KEW rOEM BT IXJNOFF.I.I-OW. Monte Camino. ;..r Beautiful valley, tliroufc'h whose verdant mead Unheard the Oarigliano glides along, . The Lirin, mime of rushes and of reeds, 1 . . The river taciturn of classic song I -, The land of Ibor, and the Iant of Rest, Where mediaeval towns are white on all The hillsides, and where every mountain creet Xa an trurian or a fionua wall I : There la Alagna, where Foye Boniface . Was dragged with contumely from his throne, Sciarra Coionna, waa that day disgrace The PonUfl's only, or m part thine own t There in Ceprano, where a renegade Was each Apulian, aa great Dante saifth, ' When Manfred, by his men-a-arma betrayed, Spurred on to Benevento and to death. Jhere is Aquinum, the old Tolaoian town Where Juvenal waa bom, whose lurid light , Still hovers o'er his birthplace like the crown . Of splendor over cities seen at night. . t Doubled the splendor is, that in its streets The Angelic Doctor as a school-boy plaved. And dreamed, perhaps, the dream Oat ha repeats In pondrous folios for scholastics made. An , there, uplifted like a passing stood That pauses on a mountain summit high, Monte Cassino's convent reara its proud And venerable walla against the sky. Well I remember how on foot I combed The stony pathway leading to its gate ; Above, the convent bells for vespers chimed ; Below, the darkening town grew desolate. Well I remember the low arch and dark, The court-yard with its well, the terrace wide. From which, far down, diminished to a park. The valley veiled in mist waa dim descried. The dsy was dying, and, with feeble hands, Caressed the mountain-tops ; tne vales between Barkened ; the river in the meadow-lands Sheathed itself aa a sword and was not seen. The silenoe of the place was like a sleep. So full of rest it seemed ; each passing tread Was a reverberation from the deep Beceeses of the agea that are deed. For more than thirteen centuries ago Benedict, fleeing from the gatea of Borne, A youth disgusted with its vice and woe Bought in these mountain solitudes a home. - Ee founded here bis Convent and his rule Of prayer and work, and counted work aa prayer. file pen became a danon, and his school Flamed like a beacon in the midnight air. What though Bowscin, ta his reckless way Mocking the lazy brotherhood, deplores The illuminated manuscript that lay Torn and neglected on the dusty floors T Boccaccio was a novelist, a child Of fancy and of notion at the best ; This the urbane librarian said, and smiled Incredulous, as at some idle jest. Upon such themes as these with one young friar I sat conversing late into the night. Till in its cavernous chimney the wood fire Had burnt its heart out like an anohorite. And then translated, in my convent cell, Myself yet not myself, in dreams I lay ; And as a monk who hears the matin bell. Started from Bleep ; already it was day. From the high window I beheld the scene On which Saint Benedict so oft had gazed ; The mountains and the valley in tne sheen Of the bright sun, and stood as one amaaed. Grav mists were KdUmi. rising, vanishing : The woodlands glistened with their jeweled crowns ; ar os the mellow Dells Degan to ring For matins in the half-awakened towns. The conflict of the Present and the Past, The ideal and the actual in our life. As on a field of battle held me fast. Where this world and the next world were at strife. For, aa a valley from its sleep awoke, I saw the iron horses of the stasia Toss to the morning air their plumes of smoke, And woke as one awaketh from a dream. Atlantic Monthly for February. SEBYING THE WRIT. he le small dapper ngure or fckiniro Butterfield was seated in his office one cold winter moraine;, and the Squire was vainly trying to comprehend a pile of law books. These books had been left by opposing attorneys in some case tried be fore him, and from the cases therein cited he was expected to make up his de cision. Had it been any oilier question geography, astronomy, mechanics, or wnat not tne quxre would nave settled it at once. He had the most thorough confidence in the ability of Squire But- A. 1 "1 . .11 II ' ' , . 1 lemtaa w aerue nnjuimg, uul now ue was perplexed. Tne more tie studied. the more he became convinced that the plain tiff had all the law on his side ; and so had the defendant ; and that both sides had amply proved .their case. In this bewildering state of mind he con cluded to take a sort of middle coarse, at once satisfactory to himself if to no one else, and he had just written upon his docket, "Case dismissed for want of jurisdiction," when the tall, thin, sombre figure of Mr. Grimp appeared in the doorway. Now Mr. Grimp was an awfully solemn man. Arrayed in the blackest of ' broad cloths, th3 stiffeet of neckties, the whitest of shirt fronts and standing collars, with features cold, austere, and severely serious, Mr. Unmp somenow ever sug gested unpleasant thoughts of fun orals. grave clothes and coffins. He was a very religious man, too very; In prayer meeting, class meeting, and on other occa sions, his monotonous, sepulchral, metal lic voice was frequently heard speaking of the "shortness of life," the " certainty of death," and about " becoming food for the worms, and such other cheerful subjects. Cold and passionless himself. he had no mercy for the weakness or frailty of his fellow, exacting the most formal religious observance in others, and the last penny due nun by his debtors. And he was rich. " I have called. Brother Butterfield." began Mr. Grimp ' in slow measured tones " I have called to see yon about a little matter that has been on my mind for some time ; a matter I hesitated bringing before the -' courts, as I. think the Scriptural rule should be generally followed about ' going to law before the unjust, and "Humph!" And the Squire straight ened himserf on nis chair and ran his hand through his thin' looks until each individual hair stood out a bristling pro test. " I reckon I ain't a bit more unjust than any on 'em. If yon're bin tin' that way, why in Sam HQl didn't ye take your case afore some spiritooal court, and done with it t" - .