Forest Grove independent. (Forest Grove, Washington County, Or.) 1873-1874, August 06, 1874, Image 1

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    FOI »KST (¡H O Y E ,
VOL. 11 .
TELEGRAPHIC!
THE INDEPENDENT.
I'CBLIMIED AT
Forest G^ove,
B .
. . . .
L U
Oregoi
O
E .
Editor timi I’nqirutiir.
N ew Y ork , July 2 S . — Tilton
TERMS OF srnS K T JlT loX :
Ono year...........................................' i¿ ..»>
50
Hu mouth*......................................... i 1 IH
I
Three months,...................................
lo
Suivit* .
.......................................
RATES OE ADVERTISING:
•J sO.
TIMK 1 s.
‘ 4 l’I.l Y j h li
« 1 50 r» oo
IH
)
1
r*
50
1
1 WKKK,
*> WKKKS. a INI
~ á )
4 50 .s r»t )
Ì MONTH •) r.it a IH) 5 l NI l‘J <H)
« • 1 » MOS.
4 50 o OO «I INI 20
00
li IN) io 1H) 1». DO
XOrt.
L
»0
IK
)
(M
JO
1 Y KAR. 10 oO là 00
N ew Y okk , July * 2 4 . - California
wool in tlio Now York market i.s low­
er— cents for choicest lots.
Freights to California are light.
California wool in Huston is in fair
demand at -1 0 0 1 - cents.
was
arrested to-day on complaint <>lY\ m.
J. Gay nor, for libel of Henry Y\ aid
Beecher, and was released on his
own recognizance. This action will
probably bring the entire mater be­
fore a court.
Thu Brooklyn t'nion says not half
the testimony has Wa n received bv
1 1
•
lo 1 M
15 00
The report that Beecher intended
20 IMI
foi tN) to resign is emphatically denied by
50 IMI
his friends.
00
Mrs. T ilton is anxious to repeat
R otai S oticcs . í O cents j>. r line for íhe her den al of guilt.
fir.t insertion. and l«V«nt»a lin* for t ;\< h
sulis. i|iii ut in.-« rtion. No notice 1 .
than
Later : courts
of the Pittsburg
A
O dis-
50 cents.
A liberal reduction v»ill Ini mude on regn- aster reduce the loss of life to 1
l.»r iidvt rt¡M rs.
bodies recovered.
AGENT AT l ’ORTLAND,
S amcki - s .
OREGON
L.
AGENT AT SAN FRANCISCO L . F .F ish -
Eli. rooms JO A 21,Merchant •-'Exi h i:;,.
California street.
AGENTS AT NEW YORK CITY— S. M.
P kttk . noill A Co., 37 l’ark Row cor.
Beekmun »1 .-G eo . E. R owell A « o.,
41 Dark Row.
TO CORRESl’OXDE.NTS.—All romninni-
l u o ' i m r - n .u 1.
n»tions intended for insertion in h ie
Isi»ErEvi*E\T mu't In'iH’.tht nticat. d by
the name hd .1 address of tin- writer
not ut-e* sxarily for publication, but as a
Nr.w Y obk , J u lv J d .-T h e libel ease
a g a in st l i l t o n , b ro u g h t ¡ y
J,;ls Re(.,, p o stp o n e d lllltil
.
*
fo r h e a rin g ,
G a y u o r say s
o n ly ;UJ citi zen d eterm in ed
Gayn«»r,
M oildiV
*
he aeti d
to b rin g
th e fa c ts o f th e g re a t sca n d a l to th e
.•
.. .»
.
, .»
, ,
n o tice t>t th e c o u rts and th e p u b lic,
1
w hich co u ld n o t be
d o n e th ro m 1:
the present Committee of Investiga­
guaranty of o"od faith.
tion. Interviews by report» rs with
OFFICE— Near Logan JuhnAou’s Planing v
.
111
* Mills
n
XT
r . J». Carpenter and Johnson throw
•t. in
court
P R O F E S S IO N A L C A R P S .
[ to II private
exanimate >n.
W ILSO N H O W L llY , 31. D.
