dependent. Ur. Ueeecker ridted Us boose, sod s friendly relslion spring on between the wile end femily of Ur. Tilton end Mr. Beocber, which continned down to December in 1870. They then refer to Tilton's opiniens, which censed the establishment in Chicago of an opposition paper to Independent, which Tilton then edit. . and the tronble and anxiety this change ~ to Ur. Tilon, extending eyen to
of the reasons wliy he had redneed Tilton from the editorship of the Independent to the subordinate position of contributor. The committee say that Ur. Tilton, before the committee, referring in time to December, 1870, states his grierancs and cause of complaint of Ur. Beecher irithMr 8 Bowrain thealhwdsT^lW he (Mr. Beecher) then participated in a conspiracy to degrade Theodore Tilton before the public—by loss of place, 'wulncea. and mate.'' It is class that in the 29th day of December,
s procured from Mrs. Tilton, the ief InciUng cause of that ste^tn
seal this trouble to Tilton, the committee go on to analyse the charges made. The first thing is Beeeher'B Tetter of apology to Tilton. They say: "This paper, which is dated Jan. 1, 1871, was intrusted by Mr. Beecher to Mr. Moulton's keeping without reading it, nor was it read to him. This paper—sometimes called the apology, and sometimes the confession—is in no proper — - —rreos repel Jl believe, Beecher said: ' I humble myself before him (Tilton) as I do before my God.' Another sentence, 'Her forgiveness I have,' Hr. Beecher states that it was not said, nor the semblance of it Pansing here, a very important question arises in this connection. To what does the apology refer 7 It declares Mrs. Tilton ' guiltless,' and yet Tilton says it refers to adultery, which Hr. Beecher denies. Without now considering the weight of credit to which the respective parties are entitled where there is a conflict between them, wo believe, and propose to show from the evidence, that the original ”ge was improper advances, and as time passed, and the conspiracy ened, it was enlarged into adnf-
“ That the so-called apology was not r the main offence Tilton himself in
the day a Moul-
in and there • told M[ s Moulton’ be had done wrong; not so much as some others bad (referring to his wife, who hnd made statements to Mr. Bowen that ought to be unmade); - * *- volunteered to write - led.' , Mse’of’fie' a paper referring to adultery, io nothing of the kind. If J done to which Mr. Beecher rersrs was adultery, how could these words be used in refereaee to it: 'He had done wrong; not so much as sot others?' The absurdity of such claim is clear. Those words and t apology are susceptible of but one oc atrnotion. ’They refer, as Mr. Beeob nays, to bis deep regret for atatemec which he and hU wife had, under o. tain information a few days befoi made to Mr. Bowen, which fed him execute a purpose already entertain of removing Tilton from the Brook!, _ Orion and the Independent. It appears also that the next day Ur. Beech-er-did write the letter to Mr. Bowen which Tilton saya bo volunteered to write, and which referred to Tilton'a burineea troubles with Bowen." The committee " oonolnde, therefore in view of these facts and loir-om stances, that the original charge of im unto advances, false though it was, ha been dropped by these aocneem, am adultery at this late day has bora aub stiluted as an alter thought. We bran, this performsnos ss s fraud that ough.
Ms said wife was UriZSKlOflStba s *- “ " -"y aMtrooklya. to'tojvstlis phUntiy si deprive him of the oomfart, society sad t—'■ snos of the said Elizabeth, the wife o pis Si riff^snd to si'——“ “—'— 1 — si" ^
ill Livingston stnst, oily of Brooklyn, wroo -ad wiekedly. sod without privily or oo o of plaintiff, debauched and oaraal
“"aots? ™pSimaSi IMainUrs Attor Tilton's AtnoAnr. .' --- .a, foregoiog Hi titled so-kmiwlsdp-o oirspt as to insee tnatteva hs bslievse f THEODOBE TILTON, t me this SOlh day or Auruat isaiox, Notary ruhlio, Kings
Imprisoned In a Freight Car. There waa brought from west of Albany to the Station house a man who tad. and apparently in a dyim thirst ana hunger, tund In a freight ear, hr several tramps who
for
parenll^laa
riady ft
mtliug a ride.. Wfae > ear the groana at re heard by them, apIrom the bin of oats m
e bod^of^the
he being unable I lion. One of thf
f liqnor, ont of which ho gave the man _ drink, and on the arrival of the train at Weat Albany proenred a oouple of sandwichee for him. These he swallowed with all the avidity of a ' ad waa then helped from ground. He attempted away, bnt had acaicely gone five steps -hen ho fail totte.groundiaaenaibfe.
