Weekly chronicle & sentinel. (Augusta, Ga.) 1866-1877, December 24, 1873, Image 1
GlO SERIES VOL UXI NEW SERIES-VOl XUVII. TERMS. THE DAILY CHRONICLE A SENTINEL, th* oldest newspaper in the South, in published daily, except Monday. Terms : I’er year, ♦10; six months. $5: three months, 42 50. THE TRI WEEKLY CHRONICLE A SENTI NEL is published crery Tuesday, Thursday sod Saturday. Terms: One year. *5 six months. 42 50 THE WEEKLY CHRONICLE A SENTINEL is published every We ineeday. Terras: One year. 42 ; six monthe. 41. 8 'BSCIUPTIONK in all cases in advance, and , no paper continued after the expiration of the time paid for. RITES OP ADVERTISING IN DAILY.-All I transient advertisements will be charged at the rate of il per square for each insertion for the first week. AdvertiaemenU in the Tri-Weekly, t -thirds of the rates in tbs lg*sJ>aily ; and in tha Weekly, one half the ItJPjp'ly rates. Marriage and Funeral Notices !«v'ti each. Special Notices, 41 per square • t - JOr publication. Special rates will * running for a i;EMJTTANbfSs by Post Office 11 atey Dtder iir Express. If thutaanriot be j done, protection against losses hjr mail may j be seemed by for-vanling 5 * d*%fl payable to the Proprietors of the CHBosiofc* an/< I SKSTnret.. or by sending the money in a , registered letter. Address WALSH A WRIGHT, ! Cf)totucle ant) .Sentinel. WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 24, 1873. MINOR TOPICS. The Czar of Russia is evidently on the war path. For so no cause or other, he has ffter mined to strengthen the army, and has issued an imperial nkase requiring that six men out of awry thousand in the Empire, including the Polish provinces, .hall bo drafted for military purposes. Much a measure in times rjf pro found p '»co seems altogether inexplicable, except upon the well known principle that it is wise in time of peace to prepare for war. The youth O'Connor, who, some time ago, tried to frighten Queen Victoria into signing a pardon foi the Fenian convictH, is now in Aus tralia. The Queen interested herself in him, shortened his term of imprisonment, and, wlien ho was released, had him fitted out and sent awav from England. Ho consumes his time with attention to some clerical duties and composing letters in verso, expressing his gratitude to the Queen. The whole civilized world will be pained to learn of the serious illness of Professor Agas siz. at his home, in Cambridge. Massachusetts. His contributions to science are equal to those of any man who lias flourished during the pres ent century. His death would create a vacuum in the scientific world which would not probably be filled in the next half century. We trust he may recover speedily, and live many years to enlighten the world with his brilliant discover ies. Watterson thinks our third-term President recommends the building of palaces in Wash ington for Cabinet Ministers and United HtateH Senators because lie supposes himself to liavo gone to Washington to stay. It will take the bloom off (lie Democratic victory of 1576 if Grant’s back does not take the whipping in stops for the Republican nominee. We hope he may live out his present term, therefore, for nothing is more probable than that thou liis servilo party will renominate him. ftrothei'-in-law Casey, with his usual fond ness for meddling, has seized a quantity of persouai property on a French steamship, in cluding five large casus of Chinese goods, most of which, the captain declares belongs to ex-President Thiers. The goods aro de scribed as very valuable, including a number of superb silk-, worth 41 500 each, a magnifi cent shawl worth 41,500 a lady's work box valued at 43,000, and other exquisite articles. It is suggested that llrother-in-law Casey might have (lielight they wore directed to the Wrong President. i’lia Irish enugrauta in Amorica have for- Wardod to Ireland during tho pait twentv-one yearn Mima of money aggregating more than was rained in Ireland by tax for tho relief of tlio poor by ti 1,250,000 sterling : and yet the Irinh ariet'ei'atH and Hquireene are continually orying »lit against their legal liability to sup port tho poor. The charity of tho IrisU-Ameri oan euflgraut should put their nobility to the blush, if it in capable of blushing. The fact of the amount of the remittauoes is published in English official returns, prepared for the use of Parliament. Sir Henry Thompson, the British surgeon, feels that it is not proper for him at present to refute the court charges that have been made agai »t him of inipropi r treatment of the late Emperor Napoleon. After remarking to this effect at a recent supper of the Midland Modi ioal Society in llirmingham, S r Henry said that he was ready to rest any reputation he might have upon everything he did in that ease and he might venture to say. in connection there with, that he did not look back with regret upon anything ho counselled or did. and that ho should be ablo to prove its propriety when the time came. Iho llev. Joseph P. Taylor, of Brunswick, Me., having some trouble from an echo in his churcii, effectually destroyed it in the follow ing manner : The church consists of a nave transept aud chancel. Wires wcro stretched across the arches of the open roof at two inches distance from each other at the inter section of the transept ami navo. coming down to tlio corbels, and also across a portion of each of several arches in the nave, beginning at the top. Mr Taylor suggests that the wires need not be nearer together than one foot.— The wire is so small as not to be seen from the floor of the church, and consequently does not detract from its appearance. Representative Willard, of Vermont, a Re publican. was t hairman of one of the regular committees of the Forty-second Congress. Du ring last Summer ho wrote a lotter making a candid statement of the part taken by Presi dent Grant in the passage of the salary grab bill, which showed that the occupant of the White House actually importuned members for its passage. For thus stating facts. Mr. Wil lard has been removed by Speaker Maine from the chairmanship of a committee to au inferior position. This action is the more marked from t o fa and that Sjicsker Maine appears to have taken extraordinary pains to give all the Credit Mobilier and salary grabbers in the present Congress the beet positions. A Mexican audience cannot be trifled with by a failure to carry out the programme at places of amusement. The Tiro AVpuWics informs us that they have an imported opera troupe play jug at the Grand Opera House in that metro polis. which contains one or two tirst class artists, to a "score or more of fifth-rate ac-. tors." Recently, on a Saturday evening, the audience became so exasperated on account of the failure to carry out the programme, that benches, cushions, chairs and other available lumber, were hurled at the performers on the stage. President Lerdo was present when the uproar commenced, but as he had not gone there to witness that sort of performance he quietly withdrew. They have “good judges of opera in the Mexican capital." atfinns the Pico KepuMirs. The old fable tells us that when all the vir tues flew from Pandora's box hope remained behind. In real hie. reversing the illustration, when every other quality which graces woman has ceased to exist, her fidelity to old attach ments remains undimiuished. No matter how anworthy is tho object, or how little that ob ject reciprocates love and trust, the devotion of ti c wretched is unabated. Seldom has a more vivid picture of this fact been drawn by Pickens, in his "Oliver Twist. Nancy loves the brutal Bid Sykes, and loves him even when she sinks in death beneath his ruffian hand. Something of the same k ud was manifested by the woman who re c. t.f.y tided the New York murderer. Sharkey, to * -cape from the Tomos. Low and aban doned. a u d fearfully maltreated by the viliiau whom she helped to escape the penalty of the law, she yet did and dared for him ail in her power. Gerald Massey is one of the few poets who have arisen from the lowest poverty and mean est surroundings. His father, a canal boat man. unable to write his own name, earned but ten shillings a week. Gerald was born in a low stone hut. which was often the scene of suffer- , iug. and where hunger aud cold were constant ' companions. At e ght years of age he com- i meneed work in a silk factory, earning a shil ling a week. The mill burned down, and Ger ald learned to plait straw. Having learned to read ai a penny school, he read everything that came in his way. Banyan, the Bible and tracts comprised the most of his available literature. He obtained a situation in a book store as er rand boy, began writing for obscure sheets, and when twenty-one years old started a cheap journal. The Spirit of Freedom, written en tirely by workingmen, but of which the con tents were chiefly from the editor's own pen. He entered i to the agitation of the working men caused by the French revolution of 19 18. and has since devoted the greater part of his life to the elevation of the working classes. MR. DUTCHKR'B LETTER. We publish