Weekly Georgia telegraph. (Macon [Ga.]) 1858-1869, April 16, 1869, Image 6
a . • Vfc The Greor^ia "Weekly Telegraph. i &JK* THE TELEGRAPH. MACON, FRIDAY, APRIL JC, 186D. A Little Knelt left. Georgia is going to escape a third reconstruc- tkm this session. That is the first piece of good poiMieal uck which has hapened to ns for ten years. No elections—no Legislatives—no fuss. qb this summer—nothing to disturb the tran quility of the State—the growth of com and cotton, and the progress of agriculture general ly. . It is a piece of good fortune which wo hardly dared to hope for, and wo congratulate Ota people upon it Evidently somo strong in- finances have been at work in the Republican party to foil the settled purpose of reconstruct ing and punishing Georgia, the existence of which was clearly manifest so late as a month ngo. Wo doubt not that Gen. Grant has sedu lously discouraged it, and we nre not disposed to undervalue .the efforts of Nelson Tift, Gen. Young, and such of tho Georgia Republicans who threw themselves into tho breech to pre vent another disorganization of tho State. Tift *nd Young have displayed immense industry pertinacity—hayo exhausted every recourse to avert the threatened catastrophe. The peo ple of Georgia owo them much. Amly Johnson in Xasliville. 'Tho Nashville papers devote several columns to an account of ex-President Johnson’s recep tion in that city last Thursday. All along the road from Chattanooga tho people thronged to meet him. At Murfreesboro a Nashville com mittee in fivo cars met him, one of which con tained a committee of colored men. In Nash ville he was received with great pomp by all the •ocioties and people. Jndgo Gant delivered a welcoming address, and Mr. Johnson responded substantially as at Knoxville. The Savannah, Griffin and North Alabama Railroad.—The Griffin Middle Georgian of the Tttli instant learns that the early completion of this road is now quite probablo. The recent choice of Mr. A J. "White as President, and his acceptance of the position, coupled with tho fact of his being backed up by a very efficient and thorough-going board of directors, is a mat- tor which will inspire every friend of tho enter prise with fall confidence in its success. The same paper further lcaras that the city authorities of Griffin will at an early day sub mit the question of an additional subscrip tion of twenty-five thousand dollars to this road, to the voters of the city. Tho Middle Georgian declares itself qualifiedly for subscription, but promises to have more to say on the subject .hereafter. The Middle Georgian requests persons having stock in this road to an advertisement of the Treasurer, who will be in Griffin on the 11th and Kith, for tho purpose of issuing new stock for -old. Precociocs Knavery.—A dispatch from Uti ca says that four boys, the eldest only seven teen, have been arrested in that city for the robbery of freight on the Central Railroad. They have been in the habit for a year or more of -concealing themselves on the trains, and .-/ihen"breaking into the cars while they were in .-DttA’on, robbing them of valuable goods. It is thought that since they first commenced, they < have-plundered the trains of upward of ten thousand'dfiilara’ worth of goods, a large por tion of whfjh they subsequently destroyed. They all plead guilty, and implicated a man named William" Terry as tho instigator of the robbery. Rhode Island State Election.—The election for State officers and members of the Legisla ture of -Rhode Island took place on Wednesday X last. ‘ITSra -vote was a light one. The Repub- V?lcan ticket, headed by Seth Paddleford, candi date for Governor, was elected by almost 3,000 ^majority. Returns from all but four towns give Paddleford G858, and" Pierce, Democrat, 3000. The Senate will probably comprise 27 Republi cans and six Democrats, and the House sixty- one Republicans and eleven Democrats. Gin House Burned.—On Sunday night last, a -gin house was burned on the place occupied by Nathan Toomor (freedman), belonging to Wil- Tiam M. Haslen. It contained nine bales of cot ton and involved a loss of about two thonsand i dollars. There was no insurance on the prop- ■ erty. The fire is supposed to havo been com municated by on incendiary. Tho gin house -was located about four miles from Marshal villa. Heavy Robbery.—St. John’s Safety Fund Building, corner Twelfth and Chestnut streets, Philadelphia, was robbed on Friday last. The watchman left' at C a. m., and returned at 5 r. ii., when he found the safe broken open and the contents, from §800,000 to §1,000,000, carried - off. Of stolen funds, over §000,000 consisted valuable funds, greenbacks, etc. Another Attempt .to Assassinate the Vice roy op Egypt.—Dispatches from Alexandria say : another attempt to assassinate tho Viceroy of ‘ Egypt has been discovered and frustrated. A loaded bomb was found under his choir at too theatre, and was withdrawn before it could ex plode. A largo number of suspected parties have been arrested. , The- Story op Ned Foroeron.—"Wo have not published this story for ten years, and it is time to printrit again. To some it will be new, and to all welcome. See first page in to-day’s im pression of tho Dairy Telegraph. Tee Georgia Bill.—Somebody prints in the National Intelligencer of the 3d, a powerful ex pose of the Butler bill. It is probably from the pen of Mr. Tift,—but tho Butler bill is dead. West Georgia Gazette.—Our friend, B. T. Costellaw, editor and proprietor of the West • Georgia Gazette, is in town on business connect- V cd with his journal, the recognized exponent of •truth and justice in Talbot and adjoining coun ties. ___ Eatonton Press and Messenger.—W. M. Jef. fOrson, Esq., of tho Press and Messenger in onr • good old county of Putnan, is in town soliciting patronage for his journal, which we hope he will obtain abundantly. A Talkino Baby.—A Dr. J. H. Sudduth, of St. Charles, Minnesota, writes to the editor of the St. Charles Herald, about a baby who talks at three months old—accosts his mother from the cradle and say “mama, take baby np,” or “ba- • by wants dinner," as plainly ns a child five.or six years old. 'Gold in Coweta County.—The People’s De- • fender, of Newnan, has in its possession a piece of ore taken from a mine three and a half miles from that place, which, at tho lowest esti- - mate, will yield .one thousand dwts. to the ton. /Iris said an effort will be made in the House, whenever the Reconstruction Committee report - on either the Georgia, Virginia or Texas cases, to postpone further action on all of them until the December session, as was done in the case of Mississippi. A motion to this effect; it is “ The Imperialist” anti what it Jfeansl “ The Imperialist” has appeared—we have not seen it—but the New York Commercial Bul letin 1las, and discourses upon its advent at length. Says the Bulletin j The Imperialist, a copy of which is before ns, presents tho appearance of something more than an April joke. It is a handsome sixteen page paper, published evidently without regard to cost, and containing, among others, the adver tisements of several of the leading publishing and banking houses, and financial institutions of the city. We cannot, of course, predict its suc cess, but whether it is sustained or not will de termine tho sentiments of tho people. Judging from its appearance, the publishers are either regardless of expense or else aro assured of a lib eral support from tho public. And now tee ask, what does aU this mean?