The New York Herald Newspaper, May 29, 1875, Page 5

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ad } certainty without which no jodpment is allowed of Mr. seecher, I mons to drive 2 out of Net 1O TH WONDERFUL Tl Al, to be provounced by the ig T questions of crimipality, au era ly | tions to the interests Of society and their influences | Would you Jeei like happiness of others, and | bad as! your assent to the proposition that this case was | choose for you urterly bare of ail thes and observed, which lead to tne conviction upon t Ninety-sixth Day of the Great | there have er committed, Le ergrd Oy page 9 owe ee vicious bau apt t oth " rs which lead to je wicl act, walle not. as conviction th to the legal and common under- | 1d Scandal Suit. Mauch teaved Which could possibly lead to the | standing, The record’ of thls case in 1'8 whole | OUtsite the Court House. At vhe close of tue pro- Vent the imquiry sto the truth, Out of all tis conclusion that such @ crime had been web of hypocrisy, ol faise s' of social intimacy such as belongs to tne relation take the converse of the proposition, falsus in of calumny which iasvened itself on this NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, MAY 29, 1875.-TRIPLE SHEET. ima ous of in, to which Porter made hardiy any reference she pars of Mr, Titon, My. Moniton, wre. Moulton, | whatever. Mr. Evarts was dull in the uh certain persons whose associa: ad ” Weil, that is enough for a motive now, | 8 creditable, Mr. Beecher all this time lead: sible men if you should put | !ternoon. is thongh's seem to travel giite whicn was in the nature of circ an Lia . vat D wee to pik one | slowly, and he was jess bappy in his conte S100, pangs the Congregal onal Gognes things a e true and take and the speech of Dr. con, whic jollowe ere them on tis say so? Moniton and Tilton were (a | een era (Argument and language, The lack came the fnal promulgation of tne scandal. They the same platform, In this cause the defendent | f imterest in tus part of tne address, combined thougni that tue boldness, the circumstan tality | did not need to trust to this maxim so firmly | with the beat, made many of the audience sleepy, Of the charge, reinforced by tat foul accusation, established, so wisely considere’, carrying uct | ang made many more retire to the cool, iresh air rere - pe es ee ey ontiing 4 | heart @ jury on | Plymouth church; I met pors' these large rel iked | a verdict upon allowing facts of conauct, as 8 OF owWO Up In the hearts, afections and ements, ol prevari- | ceedings Mr, Beach created some amusement by heat, this fame, It is troe there was a@ habit cations on their own showing, requires us only tO | announcing to the Court that he beld in bis hand . THERE CAME A VIPER ; nd- ‘in And & parishioner, but ali the evi- | omnibus, /alsus in uno. You have one question " bundle 0: newspavers addressed to eacu iM- | ani. in the Scriptures we read of @ viper spriog- ? of a clergy mai EVARTS GREAT APPEAL. fences tend toshow matter to acconnt for and to derermine whether the truth is not spoken dividual juryman, and he wanted the Court to ing out of a fire which had been made and ten- Mony on thas entirely from Less Scholarship and More Practical Pee atnacy aud aenstane regard 1s ES | BOWEN AND TILTO! sented as occurring at intervals of from three to each one of those visits during t Common Sense. dinary. lou pretends ti the evening in the sense of pri- Between 1862 ana 1870 Bowen repeated the accu- S108 from its absence or the absence Of Wit- tuein there Was not anythiag that was not ANOTHER IMMENSE CROWD. yate cail, There was perhaps some so- sation not less than @ hundred i Sises, so that 1t | nesses. A witness was finally brought, and that open as rhe day, Then thay, Uy what was a reve- cial entertat) October he at Dess—servant or inmate of the family, not even i ‘Tuton uimself—there 1s nota single witness who | gan, in Indianapolis and contivued in Broovlyn, | He said they were uot ieft on the question of in- ofotners or of themselves. Both recognized the it occasion, amounting, I think, to nothing very defl- | deep sense of personal injury, irequently saying, | McDonald, woo had been in that family trom 1855 of her husnand’s house, th ame'to Db th Jnintiff Wounded by the § nite, and certainly very few lor the evening at i ir ne was #o Suindea, he coula ata Mr. Becoher | ha fear eg Lat merger rDendhe arden d lamentable occasion to laiscover she houseuold Dot which Mr, Beecher was present or showed his irom his pulpit. Now, either Tilton believed . play id—@ ser- to have been happy, and growing discords, suc 0 Plain oun y e harp resence, and then it was in acrowa in company | Bowen or he did not, or else Bowen did not say it, ae a fs 2 Throsts of Connsel in parlors. And in regard to any visitsof Mrs, | and lam sure I don’t know how you are going to a Tilton to Mr. Beecher’s house there is no evidence finda that out. Mr. Tilton has said so on the stand, At all that any suci occurred, Mr, Beecher says and Mr. Bowen was not asked to judge himself of thut if Mrs, Tilton was at bis house on the l0ch of _ this 1mputed conversation. But in respect Justify such @ degree o/ intimacy. All the testi- about it; all of it 1s false; false in evervtnimg; open and examine them. Judge Neilson did go, | 1M 18eli on Che Land of the apostle St. Paul. And — point, as far as he can press it, 18 false in character, in conduct, in concealuents, in tue peopie, wheu they saw it, exclaimed, ‘He is the defamer’s own testimony. The Drevarications, 11 open falsehoods, in written | 404, amid much laughter, explained that the @ marderebt? But the apostie shook it off into sits during the many years of con- | faisehoods. papers were illustrated and of a periectiy harm- tie flames, and remaiping unhurt, tue same people Ne less character. cried out, “He is God!” Now, tue general theory | Counsel subsequently read the plaintif’s state- of the defendanv’s case 18 tbis:—’ or- | ment, written in November, 1872, in which he set hn MR. EVARTS RETURNED the relations oi Mr. Beecher and Mrs, Tilton wit- | forth'that Henry 0, Bowen ‘told hun that thede- | $9 the courtroom at five minutes after two were, as Mr. Beecher understood, entirely moral, fendant was guilty of aduitery—a practice be- | g’clock, and immediately resumed nis address. faithful, true, wuolly above suspicioD on the part day, Now there is not nat was in 1862, Jt iad run on for several years, | ternal tacis and direct testimony to mere conclu- quty of avoiding the appearance ofevil. Betwel hat there was ao visit in i @ | Was the old tamuy half servaut, hail friend, Kate jation to Mr. Beecher, the deseruon, by the wile avery nment, some invitation, some had not slipped his mind; frequently expres: vant, @ friend, coming from her relatives to bis as to 1 ’ father's house; devoted to him, descending to was sudter ase on to ane ie ited him; devoted to the culidren, as his cuildreu, HO name oi Theodore Tilton, brotgnt to hun vy Mr, doubt recognizing the teelug, the duty of the Bowen. With all the pride of an emperor Mr. wile’s = claracter, and having naturally Tilton required Mr. Becener to cease to exercise d not know of it, and counselon the | of Mr. Tilton, we may fairly assume thit, | the Sentiments of an honest heart ex- his duty as a minister and to leave Brooklyn. ovher side treating of this did novask nimif he | as agatust him, be bas hearu these stories; ted in her favor, But still she be- Phat was the eud of it, air. <b 4 HOT BUT IMPORTANT DAY | stir siae ire p id ol