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Permanent advertisements taken by contract
Advertisements inserted without specification as
tcmhefumb® “ finsertions, will be published until
ordered out. and charged accordingly.
Terms —Cash on demand.
Job Printing.
„ rw ,*red to do all kinds of Job Work, such
(Vulnrs, Hand Bills, Posters A <>., Ac., on
**Caid»,CU ver y lowest prices,
short notice, and at ' JA \, IKS DELANEY,
JAMF.S W. ANDERSON.
gtatetiwaal to.
L ]5. AN DEII 8 O li.
a ttox’ii oy
AND
SOLICITOR IN EQUITY
CO VTNGTON, GEORGIA.
WM. W. CLARK & J. M. PACE,
UAVE formed a partnership, and will transact all
business entrusted to them in the connties ot
r Kutts Henry, Gwinnett, Gallon,
“‘iTewtmi and in the District Court of the United
lutes at Atlanta. Special attention given to cases
iu Bankruptcy. w w . CLARK,
ecu? 1 * *’ * k
j. 0. M O R It 1 S ,
attorney La.w,
CONYERS, OA.
ll A7JO SE 6,
X) 13 ax t I as ’K,
CONYERS, GEORGIA.
Will b* found prepared to put up work in his
line, which he fee s confident from his knowledge
of ihe improvements will ttive satisfaction
• • those who may lav or him —3oi3
JOHN S. CARROLL,
DENTIST,
COVINGTON, G I.OIUSIA.
. - T.-.h Filled, or New Teethlnswted.iu
best Style, and on Reasoiiaids Terms
Offlce Rear of R. King * Store. 1 ltf
.! AMES M . LEV Y ,
Watchmaker & Jeweler,
East side pf the Square,
COVINGTON, GEORGIA,
Where he is prepared to Repair Watches, Clocks
,n I Jewelry in the best style. Particular attcu
tien given to repairing '''' stelies injured by in
eoin.ieteot workmen. All work warranted.
mMSS TUSHES AMS REPmES.
PR >l-. WILLIAM FISHER v, ill
2£*^a and , Vole his SATURDAYS to rutting
ll $ j jland Repairing Pianos. He wi.l
viail l’a-i ilirs in the country, and convenient
ti on (he Rail Road for that purpose. His
•rg experience will enable him to give *atis
,f»ctis:i to his employers. Charges reasonable.
He s permitted to r.fer to Presidvtil Ol r.
Covington, Ga., April 8, 1868. —20if
DRS. DEARINC & PRINGLE
HAVING associated themselves in the Prac
.tice of MEDICINE and SURGERY, offer
'(heir piofeesional services to the citizens ol
Navio i county. Tirev have opened rn offi eon
the East side of the Square, (next door to S-
Diwald’b 8t -re.) and. are prepared to attend to
»1' calls promptly They have also a carefully
veUc ed assortment of the
Very Best Medicines,
•nd wiil give their personal attention lo Com
pounding Prescriptions, for Physicians and
otters.
Special attention giveu to Chronic Diseases
At night Dr. Dealing will be found at his
resid r.ce, and Dr. Pringle at his rooms imme
diately over the Store of C. H. Sanuecs A. Id no.
may 15, 25tf
BOOT & SHOE SHOP.
1 would respectfully inform the citizens jjSJili
of Covington and surrounding country 4 v *
that lam now prepared to make toorder '--3
BOOTS AND SHOES
•f the finest quality. As I work nothing but
ths Best Material, I will guarantee satisfaction.
Shop over U. ICiug’s Store.
e 6 anfly JOSEPH BARBER
II T HEN R Y,
Resident Dentist.
COVINGTON, u.,vC;GIA.
I* prepared with all the latest itn
iTyafiaßL provements in Dentistry, to give sat-
I LI * isfaction to all. Office north side of
btuare, —\ ‘>2tf
•I Os E D H Y. TINSLEY,
Matchmaker & Jo wel o r
D f illy prepared to Repair Watches, Clo -ks
>»a ! Jewelrv, in the best Style, at short notice,
All IV ..rk Done at Old Prices, and Warranted.
