Planters' weekly. (Greenesboro' [i.e. Greensboro], Ga.) 185?-18??, September 26, 1860, Image 1

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BY smug A FULLER. VOLUME 3. THE PLANTERS’ WEEKLY PUBLISHED AY Breenesboro > . Bft. DOLLARS A YEAR; OR ONE DOLLAR AND FIFTY CENTBIN ADVANCE. GABOS. ~~ = 75 HNC .Il EID, ATTORNEY AT LIT 7. j>nl’s9ly. Greenesboro, Georgia. ROLIN W. STEVENS, ATTORN KY AT LAW, GlCfiMSlOlo’ Gkobgia. WILL practice in the counties ofGreens, Btldwin, Putnam o’n, Oglethorpe, Taliaferro and Hancock. (Peb.t, IRS-tf.] CANBY, CTLPHf * CO. WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, AND mrOBKRS or ixotisi, hitch, asn smut r 3, Ckfaiuli, Perfumery and Fancy Article*, •ra-src rn, faints, oils, vai’msbbs, window glass, Ac., Ac., Ac. I. W. Cor. or Light and Lombard streets, Baltimore* r. T. COOK, Trav. Agt. — jly 2P-tf. Modtcaß Card. 1 HEREBY milder my thank* to the public for kind ly bcai.num <m in rwrtofor*. a larger ahare of patr.H>t* ih.n l Mlicip.ied, and again infer my pro f.*i.,l iiriiMi la any who may *ie me a call. Whan a.t pn.fr.Mo.ally engaged, I may be found nt W and** llni* Store. Urn. If. I WS ly. W. L BETHEA. M. D ~ DENTISTK Y DR. mil. AJRC.JA, Surgeon and Sschanieal DenPLt. Ptnfie'ld, Georgia , WOOLD inform the citiaen* of Greene and ad jaiaing ooomiee, that lie i* prepared to perform Any operation pertaining to hie profeeeion.withneat ■e*i and diepn<ch. He wilt iuarrt from eoe 10 an en •ir. *et of teeth. tiiehieinteatiuDinplc.ee. ■ will he in OreeneAaro on Mondey, Tueeday *M WJ-*d*y of each weeek and in Peofleld the reianindee f hie time. Any ell flroa the oonniry that may be tendered Ain .ill meet will) prompt atleotion. ‘lie rcf.re to die. i thol Mnrohyof R un. Feh. fO. IASO. licCOHD, HOKTON 4 WALTC3I, WHOLESALE DCALEHS IN Groceries Generally. or. Broad IMB Campbell Streets. AUGUSTA, GA. -a t w. Boston, soar, walton, fa A ir*tia. Ga., March ISth. 1840 Cm. B t.AKICS of all kii-da neatly printad at •tic c fli-e, at short notice and oa reason -ah'. t*wn. CLOCKS. WATCHES JEW 11 i V \ •te) O: THE undersigned would respectfully inform the oHUeus of t'.is \ ieinity *l* and jhe public in general, that he has dmm , l Greeaesboro, nadir ill ooastaaUy keep on hand a well aelec bod stock of Clacks, Valckes A Jewelry, and will sail lower than ever. Call in and try him. BBL. Clocks, Watches and Jewelry, alto, asFAiaanas heretofore at the old stand. JT. P. ACILSTROM. Oreen-ebore , t Ga. May JO, 186*1. ts. SOUTHERN DRUG HOUSE. SPKABS 4 HIGBT. nut exm ran* u* sun*. Orromre rat Pumai’ Uotil. No. lit, Where they Constant! v keep on hand one of Cou,pri*irg Beery Article ia Urn •rs and Fane? Goods Trade, ALL OF Which they will sell AT NEW YORK PRICES. PHw Before Tat Bay A*iruu, O „ Joaaarr Iht, IHt. J* * & JR-ii. MM IP££JL, MANUFACTUHEKBOF Mle±atormesa, Tranks *c, Be O AYS permanently oatablishod rViV AX themselves in the Town of Pod, <n receipt of a aftd will constantly keep on bSm? a good of THEIR OWN and tha NORTHERN MAKE. I3T All JQBS moot jror^* 0T Repairing done at the ijiortpst no tlee. f Jan. 1,1660-ts. NOTICE Dt- M. P. POWERS, haring been karat uat kae had to got an eflleo efseghr*- tla tat new at yiag in the house formerly keld kr Os. Leatmor. I*v. P. aoletu the patronage fir tkaea sake mar front It. and ark# pro rilling A gMr loartMl—Dtrotol t Home Liloretore, A'r’.qsUore, Foreign and Domestic Sew, Wit, Humor, &e. Pbr the Planter*’ Weekly, Equlitv, ••Woennlo Vim th-; gtriveth with his .. LrJ the potsheard strive with ue potslienrds of the earth. Shall the clay say onto him that fashioned it, what makest tboul” “Nay bnt, 0 mar., who art thou that replies’* against God! Shall the thiug formed say to him that formed if. why hast thou made me thus ?” The principles of the equality and the nin-equaltty of the human races are now rapidly and effectively playing their res pective parts among our people, and influ encing our governmental transactions. The proposition that all mankind are born equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among them are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, is false, and a mere figment, a morbid issue, from the brains of infidel philosopher*. Such a principle is antagonistic to our instinctive and aboriginal propensities, to the customs of society and the ordinances of God. Be cause marriage, and property in lands de prive mankind of liberty and equality. The advocate of such principles are iu favor of free love, free lands, and free negroes. These institutions are not conventional, are not the results of human reason, or hu man legislation ; hut they have been es tablished by God, as much so as the tree religion. Man is not the originator of re ligion any more than ho is that of right, marriage, or slavery. Their origin is in stinctive and aboriginal being by God's band implanted in man’s nature. Hence when these instinctive tendencies