tt. Air. Beecher ‘oel.ber recollection 0 of known Wiel yesterday morning, They crowded the win- | mignt, tnought unimportant tn itsell, be thrown | either loved or dows and doorways, interfered with the ventila- | jn with some clusion naturally Would be that if she had been — see that Mr. Beecher and Mrs. Tilton were under | Ctiminations and rec! A dense mass of people appeared at the Beeoner | there he would have scen her there, or would have | apretty sharp observation, @on’t you? A hus- he proved, liowever, thathe hadno | he bas said $0, Now he either belteved l0n4s to the fathers side of the house; - sougut nor cared what suspicivn had started na the con- them or he did not. If ne did »elieve them, you 4nd in the break up of the family, and in the this wid malice of Mr. ‘Titon but quietly settled Inations tiat proceeded down to is Work, as ‘you heard mia | between toem, and in her sympathies, and in the — teil iriend Fullerton. foere was no imterruption her having been’ there. ‘Tuis band, a rival,a man who hated Beecher and #dhesion of ver fidelity, sae stands now with the of his sermons, bis prayer meetings, his pastoral @ notlove his wife, andeitner father and the cniidren in nis care, and she Was cails or bis dudes, When im the same weex, on additional evidence to support the way he would watch. If he loved her he woula called up tor a purpose of no ar importance, Pecemober 40, Mrs, Tilton opened to ain grounds f having seen her there tion, and made the-heat of the atmosphere op- | possibility of uilty conduct, if barked ‘up with watch. and if he did not love ver he would watch; Sowing, that while their vigilauce omtrs Beching, o1 complaint which were serious, and which ex- other evidence. To say that the visic ofa married and ue comes tere and tells you that up tothat she is wuolly silent on the quesuio. of whether cited comuiseration for the disasters which had pressive. A great number of ladies were present. | jaiy of a parish in the daytime at the house ofthe July day, when his Wife made some sort of com- | there occurred anything, from the tine ofthe mar- fallen ou the family o the Tiltous, on Liltou’s Some of thein were the old, familiar faces, but | clergyman is a suspicious act would shock not | munication to him, until that time, he had not aw riage in 1855 to the broken home in 1874, taat would asseveration ne restorea Tilton’s character and many were entice strangers, dressed as for a | only the sense of decency but the sense of fairoess, idea in bis head that there was anything wrong Wdicato either evil desires, loose conduct, orring iiie, Which he had misconstrued on insaMicient and very curious ubout seeing tne prin- cipals to the trial. Tney waited patiently until recess,and then they blocked the passageways and dislocated their pretty necks, and asked a hundred eager questions as to who that man and — this man might be. Beecher held so large a levee e contradict statements. be because It visitors irom the country had to stand | !ufuences tha and, intellectually, the common sense of every between Mr. Beecher and his wife, that tuere was man. Lfit were otherwise, If Mr. Beecher’s sim- | anything wrong in the visits and tue rides. We | | | | children and grown tninates, besides Tilton him- | Park behind a pair of grays, and had been thanked | ¥ 4 | self and wife, are all unavle to contradict bis by Mrs. Morse, and nad been told what great good | None of them have adiered to us; none of them Under ihe impuises which were dev: | because misiortune has prevented its contradtec- im the middie of the court room afier the morn- | tig, ts now in 4 court of justice explatned away. ing’s proceedings ceased that these fair | Where are the seauctive acts and the corruptung THERE WERE SOME BOUQUETS, purpose on tue part of the wile, or impropriety Of facts. The occasion ot sell-reproach to Mr. Beec visiting time, in length, in respect to te actions of worse than ail Tilton said, was tuat there had house conid | have shown that in 1870, in tne winter, that | Mr. Beecher with coat house, and not a word you been bred iu the adections Of his wife a feeling servants, five Mr. Beechor had driven Mrs. Tilton out in toe , in the @osence Of AY tie oLner servants, that lad disparaged the a solute devotion that y to have Knowo oO! them. had 1ormed the whote fabric of cheir married It joped by tat Of seli-re- y throush the faimily five ata time, proach for his soare, Mr. Beecher was led to con- Well, their whereabouts, cur in the great auty as weil unmixed in- edit would be, Fiy are within our control, and yet there were ser- comumiseratiou for tue disaster, and MATERIAL CIRCUMSTANCES. yants runoto, Now, you will se@ that the material ciroum- (Uring all these years. stances of this alleged seduction and alleged adul- | their accessibility is not known to us; but not terest that there shoud be all the reparation in tery are just as inconststent with all the external | 08¢ Of them is brougnt. Finally, the intelligent, his power that was possivle, He also thougit circumstances ol lito In which these parties were | ¢Xperienced, sober observation and judument of tnava policy of stence should ve pursued, aud Placed and the observation tow ich they were | ts excelient woman, Katie McDonaid, 18 brought thateverytaing suuid be dine to build up te Woaat is uncontradicted, whether it | 1s had done Mrs. Tiiop. is absolutely uncontraatctaple or 3 pastor used? on chairs and even on tables to obtain 4 good 100k | some nowers sent to the chamber of a woman in | exposed, as the moral compatability of wicked beiore you, ani tue reason that norung is ead jymily and restore the external lortunes of Mr. at the Piymouth church pastor, wno was sur- | connnement Bowers acne to the parlor of & laay | conduct with religious characters and pure moral- nea A ede LE piel dag ‘Tuten. e| ends, relat! jiving in her own house, fowers tue sight of whic! ity :8 impossible. How do you get over that? ye fe 2 All Mr, Beecuer’s efforts to help Tilton pecu- Founded by a double belt of iriends, relatives and ONT Tea ine eyes or everyuody in the house, and | Way, if Your Honor please, ic is one of the singu- | *Weed Man and man, according co te ordinary niariy were faltufal, honest, just ehoria to repair admirer: et be taken just theu of the merry, laughing faces, An ingenious Yankee present sug- whose perfume betrayed their presence to every . ‘ ted that if a photographic picture could only | comer. I don’t think you will find out evidence of | and morals and everyday reisoning of the Engiish ices the sentiments of heart anu experience Of and this promise aud prospect ol restoring domes: corrupt and adulterous purposes in the mere fact | people, and ourselves, that we nave notasingle ile that peiong to men, and you are to judge of tic confidence and improved @omestic relation that these flowere were once, twice, three times word to describe the husband of an unfaithiu| ™en 4nd woren, and to judge of jamiles, and tO Ali tue evidence we have given has deen to mee! lar, perhaps unfortunate, traits in the manners Twles. You are men with tne qualities of titellly any wrong, to maintain wobrogen this god fain, exchanging happy congratulations on the great presented, Think of the constant, Watchful, jeal- | wife that 18 not inspired by the bitterest contempe , JWdge of actual practical daily iife tn the ince ANd — the false view that the disturoance of that family | and triumphant vindication of Mr. Beecher’by Mr. | OU8, hostie and malignant observers who watched | and ccntumely for the husband. There