The Greensboro herald. (Greensboro, Ga.) 1866-1886, September 21, 1867, Image 1

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52 50 PER ANNUM Augusta Hotel, AUGUSTA, : : : : GEORGIA, S. M. JONES, Proprietor. rnnis Leading, Fa'hionable Hotel, has been JL newly and elegantly furnished, and is now prepared to extend a ‘ Georgia Welcome.” Col. GEO. 11. JONES, Chief Clerk, may 18—If. ~:ds=l_'W'- jvr or.o-A.3sr Utn<l ,0 j "1° beVound at his office over 8 a m till 5 o.clock p m Pen field. Ga.,aug 2—ly Memphis & Charleston R R Trains leave Memnphis as folio s Through Ezpre55........... <MO *t nr Through Mai 1,.... CtIO pm Sora-rvillo AeComodaUniU . 3:40 pm Through Express—Oonwel'cs at Gmnd Junction with afternoon train on Mississippi Ceil ral Railroad for Hol y springs Water Valley, Grenada, Jackson, Vicksburg, New Or- ; leans, etc. At Corinth for Okolona, Columbus, Miss Mobile, At Decatur for Columbia, Nashville, Louisville Cinciunatti, etc. .... . , . At Chattanooga for all places in Eastern Alabama Georgia, North and South Carolina, V irgima, Washington, Baltimore, New York. etc. Through Mail—Counects at Grand Junction with trains for Bolivar and Jackson Tenn. At Decatur, for Athens, I’ulaski, Alabama, Columbus, Nashville, etc. At Cbatanooga, trains connect for same points at Express Trvins. BAGGAGE CHECKED THROUGH (For further information, apply at office. 13 Court .Street W.J. ROSS, Gen’l Sup’t A. A Barnes General Ticket A gei.t. inayll—tf 6. li.Shock Passenger Agent M. A. 2TOVALL. 11. EDMONDSTON Stovall & Edmondston WAREHOUSE AND GENERAL Commission Htcrtjranfs Factors in COTTON Grian, FLOLt 11, PROVISIONS $c NO *Z Warren JJIocR. Jaekson Street, AUGUSTA GA *oHParticular altention given to the snle of Cdftoa .Largo s'.onige accommodation-. AMERICAN FARMER’S HORSE BOOK. BT HOIIERT STEWART. M. D. V. S. rPHIS work is printed from a beautiful, clear J. new type on fine paper, made eip-essfy tor the work aVid iscomprised in one large vo urue ol 600 pages, embellished and illustrated with nu merous''engravings. It will be furnished to subscribers at five dollars per copy payable on delivery. w U. REEsE agt forGreeae, Taliaferro, & Warren. Carriage Shop. mi!E Subscriber, having p rmaneully located L in Greenesboro, Ga., is prepared to do alt Carriage, Bugsy and Wagon Work, in the molest and best style. Abo all kina* of BLACKS MI T 111 NG . SW'l'ttftirulai altention given to llorss shoeing and Repairing old Acs. \ liberal patronage is earnestly solicited. Wo. 11. Grilfies & Cos. Photogaphic Photographic. MORGAN & JONES have opened over the store of Elsas & Adler a Photograliic Gallery, Where, they are prepared to take Photographs. Amhrotypes, Porcelain and Gem Pictures, Ac. Ac. figures’ taken to fit Lockets. Breastpins etc Persons need nos wait for clear weather to have their Pictures taken, . . Thtir chemicals aro new and reliable and pic tures taken by tb ;ur will not be soiled by mois ture aug3o—tf Commissioners Sale! Georgia, Greene County.— IN pursuance ol utt older.of the ouperior Court of glad County, will be sold at public outcry Ist Tuesday in October next before the Court House of said county be tween the usual hours of sale the tract of land belonging 10 the Orphans of Richard S. Park situated in said eoufc v, and adjoining lands or Seaborn Lawrence. Augustus L. Kimbrough and othe s, containing Nine Hundred & ninety two acres, more or less. Sold for partition. Terms cash o 11 the day of sale. Jas. L. Brown. L. B. Jackson. Jno. E. Walker. Commissioners. Bept3—td* M. P. STOVALL, E - BUTLER, Os Augusta Ga. Os Madison Morgan co FOR SALE. 4 SPLENDID TANNERY consisting of 25 ]\_ lay-way Vats. 2 Letches, 11 acres of land, a comfortable dwelling. Also, an out House for Tanner’s dwelling, 5 lay-way Vats filled, Bark and Tools belonging to the Yard, and the chance of employing a splendid Finisher, all of which I will sell for the low sum of Twenty-five Hun dred Dollars in hand paid. The water to-the Yard is pure spring water, and is convey#d to said Yard by means of Logs under ground ; Baric Mill Shelter, and