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Impeachment Proceedings. WASHINGTON, April 17. Tn tho Impeachment Court to day W. T Anthony, of Cleveland, testified that most the President's fpeech delivered there was response to int irruptions. A large tnnjoril cf ; hi crowd .v-ere disorderly. Barton Abell, of S\ Lr uis, testified th the President only -poke there at tbc carne solicitation ? f the orowd. More documentary evidence iu reference removals was presented and admitted. Secretary Wells, of the Navy Depart mei was called, and testified ?liat he was appoint in lSCHiy President Lincoln. His son r porte l baying hetti to a pariy where orde fruin General Emory were receive ! for a officers to report to Headquarter*. He c reeled his son io inform ti?e President of l! fact, and on t&a next day he Informed ti President himself. Q. What parsed between you and. .tl President ? OH?C?bri was raised by thc Maia;ers, b Chase decided that the anrwer should heard, and Secretary Wells replied-the Pn ?dont f-aid he did not know what Genet Kmory meant. He would send for him atteud a Cibinct meeting the same day. Ti President mentioned Stanton's removal ai Thomas'appointmeu', and that, Stinton, hi yielded, only requiring time to remove 1 paper*. A long argument ersued here on the a miscibility of this cviuence, but Cimse de< del it wis undoubtedly admissible- 'Ana p.-al was made from his decision, but he w sustained by a vote of 20 to 2'5. Secretary Wells continued-thc next r]i he -aw the nomination of Ewing to the Wi Office in thc bands ol the President. The defeuce asked question* regarding tl Cabinet discussions on the Tenure of Offh Hill, intending to prove that the Cabin unanimously objected to :*t o:i account of u constitutionality, and that Secretaries Sawai and-Stanton were assigned to thc duty preparing the veto message. Objection was raised here, and Air. Butl opeued at leugth. Afr. Evarts followed, at the Court then adjourned. The argumente this poiut will be continued to-morrow, and 'ogarded.as very important* in viow of tl sources of information from which thc Prc ilent dei i ved his ideas of duty under tl > Constitution au ? laws lo the country at himself, and fixing, to a great extent, tl criminality or virtuo oft fie President's action Mr. C nkling voted for the first time to-d? on the liberal side. The result is daily becoming more dcubtfi t j the minds of those who watch events dosi ly. Senators who;e votes are regarded i doubtful give no indications to hang a ho; or fear upon. Morton, of Indiana, votes a most, alwavs with the Liberals. So doe Sumner, whoso final vote is, however, ri .rurded as certain for conviction. WASHINGTON, April IS.-Impeachment C)i tinuud. Thc announcement ot the vote tell graphed at noon was followed by a.'gencri uprising in the Senate. After ten minuH the Counsel announced thaf they were read t> resume when sufficient quiet was r. store? C jase rapped probably five times before li sjcccedcd in restoring order. This is th first time duiins thc tnal that, these irregi lari'ies bara occurred, and the importance ( tuc vote- may ho iufe; red therefrom. Ther was no applause or wiid demonstration-trna ply a rising from scat . E very one sterne inclined to ask Iiis neighbor what lie ti oagll now. Tho vote was as follows: Yeas-An tbouy, Bayard. Buckalow, Doolittle, Ferset d?viow.'er. Grimes, Henderson, Hendrick* Juhnson, Mc?reery, Patterson, of ( Conn.) Itpsoj Saul<bury, Truinbul', Van Winkle, Vick e;s ami Willey-20. Nay-;-Cameron] Con ness, Chavdler, Cole, C-::k-i:ig, Catted, C(;r but;, Gragin, Drake. Edmunds, F?rry, Ere ltnghuysen, Hurlan, Howard, Howv- Morgan Morrill, ol* (Ms.);; M?rtiil, of (Vermont) Patterson, ol (Xew Hampshire) ; Pomeroy Ramsey, Sherman, Sprague, Stewart. Thayer Tipton, Williams, Wilson and Yates-2'J This question involved the support of tbi President by his Cabinet in view of the vio lation of the Constitution in removing Stantor aud appointing Thomas. The next question stated was as follows : We offer to prove tu?t at th? meeting of the Gabi not, Mr. Stanton b?i\ug present when iht Tenure of Office Bill carno up'for considera tion-the question was asked and the opiuio" expressed that Mr. Stanton and the otbei Cabinet officers appointed by Mr. Lincoln did not come under its restrictions. Chase again decided tue evidence admissible. Drake ap pealed, and was sustained by twenty two tc twenty six. On the Tote Spraguo and Sher man voted wi:h the minority. Next question whether the Cabinet argued injury to the service by Stantons continu ance. Senate refused to hear the evidence 19 to 31. On this vote Willey voted with the minority. Welles was then subjected to a severe cross examination, but nothing uew was elicited. Postmaster General Randall was next called. Blodgctt was suspended from the Augusta PostyflicG without the knowledge of or consultation with the President. Randall knew of no appointment of persons in his Department who could not take the te3t oath, and Blodgctt was suspended because of bis indictment for gettiug ellice by perjury. The defence closed, reserving the right to call Giber witnesses in case StanLury-who knew most of thc matter, but was now sick thought b st. Court adjourned. ' In the House Colfax took thc Chair infor mally h>f>ro the hour of meeting, and with stich meiiibera ss wore present, accompanied the Manigera to the Court. Discussion wa3 resumed on the question of admission of Cabinet proceedings, Wilson reading his speech. Curtis followed. Chase decided that tb it thc evidence wa3 admissi ble, und the vote being taken resulted in its being excluded. Tue vote stood 20 lo 28. MONTGOMERY, April 18. Mr. Ryland Randolph, editor of the Tusca loosa Monitor, lately had a diliicully with a ne?ro in Tuscaloosa county, in which Le cut the negro with a knife. Mr. Randolph, learn ing that his arrest was ordered by the milita ry, came nt once to Montgomery, and reached this eily last night at nine o'clock, and imme dintely reported to Gen. Sheperd. He was told to report this morning at ten o'clock, which he did promptly. General Shepherd informed Mr. R. that he must be committed to thc military prison without the benefit of bail. Do further remarked that in all esses of mili tary arrests the. parties would be committed to the military prison, there to remain until discharged by a military commission. Mr. R. was promised a speedy investigation by a military commission. To ruy. COLORED CITIZENS.-A few days ngo, two white men came among us, who live near the Camp Ground. They gavons ticket< to draw six bushels of corn and forty pounds of bacon, if wc voted the Republican ticket. The ticket given us was headed " Commissary Department,''and signed Henry Smith. Seven of us came to Columbia Tuesday, to look after our corn and bacon. We. presented .