of his money, *8
_ Omaha, ana be freight can, with nothing to eat, that he might reach Troy, N. I., *■
Cestly Horses. The following are the prioea currently reported to have been paid for the noted American horses named : Kentucky, gt0,000; Norfolk, *15 000 : Lexington. *15.000; Kingfisher, *15,000; Oteneig, *10.000 ; Smuggler,. *15,000 ; Blackwood. *30,000 ; Jay Gould, *80,000; Dexter, *43,000; Lady Thorne, S OOO ; Jim Irving, *80.000; G-” th Maid. *20,000 ; SUrtle, *20,1 Proapero, *20,000; Bosalind. *20,( Lulu, *20,000; Happy Medium, ( 000 ; Clara Q.. *80,000; Poeahon— *85,000; Edward Everett, *20,000; Auburn Hors*. 818,000: Judge Fullerton *20,000; Msmbrlnh Bertie, *1C Boerates, *20,000; George Palmer, 000; Mambrino Pilot, *12,000 ; 1..... Temple sold, when aged, for *8,000, for brood mare ; *25,000 was offered ami refused for Tom Bowling Isst summer; *80,000 was offered and refused fat Bassett iu his three-year-old form ; *26,rill not "to-day buy Baywood ot rid: *40,000 waa ofiered and refused for Woodford Mambrino, and *30,000 for-Thontdale.
Istple Cure for 1 Dr. Blnvnn, a physicisn
instead of being concave or ho^.._. lid beeomae oonvei, or bnlged upward through the pressure of the gas with 1 - The process of canning fruit could be fully described in the limits of columns, nor could any person fi .. any snch description, go to work and -tu fruit. The business most bo learn 1 in the seme manner as any other. Forest trees may be planted in th< fall, if the planting la deferred as long as possible, and the‘‘ * ‘ protected by straw weather, and by stakes from awagging back and forth. But careless planting in the spring is more snoceesfm in genplanting in the fall. It is besl then to plant in the spring. Bnt the greater part of the work, may be done in the fall, inch as digging the holoa. If the boles are dog in the fall, a good doal of planting may be done throngh "—*“ ter very safely.
and ordered but oh, mice suddenly bn agine, only a thin door between mo and Weber's "7 - - --
but oh^miseryJ'lhe sound of yt piano
suddenly breaks upon ns. —'— —thin door betw Invitation a la Valae,' strummed oy an unpractiaed hand, anl drawled out (to quote Mendelssohn) as " a alow presto." I ring the L " - ' jrightened the abigail with : playing thereP’ “Oh, only man who, being engrossed all day lung in buainesa, usually plays for a oouple of boon of an evening.'' “ A delightful proepeet this," thought L I tried to eat, bnt that waa impossible ; so, without saying a word to my astonished family, I seized my hat, rushed o-‘ knocked at my neighbor's door. 1 "come in" bronght me face to fi with the innooent delinquent. Assn ing an air of feigned politeness. I be- { an the conversation : "Four playing •a allured mo, a perfect stranger, and I ventured to cell. IpUya"-'- *“ and happen to have studied r _ tioular piece; woold yon listen Jo me reading it 7" I went elrsight to the piano—the young man, quite abashed, made way forma—and without waiting for his answer, I dashed throngh the piece in the wildest style and at a tearing paee, introducing double octavos wherever I could get them in; this had ita effect. . "Alas I" he said, with sigh, "I shall never plsy it like that "Why not 7" replied I, "if yon work hard, bnt—good evening to yon." My sa.K^i,xsie“L5; I can’t say—at all events, I coaid eat and sleep in peace. Uy wife and children, with their ears close to the wall, listened and enjoyed the joke im-
Aa Inventive Newport Belle. A good story is told of a young .lady whose taste and invention were much greeter than her means. Invited I of the villa parties, where she point lane would be at a discount diamonds at a rutting gpalc of ms
■mpany. Sho b jr diamonds, an lint, ahe had nc
than a calico gown. What waa oeoune? She did as Cinderella .dit tranafarmed nhi-.t to tha Isas brillli mind was nnlransformsple, by the i of her fairy godmother—mother a Hanging np in her closet was an i white ailk—yellowed, wrinkled, t