- V Mr. Grimp colored slightly. " I think you misunderstand me. Brother Butter- field ; I only used the- expression in a general sense, wnnoot allusion to you, whom I know to be a man with clear ideas of justice, or else the community had not placed yon in so responsible a position. " -'-:' ' ' The Squire's teatiness - at once dis appeared, the. smile came back; and be bowed m complacent acquiescence. " But to return to my business, con tinued Mr.- Grimp. ; "Ton doubtless know Mrs. -Baraeyt--5 ; "What. Widow-BaessTf a and the complacent look immediately gave place to an unusual flash on the questioner's face. ... . ' Tea ; I believe she is a widow. Her husband poor man became, somewhat involved before he died : but may we nope in a better world lie pas discovered the things of earth to, be. but . vanity and vexation of spirit Like ,ns all. Brother Butterfield, he brought nothing into the world, and it is certain he carried nothing our. " " I s'pose not, as you got the hull on't, answered the Squire altogether misin terpreting Mr. Grimp's moralizing. " Ahem ! Ah,' yes I I presume you allude to the foreclosing bt a mortgage I held on his place. : It was truly unpleas ant for me to do it, but duty to my chil dren, so lately deprived of a mother, Impelled me. As the Scripture says, If any provide not for his own, especially for those of his xxwn house, he hath de nied the faith and is worse than an infidel," " Better had some keer for other folks' ophans as well," muttered the Squire ; but Mr. Grimp did not hear, and pro ceeded "Well, at the sale of Mr ' JWtmvp'h place I bought it in, and since then I have let Mrs. Barney have it at a nomi nal rent at a mere nominal rent, I as sure you Brother Butterfield. And it is about that I have called." " The long and short on't is she hain't paid the rent and you want her put outr". "Wellyes and no. I wish stem taken in that direction, but not to ex tremes. I would like process issued, but have final measures kept in abeyance, as I think the matter may be amicably arranged." " That is. yon want some scarecrow to hold over her to bring her to terms f " suggested the Squire, looking keenly at his visitor. Mr. Grimp noddei "You will at tend to it, Brother Butterfield ? " he said. " I'll 'tend to it," said the Squire. Then Mr. Grimp bowed solemnly, said 'Farewell. Brother Butterfield' and passed out into the' sunshine his figure almost too thin and dried up to cast a shadow in the bright sunlight, yet suffi cient to cast moral shadow and unhap piaess over homes and lives around and about him. , For a moment following Mr. Grimp's departure the Squire's face was full of conflicting emotions. He arose from his chair, and his small boot-heels clattered on the office floor as he paced hurriedly to and fro. "The old skinflint!" he muttered, "Jest as if I didn't see through him like a book ! He wants to convert the widow into Mrs. Grimp number two, an' if she ain't willin' maybe she's refused him already he wants me to make her think she'd better be. That's what he wants. Ha, ha! I reckon there's a widower that Widow Barney er any other woman would jest be proud to git ; he's net a thousand miles off neither" and the Squire paused smilingly before a small mirror, adjusted bis collar, and smoothed the few hairs carefully over the bald spot on his head. " Not so old after all ; and a sight better looking than old Grimp ! Guess he didn't know who he was comin' to, did he f An he wants me to sarve a writ on Widow Barney. George I 111 sarve it myself an' git in ahead of him ! Big joke it'll be on Grimp ! Ha, ha !" In the main the Squire was correct in his cogitations. To secure the lively, pretty, sensible young widow as a help meet in the place of the " late lamented " was precisely what Mr. Grimp desired. He had at different times made advances in that direction, but receiving only neg ative replies he concluded to try a mild ooercion, and "bring her to her senses," as he inwardly called it. Now, singu larly enough, the Squire also was a wid ower, and he, too, was nmtrimonially in clined toward the Widow Barney. He had . never made any proposition to that lady, thinking, in his conceit, he had only to offer himself to be accepted at once, and she be glad of the oppor tunity. But there was incentive to immediate action. There was a chance it might happen that the widow, being ignorant of the Squire's intentions, might possi bly throw herself away on Mr. Grimp f The Squire did not like the thought, and, as above intimated, ho resolved to serve the writ and " pop the question " at the same time. He would not delay about the matter either. He would do it that very evening that he would ; and 'then see the longitude Mr. Grimp's face would assume. The idea pleased him greatly. He chuckled over it all through the day ; chuckled over it on his way home in the evening, and at tea-time chuckles inter spersed themselves throughout the meal, much to the wonderment of the old housekeeper. Indeed her looks be tokened so much curiosity that the Squire noticed it at last, and after he had swallowed the last morsel, and laid down bis knife and fork, he said : " Mrs. Crandal, I'm goin to git mar ried." "Well, now, railly !" exclaimed the old woman, almost dropping the tea-cups in surprise. " May I be so proud as to ask who she may be i" " Widow Barney." What ! Widder Barney ? Sakes, now ! When ye goin to be married ?" " " I don't know yet ; haven't asked her. Goin to do it, though, to-night." " Mebbe she won't have ye," observed Mrs. Crandal rather doubtfully. " Won't have me ? Me ! Squire But terfield I" exclaimed the Squire, sur prised out of all measure at so extraor dinary a suggestion. " I'd like to see the woman that wouldn't jest jump at the chance jest jump at the chance." " I dunno," said the old woman, shak ing her head with mournful credulity ; "these 'ere widders are very onsartain 'specially the young ones an' there's no tellin what they'll do. 