-ur tickets, ar.d they laughed at us. Thank God, wu have not voted yet. To day. seven more voles will go in for the Democratic ticket. Ocr old friends, the w hite people, told us we were deceived. We refused to believe them ; we trusted the Yankee people, and believed in their corn and bacon tickets. We have tried and they have not stuck up to their pr -mises. We are going to vote with our old liiiiod.5, and we advise you to do thc same. SEVEN COLORED MEN Fr m the Camp Ground. f Columbia Ph (mix. TORNADO N : AIKEN.-Special corres pondence from Aiken brings the information that yesterday a tornado passed over the or chard farm of Mr. James Purvis, blowing down all the out house; except the crib. One negro inau's arm was broken, another negro man was injured, and two negro women were stunned. The dwelling h ouse was somewhat ( injured, thc window sashes being broken, j Ornamental shrubbery and shade trees were ^ torn up by the roots, fences blown down, itc. . The breadth of the tornado was an eighth of A milo.-Charleston Mercury, 18th. - . . -? $3F Good brooding is the art of showing men c by external agna the internal regard which we i have for thom. It arina frew good sense, im- i proved by convening witt good ewnpany. . t - <Wl Thc War of Races in the South. Many months ago we warned the Radicals that they were sowing a fearful harvest in tho South. "We told them that thc measures they were adopting would inevitably result in a conflict between the two races. Heedless of the solemn lessons which- history teaches,and utterly regardless of Ufo laws of nature, our Radical rulers forced their policy upon- the South, and already are we beginning-to see what the constqueuces will be/ From.all ap pearances a war of races in that unhappy section of thc "Union is rapidly approaching. The first seed3 of distrust were sown by tho Freedmeu'sjRureau, which, although under thc patronage of the general government, was most shamefully used by the Radical party to poison the minds of '.he ignorant' blacks against their former mas.ers. At a later day, the Bureau not being as secret a concern as was desirable, Loyal League clubs were formed from the Potomac to thc Rio Grande.-These Oiga iizatious were composed almost entirely of negroes; they became so powerful in num bers and political importance that eventually their members assumed to be tho rulers and masters of the whiles. So long as they were permitted to display their arrogance and as sert their dsurp'ed power so long was the dan ger averted. But the logical result of two years of despotism lies now before us in the fact of a counter action o i the part of the whites. Froar one end of the* Soul h to the other a new secret society known as the ''Ku Klux Klan" has been oiganizedin opposition to universal negro suffrage and negro rule. The aims and purposes of the association are not concealed Irom the world. The South ern whites have declare! that they will no longer tolerate a policy which sinks them into servitude and makes a Remi barbarous race their masters. Thus we uow have two in tensely hostile elements organized and organ izing, and fuc.ng each other-tho Ku Klux Klan, or sccrei- society of white men, on the one hand, and the Loyal League Association, or secret society of negroes, on the other, each struggling for supremacy, anti, each of a race alien lu civilizition and ideas to the oth er. How long will it be before such antago nistic elements pas? the bounds of political warfare and engage in a contest of bloodshed and desolation ? Tho above extract from the New York He rald is full of truth ; although wc think it is too fast in its conclusion, that a war of races in the South ?3 inevitable. It is in error also i i supposing that the secret organization of the Ku Klux Klan, is generally prevalent in the South. It is unknown, we aro satisfied, iu South Carolina ; and excepting in Tennes see, where i> originated, cnn scarcely be snid to bo an organization at all. The proper time for such organizations, has no*, yet ar rived. The white race of the South, are now earnestly striving to prevent the necessity of any such organizations, by defeating tho ne gro constitutions, by which negro rule is to nc put over them. Until it in tested, whether they will have this rule put over them, th^y w.ll endeavor to avoid all organizations look ing to its defeat, by violence in any form. But should thev fail in their efforts ; and negro governments bc put over them, we doubt not ?hat eve.-}' city, town, village and neighbour hood in the South, will have combinations of thc whits population, to protect themselves agaiaat negro rule. Our own impreSMOn. however, bas ever been, that Congressional reconstruct iou (or rather d- struction) for tile Soutbcru Stat<*3 will fail ; that is-'hat so many States will fail adoplirg it as p actically to defeat th'-, object for which it was put into operation-thu perpetuation of thc Radical* iiLpoioert Should it fail in Virginia, North C'irolinii,; Georgia, Texas, and Alab ima, the peop'c of the other Southern States may well await thc development bf events, through the next Presidential election. But if the Radi cal policy is successful throughout the South, the Herald is perfectly ri^hr in its inference -that a war of races is inevitable., and wc do not suppose that any intelligent while man in thc South or '.he North-Radical or Demo erat, has now, or eyer had any doubt, that this would be, and must be, the i-estHt of such a policy. Thc idea, that the white race in the South, vastly superior ia numbers to the negroes, would allow the Southern States to be ruled by them-is so silly and absurd,that no sensible maa could enter tato it. Tho Rudi .taU Vu ?Congre?? ku?? wUon tiley pasae-d these measures of reconstruction, that they would institute by them, if successful, a war of races in the South. They knew it-ai l they iuter.ded it. The Southern people, will strive to avoid it ; but when it becomes inev itable, they will accept their fate, and meet it as becomes them. They have no more fear of the rule of degree?, than of a herd of wild buffaloes from the prairies of the West. Charleston Mercury. The Storm. SAVANNAH, April 17. It has boen raining b?;d here all day and heavy thunders prevailed. AUGUSTA, April 17. Thc danger of an overflow of the river is passed. The rains have subsided and the river is tubing. The Macon and Augusta and Southwestern and Central Roads have bacn damaged by the washing away of bridges and culverts. I he bottom lauds are overflown too early in the seas.m to occasion any seri ous damage to the planting interest. During thc storm which prevailed in Law renburg, Richmond Count*, N. C., Rev. John 3. Mckinnon and L. McLawrin were ?struck by lightniug and instantly killed. Three, negroes Were killed by lightning in Amelia County, Virginia, yesterday. Two houses were washed away in Rich mond yesterday by a rise in Shoekoe Creek. Tho bridge over the York River Rail Road was carried away by a flood on Wednesday. Three cars were thrown down an embank ment. Nobody burt. THE SPRING' EXPEDITION TO LIBERIA. Thc Colonization Society's ship Golconda sailed yesterday from Baltimore, and will sail from Savannah, on the -1th of May, for Liberia. She will carry out about six hun dred and fifty colored people, said to bc com posed of tho best and most industrious of that race in the South, who have asked the socie ty to send them to the land of their fathers. This will be the largest number of emigrants that bas been sent to Africa in one ship. Ship and Cargo Burned. MOBILE, April 18. p. m.