•
Physician and Siireeun,
FOREST GROVE, • - • * CREGON.
ill
! r 1/ I t i e t u I i j i 1
hil O
tr
•k of Uio ( 7 /y
to pieci s t
It is reported that Germany
OFFICE At !.':* R >i.hne€-. West of take im m tbia’ o and -uiiigMil :
Johnson .. Planing Mills.
n V .v .l y
ures to prevent further b ail .
|
by C'ariists, if Prance reta se-. 1- WO
W . II. S A Y L O R , 31. l>.,
so»
Physician aiul Surgeon.
Ni w Y» 1 K, July -T Tin Broi *î:l V
FOREST GROVE. - - - - OREGON
publishes a caïd 1 r<iiu d T li­
ton. He says: The Bct-cher Invi
O FFIC E -A t tin Drug Store.
RESIDENT ’K Corn« rSt vend bn ck south
igatin
; Com m ittc
\ V * V t
r*f the Drug Store.
i.vJ'd:ly
f
wi»rid a lot « >1 . n el tut testi
it
H.
Y'.
T
m
'
imi
-
iov
.
mine,
but
liai»
t» Avon
G eo . H. DriiiiiM,
Ih.-lrU-' .17 r, "i.
the m ost iiuiK>1 nt
t! t
m rt, \
Durham & Thompco’
criminali: v
ment charged u
.1 r t o a y 1: i n - . iv l a n
religious \ii-tiiu. w Ili
No. I '"* First Str> • t,
( »REGON. to 1111 not only bv
F» »KTLAND.
B ie c lu r. Furthermore tJiat it w
coiifes-cl
by her and him to Mr.
ALFRED KINNEY. M-D.,
Moulton, as a friend and isuin-idor
S U
R
O
E O
N
of both; that Mr. Moulton s i fti ;i>
FFICE IN DEKl'M'S
1 UTI.DTNG, mediator for lour vcirs
lift we> n
1»
1 .
1
«
,
O \ \s cur!»■ -r id I*irst > 11 . nuil Wa.-Uiug-
uo 7 lv J^ cclier and me was l»a - \ ouoi.,-
toil Stri’i t-’. l’ortLind. On
■ 111 -
fact- tuis prii xistiicg cntii'i .i.:' v 1 e-
i :\ i . kii . h stott . tween 31 r. J.i-echi-r and .* 1 1
i ton.
C. A. BALL.
This statem- nt 1 ma
il' to tin? < om-
main
H A L L ^ STO TT,
mittee with my utmost plainm s of
A T T O R \ K Y S . A T
L A >V speech. 1 furthennore :it> 1 to the
Committee that Beecher- ap >}o v to
No. •> Dckuia’» Itlock,
me, instead of having followed anv
rORTL-YND, C'REGON.
CtVh.ljr
of the circumstances with which tin-
TVoodhull was connect« l was 1 om-
m unicatid to me by Mr.
iicccher
FRANK L. STOTT,
nearly six months b< fore I ever met,
A t t o r n e y - a t - L a w »
saw or knew Mrs. XVoodlmll. ( Mu-
mission of these facts from the com­
h i /. /. > no no, o /; K' ; o v.
Otlii i- in ni-vr Court House.
mittee s report forces me to lav them
before the public as a necessary part
of my case.
(Signed)
THOMAS H. TONGUE.
. TifEonoitR Tir.roN.
\ i i o r 11 c y - a t • L a w »
Mrs. lili/abeth Cady Stanton, in
Hill-burn, W is h in g >11 Cnmity, Or< gon.
_____ _
an interview with a rej»«»rt<»r to-day
; stated that she knew the -uibstauee
*. d . shattc k .
b . kill » , of this afthir a year year beforo Mrs.
S lia t t u e k iw K i l i m .
W ooilhull published her slab ment.
..
.. .
.............. . „ , She was in i>ossessiou of the facts in
A T T O llX F A S AA/> C O l AN E L O ll
,
tlie r a il of the year, wmle Airs. Bul-
A T L A 3 \ .
j lard was still connected with the
Deknin’s Ruililing, First Street,
¡¡evolution. 3 Ir. Tilton and herself,
PORTLAND, OREGON.
accompanied by Mrs. Bullard, went
from the office to the house,and spoilt
B U S IN E S S C A R D S , & L O D G E S. I the day withM rs. T il ton,who showed
--------i
some feeling in this matter at the ta ­
ble. Theodora told the whole storv
of his wife’s faithlessness, not in dt -
SOTAHY PUBLIC AND COLLECT«*. ^
but
kllowi, g
,,,
S. Hughes,
K(; L PAPERS DRAWN.