are pro perly interpreted, the vox pnpuli becomes the vox Dei. Hence the laws of all na tion* aie very similar. They are not the inventions of the legislator, hut of the dic tations of nature, as much so, as the archi tectural skill of the bee or ant. Those, who have striven to be inventors, or orig inators of law, have made signal failures. The great law givers have only been great reformers, and only improvers on what pre viously existed. Man can not make a physical or moral law. He can only dis cover them. Their existence was anterior to his own. The efforts of Plato, of Sir Thomas Moore, of Lord Bacon, and of Locke, are signal failures when compared to these of such reformers as Moses, Confu cius, Lyeurgus, Xuma, and English Alfred. The views and laws of the former when compared to that of the latter are “very speculative, visionary and Utopian.” From the differences of opinions in ref erence to the equality of the negro and white man in the U. States, originate sec tional feelings antipathies and variations in customs and character. Some of the Northern people, especially the abolition ist, believe in the absolute equality of man kind, in their social and civil equality, whether they be black or white. The development of this dogma haß been slow and grndual. Having strutted upon thestagein horrible tragedy in France it was introduced here as an American so cial principle by Jefferson and Franklin. It now threatens to be the leaven—the dis organising agent of our federal compact — the canker in the bud of the body politic —the destroyer of one of the best govern ments in the world. It has been a pleas ing morsel to the decendants of the Puri tans and bold followers of Cromwell.— They always were busy ! Everything has been so propitious for its development in a large portion of oar country, that it has grown to huge dimensions, and menaces social institutions and classes. The locality, climate, the soil, the com mercial and manufactuiing facilities and the origin of the people of the Northern States, have made them tradesmen, in-door workers, “the hewers of wood and the drawers of water;” while the negros have been driven away, they being profitless to their owners. Hence the Northerner has no opportunities for the daily observation of the physical, soC’al. moral and mental inequalities of the negro, when contrasted with the white man. Being by education, and by the French dogmas— Eqaality, they call aloud for the equaliza tion of the negro. Their fuss concerning woman's rights, tueir agrareanism. their strikes for higher wages, and their higher law-principle, ore only brats of the same parentage. Their influence pervades all classes. It rules in the family and social circle, sits and smirks in the pulpit, franti cally harangue* in the popular assembly, croaks aud prates through the punting press, rants in fret love associations, plays thp fiend in midnight assassination; ana rev els to society in mormon cities. The altreiet being driven to extremes questions the propriety of eny restrictions; because, if all men ore born free end equal why restrain them 1 Why not have all things in common t Many of the altruist have repudiated divine law, and adopted the sophistries of infidel philosophers; and believe that all shonld enjoy in common the gifts of God. whether they consist in lands and its productions or in the riches of the opulent. Consequently they are in favor of canalising socially and politically the negro by legislation. In its on gen, this (rousted end stultified sUs*. wee few in numbers; bnt neverthe less ft lies held for yours the balance of polities! power, ana bus consequently keen r,.nrted end caress* 1 .v all oriles Tbev GREENESBORQ’, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 26,1860. were at first a few brawling, crasy, agita tors, but they are now numerous and strong. Their votes tweuty years since numbered 7,000, sixteen years there—after after they polled 1,342,000 and controled 114 elec toral votes cf eleven states. They now cast two thirds of the votes of the free States have 13 out of 18 Governors. 25 out of 36 Senators, and 113 out of 147 Repre sentatives in Congress for the free States. They are now nearly equal to all parties put together, and can elect their candidate for President without much difficulty. The sentiment eutertained at the South in contra-distinction to that of the North is, the white man and negro are not equals. That the people of the South should have such views is rational and easily explain ed. Because to assert that the negro is the equal to the white man is equivalent to saying. The negro has the same organi zation, the same instincts, the same men tal capabilities and capacities; the same moral tendencies and temperament; the same physical conformations; that intel lectually and morally he occupies the same stand point; that he Dossesses the same likeness and