are two ves and on the level of the society of Brooklyn. grew out of the intrusion of Mr. Beecher or of any Evarts, ana another picture taken of the same group after Mr. Beach has cone his summing up, ico’s Mr. Ju both transcripts placed side by side would show vVersatiog introduced by ‘filton—and in which Mr, Beecher comes vut the prominent fgure—says, “Well there is one thing certain at least, that such a@ striking contrast between gayety and gloom as to command a great interest andagreat | Beecher has all these years, At a lunch in Deimon- | ory fall the Wile and the clergyman during | words, and thatit may not be supposed my mem- YU are to judge of witnesses ahd of the Wit- Sequcer, and such Necessary d.sviosures bearin, me inthe exactness of the definitions 1 UCSse8’ appearance. You are to judge of tae on tuat’ question as came trom ‘Miton's miscous will read them to you. Now asa plain matter of Presence or absence of testimony and the absence quct asa nusband, AS we go into every devil fact, the definition of the word “cuckold” is accu- oi ay more weighty testimony Which would yo; tue character of this plainuf toward M Tate—the husband of anadulteress, Andtnen the Ve Produced, and aiways will be produced tf there | Wooahuil, or whatever they may have been, all Adjective “cuckoldy,” having the qualities of a ig any fact at the bottom which would Warrant 16 | those questions did Not grow out of our evidence, ‘yep hprhal " tee Seorteryr and give it growtan, These men, Mr. Tilton and : > rorné cuckold—mean, sueaking. An len we have aN | wy Beecher. and this woman, § Tue Story oO: the removal Of Bessie Turner Lecause son, in the course of the con- re not been involved or suspected of le. | any irregularities toward womeo,” and ‘Tilton | ancien! word not much in use as indeed, the word b does of Knowledge of Mr. Beecher w: it nas ms BRECHER’S VS. TILTON’S LEVERS. says, “‘Iv’e lost ny fuith in man.” Tois was # “cuckold”? is not much in use, because (he occasion be judged ap man Bnd women of ou ; been necessary to expose Mr. Tliton’s conducc Wide, indeed, ia the difference verween the | pleasing form of maxing an imputation against ® | does not occur in our society. “Wittol,” a man Society, and our daily lie, so far as all out eX: toward certainly not very avreeabie ladies, le, in a riend. Tuls Was in isd. A pastor, a visitor at | who knows his wile’s infidelity and submits tor— | !ernal relations go. They are to be judged fatriy Betore we come to any measures tn regard to | public behavior toward Beecher and Tilton, The | bis house, a man that for years hid told tut @ | a tame cuckold. Now, that shows either a coarse | Mey are to be judged justly, | When Individual "this controversy—December, 1870—I need only latter never nolas a levee, for none attend; never | bree ge ng bas the hand-suake irom so many as three men. | ‘ H He rises in solemn silence at the time of recess, | & fi buttons his coat, puts on his hat, @ wordor | mance Bn two to his counsel and starts for the door, Not | omar so with Beecher. He isinstantly surrounded at it to ‘he Janch time by men and women of all kinds, He | 1t for ever. shal freely, and spreads Joyous atmosphere all about | into men’s heads by the tale whisperinys of others | su hinjaries are simple, atlly, blind, ind:fferent, Dave stings.’ er, Where tiere him, BVARTS LESS STILTED. Evarts made a less Jearned but much more | gtrile. The ancients nave a stern maxim, Making | noticeable, and, either noticed or unnoticed, | education anu ex practical and understandable speech yesterday ue Pooper og! ws ot ~~ pai pas- F | sion to be expressed in a lew words, leaving, in than the day before. The great throng in the fact, nothing more to be said about it, “Jnvidia court room listened with marked = at- jestos dies nonagit.” Envy and malice keeg no tention all the forenoon, In the afternoon | Holidays, and there was 4 noticeable falling of, 48 | strike” geecn the counsel seemed to have lost the same | preparing a 3 and spoke Action displays tne man—the treatment of himself Now, the Koman law, if Your Honor please, was | teilect, In respect to wis character, 1D Less Ral Ou: tele, sr apastS Pees ae by himsel!; his own description of nimself leaves | not quite so indulgent as merely to visit witn'con- clearness, ess logic ana less force. Evarts’ Latin | potging to be ‘aotation from Uicero, five or six lines long, made | heart to us; he coasts of his malignity, and takes had a law in Rome, for the Romans were avirtue | 500! *Xpect to convince mself that he ls notsix — to which he called attention, aud one wale - P ie credit ior ali tne horrors it reveals. You nave no | ous people. the cuastity orthe Romsn matrons aoe anise ed ar tree fire tir ty th yay ciel hod aber Signiticatice, 18 that there tence t e c $ . ey evidence circum. at the Judge, who stvod it without flinching, | Jott mere ny ah the deformity OF h amano: be and maids was equal to that of any pation, and any eVidence, alter leaving the area of circum tne unlearned smile. The counsel hurled it~ though it is questionable if the foreman of the | seli-revealed jury, Chester Carpenter, was altogether well | pleased with Evarts in turning away from bim at | pis beak in th (bat particular moment to confer the favor of | merciless sha Cicero’s lines on Judge Netlson. THE FOREMAN OF THE JURY. Mr. Evarts shirt collar and a black tie. But the great charac- PB argued yo teristic of the foreman of the jury 1s the soft, cha- | you, aud atl -] | And now, good meleon-like expression of his face. He reflects Sawortky soot Evaris like a lookingglass. Let any ono sit be- | What are words worth uttered or spoken by this was pessimi exempli the most danger. Of S@iely und security that tue iaw wnd common ~ Anotner trait of this evidence is that it all | bind the counsel while he is speaking and keep man, wiose slanderous tongue, three days vefore ou bis eye fixed on the foreman’s face and he can | ‘liese lines ton’s, was also irtendly to Mr. Beecher. He aid not like these cowardly thrusts, ofspring of | that the mind of itself gatuers are but buzzes; but 1g nands with everybody, laughs and talks suspicions that are artificially nourished and put | does that mean? It means that the victims or Judging them. If Mrs. Tilton is vulgar imputatious, such as, Where there 18 10 wood toe fire goeth vut,’” forging a weapon with which he meant to thinks more of such a revelation than he does of if the corner stoue oi the family is maintamed by marking the depths to watch the vultare will dip Sentiments of nonor ai | pent-when it entwives tts victim. lenceinium wi | from Mr. Tilton to Mr. Beecuer, dated Brooklyn, ters. or owners their iem: He wears a good deal of white shirt front, a bigh | Muy 30, 1865, concluding with the words:— | their wives, was treated og A fps guide ‘at his (Tilton’s). house loved mm | or a barbarous feeuing, which may perhaps ac- @ifferences from tne common traits of ilfe—in in- ada that no love letters o1 Boy Kind dre pretended Judson, an intimate iriend of ‘Yil- | count for it. {don't sympathize, I don’t desire to | tellect In character, im idea, in habits ul thought, | to have existed between the parties down to the | | | sympathize, in any such contumely, but It shows | 18 habits of expression—come tv ve scrutinized monty oi December. Not one ietter of an incul- the strong sense of our people, whether it has ree Tead, each Man and each woman is entitled to pavory cuaracier. Tne waole machinery was lett grown up here or isthe birth of English manh. d@ considered