A< K-
I t r A imiitlv
ii'.wlri|i'* iiitiits takiii. AY ill utlHul
. .
to ull business entrusted to bis
one phase of social life. Next eve-
nm g she met Miss Anthonv at her
0
*
, ,,r, . ‘
n 40 ly own house and sani, “ 1 heodore told
------------------------- ------------------ me avert* strange story last evening,”
J o h n
: and she recounted it to Miss Antl:<>-
! nv, who, at the close said, “ l have
1> h N 1 ! S J A A 1> J L H h L E L
tpe sanjo story from Mr. Til-
a
« O U .I T » THE PATRON.«* OF THE l ° " " Mi”S
lm,1j f C'U
> » -«ne. Hurt wil mintili, «»itili- cor particulars as follows: \\ lien 31 i.
Y\.(h»u and 1 n>. str.. t-
u.i.1.1, 'pipón returned home that evening
some angry words, grow in g out of
the separation in the afternoon.pass­
I - O . G . T .,
ed bet we« n him and his wife. Both
e e t s a t it s hat . l e y i . p y svr- becameint«*nsc]y
excited,
and in
urdiiy 1 v. mug, ut «; u’rlu. k.
All
ember» of tl>>- (»rdi r in
»»d Ktiinding m-.- the heat of passion, and in presence
r lia lly 110 it.-d tu att. ml.
<>1 Mis- Anthonv, each confessed to
the other havin" broken the marriage
IIOLHHOOK
!.( ) !) ( .I! .NO. HO. vow. In the midst of tlc s e startling
A. F . »V A. M.
disclosup s Mi-,.-, Anthony withdrew
FORESTGROVE. OREGON. M»*. t to her room. Shortly after,
she
NutnriKy I»-forr tl • Full M «on in 1 l,/..»...] \ l , '1.1,
’■ •
up stairs
b iL.inth. Hr.ihm» in good
3 irs. tilt. n nmlni.;
»g.u.11.^ jut iuuttil to uttinil.
und Mr. l i lt o n foil A ¡¿1
,ii.r; she
FOREST GROVE LODGE. No. 136,
M
W A SH IN G TO N
llung ojieii her 1 h droom door and 1
Kli/.abetii lushed ill.
The door was
CO U N TY,
OREGON,
DICKEN’S MARRIED LIFE.
TH U RSDAY
A U G U ST 6,
1874.
led to his ruin), and Landor’s sail \ worthy to accept the most sacred of­
I misadventure in Bath —all of these fice that woman can givo to religion
äö2a
A TEMPERANCE CURIOSITY.
(T11 view of the attention now directed to
Was
lie
Insane
The
Domestic
Infelici­
may
be
attributed
to
insanity
with
!
and
her
m
aniage
vow,-.,
if
.-In
>
tl»
«
- temperance question, tho following eu-
tin 11 dosed and bolted. Theodore!
ties of Men of Genius.
as many serious argum ents gathered worthv to be the mother of his ehil- ' rimisdoggerel may tic read with homo inter-
pounded 011 the outride of the door j
—
from the phenomena of life, as the 1 dreii, she was entitled on lus part to ' > 1 ^ r friend* of moderation
and demanded admittance but Miss
Anthony refused to admit him. So
An ingenious and graceful critic, I relations of Dickens with his wife, j a performance of the vow that I10
Who think a reformation
Or moral renovation
intense was his passion at that 1110-1 commenting upon the story of the ; If we bring ourselves to tho ques­ would protect and cherish her until
death
did
them
part.—
X.
V.
World.
IVonld lien (fit our nation;
ment that she feared he might kill separation of Dickens from his wife, j tion: w hat divides madness from in­
Who dtHiin intoxication,
his wife if access to the room was which is now a social theme of ab- sanity? we find it quite impossible to
ANOTHER SIDE OF THE SCANDAL.