— Can it be that the people of the United States, sick of official corruption and seeing no hope.of reforming the defects and abuses that have crept into our system of government, are willing to accept with apathetic indifference any change that will be forced on them by nmbitions poli ticians. Possibly this is true ; if so, we have ourselves to thank. Legislative corruption would not have existed if corrupt legislators had not been placed in office and kept there ; and official dishonesty would havo been un known if tho American pnblic had vigilantly watched and held to strict accountability those who wore entrusted with resjionsibility in the administration of onr civil service. Wo do not believe, however, that tho affairs of the country aro in a condition too bad to bo remedied: or, that an imperialism offers the on ly refuge from the fraud and corruption that is eating out the very heart of republican institu tions. If the people will once rouso themselves, and, realizing the importance of a reform in the administration of our Government, weed out the irresponsible and dishonest officials and elect honest and honorable men in their stead, we need have no fear for the perpetuity of the Gov ernment, and the cry of ‘imperialism for Ame rica,” will find no echo in the hearts of the people. “The Imperialist ” comes out very squarely, and does not mince matters. “ For the first time in the history of the United Stales," says that paper, “ an American journal dares to pro claim, as false and pernicious, in tlitir influence, the democratic dogmas of popular sovereignty and equality, and to demand that on the ruins of this unfortunate Republic, shall be reared the firm and substantial structure of an Empire !" “ And now we ask,” says the Commercial Bul letin, “what does all this mean?" Well, without laying claim to any particular astuteness, we think we can tell tho Bulletin what it means. It means simply a reactionary state of the pnblic mind, growing out of the abuses and prostitu tion of Republicanism and popular sovereignty, so-called. It seems to be the ordination of Providence that whatever is most valuable in its legitimate use and application, shall be most deadly and destructive in its abuse and maladministration. No theory of government certainly can be sound er, fairer and better, in itself considered, than that of a constitutional republic. Here the will of the majority is the power, subject inexorably to fhose great overruling principles of private and public justice recognized, ordained and established in the fundamental law J Now, just so long ils the Constitution of such a Government interposes an insurmountable barrier to the injustice and oppression of ma jorities everything is safe and equitable. The personal and political rights of every man and every minority, however unpopular, are amply shieldedby the fundamental law. The majority, as is their due, control and administer the gov ernment according to their tastes and opinions in all subordinate matters, while the minority is safe in every essential right of person and prop-' erty under the shelter of a fundamental law which cannot be invaded. Thus, just so long as the Constitution is maintained, a Republican Government is bound to be the most equitable, liberal and secure form of government known among men. Even if the ballot becomes to some extent ignorant and corrupt, no irreparable mischief is done, so long as the Constitution, like a wall of fire, guards and secures the grand and inalienable rights of-the freeman. The Government might be managed unwisely, corruptly and wastefully, but just so long as it should be restrained with in its appropriate sphere by the limitation of the Constitution, its citizens would be secure, and it would be subserving all the essential ob jects of a free government. This is the reason why all intelligent Ameri can politicians insist so much upon the Consti tution. It is, as will be seen, the whole story of liberty, security and tranquility in a nutshell. It is the Alpha and Omega—the beginning and the ending of everything of any value in the Grand Republic of tt-s United States of Amer ica. Now, in order to reduce this government to the most wretched imposture under tho sun, you have to do but two things: The first of these is to destroy the authority of the constitution. No man is then safe unless he is in the biggest crowd. To be in a minority is to be stripped of all defence and protection; and we see that, to a considerable extent, this is the case with all men in the minority at this time. Nor, in fact, is tho majority safe from itself—for it is con trolled by no law except its own caprice. No other protection is then left to anybody, except wbat may be found in the force of habit, tradi tion, popular good nature and forbearance. The usages of freedom often survive for a time the legal muniments which protect and enforce; them. . The second thing to be done in order to facil itate and complete the work of ruin, is to cor rupt and debase the ballot. By these two pro cesses you strip freedom of all her defences and arm despotism for tho onslaught. The rapidity and fatality of tho progress of mischief, misery and ruin bejeome then questions only of time and the chapter of accidents. The work of degeneration is sore. The road you have entered upon can lead only to a certain catastro phe. No reader need be told that the American people have entered upon and ore industriously pushing forward on this fatal highway. Every body knows it, although very few see the dan ger. Everybody knows that the Constitution has been set aside and tho suffrage debased. But the mass of the people aro wholly indifferent to the Constitution, and ridicule those who think anything about it as a set of old fogies who are behind tho times. They neither know nor care for any Constitution. Their ideas of Govern ment go no farther than the direct motive and aggressive power—the ballot—and they shut their eyes to tho patent fact that in all systems of government, from tho simplest in mechanism and physics up to the grand system of moral government ordained by God himself, restraints and counterbalances are os essential as motive power. The simplest machine constructed alone upon the naked principle of propulsion would work its own rrnin in a moment, and it must bo unreasonable to look for better results from tho American system when remitted solely to the mere prophlsivo power of the ballot. Now, without the smallest stretch of the im agination, wo can conceive that the “imperial sts” in America see tho manifest direction of public affairs, and nre more than willing to fore stall a plunge into the abyss pf popular tyranny' (which iVnatirc/ty) by substituting the Empire.' The rule of one man is better than ihob law. Moreover, to say nothing more about their own time, we havo seen trial by jury in our frontier States, whistled down in contempt, and lynch law established, owing to the corruption of juries. Contrast the popular estimation of the Congress of the United States at the present time with what it was but a generation ago! Then it inspired a universal and profound rev erence—now it is viewed only with apprehension and disgust? Abuse unfortunately misdirects popular oppro brium to the thing abused and perverted. The Radicals debase suffrage as they tell us to edu cate and elevate the negro. The result is, and must be, to inspire a contempt for the