lairly accoraing to tne texture and | Oyen When the wile left the husoand, taking, as envy, aud instead of allowing the Lf , qualities of their own nature, so iarus they are her husband says, DO.hing but 18 love and good us displayed to breed the mis- | ness bejore our removal hence trom England, chieis it wag intended to breed he bdfings and you find io every languave—the German, the ‘eVeloped on th@ testunony, withough tt differs wui, ‘Tae love letters bexan alter the situavion ight at once and smothers the French—having the same civilization {tm your natare or my uature. Tuat ts fairness; hax been made puhlic and 18 known to tie hus- ‘A wise Inan has said, “Suspicions and the same Coristian religion the ~amecon- PUt at the Doltom we must judge them as mManand pang, some publications of these letters nave | tumacious aspersion o! the husband, Now, what Weman, Ii they are angels we have no mode Of een made tne occasion of the vasest and most m sure, Mr. ALL SPIRIS AND NO BODY, | Tuton in his senses hever could have imputed to | ‘The plaintif’ Kaoows the old proy- | carried away by affection to an absurd obtuse and if Mr. Tilton is all body and no spirit we have | jug wie; tor dia he nut tell you that noting iow tion of their observation when the evil finally 20 Mode of judging them as such. Ihey are not cynia tind a place in the heart or the lie of bis | normal characiers. We assume that tutelligence, wifey Mr. Beecaer’s letters lave ulso been made erience on the part Of Mr. Tito the subject o; mean and disgusting equivoques. making bo impression: in either case the charac: | @Xposes him to our judyment as ol aman tius ‘Phis proves evidence In tue lavor Oi these parties. ter is contemptible. And tocalla manacuckold, Daving his faculties, large by nature, sharpened ‘fyere is nouming in them but the most elevated whicn 1s simply a husband of an adulteress, carries | YY edUcation, hardened by experience with the expressions Of teeling. But Uf there are in these contumely and aspersion. World. And yet it ts in the Utidust good faith that | jetters loose, coarse, leWd eXbaiations irom the THE ROMAN LAW. an all my Hpbrticasly ed and my argument on the heart of Elizabeta Tilton Woat becomes of tie Why, there is not any other name in the Latin for | question of the provabilities o1 lis baviug veen @ ponest testimony oi Mr. Tiitoa to the absolute er to the heart; New Year’s tn | 't; no other word that expres<es that condition eceived jusbaud, | put it toyou thatit is one Of purity o: her mind and ol ihe testimony of Mrs. New Year's present for Bowen. | of the relation of a husband toa violated marriage, the greatest improoabilities, in respect to his in- Bradsbaw upon the same subject, that sue was tue rience “cleanest minded wouan she ever met.’ And how bis experience, in respect to his lne—that it of Mrs. OVington’s estimate of this iriend and sister? said of him of others, He opens his | tumely the husbands of violated marriage, They | Possible to inpute to auotuer, | could ainost as ANOTHER PROPOSITION is no tulevearer there is the end of happens, agit must in its approaches have been Theodore filton spent Christmas in {his nature— | the grandeur and power of that rociety,even with- | OFl¢ and of specch, as to convince myself wantial evidence, that does not have its orig! ‘and sel/-convicted. No wise man ont apure religion, snows how mucitcan be built tat. with this power of inieilect that tis yout wine the seduction or adultery 1s someon, | evidence disprays, aud with the sharpening of the put loug alter voth reiatious Bad come to an d reverence. The lenones Ovservations and elements of judgment that treat eng and long alter both stories (if they ever ex- ie heart's blood of its prey, ot how | oF pimps or panderers or procurers o! prostitu. | 0! this domestic calamity of an invaded household, jsted) mau been smothered. There 18 not a word, tl b@ the coil and crash of tue ser- | tion were watched and punisnea, and the crime of " Should have been the victim. There is no ay act, a movement, a conversa‘iun In Wilch Mr. visited with heavy pun: “ Satire and no surcasin about it. My pout is that Beechér is connected thas dows Dot have vrigin Shere b been a reason Lor asuspicions that syosequenr to December 29, 1870. That is the aves, or husbands ‘here has never veen @ tauit on the parvof tae ars, pretence, if auy such evidence originated, of n evil that must be ite’ Oo ee a ae ee yiteteiai tae 80ta Of vecember. Tnere Was no hing ever | may our father ia neaven | Watched and punished, and the er Jutia ae adul- | Now, gentlemen, laying ont of view te tivial Dased between Mr. Beeche and tiem to snow ou, strengthen vou. filam! teris provided that any husband who kept or took | Bd feeble and wortuless testimony that bears Juiicor consciousness of It, but macu did pass c you back a wife caught in tne act of aduitery snouid UPOD the Innocence or guilt of two excellent thy: snowed sympacny for the ailiicted parties and nught, and sweet be your dreams of your | be classed as a leno, or panderer, and punished Peovle, whatis there in the ordinary experi Nee wien was spoken in efforts to relieve # broken ternal trend, TukODOKe TILTON. | gs such. 1% Was @ condition of the family that Y Mankind on these ques!ious, or on the maxims family, tuen proceeded to read the letter But that parents shoula prost ded for suci controversies ? comes every bit out of tue Moulton mansion aud influence npon society, If the Ro. [ustice have pr 5 to imagine about? I tink, joue of it comes out of the house of Mr. Beecuer Matrovage was still to include in its Wat is tere | re penned, spoke mischief of Mr, mm Beecher to @ common acquaintance. UN, serpent pure roll of honor prostituted wives, wives that 8! have said, that but for the great oror Mr. luton. He learned of RO exception to IL accurately at any ‘moment the particuiar | peart, expression on Evarw’ 1 smiles in good humor the foreman smiles in the same spirit; when a tone of solemnity enters into his voice and eye the foreman assumes a funereal look; when scorn curls the counsel's lip the fore- | compatil man fovoluntarily lo G br his naturally good-natured times by un tures. When he | HID IN A FLOWERY VASE. " there would be no further inquiry, | taims the in- ean hee es on to say that truta comports with | ing into matronage were to see that the power of telligence @ dthe experience of every juryman ments with Tiiton woich Mouiton bad made, may confuse, error may distort, but | Was not di-Ggured by the presence of wives t 4 there 18 no anftfoth that is moe im- cherished by nusbands.with tue knowiedge of [on when with every otaer tru terial creation or the moral creation, Some- the extraordinary chastity and affection of the jad violated the marriage vow, woere was tne Ultimate fact of the question o| the vitiuicu iis ruie, except im the case Of the interview honor o the matronage! If young wives-enter- ‘0 of Mr. Beecher agaiust this impeachment, ay ‘pyjion’s house Which grew oUt OL arrange- SLTON’S HOU: was appalled at the poverty of judicial @Xamina@ | the potded in -which ths testimony has been | the plantia’ rested. ue Mad | paigeg simply reproduced the pamphlets of last summer Mr. Evarts closed at this point, ana Judge N and the words thats dowed irom ther woutts, ison, addressing ary, said they would jortunately or skiliully acquiring particular nusbund, it was subversive of the in- aad ee ee : cal, Moral and spiritual in the public opinion and the virtue of that nooie im the ma- their infidelity, however creditable it might