this morning an exceed ingly able article on the calling of a Constitutional Convention from the pen of Salem Dutches, Esq. Mr. Ditcher is too well known to require any intro duction from us. He was for many years editor-in-chief of the Augusta Constitu fir/nalinl and afterwards, and up to a few months since, was upon the staff of the national organ of the Democracy—the i New York World. Mr. Dctcheb was in | Atlanta during the session of the Con- j ' veutionas a correspondent of the World, j and is perhaps better posted as to the inner workings of that iniquitous body! than almost any one else. His argu ments are strong and forcibly presented, j and will be, read with interest by the j j people of Georgia. i A RAILROAD TO ELBERTON. j The Elberton Gazette states that a j i gentleman of that place has received a i letter from Grant. Alexander k Cos., j i railroad contractors, proposing to build a railroad from Elberton to Tocoa City on the Air Line Railway, if a subscrip tion of one hundred thousand dollars caa be raised-j A mtMitia* of thi gifem* of the county™ ill be rteld on nexFSalur day, for the purpose of taking the matter into consideration. We are sorry to see j the faces of the Elbert people turned j away from Augusta. That county add this city have always been close friends and allies and we are afraid that if con nection is made with the Air Line Rail- j way Atlanta will get the trade which formerly came to our merchants. But 1 we cannot blame them for trying to get a railroad in some way, and if they can- j not oome to Augusta, why they will go ] somewhere else. It is one of the wealthiest counties in the State, with I a population noted for its hospitality i and refinement, and it is a shame that ! it has been so long shut out from the world. RECEI VING HIS REWARD. The strongest Democrat in the South —if his own words are worth anything —is Honorable and Judge .Tames Lyons, of Virginia. He was so much of a Democrat that he could not for a mo ment tolerate the idea of the Democracy forming a temporary alliance with the Liberal Republicans, even to secure a national triumph. Had he stopped here no one could have blamed him for liis honest convictions on this subject.— Thero were many true men throughout the country who entertained the same opinion. But Mr. Lyons was so good a Democrat that he began to prefer Radi cals to his own party and frankly de clared his preference for Grant over Greeley. Thinking that the best way to assist him was to organize a third party, Mr. Lyons assisted actively in getting together the little squad of mal contents which met in Louisville and called itself a “convention.” He was President of the meeting which passed this resolution: That we proclaim to the world that principle is to be preferred to power; that the Democratic party is held to gether by the cohesion of time-honored principles, which they will never surren der in exchange for all the offices which Presidents can confer. The pangs of the minorities are doubtless excruciat ing, but we welcome an eternal minority under the banner inscribed with our principles rather than an almighty and everlasting majority purchased by their abandonment. But it turns out that after the elec tion Grant’s best friends are those who attempted to create a schism in the Dem ocratic party—Wise, Mosby, Lyons, ct ill. For them the Radical papers, which abuse Jefferson Davis and the other rebel leaders, have ever a kind word. Their influence is all powerful at the White House, and their favor consti tutes the surest road to preferment.— And now the leader has his reward. The man who proclaimed liis determination "never to surrender time-honored prin ciples in exchange for all the offices which Presidents can confer” lias just been appointed by the President to the office of United States District Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia 1 We don't know whether there has been any surrender of time-honored princi ples or not, but Mr. Lyons certainly has his reward in oue of the offices which Grant can confer. THE SALARY GRAB. Harper's Weekly is not loyal enough to defend the salary grab of the Forty second Congress. It says that the rea sons for the repeal of the bill are not pecuniary but moral. It characterizes the bill as a bargain. “It was intended to influence members to vote for the in crease of the President’s salary by pro viding for the increase of their own, and to buy the support of those who were just leaving Congress by offering them the increased rato for their expired term. However defensible the end, the means made it one of the most disgraceful nuts ever done by Congress, and the honor of that body imperatively demands the re peal.” This is very strong and harsh language for the most intensely Radical of the Radical press to use iu condemnation of a measure which has outraged the sense of honesty in both parties. But it is just. The retroactive features of the bill are not defensible, and have been condemned by the voice of the people irrespective of party. It may be legal and constitutional for members of Con gress to vote themselves back pay, but there is neither justice nor honesty in the appropriation. Mr. Stephens defends the retroactive feature on legal grounds. We desire to suppose a ease which may be consider ed analagons, and because it conies home to the people of Georgia we deem it applicable. The Legislature of Geor gia meets in January. The compensa tion or salary fixed by the Legislature of 1871 was $7 per day and mileage for each member. This urnouut was deem ed reasonable and just. The amount of salary for members of the Legislature is not defined in the Constitution of the State, neither is it defined in the Con stitution of the United States ior mem bers of Congress. In each case it is left an open question, and can be reduced or increased at the option of a majority. The question is therefore aualagous, and 1 the comparison which we are about to i institute is applicable. The members |of the Georgia Legislature have the I right to increase their salary. Suppose at the meeting iu Jannary they increase their pay from $7 to $lO, and make the ! I increase retroactive so as to embrace $3 per day extra for the session of January and February. 18?3. There is no law against it. Itwonldbe constitutional, be . cause tho'c is nothing wuich prevents it. It would be legal, because it is within the j | province of the law-making power, j But while the increase of salary might be legally right, it would be moral'y, wrong. It would be simply legalized j robbery, and the people of Georgia i would so hold. They would consider, * a nd justly so too we think, under the circumstances, that their representatives in the Legislature had abused their trust in taking money out of the State Treasury to which they were not en i titled. Public opinion in the State : would be swift to condemn snch action lon the part of the Legislature. And ! from a parity of reasoning it condemns j the back salary grab of the last Con Legally it may be right, but morally it is wrong. In this particular case, reason and honor alike condemn the additional appropriation of money j lor services already rendered and paid for at a stipulated price. There is no amount of special pleading, legal acu men or constitutional law and precedent ’ that can be cited that will reconcile the j public to the j ustice of the back pay bill. : To characterize it by no harsher term, | the back pay bill was a forcible and un i warrantable appropriation of the public i money. People who are in the habit of 1 using forcible language might with propriety cbarcterize it as the “Rape of the Treasury.” FREE MAIL MATTER. The Macon Telegraph and Messenger, after effectually demolishing the argu ments used in favor of the free trans mission of literary matter through the mails, says : “We are able, therefore, j to see nothing commendable in the bill i said to be introduced by Senator Gor don, of Geor ia, for the free transmis sion of periodicals, magazines and news papers through the mail.”’ We agree with the Telegraph. We can see noth tha sincerely trust that it may never become a law. The time has come when the press should not be made to appear mendicants in the eyes of the world. Every properly conducted journal should be able to pay its expenses with out receiving charity from the Govern ment. The press has no more right To j receive its exchanges free of cost than a merchant to have his private correspon dence “dead-headed.” The argument used is that the circulation of informa tion should be free, and that exchanges bring news matter. Let us ask if the papers do not make their subscribers pay for this same “news matter” when re-published ? Why then should they ex-1 pect to receive it free of expense ? A newspaper is, or should be, a legitimate business enterprise, and needs no charity to keep it going. If it does need alms it had better suspend. General Gordon’s bill is doubtless prompted by the best motives, and the newspapers should feel grateful for his high ap preciation of their services, but we feel quite sure a large majority of the daily and weekly journals of the United States will oppose the revival of the free exchange system. A POOR COMPARISON. Mr. Stephens, in his defense of what is known as the salary steal, devoted some time to the press of the United States, which has so unanimously con demned that iniquitous measure. To show to what an extreme point news paper criticism has been carried, Mr. Stephens stated that one journal had gone so far as to style the bill a raid upon the Treasury of the United States comparable to the memorable charge of the Light Brigade at Balaklava. We agree with Mr. Stephens—though by no moans for the same reasons—that such a comparison is very wrong and unjust, especially unjust to the immor tal six hundred. There was no gallan try displayed by Congressmen in their charge upon the Treasury. There was no enemy to attack, no strong position to carry—though there was something in the Government strong-box which they declared worthy of their “steal.” It <vas not even a wild foray into a hostile territory. If a militaiy simile is to be used, it more nearly resembled the plundering of a store train by the soldiers left to gnard it than anything else. Mr. Stephens might also have stated, whilst engaged in his defense of the transaction, that another journal had likened it to the robbery of a bank vault by burglars, and had given a graphic and circumstantial account of the manner in which an entrance was effected, of the opening of the strong-box aud the divis ion of theswag. But here again we think the figure ill-chosen and inappropriate. The transaction lacked even the nerve and daring which characterizes the op erations of the professional cracksman. It resembles more nearly the spoliation of the ward by the guardian, or the night watchman who plunders the prem ises which he has been paid to protect. In the event that Mr. Stephens shall feel called upon to make a second defense of the most disreputable act of an American Congress, we suggest that he pay atten tion to those other similes of the naugh ty, naughty press. Mr. Stephens has also stated, in connection with his elab orate argument in favor of the back pay grab, that “demagogue,” in the original Greek, signifies a leader of the people, aud that it should by no means be re ceived as a term of reproach. Continu ing his valuable and interesting philo logical researches, Mr. Stephens might also inform Congress and the world that the word rogue, which some seurillous aud uever-to-be-too-much condemned journals have applied to certain Con gressmen, moans in the original French a “proud” person, and in the Icelandic tongue oue “brave and haughty.” There fore the word, however intended, is by no means an opprobrious epithet. Here after, then, the most complimentary lan guage which can be employed when speaking of a Congressman is to term him a rogue and a demagogue. Selah. THE TRIBUNE ON AMNESTY. The bill of amnesty and oblivion intro duced by Mr. Maynard, of Tennesssee,, meets with a strong endorsement from the New York Tribune. The severe and proscriptive measures adopted by the Radical party in Congress were never necessary to preserve the fruits of the j war and the rights and privilegesguaran- j teed to the freed people. The effect of ! the prescriptive policy of the Govern- I ment of the United States has been to | keep alive the bitter feelings growing j out of the war and to engender hatred among all classes of the Southern peo ple against the Radical party for ostra- | cizing certain citizens who enjoy the respect and confidence of onr people. The vindictive measures of Congress out raged public sentiment in the South. Mag nanimity on the part of the conquerors toward the vanquished was the great panacea for the stricken and widowed South—the one thing needful to recon- cile onr people to the fate that they were po vcrless to avert, aud to bring : about reconciliation between the sec tions aud a better feeling on the part of ; ! Southern men toward the General Gov- ; , eminent. There is no longer any reason I ! t hat can be urged on the part of the most j i loyal citizen of the North, who really | wishes a restored Union, against the j repeal of the obnoxious and vindictive I measures which exclude some of the j ablest and purest men in the South from positions of honor and trust under the . State and Federal Governments. The boon of universal amnesty should no j longer be withheld. No man in the j l South should be excluded from office; for participation in the war. The Tri ' bune, an advocate of amnesty for years, has this to saV upon the bill for amnesty 1 which has passed the House and is now before the Senate. Speaking of the evil effects of repressive legislation to ward the South, it says : Mr. Greeley was the first Northern man of wide influence who perceived the full effect of it, aud the first to de mand universal amnesty as the logical corollary of impartial suffrage. His j nomination at Cincinnati f reed the AUGUSTA, GA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 24, 1573. House of Representatives into a more liberal measure of amnesty than had be fore been attainable, and a year after his death the leading representative of the Southern loyalists, the statesman who drafted the iron-clad oath which exclud ed from office nearly every reputable man of Southern birth, is able to pass through the House of Representatives, by an overwhelming majority, a bill to permit the people of the South to exer cise their elective franchise in freedom. This action has been too long delayed. Within the last few weeks two impres sive incidents have shown how useless and absurd were those out-of-date pre cautions. One was the letter of Gen. Forrest to Gen. Sherman, offering to raise a division of cavalry for war with Spain, and Sherman’s endorsement that he would trust Forrest to fight as well for us as he did against us. ’t he other was a word coming from a man who honored us all in his way of dying, Capt. Fry, of the Yirginius. While he was lying under an illegal sentence of speedy death, when he had bade fare well to the world and made his peace with God, this manly rebel still thought of the country that had conquered aud refused to forgive him, and in a letter to the President said : “My field of use fulness has been abridged by proscrip tion. The carpet-bag policy is ruinous to the country. Let Louisiana govern herself. Her prosperity is that of the whole country.” It is a wretchedly nar row and not altogether honest policy,! Whioh-ha*! kept Icafc nnder the ban of proscription. This one at least took a noble revenge in doing honor to the American name wiien he died. There are thousands of such, and we do not think they are any more dangerous to public peace or morals than Mr. Casey or Judge Durell. TAX \TION FOR THE PEOPLE. j The Secretary of the Treasury in his annual report to Congress conveys the unwelcome information that the ex penditures of the Government are largely in excess of the receipts, and that in order to meet the increased ex penditures, additional revenue must be raised. He suggests to the Ways and Means Committee how .$74,00 1,000 can be wrung from the people by additional taxation, and recommends that it be laid on in such a mannner as to be least burdensome. If duties are to be im posed on the prime necessities and luxuries of life, and have to be paid by the rich and poor alike, we fail to see how the tax bill can be sugar-coated so as to make it other than burdensome and offensive to all classes who contribute to the support of the Government. The increase of expenditures is mainly due to the large appropriations made by the last Congress in excess of the estimates made by the several Executive Departments of the Government. The public servants have been corrupt and extravagant in the management* of the high trusts committed to their keeping, aud the people—the tax payers of the country—should compel the members of Congress to reform existing abuses and reduce the extravagant expenditures of the Government. Congressmen—to give the people evi dence of their integrity—should begin by paying into the Treasury the money which was uujustly appropriated by themselves last year. Their salaries should be reduced to about $5,000 per annum, and this would be about $2,- 500 more than the services of the average member of Congress are worth. In the present embarrassed condition of the finances, the depression of agricultural and manufacturing indus tries, and the general stagnntion of trade and commerce, retrenchment and re form in every department of the General Government should be the watchwords of all honest men in and out of Con gress, regardless of party. Party lines should be ignored and party pre judices buried to accompli-li this great good, to bring relief to this tax ridden people, to restore confidence to the country at large, and to protect the legitimate business interests of the coun try—all of which by wise and judicious legislation can be accomplished. Increased or additional taxation in the present paralyzed condition of the busi ness