suffrage and to break the lever by which they propose to elevate the negro. The human mind cannot respect that which is not respectable either in its operation or results. Now, tho whole of this talk about an Empe ror, whether it amount to more or less, is the offspring of popular disgust and re-action. It is a natural result of the Radical labors to pros titute and pervert the government, which have inspired a growing conviction among the people that it is on the high road to ruin, and is neith er safe nor worthy the confidence and respect it once inspired. The prediction of anarchy or imperalism as the inevitable result of existing causes is heard on all sides and everywhere; and, in truth, it seems to us there is but one es cape from it: and that lies in retracing onr steps and a return to Constitutional Republi canism. A Yankee Spinster Slashing Hound Down South. HEE EXPERIENCES IN FLORIDA. The Springfield (Mass.) Republican prints a long letter from a Northern woman in Florida, who writes from St. Augustine, March 13: V “We left New York on the 20 th of January, a party of three spinsters. I hope Madge and Louise won’t bo angry at my frankness; I quite readily admit that I am tho senior, and conse quently most hopeless spinster. * * * As wo came up tho river on the Hattie, we made the acquaintance of Mr. B , of Brooklyn, a most agreeable gentleman, who introduced himself in the usual and always acceptable way in these Southern wilds, through the medium of a late New York paper. These traveling ac quaintances ripen rapidly into something nea * akin to friendship. Mr. B was very po lite and kind in coming frequently to call upon ns, while we were living on the Hattie at the dock at Enterprise; and often expressed his re gret at onr inability to obtain rooms at the hotel. The evening that we were to start on our return trip he astonished me with the following propo sition : ‘ ‘I really want you to stay here. I know you’ll like it. There is one room at the house for your friends, and if you won’t mind trunks, and guns, and boots, and fishing-rods, I’ll take a bed in tho parlor, and yon can sleep in my room; in a day or two some one will be going away, and you can get good quarters. " Now think about it. I really mean it, and I want you to come.” “Of course, I refused, but my first ‘No’ wasn’t accepted, and I did think about it. I was al most ill, excessively fatigued, for six nights out of seven I had been on the boat. It was selfish, I knew; but ‘Yes! I would go!’ So our bag gage was taken off, and at last we went up to the Brock House. Well for me that we did so, for I was unable to go down stairs for three days. I passed the nights in the apartment of my good angel, for such I shall always consider him, fitted betimes in the morning to my friend’s room and back again at nightfall to my angelic dormitory. Heretofore I have always hated that detestable little song, T want to be an an gel,’ but now I shall love it, for instead of ‘tho crown upon the forehead, the harp within the hand,’ I shall see a beaming, kindly face, with a soft felt (a little rowdy, just delightfully rowdy), upon tho forehead, and a fishing-rod within the hand. It may be difficult for yon, who haven’t seen him, to imagine an angel in rough gray clothes, and high boots; but for me all I can say is, that if there are a great many like him in Heaven I hope I shall go there. “While I was lying one day in my friend’s room, with the door ajar for better ventillation, I heard a tap, tap, tapping up the stair and across the hall; a pair of soft eyes peeped in at me, and straight up to the bedside walked a lit tle deer. He gazed at me for a while, put his nose in my hand and then trotted around the room on a tour of inspection. Not finding any thing to eat, he departed abruptly in great dis gust, not even having the civility to make me a farewell bow. Apropos, I suppose you would like to know on what we support exhausted na ture in Florida. We havo plenty of venison, of course, shad, trout, and on the seaboard, oys ters, crabs, turkies and fresh fish of all kinds ; young, crisp lettuce, small onions, com bread and sweet potatoes ad libitum. In ordinary sea sons we should have fruit, green peas, tomatoes, and all summer vegetables, hut the cold snap at Christmas made sad havoc in this State. Every where, except in the interior, the vegetables were killed and the fruit blighted. * * * “ At Picolata we sat for three hours in a coach without any horses, and it was there I wanted a man—to swear! 1 went to the stable at last nnd walked up to tho negro driver. The horses were brought out and taken back again, brought out and taken back again the second time. At last wo smelt a rat—we were rather stupid in not smelling him sooner. ‘How much,’ I said to the driver, ‘can you make by this ;e?’ ‘Fifteen dollars.’ ‘ Well, we represent twelve with our extra baggage.’ 4 Yes, ma’am.’ ‘ Pdt in the horses and be quick about it—we will pay tho other three dollars.’ At last we were off. The day was balmy, delicious—the 15th of February. We lode almost the entire distance to Augustine, eighteen miles, bareheaded. On our arrival here, we obtained, after some little delay, comfortable qunrters at the Florida House, kept by Mr. Bradley, of New Haven, a most obliging but ninch enduring landlord.— Night after night he cheerfully gives up his own room and takes a ‘shake-down’ on the floor, but yet he’s constantly scolding because he cannot mako bricks without straw. Unfortunately there’s only one hotel in Augustine, and not more than half tho peoplo who come hero can b6 taken in and done for; bnt they will come.— Mr. Bradley makes them beds in the parior, hall and office, does his best to accommodate them, and they ungratefully scold, scold, scold, be cause his best is not better.” thought, could be carried. Contents j apprehensions, the prejudices and disgusts of the Blackwood for M^bch is at hand. —Historical Sketches of the Reign of George peoplo aro aroused and excited by abuses, even I—Doubles & Qnit's. New Zealand and its against the best of things. Religion itself, has Gold Fields. The Northmen, Heathan and j at times, been made odious by the cruelties and Ohnstian. A Whist Remimsoenee. Stage Mo- j tyranny of its representatives. Republicanism, rality and the Ballet The Arts in the House- j for many years, rtunk in the nostrilR of the moat hold, or Decorative Art Applied to Domestic J enlightened advocates of human freedom, from ^•es. The Leonard Scott Reprint the atrocities of the French Revolution. In our lion. A. II. Stephens— Ills Health and Views on Public Affairs. A travelling correspondent of the Augusta Chronicle and Sentinel called upon Mr. Stephens at Liberty Hall, on tho 2d instant, and says: I found Mr. S. still unable to stand or walk, nnd only able to move from the fire-place to the bod, from chair to chair, without any assistance, except somo one to arrange them. For several months previous to the accident which prostrat ed him, he was so weak as scarcely to be able to raise himself when down. Ho now thinks there is not sufficient vitality.in the organ nffected to reenpernte. and has little hope of ever being able to walk again. The burden of his anxiety is the completion of the second volume of his history of the war between tho States. ' The material for the work is all ready, nnd nothing lacking but physical strength to put it together. I learn that fifty-seven thousand copies of this work