2d door below the Court House. —stf
SOLO MM Q N fiCWALfr,
At his ,dd siand, sign of the BIG W vTOII,
Has received his Stock of
Spring and Summer Goofis.
He wish-s to purchase nil kinds of
Country Produce,
for which he will pay the Highest Market Price
ia CASH, er Goode.—2 46tl
C • H. & A. W. FORCE,
W liolesale Dealers in
Boots Cto ODOO3,
Whitehall street, Atlanta, Ga.
r>ll r Roods arc purchased direct from
the Eastern Manufacturers. Wo will
sell them to Countrv Merchants at N. Y. prices—
r reight added.—ly42
VKTILLIAM BILVERBER.G, Wholesale and
’ T Retail Dealer in
Y GOODS,
C»ENTB* 15oT8’ AND YOTTIIS* CLOTHING,
Wools, Shoes, Hals, Trunks,
GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS,
Whitehall street. 2d door from I. T. Bank ’
bhoe Store.—3m43 Atlanta, Oa.
CS 1 a W ip 11 1
D0.0.5. PROPHITI
Coving to n Gr.ono ia .
Will still continue his business, where he intend*
keeping on hand a supply of
Drugs, Medicines, Taints, Oils, Dye Stuffs,
'together with a, I.ot of
Botanic EVledicines,
Concentrated Preparations, fluid Extracts, Ac.
lie is also putting up hi*
Jjiivei* MecUoinos,
FEMVLE TONIC, ANODYNE PAIN KILL II
tcrinlfuge, AnU-Eliliotis l*il(s,
and lrauy otiier preparations,
Li? Will give prompt attention to ali orders
5* -151TICW.AR NOTICE.
Iler. after NO MEDICINE WILL BE DELIV
Eli ED. or SERVICE RENDERED, except for
O j&- £3 Z3C !
You nee not call unless you are prepared to
PAY CASH, for I will not Keep Books.
Oct. 11, 1807. O. S. PKOPiUTT.
Dr. Prophitt’s Liver Medicine-
Certificate of Rev. M. W. Arnold, of Ga. Gun.
HAVING used this Medicine sufficiently long
to test its virtue, and to satisfy my own mind
that it is an invaluable remedy for Dyspepsia—
a disease from which the writer has suffered
much for six years—and being persuaded that
bundled* who now Buffer from thisannoying com
plaint, would be signally benefited, as lie lias been
by its use—we deem it a duly we owe lo this
unfortunate class, to recommend to them the use
of this remedy, which has given not only, himself,
but several members ot his family the greatest
relief M. W. ARNOLD.
pre,jnuniw JJ tttmmmm -
Rail Road Schedules.
r.corirlit Railroad.
E. W. COLE, General Superintendent.
Day Passenger Train (Sundays excepted,)leaves
A moist aat 0.00 am : leave Atlanta at 7 ft in ; ar
rive'at Augusta at 5.30 pm ; arrive at Atlanta at 4.20
' N iijht Passenger Thain leaves Augusta at 10.10
p ui ; leaves Atlanta at 5.40 p m ; arrives at Augusta
at 3.00 a ni; arrives at Atlanta at 7.45 a ni.
Passengers for Miiledgeville, Washington and
Athens, Ga., mu t take the day passenger train from
Aun-nsta and Atlanta, or intermediate points.
Passengers for West Point, Montgomery, Selma,
and intermediate points, ran take either train. For
Mobile, and New Orleans, must leave Augusta on
Night Passenger Train, at 10.10]'. m.
Passengers for Nashville, Corinth, Grand Junc
tion, Memphis, Louisville, and St. Louis, can take
either train and make close connections.
Through Tickets and baggage checked through
to the above places. Sleeping cars on all ui;;ht pas
senger trains.
MACON & AUGUSTA RAILROAD.
