Southern recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1820-1872, March 22, 1870, Image 1

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I Sff!“ Vol. LI. MILLEDG-EVILLE, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 1870. No. 12. !R,_ lvff- OBME cSo SO 1ST, f EDITORS AND PROPRIETORS. Ter at — 5 U.) per annum, in Advance. A » vbrtisixg —Per square of ten lines, each ] Insertion, * I IW. JfercUauts and others foiall aaountsoyer jj? 25, twenty-live per cent.oil. ■ I.F-OAL AOVKRTJSIXIi. 2 Of) 5 00 ‘d 50 r. oo a of) 15 OO 1 50 2 50 5 ft« 5 00 '5.-Citatio°»for letters ol ad_ m 'nistratkm guardian sh’P ■‘ tc ®' U Uomastead notice ,***, Ajjplicationtorletters of djsm n fromadm n Application for letters of J ism not guard n Application for leave to sell Land Notice to Debtors and Creditors Sales of Laud, per square of ten Lues Sale of personal, per sq., ten days Shtrijs — Each levy of ten lines, or less.. Mortgage sales of ten lines or less Tar Collector’s sales, per sq. (2 months) Cfer.i*--Foreclosure of mortgage and oth er monthly’s, per square I Oh B«tray notices, thirty days 3 00 Tributes of Respect, Resolutions bv Societies, Obituarie»,&.c - -, exceeding six-lines, to be charged A f tr ansientadvertising. £^*8aie.sof Laud, by Administrators, Execu tors or Guardians, are required by law, to be held oa the first Tuesday in the month, between the hears often iu the forenoon and three in the »f- # rnooa, at tha Court-house in t he county in which props rtv is situated. Notice of these sales must be given in a public gazette 40 davsprevious to the day of sale. Notiee for the sale of personal property must be givan inlike manner 10 days previous to sale day. Notices to debtors and creditors of an estate mas! also be published 40 days. Notice that application will be made to the Court of Ordinary for leave to sell land, must be p »bU«hod for two months. Citations for letters of Administration, Guar dianship, <fcc.,must be published 30days—for dis- ttiation from Administration, monthly six months ; #r dismissionfrom guardianship, 40 days. Rules for foreclosure of Mortgages must die pablisbed ”i inlhltj for four months—for establish- inif lost papers, for the fulls pace of three months— for compelling titles from Executors or Adminis trators, where bopd has been-given by the de .eased, the full spice of three mouths-. Charge, gl 00 per square of ten lines for each insertion. Publications will always be continued accord i, r :o The**., the legal requirements,unless oth *paise ordered. CHANGE OF SCHEDULE, 3?© CS&T7G3 OP CMS »B- TWSBffl AIT GUS2A ASTD 2VI3 ST'S! 30 BE 3&1T, ALABAMA. ' TRANSPORTATION OFFICE. GET. R. R. > Savannah, August 14,1863. J O N AND AFTER SUNDAY, 16th hist., Pas sengerTrains on the Georgia Central R- R I will run as follows : UP DAY TRAIN. LEAVE ARRIVE. S' Savannah ..8:00 A M Mac'in Augusta Miilei’gevilic Eatonton Connecting with trains that leaves Angueta - 5:38 P 51 ..5:3-1 P M . 8:58 P M .11.00 P M 8:45 A M DOWN DAY TRAIN. Macon 7:’KJ .Savannah - ... Augusta Connecting with train that leaves 5:39 P 51 5:38 P M UP NIGHT TRAIN' 8:ivanh:th 7:20 P 51 Macon ; Augusta 6:55 A 51 8:13 A 51 11) • Coiinecting witli trains that leaves Augusta - 9:33 P M DOWN NIGHT TRAIN. 6:25 P 51 5:10 A M 9:13 A M 9:53 P 51 Macon Savannah Augusta ' <...:. Alinedgevide..- -.. 4:'3l> P-M Eatonton .2:40 P 51 Connecting with train that, h aves Augusta -■ A M Trains,iron) Savannah and Augusta, a P M Train from Macon connect with Milledg© villa Train at Goidon daily, Suiidays excepted. P M. Train from Savannah connects with tbro’ mail train on South Caroline, H »iJroad, and P. 51. tram from Savannah and Augusta with trains on Soiitii-Western aud 5Iuscogeb Railroads. WM.tRDGEKS, Act’g Master of Transportation. February 1. 1870 ’ 5 tf CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT’S OFFICE, } Art.antic &. Golf, R. it. company, £ Savannah, January 7, 1870. i O N AND'AFTER SUNDAY, the 9th instant, Passenger Trains on this Road will run.as | fodows. nighT ppxpRESS TRAIN. Leave Savannah every day at... 4.30 P 51 Arrive at Jesup junction, 51 & B „ ... „ ,, K R at..-- < .ou i jh Arrive at Live Oak every day A - ,{ Arrive at Jacksonville every day '-'’y -y *' Arrive at TallahasSee every day '-O' A oi Arrive at Quincy every day 9.1 o A Arrive at Bainbridge Mondays ex- ^ ^ I.eave^aiabridge, Sundays excepted.9 30 P M Leava Quincy every day.. *'f.l J " Leave Tallahassee every day » f » Leave Jacksonville ev.ery day “ Leave Live Oak every day • ^ A "J L**ve Jesup every day i Y-n i Arrive at Savannah everyday JO.ou a ai MACON & BRUNSWICK ACCOMMODATION TRAIN. NOTICE. Atlantic & Gi lt Railroad Co.,‘ Savannah, December 15, 1369. O N AND AFTER THIS DATE, B¥ AGREE- .MENl'v the rata of Freight .between Savau- nau and Macon, by tiie Atlantic and Guff and Ma con aud Brunswick Railroads, will be as follows : .,$2 30 .. 