With all its dissipation,
gained. Several times he returned sorbing importance, advances one or 1 answer, or at least, to answer in
I11 every rank and station
to the door and angrily demanded two theories that desi rve considera- j such a way that we can admit the
The cause of degradation.
On this const w;e m ainly get our
Of which your observation
that it be opened. ‘ ;No woman shall tion. This writer, in replying t o ! plea as an extenuation for the ad­
dispatches through one channel. It
Gives daily demonstration;
stand between me and my w ife,” he sonic of the views expressed by the mitted selfishness of Dickens,and,in- i
is well enough to know what is said
Who see the ruination,
said. Susan said, “ If you enter this /¡•Toil, savs: “ Charity constrains deed, for any manifestation of self- !
Distress and desolation,
on common topics on the other side 1
room it will be over my dead body," us to put a d Her it interpretation ishness on the part of mankind.
The
open violation
of the continent. Concerning tho I
and so the infuriated man ceased bis upon tlx* great novelist s action, i There i.s another question about 1
Of moral obligation,
great scandal of the ilav we find in 1
demands and withdrew. Mrs. Tilton W e cannot look upon ii as a wanton which much has been spoken and
Tlie wretched habitation
the New Y ork dispatches of July j
W ithout accomodation
remained with Susan throughout the freak of a nature made giddy with written, and a great
deal
more 1 Nitli to the St. Louis Duibj (ifohr the
<
)r any regulation
night, and in the excitement of the 1 the fumes of flattery and seeking ' thought— namely, “ Is the literarv I
following:
For common sust< nation;
1
.
*
’
f
|
hour, with sobs and tears, she told the communion of a more congenial I character suited to the domestic j
A scene of deprivation
all to .Miss Anthony. The whole , soul.” The writer advances his b e - : sphere?" Historv is tilled with so ! As the time approaches for the ex­
Uiicqnaleil in creation;
story of her own faithlessness, Mr. 1 lief that Dickens “ was not a perfect­ many ruins of the hearths and homes pected denouncement in the Boech-
The frequent desecration
Of Sabbath oidination;
Beecher’s course, her deception and ly sane m an;” that his temper be-j of literary men that prudent fathers ! er-Tilton scandal, public interest in­
creases.
It
is
emphatically
the
ab­
The
crime and depredation
her anguish, fell upon the ears of came soured and 1 1 is brain allected would do well to give their daugh- I
Defying legislation;
sorbing
theme
of
the
hour
among
all
Susan B . Authoiiy, and were spoken bvtw o causes: “ lie was a Haunted ters to men who, like Jack Cade,
That awful profanation
classes. Evervbodv asks everybody
by the lips of Mrs. Tilton.
could
neither
read
nor
w
rite,
and
<ff common conversation;
Man and his spectre was the spirit of
else,on meeting, “ A ny new develop­
Beecher’s detailed statement is net Purest.” A fter alluding to the held scholarship to be an abomina­
The mental aberration,
ments about Beecher or Tilton?”
The dire infatuation,
yet ready to be laid before the coin- ; physical ailments which distressed tion and a sin. It is not possible
Nothing of local occuionee lias crea­
With every sad degradation,
lnittce.
Dickens, this critic argues that the that literature is a mistress so joal-
To maniac desperation.
ted so much excitement during the
New Y o :: k , July 2S. ~ NothingiL f- “ Uncongenial trails that, Dickens ousthat she will not respect the bond
Yo who, with consternation,
year.
inite was made known this morning fancied lie ilincovcred in Mrs. D ick- of th(‘ altar? Does not the dream­
Behold this devastation,
It is not probable the investiga­
And utter condemnation
concerning the Beecher scandal. It 1 11s charact« r were but th ; rctlectiou ing, fanciful writer fashion an ideal
ting committee will report before the ;
< >f all inebriation,
is understood that Moulton and T il­ of iiis own clouded vision, and in mistress so ethereal and perfect,such
end of the coming week. Perhaps j
Why sanction it s duration,
ton w ire in consultation yesterday casting In r aside he was unconeious- “ a phantom of delight," as "Words-: not then.
