, andquasajed.withpanfalet*on, which nam spois a««nrarda."
A correapoadeat In writing eta recent calibration in tha city oT Cleveland, waa vary says: "Tha aadnaarlstwo the repprthf Dr. Ferry, tha chaplain,"
An Iowa editor thua acknowledge* a present of grapes: "We hava receNada baaket of gnipca from our friend W«. for which & will' aeeept onr 4KmpiF? mentst *omo of wbiefca** nearly twV Inchea in diameter."
A widow in tha' tpesL Intending to succeed her huaband In the management of a hotel, advertised that "the hotel will ba kept b7 the widow of the former landlord, Mr. Brown, who died last summer on anew and improved pton."
Femini terns.
A delicate parcel—a young lady wrap- ^. ped up in herself. African princes require their bridea to 5 have their teeth filed like those of a^ saw.
Dr. Holmes says that weeping widows* marry first. There to nothing like wet» weather for transplanting.
The girls of SanJAntonio, Texas, wiear|i broad brimmed felt hats, hang parasols^ like swords at their belts, and look like. bandits in skirta.
A Cleveland woman advertises thatl, ahe will take in wasing, and that "being$ until recently in affluence," ahe knows3 what fastidious people require*
There is more unadulterated joy over|4 the capture of the one aolitary mosquito on tha inaideof tha netting than in dr-® cumventing the million and ninety-nine he id
1
An exchange, in a moment of rapture,£ wants to know "the difference between^ a claret punch and a pretty gill's llpa."rf Tbe difference is that the latter don't go good through a straw.
The Albany Evening Journal thinker that a wise and fitting thing for Hayee^ to do would ba to "appoint Dr. Mary Walker American Consul at Cyprus,^ Where all the women wear trousers."
AMiss Bently of Maine haa rooovered* three hundred and aixty-Av* dollam for a breach of marriage promise. The man-, courted her a year and has to pay at the rate of a dollar a day. Cheapenough.
Roes
Eytinge, the actress, tells a Phil-**
adelpbla Interviewer that Mm. Flor-| ences coarso Mrs. Gen. Gilflory in "Thef Mighty Dolhtr," is simply Mrs. Florencaf^ herself. Now it to Mrs. Florence's turn to apeak,
Two women fired at eaoh other tn^ Harris, Ga., in very much the style of a" prearranged duel. They met by ap-y polntment, exchanged ahots,, but had$ no aeconds, and neither waa hit. Onejj inn married and the quarrel waa aboutjj* her huaband.
Lloyd Garrison "confidently predicted that women will vote within the next£. decade, and Wendell Phllllpe says tbatr if we gain In the ootning fifteen yearahalfas much as we have In the last thir^ ty, woman will held apear and ableld ink herown handa." I
Kepler and Stevens traded wives in| Tipton, Iowa, two yeara ago, the lattery getting 9700 on account of tha wife he! gave being fur handsomer than tha one? ha deceived. Stevens haa since grown^ wealthy, and hia lawful wife seeka by at lawauit to reinstate berselft I
At a popular atore fsmoua for th| 4 prompt and polite attention of the clerks^ a woman of perhaps thirty years w^ looking at goods, when a young manj[ atepped toward her and aaked:' there any one waiting on yon f" "Why,* what a queation I've been married^ ..« v- a-'»S tan years rr
A
A
A
/i
,•
miner returned from California ta Michigan to marry the girl he had left behind him. He announced that be wi^ oommlssloned also to pick out a girl for. hia mining partner and take her to hlptf to wed. After oarefQl prospecting b« made achoioe, and tha choaan damael haa gone to California to meet her futusw hnabandv S "I want, and will have, a wife without afaillng,^ waa the remark of a young man who had three aeasons* experience* of life. His sister, with only a eounti^* ghd's pblloaopby, remarked: "Theo{ youll never marry, becauas,abould yoa find such a woman, ahe'll ba sura fb§ ji want a husband of the same character.*)!
young lady *t Lestievilla, an aaat4 ernauburb of Boston, could not decide? between two aspirants for her hand, and,' told them to deddathe matter between themaalvee, discarding dueling. ThMt .!:' boat raoed, the winner being ao exhaust^ ad that he bould not gat out of hto bo*IT igj for some time but he walked hama with hia prize who had been a apectatof. Sit ia propoaed In England to form, "Scbooto of Beauty," In which *11 tha members ahall pledge themaalvee to dior. all they can to make themaalvee oaaaal)| fe by natural aaeana and atriot 'regard tdi. tbe lawa of health. Priam will begivW to thoee ladlea who can move withaa^ and graoe, and ao afford evidanoeof tht free use of their llmba. A natural walsa and a well curved back,Vlth a perfeetl| poaed bead, will ba at a premium.
Roman OatWto bishop reoaplly I eermon at Three W'rwat which he sasallsil the prsapnt atyi* ofWreAee worn hy ladtasti Am pronounced tbe tight fittfsg gowp "ln^ decant and lmmoraL" Bf conclodad by forbidding the members at t^e church from again attending eervfe* fir such di eases. Many of the women leftwhile ha waaapaaklng, and tha m^oxflr at tha woman of tha ohnzch dadam they will nevvr enter tb«ca1|^dTal bbil the bisb^ spolog1za« pablicPf for.ih^ upon theiB and thalr clotfaiaK They will wear what ihay cbocaei thly say, bfadiop or not, and that It la not Mabualneas- to Interfere. As tha matter^ now stands, the bishop is as firm as the? woman, who are trying to win tha men, to thalr view of tbe 1