every thing attached to a Tannery All within the Incorporation of Joaes- Tannery. ah w TOMLINSON, boro. July 13th, 18b,. CLEMMONS HOUSE CO 7INGTON, GEORGIA. ffNIIE undersigned takes pleasure in informing 1 the Traveling Public that he has furnished his Hotel throrghont, and is prepared to accom modate all with the best the country aflords on reasonable terms. Board and Longing «*— per day. Single Meals, 50 cents. Board per ,1 onth, 5 * 12.50—6m32 W. A. CLEMMONS Town Lots ! Town Lots ! I OFFER for Sale TEN BEAUTIFUL LOTS in the town of Conters, located on the south 'side of the Ga. R. R„ and on Academy street, v ryiug trom one to three acres each. Call and examine for yourselves. Terms rea sonable. J- L, STEW AH J, Conyers, Ga., June 21, 1857, THE GREENSBORO IIERALO. STOTALI& BUTLER, Cotton Warehouse ■—AND GENERAL— misSIUN MERCHANTS Augusta, Gru. HAVE formed * PartnerSMp for the purpose of conducting lire above business, Tt ey will devot. their best energies toadvance the interests of their customers in the Storage and Safe «/ Cotton and other Produce. M. P. Stovall ts well known as having been successfully engaged for many years in this business, D. E» Butler is also favorably known as long connected with the Planting interest and public enterprise of the State. Office and Sales Room corner of Jackson and Reynold Streets, now occupied by M. P. Stovoil. sept7—tt NEW GOODS THE subscribers are constantly receiving flesh accessions to their present desirable stock ot general merchandise, and the publti, as well as their friends, are res ncclluUy ’nvited to favor them with a call. Their assortment of DRESS GOODS, Hats Shoes, School Books, &c.; are ample, and are offered at prices that will not f “ l i£sS' s SatißfaCti °"koWEl.L ANEARY_ GREENESBORO’ HOTEL , fTtHE undersignod has re opened I the above named Hotel, at toe old stand opposite the Court House where he will at all times be pleased to set his friendsand the public gen erally. Th, house has been renovated, and the table will be literally supplied. Mr W T Doster will be iu readiness with good horses and vehic/es to convey passengers to any desired point. J- J DOIIF.ATY. Greenesboro Ga, sept 20 —ts Georgia Railroad. Until further notice Trains will run as fol lows on the Georgia Railroad: DAY PASSENGER TRAIN. (Sunday excepted.) Leave Augusta at 0.30 A. M. Leave Atlanta at 515 A. M. Arrive at Augusta at 0 00 P. M. Arrive at Atlanta at 6.10 P. 31. NIGIIT PASSENGER TRAIN. Leave Augusta at 8.00 P 31. Leave Atlanta at 5 45 P. M. Arrive at Augusta at 3.15 A. 31. at Atlanta at 5.00 A. 31. J Passengers for Mayfield, Washington and Athens, Ga., must take Day Passenger Train Passengers for 3lobile and New Orleans must leave Augusta on Night Passenger trainat 8.00 p. ni. to make close connections. Passengers for West Point, Slontgomery Nashville, Corinth, Grand Junction, .Memphis, Louisville and St. Louis, can take either train and make close connections. THROUGH TICKETS and Baggage cheeked through to_the abyYC Jilaces. Sleeping Carson all Nigot Pnssitogef 1 rains E. W. COLE, Gen’l Sup’t, SO tfTII tAROUKA RAJLROAD The South Carolina Railroad will run the following Schedule until further notice: CTIALESTON TRAIN. Leave Augusta at 1 00 A M Arrive at Charleston 4.00 P 31 ArrivC-at Columbia 5.20 P 31 Leave Charleston at 8.00 A M Arrive at Augusta 5.00 P M 11. T. I’EAKE, Gen’l Sup’t. WESTERN & ATLANTIC 11. R. Day Passenger Train—{Except Sunday.) Leave Atlanta 8 45 A. M. L-ave Dalton 2 55 P. M. Arrive at Chattanooga 5 25 P. M. Leave Chattanooga 320A. M. Arrive at Atlanta 12 OoP. M: Night Passenger Train — Daily. Leave Atlanta 7 00 P. M. Arrive at Dalton 1 15 A. M Arrive at Chattanooga J Id A. M Leave Chattanooga 4 10 P M Arrive at Atlanta 1 41 A. M Dalton Accommodation Train—Daily Ex ccpt Sunday. Leave Atlanta 3 50 P, M Arrive at Dalton 12 25 P< M Leave Dalton 1 25 P. M Arrive at Atlanta 0 45 A. M ATLANTA & WEST POINT RAILROAD Leave Atlanta 1 00 A. M Arrive at West Point 12 A. M Leave West Point 12 40 P.M Arrive at Atlanta 6 30P, M MACON & WESTERN RAILROAD. Day