the same dignity and courage of the white man. All observation, expe rience and history to the Southerner, give such a proposition the lie. The Southerner believes that legisla tion, the mere opinions of ultraists. of bad lawyers, ordinary newspape. Editors, of religio-demagogues can not eradicate the instincts of an animal, or cause “the Ethe opian to change his skin, or the Leopard his spots; believes that what in instinc'ive ly degraded can not he elevated to a high position, any more than man can make the negro a white man; or the ant assume the habits or the lice. Ask the Southern Mechanic, the artisan, the daily laborer, him, who works side by side with the negro, lie ought to know, if the black man is liis equal. His answer will be, no! Because by every day’s ob servation be unlike the Northerner sees lhat the negro is his inferior—bis non equal. He sees that the chaiacteristic differences, of the white man and negro is instinctive, and aboriginal. The one in his religion is theistie, the other is fetich; the one can not be enslaved, the other be comes a slave willingly, he is born a slavo in body, a slave in mind; the one stoops while at work, has straight legs and a carved foot, tho other has his head tlirowu back, his hips thrown upward, his legs bowed, his feet flat; while the one stands erect, the other is a knee-bender ; while the one is the theistie Bimaua, the other is the ophidian; he is the Nacliash unto whom Elohim has said, “upon thy belly shalt thou go, and dust sltalt thou eat all the days of thy life.” They are tho only beings in the world who aie tin* victims of dirt eating or “chachexia africana.” These characteristic differences have existed for thousands of years. Climate ami civili zation have not materially altered them. But many fools, nevertheless, have been expecting the negro to turn white! Upon this inequality of the white man and negro rest the life and wealth, of the South. From it originates the resources of commerce, the success of agriculture, min ing, and R. Road operations, and besides it has furnished the means of, civilizing the Pagan; and supplies the requisites of part ly humanizing one of the most degraded races oft lie world. Notwithstanding all these facts, tiie Northerner asserts, the negro is my broth er, and shonld not be a slave; that there should be a “higher law principle,” an anti-slavery constitution, an auti-slavery Bill, and n anti-slavery God. He de clares that in preference to his being a slave, the Union should be dissolved aud that his master shall perish with it. While the Southerner says: For the negro to be my slave is a right granted to me by nature and the God of nations, and I will defend that right at the risk of pro perty, at the risk of the Federal Govern ment, and at the risk of life. Amen! Although thiif principle of equality, di vides and distracts our people, still the Northern and Southern, the true patriot, the j&tt'onel man, lie, who believes in State-rights, I? 1 Constitutional Federal rights, in individual *Jgl.’^ s he who believes that God’s will is the Lig!'?? l jaw. may meet brother as brother and aid fit I*®* training the fanatic and factionists, and in protecting the negro from such a serious and lasting injury as that of being depriv ed of a master. Oh. no! Patriots do not suffer it! Determine that it shall not be so. Make them wait until truth can pre vail. Truth will and mast ultimately con quer I The world will ere long learn that science and the Bible teach that the de testable dogma of Jefferson and Franklin is false, and a curse to qur beloved country. All good and wise men must ultimately be lieve it. What! the negro equal to man Where are the proofs? On what page or by what hand has tho history of bis coun try been written! What are the names of his philosophers, his poets, his states men, his law givers, bis artists and his men of science. Search the world and yon can not find one of tbeir names. Hi* people have never reared princely edifi ces, have never discovered or conquered countries; they have no monuments which lell of days gone-by, no church in which to worship|tbe Gud of Heaven, notemploof fame, it rste tr def borer! Ilia past !.