1 40 . 1 00 | First class per pound — Second class per 100 pounds.... Third class per J 00 pounds Fourth class per 100 pounds Fifth class per 100 pounds Sixth class per 400 "pounds.., Seventh class per 100 pounds.. Eighth class-per 1G0 pounds. -- Ninth class per 100 pounds — Cotton per 100 pounds Sait per sack... —’ — ■Guano per 100 pnnnds — Freight received for all Stations on 51hcoh and Western Railroad, Atlanta and points beyond. H. S. HAINES, General Superintendent. February I, 1879 ■’ tl . .2.10 P M ..5.00 P 51 . *8.20 P M ..8.30 A 51 ..6.00 P 51 Leave Savannah, Sunday’s except ed, at Arrive at Jesups Sundays except ed at - Arrive at Brunswick daily at Leave Macon daily at • Leave Jesup daily at.. . , p . Arrive at Savannah daily at i.Av r al On Sunday this Train will leave Savannah at j 7 15 A. M., connecting with Trains for Macon « ( Brunswick, aiid connecting with trains trom A a- j •on and Brunswick will arrive at Savannah at , 9.30 P M. DAY TRAIN. Schedule oftiie Georgia Railroad. FFICE, ) Company,; > imber 23, ’69. ) the 7.00 I' M 7 50 P M 6.CO A 51 ■2 16 P 51 5 35 I* M 15 A 51 train Leave Savannah, Sundays except- ed at hlaA M Arrive at Jeeups, Sundays except- ed at - 10 4.. A 51 Arrive at Live Oak, Sundays ex cepted at * - Arrive at Macon duly at Leave Live Oak. Sundays except ed at—— — - — Leave Jesups, Sundays except ed at Arrive at Savannah .Sundays ex- .cepted at - — 15 s " Passengers for Macon take ’ fram Savannah, leaving daily. . Passengers for Brunswick take 10 1 51. train from Savannah. Passengers leaving Macon at 8 39 A A connect at J .sup with express tram for h lor-.da and \\ es„- eru Division, and with train for Savannah, arriv ing at 9 30 P M. Passengers from Brunswick connect at Jesup with train for Savannah, arriving at 5 35 P M except on Sundays, whftn it arrives at 9 30 P. M at Jesup with Express Train for Savannah, airiving at ]U 50 AM. A , Connect at Macon with Train lor Atlanta, Iea\- injf at 9.00 P M. SOUTH GEORGIA & FLORIDA R. R. TRAI5I. Leave Thomasville Tuesdays, Thursdays and Satnrdavs at - A. ^ Arrive at Pelham, Tuesdays lhursdays ana Sat- ordav* at O oir A M Leave Pelham, Tuesdays, Thursdays and 8:iiur- - 3 45 1 51 Arrive at Thomasville, Tuesdays, lhursdays and Saturdays at ----- 1 H. S. HAINES, General Superintendent. Jannuary 18, 1870 j SUPERINTENDENT’S OFFICE, Gkougia Railhoad Comp Augusta, Ga., December O N AND AFTER SUNDAY, 26th inst Passciig r Trains an the Georgia Railroad j will run as follows: DAY PASSENGER TRAIN. ! Leave Augusta at. •’•00 A 5f. “ Atlanta at .....5.00 AM. Arrive at August at 3.4a P M* “ at Atlanta 6.30 P M. NIGHT PASSENGER TRAIN. Leave Augusta at 10.00 P M. •• Atlanta at Arrive at Augusta 3 45 A M. “ Atlanta 8.00 A.M. S. K. JOHNSON, Superintendent. January, 18 1870 3 tf Schedule Mncon & Bfiinswickll. R- January, 7th, IS70 R egular thro’ passenger trains •wii HOOD O.Y DUE Li YU. Tom Hood describes and intended duel which was - prevented by an amicabe arrangement made upon the ground. The parties—51 r. Bradley and Mr. Clay—rivals for the affections of Lucy Bell, find it necessary to appeal to arms. But first they found a friend apiece, This pleasant thought to give— That when they both were dead they’d have Two seconds yet to live. To measure out the ground, not long, The seconds next forbore, And having taken one rash step, They took a dozen more. They next prepared each pistol pan Against the deadly state; By putting in the prime of death Against the prime of life. Now all was ready for the foes, But when they took th'ir stands, Fear made them tremble, joUiey found They both were shah mo sands. Said 5Ir. C. to B. Here one of us must fall. And, like.St. Paul’s Cathedral now. Be doomed to have a halt. “ I do confess I did attach Misconduct to your name ; If I withdraw the charge, will then Your ramrod do the same Said Mr. B , ‘* I do agree.'