Passenger Train. Leave Macon 1 45 A. M Arrive at Atlanta 2 00 P. M Leave Atlanta 1 15 A.M Arrive at Macon 1 30 P. M Leave Atlanta 8 10 P. M Arrive at Macon 4 25 A. M MILLS HOUSE. orncr Queen and Meeting Street, CHARLESTON , s. c. THIS first class Hotel has been thoroughly repaired, re-fitted and refurnished through out, and is now ready for the accommodation of the traveling public, whose patronage is respect fully solicited. Coaches always in readiness to convey passengers to and from the Hotel. The Proprietor promises to do all in his power for the comfort of his guests feblotf JOSEPH PURCELL Trop’r. American hotel, ATLANTA, GA. YOUNG & BROWNING, l*rop’rs. (Opposite Passenger Depot.) Having taken eharge of, and placed in thor ough repair the above House, we hope to merit a share of patronage. Con. Acton Y’oung, Wm. H. Browning, Late of Nashville, Tenn, Late of Columbus. Ga EA T I NG~ II OUSE BERZELIA, GEORGIA RAIL ROAD IJASSENGERS by the Passenger Trams leav ing Augusta, at 6,80 A. M., and Atlanta a 7 15 P- 3L. also, those leaving Augusta or At lanta by Freight Trains, can get a GOOD a/! ca 1 at this long established and popular hSfse. Jl. A. MERRY & CO., 4 0,18 froprietore. GREENSBORO, Gi., SEPT., 21,1807, Sympathy. Hast thou a benrt to feel the woe, That gives thy brother pain T And in the secret of th> soul, Dost feel his grief again ? To weep with those that weep below, Methinks ’tis joy as ung«ls know. See’st thou the hotly gushing tear, Bespeaking inward grief ? And does thy bosom haating fly, To give the sweet relief? Though tears are all thou const bestow, Oh ! give them for thy brother’s woe. When wo, in grief and sadness, mourn O’er hopes that all have fled,. And bow us there, in silence, o’er The memory of the dead ; For one to sigh, whene’er we sigh, Forbids our fainting hopes to die. Honor, and pomp, and worldly gear, Are naught compared to this ; lie’s rich who ow ns no houses here, But tins true sympathies ; For what is pomp, or power, or gold. When those we truly love grow cold ? Your golden treasures I would fling— Those meaner tilings of sarth, Back to the bowels of the deep. The spot that, gave them birth : But greet with joy the answeting sigh, That tells mo of your sympathy. Sweetly as sounds an angel’s harp, Or music of the spheres. So sweetly, for thv brother’s woe, Fall sympathetic tears ; They tell their tale in signs of love— The language of the world above. JTow Amnesty is to he mad* Effectual. The Washington conespondent ol the N. Y. Tribune writes as follows: The President's amnesty proclamation has been the sulj-/ct of much comment to-day. The general interpretation put upon it is, that its author intends that those to whom it ap plies are re-established fully in all the rights of citizenship, iceluding enfranchisement. — It is given out that a test will soon be made in one of the Southern Slates, through the courts, which will bring out an opinion from a U, S. Judge. The Southern men vrho have been lobbying for tb© proclamation seem dissatisfied with it. They slale that it is wide of what they wished, and what the people of the Socth wished. Some are bold enough to say that its author is dishonest, and has faded to keep his promises in the matter ; also that the proclamation is the result of Democratic politicians controlling . the Piesident, and is intended fur political tcapital. They state further that not over a hundred persons in the South will be benefit ed by it, as most of the classes to Whom it applies have already been specially and in dividually pardoned bv tiie President. U— instance, nearly all of the rebel State GoV ernors have been heretofore pardoned, and in Virginia the only man \Vhd was a meiii ber of Congress, and left his Sedt to engage in the rebellion, and who has not beeti par doned individually by the President is Ttios; S. Bocock. The general impression, however, however, wds that the President intended to include enfranchisement among the rights restored to those rebels receiving the arilnesty, and before noon, Gen. Grant’s office was be seiged with newspaper correspondents, look ing for ah ordet from the President reopening registration in the Southern Stales. No siitb brdefs haVe yet been issued. Get into tour Hole.