Or show disapprobation
worth says, that the most admirable !
and Sunday, Moulton acting under : ly ri jn ating the part of /> •rhl <
Of any combination
Concerning the separation of T il -1
the advice of General Butler. "When / i «'/ 7 ' i hi who in (Hitting off the love wife’ in the world would become a
For its extermination?
ton and his wife, all sorts of stories |
We
deem a, declaration.
Moulton is invited by the committee that A ngts bore him. was blind and disappointment? "Why do wo see
are afloat. T ilton ’s friends refused
That oft'enino temptation,
marriages like those of Gotlio, and
it is In lievcuhe will testify. T ilton, know not what he did."
to believe she had either testified 1
By any palliation
however thinks nly a court of law I T he reserve with which Mr. F o s­ Scott, and Johnson, and Burns-
<M this ammunition,
against her husband, or had left ;
can «•<>n. 1 tel him to speak. Friends ter treats the domestic relations of convenient enough in board and
The indysure fonudatidn,
home until they had indisputable 1
of Tilton say ’i'¡ rn express. 1 the j Dickens leaves the Held open to lodging, but imperfect and unsatis­
And under this persuasion
evidence of tlie fact. Tilton was I
Hold no communication
opinion t ha t tin evidence adduced every variety of speculation. M e factory? May it not be that mar - 1
overwhelmed by her conduct, and
W ith noxious emanation,
ring.'
in
these
cases
came
from
ini-
1
«hiring tin inv«' - gat ion will not con- presume that the whole question
is.tild not believe it possible until he
«if brewers’ fermentation.
not
\ i<
it loi : Cer­
rol i till lit e
m
w ill pass into literary history’ an a •u:se
Nor any vein libation
had learned of-it, as is said,from her
,
1 ‘
* •! . io 1 uecuine
tile t « » ii: ol tainly,so far as temperament and ap­ own lips. Stiil lie was calm and ut-
Producing stimulation.
go, ’ these O
great men were
miti, c, it is said have di id- I that i a.lies - treatises and diseiis.'ious.liKe X preciation O
T „ this determination
tin d no rebuke,made no complaint., ’
We call consideration.
in
% t<
.!:c I’.iau ;n tie. Iron Mask,the insan­ ii i il 1 V mated as Dickens. The di:F- but accepted her act as an irrevoca­
And
without hesitation
(it
•lice
is
wli
it
they
accept
as
a
that
t : ! y nubi T.it.v
stab • . aits have ity of Burke, the authorship Junius,
ble and eternal divorce. Nobodvj
Invite
co-operation,
1 .n
Mr» ngtlii i:, i bv si in. thing the
reasons
for
the separa­ In ml tha t can exist •otween two of seems to understand why she’’should 1
Not doubting invitation
tion 1 ! Byron (;■ n ];i wife, the ( ni s i n atm«?s, till y legally regard- have fallen away from and forsaken 1
W ill raise your estimation,
Aiul by continuation
true relation betw tin Swift and ed as ¿i i !luty, and obeved to the her husband, when all his trouble of
t 1 Addison's peace of mind ai- in il.
k w. f c . B eech -
Afford you consolation;
this whole unhappy affair was about i
For iu participvtiou
Y bun lenso!: in' m
ii r hi-; marriage with a count»•.<s,and
her, and in this hour, too, of e x - !
With this association
day. niel oh go ¡ pie :-.miiy v. i í 1 1 tlie cause of Shake.q»eare’s le:iving load. That man and woman are to
treiaestneed. Many persons now:
You may, l»y meditation,
some i-Ir.i: !i in ni ! * v a the do. >r nis w ife his second best bed. XVe be ] dt led who a re one ii 1 this un ion,
Insure the preservation
say it is clear she must have loved
step in tl.i i-vi
!f 3 Iou iuu
a whole literature of the ealam- an (1 Ìli NI ’ IU;se lie’¿iris lovi ’ and c<•infi­ Beecher from the first better than
Of a future generation
l »l’.-> I. .Ili o» t I .
d..-nec
have
no
ll
>me.
lls
From all contamination;
B
ut
let
1- of an*hors, going back to the
her liusband, for between them, she
And may each indication
w l ioh ’ e will ree.
i lay,
on ; m i -< : S . rates and Jol». Dickens on- on cc rest a now JlllihlSOl >hy c 1 reli-
preferred to -land by the clergyman, j
Of such regeneration
< r's t ' ine i:v wil
on* witliou 1 \ aiids a new eluiptcr to it. new and Ml <ui upon 1 lilis :sentimeliit of nal ural
come what might. They d e c la re 1
Be the theme of exultation’
1I1 c ’ llv inter« sting to us because <>t pity, as some of oar foolish people she must be crazy, or worse; that !