— But think of Honor’s courts— If we he off without a shot, There will be strange reports. But look ! the morning now is bright, Though cloudy it begun,— Why can’t we aim above, as if We had called out the sun 1” From the Telegraph and 5Ies»enger. ffleRinaitis. Griffin, Ga., March 14, 1S70. Messrs. Editors:—Thai dire affec- ethics oV Man. Then you trjecl die | morals of the world, be 1 hey ever so i good, so pure, so kind and so benefi- j cent, replied Morality. That which is ; good, pure and kind, 1 love, answered j lion, cerebro meningitis having become Iieligion ; but l want those ot the hu- j prevalent in our country, anything that man heart, to draw their inspirations can possibly throw light on iis nature and promptings from ihe right source, i anil treatment, in our mind, should be and do those good deeds from right made known to the profession. Having motives, and thereby honor their spir | seen numerous accounts of its preva lence in the lower parts of this tStale, we have taken this method of giving our treaiment in this disease, which has proven uniformly successful. We So up into the harmless air Their bullets did they send, And may all oilier duels have That, up-shut in the end. dual nature. Look at the morals oi the world, a self contradiction, and an absurdity. With one nation it is a virtue to steal, with another, a crime — with one, a praiseworthy act to mur der, with another Lite highest offence, and thus through the whole catalogue of what you call morals. How would you remedy the evil, asked Morality? By teaching all nations lo embrace my doctrines, answered Religion, to have but one principle lo guide, and one be lief to control them, to bring themselves in close communion w ith iheir Creator, God, and learn of Him what He would have His creature, Man, lo do. To animate and enliven that immortal .pa it about him, and to make it con scious of its responsibilities to a Re deemer. Had it pleased Jehovah to let the world be governed by iis own code of morals, then He would not have sent me on earth lo preach and teach another.. But Man had an ex istence before you came on earth with your peculiar notions, and he seemed himself, replied Moral- know that communications through the newspapers of the lard are not consider ed in strict accordance with true medical ethics, so we beg the indulgence of tire medicai profession in this urgent neces sity of the limes. The treatment adopted hy us in the epidemic of 1SG2 and 1SG4, was as follows : We in the first place give from live grains to thirty grains of"cal omel, according to the age of of the pa tient, to be repealed, if necessary, un til the bowels act; apply a flannel well saturated with spirits turpentine along the whole course of the spine, run over litis u smoothing irou moderately heal ed ; keep this up until the parts are blistered. Give from ten to fifty grains of bromide of potassium, according to die age of the patient, every three hours; after getting the patient fully under the influence of the bromide, commence and give large and heroic sentiments subiecl that AN ALLEGORY—RELI RIO.N ASD MORALITY A Rationalist sat causing to of the many opinions and held hy rr.an, upon every ouwj the furlile imagination of his nature could suggest. He inwardly laughed at the religions beliefs of the nations of the world, and criticised with severity satisfied with ily» I came not to make him dissatis- j doses of the sulphat# of quinine. Hed with himself, answered- Religion, but to elevate him to a higher standard of right and responsibility than he seemed willing to acknowledge. I ^ came not as a philosophi r, reformer, or | adventurer, but as a Divine teacher, to , • I offer immortal happiness beyond the grave to those who will, arrowing aside their self righteousness, embrace ibo ethics of heaven, and glorify the great Master, who taught as never man taught, and judged not the externa, deed, but the spiritthat gave birth to it. 1 care not to arcue with the moral, hut rigidity- and tension and temperature of the skin, 1 then put them upon nausea ting portions ot tartar emetic, and gave a brisk mercurial purgative, and appiifed a large blister to the spine, extending from the occiput to the iorver angle o,f the scapular. After the action of the purga- tivp, I continued the mercury and tartar emetic iu a4terali.ro portion ' combined with Dover powder it it was disposed to act too freely npon the bowels, And if reaction was fully established before re lief, I repsted the bleeilieg. Under this treatment I liad the satisfaction of seeing my patients relieved in from six to twelve and t.wtsnty-fpur hours of all symptoms of the Jisy.ase. It is an active inflammatory disease, tending rapidly to disorganization and death, and to treat-it Micceardully the most prompt and decided antiflogistic remedies insist be employed early in the disease, and I. know of no sLigie remedy that offers such advantages, both to patient and phy sician, as an early, thorough and decided bleeding—in language ot the hooks, at! delt(’uim animi. But, in order to givn the remedy a fair chance, tiie physieiau must see the patient early and act with vigor. J. T. WORD. M. D. ‘ N AMES—T H E lR M E A \INGS. Altatnaha : the place of the village. Atlantic: sea beyond Mt. Atlias. Chattahoochee : figured, or painted stone. Mississippi ; great and kmg river. Missouri : muddy. Montpellier : mountain, of the young ig ir,s - , ” . j Ocmulgee: tne rivers, the water I courses.' , .