have already been sold, through the agents of the publishers. Mr. Stephens deplores the demoralization which prevails, and thinks all good people should unite in suppressing the mobocracy and insub ordination which threatens the usurpation of civil government and the rain of the country. He has confidence in the virtue, intelligence and patriotism of the peoplo, and hopes they will not be blinded to their great interest, in a wise, just and strict maintenance of law and order. On taking my leave tho next morning of Mr. Stephens, ho cordially invited me to come and spend two or three days with him, and al ways to stop with him when on business engage ments in tho town. He said his house had two names, “Liberty Hall” and the “Wayside Home,” and in every respect I think it answers to the appellations. I am loath to believe that the “ great star of the South” should cease to shine in his civil heavens, and the people be de prived of the counsels of one of their wisest and purest statesmen ; huthope that the more genial seasons may revive nnd restore, and wo shall soon meet little Allick again, upon the arena of activelife-i l a..*!., A French Sjory.—The other day X. called on Madame Q. “ Madame, can I see your husband?"’ •, “No, sir; lie is out tit present. He went out to kny a cigar.” ■ \ "■ ' • a 1 ; . .,-‘7 .. “ Did he say when he would return, rnadame?” “No.” ...... , “Has he been gone long ?" rUqfiU « “More than twenty years.” ; “Ah, I see,” said X., “he wanted to get a good one."' A GEORGIA STORY. ] BY THE HON. J. B. LAMAR. CHAPTER I. At the entrance to one of those gorges, or gaps, in the great Apalachian chain of moun tains, in their passage across the northern por tion of Georgia, a blacksmith had erected his forge in the early settlement of that region by the Anglo-American race, and drove a thrifty trade in the way of facing axes and pointing ploughs for the settlers, and shoeing horses for wayfaring people, in their transit through the country to examine gold mines and land.’ As he was no ordinary personage in the affairs of his neighborhood, and will make a conspicu ous figure in this narrative, some account of his peculiarities will not be uninterresting. Hav ing acted through life on a homely maxim of his own, “pay up as you go up,” he had acquired some money, and was out of debt; and conse quently enjoyed “tho glorious privilege of be ing independent,” in a degree that is unknown to many who occupy a larger portion of the world’s attention than himself. He was a burly well-looking man of thirty-five, just young enough to feel that all his faculties, mental and physical, had reached their greatest develop ment ; and just old enough to have assured suf- ficent experience of men and things, to make tho past servo as a finger to his future journey through life. With a shrewd, but open, bold, and honest-look, there was a gleeful expression in tho comers of his eyes, that spoke of fun.— The “laughing devil in his eye” was not a ma licious spirit, however. His physical conforma tion was that which combined great strength with agility; and if he had been fated to have been a contemporary of his great prototype, Yulean, there can bo no doubt but the Lemnian blacksmith would havo allotted to him a front forgo in his establishment, to act as a sort of pattern-card, and to divert the pnblic gazo from his own lame leg to the fair proportions of his foreman. Now, although Ned Forgeron, for such was the name he inherited from some Gallic ances tor, was a good-natured man, yet the possession of great muscular strength and courage, and the admiration which a successful exercise of thoso powers never fails to command, had somewhat spoiled him. Without meaning to injure any mortal, he had managed, nevertheless, to try liis prowess on sundry of hi3 neighbors; and from the success which always croTmed his honest efforts in that way, had unconsciously acquired the character of a bully. With very early advantages of elementary ed ucation, he had, nevertheless, at different pe riods, collected/! mass of heterogeneous informa- 'tion, jvhich ho was very fond of displaying on occasions. He was a sort of political antiquary; and could tell the opinion of Mr. Jefferson or Mr. Madison on any subject; and was referred to on all disputed points, on the theory and his tory of the government, that arose among the candidates for the legislature, and county politi cians. This he studied on account of the con sequence it invested him with. But why he had treasured up an old and well thumbed copy of Paine’s “Age of Reason,” and affected skepti cism as to the veracity of the story of Jonah and tho whale, Balaam and his ass, would be hard accounting for, unless it proceeded from a desire of a character for singularity and erudi tion. When vanity once gets the mastery of a man’s reason, there is no telling the absurdi ties it will lead him into. He was fond of speak ing of Yolney, and being found with a copy of Taylor’s “Diegesis” in his hand, although few of his neighbors had heard of the “Ruins,” or knew what Diegesis meant. This peculiarity, together with the pertinacity of the missionaries, Worcester and Butler, which carried them to the penitentiary, may account for the great aversion of Mr. Edward Forgeron to all preachers of tho gospel. His dislike for them was so excessive, that he could scarcely speak of the “hypocritical scoun drels,” as he colled them, without flying into a passion, and using indecorous language. But a circumstance occurred which gave his zeal a dis tinct and sectarian direction. A Methodist preacher over in Tennessee,' who was fond of jjpicing his discourse with anecdotes, once made him the principal character in a long sermon. His peculiarities were dilatedon, and his heresies dealt with in severity. He was ridiculed, and his literary acquirements disparaged by the preacher. All this came to the ears of Forgeron. with such additions and embellishments as sto ries usually receive in passing to a third person. It would be as useless to attempt to describe a mountain storm as to picture the wrath of this mountaineer. But if we cannot portray the stonn, the consequences may he easily told. The black smith swore in his wrath he would whip every Methodist preacher that passed tho gap, in re venge of Ms insult. Forgeron was a man of his word, as the bruis ed features of many of John Wesley’s disciples could testify. His character soon went abroad, and the good old matrons of the surrounding counties on each side of the mountain trembled at his name. In short, the mountain pass, wMch was really as romantic a place as a land scape painter would seek for a picture, and was just the spot to remind a youth fresh from his classic studies of the place where Leonidas and his three hundred Spartans fell, in attempting to defend Greece against the army of Xerxes— in despite of the grandeur of its beetling cliffs and the beauty of its verdure, was associated in tho minds of many pious persons, with the broad gate that leads to destruction. And Ned Forge ron, tho handsomo blacksmith, was invested with the attributes and hideous aspect of his Satanic Majesty, by many a mountain girl who would doubtless have fallen in “love at first sight ” with him under any other name. The preacher whoso circuit lay on either side of the mountain, at the time Ned’s direful edict was promulgated to tho world, was a meek and lowly man, who approached nearly in his natnral dis position