Southern recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1820-1872, March 29, 1870, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

&m4Mszrt**mrwMm Vol. LI* MILLEDGEVILLE, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, MARCH 39, 1870. No. 18. R 2VI. OBME <Sc SO 3ST, editors and proprietors. f. rA< —$ bll per unaum, itt Adrance. VnvuRTisiSti—Persquare oftenlines, each *■ . ii i),) Merchants aud others forall I r $ 25, twenty-live per cent. off. j LF.UAI. ADVCRTISINO. CHANGE OF^SCHEDILE. SO CHANGE OF GARS 5E- IWEBHT SAVjSlEJNASX, AU GUST A A3TD IXgQTf'BQrQXiL- SKY, ALASAMA- Application for leave to : Notice to Debtors and Creditors . OtJ Sales of Land, per square of ten lines .... 00 Sale of personal, per sq., ten days. I ft Sheriffs-Each levy of ten lines, or less.. 2 nO Mortgage sales often lines or less... 5 1.0 T ,x Collector’s sales, per sq. (2 months) 5 00 z’/jria--Foreclosure of mortgage and oth er monthly’*, per square ^ 00 gutray notices, thirty days ” 00 Tributes of Respect, Resolutions by Societies, Obituaries, «fce.,exceeding six lines,to becharged 4 g trauaient advertising. r^r Sales of Laud, by Administrators, Execu tors or Guardians, are required by law, to be held Oil the first Tuesday in the month, between the hours often in the forenoon and three in the af- r!l 10 n, attno Court h nise in the county in which j,, pr >,) srty is situate I. DAY TRAIN. Leant Savannah 8:00 A M Macon Augusta SFiUeugeville Eat (inton Connecting with trains that leaves Augusta DOWN DAY TRAIN Macon 7:00 Savannah Augusta Connecting with train that leaves Augusta UP NIGHT TRAIN Savannah 7:20 P M .. 5:38 P M ...5:3rt P M .. 8:58 P M .11.00 P M .. 6 :45 A M 5:3b P M 5:38 P M 8:45 A M 0:55 A M 6:13 A SI .. 9:33 P M Notice of these sales must be given in a public j Macon jatette 40 days previous to the day of sale. | Augusta Notice for the saleof personal property must be j Connecting with trains that leaves f ; fe n i alike manner 10 days previous to saie day. j Augusta Notieesto debtors and .♦editors of an estate DOWN NIGHT TRAIN, must aUo be published 40 days. j Notice that application will be made to the j ‘' V Court of Ordinary for leave to sell land, must be | ^ . sta **!.’.*. p«bli»hed for two months. | Milie‘dge"vhYe.V. .'-* ...... V:30 P M Citations for letters of Administration,Guar- J Eat(intull . 2:40 P M 4isn»Hip, Slc ..must be pubiisbeu ->0day.-. .<>. ui> j Connecting with train that leaves mission from Administration, monthly sir. months ; j Augusta - .... A M Trains from Savannah and Augusta, a P M Train from Macon connect with Mrlledge 5:10 9:13 dismission troin guardianship, 40 days. R iles for foreclosure of Mortgages must be 9:53 P M tutors or Adminis- pabiished tiontlilq f>r i a g 1 ost papers, for the. full spore e forno-npelliagntlestroui Lsecut. trators where bond has been given by the do- lS( ,a the full space of three months. Charge, *1 00 par * q -are of ten lines for each insertion. I’uV.'ieaMons will always be continued accord ja-rto time, the legal requirements, unless oth rr rise ordered. s J" r eslau , *'| ville Train at Gordon daily, Sundays excepted. f three mouths— j j, m. Train from Savannah connects witlithi ifh thro’ mail train on South Caroline 4?allfPad, and P. M. train from Savannah and Augusta with trains on South-Western and Muscogee Railroads. Wit. ROGERS. Act’g Master of Transportation. February 1, 1870 ’ • >_ 5 tf n-Ti i L. 7.30 r M .. ..2.20 A M CHANGE OF 8CHEDL! GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT’S OFFICE, Atlantic a Gulf, k. k. iouvanv , / Savannah, January 7, 1870. 4 O N AND AFTER SUNDAY, the 9ch instant, Passenger Trains on this Road w ill run as fu.lowa . NI( - iHT EPXPRE3S TRAIN. Leave Savannah every day at... 4.30 P M Arrive at Jesup junction. M *fc B K R Arrive at Live Oak every day... . Arrive at Jacksonville every day _ - ‘ Arrive at Tallahassee every day < 07 A j* Arrive at Quincy every day J.io A -U Arrive at Bainbridge Mondays ex- , , r cepted— - -- ....o.lo A A. Leave Bainbridge, Sundays excepted.9 .>0 P M Leave Quincy every day ^ Z- v> Leave Tallahassee every day * F ”*■ Leave Jacksonville everyday o > \ \r Leave Live Oak every day *, 7, Leave Jesup every day... lo rn a m Arrive at Savannah everyday Ht.o. a . MACON A BRUNSWICK ACCOMMODA i ION j • TRAIN. Leave Savannah. Sundays except ed. at Arrive at Jesups Sundays except- __ ed at... — - — - -- -- •* * Arrive at Brunswick daily at H g'J 4 Leave Macon daily at Leave Jesup daily at... J’- * Arrive at Savannah daily at .t..