-The ship Alter/ Gallatin was struck by lightning and burned in thc outer bay yesterday morning. Three thousand one hundred bales of cotton were le8troyed, involving a loss of nearly haifa million dollars-insured principally in Liv ?rpOol. After all hopes of saving the vessel were given np, she was scuttled and sunk in three fathoms of water. A BAD THING OP WHICH THE K. K. K. IS INNOCENT.-The Gadsden ZYmessays that, on Monday last, we were in Jacksonville, and witnessed a sight sickening and revolting in the extreme. After the nrrc-t of Judge Pope, who was so feeble from ill Health that he could scarcely walk, and as the guards were con fusing him to jail, an aged, grey haired man so afflicted with paralysie, that he had not walked for years without the aid of crutehe-, too outraged to contain himself, cried out, ' Judge, are they taking you to jail ? Well, J-n mo if I'd go with them ?" For this monstrous utterance, a soldb-r made a tilt at aim with fixed bayonet. The choleric old man bestowed a shower of oaths on the sol fier, who turned away and left him. His riends now coming np, got tl e old gentleman nto his buggy, and started ont of town with lim. Lieut. Johnson, commando g the past, jame up about this time, ami ordered the iiiggy stop'ped, and arrested him. As be waa ?eiitg conducted IO jail, lie again cursed Hie Lieutenant and guard, and for this was beaten vith his own crutch until it was broken over tim. 1 pSr Mysterious murders of white men in Vir ginia aro becoming quite common of late. The f atest was that of a young man named Cross, on i ^riday night, about eight miles from Richmond. ' Io was driving hii charconl cart homo, and nt a 1 ato hour of tho night was .?hot in tho head and tilled. The inquest was held Monday, but no j ? lue could be obtainod to the murderers. Ile was I ( obbed. Three negroes were seen shortly beforo > < , shot wu hoard in the neighborhood, and are ? ? apposed to have perpetrated Ibo bloody deed, j < THE ADVERTISER ? JAMEST-BACON, EDITOB._ WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 18C8. Our Club Rates. We are now furnishing the ADVERTISER to Clubs at the following vo'ry.low ratos : Two Copie* ono Year, *$5.50. Five Copies ono Year, . 3250. Ten Copies one Year, 22.50. Twenty Copies-one Year, 40.00. No Clubs received for a lew.period than ono year,-and in all cases the Cash will be required in advance. . Thc names of tho entiro Club mu.?l be ?ont 'at oho time. -??..?.?> Advertiser Agents. The following g-.ntlemon are our authorized Agonts; and"will reoeipt for all monies for>Sub scriptions or Advertisements sent through them : B. W. HARD, Oraniteville, S. C. M. M. PADGETT, Mine Crock, S. C. CHAS. NICKERSOI?, Big Creek, S. C. Rev. J. P. DODIE, Kirk8ey's X R'ds, 8. C. JACOB HUIET k BRO. Huiet's Store, S. C. High On The Mountain Tops of Glory. Tho clectiou fa South Carolina, for ratification; of tho hew Constitution, and for Stato Officers and Representatives in Congress, is over. That is, untoss Qenl. Canby shall eeo fit to again open the polls. This wo presumo will not be done? simply because there is no necessity for it. No necessity for further radical sham and dishonesty. Tho success of the negro-radical party in the State is a foregone conclusion. The negroes and r.*diea% aro high on the mountain tops of glory. Tho higher they ore ?ow, the deeper will bo their fall in the fullness of time! As rogards the election at this place, we have but little to say ; on the first day the negroes swarmed like locusts in Egypt; and even on tho second and third days, despite the torrents of rain, they cr>rtinued to flock to the polls in goodly numbers. Not so with the whites. In compari son with the negroes, they were most culpably few and f'ir bo'tween. The voting was done in tho Court House. As far as we can learn, some ten er twelvo freedmon, at this box, voted thc Democrat ic ticket Everything passed off quietly ; there was not oven a fisticuff to disturb the monotony. And so it was, wo believe, throughout the District. We havo been able to ascertain the result at three I precincts only. Wo make the ttatemont : Democrat?. Radicals. Edgefield C. H. 233 944. Pleasant Lane, 185 885. Hamburg, 76 407. The grand result will, we presume, be an nounced before the elote of another week. Re grading this result there can .bo but little doubt. Tho white man's government in South Carolina is destroyed, and the State, wo fear, becomes a St. Domingo. Under the present circumstances, we exhort tho white pee plc of the cuuutry, the landholders aud the intelligent, not to give way an inch to the unprincipled adventurers' and mongrel barbarians who aro striving to rise to the top of affairs in this day ef new things. Let us organize still fur ther and ?till more persistently, for passive yet undying re?i.?tnncc. And we will thus be ready ti take advantage of tho Grit opportunity for ag grcssivc movemeuts, when such movements can be counted on aa effective. A great contest ? going oti, and the day may come, ere the struggl is over, when the white mon nf the South will turn thc scale in favor of right, justico ?md liberty ??The Roll of Honor." Sirca there remains not a shadow of doub concerning the result of thc election iu Edgefield District, wc give tho names of tho individuals wbc are to misrepreseut us in the forthcoming L?gislature. We copy the<e names as they stood upon the printed Radical ticket. Arnim, Root .-ind Wooley arc white men; tho rest aro black? an! mulattoes. For General Aiumbl]/.-Edgefu?d County. SKXATC.-Frank Arnim. RBPRESENT A TI v E s.