Till its final consummation.
i,is wonderful jicrsonality. Authors do, and admit that marriage is n< i- they remember no instance of w o -!
o u ; (' wiilnu
M A »! • c o L.un
o 11 ' ! i -' 1 o.
C
of renown have left their wiv< ■ with­ ilier a .sacrament nor an ordinance ,
SAD, BY THPSEA WAVES.
man s conduct more treacherous, lla- >
out exciting much interest in the of God's Scripture, nor i n n a bond gitious, infamous, since, although !
Mr s.
Skinner olx-rvcd : M is.-,
wurld. Bulw er is a famous exam -j before the law, like a mortgage or a knowing her husband to be right, !
!’ ;•« si* * * nt, i 'low wimmen. and male
Did you ever sit by tlio sad sear
jilc.especially as Lady Bulw er wrote bail piece - let us once concede that and Beecher wrong, she defends tlie *
tr:. u gi nerallv l am here to-day
while UK' object of v’our con-
novels about her liusband. satiriz-; because Byron tired of his wife's man who has wronged her, against) waves
» . , .r ..
for tin purpose of discussing wo-
- .......... ..... 1 .
,
. . .
centrated affections was making you
a g him. lint Bulw er held no such mathematics and primness and pre­ 1 lier
spouse.who lias been laboring to
t ¿ail’s rights, re-cus iug li< r wr >ngs,
personal inllueneC over tlie people ferred G uiocioii; that because I >ii*k- protect her in every possible wav. envy it by giving herself into its free
and cus>iug ;he men, i believe sex-
as to make his domestic experience a ens found his Catherine “ aimiable Those acquainted with Mrs. Tilton and rude embrace? The billow comes
• w< re er ate l perfectly equal, with
matter of common interest. Nor did and com plying," but stupid and un- 1 assert that she has always been a r e - ! crashing in, and roars in its own an-
the wi.nu n a little more «-qual than
lie, like Dickens, call upon mankind genial, therefore they sould dismiss 1
the lat n. I also believe that the
ligious devotee; that her faith in ! grv way wliou the winds whip it into
to judge between him and his wife, ! thorn— and we have chaos and license ami admiration of Beecher ns her i f
1
,
, . .
w orld would to-day be happier had
.
i n i
, . j 10am,
and anon it sobs and sighs
and cruelly stamp upon her in his 1 where we should have virtue and „ pastoi
were unbounded; equal in -1 • ,
->11111
11
. .
man m ver existed. As a failure,
, »
..
1 ,
, just as it did that natal mom of the
will. These are reasons which make ■ protection and love. If we pity the I deed
to
worship.
A\
hen
she
believed
'
,
,
,,
c
.
,
.
man is a success, and 1 ’ bless niv
,
1 1 1 ,
wol’hl, when the first sea broke upon
the case of Dickens peculiarly inter­ men of genius who wake up from .1,»
that either Beecher or her husband
r
stars that niv mother v.ns a womtin.
a virgin beach and tho waves began
married life to lind themselves w e d -,
esting
to
11s
as
a
social
question,
and
must be ruined, Iter pious fervor tri­
(Applause.) 1 not on lv tuaintain
hat song which they are still sing-
it would be an immense relief to be ded, not mated -let 11s pity still
umphed, uml she sided with the man __
-p *
. . A.
these principles, but ( maintain a
ng. h
more the women who arc under this
i i ,
i i ,
t
T no-
a t wliat are. they
singing?