—During ‘the late unpleasantness,’ there waS a cool, unqueoclffi able Sort of a Tanfeee named Gunii, who fan a stage in Western /Virginia 6ver a route much infested with bushwbdckers. We fre quently told Gunn that he would some day get smashed up and gobbled* (tnd hitd betiet give up his job, but all to no purpose; for he kept on driving stage and pocketing the greenbacks. So thtee of us concluded we would give him a good scare that be would accept as a warning. In coming from his stables, late at night he always took a short cut aeross an old burying ground. To this point we repaired. One of our number wrap ped in a sheet, lay down ‘stark and stiff,’ 00 one of the oewly made graves: while the others dodged behind settle toriib-slonee, and impatiently awaited Gunn’s afriVal. Soon he came along, whistling aud swinging a pair of heavy bridles, when all at once he confronted the counterfeit spectre. There he stood lor a few moments with his arms akim bo, and coolly eyed the object from bead to foot, then raising his bridals began to give It a tremendous thrashing, bawling at (he same time, ‘Consarn you old pictur ! what you out here for this time o’night! Gel into your hole ! Get into vour hole!’ We concluded to let Gunn alone after that. Those intimate wTth the President assert that, although not stated in so many words, his proclamation of amnesty looked to the restoration of the right of ballot to all those who were included in its provisions. As to the legality of the proclamation the ablest lawyers here have declared it to he unquestioned, nor can Congress set it a*ide, exept by the overthrow of the Constitution itself. Gen. Sheridan reports to General Grant’s headquarters that be has approved the ac tion of General Griffin in removisg, on Au gust 15, three additional District Judges in Texas, on the charge of disloyalty. Important. Circular to at! District Attorneys and Mnr f hals of the Uniter! State.*, and to all their r spective Assistants and Deputies, aud to Persons Holding anv Official Relations to the Attorney Geaeiul’s Office. A iron Kiev Ginekai'h Off-jus, { 10th September, 1866. ) Slit: therewith furnish you with hr. iffi cial copy of the proclamation of the Presi dent.of the United States, dated the 3d in sta 1 ,and in the ninety second year, of Amer ican Independence: tis pioclamation recites in brief the oh ligiboni of loyalty to the Republic, aud wa* intended to admonish you, in common wbh all petoons holding any place of honor t trn- 1 or profit, cir II or military, at home ©r abroad, under the United States of Ameri ca. and all good citizens thereof, that the CiSfmitution of their country is in force, and tlil,!'the Government thereunder, with its sets--.il eO-ordinate branches, legislative, ele ct! 1 ve, and judicial, is the only lawful (iov erument for this Republic, -notwithstanding th.v. many well meaning citiams have, lu co isequeuce of disturbing events Hurt are nr.sV past, coitie to look with indulgence upon fabe and dangerous pretences that the Con st! utiori is not the supreme law of the land, and also the most authentic proof of the pe -ple ; but that tbereare powers of govern ment outside of the Constitution which may lawfully Violate that imtrumeotj and the laws tn.;de in pursuance of it. All citizens of the United States owe alle ge, nee to that nationality, as the same is em bodied and organized in the Constitution ai.d such amendments thereof as, Laving become expedient in the progress of thft country, have been duly made and ratided; But. in a special manner, all persons holding office under the United States are Solemnly sworn to support that Constitution; and, also, to bear true faith and allegiance to the Same) and to the-Government thereunder J and for the greater number of such incumbents at tbs time, it is known that they have been retained, or have placed, in their respective offices, upon express