-Truman Ror t, John Wool ey, David Harris, Prince R. River?, Samuel J. Lee, Johu Gardner, Lorenz Cain. Life of Jefferson Davis. The National Publishing Company, Atlanta, Ga., have issued very lately a life of E.X-Prcsi dcut'DAVis, written by Frank II. Alfricnd, avery gifted man of letters, late editor of the univer sally kuown and admired " Southern Literary Messenger." Wo acknowledge with mach pleasure tho receipt of a copy of this valuable work. It is beautifully bound in English Cloth, and contain.', as frontispiece, a fino and faultloss photograph of Mr. DAVIS. Wc havn rend it with pleasure nnd profit, and do not hesitate to say that it is the most reliable, tho most dispassionate, the most interesting, the mott elegantly written publication concerning the Southern Confederacy, issued since tho war. The copy we have received lies upon our table/or thc inspection of our friends and patrons. If we do not.err, this work is to bc sold exclusively by subscription, and agents uro wanted for every District. Address thc " National Pub lishing House," Atlanta, Qa. Deferred until Next Week. We have received the Card of our friend, E. W. SEIUHLS, Esq, aud the Communication of "OLIVER" Wo regret that we will be obliged lo defer their publication until next week. Something New and Alluring Every Week. Cast your eyes over the latest lists of Now Goods at GRAY k TI'RLEV'S. Every week they mention lately-rccoived Elegancies and Novelties. Their establishment is emphatically unsurpassa ble. Life Insurance. We would call attention to thc advertisement of thc Aitn.a Life Insurnnco Company in another column ; and wo take plcnsure in announcing to thc pcoplo of Edgefield and surrounding Districts that our old acquaintance, and former fellow citizen of this Diitrict, Mr. F. M. NICHOLAS, has been appointed Special Traveling Agent for the Western part of this State. To most of our citizens ho is well and favorably known, and to such he will need no recommends lion; to thoso to whom ho is arranger, wo would .^ay : You will find him a gentleman, a&d ? correct luMuess man, one ?n whom you can place im plicit confidence. Tho Company lo represents is ono of the oldest, largest, and most rellublo Companies represented in this StHte. It wan, we aro told, the first, and for a long time tho only, ono that renewed its Southern policies after tho war. Its losses aro paid promptly at tho Branch office in Augusta, and all who wish to make a suro provision for their wives and little OIIBB, should amil thom selvc? of the firat timo they aro called upon by Mr. NICHOLAS. Wo have reen a statement of the condition of the A3:na Lifo Insuranco Company, in which the figures speak moro eloquently than wolds, of the sound status and rapidly accumulating buiiness of thii old, favorite and well established Compa ny. It is rare, porhnp?, that an Insurance Com pany can sh-.w such a financial foundation as this, upon which to baso and expand business; and wo moat heartily commend to thc public its Agent for thia part of our State. <jrSt- A Confederate ghost sent the oditors of the North Alabamian ti Ku-Klux order, and en closed twenty dollars in Confederate money to pay tho printing. He say?- it passe' in tho moon at par. ?&- A shoomaker, intending to bo absent a few .'ays, lampblacked a shingle with the follow ing, without date, and nailed it upon his door: . Will be home in tcu days frcm tho limo you soo thia shingle. XCS^ Tho reports from all parts of Illinois and Southern Wisconsin aro to the effect that the win er wheat passed through tho cold weather suo !e8sfully, .and promises an immense harvest* Spring wheat has abo been ?own in great aban tase*. Give Them the Preference by AH Means. We mean those freedmen who, in the late elec tion, manifested conservative .principles. It is undoubtedly the duty of white men to give the preference of employ tuon t to ril colored men who voted tbe Democratic ticket. Fewer perhaps voted with the whites in "ridgefield than in any ofbir pait of tho State. Tho fewer, however, the inure easily renumbered. We do not imagiue that any argument is needed, to prove to the white people thai they should do as we have said above. Let those freedmen who have exhibited both good senfc and good feeling, be particularly remem bered and pa'ronized by the whites. Tinder ex isting circumstances, their voting with tbe whites was a brave thing. They deserve to be rewarded. Meat and bread to the freedmen are involved in theso elections. White man are not going to feed their ecemiea. They will nut nurse vipers in their bosoms to sting thom. The colored man is now choosing between carpet-bag speculators, unknown strangers, and their own Southern white people. As they choose, there will be peace and mutual support, or antagonism and separation. Tho colored men certainly knew that aa election is not thing done in a corner or in the sccreoy of a league meeting, but in open day and before the eyes of all men. Every vote oast ia known and noted down on paper. The watchful eyes of the white people have been upon the clei lion as it transpired ; and evory colored voter has made his mark by his ballot, whether ho is a friend or an enemy of his white neighbors. We greatly fear that a vast amount of sofforing and misery (far greater than they have already experienced) is in store for the unhappy and de luded blacks, the victims of Radical ambition, and of the white scoundrels who aro deceiving them to their ruin. If they could but be made to understand that it is the sway of the party in power-the Radicals who profess to be their friends and benefactors-which has brought tho planting interests to such a condition that they can get comparatively little work, and that th* perpetuation of thia rule is to perpetuate and ir. creaso the evil, they would spurn the white mis creants who have cheated them with false hopes ; and at the ballot b . would crush their ambitious srhrmos based A/on negro credulity and igno rncu. But enough. We fear we but dart straws against the wind. -? ? .-. Towards the Equator? Or Towards the Poles? It is very evident to our mind that wonderful climactic changes ure taking place on the earth, flow different are the soasons now-a-days from what they used to be when we were a school boy ! And it is difficult to tell exactly which way tbeie changes aro ?ending. Sometimes we think thc temperate regions in which we live, are veering gradually towards the equator; and then again, as during the present cold and rainy spell, we ladino ti the belief that we are gradually ap proachiog the North pole. How ia it? Who can throw light on thu subject? God forbid however, that we should be traveling Northward; that is, unless we have already swung around tho equator and are going up on the other side. For in this latter case we should give the Yankoes the go-by ; and in course of timo they would occupy our country, and*wo theirs. A very good country is the latter if cleared of its vipers. But (Hen thc niggers are going along with us. Tb at is .a hor rible idea. We should prefer to leave them hero, to bc ready when their friends come along. How shiill wc arrange it ? Bah ! it is a hopeless caso. We sha'l never be rid eiiber. of niggers or Yan kees ; ce: tainly not of Yankee.