>0 I 31 On Sunday this Train will leave Savannah at j 7 15 A. M., connecting with Trains for Macon « Brunswick, and connecting with trains irom Ma con and Brunsw ick will arrive at Savannah at j 8.30 P M. DAY TRAIN. NOTICE* Atlantic x Gru Railroad Co., i Savannah, December 1,5, 1609. ) O N AND AFTER THIS DATE, BY AGREE- MEN I', the rate of Freight between Savau- ! nan and Macon, by the Atlantic and Gulf and Ma i con and Brunswick Railroads, will.be as follows : j First class per pound j Second class per 101) pounds : Third class per l(i0 pounds j Fourth class per 100 pounds • ! Fifth class per J00 pounds * j Sixth class per 400 pounds i Seventh class per 100 pounds J Eighth class per 100 pounds | Ninth class per 100 pounds j Cotton per 100 pounds.: ' ! Salt per sack * ... | Guano per J00 pounds , .... Freight received for ail Stations on Macon and I Western Railroad, Atlanta and noiuts beyond. H. S. .UAiN’LS, General Superintendent, i February 1, 1679 5 tt Does Alcohol Contributes to the Nutrition of the. Body, and Increase 'fun's Power of Endurance if Physical or Menial Labor 9 Editors Telegraph :—The effi cient and healthful functional activity oi the different organs of the body, de mand a supply of food and drink w hich contain the elements that enter into the structure of the different iisues and or gans. Those substances are usually most digestible and assimilable which can be most readily acted upon by the fluids ol the stomach, and prepared for absorption into the blood, and as similation or con vet sion into the con stituent parts of the i> idy. Healthful arterial blood fully freighted with The elements of nutrition for the support of the different tissues, Haves the heart and nasses die roffind ofthe circulation, in its errand of distributing to the wants of the economy. On its return .to the heart from the capillary system of vessels, it becomes altered in its col or and qualities, having lost its red and assumed the color of dark or venous blood, and been deprived of its nutri live qualities. The venous blood charg ed with carbon passes on to the lungs, to undergo a process of purification or vilalization, by the chemical action of the atmosphere. A great redundance ot carbonic acid in the blood destroys lite by its poisonous effects upon the brain and nervous system, and induc ing conjestion ofthe lungs, by impos ing upon them a lngher degree of func tional activity than tliev can sustain. .Nitrogen, one ofthe four elements— carbon, oxygen, hydrogen and nitrogen, which compose all organic bodies, en ters into ail 1 he tissues; they cannot lie-formed without its presence, for it is the pabulum, or fond oi fiesli and blond, h abounds iu lean meats, va rious cereal grains and all grasses. In muscular activity, but l>y its slow, i sand and two thousand workmenWere steady and sustaining power. ; employed, the proprietor reports, “that Preparations of iron exert their ton- j the men engaged as strikers to the ic effect by increasing the red corpus- j forge, who drink largely cf water, are pies of the blood, and its plasticity of! mute active, can do more work, and ready convertibility into the animal lis- are more healtlily than those who.make sues. I be different prepuruii >ns or use of fermented liquors.” mix vomica, in minute quantities, ex- The American indkin, before his de- ett a decidedly stringent agency upon structive contact with civilization, was the spina) ajdrrnw and its motor nerves ; quinine: neutralizes .the morbific poison of malarious districts, by a peculiar influence upon the sympathetic system of nerves. Coffee and tea are not on ly direct nervine Ionics, in moderate quantities, but they may be classed with the nitrogenous substances that abound in elements of nutrition which are employed in the regeneration of the tissues. Alcohol induces a rapid exaltation of nervou^ sensibility, whereby pro digious feats of strength and agility are accomplished, for the time,but in propor- regarded as the type of physical and natural mental endowment. W'th his supply of parched corn and jerked ven ison, fie laughed at hunger and fatigue ; and, with muscles of iron, and nerves of steel, he pursued the bounding deer, or the track of his foe, giving neither repose to his limbs, nor slumber to his eye lids until avarice or re\ei:ge were fully satisfied. Among prize fighters, prolessional pugilists, before a contem plated contest, are subjected to a rigid system of training, involving three es- senlial requisites : 1st, properly regu iated exercise ; 2d, a diet ot lean meats lion to the degree of excitement must an ^ stale bread ; 3d, an entire abstiri- there be a corresponding singe of de- e,i ce irorn alcoholic