'Sides, there's that young lawyer, Tom Hardwood, seein her about a good deaL" "Oh, that amounts to notion,' said the Squire complacently. "He boards at her house, an takes her to meetin' an' sin gin' school just out of politeness." Mrs. Crandal made no further remark, but proceeded to gather up the dishes, and the Squire went to his room to gather himself into his Sunday clothes. He decided not to call too early upon the widow, lest she might not be ready for visitors, and therefore he delayed un til the clock struck the hour of nine ; then a tall hat, drab towners, a blue, brass-buttoned "swallow-tail," an over coat and .Squire Butterfield contained somewhere within passed ' out to the road. It was a clear, cold, moonlight night ; no one was out on the street, and the bright home-lights from various win dows shone npos a face assured and pos sessed as he moved along.' No " taint heart" to "win fair lady' did he carry I Not at alL But with firm, oonfident step he passed over the crisp, well-trodden snow tnat creaked loudly under his feet, It was not a very long walk and he soon reached, his destination, - The widow's house was a small two-story frame, quite back from the road, and surrounded by a forest of shrubbery and fruit trees. From the gate a path wound up to the house under these 'trees, and the Souire had to move cautiously, aa the moon gave out l&int iignt tnrougb tne louage. r He reached the house safely, however, and glanced up at the second story, . the corner room of which was used by the widow as a sitting-room, He saw it was well lighted, the window-curtains not yet down, and he was about turning toward the door, when some one a man oame to the window and looked out. For the first time the Squire paused irresolutely. Who was that man? Was it Grime and had he got the start of him after all! He dictn t wish to see Mr. unmp at least not then and there. He stepped back a little to get a better view, and waited for the face to appear again. - .But it did not. Then he moved round to the end of the house and looked up at the window on that side, ; but with no better result, If he only knew who the man wae; knew oertainly it was not Mr. Grimp, he would be satis fied. His eye rested on the low back kitchen, directly below the end window. If he was only on- that he could look into the room unobserved by any one. It could do no harm, either; and he did so wish to know who that man was ! The more the Squire thought about it the more convinced was he i that it was Mr. Grimp but then may be it wasn't lie would find out ! He became more resolute then, and looked about for some aid to his purpose. This, after some search, he found in a small ladder, which he placed against the kitchen and began to ascend. He got up the ladder without trouble, but found the roof so coated with ice that he had to move with ex treme caution. However, the window was reached at last, and, looking in, he saw only the widow and Tom Harwood sitting by the fire. " There !' muttered the Squire in dis gust after making this discovery ; " I never thought of him! Why in Sam TTill didn't I remember he was here, and saved all this trouble ? Nearly spiled my best clothes, too I" He turned about and was preparing to go back, when a movement down in the shrubbery arrested his attention and downward progress at the same time. For a minute or two he remained per fectly still; then he peered carefully over the roof's edge. He saw a man standing below among the trees, but who he was the Squire oouldn't make out. Howbeit, whoever he might be, he seemed to be scanning the upper front window very closely. Indeed, this view did not seem to satisfy him, and like his " illustrious predecessor" he, too, passed round back of the little kitchen. The Squire became alarmed. He would be discovered now certainly ! What should he do? He glanced about hopelessly until he caught sight of the cnimvey a large, old fashioned one, running up from the kitcken close against and on the outside of the main building. With a quick movement he scrambled to his feet into the shadow of its deep corner and stood close against the wall. " Maybe," he thought, " the man will go 'way pretty soon, confound him !" But the stranger seemed in no hurry to leave; on the contrary he moved about a few minutes, and then, to the conster nation of our friend on the roof, he be gan to ascend the ladder. If ever Squire Butterfield perspired in his life, he did then. Although it was a cold night, he was in a profuse sweat from head to foot. He gritted his teeth, clenched his hands, bit his lips until the blood came, but nevertheless the intruder made his way slowly but surely up the slippery incline. " Goodness gracious ! What in Sam Hill shall I do i" murmured the Squire in his desperate fear. "I'd give any thing, yes, anything, if I was safe at home. I wish all the widows were in Guinea. I wish " But the sentence never was completed. The ice alas the treacherous ice on the roof! Unexpectedly, suddenly, without premeditation or malice aforethought, the Squire's feet shot forward from under him, and with accuracy of aim and swiftness of motion seldom surpass ed, he bore down upon the stranger. ' That individual's hold wa3 very weak and uncertain at best, and he was illy pre pared for such an onslaught. Therefore when the Squire struck him, he, too, assumed an unexpected momentum, and both passed over the roof together, the stranger descending feet foremost into the rain barrel and the Squire making sad havoc with the widow's grapevines and arbor. , For a moment the stranger remained within the barrel and the Squire among the vines where he had fallen, both too amazed and confounded to know what to do. But only for a moment; then they extricated themselves and stepped out into the moonlight, the Squire with coat torn clear to the back, and the stranger very wet and dripping. And thus and there, face to face, they met.: v "Brother Butterfield!" i "Mr. Grimp!" There was a momentary silence after these exclamations of astonished recog nition. Mr. Grimp was the first to break it. " Will you allow me to - inquire, Brother Butterfield, what you were do ing on the roof of my house at this late hour?" t "Sartainly