*. For should we louve i ff traveling on the surface of. the globe, and pierce through thc bowels of tho earth, even into "hell or China," there wc should find them. Both places would be full of them ! lu profound desperation we give up the subject, aud proceed to speak of the lute terrible ruins ; which indeed was our original intention. During the last ten days the windows of heaven have been open to the very fullest extent. Scarce ly a day during that time, butjbojbjhj,ekj?loudf Uixve gathered in iuiiiion.u u.U.ar? u.l.o-^^BT.kU.'-l lug their contents, amid lightning anT^Punder, upon the earth. Even while we write/^onday morning, there is going on such au outpouring from the clements that tho country for miles around us seems a surging, rolling, tumbling sea. Every little stream that usually would hardly swim ii duck, now ri-joic?? in a prodigious torrent, and might invite a muu of-wur to ride upon its bosom. Beaver Dam scorns his ancient limits, und utrides to tho sea with the lordly und precipi tate step of tho Mississippi. In the meantime the rushing aud surging of the waters have of course dono immense harm. We have not. however, learned tho extent of the damages. The railroads of our State are still, we believe, iu running order, but unless a favorable change shall suoutuke place they must inevitably "cavo in." Those floods have doubtlosa extended orv the State ; nay over the entire South. At this season of the year, rains ate usual, but we have never known them so terribly heavy and continuous be fore. They will work destruction in more ways than ono. Bcforo thesi floods set io, the prospects were gloomy enough ; now they aro a hundred per cent moro so. How often, though, in the order of Providence, does it happen that the greatest apparent evils become in reality tho greatest benefits! " The Southern Home Journal." This is tho title of a new and very elegant lite rary journal published in Baltimore. It is a channing and delightful paper, and, moreover, an uble and honest friend of the South. It is full of choice Literature, Biography, History, Poetry, and Local and Foreign News. It is es sentially a Hume C(iiii]>an!on-edifying and enter taining. Ia typographical ex?cution it is very beautiful. Tho contributions aud selections to bc found it evince the highest taste and most culti vated scholarship. Leave utT wallowing in the vomit of Harper, Frank Leslie, and all publish ers of that kidney, uud tuko " Tie Southern Howe Journa I." Thc Terms aro as follows : Three Dollars per annum. Four copies, $10; eight copies, $20. No subscriptions taken for u less period than one year. Address Joux Y. SLATER, NO. 203 Balti more Street, Baltimore. -? .?- ? An Incident o? the Times. * Tho Florence llazcttr give3 tho following ac count of a "sale," by tho sheriff, of Mr. J. H. Husband's shops in that place : Colonel R. A. Rouse, the magistrate of this place, neting on this occasion as the sheriff's depu ty, in accordance with law and bis instructions, oxhibitod tho articles, and offered them for salo, stating'their valu?, utility ?c., as inusual. Here's tho style: Oeutlomuu, what is bid for the safe? [Long mum ] Start it at something. Sholl I say $30? $20 ? fid? $5? $1? Start it ut something, gentlemen! Mum's tho word, save that exclamations might be board like tbe abovo of " Who'd sell a man out in these kind of time.? Who'd buy him out!" s Finding no hid, Colonel Rouse passed from ene thing to another, in uboUt the suma routine os nbov?. While discharging duty, hu did not op pour nugry that co ono would buy a man out in such times. Some of the crowd jokingly and pleasantly, aftor tho salo was over, told him to multiply nothing by nothing and find his com mission. -? -. ?? Fnlsc to their Own itace." Thc Euphrudian Society of the University of South Cnrolina have unanimously expelled Thos. I. Robertson and Franklin J. Moses, Jr., who, in bo lungunge of thu resolutions adopted on the x-cuMoii, " huvo proven false to their own race, mloosed every tie of honor, every golden chord >f virtue, and left tho remaining fragments to :rail in the dust under foot, or stifled ia their ihroais the .mooth flow of eloquenoe by the re peated utterance of base and subtle falsehoods, md have, in all these respects, lowered their dig airy and station as truo gentlomen of Carolina; md whose names oro no longer an ornament to, ir n jewel in, the honorary roll of this Society, but, BS it woro, two black stain? upon that other wise unblemished roll, as yet, of brothers true ind faithful to their vow." _-?. ? * ?33* Thurlow Weed confesses to have sent " his mite" to help the Radicals in Kew Hampshire. Hut "mile" wu PW. The Election in Georgia. Tho election in our sister State bogan on Mo day last Shall the proud old Commonwealth Geogia (till remain under the government of tl white race-shall ?ts government bo administer! in moderation by the An gio-Sus ou-or shall be surrendered to the ignorance, rapacity and lu of the negro and adventurer? Wo shall soon sc In our own State tho white people had scarce the ghost of a ch.tr.ee; but in Georgia it is not ? We earnestly pray for her deli veranee. Tbe issi presented is a mightly one, and- should aroa evory energy of tho mind, aud enlist the acti co-operation of men who are not lost to roos < and devoid of honor, to the end of over throwii a party that would blight the happiness of mil ions and change the relative position of tbe race The Newark 8te?m Xat. Have you all read about the famous Cut Ir< Man that (or-as we like to write good Englii -should we say " who"?) hu been manufacture in Newark, New Jersey, and that (or " who goes about tho streets and over tb? highways a mechanical and very wonderful way-Uko tl heroes and heroines in fashionable novela? Th cast iron fallow is now on exhibition io New Yoi where, Uko the boautica of th . "White Fawi and "Humpty Dumpty," he is creating an ?E ?sense sensation. Be it known, however, that 1 is much more warmly clad than the said beantia Indeed, considering his sex, he conld'nt do betti than clothe himself from bead to foot. But b outside hf altogether unimportant any way; lt with ilia "innerds" that we have todo. Tl fellow has any quantity of springs and pistol and valves and levers in bim, and by some peet liar application of steam power all these thin/ are set in motion and kept a going, and the o chap stumps about very much like Silas Wegg " Our Mutual Friend." He wears a black broa ,cloth snit and an elegant stove-pipe hat. Ont > this bat, when bis " innerd?" are in motion, pou the smoke. He has numerous holes in his bod; and through ono of those, one in his breast v believe, the fuel is poked into -him. His snow ?birt bosom foils over this heart-rending bole ai hides it Nothing mars tho beauty and elegam of his outward man. His cast iron features ai said to be of the highest type of manly beaut; He is not made however for beauty or ornament be is to be a man of immense use in the worl Samson and Hercules are to fall into insignil canco beside him. He draws wagons, and rocki ways, and whimmydiddles, with fabulous load He is harnessed in u a horse to a buggy. Tl driver guides him, and pokes the fuel into hit and lets off bis steam, and all that sort of tliinj He steps along with great speed and certaint; mading no obstruction that is not more than foe la .".'