E. W. COLE, Gcn’l Sup’t.
Leave Camak daily at 2.40 p. m.: arrive at Millcdge
villc at 6.20 p. m.; leave Miiledgeville at 5.30 a.m.;
arrive at Camak at 8.55 a. m.
p vrerr leaving i»ny point on the Georarta H.
R tiy Day Passenger train, will make close counee
liu’u ;,t C.iinak for Miiledgeville, EatontOD, and all
intermediate ] obits on ti.e Macon A Augusta road,
and for Macon. Passengers leaving Miiledgeville
at 5.30 A. M., reach Atlanta and Augusta the same
day.
SOUTH CAROLINA RAILROAD.
H. T. Peake. General Sup’t.
Special mail train, going North, leaves Augusta at
3.55 am, arrives at Kingsville at 11.15 a in ; leaves
Kingsville at 12.05 p m, arrives at Augusta at 7.25
]>. in. This train is designed especially for through
I ravel.
The train for Charleston leaves Augusta at i am,
and arrives at Charleston at 4 p m ; leaves Charles
ton at 8 a in, and arrives at Augusta at 5 p ni.
Night special freight and express train leaves Au
gusta (Sundays excepted) at 3.50 p m. and arrives at
Charleston ns 4.30 a m ; leaves Charleston at 7.30 ]>
in, and arrives at Augusta at 7.35 a m.
WESTERN & ATLANTIC R. R.
Campbell Wallace, General Superintendent.
Daily passenger train, except Sunday, leaves At
lanta at 8.45 am, and arrives at Chattanooga at 5.25
pm; leaves Chattanooga at 3.20 am, and arrives at
Atlanta at 12.05 p m.
Night express passenger train leaves Atlanta at «
p m, and arrives at Chattanooga at 4.10 a m ; leaves
Chattanooga at 4.30 p m, and arrives at Atlanta at
1.41 a m.
MACON k WESTERN RAILROAD.
E. B. Walker. Gen’l Sup’t.
Day passenger train leaves Macon at 7.45 a m.nnd
rrives at Atlanta at 2 p in ; leaves Atlanta at 7.15
am, and arrives at Macon at 1.30 p in.
Night passenger train leaves Atlanta at 8.10 p in,
nn d arrives at Macon at 4.25 am; leaves Macon at
8.30 I* m, and arrives at Atlanta at 4.30 a m.
Hotels.
PLANTERS HOTEL.
JGUSTA, GEOKGIA.
furnished and refitted, unsurpassed by
ll any Hotel South, is now open to the Public.
T. S. NICKERSON, Prop’r.
Late of Mills House, Charleston, and Proprietor of
Nickerson’s Hotel, Columbia, S. C.
United States Hotel.
ATLANTA OKORGIA
WHITAKER <fc BASSEEN, Proprietors.
Within One Hundred Yards of the General Passen
ger Depot, corner Alabama, and Prior street*,
AMERICAN HOTEL,
Alabama street,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
Nearest house to the Passenger Depot,
WHITE & WHITLOCK, Proprietors.
W. D. Wilky, Clerk.
Having re-lease 1 and renovated the above
Hotel, we ate prepared to entertain gin sts in a
most satisfactory manner. Charges fair and
moderate. Our efforts wiil be to piea-e.
Baggage carried to and from Depot free of charge
PLANTATION TO RENT FOR 1869.
( CONTAINING 2000 acres of Land. 500 acres
J open for cultivation, of which more than 100
is bottom, and 100 creek lan !. On the place
is a geoil Dwelling, and all necessary out houses,
including Kitchen, Stables, Gin House, Packing
Screw, Ac. Said Plantation is situated on the
Yellow River, eight miles south of Covington,
known as the ROIPT WRIGHT l’antatiou.
It will lie rented to the highest bidder, before
the Court House door in the city ot Covington,
on the Ist Tuesday in October next. For fur
ther particulais apply to Mr, Kiucaniion, on the
idacc, or the undersigned.