drinks, pression. These rapid alterations of It is generally conceded that the opposite stales ofthe system must be brain is ihe medium through which we observe maniiestationsof the operations debility and exhaustion. D. Hooker: Slowed by Says Dr. J. *T know of only one occasion on which the use of spirits appeared to be indispensable, aud that was, when a little more exertion at the crowning of a mighty and long continued effort was demanded. • • * Now 1 have seen every officer and man of the ship straining at the capstan for hours to gether, through snow and sleet, with the perspiration, running down our faces and bodies like water. Towards the end- of such a struggle, or at the mighty crowning effbrt. 1 have seen a a little grog work wonders. I could not have drank hot coffee w ithout stop ping to cool ; nor if 1 had, do I think it would have supplied the temporary amount of strength called for on the spot under circumstances like this.— These, however, are extreme cases which do not affect the sailor iu his or of mind, and the apparent elective at fiuity ofspiritous liquors lor brain and ner/ous mauler, causes varied mani festations of intelligence. The crea tive and combining faculties seem to be especially stimulated thereby height ening the poetic talent and quickening the imagination and fancy : evoking sallies of wit, streams of silvery rhetor ic, and the harmony of dulact notes that fall with seraphic sweetness upon the ear, but they render the mind in capable of intense concentration of thought, evolving severe and lucid logi cal deductions* Intense and prolong ed menial effort requires great con sumption of brain and nervous matter, in the natural process of disintegration From the Southern Home. HCffffNTl OF mwiRX. Mr. Editor.—I was one of a num her of persons sitting in the office of a gentleman ot my .acquaintance, when I listened to a conversation between out- who had served iu the Confederate ar mies ai^d a person Iiom the North.— The Confederate was excusing the so cial ostracism practiced by "some of his peoph-, and the prejudice' which ex isted generally in the South nmiinsf some of the-people oT the North, be cause of the unexampled outrage? and wanton and vindictive destruction ol property committed by the Yankee troops'upon the people'ar.d property of the Southern States, whenever an opportunity offered, and especially, when there were women and children and old unarmed ai;d defenseless men only to be encountered. Their con duct during;Ihe war and utter disre gard of solemn pledges since, warrant ed ihe £k>ulh in having not only a hate- red Out a contempt and loathing for such people. Our respect, he said, was go ing fast, and when that was wanting, it was all nonsense to talk about friend ship. I he Northern man replied that tlie.se tilings was the result of war passions ; ihutthe war was over, and it would he better arid wiser, perhaps, io let by gones be by-gunes, and ail join in ce menting liip new Unton, The Confederate, in response, said, dial he would relate an incident in the war of 1SI2 and some one or two of the war of l8u 1—65 in Order to illustrate the. character of.the two different people —one of whom we had been taught from childhood to hate, and the other theirs, and left the orange groves, and lemon trees, and beautiful gardens,and the grand old house, (which, until their visit, was the* abode of elegance and refinement,) not as they found them, but left them despoiled aud defiled. Again—on the CoastofNSouth Caroli na there was a family, —(I particular ize one, there were hundreds of the same kind, who were similarly treat ed,} of large wealth; their home, the- ’ofd family mansion, was known far ffnd wide for the genetous hospitality of its inmates, who had lived there so long that a double row of live-oaks, planted by au.ancestor; had grown so as to mingle their branches across the road, and being festooned by ihe Soiufir ern moss, gave a magnificent avenue , of approach to the dwelling. T-ue grounds had been adorned,.so that th© place lyas Known as JCosclaoJ. The Yankees paid this, place a visit, hurri ed ihe. house, stole the pictures and .whatever was trail spot table,, destroyed! ihe gardens and fences, and cut down the trees. What motives do you sup pose actuated them? Nothing in the world but envy, malice, awl the pe culiar bjil instructs of a bad jieoole. - The young ladies of tiii? family had taken refuge at a farm some distance north of Columbia, out of the line of Shertuau's march, as they supposed ; hut one day a large body of Yankees, under numerous officers, came to the place erneted