?je. If we mistake- not, he maki hundreds of miles in a day. Even now be walking for a wager between- New York and A bany. And be is U> be mado particularly usefi in ploughing. Ala? ! that he should not be drivi as well as horse. In that cue we should t somewhat oojed of "free labor." All this is no joke. It is real milter of fae Wc cannot recall just now the name of the ii ventor and maker. Ile is going to make wome too. Wonder if ho is a Radical. Which do v mest,, the maker or the man 7 We scarcely kno ourself. We believe, however, wo mean the cn; iron man. And apropos, wby don't the Radica have thousands of these steam men manufacture (expense is nothing !) and sent down here I vote ? They Would vote, of course, upon exactl the same plan as thc ma*i of tho negroes. Not! ing to do bit to put tho right ticket J into thei hands and start them to tho polls And the Radicals will do this too; you mind they don't ! --^ ^3r* The Columbus (Ohio) Journal says of cotemporary, " that it is a ve-y well edited pape It is edited by mort of the best Republican ed tors in the-Sta'o. Wo have the honor of furbish ing an occasional article in the Journal." J2?>" Editing a newspaper is a good deal lik making a tire. Everybody supposes that bo co do it n lilli* bolter than anybody alu?. W* hiv seen people doubt their fitness for apple peddling ox driving, and counting laths ; but in all ou experieuce we rever mot with that individual wh did not think he could double the circulation c any paper in two months. ^a?T* In the tenth century, to eat out of th ?arno plate, and drink out of the same cup, wa considered a mark of gallantry, and the best pos siblc understanding between a lady and gentle man. It is a remarkable fact that the Jews alon of all nations, handing down the Sacred Bool from remote antiquity, havo in all their wander ings and wide dispersions preserved as a 1 i vin j tongue the language in which tho Scriptures won composed. Beliovers of other creeds have oiigi nal gospels in doud languagos, only the Jcwi have preserved the original tongue of their prnph cts. ty Tho Marion Star of Wednesday says thai the voting in that town proceeded quietly, until i colored mau voted tho Conservative ticket, whet ho wu chased from the polls, and surrounded by a crowd of Rudiculs, who desired to hang, draw and quarter him. pa- A Leavenworth (Ks.) paper has a corres pondent who thinks tho colored citizens of that Statu are far too ignorant to be intrusted with balluts. Ile writes as follows : KIKA-POO, nov the 24, 18f>7. Dere Zur-Will you picze inform we whether nigger suphrage Wus carried at Tho late lection. If sech ignrant pecpul is to voat, I want to leave this God forsaking State, and go back to Souther illinois. yours trooli, - ?3f A riot occurred tn St. Bornard's Parish La., on the 12th, and a Conservative barbecue was broken up by a body of armed Radical ne groes. Ono Democratic negro was shot and a number beaten. The accounts stato that War mouth, the Radical candidate for gi < .mor, and Siphor, candidate for Congrcis on the samo ticket, wero present and mado no effort to quoll the dis turbance. Dr. Southwortb, editor of the Now Orleans Republican, was thc only white Repub lican present making any effort to -preserve the poace. p&- A renewal of hostilities by the Indians on the Plains is apprehended during the Summer months. The causes assigned aro the outrages still committed by white settlers and others, and thotdelay of the government in fulfilling its treaty stipulations. fy The position of the Radical party upon impeachment is concisely stated in the following Washington telegram to a Boston paper: "What ever maybe the strictly legal aspects of the caso, it hu become a political necossity to remove tho great obstacle in tbe way of reconstruction and to arrest the executive usurpation that is paralyzing the pesce and prosperity of tho republic." p%- The New Orleans Picayune says that while Qenoral Canby wu in command in that city, a promlnont citizen called on him to warn him that if certain orders were not issued without delay the streets would run with blood. Tho general very blandly Informed the excitcdgentleman that be did not apprehend much danger, even with the small military force at his con mand ; but, if there shouK-ari-e any commotion, " thero were several thousand paroled Confederates in tbe city, and be did not doubt that, with their usistanco, he could preservo the poace." |-y A German woman in Hartford carried her rheumatic husband on her bnck to the polls to vote the Democratic ticket. The crowd mado up a purse of $200 for her. ?3- The Baptist Convention of the State of Georgia will meet with the First Baptist Church, Greene street, Augusta, on Friday morning, the 34th instant. pgr" It i? proposed now to try and hang James Buchanan. One of the impeachment managers has got hold of a new story from a " South Caro linian, of unquestionable personal honor, and of the best standing at home," showing that the ox President waa guilty of a heretofore unknown deed of perfidy in tho matter of Fort Sumter, ' goren years ago. " If tho story is not false," says j the m onager, MI hold that we ought yet to try j ?od hang Jaso Ssdwias." j Sf. iscrgcnntioii in North Carolina. ' We und the following article in the Greens boro' (N. C.) Patriot, of Monday last : The clerk of the cpnnty conrt informs us that Mme time hst fall application was made hy a colored man for a license, .to roarry a white woman. The maa was told that such proceeding would be contrary to the law of j theJState ; whereupon he went to tho arippr intendent of., the Freedmen's^Bnreau^. .who called upon the clerk, nod ^aa-iqld thai such license could not bo granted without ?, milita ry order to that eflec;. The superintendent here then wrote to tile State Superintendent - j "at Raleigh, stating the case, and that there were three such cases before him, and asking that a " special order" might be granted-in a specified c se (where the woman already had children by the man ), if a "general order" could not be giren for al!. He wrote a second time before receiving an answer, which bad been delayed on account of watting a return from headquarters at Charleston. The fol lowing was finally received as Gen. Canby's response : ? HEADQUARTERS SECOND MILITARY DIST., CHARLESTON, S. C., Nov. IO, 1767. J " Brevet General N. A. Miles, U. S. A., Assis tant Commissioner Bureau U. ?L, F. & A. L., Raleigh, N. C.: SIR: Referring to communication pf Cap tain Hilderbrmdt, representing that cases ari.