< Oconee : water course, small river. Ohio : beautiful. Tallahassee : old town. Tallapoosa : swift water. Tallulah : terrible. Tticcoa : beautiful. Tlironateeska : flint. Vermont: green mountains. Tennessee: river of the Big Bend. Oregon : river of the West. Wisconsin : wild rushing ehannel- waler valley, shallow cloudy water, whitish Wornrn in Cliinn. The worrrn is regarded and treated us a creature radically despicable, and scarcely-belonging lo ihe human race. She has no soul. She is treated by ev- erbody. and especially by her brothers as a menial from who n they have a right to demand the lowest and most painful services. The amusements pjjj^ and pleasures of her age are quite uu- wholc treatment should be carried out by j l \ nt)VV " 1 *' er whole education.con- some intelligent physician, as they I S,sls 111 knowing how lo use her needle, alone could adapt the treatment to dif ferent cases, and appreciate the action j of ihe different remedies. We regard j the disease as a miasmatic affection, j making a profound impression upon | the nervous centres. Hoping this '-om- munication will prove of some benefit, we remain, Very respect foil, Your obedient servant, J. J. KNOTT, M. D. the morals of mankind; one he thought . ... T1 . . ,p the spiritual man. His eai^ihiv associ ate child of superstition, and tiie oilier . f . , , • • ,, r - ■ - - 1 anons atm human relations, are mould ed and governed by tht t imes and places, in which he lives, but his spiritual re lations to his Redeemer, and their rt-ilex influence ujx>n his brother man, the peculiar idiosyncrasies of ihe mind. What, thought he, has Man intel lectual organs lhat will sleep unless brightened into life by some effort, or will they, true to their existence, make themselves fell, as fhey are inborn ? — Has not Man a spiritual as well as a material nature, and will not both ex ercise their relative influences? Thus reasoning within himself, he beard the voice of one near, saying to him : Friend, of what are you think- outlive and impress themselves upon the world to the setting of the last sun. I change not for time, manners, or cus- jom$; the same to-d iy and forever, apd shall only cease the work I wai sent to perform, when the trump of ihe I lesnrreclion morn shall proclaim that Dr. Robertson says, in writing to a lady friend and relative, in Soul It Car olina : l’he disease called Ccrtbro Spinal Meningitis is improperly named.,, and will drenee the improper treatment in many cases. It is not inflammation, of the membrane of the spine and brain, but a mere venous congestion of the spinal marrow and brain end yost mortem found it the case it Tire symptoms are 1 have made sev- exarninationsj and every instance,— ry very like those of .‘ *, \ 1 . U all things temporal have ceased to ex- inflammation o: the membranes .lad mil, i em ' )U ‘ mg— what deep thougbi has presented • ^ . L 1It IreaIf . li Sllt m everv case will great I itself for contemplation ? I was think ing, answered the Rationalist, o.f many things: but more especially ol Religions and religious beliefs,—of morals and Morality. Then you are thinking me, answered Religion, for that is my name. 1 have heard of you, replied the Rationalist., but there are so many ' ot ibat name, that I do not recognize its. I was not born of earth, or of the brain of man. i am heavenly in my j nature, and came lo point the way to j-[ my heavenly home. Earth with all its . i pomps and shows, its schools o f learn ing, ot science and arts, of morals and vilues, effect me not. I am before ali, ; above all and superior to all. but treated as such, every ca-e will prove fatal. I have had over a hun- drec cases: the first seven cases had She neither learns how to read nor write for there exists no school nor house of education for her. The idea of nulli ty is carried so far that consulting her in any way or even informing her so mubh as the name of her future hus band would be considered superfluous arid absurd. She is simply a traffic, an article of merchandise to be sold to tlie highest bidder. She has no right | lo lake her meals' with, her