the house, and having broken open every locked place and taken everything transportable, a band under one or more officers, came to the room where, the ladies were assembled, I demanded the keys of their trunks, j opened mul ransacked them, taking ihe hereditary-enemy and the Yankee was not well calculated to embalm the its chemical composition alcohol, is nt- . itrlej destitute of nitrogen : 4 parts of car- d'liiaiv condition, and winch any ship *; •’!! bon, 6 of hydrogen, and 2 of oxygen, I ina y well prepared for. term alcohol. As is weli known, it is I Alcohol is incapable of sustaining highly inflammable ; and resists the I prolonged and extreme physical labor, piocess of putt ifaction of vegetable a>Ll j'i'heie is a continual process of waste animal substanees. Iis effects vary in land replenishment of the vital tissues intensity according to the quantity b*k- j going on. This is accomplished by eii into the stomach-within a given time, certain organ? employed in elaborat- l 4o i uo 60 70 50 45 9‘J,‘ in moderate doses it is highly sti 15 iaiitig, and become? rapidly into the blood. I; increases ofthe circulation, sharpens titc, but expends its energies absnrbed the force TP :v tlil' w-e are now called oivlb love,—and he i l * ie j'-weis and oilier--ornaments* lore would submit, if the contrast between f l ^ ,e s|virts fro n the silk dresses, disirib- uteil the clothing to the,negro women, and then demanded every -article of jewelry from the ladj. s, gold &e. about (heir persons, under pam of instant search. Their hair had to be let down to shqw, ibat,nothing was concealed.— Alter ti/ese. outrages the ladies were told to go into the yard; their trunks, now nearly empty, were only of thi ilization. There i? a plantation oh the coast oi Georgia, which was once the property* of (>onaru! Greene, (n Northern rtidn.) Perhaps, it was presented to him bv Schedule ofthe .2 10 P M ... 7.15 A M 7.00 P Lauve Savannah, Sunda} s except ed at Arrive at Jesups, Sundays except- edal —- « 10 45 A M 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.. J3T Passengers for Macon take 7.15 A M train fee iu Savannah, leaving* daily. Piuisenfjprs for Brunswick tike v.K) i xvi. trfiiii from Savannah. j Passengers leaving Macon at 8.30 A M connect , at Jesup with express train for Florida and West-, ern Division, aud with train for Satannah, arr.v- j log at 9 30 P M. _ ! Passengers irom Brunswick connect at Jesup v. it h j train for Savannah, arriving at 5.3 > P M except . on Sundays, when it arrives at 9 30 P. M at Jesup ; with Express Train for Savannah, arriving at I 10 50 A M. , | Connect at Macon with Train for Atlanta, leav- ; mg at 9.00 P M. SOUTH GEORGIA A. FLORIDA K. K. TRAIM. Leave Thotnasviile Tuesdays, 1 hursdavs and j Saturdays at 8.00 A M j Arrive at Pelham, Tuesday's Thursdays^ anu Sat urdays at 9.55 A M j Leave Pelham, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Satur days at I 4o 1’ M Arrive at Thomas ville, Tuesdays, Thursdays aud i Saturdays at. P M 1 H. S. HAINES, General Superintendent, j Jannuary 18, 1870 o ti | SUPERINTENDENT’S OFFICE, ) Georgia Railroad Company, > Angusta, Ga., December 23, ’09. ) O N AND AFTER SUNDAY, 26th inst . the Passenger L'rains on the Georgia Railroad iviiirun as follows: DAY PASSENGER TRAIN. Leave Augusta at.... '.00 AM. “ Atlanta at 5.00 AM. Arrive at August at 3.45 PM. •• at Atlanta 5.30 P M. NIGHT PASSENGER TRAIN. nml waste of the tissue?, Granting j latter in bur miftfis as ilie enemy, not 1 (hot carbon or hydrogen inay enter in {only of the South, but of advanced civ- sorre.degree into t he constitution ofthe go v substances of nervous matter, ihe perverted quality of the blood and the deficient supply of nitrogen in spiritu ous liquors must necessarily induce ex cessive depression of the mental flow ers to a degree a3 great as that of their abnormal elevation. The demand, i South during the war ol therefore, for a still larger ainouur of bdiionof the English colon fits in Arner stimulus to work the mind up to its ica against Great Britain. The lit mil v former pitch of excitement, eventually j of General Greene or fiis decenffimts J u P on U*P con* picked up from the lays the train to early and rapid eon* j weie ijving on that plantation during.] p rouli< i; where tin- Liases had been fed. sumption of both minJ and body. I the war of JSI2, between Great Britain I. These Judies were my relations, said The splendid productions of musical ’ a,!!i U,, ited Slates, at ihe time ihe jConfederate ; and those bygones and noetic genius, exhibited in the wri- | ’" Cllienla occur ‘ e ^ * am now | by-gone, but, nevertheless, I choose tings o! burns, byron auo .u **. i»«, .... -1« •. j to re me mb***’ llu ‘‘", v-s tiie chaiacter- J One summer day, a biiiisn m*in-«i» -—jr- y - r uw ': the State ot Georgia iu testiiHony of! hfoaght to them; chairs were brought ippreci.uiou of services rendered tlie { * or Tern to sir on: and then the houses, the great re- dwelling, Lares, stables, and all were burned. Tilt? Yanke • gentlemen ttien lef’l, jjiuI the ladies lived for ;t week of alcoholic pota- der the inspiration ... u.v.w • , ' . • i • i, *, war came to auuluir a JillJe wav off irom lions, wuh meteoric brightness, tlaz- , - , , , ° 1 me island, ana between g ana tile main land, and the anxious residetn$ on the plantation soon saw, with dig- may, a number of boats, filled with over again to my Leave Augusta at “ Atlanta at Arrive at Augusta “ Atlanta S. January, 18 1670 10.00 p M. 5.45 P M. 3.45 A M. 8.00 A. M. K JOHNSON, Superintendent. 3 tf mg arid supplying the elements of re- euperation, and others whose office it is to eliminate and discharge those sub file uppe- | stances not needed in maintaining the integrity ol the, oig ,... a T , 0 ly upon the nervous system and brain, ithe latter are the lungs, liver, kidneys It is par excellence a brain stimulant, |and skin. Now, it is evident, that and seems to have an elective affinity | where a proper counterpoise is not tor this important organ. Its chemical I maintained between the organs and _ elements enter chiefly into the forma-j tissues, those employed in the process ' soou '^cre tiie.se hghts exiinguiened m : ^ tj je mutation soon saw, with dig- ^ SAVANNAH INCIDENT, lion of oily and fatly matter. The lot-1 of nutrition and excretion,derangement debns of early pny^ical ^ay. ami ; ^ a ni)(ll | ?L . r „f borits ’filled wffih A Drunken Sailor makes a Laugh in ter are usually slow aud difficult of so- m l lie machinery must necessarily en-! ! 'immature oe.iin. ^ vyn me otucr .umi, . men p r()r t Vessel, mill in«» towards (ution, and in a disordered condition of sue. Exeess'Ve labor imposed upon j lt,e Herculean laoors of t ewton, Ba : ..- tfaeir 'As Gelieral Greene bad (j Church. the digestive organs are.either rejected ; an organ must invite an undue deter-1 c,n b franklin arul J T )CiK . e ’ ,r * l ^ e lle j-been a pmiiimeiii actor in the war ojj w The writer wili vouch Ibr the truth by the stomach, or remain some lime j initiation of blood thereto, and neces- I liniments o metaj ivmcs, nUUi.a revolution, which .deprived the - of the foi lowing incident, which he had before they can be appropriated to sitate an adequate supply of those nu-! phi.osoph", and natural " e / c , English of iheir colonies, his family or from the lif«s of a fadv who witnessed the wants of the economy. In . large I terials required for its proper nutrition, j accomplished by llie aid o. those artic | decefl , lamg eX p eclC( | f or feared rasher, it : quantities, alcohol acls as a virulent I Where the latter is withheld, impair- j ! es of nutrition which sustained ^ the ; ^ ^ raj>j *, ly n p pl on.c:hi:«g boats | Rev. Dr. Willard Preston, the ven- poison, and almost immediately extin - merit of its functional powers must be I integrity and vigor ot the whom physi* j wero c<)rn j n g for phinder and de&r.uc-, erable pastor of the Independent Pres- guishes the vital principle. Dr. Pierey j the Irgitimate consequence, or exc'es-j cal -yslem^ ft is said innt ‘‘L r. John - j tion< B(Jt suc[| u , a5 not ,{ ie ' ca?e , arjl j ; byterian Church in Savannah, who has introduced a considerable quantity in* sively prolonged labor must result in ! SoM ». ,n t,,e ,aUt;r l )arl °* l ‘ )0k I bid you mark well the conduct of a ; long since be. n gathered to his fathers, to the stomach-of a dog, anil death en* structural disease; Now ihe active j Mining s'ronger than tea ; while V ob , brav .^ |(|( j chiValrous people. On ar-[Vas reading rather a prosaic discourse sued in two minutes. In such circum- agent employed in the disintegration j taue an ” ^ ontane " e us "d eoftc-e ; and stances, the Dosi-moilem aooearanee I of the tissues is the oxveeu conveyed ! Newton and Hobbes were accustomed to solace, not excite, themselves with the fumes of tobacco.” repealed over ami children. Schedule Macon 8b Brunswick R. R* January, 7th, 1870 J^EGULAR THRO’ PASSENGER TRAINS of the blood resembles that produced by the blood into every part of the sys- by lightning ; it loses its power of cr»- jiem. It lias already been shown that fagulating. ■ These suddenly fatal cd- the presence ot alcohol deterioiales the | feet? are supposed to arise from paraiy- j