assurances of zealous loyalty to tbeUoiow, which is taken by all men to mean a cheetful obedienee to the p-oper civil authority of th© cunntry. But fi r the functions of your office, which aie directly connected with the enforcement of too laws, a lively sense of their sanctity and a üborily is anticipated. Y u are requested to acknowledge the res . vot of this communication. Very respectfully, Your obedient, servant, Joirx M. Hinckley, Acting Attorney Genera': to . Confederate Soldiers. —Speaking of the men who fell fighting in tho Confederate cdtise, thfe Huntsville Independent says: Their dspirations were holy, their purpo ses were good; their impulses commendable, their qualities admirable. The men were brave, and their actions heroic. We can never, sot dll tiirie to come, forget their deeds and they will be handed down to the latest generation. Children yet unborn will be tailght to loVd the memory of those who fell during the febbllion of ’Ol. Dike DarceLled Oct.—Lord Coke wrote the following, which he religiously obseMmd : •‘Siijt hotlrs to sleep. To law’s grestt study six, Four spend in prayer, Tho rest to nature fix.” Hut William Jones, a wiser econti nist of the fleeting hours of life, amended the sentiments thus ! —• ‘‘.Sdvefi hohrS to law, To soothing slumber seven, Ten to tiie wot Id 1 1 ft, Aod all to heaven,” — A young gentleman of an elderly one, *6 disremember which, after having paid his addresses to a lady for some time, “ popped the question.” The lady said, in a frightened manner : "Ton scare tile, sir.” The gen tleman did not wish lo frighten the lady, and consequently remained quiet for some time, when she eiclaimed * “ Scare me again.” We did not learn how affairs turn 1 ed out, but should say that it v/as pretty near his turn to be scared. - «»« A friend from the country; on telling Foote of an expensive funeral of au attorney, the latter replied i “Do you bury your attorneys ?” ‘Yes to be sura we do—bow else V ‘Ob ! we never do that in London.’ •No! said the other, much surprised, how do tbev manage T ‘When the patient happens to die, we lay him oat in a room over night by himself lock the door, throw open the sash, and in the morning be is entirely off. ‘ludeed 1 said the other, in amazement, what becomes of him?’ ‘Why, that we cannot tell J all we know there’s a strong smell of brimstone in the room next morning.’ A disturbed preacher remarked, "If that cross eyed lady in the side aisle, with red hair and a blue bonnet, don’t stop talking, I must point her out to the congregation.” Trnsit-s.—To such a stale of perfection hav* the English brought the culture of fur nips, that they have revolutionized the agri culture of the kingdom, and the turnip crop of England is ftnaually worth more than the cotton crop of llie Uuiled Slates. Sow com mon turnips in August, September and Oc tober. The Rutii rtaga may be sown from the 20th July to the middle of September; shi uld he planted in drills, two feet apart, and thinned out to twelve or fourteen inches. The Ruta Baga is destined soon to work a great chafigein Southern agriculture. They aie as easily managed as the common tur n-p, are more nutritive, keep much -longer, and afford greens equal to collards, if not superior. Stock ofudl kinds are fond of them, and from their rich golden color, sweet and delicate flavor, unsurpassed for the table. Fartuets, try the Ruta Baga, and learn how to save the corn-crib. The Ruta Baga is not inclined to seed in this climate ; but this is a benefit rather than an objection, ns thereby the roolß keep much longer. Gjul*.— There are two kinds of girls.