-e where freedmen marry whites, and the clerk refuses to issue licenses, forwarded by yon on tho 23d ultimo, is received. I am directed by the commanding general to state in reply, that the laws of the United States invest all classes of citizens with equal rights, and that whenever these rights are de nied, thc same laws furnish ample remedy. The commanding general does not deem it necessary to order civil officers to obey the laws of the United States in such cases. You will please inform Captain Hilderbrandt of this determination. I am, sir, very respectfully, Your obedient servant, L. V. CAZIARC, A. D. C., A. A. A. G. The clerk, still reluctant to perfbria so dis agreeable a duty, requested a copy of Gene ral Canby's letter and a little time to consult his legal frie aft. Captain Hilderbrandt po litely complied, and furnished him a copy of the correspondence. At the request of the clerk, six gentlemen of the legal profession in Greensboro' met and considered the case. It is unnecessary to state what was said about the constitution ality or unconstitutionality of the laws of the United State;; (Civil Rights Bill) referred to by General Canby. They were unanimous in the opinion that thc Federal law is para mount until it paull be repealed or pronounc ed unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States-consequently, that tLe clerk had no option but to be governed in bis official conduct by this paramount law, and the interpretation given by the military commander. Such is a plain, dispassionate st itement of this matter. Three or four instances have since occurred of marriages between negcoes and whites in this county. Of the character of such whites we have nothing to say. The consequences to flow from this radical change in our social laws we leave to the imagina tion of our readers. The subject is loathsome -we will let it rest for the present THE AMBROSIAL ASHLEY AGAIN.-Mr. Ash ley, M. C., delivered another of his serius of elocutionary thundpr storms at the Citadel Green yesterday. Unfortunately for himself, there was an exceedingly uncomplimentary attendance ot* only one or two hundred col ored men and boy.?'. His sweetness, there fore, was utterly '' wasted on tho desert air.': Mr. Ashley was hoarse, very hoarse that he conld not be heard ten U-ct from the plat form, but he compensated for the deficiency by pointing in the most vigorous and miscel laneous manner at " the flag," proclaiming, at the s;.me time, with as much vociferousness as "his pulmonary viscera would allow, that " without the flag and the party, the country would go to the devil 1" This was the sum and substance of his speech. He ran his hnod through the tonsorial hair oil with at) much enerby at> at any time within tbe last fifteen years, but he was like an empty bomb shell. Ashley is no longer immortal. They laid him to rest in Washington some time ago, and South Carolina negroes were per fectly satisfied on Monday night that it would be useless to resurrect him. So many better speeches are made every day in the week by intelligent men of their owu race than those of Impeacher Ashley, that he will depart hence like a shadow " and leave no trace be hiud."-Char. News. ASHLEY AMONG TH E GERMANS.- On Monday, after the speech-making nt tbe Club House, Ashley and Mackey, finding that the mountain (in the shape of white men) would not come to Mahomet, determined that Mahomet would go to the mountain. They accordingly made a de scent upoua party of our German citizens, who, in tho most private manner, were with their wives and " sweethearts'" enjoying the pleas ures of Terpsichore at a select ball in the r Turnverein Hall on King-street. Greatly astoi. ished at this rude invasion, nnd perhaps per plexed at the lack of courtesy which led a pariy of men to break unbidden into their I entertainment, one of the Germans inquired what they wanted. Ashley said he wanted to make a speech on the political issues of the day ; and intimated that he was vory fond of Germans, and dint h on Bologna sausages. One of thc managers of the ball intimated bark that the ambrosial impeacher had evi dently got into tho wrong hotel, and they "didn't want no sich." Mr. Ashley was fur ther informed that the Germans of Charles ton were white men, and not in the habit of being intruded upon in their private enter tainments by peregrinating politicians. The managers tren turned their backs upon the party and left them to their own reflections. On receiving thia very emphatic snub, it is s tate i that the illustrious M. C. looked as if he had been u bottled up" and wanted air, which he speedily found by putting himself vehemently down stairs. Mr. Ashley is truly unfortuna'e. A few months ago he loomed up like a lighthouse. The newspapers advertised him freo of charge ail over the country. Then thc Washington correspondents began to skin him alive, and didn't leave enough of his corporosily, politi cally, to make a respectable funeral. The impeaching process began, and he was left out in the cold. When the lovely Butler took his place, Ashley took to the stump. He turns up in South Carolina. The whites won't hear him ; the colored people only ap plaud when he makes faces, and his audi ences grow small by degrees aad beautifully less." Ile intrudes on a German ball to make a speech, and is tjld inferentially that although he may he the immortal Jeems Mar shall Ashley, a Virginian so-called, named af ter one of our big rivers, a very polite sort ol a member ot Congress and all that, they nev ertheless prefer to select their company, and in doing so invariably choose a white man. Char. News. Tho New York TWouncsays that u ".he laws of God and humanity render the defeat of the Republican party impossible." Similar laws render the death of the devil impossible, but they cannot save him from hell.