1 C. WRIGHT,
FRANKLIN WRIGHT,
Sept. L 1808. AUimnistvatois
COVINGTON, GA., OCT. 9, 1868.
There is no Death.
11Y Silt E. lit; MV EH I.YTTON.
There is no death ! The stars go down
To rise upon some fairer shore;
And bright in Heaven’s jeweled crown
They shine forevermore.
There is no death! The dust we trend
Shall change beneath Lite summer showers
To golden grain or mellow fruit,
Or rainbow-tinted flowers.
The granite rocks disorganize
To feed the hungry moss they boar ;
The forest leaves drink daily life
From out the viewless air.
There is no death! The leaves may fall,
The flowers may fade and pass away ;
They only wait through wintry hours,
The coining of the May.
There is no death! An angel form
Walks o’er the earth with silent tread ;
He bears our best loved tilings away,
And then w e call them “ dead.”
He leaves our hearts all desolate,
lie plucks our fairest, sweetest flowers;
Transplanted into bliss, they now
Adorn immortal buwcis.
The bird-like voice, whose joyous tones
Made glad these scenes of sin aud strife,
Stings now an everlasting song
Amid the tree 6f life.
Aud where lie sees a smile too bright,
' Or hearts too pure far taint and vice,
lie bears it to that world of light,
To dwell in Paradise.
Born unto that undying life,
They leave us but to come again ;
With joy we welcome them —the same.
Except in sin and pain.
And ever near us, though unseen,
The dear, immortal spirits tread ;
For all the boundless Universe
Is life—there arc no dead.
From the New York Tribune.
Interview with the Hon. EL H. Hill.
A representative of tlio Tribune called on
the llou. Benjamin 11. Hill, of Georgia, at
his hotel, and during a long and interesting
interview,"that gentleman expressed the opin
ions of which a synopsis is given below. ‘‘My
opinion of the Reconstruction policy of Con
gress is, that its successful establishment will
totally ruin the South. It will demoralize so
ciety, disorganize labor, and destroy confi
dence. Genrgia will vote the Democratic tick
et, the whites having a decided majority, as
well as the support of large numbers of the
negroes. But in many portions of the South
the negroes are in such large majority (hat
evil disposed white men can control enough of
them to secure the offices ; hut the means by
which the negroes are -u controlled and influ
enced are such as engender among them abso
lute haired of the white race. Asa result of
this hatred, we of the South are in constant
dread, and cannot leave our wives and chil
dren alone with safety and confidence.” In
reply to a query about the prevailing opinion
in the South on the suffrage question, Mr.
Hill said : “I th-hik our people would have
accepted impartia suffrage as a compromise
and finality. They do not object to negro suf
frage because they hate or would oppress the
negro, hut for the reason that they consider
their late slaves incapable of understanding it
at once, and fear that they would become (as
they have become) tools in the hands of wick
ed and designing white men. Thus, by giving
suffrage to the negro, he is made utterly worth
less as a laborer, and dangerous to Llie peace
of our society. Our people, having become
impoverished by the war, desire now to recu
perate. .They can'do so only by cultivating
their lands, and for tliat purpose need the
negro as a laborer. It is their interest, there
fore, to be kind to him. I know the Republi
can party eould have commanded (lie white
vote of the South after the surrender, if they
had pursued a different policy toward our peo
ple. Those of us down there who had opposed
secession, always charged that the Democratic
party would bring about disunion, and that
disunion meant destruction. The facts turned
out as we predicted. We also told the peo
ple that the party opposing the Democracy
did not hate the Southern people, and would
not do them an injustice. But the Reconstruc
tion policy destroyed the confidence which
otherwise might have been felt; hut for this_
I do believe all the evils of secession would
have been charged by the people on the De
mocracy, and the white vote of the South
would have been largely against that party. —
But this Reconstruction policy of suddenly
disfranchising whites and giving the ballot to
ignorant negroes, and the plan of forcing these
things upon us, threaten to fulfill the worst
picture ever drawn bv the most rabid seces
sionist.” As to the Republican candidate for
President, Mr. Hill said that the Southern
people do not dislike General Grant. llis de
portment toward General I.ee at the time of
the surrender at Appomattox, and his vindica
tion of the Southern people to the President
in 1865, made him a favorite with them, so
much so, in fact, that he could have gained
their consent to any honorable terms. Res
garding the reestablishment of slavery Mr.