— (Fie is the kind tlmt appears best abroad, the gitls that are good for parties, ride*, ris ks, bads, <kc., and whose chief delight is in such things. The other U the kind that appears best at home, the girls that are use ful and clicciful in the dining room, sick room, and all the precincts of home. They differ widely in chaeroter, One is often a torment at b ome, the other a blessing. One is a moth, consuming everything around her: the other is a sunbeam, inspiring light and gladness all around her pathway. The right education will modify both a little, and thus unite the good qualities of both in one. ItioHTKoUs Vknoeanck Lwo Delaybd. —We find the following story in the New Yotk Evening Gazette: Baron Praogen was colonel in the Austri an army in -1840, and chief of the military police at Verona in those days when Austria ruled Italy'with a rod of irin. ll© was ex ceedingly cruel, and on.one occasion had the young Countess It ivina stripped almost na ked and whipped unmercifully in the presence of a crowd of spldiers, for an alleged political offense. The Countess was crazed with shame and indignation at the outrage. Her death and that of her husband soon followed. A youhg mao lately met the Baron Dragon at his country seat near Gratz, in Austria. He Insulted him, received the desired challenge, and chose Tuikish sabres as his weapons.— When the duel came off the young min an nounced himself as the son of the Countess Rovinaj and hacked the Austrian to pieces. How a Dream Came True- An old farmer in Ohio has had an expe rience that convinced him that dreams some times come true. This is the story . Sortie tim9 during last summer a stranger stopped at a farm house in Paris. Township, a*ked permission to stay over night, which was readily granted by the hospitable far mer. A couple of hours after retiring for the night, the stranger was taken suddenly and violently ill, and for several days was apparently deranged. C»rf his recovery lie informed his host that during bis illness he had dreamed three nights in succession that he had discovered, in a certain ravine near the house, under a rock, an earthen crock containing a large amount of silver. At ibis the ofJ gentleman expressed sdrpi-isp, and spoke of it as beiog a very mysterious dream. Afterwards, however, they werd talking to gether in that section, and the dream was again adverted to by the stranger. An ex amination was at.once proposed by the far mer to satisfy their curosity. The rock war soon foUnd, rtnd after brushing the leaves carefully away it was removed, find id their utter amaztment there set a crock full of silver. They took U out and conveyed it secretly to the house, and on examination it was found to contain *4OO, which they agreed to diviJe equally between them. The day after this discovery, as the stranger was about to taka his leave, he complained to his benefactor of the inconvonienee of carryizg so much silver, when an exchange was pro posed, the stranger receiving $250 in green backs for bis share of the coin, silver theU being at a ptemium of about fifty per cent. It was not long after the departure of his guest, however till mine host made another discovery—his S4OO in silver was Counter feit ! and he had thus been ingeniously swin dled out of $250. The story was kept quiet for several months, but it finally leaked out v Ready for Either Side. — A countryman walked into theoflice of a lawyer the other day, and began bis application I "Sir, I have come to get your advice in a case that Is giving me some trouble.” "Well, whales the matter ?” ‘ Suppose now,” said the client, “thata man had a spring of water on hia land, aod his neighbor living below should build a dam across the creek, which runs through both farms, and it was to back the water up into the other man’s spring, what ought to b e don t?” - t VOL. 2. NO 22 "Sue him, sir—sue him by all means, ,f said the ! twyor, who always became excited in proportion to the aggravation of his efi «m(e. "You can recover heavy damages, sir, and the law will make him pay welt for it.— J 11st gite me the case, and I’ll bring tha money from him.” “But stop,” oricd the terrified applicant for legal advice* “it’s I that hare built the dam f and it’s neighbor Jones that owns tho spring, an ! be threatens to sue me.” Ttie keen lawyer hesitated a moment be-* fore lie tacked his'ship and kept on. "Ah ! well, sir* yott say you built a dant across the creek. What sort of a dum wa* it, sir "It was a mf!l-dam.” “A mill-dam for grinding grain, Was it? "So it is, sir, and yoti fflay Well say so." “And all yotir neighbors bring their graia to be ground, do they “Yes, sir; all but Jones.” “Then it is a great public Convenience, ?