interests of the country should not be imposed. The people cannot pay taxes that must prove exacting and oner ous iu their crippled condition. Mem bers of Congress should have sense enough to know that all the industries of the country have been depressed and stagnated by the recent financial crisis. The effects of this storm are still visible. Congress should apply itself to the task of removing the commercial debris—the result of financial chaos—by restoring public confidence. Inci'eased and addi tional taxation will not do it. Reduc tion in every department of the General Government, retrenchment in appropria tions and economy in expenditures will render the present receipts of the Gov ernment ample to meet every require ment and obligation of the country. If the men in Congress have ordinary intelligence, common sense, honesty or patriotism, they will commence the work of reform by cutting down the appro priations of all the departments of the Government, beginning first by reduc ing their pay to $5,000 a year. Let them bear in mind that salaries have been re duced from ten to twenty per cent, in all the great manufacturing centres of the country; that the agricultural inter ests of the people North and South have suffered a loss of from thirty-three to fifty per cent.; that while those reductions in salaries and wages have been made, and the losses iu agricultural pursuits sustained, the necessaries of life have fallen in price, and the cost of living is therefore less ; and that $5,000 a year from an impoverished people should be ample compensation for about four mouths service. Our Senators and Representatives are all honorable men ! mark you, reader. They are intensely patriotic—they love the people and the country which they serve, and if they do not love them selves more than either the reform and retrenchment which are so much needed in the impoverished con dition of the country will be speedily inaugurated. Men of all parties—Radicals, Liberal Republicans and Democrats —can stand upon this platform, if they are sincere in reform ing abuses and curtailing expenses within proper and reasonable bounds. Lip service is cheap, but the people should not be cajoled or cheated by lond-monthed reformers, whose actions are always sure to belie their words. The people cannot and should not stand any additional taxation, because they can lot pay it. The work of retrench ment should begin in the Senate and House, and thence spread to every Exeeu [ tive Department. Compel the President | to pay the money wrongfully taken from the Treasury as back pay, reduce his 1 salary, reduce your own, and return that which is not yours, and then the people ; of the country irrespective of party may be induced to believe that the Forty-third Congress is an improvement j on its predecessor. Increased taxation is an expedient that should not be thought of. Ad ditional taxation, no matter how judi ciously imposed, cannot be other than burdensome to a people whose industries are crippled from the effects of a finan cial cyclone which swept the whole conntiy and paralyzed every interest. Irascible old party—“ Conductor, why didn t you wake me as I asked you ? Here I am miles beyond my st tion.” Conductor—“l did try, sir, but all I could get out of you was *‘all right, Maria; get the children their breakfast, and I’ll be down in a minute. ’ ” A STATE CONVENTH -U, Letter From Salem Dntckeij Ksq. To the Editors of the Chronicle and Sen- Gextlemen—ln response I tvr,! po lite circular note of a few days' since, re questing, for publication, my views on the advisability of a Convention to frame anew Constitution for Georg. I have the honor to say that, iu my opinion, it is altogether deshable sucl’ a body should assemble at an early day. The present fundamental Is vof Geor gia is the creature of force It was brought into being by and has been sustained up tc ■ Miis time by fear. Iu no true sense is i; the Con stitution of the State. Even those who imposed the instrument us now a mit it was not authorize! even by their own laws. The Athwfc Conven tion was called in October, V*7, and its handiwork ratified in Aprihf 1868, by negro votes, and yet in what Js known as “The Slaughter House Uase,” de cided in the Supreme Cos t of the United States, April 14, 1878 jpe Conrt said, “The negro having, by the Four teenth Amendment, been decked a citi zen of the ’united States, was, jy the Fif teenth Amendment, madea vo'hr in every State of the Union.” The fourteenth Amendment was declared a iFt of the Federal Constitution on theKyof July, 1868, aud the Fifteenth .VitA luent on the 20fb 1 SoJ3Ek.iug Huy nKse who^vi^^a^F?e?"mnP neither voters in nor citizens of the United States. Touching the lawfulness of the instrument in the eyes of the peo ple of Georgia, but few words are re quired. It is the badge of their subju gation, the seal of dishonor on their spent tears aud wasted blood. It is my firm belief that they deeply resent its existence, and that neither itne nor habit will dull them into any respect for or confidence in it. Now, a law which has neither the respect nor the confi dence of those upon whom it is to ope rate Jacks the first essential of all ser viceable legislation. We love tLat which our own h nds have in whole or part created. We respect that which comes to us sauctioned by the good opinion of our friends and neighbors, even though we feel unable to coincide in all their views. But what respect or affection can human nature have for that which is thrust upon us, contrary to our own wish and without even the palliating ap proval of those in whom we trust ? Fail ing, then, as it most assuredlj does, in these all-important particulars, the pres ent organic law of Georgia is fatally weak. Being weak in the great and main point of its authenticity, no patch work of the instrument can make it strong. Anew, and not an amended, Constitution is what we need. Such an instrument, untainted with tli* past and fresh from the bosom of the present, will receive that public respect which the utility of a State Constitution so im peratively requires. Coming to those particular provisions which, in my humble judgment, tiny new Constitution should confeiin, there iti this to say: The object of all govern ment is, or ought to be, the protection of person and property. Protection to person is, I believe, in Georgia, well se cured, though I must confess a distrust of any theory or practice tending to limit, the right of trial by jury in crimi nal cases. “Though begun in trifles, the precedent may gradually increase and spread. ” —Blackstoue. Touching protection to property, we open a wide field. The reign of violence is over in Christendom, but the reign of fraud is come instead. Property is no longer snatched by the mailed hand of robber barons. It is softly conveyed away by the almost imperceptible processes of taxation, assessment, donation, endorse ment and subscription. The rough thief of old plucked away your thousand dol lars, and that was the end of it. The sweet-spoken “live mat.” of to-day hot only takes your thousand dollars, but makes you pay him discount and inter est on the theft. In the old time, when your money was taken you could forth with begin, unimpeded, to lay up some more. Iu these modern days you can only imperfectly wako ijp .epfOie tion by reason of the necelsfy you are under of paying for the privilege you have just eujoyed of being robbed. We have lately seen Germany demand a war indemnity of $1,060,000,000 from France, and France being a ready money country lias paid it. Her industries do not now languish under the debt. But suppose Germany had made what the “live mau” would term it min e favorable settlement. Suppose she had said, give us $750,000,- 000 in twenty years seven per cent bonds. The sum total to be paid by France under that arrangement would have been SI,BOO, 00,000, and for twenty years her industries would have felt the para lyzing effects of the burden. Mortgag ing the future is the great danger again-t which, if Georgia is ever to flourish, she must in her new Constitution provide I believe it to be an absolutely indis pensable necessity, a prime, first, and fundamental pre-requisite to any re cuperation of this Commonwealth that the prevalent practice of incurring pub lie indebtedness should cease. The Con stitution should permit no taxation what ever, State, county, or municipal, save for ordinary and legitimate State, coun ty, and municipal purposes, and the prompt payment, principal and in terest, of such State or local debts as have up to this time been law fully incurred ; nor should either the State uor any of its political sub-di visions at any time, in any manner, or on any pretext give, loau or pledge its funds or credit in aid of any person, associa tion, or corporation I would also re quire a concise annual statement, under oath of the receipts and expenditures of the State, and of each of its political sub-divisions, the general statement to be published at public cost in every newspaper in Georgia, and the local re ports to be similarly