be to ia expectation shat Br. fr iM mina that the propriety of holding court : —wio kuew all, and wio kuew ifte came expression of countenance and frowns grimly at facts enough to see Wwhethere the par- stitution and should not be allowed, poatapie nid 4 t ou Saturday had veen oroached hereiofore, aud wil mn upon tne stand, even if ne did oot fear God, might some imaginary foe. Mr. Evarts hardly notices ticular fac! comport with tnem enables tue | A PERILOUS EDGE. jear man and his punisbments—coutd never come Sa bred = iene \ i. Lay pag eny of the other jurymen, which would appearto witness. Wo: cross-examninet to baille the false purpose o/ a | | Counsel said he had not the least Idea that Mr. ¥, What is Cross-examination? In | Tilton was exposed, on any facts*in bisown fam- 8 the staud. i livee oatas of Witnesses are LOO week, a be breasted by a man who was to tell a be rather baa policy. this subtie, penetrating power some think itis to ily, to the least imputation of either this con- many foreman Carpenter said they were unanimous a ES IssUEs. exnibit the AUemative of Mo nory and the exact- tamelons opprobrium of the English purase or We: They were togetner, Out taey wore NOt too im tyeir objection to attend a rie loan a | ness of expressions of words, and tnat a gr this darker condemnation of wwe Roman law. [ M#oy to be breasted by a man whokuew thetrath G.¢ oj; cheir number Ws HOt Well and others tad a The counsel addressed himself yesterday morn- | jeat is accomplistied by asking a Wituess to tell a wish, said the counsel, to save him trom both; = Was going to teilit. If tuey watcved the tof business to atiend to Which would not admit ing.to the more practical isi of the case. ‘1 day previous his speech was less ior the jary thaM giraied that for the public out of doors, It was hignly rhetor!- ivaris, in giving amusing instances of how truth mo} cal and garnished with Latin qdotations, It | eee eens wih all Core See Be it gar might seem, went on tosay that wien Mr. Tilton fence merely scraped the rim of the scandal with- | wisneg to convict Bessie Turner of lle, with ® ce, he gave you as the reason toat ner ont plunging into the body of the matier. | circum’ Yesterday, nowever, he took up some of the many | poy As fal~ points of evidence that bi ‘ay lairs long conversation over two or tiree times. A from either, witty and profound cross-examiner nas demon- stood on a very perilous edze, been deemed impor- ne hadn't any gray hairs. Well, that showed of large 1a tant toward the establishment of the charge of whether 7. or be tola A Ue Thatisa@ very and iears and ny nowny Ay . Reecher’s adultery. He resumed nis address by £009 test, and he thougbt he knew about the gray pert in the wicked ways 0: the world; he has ha nature of o1 n nd ti he didn” ; iter a incuication into his mind th referring to the lack of testimony on the other | hat hessie uad comved Dis hair, Heasie nad ted | Mr. Beecher was a. dangerous hic mind that Creaitanie to it in the bravado aud deflance of Gay, would be © tegal us Course of tue evidence, drawn hither and 1. na heoasgordown | wituer by Moulton and Tiitcn, cney would tnd NN Yeelcn said that he held im bie anu w pack- this thing cannot be done Mr, | the precipice as he could wet down it, of his own ‘there had been great ingenuity exercised to avold ge oi payers which fad been banded him by an h ote, And I present, as an Utter improo- te misstatements that carried imputations of omcor, ‘Tuy were addressed to ine members of mea hing dune e deep in the ae. cotsciousness Ol faischood when any such | foeury, individually of the morals and character as 1 have Statement ran auuiast two wiillesses tuat “Tu9 jdage suggested to Mr. Beach to keep them, pure wife and-a noole man, out fould, speay and contradict the same thing hue tue laccer said, “4 think Your Honor nad bet | Cit is moral improbability of For the law of perjury, which rules that cou- te, cake tne aud open them and see from whom | nd I think I si 4 eec! victiou should not take place on the false oath of " ” Mcetae dee ‘TO toe craves Ne Sata sagered this disgrac a hi * ay Phong bad a oe to the contrary Ay a Lom wa eoreman Carpenter interrupted, asking whetner ence; he judg! age = b nome Ce tho Wat | the oars woale on Monday, to which the he isa mn not inex. Lesses—that the jury believe tue two against (he jugge repiled that they Would NUt as they were one. And so, day afer day, (his unuopoy naman {heHY ty overve vue lnm, nd uot dreak it. Moe showed oot in qualities holiaay. Mr. Beach aguin urged (hat Mis Honor take the papers aad joox at is Mr. Beecher coming on tho stand. And then, side im relation to the visits of Mr. Beecher tu you how frequently she had combed his hair, and | families of the pure-minded women of Brooklyn, Yi.n ne came on the stand, most ol this seat. them. “I will look at only one of them." said His Mrs. Tilton, insisting that they were only of such | | have touad that people who dou't ow gray and he has encouraged, has ovserved, has been Honor, hamorvusiy. “1 svould pot care to read hairs are quite as like tosee them as those who | pleased with the visite of Mr. Beecher; he has ment siunk avay. And then they Said, “wait lOF tiem gik” ‘ihe papers were them opened by the acharacter asa pastor might be presumed to pay yo, But ne an intimate parisnioner. No visits were shown to his own bel: have been made in the night time, and no visits | cripture om the part of Mrs. Tilton to Mr, Beecher werein or lack.” proof, ‘He strolled around there to her house at But he had forgotten more than that, daring these many J he had forgotten Worthiess head al any time when he felt like it, staying an hour or two at a tim He pronounced the evidence comes to ligt against Beecher as tue fiimsiest ever produced in years vefore, & court of justice, Uertain volumes of his fence of guilt against the defendant. Evarts wenton to sneer atthe Mimsy character oi the | Well, we had anotuer witness, Mr, ae and | doubt, one thought, one fear, into Mr. Tilton’s testimony put in by the defendant, and once more | he thought, inexperienced in the practice , aon . me! truth aud Of the arts of fa'senood, tua be tol 8 recurred to the oft-repeated argument of Beech- er’s character, position in society, &c., negativing ‘he had forgotten that it is write “Thou canst not make one hair white ‘since your marrage, u shows you what there is m my suggestion, that households such as Mr. Beecher’s ana Mr. Tiiton's 11 Dot vy him personally, it Was carried so far and juror, Jeffrey, so the Judge adjourned the Court sermons, his novel of “Norweod,” the presents of | truth matches all the trath tn the world. And | in two nouses such as lowers to Mrs, Tilton, were tortured into evi- | Bessie’s statement matches all round while nis | possioly more public than when covered by init: oy broke at the first attempted connection. these sWo roois, there has pot come one fact in . the rebattai.”” Nobody appeared against him. r- aoe ad | feet ai vie Uvacye whieh. he iave gave that even | MF. Bell and ifr. Bowen) gave testimouy as valna- | tte! Gorman’ papers: Hamdiag. neu to Cl-rk the grea’ interests of justice never shali invade; | Vie to the cause of the defendant as any which | saiigon, tue Judge eald, “I will instruct the Clerk he hus seen into h-r soul; ne nas ooked into her Rad eed introduced by Lin. Mr. Lvaris lad MO | YoKeey the papers tthe Jury have performed Even unver oath be cannot, | eyes with love oF seat provetsion Was honest im acfuivg ur, | (Mel dary, and chen, perue at even the