* lory like the vast deserts of his own coun try ic sterile and barren. His to-days pie ture is a stereotype of yesterday's, unaid ed nnguided by a superior, he has not pro gressed one step in four thousand years. Whenever be has been forced to imitate, to improve, to become civilized, after wards if let alone, he and liis progeny retrograde and become instinctively fetich, Serpent worshipers, and knee-benders. Gan the negro be equal to man from whom has descended a Moses, a Solomon, and a hove all a Christ! from whom has descended the great, the good and the wise! No! Is Canaan equal to Japheth ? God has said, and who shall gain say it; “cursed be Ca naan (Naclias) a servant of servants shall he be to his brethren.” Blessed be the Lord God of Sliem, and Canaan shall be his servant. The negro is a slave instinc tively, aboriginally, he is a slave by the laws of nature and God. He was created a slave, created anterior to man. His whole organism is adapted to this condi tion. Then can all men, if the negro is a man be born equal ? No! It is nonseuse to assest it. Mankind are. not born free and Equal! September the 10th 1860. For the Planters’ Weekly. Continued from Last Issuf.. But let me tell you how they make Democrats in Morgan. In 1856 when Buchanan was being vo ted for to save the South, and save Kan sas to the South there was about ten miles from Madison, a short time prior to the election, a Barbacne, (great Democrat bulwaiks) there was some five or six of the faithful, that obtained n vehicle and a couple of horses to attend. The crowd consisted of one or two Georgia citizens, and one or two of our Jewish citizens, and one of our--well, I think yu can tell his native State, when lam done. This was the crowd, and all were Democrats save one, when they started, I am sure he was a hard know-nothing a few days befoie, but, O whiskey ! it is to the Democracy, to draw, better than any “Hebrew Plas ter,” all went on well, all had a jolly time and no stopping until about five miles from town, they hauled up at a nice cool spring of water, when of course something must be drank, when the captain of the crowd, or I might sav, the Mayor, proposed that all that were fruchanan men, should drink, and all that were not could not hare an; whiskey, now this was indeed a trying time to our know-nothing friend, and the Mayor I havb no doubt, had been con cocting the plan all the way, for he hated the idea of having a “striking know noth ing,” in the crowd with him, going to a Buchanan Bat bacue, the Mayor is a good worker, aud if theirs is a Democrat on earth that deserves office, he is one, he knew the weak point of our friends nature, consequently his suggestion, and how he succeeded is easily imagined, he informs us that all took a drink, and all were Buchanan men, they went to the “cue,” enjoyed themselves* well, but unfortunate ly for our new floadged Democrat, as they were returning home, the amount of whis key, or barbacuo, or the overload of Dem ocratic sin and deceit, was more than the horses could draw, and one of them died. The Mayor had broken many a young Democrat to harness, and he kuew that the whiskey had created a zeal in his new convert that would make him do anything, the consequence was that they tested him, to aee if he. was thoroughly broke aud willing to work in Democrat harness. So the Mayor proposed to hitch his new con vert, in lieu of the horse that was dead, they did so and I am informed that he worked to the entire satisfaction of the party, I believe it, for he is now working finely in the Douglas waggon. I may be in eiror. if I say lie loves whiskey, for 1 am informed that about twenty years since, he had a severe spell of sickness, and t'*at the medicine they gave him was Brandy aud Whiskey, and that the rea son he drinks now, what little he does, (about a quart per day) is that be fears a relapse, and here let ine say, that if I were traveling and wanted someone to get me some whiskey when it was scarce, I had as soon go to this individual for help as auy now living. I will give you an item of his ingenuity sometime ago,—last year perhaps,—he turned Boob-pedler for a Brother chip, up at the OoCbl Circle- in his travels, he finds himself, we are informeu, *wd that tod, by one that “loolu good,” one evening about scuffle town,in Southwest Georgia. I think it is a temperance town, our friend was very dry, and I have no doubt bnt he felt as if his South Carolina sickness was fast coming npon him again, so he wanted medicine badly, lie applied to the lady of the house, to know it she had auy whis key, poor unsuspecting woman, she little knew her man—the lady informed hint, that she had a little, and but a littld, aud that they never used it, only as medicine. Tj know that there was whiskey there, and get none would nearly have killed him, besides the constant dread of his old disease coming npon him, have it, ab yes. he wot bound tu have it. so he seta his brain to work, and ho succeeded. The son had gone down, the ahodea of eveniug were gently falling o’er tho earth, it woe one <4 these calm still eveuingt, when all e%tere reeiied sinking v. that r|o*e. t>* essential to happiness. Our friend had strolled out towara the house-lot, his brain Sant with the idea he had created to e him to test the quality of the whis key in the house. The lady of the house we are told was quietly sitting by her win dow enjoying a moments leisure after the labors of the day, when, to her astonish ment she heard in a most unearthly voice someone hollow, she looked, and beheld our friend, coming with all the speed