published in every newspaper within the sub-division. — Among still otlierprovisions, 1 would re quire the assent of a majority of all the members elected to eitherhouse to the passage of any bill. At present the Senate consists of 44 members and the House of 175. A majority in either body, or 23 in the Senate and 88 in the House, are competent to proceed to business, and a majority of this majority, or 12 in the Senate and 45 in the House, can pass any but some'few specially ex cepted bills. I fail to see the reason iu a little over one-fourth of the legislative body making laws for a people who base their whole theory of government on the i idea that the majority must rule. In j Illinois, lowa, Missouri, Maryland, Mich j igau, Nevada, and Minnesota, this thebry is carried into practice, and I believe it for the advantage of Georgia to have the same rule. It is a current observation in politics that most badfe -.vs creep through in “a thin House,” f. e., where there is only about a majority of a majority of the members present The same rule, mutatis mutandis, I would apply to cases of a two-thirds vote. Let it be a real two-thirds, that is 67 per cent, of j either house, and not a sham two-thirds, ! simply two-thirds of a majority, or 35 per cent. Still, furthermore, I would provide for the proper publication aud due promulgation of the laws two things sow shamefully neglected; would give cirtain limited exemptions from jury duly and forbid the Legislature to grant more; would fix the capital iu its time-honored seat at Milledgeville; would iripple “log rolling” legislation by denying the Legislature power to en act spedal laws in any case capable of being pul under general statute; would apply the principle of minority repre sentation—just as it was years ago ap plied in Seorgia to the old bank char ters—to tie election of officers of incor porated ccjnpanieSjSo that the large stock holders cinnot elect all the directors; and, for the benefit of the rising genera tion, Woulil insert that provision once so popular in pur Aneriean Constitutions, ; the which made England great and has kept her free —“The doctrine of non-resistance against arbitrary power j and oppression is absurd, slavish and destructive *f the good and happiness of mankind.* Such, Mesirs. Editors, briefly and in the main, are the view- yon have done !me the honoi to reqne-t. Minor points : I have passtfi over and presented the ; salient features alone. How far they i may meet popilar approval or ever find a place in ours organic law I know not, i but constitutiifcal law—"the rise of em pire aud the spring of power”—has long been a favoriti study, and I am inflexi bly persuaded! some' snch provisions as have been her! presented are necessary to make Georia rich and great. In ad vocating a Convention you will, I think, carrv the pefple with you. The shat tered temple if the Stab- needs re-erec tion. Many pf the pillars have fallen from their jedestal and the arch sur mounting is not as symmetrical as of yore. Wistim and patience, skill and devotion aid needed in the work of re i habilitatioa but if that be well done the storm-tried State will realize the bless ing on that ancient city—Peace be with in thy palaces and prosperity in all thy borders. Yours, truly, • Salem Dctcheb. THE STATE CONVENTION. Letter From Dr. H. R. Casey. Waverly Hall, December 8, 1873. Editors Chronicle and Sentinel: Gentlemen—Your kind letter of the 29th is just to hand and contents noted. In it this significant inquiry is made:— “Shall the Legislature call a convention for the purpose of amending the instru ment known as the Constitution of 1868.” And again, “that the people may be fully informed upon the subject, you desire to give them, through your paper, the .opinions of gentlemen whose ability and experience in publie affairs make them representative Georgians.” And again, if consistent with your (my) feelings you desire an expression of voiir (aiv) opinions upon this subject matter. It is my wish, and I conceive it to be uiy duty, to walk up to the “captain’s office to settle my account with my na tive State, as one owing allegiance to her at all times aud under all circum stances. Hence I have no hesitancy in putting myself squarely and publiclv upon this record. And upon this “plat form I stand, and shall stand, be the consequences what they may. I shall net “hedge” by saying, “I did not go to -*;%**■ * [ ju£t what I say. If tins lie treason “x am ill on £ Responsible f° r .ik I intend no disrespect to the Uniteu States Government. I desire to see the “E Pluribus Unum" flag float from the “masthead” represent ing many districts, States or sov reigtities under one General Gov ernment. I desire to respect the “delegated rights” of the General Gov ernment; but also to stand by the “ re served rights of the States.” And any infraction by the General Government upon those reserved rights of my State L shall ever oppose. But I see a very great difference between the Government of the United States, as bequeathed to us by the “ fathers” and administered under the Constitution at Washington City and the present political machine run alone in the interest of a mere party at Long Branch, Saratoga, and semi-occa sion ly at the Capitol. Aud as this State Constitution (“ so-called”) was framed, fashioned and manipulated under the dictation of this rambling government and outside of the Constitution of the United States, my answer to your per tinent inquiry is, Yes 1 Yes!! Yes !!! And the reasons are many and obvious. At the time this “ instrument’’ called a Constitution was put upon us Georgia was under the heel of the despot, and her sovereignty was denied her by those who were here merely to riot in the “flesh pots and to fill their empty carpet bags. These were the characters that had control of public matters, and, bending the pliant hinges of the knee thatthrift might follow fawning (thrift to themselves, but not to the country), this instrument without form or comeline s was published as the law of the land. It is not of us nor by us, but a miserable exotic, a spawn of the hour, > “conceived iu sin and born in iniquity.” We then were under the reign of Rufus, the Bovine. We had to submit fer tue time being to these “revellers at Belshazzar’s feast.” But Bullock saw the “handwriting on the wall,” while engaged in his peculations and specula tions, and fled the “chair of State” that he had desecrated, leaving this country for the country’s good and stopped not till the snowy cliffs of Albion intervened between him and justice. His hegeira left the State government in the hands of her own sons, save and except the few days’ reign of Ben Conley. 1 only wish that in his pickings his fingers had appropriated that “instrument known as the Constitution of 1868,” which was in part the work of his head, and taken it along with him. Johnny Bull was more than welcome to the man and to his minor charter. But thanks to a kind Providence, and to a better feeling at the North, these bad men and their illegal measures came to grief, and the Democratic party com ing into power “things ip general,” aud UV politics, assumed, $ djflferviit aud a more prosperous phase Georgians now rule Georgia. But Georgia should be under a Constitution eminating directi) from the brains of her own sous. They •.nd they aloue are the real custodians of our State’s honor and manhood. T continue this “Constitution of 1868,” now that we have the power to change it, is a blot and a sore reminder of other and darker days; all traces of which I wish to see v tnish from the laud. Now is the time,for action, and our Legisla ture at its next session should call a Convention for the purpose of framing anew Constitution upon the basis of the old one, modified and changed only as the soverjgn people of Georgia have decided are necessary to meet the chang ed condition of things. This is not only >nr r ght but our duty. These are my honest sentiments, howevercrudelv they may be expressed. Respe tfully, H. R. Casey. Hen. Gordon’s “Charlatanism.” [LaGrange Reporter.] Two or three weeks ago the Columbus papers stated that General J. B. Gordon would deliver an ndlress in that city. Whether they stated the subject of the address we do not remember; but the idea got out that the General was going to urge on the people the importance and benefits of life insurance. He did not get to Columbus when he was ex pected, and for two or three days after wards the papers announced each morn ing that he would be there on the suc ceeding night, and thus the matter ac quired considerable notoriety. The Chronicle and Sentinel took occasion, very properly we think, to reflect on the exceeding bad taste of a United States' Senator going about to lecture on life insurance. Some of the papers, with more zeal than good taste, undertook to defend Gen. Gordon, but this did not make the matter any better. The coun try press ti ok it up, and from various parts of the State could be heard con demnations of Gen. Gordon’s “charla tanism.” They were all acting under a mistake. We happened to be on the same train on which Gen. Gordon went to Columbus and heard a conversation between him and some friends. He stated that he had no intention of making a speech in Columbus; that his visit to that city was strictly a business visit; that the an nouncement of an address from him was made without liis knowledge or consent; that he was astonished when he heard of such announcement. We were not in the party to whom these remarks were made; hence we have not been in haste to mention them —preferring that some of Gen. Gordon’s personal friends should set him right in the matter. But they have not done so, and we think it due to our Senator—a man whom wq all delight to honor—that this statement be made. Those papers which have reflected on Gen. Gordon should now make the correction. A Regular Mormon.