Hill remarked that much misapprehension
exists in the North respecting Southern opin
ion on that subject. lie asserted that South
erners would vote the proposition down almost
unanimously, because they have found slavery
too costly to be maintained against the senti
ment of mankind. In case emancipation re
sults unfavoral ly to the negro, however, the
Southern people will not feel themselves re
sponsible for it. In reply to a query as to the
onuses for the rejection by the South of the
Constitutional amendment (14), he said : M e
rejected it solely because it disfranchised our
leading men for doing what the people, by
their totes, hail requested them to do. Be
sides, it disfranchised tlio very men who did
their best to prevent secession, and leaves open
a rond for the worst secessionist to become
Republicans, thus not only repudiating their
own past career, hut deceiving tho party
which receives them. They only join to have
their disabilities removed. Mr. Hill said that
the financial question excites but little interest
among the Southern people. They believe
that if tho Union can ho restored and the re
sources of the country fully developed, the
currency can lie brought up to par, and the
national debt liquidated when it hecomesdue;
hut if the Union is restored in hate and by
force, and the South is thus made incapable of
recovering, the resources of tho country can
not he developed, the government cannot he
economically administered, and will he sub
verted long before the bonds fall duo, and then
they will never he paid at all. They think
that capitalists should by all means oppose
the Reconstruction measures, because (and
hero Mr. Hill was very emphatic) tho South
can never have either safety, peace or prosper
ity under those measures. When tho election
throughout the South was alluded to, Mr. Hill
said : “Tho South will vote for Seymour only
because he is pledged to relieve us of this
measure,and enable us to recover out prosperity
and reservo out peace. We expect this re
lief to come peaceably, and by lawful means.
Wo would not have it otherwise, because it is
to preserve the peaoo that wo ask relief from
these measures.” In relation to the recent
expulsion of tlio negro members from the
Georgia Legislature, ho gave it as hi.s opiniou
that under the Reconstruction laws, and the
laws of Congress, they were entitled to tho ; r
seats, hut that, at tiie same time, tho Legisla
ture had power to pass a law disqualify ing
them. Their expulsion, lie said, could not
have been accomplished without the connivance
of the Republican members. It lias no great
effect on tho whites, hut the blacks are consid
erably affected by it, for they have lost their
confidence in the nu n who proclaimed them
selves their friends. Mr. Hill does not believe
in the exisistence of the Ku Kdux Klan—at
least not as a Southern institution ; he said
there had undoubtedly been “demonstrations,”
hut his belief was that they had invariably
been incited by Republicans, in order to give
Northern men a wrong impression of South
ern opinion. When the question was asked,
“What would the negroes do in case Scvuiour
and Blair were elected?” Mr. Hill said that
he had no doubt they would quietly submit.
Their condition xu that event would ho fully
as good as under the present rule, and they
would become of more use to the country us
laborers.
When asked whether he proposed to aid in
the canvass of his State, he answered that he
did not, for the reason iliat the state of public
feeling is such that but little agitation would
fan the present excitement into serious troub
les. “In fine,” said he, “the people antieiputo
fearful riots on the eve of the election.”
As ouv reporie* was about to take his leave,
Mr. ii 11 said : “1 wish to 6tate that I uni
convinced there is in the South an organized
scheme to provoke collisions botweeu the
whites and blacks, for the purpose of infla
ming the miuds of the Northern people, its
prime movers being Radicals.”
Mr. Hill’s manner of speaking is very col
lected and deliberate, and his opinions are
evidently the result of deep thought.