able
to
accept
as
an
excuse
that
g
iv­
who had sought her dishonor. It fo , ... ,
J
o fe­
.sllifHess li Usi nmd in1 side:
l l ,
, ,,
,
. L harles Dtcl kens wanted to know,and
en by our critic namely, that D ick­ cruel fate. Marriage is only a part seems highly
probable
that
some
say man waS tI’l’eatc ! fust
made a prize conundrum to that ef­
of the life of a man like Byron or
ens was insane.
memberor members of the Plym outh
’»I < -«■ he w¡;is. A in’t first ex] i-ri-
The plea of insanity, like the fa­ D ickens— but to the true wife m ar-' Churi’h must have made ail earnest fect, but no one has claimed tile
mei i t . alway »S i : t; 1 1 ire i'.J If I wms a
money.
mous plea of an «///VjWnich tho elder riage encloses her like a liorisou, i appeal to Mrs. Tilton
to
shield
In ti ing man i i would bet
1 they
You think of a ll this while you sit
XYi Her regarded as an unfailing le­ w ith nothing more beyond. Let us 1 Beeelu r, t« llilig her it was in her
are. The 0 111 V decent thin
about
gal expedient, is nearly always a d - ; once pardon to insanity, or unhappi­ power to save him; that weighed on tlie bluff waiting to see Melissa
him was a rib,and that wi nt to make
vanced in cases like this. When a ness, or uneongeniality of tempera­ down by this responsibility she took bathe. She has disappeared in a
something bet ter. (Ajquail a . ) And
man of genius inspires the love be­ ment an ai t as wanton ami publicly tlie step that has s«*parated her from bath-house and vou are watching for
then they throw into our face about
her. Some ono comes out, and vou
stowed upon Dickens by millions it avowed as Dickens dismissal of his her husband. Those
1 ating an apple. I ll bet ? •"> that
claim ing to
,...11 „ ,»• ,
,,
. . ; laugh quietly to yourself,and thank
is hard to form another opinion. XYe wife, and society no longer gives 1.»
he well ml \is«'d say Mrs. I ilton s do-
,
. ,
..... .
Adam boosted Kve u;> the tree, and
your stars that fate liasn t linked you
protection, and we
have heard of ¿1 critic who is in the woman any
niiil
will
have
little
weight
in
the
only gave her the core.
\n l what
habit of avowing with amusing grav­ drift into Mahometan ways,in which committee's decision; that Tilton’s . for life to such a scraggy bunch o f
dill ll
found out?
Will’ll ll e wa
woman becomes the slave and the
i bones, as you facetiously call her.
True to his maseiiiiiii’ instincts, he ity the* general proposition that all
statement will make startling dis­
sneaked behind Kve s (»¡i-ciau I k ik I, men are insane, more ov less; that caprice of man, and no longer the closures, lortitied by facts, includ­ ¡ She is arrayed in a red and blue llan-
nelsuit, and has an old straw lint
and said: “ Twasn t me; "twas her;" genius and crime and virtue are only blessing of a virtuous home and the
ing all tlie dreadful things revealed
and woman had to father everything so many forms of insanity, i- Me crown and felicity of the most per-
jammed on her head and tied under
to him years ago by Henry ( ’. Bow ­
mean', and mother it, too. What
|
feet
form
of
civilization.
the
chin. In her form the angle pre­
en, tlie truth of which has hocn con­
we want is the ballot, and the 1 »al- startled many readers when he at­
paid« rates,
ami you get off little
And our criticism upon Dickens
lot wi 'ri’ bound to have, if we have tributed the extravagance and anger
firmed long before a whisper of the
to let dow n our back hair and swim of Burke in lus latter duvs, and es­ still rests, that having made him- ■ lilto n trouble was heal’d. Stories , witticisms to yourself and allude to
in a .-« a of sanguinary gore. (Sensa­ pecially concerning the French rev­ ; si ll a teacher of morals and domes-
her as an animated goomctrical
| disparaging to Beecher’s morals
tion.)
,
tie
virtue;
having
done
more
than
proposition. Just then you got a
olution, to insanity occasioned bv
j some of them absolut civ shocking —
. . .
.
,
,,
iview of her face, and, great hoavens!
domestic m isfortune. In fact, we any man of his time to inculcate ...