you may, Mr. Grimp. I came because that is I came to sarve that writ of yourn," answered uie Squire, relieved to find some excuse. ; "Ah!" i " Yes ; an I'd like to know what busi ness you had up there, Mr. Grimp i" " 1 came to see you serve it," said Mr. Grimp, with a perceptible tightening of his thin lips. f " Well," said the Squire,1 rapidly re covering his composure, " if your writ don't stick better'n you did on that 'ere roof, it won't amount i to nothin', that's alL" What reply Mr. Grimp would have made to this request is not known, for just then the door opened, and Tom Harwood and the widow, alarmed by the noise, came out. Both I the Squire and Mr. Grimp would gladly have avoided an interview ; indeed they turned to hasten away, but were too late. The widow recognized them at once. j "Why, Mr. Grimp! and Squire But terfield, too!" she exclaimed with the most charming of smiles. " Why, I thought it was burglars, or horse-thieves, or something, and I was sot frightened. And, why, Mr. Grimp ! you are real wet, aren't you? Is it raining or snowing ?" And she held out her little hand to catch the falling drops. - ) I " No, marm, 'taint snowin, or rainin' either. Ye see, Mr. Grimp was jest showin' me the water privilege about the place, an' tryin to see how much a rain bar'l would hold," responded the Squire sarcastically, pointing toward the aforesaid barrel. - "Brother Butterfield, will you be so kind as to, attend to the 1 business on which " we came?" said Mr. Grimp sternly. . " Sartainly I will. Here, Widow Bar ney, is a writ from Mr. Grimp, notifyin' you to give up these 'ere premises." . "I will take charge of j that," said young Harwood, rather haughtily. "I will call upon you to-morrow, Squire, and settle the matter. I would say, also, Mr. Grimp, that the time for redemption not having expired, the mortgage and costs on this lady's place have been paid in to the County Clerk, and yon will not be troubled in caring for it further." : After that well, Mr. Grimp made some indistinct reply, and i the Squire very profuse and incoherent apologies; then they took their leave as best they could, feeling very awkward, mortified and humiliated. They did not go home together either, nor ever after speak of the evening's experience to each other. However, a month later, when Tern Har wood married the widow, the Squire was observed to shake his head i mournfully and murmur: .;J : -!V "If it hadn't been if or Old Grimp comin' jest as he did that night, things would have been different. Widow Bar ney never would have married that con ceited young Harwood never!" - As for Mr. Grimp, his face and his prayers grew longer day by day, and the Sunday f flowing the marriage he spoke feelingly of "this vale of -tears," the " vanity of human expectations," and the "uncertainty of earthly things," and when the collection waa raised for the twi, vo aiuiw rrave a torn piece of currency his grocer had refused the day Deiore. Jicartn ana xiwn-. TILTCN BEECHER. Scenes and Incidents of the Great Trial. Bad for Beeoher. From the Now York Star. jix. xseecner iaoor ujjuci u uiu dous influenza, and his lip is covered with 1 , , , 1 3 wen developed ooiu-boito. Elisabeth. I sit almost next to Mrs. Tilton every day, writes another - oorreepondent, with plenty of time to watch her wan and faded face. She is very weary and very miserable. The strain of exposure is more than she can bear. Most of her time she bites her fingers or gnaws list lessly at her fan, stealing now and then a glimpse of the stern and frozen face, which is all she can see, of her husband. No Respoet for Gray Halra. Cor. Cincinnati Commercial. One old man, over three-score-and ten, was very much depressed in spirit be cause unable to obtain admisson. Taking by the hand a reporter who was about to enter the court-room, the old man said, with tears in his eyes, that he had come all the way from Elizabeth, N. J., to see the trial, " and," he added, " if I don't get in thar and get one look at H. W. Beecher, my wife Sairy will fret and scold dreadfully." Sublimely Truthful. Cor. Chicago Times. The witness then went on to tell how he used to answer inquiring members of the Produce Exchange : " If the story is true, it is infamous ; if false, it is dia bolical ; and if Beecher's life isn't a sufficient answer, I don't choose to give any other." A new bit of testimony, which created much merriment, came out here. Moul ton said : " Beecher came to my house on Saturday evening. He said he was without hope. He said to me more than once that he was hopeless, and that he came to me for strength ; that he wanted to get up courage to face the people." Beecher here appeared overcome at the testimony, as too absurd, and he gave a silent laugh. Witness I told him what I said when Earties asked me about the scandal, and e thanked me, and said the only way to do is to be sublimely truthful. Shouts of laughter. Mrs. Beecher and Sirs. Tilton. Jennie June. Mrs. Beecher's fine face and dignified bearing sometimes takes on a disdainful expression at the adroit attacks of Mr. Morris. Mrs. Tilton wears an anxious look, but her brown eyes are clear, and she directed them steadily at her hus band for full fifteen minutes the other day, when his counsel was lauding him and pitifully describing his desolate home. He looked down, however, or around the desolate room, every way but at her ; not once, it was observed, did he return her gaze. Mrs. Beecher's con duct through the whole affair has been admirable. On the first day of the meet ing she met Mrs. Tilton 's glance with a kind smile, and after the proceedings went up and shook hands with her. Since then they have several times left in com pany. She sits beside her husband with a look of perfect trust and confidence, her eyes sometimes meeting his with a smile which speaks volumes, when some wicked act or motive is imputed to him. Theodore. Cor. Chicago Tribune. Tilton has eternally lost, I fear, the promise with the happiness of his youth. He seems to me nothing more than the incarnation of one enormous and perfect