husband ; i nay not even with male childrens Her iduty is to serve them at table, and flii and light their pipes. She must eat alone.afterThey have done, and in a corner. Her food is scanty and coarse and she would not dare to touch even what is left hy her own sons. Her husband can strike her with impunify, starve her, sell her, or what is worse, lei her out for degrading purposes. The number of women who cooi.mil suicide is very considerable. When this catastrophe occurs iu a family, the husband usually shows a great deal of emotion, lor in fact he has suffered a rent loss, and will be under the neces sity p! buying another wife.. . In sprite parts ot the country it is so you as the special individual of whom I was thinking. There is but one Reli gion in the world, and 1 am (bat one, answered Religion, though there are thousands of imposters going by mv name ; but they are nothing but super stitious creatures, and dare not meet me ,in an argument of our mission. There are others, again, who have sto len some of my robes, and have passed themselves off for myself, and have actually reasoned themselves into the belief that they arw inspired from the same great source of Light , as myself. Do I understand you to say, asked Ra- From the Atlanta luloiligencer. Atlanta, Ga., March 14th, 1S70. Mr. Editor:—Passing • along ihe | street to-day, i observed a squad of j farmers and a cotton merchant in car I uesl conversation, and over hearing a j.certain remark, 1 was induced to stop land listen to the following eonversa- | Merchant.—“If you will only plant j enough cotton lo make twenty bales | weighing five hundred pounds each, j this year, 1 will give you three thou- I sand five hundred dollars for it, tieliv- j cd in New York, June, 1871. But if ! you plant enough, and make thirty died when I was called i:r cousulia-i‘ !llU ! ‘ ie fashion lo beat a wife, ihaL a lion. Finding all these had been treat- j m ' an '^j 10 ^ )V Y 3 himself negligent on ed hy depletion, and had died, I forfeits ins marital dignify, once made an examination of two of T 1 "^ ' a K ‘gard‘-d as a simpleton who : tiie bodies, and decided to change ihe j understands nothing of his prerogative, j plan of treatment, and it proved a sue- j ^ nei1 . wom eti are treated with gen- i cess in nearly every case. j t.encNS and moderation, il is usually on When the case is first taken, at once j a principle oi economy, as one might j shave the back of the head, and in ihe | s P are fl heasl of burden because it cost I most rapid manner possible, raise,a ; m °ney, and because if it is killed one blister from the back of the head to the j." ou '“ havpiq replace it. end of the spine ; in severe cases, II A hue writer states tt^t more than saturate flannel with turpentine, and j once 11 ,s he seen a plow, drawn by a apply it, and run a hot iron over it un- | ' vom ,n w ^-‘ik‘ her husband walked !>e- tii it festers, or rub on the turpentine hind and guided il. Pitiable it was to and set it on fire, or any other way to : 'j' 0, poor little things sticking their produce a bad blister as soon as possi- j ,f * el - the ground as they went, hie ; then give quinine in ten gram doses until forty or sixty grains ate ta ken—give ten grains every two or three hours; let the patient drink free ly ot pepper tea, and also take a tabie- iii commence ruiinifit? diis Koaci 011 the 9th inst., hs follows : 9.15 A 51. P 51. 10.UO P 51. 4.30 A. 51. .6.15 A. M. tionalist,that you are an m.-piied ere a- : j ls j e g weighing live hundred pounds J siRHnflulVor two of whisky everv lour —i .u views are not the • , , ? u. ! 1 - - 3 tf i CHANGE 0FSCHEBULE. South-Western Em.road Company^ ( Office, Macon, (jta,, Jan. 15th, PLO. 1 Z of aula day Passenger and Mad lnnn Leare Macon Arrive atEufaula — Leave Eufanla Arrive at Alacon 8.00 A. M. 5.30 P. 51. 7.20 A. M, 4.50 P. 51, Solid Leave Macon at - - Arrive at. Brunswick at Arrive at Savannah at.. Leave Brunswick - Arrive at Macon I HAIMS TO HAIVKFXSVILLE. Leave 5iacoh £.00 P M. Arrive at. llawkinsville •' .0.30 A M. Leave Hawkiasvilie ~ 6 !l Arrive at Macon 10 25 A M. This train fnns daily Sundays excepted. RETURNING : Leave Brunswick at ....8.00 A M. Leave Savannah at 7.J5 A M. Arrive at M.icou at 7.50 P 51. Trains make direct connections at Jesap, hotli ways, .with trains for Bainbridge, Thomas- tlie crossing of the AUantic and Gulf Rotd, , vine, and all points ou that Road, as well,as with j those for Jacksonville. Tallahassee, and all sta- i tiops on the Florida Roads. j F are to Savannah and Brunswick--.. $ 8 00 j Fare to Jacksonville 69 j Fare to Tallahassee - 17 00 : Fare to R iviibridge — 15 00 i Fare 40 Xew Yoik, Philadelphia or Baltimore, by steamers '27 00 ture, and that yout: result of your mental reflections. Pre cise!