—We Lave a private letter from Mr. Jacob Duck worth, residing on Little river, tea. miles north of Quitman, Brooks county, in which he requests us to state he will pay a reward of fifty dollars for the ap prehension of one Scott, or S. S. Smith. Said Smith is a regular Mormon, and oc cupies his time in traveling from one county to another, remaining only long enough to deceive and marry some inno cent country girl. It is known he has four wives in Middle Florida and two in Georgia, one of the latter being the daughter of Mr. Duckworth, whom he deserted after living with her two weeks. Several of his abandoned wives are 1 hunting for him now. Smith is sup posed to be in Decatur county at present, and is accompanied by a lad named Jim Johnston.— Savannah Hews. Patterson’s Tricks.—Whoever in the Federal Capital, or elsewhere, is in any wise interested in the question whether or not John J. Patterson obtained his seat in the Lnited States Senate hv bribery, may as well understand that the accounts of his honorable acquittal that have been telegraphed to the press of the conntry are misrepresentations of the facts of the case, concocted and for warded in the interest of the accused Senator. T' e fact that the election of Patterson was procured solely by the use and promise of money is perfectly | notorious in South Carolina, and tiie '< United States Senate can, if it likes, j easily satisfy itself that the partial de , sea of the feeble efforts which have : thus far been made to bring him to jns | tice was accomplished by the very same means . Charleston News. The Military Committee commenced an investigation of Freedman Howard’s defalcation. A CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION. Another Letter from Hon. John C. Reed —Reply to the Atlanta Herald. December 15, 1873. Editors Chronicle and Sentinel : The Atlauta Herald seems desperate ly afraid of the revival of imprisonment for debt. It ap> ears shaky at the very BU BB es tion. When its editorials are considered so little is found in them that one almost thinks that the reasons given are only ostensible and that a still greater and more moving argument ex ists, kept back, asyet undisclosed. The Constitution of 1798 provided tha, there should be no detention of the person of a debtor, except in cases where there was a strong presumption off, aud. Our law did not stop there. It went on humanizing, increasing the allowances to insolvent debtors, until at the break ing out of the late war no bail writ could be i ad against a man unless the plaintiff made oath to the fraud of the defendant, nor could a ca sa be obtain ed unless the plaintiff specified iu his affidavit property other than his exemp tions held by the defendant, which could not be reached by ft fa. If the plaintiff swore falsely iu either affidavit, the defendant could prosecute him and send him to the penitentiary. After the bail writ or the ca sa issued the defend ant could be at once released by giving bond to appear at a day appointed and give up the property over and above that allowed him by the law. He could only 14 imprisoned by th- finding, of a jury <>f his neighbors that, he was keeping back and hiding out more property tha that which the law permitted to him as the head of a family. Under this law, that the free people" of Georgia enacted for themselves, which they recast and perfect, and in 1858, no honest man was ever hurt or even arrested. The fear of the law sodeterred the dishonest that I never knew of but oner: se of imprison ment—that was where a purchaser of a large stock of mules, having sold them out and pocketed all of the money to cheat the seller, pretended that he had lost his pocket-book. The seller took him with a bail writ, and an honest jury of Greene county found that he stilt had the money. He was sent to jail under the verdict, aud in there he found the pocket book and paid the seller for his mules. I practiced for eleven years under this law and the above is the only case of imprisonment for debt which I ever knew. It was a good law, guarding jealously the liberty of the citizen, and it was a terror to none but those who wished'to cheat aud swindle. Our State, at her highest pitch of refinement, when she was free to do as she pleased, recast the law as I have said in 1858, and again re-enacted it in adopting the Code. But the Herald says : “It was a noble spirit of reform in our civilization when the foul blem ish was eradicated from our statute books.” It speaks also of this law made by the freemen who bore up the South ern cross for four years, almost against the worm come in arms, and who have not been bent by the eight years of op pression following their disastrous de feat as “an outrage upon Christian civilization aud humanity.” The ignor ant slave just freed, the carpet-bagger who ran away from home to steal, and the scalawag who stole at home, were, it seems, superior in Christian civiliza tion to the free whites of Georgiu in the meridian of their advancement and de velopment. The Herald seems to fear that if the people of Georgia are permitted to meet in free convention that the barbarians will at once begin to put every mother’s son of themselves in jail for debt; and that paper would patriotically protect these poor creatures with the superior civilization of the African anil the Scow heganite, and keep them from wreaking their ferocious barbarity on themselves. •Surely, we ought to thank the Herald. Moses, who would not let his Divine Master destroy his people, wasn’t a cir cumstance. I say, if the people of Georgia wish a law to jail the swindler and smuggler, let them have it. If they wish to re move the capital back to Milledgeville, let them do it. Their will expressed in constitution or law should commaud our !' : !..f V i'.U , ~! superiority of the carpet-'baggefiT'''anfl' scalawags who, in such Christian enlight enment, corrected our errors aud purged the worth, intellect and flower of our people of barbarism, I do not see it. 'The old law ennot be revived unless the. people meet in convention, and if it is revived no man can be imp . -on-d in,less a jury of his own people find, on relia ble evidence, th-,t he is hoh img- back property over anil above his homestead and exemption. Should any horn st man fear either a convention or a jury of his own people ? After all, this question is trivial com pared with some of the others ugnated. So is the. question of the removal of the capital. Good men may differ on either. But however much we m v differ, no •odv should be afraid to see the, people of Georgia maki tlieit owu constitution, nor refuse such, when mad-, his cheer ful obedience, through it may put the capital where some people do not wish it, or agree e ther with the Herald or myself as to the policy of imprisonment for debt. Revival of the good old sys tem of our fathers, trampled under foot by the irruption of the vandals who desecrated our State under the recon struction acts, protection of the public credit, an inhibition perpetual and iri e pealable on the Legislature to pay the repudiated bonds, but above all, the ex ercise of the glorious privilege to make our own constitution as we please, in stead of being kept forever under the immaculate Christianity and supeiior civilization of the first constitutional ex periment of thieves, plunderers, floaters and negroes —all these speak command ingly to the good citizen, whatever he may think of the particular subject of this article. Yours, &c., John C. Reed. A CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION. Letter From Judge Alex. M. Speer. Griffin, December 15, 1873. Editors Chronicle and Sentinel: Gentlemen—ln reply to yours of the 29th, I beg leave to say, were Ia mem ber of the Legislature of Georgia, I should unhesitatingly vote to call a Constitutional Convention of the State. Apart from the mode and circum stances under which the present Consti tution was framed, I am satisfied the public interest demands new safe guards to protect us from the universal ly .corrupt tendencies of the age. This corruption seems pervading almost every department of the National Gov ernment—is bold and unblushing in many of the local Legislatures—and to day Georgia tax payers are groaning under the burdens imposed by the ra pacity, villainy afid