purpose vengeance. The fires which have burnt in him have vitrified him. He is as clear as crystal. All common emotions, all human senses, seem to have been purged out of him as if by a flame. After the primeval age of his ruin has come a glacial period. He is a thawless mass of ice, and, frozen in the heart of it, is his terrible and unspeakable hate. The man's face looks like a stage dressed for a tragedy bare and almost empty, but with a hundred frightful intentions waiting lor the bell to clang and the sword-play to igin. You catch yourself wondering whether he eats, whether he drinks, whether he sleeps as other men do. Something, written in no language, marks him in the forehead as one whose life has for some time been arrested, and who, when the necromantic spell that keeps his blood moving shall have been withdrawn, will dissolve into a handful of cold and harmless ashes. He seems but a specter a phantom, doomed when the end of 'this trial shall have been reached, to be as if indeed he never had been ; a shadowy monster born of, and to be burned in, the womb of mystery ; the colorless, passionless, lifeless high priest of revenge. A Breese of KxcKement. ' From the Sun. A protracted dispute took place be tween counsel as to the introduction of Miss Proctor's name. Mr. Evarts said that it was in evidence, and -Mr. Tracy said that he assumed the responsibility of mentioning it Judge Neuson, with considerable warmth and marked imper ativeness, told Mr. Tracy there was a higher responsibility than his, informed Mr. Evarts that the matfor was not in evidence and never would be with his consent, and directed the stenographer to' strike out Miss Proctor's name wher ever it occurred. Mr. Evarts exoepted to the direction of the court, and the brush between counsel created some ex citement in the room. Monlton was then examined as to expressions of hostility made to other persons by him against Beecher. He was asked whether, in his house, he had told Mr. Wallace Caldwell, the Plymouth usher, that Beeoher was a liar and a libertine, and that he would cut him down if necessary. . Moulton in dignantly denied this,, and in a tone of voioe which recalled his visit to the meet ing in Plymouth Church, said, " I knew he was a snook when he came to my house." A scene .followed, Mr.' Evarts protesting .vehemently, and demanding that the answer must be stricken out, and Judge FnJlertcn regretting that Moulton had not struck Caldwell out of his house. Order was restored by Judge Neilson's vigorous use of the gaveL A series of similar questions followed, : when the court was adjourned. , ? :. ! ; y Beecher's Creed. ' A paper printed in Bichmond, Ind., publishes a letter from Henry Ward Beecher, lately received by the Rev. L Hughes, of that 'eity, in which the pastor of Plymouth Church gives his views on certain doctrinal points at considerable length. Among other things he Bays : v " I believe that all men are bom into imper fection, and that as soon aw intelligent action begine they fail into sin. and that no man ever kept the law of God with all his heart and mind, nor even with any single faculty. I believe that all men need a moral revolution, a change of heart, and that such change, while it involves man's own will, is also, and effectually, the result of God's Spirit. I believe that the Holy Spirit blesses parental example and teaching. msomecasea, so that the children are broueh by the Divine Spirit into the Christ life at a verv early period, and even without any conscious change but, early or late, the human soul docs not rute into a , spiritual character without the qmckening and nonrialiing iniluencee of God's bpint. liut I believe and teach inceHsantly that conversion is only change, and not character, and that Christian graces, experience, habits, knowledge, are the results of education in the Irvine life ; that, upon entering upon a Chris ban course, every one becomes a scholar of Christ, and, like scholars of human knowledge, learn by the normal use of their faculties ; that daily household duties, business cares and duties, special relations, and the whole flow of secular life, is the school in which God drills men as really as in the closet or in the church ; that the whole of life is, in the hands of the ittvine Spirit, a means of grace. I differ with my brethren of the evangelical churches in some details, but more yet in the philosophy by which the facta of religion are to be explained ; but I am at hearty agreement with them in the Lhvuuty mt Chriirt, the Trinity, the Sinfulness of Man, the Universal Meed of a Change of Heart, of the Holy Spirit as the Efficient Agen in Conversion." A Tough Cuss. Fom the New Tork Times. Moulton's testimony was given by him in his usual style. His coolness never deserted him. When Gen. Tracy asked him when he heard the "true story" read, Moulton said that he did not exactly remember, but that Gen. Tracy was in his house at the time and fell asleep while it waa being read. This roused Mr. Everts, who protested against the answer. Moulton, with the utmost coolness, craved pardon for his inadvertence, and said he only wished to fix the date. Counsel laughed heartily, and Mr. Evarts looked very glum. . Moulton kept on worrying the croBa-exam i n i n g counsel in this way through the entire day. He was asked about taking down a portrait of Beecher hanging on the wall of his parlor. Moulton first managed to state to the jury that the picture had been given him by Tilton, and that his own and Til ton's portraits were also hung in his parlor. When the examination verged on a letter Moulton said he wrote while in bed, Gen. Tracy assumed an air of incredulity which Moulton noticed, and 3 at once added "my wife brought me the paper." Gen. Tracy, angry at being again baffled, said "We don't care about your wife, sir, "and Moulton smiled that Eleasant and deceptive smile for which e is noted. Gen. Tracy then asked Moulton if it was not a fact' that, by reason of his late hour of rising on Sunday, his wife had been prevented from attending Plymouth church service. Moulton did not get angry, but smiled as usual and said, "Well, really, General, I do not know. 