}’ what I Would have you to be lieve, answered Religion. Yoa assume much to yourself, replied Rationalist.— entitled : each, l will only give you ivvenly-eight or five hours, and give him hundred and fifty dollars for the thirty j 0 f the‘bromide of potass | bales.” Fanner.—“ How is that? Y‘ou say you will give me three thousand live . , 11 1- 1 I VUU Will tf I V u lilO Uitcv- IDGUOUI No more Ihnn I »m o„mlc! lo. replied j lulldreJ d e olIars for twemy bales, and T e,! g ’ b“l I see liliproaehing-Ba.il,, lwe my eiglll iiaudred and (illy ell hand the most dangerous enemv 1 ^ fo( {J,,,..* bale , have on earth. vV ho is lie, asked Ra- ; tionalist? Morality, answered Rdi-1 girrti. I know him of old, answered | Rationalist; an old friend of mine. A ! good enough friend, replied Religion, j and one that I esteem 'much-, but he ; has a strange dislike to mv teachings, j Talking airout me, asked Morality?! I hear my name. Yes, replied RHi- j Merchant.—“Yes, that is the propo sition. If you make thirty bales, il will be more than is wanted for irnme ten grams every six hours. These doses are for adults.^— II the case is a negro, it will require more stimulants than a white person, and especially of red pepper tea If the case is taken in time, this treatment will cure nearly every one, but it neglected fir an hour or two, it may fail. I saw cases bled, and they died an hour after ; others were purg- V. IIIUU I.j ■«« | LJIU.lt ail IBHtl diate consumption, and the expense of I cd, and died with symptoms of cbol- ; others had every appearaace olie- lanus, or lo.;kjaw. The symptoms and names given the disease mislead the physician in his treatment. Under recent,arrangements made with the At- ! lautie & Gulf Ruad. Weights to and from Savan Arrive » I--- rr-r f iintt and New York have increased dispatch. . TirJ,Southern Express Company will operate on fir hi l reight iy Accommodation 1 ram. to' Brunswick, polpts in Southern Geor M»con 8:25 P 51 Lniveat Eufaula Ifd’O A M -*nve Eufaula. 7:18 P M trrive at Macon.. - 9:10 A 51 Col embus Ma il Train. oia nr.d in Florida', eoimuencing on Monday,.the ROBERT SCII51IDT. Master transportation. January 18,1870 3 gion ; I was saying to your friend Ra- ! tionalist that you were a good enough i man, but that you had a strange tiis-! like to my teachings. I have no.ob-! jections to your teachings, but as 1 have told you over aud often, that I think you carry them too far in all the relations of life, and do hot give the f world credit for what it is or have i t,u ^ 1 done, replied Morality. I was not holding it is so great, end the fluctua lions of tiie market is such, that ! can not risk more than that. But if you only make twenty bales, the spinners will want that at an early day, and I can speculate on it, and turn it over in a few days.” Spectator.—“ How do you make your calculations f” Merchant.—“On past experience.— Last September cotton was worth 35 cents in New York, aud to-day, l can for 19 cents, delivered next June. From the Columbus Enquirer. MENINGITIS. Mr EniTon : From various sources we learn that meningitis—a rapidly fatal dis- bales, and the .wre Macon iTrive at ColHinbua .cave Colnmhus irriro at 5Iacon 7:25 A 51 1.22 A M 12:26 P 5C 6:05 P M Jolumbu* Night Freight Ac'out'a Train .leave Macon 7:40 P 51 Lrrive at Columbus 5:95 A M .cave Columbns 7:00 P 51 Lrrive at 5Iacou 4:43 A 51 -Albany Train" connects at. Sinithville with Sufaula Trains aud Arrive at Albany at. 3:11 P 51 nd Leaves Albany at 9:35 A 51—Regular 5iail '’rain. Aeeemmodation Train connects three times a reek. “Fort Gaines Train,” connects at Cnthbert..- Leave Fort Gaines at 7:05 A M and Arrive at •Vt Gaines 3:40 P 51. Accommodation Train connects twice a week, n Tuesdays and Thursdays. W. S. BRANTLY, Aud. 'ehmary 1, 1870 5 tf. f. W. WHITE, ttcPfieif -ai- ^ sent upon earth to give credit for any- ^ . e 1 b .... J Merchant.—“ Mmply on account of of righteous- 1 , , . I f ,° .. ihe report liiat the last crop w ,. .. , , ° 2,S50,000 to 3,000,000 ‘ ’ mankind in the tt ue wav of life,, and ’ ^ , . planters were preparing for a heavy vour * ,. „ 1 ° I: crop this year, have no fault to find, replied Morality, with a common sense view oi die sub ject ; but when you go so far as lo as- tliitig, but lo be a teacher ness, and to point you and true way of life,, to open to your understandings spiritual relations to your Creator. all too MILLEDGEVLLLE, GA., Will practice in this and the aJioinir.g counties. UsT Applications fur Homestead Exemptions under tiie new law, and other business before tba Court of Ordinary, wiii receive -proper attention. October 13. I860 41 tf JStlaoks lor &a!