A* BILL
To he entitled an Act for tlio Relief of Debtors
and to authorize the adjustment of Debts up
on Principles of Equity :
Sec. 1. The General Assembly of (lie State
of Georgia Enacts : That in all suits which
shall he brought for the recovery of debts, in
any of the courts of this State, or upon con
tracts for the payment of money, made prior
to the first day of June, 1865, except for the
wale or hire of slaves, it shall nnd may l>e law
ful for the parties in all such eases to give in
evidence before the jury empannelled to try
the same, the consideration of the debt or con
tract which may be the subject of the suit, the
amount and value of the property owned by
the debtor and creditor at the time the debt
was contracted, or the contrast entered into,
to show upon the faith of what property credit
was given to him, and what tender or tenders
of payment he made to the creditor, at any
time, and that the non-payment of the debt or
debts wac owing to the refusal of the cieditor
to receive the money tendered or offered to be
tendered, the destruction or lyss of the property
upon the faith of which the credit was given,
and the amount of loss by the creditor, and
how and in what manner the property was de
stroyed or lost, aud by whose default. And in
all sucli eases the juries which try the same
shall have power to reduce the amount of the
debt or debts sued for, according to the equities
of the ease, and render such verdicts as to them
shall appear just and equitable.
See. 2. That in all cases in which jverdicts
have been rendered or judgment entered upon
debts contracted, prior to the first day of Juno,
1865, and the judgment remains unsatisfied, it
shall he lawful for the defendant or defendants,
by motion in the court in which the judgment
was obtained, to have the same submitted to a
jury for trial upon the same terms and condi
tions a.; are contained in the preceding section,
with like powers to tho jury to reduce the
amount of the judgment according to the equi
ties in each ease,and render such verdicts as to
them shall appear equitable and just, and the
judgment rendered in such ease shall supercede
prior judgment; l'rotided, no judgment shall
lose the priority of its lien by reason of the
rendition of anew judgment; and Provided,
That in all such eases twenty days notice shall
be given lo tlio plaintiff in execution in eases
in tlio Superior Courts, and in cases transfer
red to that eojirt from the Inferior and County
Courts ; nnd in the Justices’ Courts ten days
notice shall ho given, and in all eases com
menced by motion in either the Superior or
Justices’ Courts tlio case or eases shall ho in
order for trial at the term at which tho motion
may he made, but shall he subject to continu
ances as eases upon the appeal.
Sec. J. That in all eases in which the de
fendant may have in possession the property
for which the debt sued on was contracted, the
jury shall have power to render a verdict, re
turning the property, together with compen
sation for the use of the same ; Provided, That
any improvements made by the defendant shall
he taken in consideration, or any part of tho
purchase mono)- which may have been paid for
the same,according to the value of tlio property
at the time of the trial.
See. -1. That in suits against Trustees, Ad
ministrators, Executors, or Guardians, it shall
he lawful lor tho defendant or defendants to
give in evidence the loss or destruction of the
trust property which came into theirliands, or
its depreciation in value, and the value
of the property in their hands at tho
co aim once ia out of tlio suit, shall ho tho
measure of damages to be rendered by tho
ji.ry titan t them ; Provided, That no Trus
tee, Administrator, Executor, or Guardian,
shall he exempt from liability for the value of
any trust which lie may have wasted, or which
has been lost by his neglect or default.
Sec. 5. That in all suits which may bo com
menced by original action, or by motion under
this not, both parties thereto shall ho compe
tent witnesses.
Sec. 6. That in all arbitrations to adjust and
settle debts contracted prior to June first, 1865,
the same rules aud regulations shall apply,
aud the same evidence shall be ailmissiblo as
provided in the first section of this act.
