HMlt) JntclligmnrATLANTA, GEORGIA.Wednesday, April 17, 1866.Tenue**e«.Notwithstanding the somewhat unfavorable character of the spring thus far, the crop pros* pert in Tennessee is good-better perhaps than for several years past. It is true that many of the farms on the rivers were damaged by the late high waters, but these constitute a very email proportion of the lanos of that productive region, and the loss will lxi more than overcome by the renewed energy and industry which the people are devoting to tlieir agricultural interests—at last, the only sale and reliable source of a large and enduring prosperity. In all the country South of the Tennessee Kivcr, the fields are green with the growing wheat, and cxpc