<* ai lit is Office \\j ANTED.—A Northern man—friendly to the tV 8uuth, aud a believer iu tue old Jefferso nian idea uf government—a College graduate, de sires a situation as. Teacher in s'-me 8 out hern .State. Satistacfory references furnished if desired. Address, sturin^- terms, “CLASSICS,” P■hflshers' Box No. 7, DayToK, OHIO tfr Rpiwrdei Utfii --.' October iU, Icoi* 42 tt serl that there is nothing good in man, by reason of his carnal i aiutv, l do ol)- \ ject. For 1 hold, tint! man is by na- j ture, spiritual, as well as inletlectual, ! and that the good he does—he does dot good—is Ihe innate promptings of that I so-called spiritual gilt, as much so as ; any mental effort on his part. If I were ready to accept your rationalism, j then I might admit your premises, re- j plied Religion. But I admit of no el'n- I ies or metaphysics in the doctrine l was ! ”. ..V 1 •r>m ((.-.i'll - tor it f did, then would 1 be , c 11 1 t * self—! Moral.—Two million bales that is needed—three- mil ion much. Let us all plant two-thirds less cotton this year than we intended to plant, and put the balance of our land in corn and potatoes, and hold on to what cot ton we have got, un’il we can get at least 2-5 cents for it. PLANTER. If we would have powerful minds, we must think ; if we would have faithful hearts we must love ; if we would have strong muscles we must labor. These include all that is valu- sent teach the sport of reasoners as yourself j \ Los Angeles, California paper says and the vital spirit of my Being, ! that one thousand borses were lately sold would be lost forever amid the mot a • u that place, at livu dollars a head. ease—is prevailing in many sections of our State, and causing much alarm and apprehension in the mind* of the people from its unchecked ravages iu many local ities. Feeling it to he the duty of every citizen to contribute whatever lie may for the reach ^ f? en ‘‘ ra l good, and hoping my limited ex perience in the tieatuieut of this fcnrfui scourge may aid some of my professional brethren in successfully combatting it in a case now aud then, I give, a brief detail of my plan of treatment aud the results. In 1S64, I had charge of the hospital for the treatment of the laborers employed in tha Transportation Department in-this t i v it tell to my lot in the latter part of ifu winter aud early spring of that year, to treat six cases cl cerebro-6piual n.eniugiti an 1 with one axcept'on they all recovered and that was the first ease, widen ba-1 e.x is;ed some twenty-four hours before I i»a called in. Iu the other cases 1 saw tin patients within a few hours after the ap pearance of the disease, which was gener ally Hsherd in with chiily sensations pain in the head and spine, and followed by fever, delirium and eurvature of the spine within from two to six hours. My plan was to bleed them freely from a large orifice, until I made a decided nn- pression upon the pulse, and uutii then was a manifest relaxation of the rnascula; (liauiug them painfully out nginu, and so hopping from one end of ihe furrow to the oifjer. Ad vertiepmenifra hundred years ago tell how certain gentlemen were mar ried lo certain ladies, one lo ’an agree able young geinie woman with a for tune of one thousand pounds ;’ anoth er to ‘a beautiful voting bidv with a great fortune and fine accompfish- oienls ;’ a ibird to ‘a vOung ludv'ol great merit wilb a fortune of len thou sand pounds; a ftmrth geis ‘a voungTa dv endowed wiili every qualification that can render the marriage stale hap py while Miss M. E. t a ‘co intry young woman wild good heal h and a tolerable person, brought up in an bon esl and plain way, about twenty years of age, and whose father, she flunks, will give her five hundred pounds down if she marries with bis consent, offer 5 her seif l° r a "’ife G> any sober, gopd-tempeied, well-looking man be- tw’eeji ’ vveij.ty and thirty, who is sealed iu a good ir ole in Birmingham or fhal ii'-ighborjrpod, in which she promises to give eyer\ assisianc’e ii, her power.’ If things, are settled to her saiisfy.clion, <he promises to make an oliedient and good wife. And ihen comes a post script : “My father says frade is bet ter tban the farming business. In an older page we lenrn how Samuel Whitehurst, having fried, the slate which Miss M. E. so desired to know, is now as anxious to be rid ol ifis bar gain as be was once, presumably, anx ious to obtain it wife to Tiros. Griffiths for one shilling, Nebraska : river* Minnesota water. Michigan ; a weir tor fish. Memphis : Temple of the good God. Ma huseits: Blue Hills. •Kentucky : at the head ol a river. Kansas: smoky water, also g a> potato. Iowa : drowsy or sleepy ones. Illinois : tribe, of men. Florida : land ot flowers. Dahlonega: place of gold. Dacotab : leagued, atied. Connecticut : upon the long river. Colorado : red or colored. China : the middle nation. Chicago: skunk. CtK!sa|>cake : great waters. Alabama : here we rest. FOOL’S COLD. A man came into the office of a prac tical chemist one day, and after asking leave to lock the door, produced from a hand kerchief, in a very mysterious manner, some substance which he laid on the table. “Doyou see that ?” he asked tri umphantly. “I do,” said the gentleman. “Well, what do you call it ?” “I cal! it iron pyrites,” “What !—ain’t it gold ?” “No ; il is worth nothing.” And placing some on a shovel, lie held it over the fire, when il all disappeared up the chimney. The spirit was all gone out of tire jAKor li;l!ow as he sank back in a chair, and aUast lire sad truth came out. “There’s a widder in our place has got a hull hill full of that stuff, and I have gone and married her.” True “fool’s gold” it was lo him, in more sense than one. But he was not the first person uho has speculated in fool’s gold,” and been sadly bitten. The man who puts his whole soul into tho work of getting rich—who robs bis family of all the comforts of life, himself of needful rest and help, who grinds tiie faces of the poor to in crease his hoards will find in the end he has ouly amasseu a heap of glitter- in “fool’s gold.” The young man who wins his mon ey by any of the dishonest crafts in vogue, is only accumulating “fool’s gold.” It will most likely vanish in smoke before his eyes; and it it does survive him, the rust of it will eat into his soul like a canker. True riches are those wich .are hon estly gained in l awful pursuits, which are wisely and genarouslv expened as as we go along through life. As soon as money is valued tor money’s sake, it becomes only “fool’s gold,” Those possessions which have the blessing ofthcipoor upor. them, are the only ones which also have tha blessing of God—rlliat “rnaketh rich,” indeed, “and He addeth no sorrow with it.” Curious Facts in Regard to Sound.—The following curious obser vations in regard to the transmission of sound, have been carefully verified by an extended series of experiments: The whistle of a locomotive is heard S300 yards through the air; that of a railroad train, 2S0U yards; the report of a musket and the bark of a dog, 1800 yards; the human voice reaches 1000 yards ; the croaking ot frogs, 900 yards ; the chirping of crickets, 800.— Distinct speaking is heard in the air from below up to a distance of GOO yards; from above it is only under stood lo a range of one hundred yards downwards. It has been well ascer tained that an echo is well reflected from the surface of smooth water only when the voice comes from an eleva tion. An orchestra or the roll of a ctrnm. reaches IG00 yards. Other similar phenomena connected with the transmission of ’sound have been observed, but the results disagree either from inaccuracy in the observa- , tions or f rom the varying nature of the wherefore he syils-, his. circumstances affecting the numbers obtained* Such variations occur to an money down, ‘to take her with all her j,extern of 10 or 20 percent., a/uf even faults.’ I he entry was make in tnejrnote. The weather’s being cold and oil book ot the Bell Inn, ^dgba.ston | d rv , or warm and wet, are the chief -irt ei, anJjhe commentator stated j influencing causes. In the first case, !i ;t “the parlies were exceedingly, the sound goes to greater, and in the \cll pleased.” | second, a less extent.—From the J'ech- i ~ nolovist, A. Y. Awhile garment appears worse!. w _ with slight soiling than do colored gar-, quiits much soiled ; so' a little fault in t good man attracts more attention" than grave offenses in had men. Baltimore owes £25 000.'000, and Pliita- ieljjhia over S42.00O-.U00. The aggregate is greater tfiau the national debt tb* com** mepceineut of ihe war. j Bone Felon.—The Dawson Journal says the following will give relief in a few minutes : Take the bloom or root [bloom preferred | of the Winter Fink, and make a strong decoction by boil- ng in water. Add lard, simmer down to the consistency of soft paste, and apply to the affected part. i 1 h .Itr t-