'l Again; when Mr. Evarts got in a passion, and said, "We don't want to know what your wife did," Moulton, remembering Mr. Evarts pre vious injunction as to telling the whole truth and nothing but the truth, said, "Mr. Evarts, your instructions as to tell ing the truth are so peculiar, I find difficulty in observing them." A Forthcoming Stream of Filth A Tragic Conclusion Feared. From Dr. Syntax's Letter in Chicago Tribune. I feel, sopaetimea, that a tragic conclu sion will abruptly and .terribly end this matter. As it progresses, the theatric mantle of heroism drops off, fold by fold, from its shoulders, and presently all will be wholly un draped, a lewd and hideous transfiguration of Priapus. To be the laureate of such reeking annals might gratify the hot ambition of Swiaburne ; but, to impartial nostrils, the whiffs and stenches of a wide-spread licentiousness are nothing else than sickening. Its tableaux are as vile as the encaustics of Pompeii ; its episodes fit only for the prurient contemplation of a Messalina ; and its actors seem t have lost their apt est opportunity in the suppression of Aphra Behn. The argument of the de fense, on the moral question at issue, not between Beecher and Tilton, but between Beecher and the world, is-no loftier than a grinning " tu quoque." II Beecher be a libertine, Tilton is a free-lover; and, if Beecher seduced Elizabeth Tilton, Theodore Tilton permitted and extenu ated that seduction by his adulterous al liance with the WoodhulL So far, it looks like a match at mud-throwing, with fouler ammunition, however, than the cheap ordure of the streets. All manner of beastly confidences are to be torn from their graves, and shown up in the witness-chair. A true Corinth ian orgie is promised, in which every brutal appetite shall be nakedly repre sented. We are only on the threshold of the scandal. If it be necessary to save Mr. Beecher, an exhibition so mon strous may be made that the anger of his countrymen will rescue him by a promp and wrathful extinction of the whole pro ceedings. Other adulteries, other seduc tions, other bestial incidents in the un written history of Plymouth, are to be paraded before the ! puzzled jurors and the stupefied world. At least two dead women are to anticipate the Last Judg ment by confessing, through the mouths of their own kindred, that they were false to their marriage vows ; and one of them, that her filthi ness was beyond even the awful picturing of JuvenaL At least one incest will be dragged from under the protective shadow of Mr. Beecher's church, and stripped bare and putrid for the consid eration of these Christian States. If Henry C. Bo-wen ever reaches the witness stand, there will be squeezed from his lean person such a stream of poisonous, excrementatious knowledge, that the whole country will stop its nostrils and its ears, and cry Enough ! " Testimony will be produced upon this trial, and may, perhaps, be spread upon its records, to which the feculence of all extant litera ture will be as Sabeean odors. I know of one tomb which has already been ran sacked to prove prior guilt on Beecher's part ; and I know of , another grave into which Beecher's lawyers will presently descend to grope for the shameful affec tions of Tilton. Hainan dust and ashes cited to demonstrate' the wickedness it committed in the flesh is one of the cer tainties of this, our tedious Dies Irae. But, though the horrors which I have faintly outlined and which are as well known to a score of persons as to myself form an irrefragable chapter in the lewd record of this case, yet do I firmly believe, without being able to give a reason for my belief, that a sudden and mortal stop page of this trial will be made by one or both of its principals. I dare not predict that Beecher will take flight from this terrible arena ; I dare not predict that sudden death or dramatic confession will startle his worshipers, and silenoe the process of his accusation. But though it would be something worse than audac ity to conjecture the form in which the end will come, yet do I verily and earn estly believe that some other climax than the verdict of a jury will conclude this appalling religious tragedy. . 1 , ' jLknt. Lent will begin this year on the 10th of February, much earlier than it has done since 1869. - This will bring the high festival of Easter this year on the 28th of March, which is within six days of the earliest period upon which it can ever possibly occur. In some years Easter falls as late as the 25th of .April. Some years there are as many as nine Sundays - between Epiphany and Ash Wednesday, but this year there will be only five Sundays intervening between the jubilee of Epiphany and the solmne feast of Lent. - Snooksey's Berenge. Mr. J. Melancthon Snooksey, scissors editor of the Polhemus JSvening Clarion, never suffered a wrong that he did not some day avenge. One day Snooksey went to the bank to get a check for ten dollars cashed. Mr. Goldcopper, of the First National Bank of Polhemus, was a cautious , man, and he imagined, that Snooksey's voice trembled a little, be traying guilt of some (sort. "Is this your name on this check? " asked Gold copper. " Yes," said Snooksey. "Well," said Goldcopper, youH have to bring some one here who knows you ; I can't pay anything on this until you identify yourself." Snooksey walked out, and in about half an hour had drammed up three or four of his friends, who accom panied him to the bank, and assured Goldcopper that Snooksey was no other than Snooksey. But alas 1 Goldcopper didn't know either of Snooksey's friends from Adam, and he shook his little head. "Can't pay this till I know who I'm paying it to," he said, gruffly. "All right, returned Snooksey, disgusted. " I'll make you a present of the check ; keep it, by all means ; " and he and his friends passed out. Seventeen weeks after this occurrence, as Snooksey was hard at work on his exchanges in the office of the Clarion, who should step in upon him but