to willing obedience to tho mandate, relative to turning the cheek to tho smiter. The poor soul passed many sleepless nights, in view of the fate that awaited Mm at the mountain pass. In his dreams ho saw Forgeron, with a huge sledge-hammer in Ms hand, ready to dnsh out his brains, and would start with such vio lence as to wake himself. He inquired if there was no other place at wMch the mountain could bo passed, only to learn Ms doom more certain ly. Being a timid man, but withal devoutly im pressed with a sense of duty, ho Tesolved to dis charge Ms duties faithfully, be the consequences what they might. Like lambs going to tho slaughter did ho wend Ms way toward the gap; as he came in front of the shop, the blacksmith was striking the last blow on a shovel, and sing ing away, to the tune of “ Clear the Kitchen ”— “Old Georgia is a noble State, Her laws aro good, her people great.” , Op catching a glimpse of the poor parson, who had flattered Mmself that ho was about to pass’with impunity, Ned sung out—“stop there, you eternal shad-belly, and pay the penalty for an injured reputation!” Tho* holy man pro tested innocence of having ever intentionally in jured him, by word or deed. The man's subdued looks and earnest voice had half dissuaded Ned from Ms stem purpose, when the giggling of Ms striker, and the cheer ing of two or three idlers, nerved him to do what he felt was moan. Let any one pause a moment, and reflect if he has never been urged on to acts his conscience smote him for by the opinions of others, before Mr. Forgeron is sen tenced as a devil. The preacher received sev eral boxes on Ms ears, and heard many denun ciations against his sect before he was permitted to depart; and when that permission was re ceived, he was not slow in availing himself of the privilege. At the next annual conference, when circuits were assigned to the different preachers, this one made Ms appearance punctually, but by somo process of casuistry convinced himself that Ms duty did not call for a revelation of Ms sufferings. "Whether he was too sensitive of the blacksmith’s character to expose it to rude re mark, or had a preference that some worthier brother shonld occupy that healthy station among the mountains, it is difficult to conjec ture. Bnt Forgeron’s reputation had extended be yond the circuit, and was done ample and se vere justice to by others who had heard of his fame. It soon became the subject of animated conversation, and there was no little wincing, each ono fearing it would be Ms cruel fate to be sent b victim to appease the wrath of tMs human minotanr against toe Methodist Ohoreh. . After a time, itwas decreed that toe Reverend Mr. Stubble worth was the doomed individual, and when the annunciation came, many an eye of mingled pity and curiosity "was turned on Ms ! ruddy, good-natured face, to see how toe dispen- ! sation was borne; but hot a muscle moved. With a quiet smile he professed a perfect will ingness to go where he was sent He was “clay in toe hands of the potter,” he said. If he piqued himself on a stolid indifference to toe blacksmiths’s pummelings, or if. he relied- oh liis ample dimensions to protect Mmself, he never disclosed'it, but appeared as self-satisfied and content as ever. His predecessor looked for all tho world like a mouse just escaped from the fangs of some terrible grimalkin. Mr. Stubbleworth arranged his few sublunary affairs, and bidding his mends adieu, mounted Ms old roan and departed for his new home of trials, with a song of praise on Ms lips. Let us hope the best for him CHAPTER IT. The Rev. Mr. Stnbbleworth was very much pleased with his new situation. Having been transferred from a level pine wood’s country, near the confines of Florida, the novelty of mountain scenery and a pure, bracing atmo sphere seemed to inspire Mm with new life. Complimenting all toe mothers on toe singular beauty and intelligence of their .children, with a delicate allusion to their own personal appear ance; he soon became a general favorite. Mr. Stnbbleworth “knew wMchside of the bread Ms butter was on.” The time arriving for his de parture to visit the tramontane portion of his pastoral care, he was warned of the danger he was about to encounter; but they were heard with the same placid smile. Tho worthy ladies pictured to him “chimeras dire,” sufficient to have abated the zeal of any other individual. But that gentleman quieted their fear by ap pealing to toe power that “tempers the wind to the shorn lamb,” with a countenance as lamb like as could be imagined. 'And he departed, singing— “ At thy home, or abroad, on toe land, on tbe sea, As thy wantB may demand, shall thy strength ever be.” They watched Mm until his portly person and horse grew dim in the distance, and turned away, sigMng that such a good man should fall into the hands of that monster, toe blacksmith. For geron had heard of his new victim, and rejoiced that Ms size and appearance famished a better subject for his vengeance than the attenuated frame of toe late parson. Oh, what a nice beat ing he would have! He had heard, too, that some Methodist preachers were rather spirited, and hoped this one might prove so, that he might provoke Mm to fight. Knowing the clergyman must pass on Saturday in the afternoon, he gave his striker holiday, and reclining on a bench, re galed himself on the beauties of Tom Paine, awaiting toe arrival of the preacher. It was not over an hour before he heard the words, “Ilnw happy are they who their Savior obey. And have laid up their treasure above,” sung in a full clear voice, and soon the vocalist, turning too angle of a rook, rodo leisurely up with a contented smile on his face. “ How are you, old slab-sides ?” Get off your horse and join in my devotion,” said the black smith. “I have many miles to ride,” answered toe preacher, “ and haven’t time, my friend; I’ll call as I return.” “Your name is Stnbbleworth, and you are the hypocrite the Methodists have sent here, eh?” “My name is Stnbbleworth,” he meekly re plied. “Didn’t you know my name was Ned Forge ron, the blacksmith, what whips every Metho dist preacher that goes through this gap ?"’ was asked with an audacious look; “and how dare you come here ?” The preacher replied that he had heard Mr, Forgeron’s name, but presnmed that he did not molest well-behaved travelers. “Yon presume to presume so! Yes, you are the most presumptuous people, you Methodists, that ever trod shoe leather, anyhow. Well, what’ll you do if I don’t whip you tMs time, you beef-headed disciple, you ?” Mr. Stubbleworto professed his willingness to do anything reasonable, to avoid such penance. “Well, there’s three things you have to do, or I'll maul you into a jelly. The first is you are to quit preaching; toe second is, yon must wear this last will and testament of Thomas Paine next to your heart, read it every day, and be lieve every word yon read; and the third is, you are to curse the Methodists in every crowd you get into.” Tbe preacher looked on during these novel propositions without a line of his face being moved, and at the end replied that the terms were unreasonable, and he would not submit to them. “Well, you’ve got a whaling to submit to, then; I'll larrup you like blazes! I’ll tear you into doil-rags comer-ways. Get down, you beg gar!” The preacher remonstrated, but Forgeron walked np to the horse and threatened to tear Mm off if he did not dismount; whereupon tii9 worthy man made a virtue of a