avarice of those who came “to develop our resources.” I want to close the door effectually and permanently to any chance to be robbed and plundered anew by these ad venturers, or any like successors. And to do this, I want the fundamental law so framed that the Legislature would be powerless to do us harm—a positive in hibition against State aid, in all its forms or hues, inserted in the Constitu tion. The great curse of the day in politics is too much legislation, too many office holders and too many laws. Asa measure of economy—a short session of thirty days of her best and wisest men in council could save the State in one year double the cost it would impose. Biennial sessions, limi ted terms and per diem pay of the Legis lature, fixed in the fundamental law, coupled with large reduction of the membership of the Legislature, would save in one year twice the cost of the Convention. The gTeat object that I would seek for would be to limit and restrict the legislative power in the imposition of taxes and increasing public debt or any conditional liability. Another serious inconvenience that the people are suffering under is the home stead exemption in the present Constitu tion. I am satisfied that the present real and personal property of the State —every dollar of it if divided among heads of families—could be covered with these exemptions. In other words, it would require something like five hun dred millions of real and personal prop erty to furnish each head of a family these homestead exemptions—far more than is returned by her citizens on the entire tax digest of the State. When capitalists and money-holders know that your fundamental laws thus shield, or propose to shield, so large an amonntof your property from payment of debts, is it strang - they decline to 1 >ai>, or when they do their accommodations bring ruin to *he borrower in the exorbi tant interest they charge ? A moderate homestead I regard as a public blessiug and a wise policy, but the exemption that leaves nothing upon which credit can be based, limits its owner to his own means, and the result we see iu abandoned fields, decaying en closures, and neglected and ruinous dwellings. This golden bounty that was | offered to a ruined and war-impoverished I people as a bribe to submit to the wrongs and usurpations of reconstruc tion, is yielding its bitter fruit in the j utter prostration of credit and universal loss of confidence be f ween lender and the real estate of Georgia in golden streams, under a wise and intelligent system of agricultural improvement, ex pended on the remaining half, what a new face would our country wear in a few years. Thrift and fertility would succeed sqnallor and bmYonuess ; happy and neat homesteads would rise where now totter the ruins aud wreck of a former prosperity. But there are other cogent reasons to my mind why ourCaustitutiou should be revised—had I time to submit them, i'hey will readily suggest tliemselve- to the reflecting mind. The great, aim to j be accomplished -the''great purpose t be kept steadily in view —would be to grant grudgingly power to your Legis lature, lest mthefuture it may he used to wound ahdpliinderyon—while theinte!) i gence and virtue and wealth of the Stare still hold the reins—so t > guard the publie credit and liipit the* power of taxation and public expenditims in your funda mental law thW even power if (tempo raily) conferred upon the unprincipled fid adventurer by the people eoold not be Vriehh.d t(>aoi,,' l .ei ; ''u- detriment, or Tifipr-v!.!- >■ firs Hr i .ireuotes, not lifc-'v [•< happen -i i. o u-xl decade of y'urs, 1 would say while it is calm and the sky is clear, overhaul the ohl ship, refit her muststrengthen lun timbers, remove those that are decay i g, unfit or useless, and prepare for the storms and perils that even patriotism cannot always guard against, and which, in the political as in the physical world, must occur. Very respectfully, yours, Alkx. M. Speer. LETTER FROM EDGEFIELD, 8. C. Fdgefield, S. C., December 15, 1873. Editors Chronicle and Sentinel : After an unusually' lengthy warm spell we are now having bracing weather. Those who have been fortunate in raising hogs will have them slaughtered this week. Our farmers are now about closing up this year’s labor. Occa sionally we find one who has not finished gathering cotton, but it does not neces sarily follow that his crop is any better than his neighbors. The crop has ngt been an average one, considering the acreage p'ante.d, aud the fertilizers used. As nine-tenths of the planters were compelled to sell their cotton to meet their obligations to merchants, the the planters are not as'well oil'to-day as they were twelve months ago. Any business yyill fail conducted alto gether upon a credit system, aud the planters are to blame themselves, al though the merchants aro often unjustly Warned for the planters’ failures. The merchant who sell on a credit and take liens, under the laws of this State, have very little protection. The homestead law and one-third of the produce raised by a laborer will leave but little for tho merchant after rent and.the laborers’s third are paid. The large landed estate of the late Gov. Pickens, sold at public auction at this piace to-day, was purchased by his widow at a nominal sum. The lands were very valuable in days when labor was reliable, but with the present laws we are forced_ to live under, and the de moralized condition of labor, it is hard to piace a value on property in this State. Taxes the present year will not fall much under two per cent. Tho Legis lature has not yet settled the amount. The Edgefield Sabre Club have con cluded to have' a hall during the Christ mas holidays. The members of the Buptist Sunday School will have a festival. We are expecting to have a merry Christmas, especially the young people. Homer. j AGASSIZ. SftSeVrirrt. -i Boston, December 15. Professor Agassiz died to-day. His last hours were apparently passed in unconsciousness. ■ t 2, p. in., on Sunday he hml an attack similar to one ox,.erirncei! before a aus- ! pension of r< operation, which continued about a half minute, icompanied by i other indication!} of uppmaciuug disso lution. These, were succeeded 'by un naturally rapid breathing that continued to grow outer with flop ii t.ing vigor The path nfc lay upon h - aide and be yond an occasional convulsive uiovi m< i . of his limbs, there were’ no signs that he - suffered pain, and I he fi: ale, was scarce- ! I.Y perceptible. London, December 15. Thejournals, in tlieir obituary notices of Judge -e. , son and Professor Agassiz, award big : praise to them. liliuis John Rudolph Agassiz, the great naturalist,, >vho died yesterday, was born mar the Lake of Neucln.tel, May 28th, 1807. He was the defendant of a French Huguenot family which was driven from Fr nee by the ri vole tion of the edict of Nantes. Having chosen the profession of*medicine ho stud rd in the medical school of Zurich and alte wards at Heidelberg. In 1827 he entered the University of Munich, which had recently been organized. Here he formed intimate friendships with several distinguished scientists. Upon the return of a Hcieutjfio explor ing expedition sent to Brazil by Un- Bavarian Government, the leader of the corps, Martius, selected Agassiz to elaborate t e ichthyological part, of Un work, and the manner in which the task was accomplished, placed him at once in the foremost rank of naturalists. These studies and labors diverted him from the profession of medicine to which he Imd been destined by his par ents, who therefore withdrew his allowance. • Cotta, the publisher struck by the value of the materials Agassiz hml collected fur a “Natural History of the Fresh-water Fishes of Europe,” and no doubt impressed with the genius of the young naturalist, enabled him, by a timely supply of funds, to go on with and complete the work. He took the degree of doctor of philosophy at Elau gers, and in the same year the degree of doctor of medicine, at Munich. He de voted seven years to researches upon the fossil fishes, before commencing the publication of the work. In 1832 he re- I ceived the appointment of professor of I natural history in the college at Neu j chatel, Switzerland. In 1833 lie com menced the publication of his work on the fossil fishes. The work was of vast, benefit to science and has stood the lest of time, It gained him gvA-t, celebrity, The Universi ties of Edinburgh and Dublin con ferred on liim the degree of LL.D., and the corporations enrolled him among their citizens. He wrote a number of other scientific works now well known. ' In the Autumn of 1840 he arrived in 1 Boston from Paris, his object being in ! the first place to make himself familiar with the natural history and geology iof this country. In 1818 Agassiz en- I tcred upon the duties of professor of 1 zoology and geology at the scientific | school at Cambridge. From that period j until his death Professor Agassiz de- I voted his time alternately to teaching : and making original investigations. In j 1852 he accepted a professorship of j comparative anatomy in the Medical i College of Charleston, S. C., which he retained for two successive Winters j during which lie made a thorough study | of the marine animals of that coast, ex | tending his excursion to Georgia and | North Carolina, but fiudiDg the climate injurious to Lis constitution, he re ! signed his position and returned to re- I side permanently at the North, lie was elected into the Academy of Sciences | at Paris, the Royal Society of London, and all the Other learued societies in Europe and America A Specimen Senator. Montgomery, Ai.a , December 17 The Senate, la-t night unseated Hatch, Senator for Hale county, elected last Spring to fill a vaoaDcy It seems that Hatch was, three years ago, postinast, r •t the county site of Hale couqtv. Mo neys wi re missed from the mails, arid Hatch made a'lidavit and accused .