pos sible to imagine, and at every breath ex claiming, snake bit! snake bit! snake bit! ■Oh,’ do but spare me a gill, or one swal low of the whiskey you have, or lam dead, of course the kind unsuspecting lady with all haßte gave him her bottle, and in the meantime our friend (Yancey like,) managed to prick liis flesh with a brass pin, so as to represent the snake bite. He imagined he grew worse, although no visi ble sign. of an external nature exhibited itself, yet he felt dreadfully within and continued so until tha last drop of the wLiskey was gone, then be grew better and next morning was well and off by times, now I am sure it is useless for me to tell von he was from the State of N. Now Mr. Editor, there is a moral in this thing, there is too much truth in this manner of making Democrats, there are too many made, and too few born. There are too many dependant, and not enough inde pendant men in this country, one man thinks for too many, and when he falls into eror, there is too much pride existing at this day to get most of men to acknowl edge that they have erred, the result is they are liable to lead thousands to ins truction, Ido trust however, that our citi zens will think and read more for them selves, aud vote for men that will support and maintain the laws of our country as handed down to us by our fathers, then we shall ree happy days again, then our constitution will grow and cast its benign shadows over all the earth, giving joy, peace and happiness, to all that will seek its gentle shadows. So mote it be. SCISSORS. Union Point, Greene Cos. Ga. Jone 23d 1860. Mr. Cracker:! Neck the 2nd, I saw in Planters Weekly, yonr adver tisement advertising for a wife being as it is leap-year 1 will place myself before you as a candidate for matrimony, I am a young girl seventeen last March, I am a bout four feet and six inches in height with light hair, and bine eyes, lain pretty tol erable smart with a good education,—a graduate of Madison Female College, I am one of those fashionable go-ahead sort of a girl, do not understand me to be a flirt, no tar from it, t am one of the highmiuded good natured girls, I understand domestic affairs pretty well, I have always had an eye over such, so if you want a good wife you had better repl; to this as soon as you get it for I am determined to marry the first, chance that I can get if it is a good one &c. Most respectfully yours, SARAH DOOLITTLE. Direct to Union Point Ga. Ida. Ga. July 2nd, 1860. Miss Salue Doolittle. Dear Miss : Your very kiud and accept able communication came duly to hand and its contents carefully perused. It af to.ded me much pleasure iudeed to find that my efforts are not eutirely fruitless and the reception of your letter nas caus ed many pleasant reflections in my m<nd and lias also caused the future to hold out to me many hopes and promises of a hap piness of which it had been deprived and I am fearful now that these hopes of a future felicity are but phantoms and will vanish as 1 grasp them, but 1 hope for better things and 1 trust that the acquaintance so singularly begun by us may ripen into love an<t something more than a mere commu nication between us he the result. Even now I have read your letter so much that I have learned to love the hand that trac ed the characters upon these pages which 1 shall ever consider as sacred, 1 am very much pleased indeed with the description of yourself, just the very girl for me, I will now give you a description of myself and then notice a few things iu regard to your own lovely self which 1 suppose you neg lected to state, I am about five feet eight or nine inches iu height weigh about one hundred and forty pounds my hair is rath er inclined to dark brown (it is not red) my eyes of a biaei*ii cast and my complexion at present is a little sunburnt for I SIR a fanner by occupation and have to be in tb® suu sometimes, the young ladies in this section say that I am a pretty good looking fellow, I am uo collegiate, that is I never went through a regular course • f studies at college, I have been through college, but it was in at one door and out of tin other, but I consider myself as smart as some of the specimens of “Young Ameri ca,” fresh from the walls of a college. Yon neglected to tell me your complexion, and also your weight, these are rather itn- E orient items to me, but I bare no doubt ut that they will bo eutirely satisfactory I regard you also in a different light to which your letter iuit ads to convey lor 1 have no doubt but that von ate an accom plished graduate of Madison Female Col lege and that year writing, spelling, end Terms—sl,so Always in Advance. composition is done in a manner to dis guise your real self, I hope that you are uot what your name imports you to ha, A. Doolittle, hut I hope that you are at least able to do a great deal, not that-? ever expect to require or demand it of yon, for