necessity, and alighted. “I have but one request to make of yon, my friend; that is, that you won’t beat me with this overcoat on. It was a present from the ladies of my last circuit, and I do not wish to have it tom.” “Off with it, then, and that suddenly, you basin-faced imp you!” Tho Methodist preacher slowly drew off snr- coat as the blacksmith continued his tirade of abuse on himself and his sect, and as ho drew his right hand from tho sleeve, and threw toe garment beMnd Mm, he dealt Mr. Forgeron a tremendous blow between bis eyes, wMch laid that person at full length on the ground, with the testament of Thomas Paine beside him. The Rev. Mr. Stubbleworto, with the tact of a con noisseur in such matters, did not wait for Ms adversary to rise, but mounted him with tho quickness of a cat, and as he bestowed his blows with a bounteous hand on the stomach and face of toe blacksmith, continued Ms song where he had left off on his arrival at the smithy: “Tongue cannot express toe' sweet comfort and peace Of a soul init8 earliest love.” Until Mr. Forgeron, from having experienced “first love,” or some other sensation equally new to him,responded lustily, “’Nough! ’nough! take him off. ” But, nnf ortunately, there was no one by to perform that kind office, except the old roan, and he munched' a bunch of grass and looked on as quietly as if his master was happy at a camp meeting. “Now,” said Mr. Stnbbleworth, “there are three things you must promise me before I let you np.” “What are they ?" asked Forgeron, eagerly. “The first is, that you will never molest a Methodist preacher again.” Here Ned’s pride rose, and he hesitated, and the reverend gen tleman, with his usual benign smile on hi3 face, renewed his blows and song— “I rodo on the sky, freely justified I, And the moon it was under my feet."' TMs oriental language overcame the blacksmith; such bold figures, or sometMDg else, causing him to sing out, “Well, I’ll do it! I’ll do it! ” “You are gettingon very well," said Mr. Stub- blewortb. “I think I can mako a decent man out of you yet, and perhaps a Christian !*’ Ned groaned. “The/second thing I require of you is to go to Pumpkinvine Creek meeting" house, and hear me preach to-morrow.” Ned attempted to stammer out somo excuse— “I—I—that is—” When the divine resumedhis devotional hymn, and kept time with too music by striking Mm over the face with toe fleshy part of Ms hand— “My soul mounted higher, on a chariot of tire, Nor did envy Elijah lus seat.” Ned’s promise of punctuality caused toe par son’s exercise to cease, and the words, redolent of gorgeous imagery, died away in echoes from the adjacent crags. “Now, tho third- and last demand I make of yon is peremptory.” Ned was all attention to know what was to come next “You aro to promise to seek religion day and night, and never rest nntil yon obtain it at the hands of a merciful Redeemer.” The fallen man looked at the de clining sun and then at the parson, and know not what to say, when toe latter individual be gan to raise his voice in song once more, and Ned knew what would come next. ‘•I'll do my best,” he said, in an humbled voice; “Yfell. that’s a man!” Mr. Stnbbleworth said. “Now, get up and go down to the Branch and wash your face, and dust your clothes, and tear up Mr. Paine’s testament, and turn your thoughts on high." Ned arose with feelings he had never experi enced before, and went to obey the lavatory in-i junction of the preacher; when that gentleman mounted his horse, he took Ned by toe hand and said, “ Keep your promises, and I’ll keep your counset Good evening, Mr. Forgeron, Ill look for you to-morrow,” and off he rode with toe same imperturable countenance, singing so'loud as to scare the eagles .from their eyries in tho overhanging rooks. • “Well,” thought Ned, “this is a nice busi ness ! What would people say if they knew that Ed. Forgeron was whipped before Ms own door in the gap, and by a Methodist preacher, loo?” But his musings were more in sorrow than in anger. }’<-■'?- »• ■ sd as I . 1 ?". • ’•chapter m. The disfigured countenance of Forgeron was of course the subject of numerous questions that night among his friends, to which he replied with a stem look they well understood, and the vague remark that he had met with an accident. Of course they never dreamed of the true cause. Forgeron looked in the glass, and perhaps" com pared the changing hue of his “black eye from a'recent scuffle," to the rainbow in toe ship wreck scene—“blending every color into one.” Or perhaps he had never read that story, and only muttered to himself, “Ned Forgeron whipped by a methodist preacher! ” His dreams that night were of a confused and Grant, Alei^', disagreeable nature, and waking in toe mom- j A ProHtaMe ami F... rHnDq <t TtTr~' mg, he had an indistinct memory of something Convicts, unpleasant having occurred. At first he could ! j; ; s i™™, r _ . ,, not recollect the cause of his feelings, but the ! ». rv. , , " nt ’ braises on hisface and body soon called them to ' ’’ contractors on the Macon and Brunswig m * n< ^ . as 88 Ik® promise. He mounted his | Railroad, have effected an arrangement with a* horse in silence and went to redeem it j county authorities of Richmond countv v From that time his whole conduct manifested the convicts in that rmntv tnr lnk«. a change of feeling. The gossios of the neigh- , “ “ . . comlt y for labor «pon n, borhood observed it, and whispered that Ned ! rallroad - P 1 ® stipulations of the contract was silent, serious, and had gone to meeting ev-; tlraB c^P^ned in the Augusta Chronicle ^ ery Sunday since the accident. They wondered: Sentinel of Friday: J at Ms burning the books he used to read so much, j TMs contract was made on the 26th of Mar.- Strange stories were circulated as to this meta- and contains the following provisions: ail morphosis of the jovial blacksmith into a convicts sentenced under the laws of the Sn gloomy and taciturn man. Some supposed, for a term of thirty days or longer, and all very sagely, that a spirit had enticed Mm into may be sentenced hereafter, shall be turned ^ the mountains, and, after giving him a glimpse to Grant, Alexander A Go. n • into tho future, had misled him to a crag, where ’ " he had fallen and bruized Ms face. Others gave the Prince of Darkness the credit of the change; hut none suspected the Methodist preacher, and, as the latter gentleman had no vanity to gratify, the secret remained with Ned. This gloomy state of mind continued until For geron visited a camp meeting. The Rev. Mr. Stubbleworth preached a sermon that seemed to enter his soul, and relieved it of a burden, and tho song of ‘ How happy are they who their Saviour obey,’ was only half through, when ho felt like a new man. Forgeron was from that time a “shout ing Methodist.” At a love feast a short time subsequent, ho gave in Ms experience, and re vealed the mystery of his conviction and con version to Ms astonished neighbors. The Rev. Simon Stubbleworth who had faithfully kept tho secret until that time, could contain liimself no longer, but gave vent to his feelings in convul sive peals of laughter, as the burning tears of heartfelt joy coursed their way down his cheeks. “ Yes, my brethren,” he said, “ it’s all a fact; I did maul tho grace into his unbelieving soul, there’s no doubt.” The blacksmith of the mountain pass became a happy man, and a Methodist preacher. Sprague, ol Rhode Island. Mr. Sprague rose to a personal explanation, and said: The