-un born, his clerk. After Sunt” rn had been j idled several mouths the investi gation pressed Hatch -n elo.-i- that co wrote a confession of hi- uvn guilt, which whs published, and In- agieed with Special Agent Pettier).ridge to pay up. Suit was Commenced in the Un tc-i Slates Court, and Hatch was turned out of office. Hatch then ran for the Bml ate, and was elected by a large 111 , jur l tv, but on the above showing the Senate de clared him ineligible. He is a Republi can. NUMBER 52. MR. STEPHENS. A Vivid Description of the Scene in the House When It was Announced by the Speaker that He Had the Floor. We clip the following description and comments from the New York Hr raid in regard to Hon. A'. H. Stephens’ speech I on Wednesday, the 10th inst. : The scene in the House to-day when the Spesker announced that Mr Ste phens, of Georgia, had the floor, was grandly picturesque. It was intimated yesterday that he desired to say some thing on thequestion of pay of members of Congress, and his infirmity pleaded for him more eloquently than ther- quest, of his colleague. Hut it was not what. Mr. Stephens would say that made the prospect of a speech irom him so at tractive. There was somethin,' more heroic than mere cariosity in tile earnest desire of Senators to he informed when the distinguished Southron ha.l the floor. A few minutes after one the Speaker gently tapped his desk to remind the members of the obligation not to dis turb debate, and attention at <p ce ('en tered on the gaunt figure of the Th-pre mitative from Georgia, who occupies a desk immediately.in Wont, of the Speak er. on the inner circle of seats. The galleries were full of eager listeners.— Under the eagle’s wing, which over shadows the clock, stood a youth, peer ing down the aisles, which were filled to •nitlbcattyu. It was Young America. Webster's reply to JTayrie, and in his tory, when Chathnifilinveighed against the recognition -of American independ ence. What, a scene was this I The Vice-President of the organized rebel lion, who fourteen years ago was a mem ber, without, spot or blemish, of Con gress, to-dav the cynosure of all eyes : ... How strange in contrast with the' story of Bazaine’s condemnation, and how passing strange in comparison between the strength of the French and Ameri can republics ! The doors leading t.o the galleries are jammed; only the dip lomatic gallery is empty, save two soli tary individuals of foreign toilet. The reporters sharpen their pencils, put, on their eyeglasses, and a hush, produced by the gentle tapping of the small end of the Speaker’s gavel, ensues. The surroundings in the House, and especially about, the orator, make a pic ture which must strike him with a sense of strangeness. In all that crowd of Representatives there are only half a dozen whom he knew in his previous Congressional experience. Who are they? The tall, gaunt, Indian form of Maynard, looming up above the throng; the herculean form of BufHnton, of Mas sachusetts; tlse si me what grizzly face of Dawes, and the odd spectacled English physiognomy of his colleague, Mr. Gooch, together with the black haired Marshall, of Illino s, from the Egyptian part of the State; and S. S. Cox, whose new name, “ Dew Drop.” sparkles on every tongue. These six men are the only ones of this Forty-third Congress who are familiar with the voice of the Georgian and who served with him in the Thirty-fifth. How curiously his little black eyes must have gazed upon the strange faces about him ? What an eagerness on the part of all others to catch the words as they fall I He rises, drops one of his crutches in the aisle; he leans heavily upon the other. Death the skeleton anil Time the shadow paint liis picture, and put a glossy black dress coat hanging iohsely on the shoulders, with a small, cadaverous head, covered with a plum colored velvet smoking cap, from under which the steel gray hair creeps. Now for the first words—“Mr. Speaker?” The first words have a music tinged with the lull vowelied A-frioanese dialect of the South. The Democratic seats are va cant; the crowd presses close up to the orator. He indulges in a comparison between the good demagogue who leads right and the bad ones who pander to them. He makes a classical, then a Biblical illustration. Does ho strike the keynote all expected ? Does he inveigh against corruption, profligacy, extrnva gat ice ? Does he applaud economy and self-sacrifice? Thoreis disappointment. 3,105 t think lu» has clutugeO with the the mercenary year-' have coiVie, Vie rm™ come with them. Gifted and pure him self, passionless and almost, disabled, he would have been the man to herald the better day, or to renew that, other tame when -lolin 1 .etcher, George W. .Tones and others of the South gave up to the. public their service to save millions for the public and take nothing for them whatever may" be’express ,'d.' Z' one nearly parallel being when Chatham, to whom the orator referred, cum. into the H- l u«e of Lords swathed in flannels and demise HIHII followed .Mr Stephens has lived since he left here in 1859. Cornet- Pitt, and old'statesman Chatham, sonant, even to tlm purlieus of West minister Hull, nr, in strange contrast with the shrill, fife-like, octave voice of the skeleton orator from Georgia But they group i,bout him. The ora tor is talking the salary bill, aud what tors "conklin,"', * Windimi,' Thurman. Bogy, Conover and others. Within al most arm’s reach sits It i Butler. To the rear Judge Hear, tie night In I aud lent. A number of lueinln rs who served as generals and colonels m both the Union and Confederate armies form a cordon about the old man’s de k. Tin Speaker is intent, lie lias laid aside his gavel, for no one even whispers or disturbs the good order of the House.— All eyes are fixed upon the orator, and yet the linden of his remarks was that, he was not oniy opposed to the repeal of the salary bill, but did riot believe the representatives of the people were suf ficiently paid for their services render ed. That is all. His time is out. Gar field and ivellogg, of Connecticut ask that it be extended. Members press closer about him and give undivided at tention until he concludes his speeoh, resuming his seat. The Georgia P. ess.—We find the fol lowing in the Hawkiusville Dispatch: Our Odious State Constitution. —But sow papers in Georgia oppose a Conven tion of the people for the purpose of changing the present Constitution, and il the people of the (State were aware how much bettor they could make it by a few alterations, they would demand u Convention at onoe. The present Con stitution was thrust upon our people at a time when they were under the power of Federal bayonets, which fact was so repugnant to their feelings us free citi zens that thousands of them refused to go to the polls and vote agauu^giaAßul lock was running for Governor, Mid it is to his party that we are indebted for the ratification of the Constitution and its odious provisions. The scala wags and misrepresentatives who were a-sembled in Atlanta in the early part of 1808 had strong ap prehensions that the people would some day demand a change in their legislation, and call for an alteration of the Constitution. To place aH great an obstacle as possible in the way of amend ments to this instrument, they declared that it should not be altered or amended \ eicept by a vote of two-thirds of two Legislatures elected successively. Thus we are forced to submit to the operation lof laws that cannot be amended or re pealed unless by our representatives elected on different occasions, or a di rect action by the people to dispose of the matter. If the present Legislature, which convenes in the early part of Jan uary, will submit the question to a vote, we are satisfied the capital will be re moved to Miliedgeville, where it right fully belongs, and some very wliol. and more important clmi g. will be made in the present C.oi -titnii n, it neV one be not entirely and. “Jury,” said a We,-,tern .1 i.ige, “you I kin go out and find .i verdict It ;, on i can’t liud one of your owe, g ( -i Hie one j tiie las' j .ry n~< and, ’1 n j ir.v v. fumed ; glee. ; A little boy ha been fairly driven ! N w--. j tobu, .ui.oiig t, ■ >•- ol l; ' j .ire to 'be given enough fishing twine j every year.