daughter Hazy, a young soe, ten gaara of Bge,wereath 3*0 young boy picked up s gun .Mob Mae caralesoly left loaded la s 1-" l room, painting U st Ms slstor said. "Do jon ms to shoot you f" altho ssins Unto pulling tbs
The Pilgrim and the Knight a very rich knight He expended money in adorning and beantifyir dwelling, Hat ho gave very little I poor. A weary pilgrim came to the castle and asked for a night's lodgit The knight haughtily refused him, a " This esstlo is not an inn." The pilgrim replied : " Permit mo ask two questions, and then I will < "Dpon this condition, speak," i .plied the knight "I will readily answer yon." The pilgrim then said to him : " Who dwelt in this before yon 7" " My father," replied the knight "And who will dwell here after yon 7" still asked the pilgrim. The knight said: ■'With God’s will, “Well,” said the pilgrim, "if ei dwells but a time in the oastlc, and time ipnat depart and make room another, what are yon here otherwlae than guests. The castle, then, is truly an inn. Why, then, spend so much money adorning a dwelling which yon will occupy but a abort time. ”*
A (j-estlon of Tribe. The late Ezekiel Horn ventured abroad some years before his decease, and the first thing after landing on a foreign ahore got his love of country so wonndod that he never indulged in travel afterwarda. Ho prided himself on his origin, and in registering his name on but arrival abroad intended to make something of s spread. Accordingly he wrote thns, " Kzeiiel^tnm, America.". The polite and gentlemanly clerk aeisod the pen after him, and bending over the book, as if to complete the entry, inquired, “What tribe r When Uncle Ezekiel had
—No tribe, 1 English origin from North An Beg pardon; Canadian?" Ah I perhaps Nova Scotian7" --no, r I I am from the United Staten of _m.eriea." “ Oh, very good. Thank yon; Yankee f 3 A Change. A 8t. Louis family lately hired voting man to tend horses, milk oaw-. io., A.-. His name was Barry. Be had flazen hnir. blue eyes, red cheeks, and redder lips—he is generally tiescribed aa " a plump chnnk of a boy." Be gave great saLafimtion. Bo milked like an auyel. He became a favorite of the household, and especially of
Doubting Castle waa a sn block in Iho path of Bun it couldn't bat can sympathi z-tignm, tor Donbt alway .... particularly extraordinary. Oonsiv quently, when we heard, some eighteen h,, cent months ago that a physician in Cali- - - -- - fornia had compounded, from the jnioes
of the report, and at
know, it, is impo.siiJe’for m toqume lion the remedial properties of Dr. Walker's Vinegar Bittora. And thia famous vegetable Tonic, Alterative, and Antiseptic is a specific for Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint, Chronic Constipation, Fever and Ague, Bilious Intermittent*, Scrofulous Taint in the Blood, Incipient Consumption, Local and General Debility, Rhenmatiam, Sick Headache, and Diseases of the Kidneys, seems to he a matter beyond the pale of controversy—a/red/acf fit medical hietory. The statements Of friends, in whose veracity and intelligence wo have foil confidence, corroborated by our own personal observation, compel us, to admit the surpassing merits of the
preparation,—Com.
iJIo* <5ud to’tiiTmatUr, la wL^'thu thobahllass and ovar erednkms psoeU t not bo^dzeztred an^stirisd^setfag
S£5Sr:;::™=::.:: *5 I’-f! aai-sasErb:: IS HI!
niszl.tr.to Md mad. oath to th. fact that th. ssiJ rre..p«. «.« viurij frire. Mr alM.Ttt rent gtb. petjMMCT ri lh.j«|re ^ ^ >l J> MvMSMrtmSanicr^n^aadM'lastee T -A-.r.-i-uor-m—.irsnxr
Sold by Drogglata SLOG per Uottle R. ^7 R. RAD WAY” a READY RELIEF,
THE NEW IMPROVED REMINGTON Sewing Machine. The “Medal for Progress,"
’'H£r
DR. RADWAY’S Regulating Pills,
.) BRANCH OKWICKN,
WISHARTS
NaturssBreat Remedy THROAT and LUNG ' DISEASES!! ggSgS-SSSf
istsj/LjsXdsehrxstxd; ■ WorafilortaliilisiiToinii ^“oAZCTTKElf 1 .'' ’ S S“-V p BECKWITH $20. Portable Family Sowing Machine, POPULAR
•••BROADWAY, ■KWYOBK. - Jssar- ■'
I mu if. com mu thbhh fv mr Nirnmi j