Mr. Goldcopper, of the " First National." He had forgotten Snooksey, but Snooksey had not forgot ten him. "Ah," said ffioldcopper, blandly, " I am anxious to get hold of a copy of the San Francisco Morning Bed ouin ; yoa exchange with it, of course ? " " Ctertainly," said the smil ing Snooksey, yanking the Bedouin from a pile of papers and holding it up tempt ingly ; " but whom have I the honor of addressing ? " " W. H. Goldcopper, sir ; Goldcopper, of the First National Bank, sir." "Oh, yes, Mr. Goldcop per ; yes, I've heard the 'name. But, see here, Mr. Goldcopper, how do I know that you are Goldcopper? Your name might be Bodifer, or Jinks, or Jean Valjean, for what I know. Bring somebody here who knows you, sir ; who can identify you, sir ; then, sir, if the proof is satisfactory, sir, you shall have a copy of the Bedouin, sir. We have to be very careful here, sir, you can see for yourself." The astonished Gold copper, without a word in reply, passed rapidly out. When he reached his bank he sat down and hastily wrote : " Pro prietors Morning Bedouin, San Francis co, CaL. : Inclosed find ten cents. Send me one copy of the Bedouin at once. Yours truly, W. H. Goldcopper, Pol hemus, Ind," "Me Married Her for Hsr Money." Married her for her money, did he ? Why did he not kill her outright, and take it I Indeed, that is what a man who makes a match with such motives would really like to do. He wants the hard dollars, not the soft woman who owns them; and he hates her because he has had to take her also. Poor little heiresses, ! with such de lightful fortunes poor little widows, with a snug sum settled on you by the husband who had your comfort at heart, how much better that you should be pen niless women sewing for your living at ten cents a shirt ! Then, some strong, loving hand might gather you -up to a tender heart, and you might be sure it was all for yourself all, every bit of it. Now, with so many fortune-hunters afloat, what are you going to do ? Married for money, was she ? And that is why her face is so hard and her eyes so cold. She knows it, one can see. She remembers the kisses that were so much oold " courting," and did not come from the heart at alL The vow that was a lie, when, instead of saying I take this woman for better or for worse, he should have said, "I take this woman for her property." She understood that long ago, no doubt. God help her 1 ; Married for money and yet she was as sweet and pretty then as many a girl who is married for pure love a rosebud that might have been plucked to wear over a true heart. What did the fortune-hunter care for that? A man who woos a woman for mercenary motives is rather apt to hate her the more for being worthy of a better fate. And in any case, a man hates a woman who reverses the proper state of things, and " endows " him with her "worldly goods." It is contrary to the prayer-book, and contrary to nature. M. K. D., in New York Ledger. The Egyptian Baler's Royal iilft to Gen. Sherman's Daughter. The wedding gift from the Khedive of Egypt to the daughter of Gen. Sherman reached New York by steamer on Tues day, and was on private exhibition in the Collector's parlor of the Custom-JIouse yesterday afternoon. The present is a parure of diamonds, necklace and eardrops, said to be the most magnificent and valuable in this country. The necklace ; is composed of four straus of diamonds, each of which is a brilliant. Not one ef them is worth less than $1,000. The chain is studded with the gems, and they are set so closely together as to hide the gold. There are so many of them that Deputy Collector Lydecker tired in the count. He count ed 850, which is only about half of the whole number. The strands are joined by ten immense stones, each of which is encircled by smaller gems. The one in front is the size of a hickory nut, and is worth $20,000. Pendant from the front is a festoon of brilliants with five big pear-shaped stones of finest water luster hanging from it, : The ornaments for the ear are single stones equally as large as the rest. The entire set is ap praised at from $200,000 to $300,000. The case for the jewels is plain moroc co, without - inscription. As soon as the Secretary of the Treasury orders a free permit for them under the b pedal act of Congress they, are to be de livered to the Turkish Xmister, and by him presented to the fair bride on behalf of the Egyptian potentate. New York Sun, ' Xew York in 182a. The population of New York fifty years ago was about 130,000 hardly more than quarter of the present population of Chicago, which then had . no existence except as an TnKan outpost. Brooklyn was a straggling village of 7,000 inhab itants, and there was but One steam ferry boat on the East river. People who wanted to cross the river then after 8 o'clock in the evening had to pay twenty five cents to a boat man to row them over. The largest ship then sailing from the port did not exceed 500 tons burden. Postage on a single letter-sheet by mail to Boston was eighteen add three-quarter cents, and for a double sheet double that sum. There were ne envelopes in those good old days, for those aids "to cor respondence had , not been invented. Mucilage was unknown, and it was con sidered disrespectful not to seal a letter with a great lump of red wax. There were then no omnibuses nor street rail ways nor any other public conveyance, except two-horse hackney coaches, which cost a small fortune to ride in. HtrafOKOUH. Do they miss me at home ? do they miss me ? Twould be an assurance most dear To know that my name wss forgotten, As though I had never been there. To know that the tailor and landlord. And the banks where my paper is due. And hoete whom I now cannot mention, Had banished me quits from their view. Do they miss me at boms T do they miss me? When the market for money is tight, . And collectors in haste ars pursuing Their debtors by day and by night T '' Do the friends who once loaned me a " fifty," And the others who loaned me a "ten," Heave a sigh of regret ss they miss me. And wish they could see ma again t Do they miss me at home ? do they miss me f Where no longer I'm seen upon 'Change T And do those who were wont to saslet me bay, " His conduct's Infernally strange t" Does the Shyloek who loaned me bis money, To bear me to regions unknown, Ixok in vain for occasion to dun me, And wish I again were at hornet Do they miss me at home T do they miss met , Twonld be an assurance most dear To know that my name was forgotten. As though I had never been there. But I know that my memory lingers Around the dear place as I roam ; Ana wxme I've my wits ana my creepers They'll miss me they'll miss ms at home t Wit and Hamor. When is a literary work like smoke; When it rises in volumes. Troubles are like dogs ; the smaller they are the more they annoy you. An Ohio man has been oonverted to temperance ninety-eight times, and says he'll go up to a hundred or die. A CiiABKSvrxiiJi man has written a life of the devil. The last three chapters comprise a ten year's biography of his mother-in-law. An exchange remarks that it is re markable with what exactness the lines between adjacent lots can be marked out with a anow-shoveL "Do you like novels?" asked Miss Fitzgerald of her backwoods lover. "I. can't say," he replied ; "I never eat any. But I tell you, I'm death on possum I" A wtdow was weeping bitterly for the loss of her husband, and a friend tried to console her. " No, no," said she," let me have my cry out, and then I sha'n't care anything more about it." A coffin-makek was asked whom he was making a coffin for, and mentioned the intended. "Why, he is not dead, man!" said the querist "Don't you trouble yourself," replied the other -" Dr. Coe told us to make his coffin, and I guess he knows what he gave him." A country youth came to town to see his intended wife, and for a long time could think of nothing to say. At last, a great snow falling, he took ococasion to tell her that his father's sheep would be undone. " Well," said she, taking him by the hand," "111 keep one of them." The Tobacco Trade Interesting Sta- tistics. From the advance sheets of the yearly official report of the tobacco trade, the following interesting statistics have been gathered. The report is for the fiscal year ending June SO, 1874, and will be completed about March 1. There was exported from the United States, of na tive leaf tobacco, 318,097,804 pounds, amounting in value to 830,389,181. Dur ing the same time there was imported into the United States and entered for consumption 9,213,860 pounds of leaf tobacco, for use in the manufacture of cigars, and 85,690 pounds of stemmed or prepared tobaoeo, amounting together in value to 85,332,548.41. During the same time there was im ported into the United States and en tered for consumption 845,774 pounds of cigars, or, at an average of eleven pounds to the thousand, 76,888,000 ci gars, amounting in value to $3,030,628. 79. In the same period there were manufactured in the United States, of foreign and domestic tobacco, and tax paid, 1,780,961,000 cigars. Allowing thirty pounds of tobaoeo for every 1,000 cigars manufactured, there was used 25,728,330 pounds foreign and domestic leaf tobacco in the manufacture of cigars in the United States. The comparison shows there were twenty three domestic cigars manufactured in the United States, and the tax thereon' ' paid, for every cigar that was imported and paid duty during the same time. A close scrutiny reveals the astounding fact that the average number of cigars smoked in the United States during each twenty-four hours is 5,168,000. The following are the amounts of duty and taxes on tobacco and cigars for the fiscal year ending as above : Import duty on leaf tobacco for cigars, gold, $3,524,787. 82 ; import duty on all other kinds of to- bacco and snuff, gold, $53,181.12 ; im port duty on cigars, cigarettes, etc, gold, $2,872,091.27 ; tax on cigars, cheroots, etc, currency, $9,333,591.24 ; tax on manufactured tobacco, currency, $2,900, 509.57 ; tax on snuff, currency, $2,038, 445.92 ; tax received from all other sources from tobacco, currency, $1,970,- 327.79 ; total amount of import duties paid in gold, $6,150,060.41 ; total amount of taxes paid in currency, $33,242,875. 62 ; grand total, $39,292,935.03. . . How to Spell Shakspe are's Kame. For one hundred and fifty years critics have disputed over the correct way to spell the name of Shakspeare. The Troy Times thinks that the reason that the Bard of Avon induoed Juliet to inquire " What's in .a name i" was for the pur pose of discovering the correct orthog raphy of his own name, and says that in some of the earlier editions of Shaks peare it reads " What's in hi name ? or in plain language, "How many let ters are in his (Shakspeare's) name ? The spelling ' of Shakspeare's name bag been an orthographical puzzle that crit ics for a century and a half have labored over. 'Stevens, Drake, Dr. Johnson, Heed, Hazlett, Chateaubriand, Lamar tine, Ulrieh, and Bodenstedt, spell the name with ten letters, thus: Shaks peare ; Chidwerth, - Mason, Heath, Lord Campbell, White, Gtrixot and Horn in sist on eleven letters, thus: Shakespeare; while still others, though less in number and ability, declare for only nine letters, thus; Shakspere. William : ought - to have known how to spell his own name, and as he wrote it Shakspeare, we are in clined to give him the benefit of the ten letters as he placed them. .Louisville Courier-Journal. ; . ..., , Dead : Letter Ikf9biatiok. There is some sense in the proposition made in Congress to authorize the use of infor mation received in the Dead-Letter Of fice in the prosecution of criminals. : At present there is much diversity of opinion among lawyers about the right of the government to make any use what ever of this information, and under ex isting laws no use is made of it. It often happens that dead letters contain counter feit money, and information which would lead to the immediate arrest of guilty parties. : As the law now stands, if a clerk in the Dead-Letter Office should discover a plot to assassinate his personal friend, he would have no power to give warning of the danger. I