lam of a very lenient disposition and not easily provoked or vexed and I do not expect to get a wife to make her do as people sometimes do, but I want her to love, and tor her to love me, 1 hope you will not take any exceptions to my epistle, but consider me as your admirer. I wish you to reply to this and let me know some thing cf those things which you did not tell me, they are of but little importance but I uould rather know them. Alter that I will propose a plan so that we can see or know each other. Yours Sincerely, Crackers Neck th'k 2nd. The Money King. A French writer thus speaks of the Baron James Rothschild : “Monsieur de Rothschild is an indefa tigable. worker. He rises early, looks after his own affairs himself. He receives visitors after he has prepared the day's work for his myrmidou3. On certain points he is uubendiug, but he is a good matt, though not easily moved. He has the perspicacity of a man who has made the largest fortune in Europe. His views op financial matters are always sound ; he has a genius for fores eeing events. His judg ment of men is unerring, and consequently he knows with whom and how to deal.— Nothing turns him aside from a purpose he has once formed; his views are always cl'ai, and forcibly expressed. The hours devoted by him to work are occupied until the last minute. He then withdraws him self entirely from business, and resorts to * the pleasures of life.” The house of Rothschild, consisting of the Baron James, Charles, Lionel, and other brothers and cousins, is undoubtedly the most royal and powerful ofthereigning European families. They have absorded most ot the gold and silver of the world, and no nation can go to war in Europe without their sovereign permission. They lent the Emperor of Russia forty millions for the Crimean war; they lent the British government seventy-five millions; Turkey, Austria, Sardinia, Prussia, and Egypt have all looked to theit pockets for the sinews of war. The Emperor of Austria, at the last accounts, was trying to obtain • ftesb supply from this inexhaustible foun tain, and even the great Napoleon is ea ger to propitiate the branch of the house in bis empire. It Is said that the great banker has been offered the sovereignly of Jerusalem, but having all the sceptres of Europe in his coat pocket, he magnificently disdains the proposition. The Philad?!- adelplua American has a story, that the Baron James was quietly leauing against a column in the Exchange (which column, from long occupation by him, is recognised as the Rothschild), when a gentleman of mysterious deportment approached him and intimated that he came from the neigh borhood of the Tuileries, to confer with him respecting the disposal of the Holy City. Tiie Baron is said to have replied in terms by no meane courteous ; in fact, he consigned the ambassador and his mas ter to a place not mentioned to cars polite. It is supposed that he at onee perceived a scheme to extract out of his pocket tha expenses ot the Syrian expedition, on pretence of restoring the Jews. The Ba ron is not convinced that this is the set time for restoring the Jews, nor has he seen any prophecy which declares that they shall be restored at bis expense. fining In the Springs in the Olden Time. An old visitor to Saratoga, the editor of the Fayetteville (N. C.) Observer, writes as follows of the old times and new at Saratoga: A few years ago I read a very pleasant little volume entitled “The Recollections of a Belle,” in which the lady authoress gave an account of her journey, sixty year* ago, from her home in Georgia to Ballston, the Saratoga of that day, now an insigni ficant village eight miles from here. The family le.ft home in the coach and four, with outriders, preceded by leisurely stage* through South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, (stopping on the way at John Randolph’s house, the father being a friend of the eccentric Virginian,) then to Wash ington City, Baltimore, Philadelphia New- York, stopping (to get something to wear,) at the famous City Hotel, in Jennings fie S Dillard’s day. The reader can imagine ow long it took thns to travel a thousand miles, ana at what expense the journey was made. The belle is now a great grandmother, her father and bis friendi John Randrlpb, long since went the way of all flesh, the City Hotel was razed to the ground, and dry goods stores cover it*, site, Ballston lost its mineral spring, end ceased to be either useful or ornamental, the coach and fonr baa the Georgia belle of this day finds herself at Saratoga after a journey of only thro* days, at r a trifling expense comparatively, and ahont almost to converse with them she left behind. The world is when, hot it may be doubted whether it is any hat ter by tbs changes of tba sixth years. At all events, it mJgb* he def&calt to Aid a more agreeably entertain I*4 bell* than she of that day .#• NUMBER 39.