¡ wcie privately circulated here; and ' .. . , r
r„, . . . .
,, ,.
PROPOSED LEGISLATION.
..
v
, ,
. .
t tt is Melissa. That is, it all th a ts
might pursue tins pica so far, and in­ dutv and love to every man and
liiese, if report mnv be trusted, are ,
fl
,
life’s
ri-
,
.
.• *
left ofiier; the balance is hanging up
to the lives of so many men of gen­ j woman, to show that
to be substantiated. A pp earan ces!____ _
,
, JV ,
In the seventeenth century, a law
, on pegs and nails in the bath-house.
ius, not only in letters, but in states­ | pest and most honorable relation is
i indicate that now nothing will be,or
was in force in England that all wo­
Those are moments of great dc-
manship, war art , mechanics, that ( in marriage, to recognize as sacred
: can be. kept back: that other repu-
men, of whatever age, rank, or p ro ­
J ,
. pression of spirits. How inauy gold-
it would lose its effect. Bacon’s j beyond all others the bond of the
tations than Beecher s 1:111st be ru-
,
, ,.
.
. * ,
fession, or degree, whether virgins,
,
. ,
..
; eii bowls ol 1 input ness have been bro-
acceptance of
bribes,
Dry den's altar, he deliberately dishonored his I.
1 mod; that the forthcoming ilisolos-
wives or widows,that should impose,
i ken, liow many dreams of youthful
change of religion, Sw ift's behavior 1 own gospels by an act of selfishness
I tires will render this one of the mon- ;
seduce, and betray into matrimony
love destroyed by the apparition of
to Stella and Vanessa, Johnson’s odd and impulse. The vvoild asked whv
any of his M ajesty’s male subjects
! strolls scandals of the country and
the dear one in a bathing suit! It
he diil iliis, why lie publicly violated
l y scents, piiints, cosmetics, wadies, customs and beliefs about ghost sand
, age. Beecher is believed to be
can’t be ilonc^ no woman can look
Whigs, a n l Scotchm en; Bo scau's every one of the principles which he
greatly «list 111 bed, matters have tn-
artificial ti eh, false
hair, Spanish
graceful ¡* under such ^distressing
treatment of his children, Voltaire's had preached for twenty-live years
| k< 11 an 1 nt in ly dit’i'erent turn from
wool, iron slays, hoops, high-heeled
quarrel with 1 red« lick , Xiirabcau's with so much gvnius an I humor and what h< had expected when hi* asked circumstances. B ut Melissa looks
shoes, <>r b o lsti. od hips.should incur
| better then than she does after sho
book oil his emb. ssy to Bolin, I' red- ! passion, ho moving the In arts of
for the investigation.
the penalty of law,
and
teat the
j has gone down into tho sea. The
crick the Great's invasion of Silesia, his race that Ins name had become
marriage should stand null and void.
Mas. T ilton says ; he has seen too , breakers h ith e r on the nose, take
It is said that Mr. Gladstone, to in­ Napoleon's invasion of Bussia, Deter | almost an idol iu the temple of do-
crease Ills popularity, was about, to the Great s daily life and conversa­ mestic love. O r.if we accept the c\- I many of Susan B. Anthony’s class ! down her back hair and stand her
have this law revived, but found, on tion, Shelley's baseness toward his ’ case as regarding him, who shall he for her own happines.Tilton’s down- j occasionally on ftor head; and when
investigation, that if lie did, his fe­ first wife, Byron’s behavior on twen­ ; blamed for dismissing from his home fall dates (ami that of his wife, we | ¡it last she comes out she looks as if
male country-women would make his
ty occasions during his career, in tho evening of hordavs the wile i fear.) from the time he threw him- sho had happened to be in tho way
removal an absolute prerequisite lor
W alter of his youth and fame,and the 1110th- j self into the arms of t l ca* pseud«»! when the Oar of Juggernaut wa»
their marriage; and yet women a;c Moore's earlier poems,
i rolling over people.
u. mess ambitious . wiuci: *.• ol lnuLv 1 ini.ireii? It s..o \v:.s re
caiiCu .Jv WCUi.Ci 7 *.
'*
•