quality of the blood by loading it with j sis of the vital organs, by direct im- an excess of carbot. The portion ofl er people’s except that lie I pressions made upoti me nerves and oxygen, therefore;'Which is required in [ drank nothing but water, J brain the process-of disintegration of the tis- Oily and fatty matters can be readi-] sues, is expended in driving out the win commence rnnning on this Road on i ly digested in the healthy s'oinach by j offending substance, in the formation ot Sunday,tiie 9th inst., as follows : LeaveMaeon at 9.I5 A M. Arrive at Brunswick at— 10.20 P M. Arrive at. Savannah at 10.00 I‘ M. Leave Brunswick 4.30 A. M. Arrive at Macon 0.15 A. M. T It AIK S TO HA VIK HI S VIIX E. Leave Macon 3 90 P M. ! Arrive at Hawkiusville .0.30 A M. Leave Hawkiusville 7 00 AM. j Arrive at Macon 10.25 A M. This train runs daily Sundays excepted. RETURNING : Leave Brunswick at ....8.00 A M. Leave Savannah at 7.15 A M. Arrive at Macon at 7-aO PM. Trains make direct connections at Jt-sap. both ways, with trains for Bainbridge, Thomas- the crossing of One who knew him well testifies that Locke’s diet was the same as oth- usually and he thought his abstinence in this respect had preserved his life so long, although his constitution was so weak. j the action of the gastric fluids, and I carbonic acid, and its expulsion thro’I i pepsin, the peculiar solvent of alt ! the lungs and liver. Hence, in warm 1 j nutritious substances ; butaicbhol can* I climates more particularly, we find I not be digest: d, for it. precipitates pep- ! that habitual'topersareespecially prone | sin and separates it from the gastric ; to biliary disorders, aud succumb very [ fluiils. It also reiards the digestion oi speedily to accu-e diseases ot almost , riving within pistol shot of the landing, I on a certain Sabbath, when suddenly j the boats were stopped,'and the officer j an hopest sailor, just in from along commanding, 'addressing the; master of: voyage, appeared in a conspicuous the plantation, who had pome d.o\vn j position in the crowded gallery. : from his house to see what"wa? wauled, i JtKtk’s face Was full of interested cu- ; presented the compliments .of his supe- i rfosity y and ioug anti patiently did he ! rior in comuiaud of the ship, and beg- j listen to the doctor’s learned disquisi* j ged permissioii tor liis boats to Jarid ^ tion upon the Mosaic law. j and purchase from the negroes and j At leqg’ili,growing weary, however, | others wishing to sell> surffi fruits and i from tli^ cajiiicious pocket of iris pea- i vegetables, fowls and fresh meats, as {jacket, he drew forth a black junk bot- Sir Win. Carpenter one of the most could !>e spared, as the vessel had j tic, and pnlliag-Uie cork audibly, thus nitrogenized substances by coagulating j every type; tne very perversion i and soliilifying them on account of the j the blood, and impairment ol nervou the Atlantic aud Gulf Road, great demand it makes upon tire--water that enters into their composition.— Subject, for a tirne, to immersion in al cohol, a piece of flesh or animal mem brane, and it soon becomes corrugated or shrivelled, thus draining it of its wa tery particles, aud arresting putritac- lion, by the abstraction of the oxvgen energy precluding almost entirely the use of depleting remedies of every kind, anil rendering nugatory the re cuperative efforts ot nature. The deductions drawn from seien- | tifie truth are greatly confirmed by ob- 1 Serving their practical operations upon individuals and bodies of men in the CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. South-Western Railrou* Company^ ( Office, Macon, Ga., Jan. lotlt, 1870. \ Eufattla day Passenger and Mad 'lratn. tions on the Florida Roads. Fare to Savannah and Brunswick. astute thiukers, and intelligent and vo- [ bec.i at sea a long lime and such things luminous expounders of Physiological j wn,J . be .very acceptable to tf;e. crew, science declares, lhat while" suffering I Permission*was given, from occasional spells of mental depros- | < o il«i sion hrising from a peculiar state, of the ! atmosphere, he was in the habit of re sorting to moderate drinks of fermented i liquors for relief, hut having reason to question their utility lie entirely ab stained from them. During two years of his experience, he performed a lar ger amount of mental labor than ever before in the same space of lime, and with more ease lo himself than under his former habits ; and furthermore, he believes that the benefit which sotni addressed the minister: “Stranger, you have had a heap to say about Mr. Moses, and by your ae- j.fiount he must be a dam clever fellow ; vine, and all points on that Road, m welt.as with an ,| hydrogen necessary for the process i business of life. In mechanical work- of fermentation ot animal and vegetable j s | 10 ,, 3 atl d at -other kinds ot employ- persons imagine that they derive from tissues. Albumen coagulates Ity con- j rrjenl requiring intense and prolonged a ! co holic stimulants arises from their muscular effort, where large bodies of j aim ply removing for a lime the depres- . $ 8 00 . !2 00 .17 00 . 