Sec. 7. That in all cases where levies have
been made and the property levied upon has
not been sold, it shall aud may be lawful for
tho defendant or defendants to file their affida
vits, statiug that they desire to take the bene
fit of the remedy provided for in this act, and
the sheriff's to whom said affidavits are present
ed, shall receive the same and suspend the sale
and return the same to tlio Court from which
the process under which they act may have is
sued, or to such Court as may, by law, have
jurisdiction ; Provided, That the property levied
upon shall be returned to the defendant upon
his giving bond and security, as in claim cases.
See. 8. That all laws and parts of laws,
militating against this act he, and the same are
hereby ropealod.
The Army.
The Radicals claim that the army which
conquered the Rebellion was officered almost
exclusively by Radicals, and that all the lead
ing men of that army are now in favor of
Grant and Colfax. The letters received from
Generals who took prominent and earnest part
in the late conflict, by tho gentlemen having
charge of the recent grand Democratic meet
ing in Indianapolis, prove very conclusively
the contrary. General Buell says in his
letter:
“The North nnd the South wero arrayed in
de-sdly conflict against each other ; but it was
not among the mass of the Democratic party
that the idea of dissolution was entertained,
for while more than one faltered of those in
the opposite party who had helped to stir up
the strife, thousands of Democrats instantly
rushed to arms to preserve the Union and
maintain the laws.”
Gen. Roseorans writes:
“The desolate and ruined South, the op
pressed tax-payers of the West and North,
generosity, mercy, love of oountry, apprehen
sions of evils to come, eyery motive that ought
to move the hearts of true and noblo men ap
peal to us to say by our votes we will stop that
hoi>eless folly of attempting to govern the
Southern States by what we call ‘loyal blacks,’
and give tlio people, under just guarantees,
the right peacefully and legally to proceed to
reorganize their own government within the
Union.”
General William F. (“Baldy”), Smith
says :
“All the “White Roys in Blue” look to In
diana to plaee herself right on the record at
the November election.”
The following is a copy of Gen. Franklin's
letter :
Hartford, Conn., Sept. 17, 1868.
My Dear General :—I have received your
note of the 7th instant, inviting me to join the
Union White Boys in Blue of Indiana in the
grand mass convention to be held in Indianap
olis on the 2dd instant. I regret that other
engagements will prevent mv acceptance of
the invitation. 1 regret more especially be
cause your organization is one of the few
which prove that the soldiers and Failors of
the war were Democrats as well as Radicals.
Had such organizations been formed and en
couraged in all of the States, I do not doubt
that it would appear that a majority of the
Union soldiers and sailors now living belong
to the Democratic party or do not belong to
the Radical party.
I congratulate you upon the cheering pros
pect in your gallant State, I am truly your
friend.
W. B. Franklin.
Gen. Geo. W. Morgan, in a letter written to
the Democratic Mass Convention lately held
at Indianapolis says, “We shall carry Ohio!”
— N. Y. Express.
Twenty-four Hours from India. — A mer
cantile house in Bostun lately received a dis
patch <lated Calcutta,September 21, which had
been less than twenty-four hours on its way,
nnd which reported the fact that their ship was
ready on that date to sail for Boston,
YOL. 3. NO. 46,
A New and Promising Business for Vir*
ginia.
Wo have been reading (says tho Lynchburg
Virr/ininn) some accounts of anew business
which we think may become immensely profit
able in Virginia. It is the extracting of the
astringent or tanning properties of oak hark
for the production of leather. The information
we have, convinces tls that the business will
yield very largo profits. An artielo wo have
before us on tho subject from a Georgia paper
says l
Five-sixths of the leather made in the United
States is produced in tlio Nctv England and
Middle States. In the prosecu'ion of this
business, Boston and its immediate vicinity
alone are said to consume about four hundred
thousand cords of crude bark annually, and
the enormous consumption which this fad
illustrates, is very rapidly exhausting all the
accessible sources of supply of the crude ma
terial, and raising its value, ns the distance
from which it mus t be brought and the difficul
ties of gathering it increase.