hairs of the most adultery; he bas watched Mr. Beecher in his Faget hoo oyna the procession, but thought be journed wil eleven o'clock ail numbered, and when trath | comings im and in his goings out; he has ¥ _ wext, June 1. The g eat point on which that evidence was in- ‘ts wits "uray hairs, fait “in ir. "Soucber, and tas eet otter Deople troduced to U8 Was to show that communion or Mr. Onester Carpenter demurred agatnst a ses- assuciation that had been Incroducod into the gion to-day, on account or the health ve falien upon us,” he to watch and thi and saspect, and now, in two e by Mr. Tilton. The evidence is ior the plarntiff; ay, ealth of his leliow ad iorgetten—ana, in fin the verbal inspir they will oe givea boart was toem ad- mn ‘Tuesday morning av im when b heirs, in the relations fo neaied tu ais svinpatuy. The procession Wasim | till eleven o’clock Tuesday, explaining that Mon- Commune, which had the history that gay was a legal holiday, tt being Decoration Day. ana inciaded in it the inurder of the Upief © France and the Arcnvisnop of Paris. | When the adjournment for the day took place the | 1 of bantering, | seldom in the experience and exposure lawyers had a good di the mind or heart; but I don’t think you will be avle ‘ ’ G of ile 80 noble @ sacriiice was ever made r _ to find evidence—if anybody eine can’t he oan’. | OF Tete: nevis Sued ike the head ofthe | EVarts said+to Beach :—“Beach, I see you have a’t anybody to con- | Ldon’t think you will. Wn, ea thanoare, Clergy, the Archoisliop, aulong tho hostazes of tais | been taking copious notes of my speeca,” | { Mobofthe Commune. From the time of the apostles ‘es,’ replied Beach. “I took a great ny | MARTIN'S LIRS. evidence again<t them, aod there d.dn’t enter one d there w: any rate i: it was only words | Whatitis to lave such, the e made against him. ainst Words, that le could do some damage to | jacious hunt of trained ~ note TILTON pee BERCHER. Mrs. Tuto by lis testimony given in iriendly | to see the petty, eae ee a eee tase tk caren wae when my eyes were spat.” . - | intercourse with her. And so he told you that he singuiar hoor, when mariyrdoms, woen craeity, | “Ob, then, suon notes as these,” responded | Evarts’ characterization of Tilton was briefand and se, being too warnmi in the room ap not without a show of trath—a man of large in- | ponge Aap ty aged half-past two in the aiternoo1 0 sit on piazza ve: teliigence, a man of active doubts and fears and | now there is a matter whicu don’t seem to have , & man not inexpert in the wicked | much to do with (he solar system, per se, by itself, dence, Not coming against a man vecause saspi- Vee marryrs to their reilgion. Lam as much & you that they are.” vas) teior ways of the worid.” There was force in Evarts’ | but you have Fs. when the flerce hatreds aga.nstreilyion and moral- Evarts, “are not reliable.” ity bad been subdued by the prevalence of religion | 4, and morality —it nas been the nouor oi the Catho- ‘Well,” retorted the har with @ bumorous lic arenbishops of Pari to furnish witin our own | twinkle of hiseye, “I think I'll be able to remind SUSPICION AND ASPERSION. we all understand ¢ picion oF asperoton, it wus cool. Weil, | aie , oe got to match all round, and trath | cion baso’t ceen open—butit was open to Tilton’s poo tae by birth, by education, by Coaviction, does it without effort; but falsehood, never! And | mind and kept alive by Bowen through ten years, | Aeon ogy, but a would like to seo Tiiton was sitting beside the two and langhea earnestly expressed argument that Tilton, with ay ne was sno all pis active suspicions at Work, watcning, watch- July a! ing, watching Beecher for years, hi: place! Weil, constantly on the alert, never once secured a sol- the solar syatem, don't it? Bat whar’s that to an {tary ocular proof of the commission of the crime ingentous inind like Martin's? Genius shi when most hara pr ! t iiven by the audience to this | C2Tts are sometimes, Its most extraordinary | Whest or TON the Mei Whats the pre?” exerifces Of the noblemen o! France. I question | |The eight o'clock prayer meesuinge a8 Plymoutn of adultery on the part of Beecher with nis wife, Great attention wa part of the counsel’ Carpenter, foreman of the jury, bis look® betrayed | | and as for Chester tious notion o srnvon With the thermometer among the | Beecher was pure. And he knew his wile was. yes and ears | Diueties, and they nad gone there to sit for acool | That's the result. "Now, <entiemen, 1! im tne grain smong au oranches of tae new. ia emulation ia | PLYMOUTH PRAYER MEETING. | walloo the side of the wh that the sun blazed there on that 8nd be watched, and watcned, aid saw—hat | tL, Livuiry becween the old Church and | tthe lawyers’ curious ways of fraternization. broker comes to you and gives yona 4 ea inye tet fy 4 of Wasnt, ona you see UlTistian faith and duty, courage and nope and lab tr. That is my view of the advantages of —_——— ‘sitself it full of weevil and roast, and be asks you to ouy .! “ ol 2 emulation among 200d meu, This processon was TRUE TRACT THR Y, You expect ms to buy acatgo of tn’ honor of the Commune that had jade these beg cate Sed Mgr in that looks as if he had run agaist ed, and its ex tempore | it, you * ’ What’ S aiuing Owe ta Ose. | eee carret pron” | Nie, Nou must thke me BOvEdY?S mottves Iu the procession, provided only | ehurch began last evening, The lectare room was : f fe ” kK. that (hes accepted the acts and had the courage * 22% toa neighbor ng Se Gamaun eens Ok toe iheet ain to stand by them. Character constitutes the vol- crowded long belore that time. Mr. Beecher ye said, f sunsiine, hat extended past e ; é woulda’t, after all ! Buy it at any price.” Now, thatis what has bap- § A POLICEMAN DECEIVED. solar system Wwo' all, convict him! But ay y inple of tt as @ crediollity OF the witnesses, as compared With ONE Poom. then advanced slowly, talking to friends We brought an occupant of the house, and they pened here. They brought you & ‘There is a policeman stands near the jury, whose | WY" rowan! D anotaer, on particuiar points ef evidence where yor—and there wasn’t any brick | Sample that is scraped from the whole ite of Teta ide and | shail assume jor the wit- rehtand left, and finaily sat down on the steps fiuty itis to rap with ® ciab on the floor atthe wall there! Now, sometimes men run theirheads | Henry Ward Beecher. liad not Tilton written hesses Upon Our side no diferent measures of of the platt . fe Geovernente Ret been ion of f Wightest fodication of an expr ‘Speaker closely, 80 a8 0 detect at a (Langhter,) Flance whether he meditates a joke, a flight of rhetoric, a touch of patnos or | ,,rnlsis not ling on | Sgainst a brick wall, bar the trath was, with him, Violent enough, or yenement enough, or partic moral oF legal test than I accord that he dashed his brains out lor the want ol & wlarenough im that New Yi . the part of the audience. He has to waten the | brick wail! A. B. Martin! A—Drolled—Martin! pared sor Bowen, ia, woich ne described the ae. counsel, that has ever been tried; these are not | imate traits of conauct or character leading to Pking talked together till the last’ moment. to the witnesses on (he other side. Nof shill tassume Watched with & good deal of interest by all in th that because Mr. Tilton is plaintitf!and maintains room, and at this point there was a general aucheries and wickedness and aduiteries and U nix theory that his evidence is to be probed «nd ther Shearm: tha b A MAXIM IN LAW. rapes of Henry Ward Beecher? Why aidn’t they eas