Rensselaer Union, Volume 2, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 November 1869 — The Attacks of the Gold Ring on the President and Mrs. Grant. [ARTICLE]

The Attacks of the Gold Ring on the President and Mrs. Grant.

The fresh assaults of-the gold gamblers and their organs upon General Grant, this time dragging lu Uiqgauie of Mrs.-tyrant, attract renewed attention here, notbnly, for their matter, but for thejr shameless audacity. Nfoone here ever credited fine of these wicked charges, and since the President's plain tetter to Mn Bomgw nbtliing llki suspicion evdn frt* fobrterl. But these new developments SQjm tobave been made with a View to breaking tho'' force of the President’s denial. He needs no defence from such attacks.. The base nttrmpf Io cf)rihO(-t the -HXtftc of Mrs. (Irani with the alleged operations is as vffeked as every other part of the conspir ary. 'Die charge that she wrote to Mr. Corbin the letter ituia which au exliatt purports to Be TriHitr tn AnC of the New Nork papers of to day, is effectually answered by the fact tlmt siMJ never wrote tn tyr. Corbin on any subject, and never Wrote anything so any mcipber of his family that could possib!y : i»e? tortured in snch shape. All statements or assumptions that Corbin or any one else'erer bad or ex'” nrted the slightest influence in deterniin ing in the Pre»deut'g.miiid whether gold diotild ot should not he sold, are, like, all the rest, false without qualification ; and If Mr. C<jrW, or wy one elMtwer nuule any use of the name of the President or ’Mya.- Grant in connection with tflie opcrAflods of any kind,- H whs not cjnly without their consent, but wholly andyt j» bapjiv ' Accessary to again declare tliat neither of them ever had any intoxoet v dirc,clj iadiract, fontingeift or remote,’m any trnnstictions Of the kind, or ever sought to control, adyise or direct* in any such matters,or ever had anything but words of warning against the unscrupulous and designing men whom they saw setting their toils for their unwary friends. The wicked attempts to thus injure the fair name of the President as a man, and the last despicable effort to drag from the sacred privacy of the family circle the name and wcfoiknly tame of,Mrs. Grant, deserve, as they must receive, the universal'exccratton decent people.— WasTtingfOii Dispatch to New York Tinies. ,