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Mayor's Court, Saturday. --Franklin Jones, of company G, Fifteenth Virginia battalion, was charged with robbing J. H. Dilks of six hundred dollars in Confederate money forty or fifty dollars and a new suit of clothes. The robbery was perpetrated last Wednesday night at the house of Ann Thomas, on Cary street. Dilks had gone to bed, and while asleep his room was entered through the window and the articles carried off. Suspicion pointed to Jones, as he had been for several days loitering about the promises in company with another man; but before the robbery was discovered, the accused had left the house in which he was when Dilks retired for the night, leaving behind his own clothes and putting on those which he had stolen. On Friday night, the Central train brought down a man who had not the proper papers about him; he was taken before Assistant Provost-Marshal Doswell, and upon investigation, it turned out that Jones was none other than the man who had committed the robbery
h him the Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth and Twentieth corps, and eight thousand cavalry--fifty or sixty thousand men in all; that this force is amply sufficient for any purpose — that the rebels have three thousand men at Savannah, and about the same number at Charleston, besides militia, which he does not value highly; that there are no others to meet him without weakening Lee, as Hood could not overtake him if he were to try. Besides, the latter has as much as he can attend to, watching Thomas. Sherman is to move in two columns, one by way of Macon, and the other direct for Augusta, at which latter place the two will concentrate. Three points, then, present themselves, all equally at the mercy of the irresistible Sherman: Savannah, Beaufort and Charleston. Sherman will select Savannah — the correspondent is certain of it, and he gives his reasons. Savannah, cut off from all communication, will be useless to the rebels. Charleston can be cut off by moving down the road to Bran