« it not!” “lo be sure it is. It is to far superior to any other mill, sir.” "And now,** said the old lawyer, "you tel! me that mail Tones is complaining just be cause the water from the dam happens to put back into his little spring, and he is notv threatening to sue you. Well, all I have to say is, let him sde, and he’ll rue the day as sure as itiy name is B The Bones or Bull Kun.-tA correspond ent of the Cincinnati Gommerciit, writing of a visit to the battle-field of Bull Run, says j "The first sight that greeted my eyes at Hanassas Junction, was a forcible reminder of the War. Ihe huge piles of bones, horse bones, cattle bones, and, sad to say, human bones intermingled, lay whitening right in front of the hotel. They are picked up off the battle-field by the owners of the soil and carted here for shipment by the cars, to be gtotind into fertilifierr, at some mill in Balti more- The prioe here is “a penny a pound,’* one of Fairbanks platform scales to weigh the deliveries, and several tons of bones have been shipped. Oae man* with a girl to help him, collected in two days enough to com* to sl6. My Landlord, a Fensylvania Dutch man named Varner, brought otlt a long and powerful looking bone frotti behind the bsr, saying: “Here now is some poor fellow’* thigh bone.” The sight was not to inspire cheetful reflections, to another great heap were piled masses of camp-kettle*, musket barrels, wheel-tires, solid shot and broken shells, fragments of swords, bits of wagon gear,old rusty fire-locks nnd the like. This too, is for the market, the last relics of tha huge debris of destruction of which every battle is the fruitful parent.” New York Dolitics.—The New York correspondent of the Boston Post writing of the coming election in this State says: The Democracy will go into the Novem; her fight with more earnestness and vigof than they have brought to any struggia since tiie McClellan and Lincoln campaign of 1804, when they really carried the State, but were swindled oitt of the victory by the arrest of their agents for collecting tha soldiers’ vote; and the “confiscation" of the* Votes which these agents had collected. No such scheme for their defeat can be adopted this year. The soldiers ate at home, and even if they were in the field, therd is no Stanton in the War Department to seize Democratic votes and thrust the collectors into prison. One reason why the Democrats are bopefid and almost Confident is the clearj plain issue created by the bold step forward which the President has takeni This has infused vigor into the masses and given their purpose more earnestness than it had last year, or the year before, when Mr. Johnson’s real position was very hard to guess at.—- Another is the fact that A considerable num ber of Hermans, quite enough to turn th« scales, who are indignant at the in/asion of their rights which has taken place under the stringent Sunday liquor law, haVe resolved to turn their hacks upon Radicalism. If all the Germans who have promised to vote against the Radicals keep their words nett Novem* her, the State ought to go Democratic by ten or fifteen thousand majority. Not His Forte. —General Grant, it is eaid, has requested to be relieved from atten dance at Cabinet meetings except when mil itary matters are under discussion, as he does not think it proper for a military officer to take part in political discussions. In this the General is sensible. "Shoemaker, stick to your last,” is a good rule, and the expe rience of other Generals with political mat ters establishes its wisdom beyond contro versy. Just see what Gen. Pope did for his reputation by his political letter to Grant. Such a record to stare a man in the face in future wiil be more frightful than an army c-f hobgoblins. —■ Macon Tel, If a man reap whatever he sowetb, what a harvest of coats and breeches the tailors will have one of these days,