people of toe United States will suspend their judgment on all newspaper articles bearing on mo to my disadvantage. The telegraphic summary of my recent speech, as well as the report in toe Globe, has some material errors. They may be assured that my words and courage do not rest on wine, or whis ky, or any other stimulant, but upon knowledge of toe shrinking of property, and the loss of virtue going on around me. My great anxiety is to effect a cure now. Tho remedy is now ac cessible. A year hence it may be beyond our reach. My leading idea is to correct the condi tion of things of which the following is per haps an aggravated case, but it is a substantial illustration of the condition throughout the country: A man in "Washingtonhas§20,0001oanedoutin sums of §50 to the poor, at 10 per cent, per month, secured by chattel mortgages. When the victim is exhausted, demand for payment is made, and in default of payment the property is sold at a quarter or half its value. The plan to correct this, and to place witMn toe reach of every man of ability and industry capital at a low rate of interest, upon which he can labor and make profits, is the one I have in view, and is substantially the one in nse in England, Belgium, Holland, *and France, tho most pros perous nations of modem times. I wish to adopt that plan here and to eschew the plan the results of which are best exMbited by Spain, Mexico and the South American States. Mr. Sprague called attention to the State of Ken tucky, which, he said, was the most prosperous farming State in the Union, because she adopted a plan similar to that which he advocated, tons bringing within the reach of the-people the cap ital necessary for the transaction of their busi ness. Speaking of the way in wMch tMs plan could be applied to the whole country, he said: This is to be effected by tho Treasury of the United States, which is to be first made strong in means, and then is to use that strength on the market to unlock and distribute hoarded capital. The present danger, inmy judgment.is greater than when the rebels fired on Sumter and march ed almost on WasMngton. I use no words which are not properly considered. I have made no attacks on individual Senators prior to attacks on me. I wage war upon the legislative nnd ex ecutive power exercised by thi3 body, and on the disastrous results of its action. If any one, here or elsewhere, attacks me, I shall “ move on the enemy's works” to tho best of my ability. Following out this idea, I shall undoubtedly antagonize myself to those who have been favor ites with the people, as was the case in my last remarks before the Senate, on wMch some part of tho press has commented adversely. But let it be so. I will not longer sit and hear incor rect statements concerning our condition—our drifting condition—come from whence they may. To euro the evil we must know its character and not mistake it. Letthose who think I am crazed do as I have done for three years past—examine patiently and without prejudice into onr exact situation, and ask those around me if there be any substantial difference between tho opinions I now avow and those I have heretofore indica ted. My present work is to show that the plan I advise will remedy toe evil. This will take time und investigation. It is as clear as the noonday sun to my own mind, bnt to prove it logically and with satisfactory reasons is the work to be accomplished now. The demand for my several speeches will be speedily met. I have not time to write a word in answer to the multitude of letters I have re ceived ; but I shall send my speeches into every city and town, and on them I stand. The posi tion I have taken would have failed to effect anything if token heretofore; but let the people take it now. That their action may not have been too-long delayed to effect a wholesome cure is the wish of the speaker, who, being under no obligation for what he is (except as hereto fore indicated), asks for nothing now bnt to servo Ms day and generation. A Virginian Retrospect. The history of Virginia for the last four years can never be written so that it can be fully un derstood and appreciated by posterity. 1 The events that have happened, and their terrible bearing upon, onr people in all their relations aro not known and understood outside of the State. "Wo know and feel them alone—and most of them-have been borne in silence. "We pass over toe oppressive and mortifying politi cal measures that have in rapid succession been leveled against us. Such a mixture of buffoone ry and gravity, of farce and tragedy, of igno rance and sharp cunning, of wretched imbecili ty and pompous pretension, as has been ex Mbited by those who strut their brief hours upon the stage, was never seen in any preced ing age. Should the sayings and doings of the mongrel convention and of the mock cdhrts of justice go down to posterity, they will be read and laughed over as men laugh at the ludicrous but malicious pranks of a cage of apes. Bnt there is a part of that Mstory that is truly mournful—that relating to the ordeal through which nearly all of our families have passed. Without bread or meat, without farming uten sils, work animals, fences, stock, fowls, or even seed for planting, and with our whole labor sys tem destroyed, and the former slaves turned against us as enemies, we commenced a terrible struggle, not for wealth, nor honor, nor office, bnt for the commonest necessaries of life. Those accustomed from their birth to all the luxuries of life were in a moment deprived of everytMng and roduced to abject poverty. Language cannot describe, and those without a similar experience cannot comprehend, the continued and oppressive heart-sickness, the misery and despair felt by us—nor can the out side wotid, unpitying_ and vindictive as it has been, oven feel a joy in onr distresses commen- Borate with their extent. There is another toing that will never be known except to us, and that is the moro than k Co. promise to assume charge of each of tlT convicts as soon as they receive sentence «bj convey them to their place of labor, and if th nre not immediately removed, the firm ig to m their board at the jail during the interval ofV lay. Grant, Alexander & Co. agree to take e ery convict, and if the term of service in an" case be so short as not to warrant the expend of transportation, the firm is to pay jafi hoTj of such convicts, it being expressly understood that after the sentence of a convict the conaf is not to be at ^ny expense on Ms or her J count, but that all expenses are to be paid yl the firm (the term short not meaning a tenn ‘f less than thirty days). The firm is to transnon the convicts to their place of labor, to them, and respond in damages for such as nn escape through the negligence of their rniard^ They are to be furnished with full rations t'f meat and bread, good and sufficient clothinc proper housing nnd medical atttendance ani they are to be discharged from custody whenever terms of service may expire. TheOrdinarvW the right to send a visitor or inspector at stated times to examine into the treatment, condition and security of the convicts delivered to the firm, and the expenses of tMs visitor shall be paid by the former. /Grant, Alexander & Co agree to make a monthly report to the Ordinal touching the conduct and condition of the con. victs, and also to report every one discharged at the expiration of Ms term. Grant, Alexander & Co. agree to return at their