iavorapiy than Mr. Beecher’s. I jangh. Brothe an came in with a big he first cause, continued the learned prove tnem? Why didn’t they show aly approx. propose to vest him and Mr, and Mrs, Mouiton by | DOOK unde: his arm, and he and Mr. anee rother ‘¢ gilt he had pi of pathos, or of anything calculated to provoke firs: witnes: that nave testified and been | doubt or suspicion’? But i don’t put it upon that. An impressibie assembiage to maniiest any exhivi- | tested; it is not the first time that the learned I put it upon the question, how do you dare to say RULES OF CANDOR, JUSTICE AND GOOD SENSE Cleveland was present, it being the first time Judge and my experienced opponent as you do say—ana I think trath/uily, lcertaimly | as Task to vave applied. to amy wituess on OUf noe his iliness, After the regular opening on of: applause or of laughter. Mrsunderstand- | oursely. mg Mr. Evarts’ facial expressions and takinga § diiliculiies have hardened into a maxim which - smile of scorn for a preliminary notice of ato th. | have hardened into a Maxi iatae tastes js 4 your fumiy—how can you say that and not feel | hibited by life and conduct and main‘ainea in re coming joke, tne deluded oMcer broaght his ciub conscience an: down at a time when no movement toward dis- | them and compels (hem to follow, It isin the | Ollemina of cnoosing Ww nave hari to ob: nd weaknesses vf testimony, and we | had No doubt, no tear, of thought or suspicion in character, not as involved in the controversy, ve and to lament the | hope trutnruily for your character—till Jaiy you | side. But in that is included the question of exercises, Mr. Beecher said any under- regard to the intercourse of Mr. Beecher with jor that would decide it in advance, but as eX- taking to preach a system of doctrinal truths which shall exhaust the topics belonging to i the commor 8 that ‘ou have not forced yourself into the mile, shown by them ia motive, candor, imtelii- - eee Hn iets Z ner you take the cone genes, accuracy and in good {4.th, oF the sand the Christian religion would Mil up @ calendar of probrium or the dark | durlog the trial. [ propose that each of these doctrines. A Christian, supposing that in that varbing the required silence was dreamed or. brevity of tae law maxim in Latio:Falsus in | tumeiy of the English « ul TILTON UNEASY. uno, falsus in omnibus. Satisiy yourself that | stain of the Roman congemmation. Witnesses, ald those Against us, should ve COM- way ne would meet all emergencies of life, has Tilton was jess usy in his manner thanever munis faise iM one thing, you must judge him | At this stage the Vourt took tne usual recess. pared la your judgment aod for tve amimution d to learns the berore. His ordinary demeanor in court has been false jueverytning, Whew & man telis you from | AFTER RECESS. erate cal ceaceer or craaaer piven te = ope of calmness and sometimes of absolute indifer- his own mouth, that he bas lied throu: " contra tictes SO} POF of evide’ Tn. | @nee. Hie hoe eat placid and uagumied under tne statements under x motive, and then “in anocner | _ The Attendance was again dense and the heat as | wiinesses in support of one party ur the ovner in ray mn oe et hi boot, Most scorching invectives huried St him by Porter, series of statements under anotuer motive, | great as in, the forenoon. Mr. Beecher, though this contreversy. There must be aamitied circum- You never can pu io 8 , even but he turned and twisted, plashed and grew pale, he does not lie, you have im your own | finshed as usual, seemed to suffer very little from stances of save import connected with Mr. Trl- | @ivinely inspired, all the truth there is. Wok notes rep a altogether ediy, spoke to Beach isequentiy comma: owed an uNncasiness not usual shail we tre wid Bim. ie . when it les z , . v man could come and say :—“'l lea then, and then, of bis leading aavocate, and then, and under ® motf " nothing bas she spesok . here andi teil the trath ’” “Well, pave you au as s@ indispensable clement of producing that legal , motive im iby’? sense one question for him:—“llow ton mnconnec’ed with this domestic sisturvance, = the oppressive atmosphere that made other peo- When tye secret became known the Most ponder- The Bible don't contain it, don't play to secure tt. profess to contain it. The Bible ts a book of sity for supp. essing sampies; but the fabric of Which these are samples has never been anrofled. In this book moral woh yos. J Mean to strike at the | traversed various orancues of the testimony put | came the uecessity of compulsory association on , truth and the truth of the human soul is com- st a lying tongue to tell us Now, Would not it be nice if a ple around him wocomiortable. He attended to ous machinery \ us brougas in ‘Then there came to ve a nec : ve.” aby hostile promt igation of fais secret on the part Wal sere con aee | who resumed his work with heart and Vigor, amd) g; certain intecests, aod arterward thers | When men are so low that novhing but fear in th do, (Laugh | fair Uf the present appiication of tue ax ee mingled with the divine soul, but the depth, lengtn and breadth is such that simply absurd to talk about the Bible containing all great tratis, You might a I say the finger board on the road contains tae road, tatesd ny pointing to it. Talk of the activi. tyof @ human soul, ts thought and feeling and the interplay of both with wiil—the whole world it not large enough to contain the sum Of it Binle is like the keys of a piano, 10 which there are no tunes, but the capacity of all tunes if you touch the rigat keys. ‘THE REALM OF TROTH | 18 life itsel/. So, then, men’s criticism about preaching and preachers you perceive to be ve narrow sometimes. This mao, it 1s sald, *dorsn’ preach the whole truth”—that ts vo say he neg- jects certata inteliectaal forms which were proven good in former days and which they expected to see reproduced al. ways. A wan may be & poet and not de forever reproducing Dante, or Milton or Shakespeare. A man may preach the trath and yet not reproduce dogmas of trutn. This is aise true of another eletent—the element of nove and love as contrasted withfear. 1 don’t hesitate wo savylam speaking of my own Views a8 bo tha administration of trato, wich bave given rise ta maay very kind comments, it 1s sald {have cas out jear from my preaching and that a doctrine of love becomes inawkish, feebie, producing first sen tim aud then sentimeutality, and that to have @ doctrine toat would TOUCH ALL SORTS : and would have agvod, substantial element of conscience and lear would be the proper sor, In the first place, i don’. give up conscience or fear. I preach them ail the time; bag 1 preach them a& UM you were men, not animals. If you were driving oxen and you should say “gee and they sdould “gee,” y: don’t want to jab them with a rod (langhte coarsess form wilf touch tiem | believe in lear, Anything Is better than death. But wae Une aptitudes of men have cbauged them we dou't go into bell and brimstone and damnation to these pevpl ee ths Way jear Works WM the household, We begin with children by being tea~ der Wita them: cien when passion begins to Cro) out we bevin to neip thom, even to the extent % spanking, (Laugater.) We make childrea a raid when we can’t do any better, in the begins ning children don’t steal gingeroread aud sauce because ma will find them out aod spa them, Later th re afraid, but not Decause ol that: 1 was afraia to do 4 great many thinge which iny mother nad forbidden, but there was nerse in our jamiy WHO bad 5@ won my heart 6] ber kindness and