15 oo Leave Macon Arrive at EufV.uia l.eave Eufaula Arrive at Macon 8.00 A. M. .. 5.30P.M. ... 7.20 A.M. .. 4.50 P. M. 27 00 Night F reighl i) Accommodation drain- LeaveMaeon 8:25 P M j Arrive at E ufaula .........11:00 A M , Leave Eufaula 7:18 P M Arrive at Macon - 9:10 A M Columbus Mail Train. Leave Macon.. 7:25 A M Arrive at Columbus..--- J .22 A M Leave Colnmhus. 12:25 P M Arrive at Macon 6:05 P M Columbus Night Freight &"Ac'oin'n Train Leave Macon 7:40 F M Arrive at Colutwbns 5:05 A M Leave Columbus 7:00 P M Arrive at Macon 4:43 A M “Albany Train” connects at Smitliville with! Eufaula 'Gains and Arrive at Albany at 3:lf and Leaves Albany at 9:35 A M—Regular tact with alcohol. The alcoholic agilinm, if separated fro-m the alcohol by washing does not r* dissolve in wa ter.—Dalton. it is well known that carbolic acid, creosote, and all antiseptic agents ate difficult or impossible of digestion.— Now, although in ordinary quantities in the diluted state in which, alcoholic drinks are usually indulged when tak en occasionally, the organs employed in depurating or purifying the blood by their united efforts m ly counteract fir t'iie time their injurious effects, yet continued and often repeated siimu- laiion, even in moderate quantities, must be attended by impairment of the ^_r . -j, : fiuttilive functions. The popular no- M1LLLDGL T ILLL, A»-"*ijq!| ons entertained of trie properties of ! alcohol as a tonic, we thluk are not [uincip’ ! Fare to Jacksonville Fare to Tallahassee Fare to Bainbridge j Fare to New York, Philadelphia or Baltimore, by steamers * ‘ Under recent arrangements made w ith tlieAt- I lantic: «fc Gulf Road, freights to and From Savan naii and New York have increased dispatch. The Southern Express Company will operate on | this fine to Brunswick, points in Southern Geor gia and in Florida, commending on Monday, the I 10th instant. ROBERT SCHMIDT. Master transportation. January 18.1670 t experiments have | s | on which results from their previous the relative power j employment. T. W. WHITE, fjlUo Cur if ic, MILL EDGE VILLE, C Will practice in this and the adjoining counties. j founded upon philosojtmcal ! men were engager been made testing {of endurance ol water-drinkers and dram drinkers. “In an extensive brick- | making establishment out of 23.000,- ! 000 of bricks made during the season, ! the average per man, made by the beer- id rinker, was 760,269, while the aver I age for the ice-totaler was 795,400, I which is 35,131 in favor ofthe latter — 1 In comparisons uiade between indiv-id- . . . . nal workmen the highest number roa.le 1 w >' h re S"l l "> llie "r ce ““.’ ol I,v the beer-drinker was SSO.OOO ; the ,c “l""'’ the mamleuance ol physi highest number made bv the WiUer . i c d health are at least qnesttonablei an.l drinker was890,000; the lowest num-; 1 ‘j* 1 111 a vn9t instances, her made by Ihe beer-tlrinker was «S9, ! ", here * >’'’' ,res .** ''f? 1 !* 000: the lowest number made by thej"‘ r ’-' ason and philosophy, the -wish i- water-drinker was 710.000, leaving' l “ ,h< ‘ r 10 ll| e thought. Sti,500 ill favor of the latter.” It is , . » Baker County, July 2, lbbff. We might go on and adduce without number the testimony of individuals and corporations Irom all ranks and conditions of society, in confirmation ofthe views sei forth in this essay bui we believe lhat enough ha? been writ fen to incline us to risk the opinion, that the popular notions enlerlainedt probable that the difference would; PM, fST Application* far Homestead Exemptions j neitber do they stand ‘the test ofexne-1 have been mnch more striking if the I -rain. i Court of Ordinary, wiii receive proper attentio*. i nence, but may be fairly attributable {laborersf had dratik va l.t»ky or gm m-1 1 lit follow mg Ncnttnce from Accommodation Train connects three times a October 1.5. 1868 41 ‘'Fort Gaines Train.” connects at Cnthberl. | ANTED.—A Northern man—Friendly to the i Leave Fort Gaines at7:U5 A M and Arrive at j W South, and a believer iu the old Jefferso-i Fort Gaines 3:40 P M Accommodation Train connects twice on Tuesdays and Thursdays. _ , W. S. BRANTLY, Aud. Febrnary 1, 1870 ft tf. a re- t f ; io the transient stimulating impression Ulead of beer, for the former contains cemly published sensation novel, show.