These facts suggested the idea of inventing
machinery to extract and condense the tanning
properties of tho bark in the original forest »
so that a cord of hark is reduced to a single
barrel of forty-five gallons. This extract is
worth in the Northern cities ten cents a pound
or a dollar per gallon—'the gallon weighing ten
the whole barrel, therefore, worth
forty-five dollars, and the demand for it in
Europe and America can hardly be met by any
probable supply.
The manufacture of this bark extract, com*>
mencing during tho war when the forests of
tho South wore Inaccessible, has been confined
principally to the hemlock forests of the North
and East, which produce one thousand barrel*
daily—about Four fifths of which go to Europe
and the reminder is used principally by the
tanners of Boston.
The machinery for manufacturing this ex*
tract is very heavy and effective, and costs
from eight to nine thousand dollars. It is
driven by a twonty-five horse power steam
engine. The bark in slabs, as stripped from
the tree, is first soaked in a tank, with water
kept at a temperature of one hundred and
seventy degrees by steam. It is then passed
between iron rollers, which compress it to the
thinness of wrapping paper, crushing every
fibre and air and water cell in tho bark. In
this condition it falls into another tank, where
it is broken up and beaten, and agitated in
warm water by paddlo wheels driven at ave»
locity of one hundred revolutions a minute, and
thereafter treated until the water has attained
the point of saturation. At this density it ia
carried to a condenser and further reduced to
the drived point of strength for barreling and
shipment.
If all these figures and data are correct, evi*
dcntly there is an excellent chance for profit
from the oak forests of the South. More than
this—in tiie Spring of the year the tanio acid
has been found by experiments to be much
stronger in the young oak leaves than in the
bark, and we seo no reason why they,
might not be brought into requisition for the
manufacture of this concentrated fanning ex*>
tract.
A lettor from a gentleman in New York
familiar with the business says:
“The tanning properties of a oord of oak
bark reduced to the consistency of ten pounds
to the gallon, which makes it imperishable*
weighs 450 pounds. This is worth in Phila s *
delphia ten cents per pound, and in New York
and Boston it commands a ready sale at twelve
and a half cents, while in London and Liver
pool it sells at fourteen cents in gold per pounds
The demand abroad for American oak extract
will for many years exceed our ability to sup
ply, while that for home consumption will test
our utmost energy to meet. Oak extract at ten
cents a pound, when bark can be had at five
dollars per cord, will yield to the manufacturer
a net profit of twenty-five dollars per cord)
and as one machine is capable of making two
pounds per hour, or forty-eight pounds every
twenty-four hours, it is easy to compute the
returns which may be realized by running it
for a single year. These figures may seem in
credible to your people, but I challenge any
one to show wherein they are incorrect.”
The editor of the Virginian can place per-'
sons who may wish to investigate this subject
in communication with parties in New York
who can furnish all the desired information. —=
Richmond Enquirer it- Examiner.
A rapid penman can write thirty words a
minute. . To do this he must draw his quill
through tho space of one rod—sixteen and a
half feet. In forty minutes his pen travels a'
furlung; and in five and one third hours one
mile. \\e make cn an average sixteen curves
or turns by the pen in writing each word.—
Writing thirty words in a minute, we must
make four hundred and eighty-eight to each
second ; in an hour twentY*-eight thousand
eight hundred ; in a day of only five hours,
ono hundred and forty-four thousand ;in a
vear of three hundred days, forty three millions
two hundred thousand. The man who made
a million strokes with a pen in a nrnnth was
not at all remarkable. Many men make
four millions. Hero wo have in the aggregate
a mark three hundred miles long to be traced
on paper by each writer in a year.- In making
each letter of the alphabet wc must make from
three to seven strokes of the pen, on an average 1
three to four.
The convention of railroad agents at Meni-'
phis, has decided to charge on cotton per one
hundred pounds to New York, uncompressed
all rail, $1 75 ; rail nnd water, $1 65* com-'
pressed, all rail, ?1 10 ; rail and water, $1 80 ;
being a reduction of ten cents per hundred oa
last year’s rate.