own expense every female convict entrusted to them tothis county, or any other place in tho State which the convict may select; and they shall return all male convicts after the expiration of their term at their own expense, or shall hire them at fiftv cents per diem until they shall have earned "a sufficient amount to defray their transportation. The articles of agreement are to bo of force from the date of signing, and may be terminated bv either party giving three months’ notice, i failure to comply with any of the provisions of the bond to- be given by Grant, Alexander & Co. shall constitute a breach of toe same, the dam ages for wMch are to be assessed by a jury try ing the cause. Mayor Russell was also a *partv to tMs contract, representing the city of Augus-' to, and Grant, Alexander & Co. gave an indem nifying bond to the county of ten thousand dol lars and to the city of two thousand dollars. Important Decision. Frnm the Griffin iSfnr.] From a gentleman just from Clayton Court, we learn that Judge Pope made the following important decision upon a case, in wMch the facts were about as follows: In 1850 or I860, an execution was obtained in favor of A against B. B afterwards—about 18G2—sold his land to C— toe claimant in the case. In 1808, A had his fi. fa. levied upon too property of C, wMch he had purchased from- B. It was admitted that C had been in possession of toe land for , more than four years, and’A bad not disturbed it with his fi. fa. After argument, Judge Pope held, That toe statute of Georgia wMch provides that where a party holds land four, and personal preperty two years, undisturbed by judgments against the party from whom he (the purchaser) purchased, was not a part of the statute of limitation, and had not been suspended by any legislation en acted during or sinoe tho war: and thnt real property held for four years, and personal prop erty for two years, undisturbed by judgments against a party from whom such property was purchased, was relieved from the liens of such judgments. Should tMs opinion be affirmed by tho Su preme Court, and it doubtless will, it will be substantial reliof to a very Largo number of onr citizens, who have bought property over which old judgments were hanging. Judge Pope, although quite young, is an or- nament to the bench; and, as he always does, presided with dignity, and gave satisfaction to all parties. Judge I.ocltranc on Informers. In onr hurried review of yesterday, we did not as fully as we desired, refer to the argument of Judge Lochrane in the Macon ArmoTv case, in the U. S. District Court. Tho Judge commenced by a review of the po sition assumed by Mr. Stone, for the informer, and reviewed the law quoted, and scattered itl>y blow after blow of logic and law. The Judge paid an eloquent tribute to the government, and said he represented its power and prerogative to pardon all offenders and offences, and protested, in manly invective, against informers raising their voice for the paltry pittance of private interest, to stop the machinery of justice and overthrow too power and policy of the nation. He commented on tho laws of England as to too rights of informers, demonstrated its source, origin and power, and showed that they had no vested interest against the property to defeat tho policy of the govern ment in its restoration until after judgment of record. "We cannot follow toe Judge in his. strong and overwhelming argument in this case, carrying conviction to every mind by Ms copi ous and eloquent illustrations of the law, bnt we shonld like, had we space, to give Ms elo quent invectives against informers as a class. We will say, however, that he denounced them as being the meanest things that stood under the protection of too American flag, and had a right to claim in tho protection of its laws—that they breathed pestilence, dissension and discord among the people, infected the atmosphere of justice with their presence, festered the body politic with their sting, hatched here to crawl over the loyalty and allegiance of the people, etc. His words burned and blistered as they touched, and at the conclusion he poured a broadside into tho case wMch seemed to be over whelming.—Savannah, Republican. Abont Money. Frost Harper's Magazine.} My chum pulled out of his pocket a half sheet of paper folded like toe back of an old letter, and began reading notes there, in a slow and sententious way: ‘“Money is the concentrated essence of Labor. A man who has a thousand dollars has a thousand days work in Ms one hand. If he knows its valne he can move abont men with the force of a thousand laborers—that is, with a hundred and twenty horse power. “To know the force of money, one must know Labor. “When one man has money and another has not, they contend for its possession. This is trade, or robbery, according to circumstances. “There aro three uses of money—the use of getting it, the use of keeping it, and the use of spending it. _ Consequently it classifies the bulk of mankind into money-getters, money-keepers, and money-spenders. Except the misers we read of in noveLs, men do not love money for itself any more than soup tickets, or baggage checks, or promissory notes, or title-deeds. The ‘love of money’ is the pleasure of mental func tion in getting, or keeping, or spending. The sponge and the spendthrift are equally guilty with the miser. “The class of money-getters includes mer chants, gold-miners, pickpockets, politicians, and professional beggars. Americans are great money-getters, but they do not care to keep it- Hence this is a country of great income but small fortunes. “The class of money-keepers is small. Lit erary men are not found in it. Lawyers are superhuman efforts we have made to procure kee P* n «. mo , n ®L particularly ‘Smother the means of subsistence, and to reduce ^ consumption to the lowest point of econom£ b«,£ . . , ;ia a condensing instrument wMoh enables a foundation for a j raoney w t it We are M born to S « has h®® 1 ? T em - ; this, knd cost a great deal before we earn any- J 5 com ™ ercsal ®°- ! thing. The power to get into debt is essential S and ore m success-: to ^ of alTshiftless people, inclnd- thBt ^r w in 8 most of the Governments of Eniope. Col- rvnl R?.r d - ^« lfdiiT been r ®-? 8tab , b8ll< 4 lege students and married women, who have no ^ is.n°W liberally supporting its van- legal capacit y to bind themselves, satisfy this ous religious institutions, colleges and schools, - pr0 p en8 jty b y getting their fathers and hus- and every succeeding Say witnesses the maugn- ; ^ debt, if powible. ration of some now enterprise. "We have borne) “Money is like gunpowder. To make it car- enough and acMeved enough under our troubles „ ^ ' should betoarefullv measured and to mve us strength to endure more and accom- well down. Its explosive power de- phsh more. Let us be as patient as we may,» ds on the tightness with which you hold it- and continue to work unto theend, whatsoever Scattered loose; it fizzles away with no effect, that end may be. Richmond Whig. , “Xo become wealthy, one most both get and — j keep. To be useful, the wealthy man must be A Slight Difference.—It was once a ques. *1*° 8 judicious money-spender, tion down South about the right of officers to " hold negroes; now the point is, have the ne groes a right to hold offices ?—AT. T. Herald, ■ Anthony hasoonfiaeA his observations to the Indiana.—It will be seen that the Indiana { snonah wfll be raised to supply J