- unide upon ilie-nervous tissue. A ton-*I from fifty to filty-lour per cent, of al-! the great importance of correct jtuitc- ic agent increases ai:d maintains thelvoliol, while ihe latter lias out lour or; luation : i man idea <-f government—a College eraduate, de-j contractility of tfie muscular lisstie, jfive per cent., with a consideiabie | He enlers on his head, his helmet (ib week. s i r e s a situation as Teacber^in^some^onthern | ^^d tighien? the relaxed inn?ciffiar ft- j quantity of mucilage and .sacchatine-his leet,armed sandals upon bis brow’s ; Its effect may noi be immediate 1 - ! matter-, which are possessed of Blanks for £a!(‘ al litis Office State. Satisfactory references . Address, mating terms, *‘CLASSICS,” jfnc. Puldisliers' Box No. 7, IVwtox, Ohio j or Recorder Office. Otkthit HI, I MW 42 R ; nutri j there was a cloud in his right hand, his extensive *na-j faithful sword in his eye, an angry, duct ion ot mental hilarity and mterj^e Thin# shop, whtrt between one thou glare he sat down. Iy appreciable by the senses in the in | live properties. In an of course, ins it not he refused ; and ihe boats came lo a landing. The.officers caus- t stranger, here’s to Mr. Moses.” ed seniiiiels io be jnaced a little way | With this, the black Hot tie was e!e- imm Lie boats, wifii order? to aliovv no j vai etl in *1 he air, and the gurgling sound one to leave l a ir vicinity, and. word ; showed that full justice had been ren- being sent to the negroes, an aluindanre | ,J er0 . f J mast, of everything desired vyasjsoon brought {. r |’ff e ( r mat _ , may imagine article was .scrupu- f U poh the audience, ibr in gold. The men ba ler sale. Every fouslv paii haved in ihe most orderly manner, and: the' party returned to their ship as soon as supplies h id been obtained.— A few minutes afterwards, a small boat came from the ship, with the re quest that the officers be allowed to have n meal cooked at the house, and to walk about ihe grounds. The re quest could not be refused. The olfi- the effect GENIUS AND LABOR. I •f!l , *i* * .. .• ; *• , Ik is no man’s liusines whether he has genius or uot; work lie must, whatever lie is, but quietly and steadi ly : and the natlij'al and unforced re- sultp of such work will be always the thing that God meant him to do, and will be bis best.. No agonies or hean- cers came, bringing the latest papers j r ?B.dings will enable him to do any and periodical', which were presented j belter. It lie be a great m in, they \anl to the proprietor and family. Their } be great things ; if » small man, small conduct was marked during their short i * hut always, it thus peacefully slay by that high toned courtesy pr-cu- j done, gncul and ngiil ; always, it resi- iiar to representatives of a Vfined ! ! ? ssl y a “^ ambitiously done, false, hol- peojile; and they departed regretting ^°' v ailL ^ despicable, lhat the war between their, respective * ‘ countries prevented them from enjoy- A Paradise.—Some people have .mg social ’intercourse with llie famjjy.i singular ideas of perfect happiness. An They offered to pav for the...fopd apd j indiwtriqos Scotch emigrant to this the trouble givey, which was refused J country, who had accumulated a very and they left behind them the pleasing j bandsornh property, sent to the “auld ■ •npressiqn that the English’ nation did. eaunirie” for his father, with the view mil make war upon defenseless wo. lhat lie should share his son’s prosjier- upoi men and children, and old men; but hat their re presen; alive? vvojfid grant p dtrctiou to all who could nut protect In jnselves ; Per cot trit. During ike .war between he States of ih^ United Smies, not yet concluded, the Yankees visited trial same island ; and :t uas equally with out riefense then as before. They plimderetl and robbed iti )d pillereffi tod destroyed until they w-trre gorged. They reveled from early morn to dewy feve, iRi iliofe things which v«rs not ity. One day a friend of the family paid a visit to the elegant mansion, where the old gentleman was living with Ins son, and took occasion to com pliment ihe proprietor- <>t the estate on its smpassing loveliness and cosy com • ft rt.> The owner full of love tor his beautiful home, said he looked upon it und its stir roundings as “a perfect heav en ori earth.” “Heaven on earth !” growled the venerable Scott, “heaven on earth, and no’a thimble Iu’ o’whu$« ky iu the bniil boose !” t» iita.ii i*i tu- ;- t^s.j - -