gentleness that wea sue tole me to do anything { wouia ¢ it lor love, even t@ the ‘extest of oot picking up the ripe apples early in the moroing which had falleq one night, which is wonderful obedtence in any boy. (buughter,) Peer says YoU must not do i and | get up so eariy nobody will see me, and do it. Love sayS you iost not, audidon't, Kear becomes at last a simple yearning after tmings that are rigit, and w repulsion ior tae wrong. Now, I undertake to say iv is the teact. ing of the New Testament and the idea of Jesua ‘nat the power ol the Gospel was to be developed, not vy lear, net by conserence. Taney were to be subordinate, but the accual potency was to be hope aud cheer aud jove. Christ says:—" Hence forth [ call ye not servants but frieads, lor Bere vants know Dot waas their master doen.” may say this Is but a single passage, bub listeg to the deelaration of the Master, wo says:—** Por a righteous man noue Will be louna to die; perad. venture for a good man some one may.” Here Christ brings into antitnesis two characters, ou@ @ Just mau and the otaer & jusy mau overlaid with goodness, “Let your lgut so shine beiore men that they, seeing your goodaess”—your good- Ged.” 1 think ‘there were existence before Piymouw hvea; but the love of flows ers fas been quickeaed by the example of Plymouth churca, it came about singaiarly ebongh. A Quaker sister—just as macd Quakes ax the day sie jomed (he church, Tuat 18 the pe culiarity of our ciurca., [don’t care what denom inaion you are, any more tian I care taat friends Who visit my house should wear the AME KIND OF BUTTONS ) ‘This sister plagea some flowera on my stand ineburck, snd ifom that day Lhave never deed without them. But | have never Dreached @ botanical sermon, and you have all learned to love them, itis Lue Sight ol them that Nag taught you to love tiem. Tuat is the Gospel. Let your int 80 sine velore men that ‘t-ey, seeing your goodness, shail be Influenced.’ Any Church that negiects to instract men tu regard (0 Lhe duties of couscience and the application of fear is a failure; but when you Dave tuese you nave bot the distinctive element of the Gospel, which is Jove. While they have @ jramework of travh aud &@ substratum ot conscience, they have, superadded te that, love, joy and peace. Tnat is the fruit of the Holy Ghost. The iraitis vot got with: Out the 1006 and the root is In sue ground. Toat Which youeatia woatthe rootanu siem ripen and the irait is love, There are tureo thiny which never change, says the apostie, nope an te andilove, the greatest—the elected chief—ia ove. : OUR COMING JUBILEE, TWO ONE THOUSAND DOLLAR SUBSCRIPTIONS YESTERDAY—NEW YORK CITY'S GIFT ONE HUMe DRED AND SEVENTY-SIX THOUSAND DOLLARS UP TO DATE—ASTONISHING PROGRESS IN THE BUILDINGS. ‘The outivok for the Centennial, as gathered from the statements of ex-Governor Bigier, of the city bureau of the Centennial Committee, is becoming more cheering every day. Scarceiy a day passes in which some subseriptio.s of consideracle amount are not made. Yesierday Mr. Unickertng, the piano manulacturer, and Samuel McLean & Oo. gave $1,000eacn. Tne amount thas far raised . by the merchants and manufacturers of tais city is $176,000, This, however, inciudes only suvscrip- tons actually made and on which Instalmente have been paid. There are qat Bamber of as Scriptions promt-ed, and negotatous ar+ pending with parties Who have promised t» ald the Cen- tenuial to @ cousideravie extent. One well known and wealthy corporation alone te expected to give $50,000 a8 Sgon as its president returos to this ‘This will be tue largest subscription yes ‘en by any one firm io the Unttea States, HOW SUBSCHIPTIONS ARE MADE. The process of procariag mouey by bundreda and thousands, it will be readily believed, is pot ap easy one just now, woen business has deen stagnaut so long and compiatuts of duluess of trade have for years past: flied tue very atmo sphere of New York, Hence tt cen eusily bo image mned that Mr. Bigier’s bed is not always one of roses, elils experiences ‘canvasser” would form quite an iiierestiv W ile some people require Hours oO persuasion to gi Otuers Wau are prooably muc the old gentieman & éne amount in fiiteen minutes. Teiates, “I called suk trade, and | had vot deen talking to (hem five minutes Wied & check lor $5,000 was quietly hanged to me.” It is due that such wiliug aud unconstraimed liverality aud patriousm snould have public acknowiedgmeat, aud ic 1s Cuerefore & Pleasure to state ih.t the firm aljuded to was Frederick Butverdeia & Uo. If their example Ls imitated by ovher memoe 8 of the trade, tue Litter Will Win & prominent piace in the saunas of Ved veanial patriotism, PRIVATE CENTENNIAL STRUCTORES. The Remioxton rifle wandlacvories are to be specially represe teu at the Puiladeivtia world’s iru for per Mission to erect a buildiag of their own is grated, There ts litte douyt that the negotiations Wil be asiacturliy concladed, aud taat the permisstog applied ior will be accorved. Other promiueat manufacturers are also ambitions to sulae at (oe Exposition ia pretty vraase structures of their own, Where they can arrange their display with @ greater unity of design aad jacger effect. Tue de talis as to tuese special Centeuatal Odudings on @ amali seale have not yet beea decided apon, bat they Wil oo douve afford a grateful reweliroay the huge monotony of the other vagi structures, HOPES FROM CONNECTICUT. Ex-Governor bigier Nas Oren inViled tO appear, in company with ex-Governor Josepn R, Hawley, of Connecticut, belore tau Ledlsiature at Hartiord for whe purpose O1 delivering addresses on the necesstiies of the partiottc wa lertaxti@g the ald expected from the Seave of Conaveticat. The Legisia: re, by extending this javitatioa, e® courages tae Hope (hat it will pass an Opa tion of at least naif the quota of the State, Waies is $139,000. If the Legisiatt € appropriates $70,000 tae Merchants aud manufacturers, 1 wu thought, Will Tawe tae .tuer $69,000 before long, Tae day set avart for the Fr. tion oF the Ger teonial representatives by tue Legisiatare of Com necucnt is hext Wedo PROGRESS ON THE BCILDINGS, The progress made in (he erection of the bulls ings 1s hichiy satisiactory and outaoes the pectations of the managers tuemseives. A larw jorce Ol workmen Is engaged tu putting up ta main putiding, which 1s doae by secttons, Snore are ixty-uive (irom) sections, and the progress recently made is at the astonisiing rate OL 4 section every day, Toe Macmvery Hal has = been = pusued = forward) =owith = muca vigor, and a considerable portioa Tt is alread: under re it the weatner conw f bas been during the lage jew weeks, the entre hall will de Wander root by the Fourth of Jaly. the Ari Gallery, Waich will be one of the Gunes. dull ings in thé Untied states—t fir sorpasses any thing New York can boast of :n gue Way of deantt ful arcaitectaure—is ore toam Ralf fluished and the floocs are already bem patina, THE STATS COMMISSIONERS | for the Centennial to be apporiied by Governor ‘Thden wil provaoly rent am Office ta the lower portion of Broadway, near tae new Post om It practicable Mr. Bigier wri then remove ois office to the same place, so as to uvord Lhe existeave of two Centennial headquarters In qaecuy. Faere are to be seven commissioners for New York State, Who Will serve withou: pay. Tacit uecessary exe penses wil be paid oni of the appropriation of $25,000 ranted by the Le wisiure of thie ptate, New York has not given one cent directly bo the Ceuteuuial.

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