-Wheel ing Register. Public Meeting* A Public Meeting of the Citizens af tho Lower Battalion, 10th Rogiment, will be hold at Mount Willing on Saturday next, the 25th April. A full meeting is earnestly requested by tho Sub-Com mittee. J. P. MICKLEIt, Chair. Apr 20 IT AUGUSTA, April 13. GOLD-Brokers are buying at 139 and selling at 141. SILVER-Buying at 133 and selling at 137. COTTON.-Tho market opened this morning rather weak, but later in the day it became bet ter, closing firm. We quote 2?} @ JU for Middling, nominal. Sales 250 bales. Receipts 37 hiles. BACON-Smoked Shoulders, 15} cents ; B. B Sides, 1-7; C. R. Sides, 18; C. Sides, 1?; Old Salt Shoulders Hi ; Old Salt C. R. Sides 10 J ; Hams 18@22o. CORN-Now Whito $1 18, Mixed $1 20. WHEAT-White, *300@2 75; Red, $2 70? 280. OATS aro quiet. Wo quote at SO, From the Columbia Phoenix. The Right Kind of Talk. MR, EDITOR : As a citizen heartily approv ing of the course which Cul. Thomas has U.k ea in his political role, we wocid recall to our people the very appropriate language used by him on Saturday .evening last. Reminding .the colored people of the.'fair terns the whites had held oat lo them, in .order to presetve the peace and harmony -of the- community, -he tol?^.them-that if, howey?rpithey should turn atleafelir to tW propositions, this they must bear io mind : That the colored man need not expect to pass laws for thc white mn, iliat will stand. To negro domination, said ho, the whites of the South'will never submit. We will give what is .fair and just to the black man ; we will concede to him all tl at reason and an enlightened christian view of the matter may demand. Bat we will con cede no more. Re member, _ said he., (aa sorae jeering on. ino part of some black man was heard,) that beneath the Velvet glove of con ciliation, is tho mailed band of an unalterable resolve. And then going on, in a tone that thrilled the erewd, he added, this resolve I see In the dauntleas brow and spirit-speaking eyes of those :.round me. I read it in the quiveric g lips ; I feel it in the recesses of my own swilling emotions. Bad. mea maj pre vail. The pride of the South may have to pass wijh bowed head beneath the ignomini ous yoke that radicalism North, and bane treason South, seek to fasten upon it. But let us possess oar souls ia patience, There is a God ia Heaves. There ia a Democrat.ic host North, with ft flaming standard that is waving ia victory. "Truth crushed to earth will rise again; The sternal years cf Ged are hers ; Bat error wounded writhes la pain, And dies among its worshippers." ---? ? * /Sst" There is a Gal ic proverb: "If the bent .man's faults were written on bia forehead, it would make him pull his hat over his eyes." jSS* The New York Union League has very ap propriately omitted the portrait of Washington from its collection of portraits. NEW SPRING DEY GOODS Great Reduction ! E BEG TO ANNOUNCE to our Friends and Customers that we are in receipt of a VERY LAB GE AND VARIED STOCK OF GOODS, embracing 150 PIECES BEST PRINTS, Bleached and Brown SHIRTINGS, Bleached and Brown SHEETINGS, Plain and Striped OSNABURGS. . LINENS. Striped and Figured Brown LINEN DRILL, Brown LINEN DUCK, White LINEN DUCK, White and Brown Table DAMASK, DOILEYS, TOWELS*, CRASH, Ac. LADIES' DRESS GOODS. Beautiful LENOES and MOZAMBIQUES, Handsome CH ALLIE'S and POPLINS, Rich and elegant PIQUETS, TOMATINES, latest styles, Fashionable Silk GRENADINES, Beautiful CRAPE MARET, Plaia and Figured LIWNS. Biihop LAWNS, French CAMBRIC, Swiss and J.ickonet MUSLINS, Nanauuk and Mull MUSLINS, Whit? ALPACCA, W ite DELAINES, Black SILK, a splendid article. Trimmed and Untrimmed ILVTS, RIBBONS and LACES, EDGINGS and INSERTINGS, TRIMMINGS of every variety, 50 Doz. COAT'S BEST THREAD, GLOVES and HOSIERY, iu great variety, HOOP SKIRTS, a tremendous stock, and at uncommonly low prices. io? THU GBNTJLJBMJEN. A splendid line of READY MADE CLOTH ING, cheaper than ever, Elegant CLOTHS and CASSIMERE3, Gents' FURNISHING GOODS, full stock, Felt, Fur and Straw HATS at low figures. SHOES FOR EVERYBODY. In Store a very Urge and select stock of La dioi, Muses, Gent-, Boys and Children's SHOES, at prices within tho reach of all. Good BROGANS from $1,65 to $2,50. ALSO, On hand a large and well selected stocks of HARDWARE AND CUTLERY, TIN WARE, WOOD AND WILLOW WARE, CROCKERY AND GLASS WAKE, SADDLERY, S MOKING AND CHEWING TOBACCO SEGARS, CONFECTIONERIES, Atc. All of which werebought from the largest and best Housen in New York prior to the greut rise in Cotton, a,nd we propose to sell them as low as they can possibly bo bought in Augusta. C. A. CHEAT/HAN & BRO. April H tf 16 JETNA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, OF HARTFORD, CONN. Organized 1850. E. A. BULKLEY, Prcs't. T. O. ENDERS, Sec'ry. DIVIDENDS for the laut five years, 50 pr ct RECEIPTS now over $500,000 per month. No. of Policies issued in 1S67, 15,251. Amount insured on same, $41,S64,872. Assets Jan. 1, 1867, $4,401,833,86 Receipts for year ending Jan '6S. 5,129,447,34 $9,531,281,20 Paid Claims by death, $513,8S1.50 All other Expcmes, 1,478,7S7,35 $1,992,663,85 Aisotts Jan 1, ISIS, $7,538,612,35 Policies issued on every pinn used by all the old and responsible Companies. ^rSr-Branch Ornee, 262 Broad St., Augusta, Ga . CHAS. W. HARRIS, MAJAQBR. F. M. NICHOLAS, Special Travelling Agent for South Carolina. Apr 21_lm_17_ ? Miller Wanted. AWHITE MAN, competent to take charge of a Flour and Grist Mill, will find immediate employment by applying to this Office. Apr 20 tf 17 Dye Stuffs. THE Subscriber has in Store the following DYE STUFFS of No. 1 quality and for sale at prices all right. INDIGO, MADDER, EXT. LOGWOOD, COPPERAS, BLUE STONE, CHROME YELLOW, SPANISH BROWN, VENETIAN RED, ?c. G. L. PE* N. Apr 21 tf xl At The FREDERICKSBURG STORE ! TTllE Subscriber bogs leave to remind his friends throughout EdgeGold District, that ho is still at the famous FRER1CKSBURG STORE Augusta, Ga., on the Corner below the Planters Hotel, whero he is ever ready to welcome them, and exhibit to them ALL KINDS AND QUALI TIES of SPRING and SUMMER GOODS, ?nd to offer them the MOST ADVANTAGEOUS BARGAINS. ne will consider it a privilege at all times to .iee and serve his EdgeGold friends ai tho Frede iricksburg Store. GEORGE TONEY.. Augusta, Apr 13 3m 16 Kerosene Oil. JUST roceived One Barrel No. 1 Kerosene j Oil. G. L. PENN. FcbU tf 7 J - .- ~.-:---: m SPRING GOODS! -0 THE FREOEPilCKSBURG1 STORE IS AGAIN FILLED WITH ?STew and Beutiiul Sprin j leeds, And our.Frfeftlf a? ?nt^^je^mU examine. The Stock was NEVER LARGER OR MORE COM?LETB^mb?dirj-?Mme NOVELTIES OF THE SEASON. .-ii i i \X ii J*S * j? v We- wUl Uie^loMirrota seeding'Samples and L?t of Prices to s.ny who Ate unable to call and urinai? v.-'. ir."s .IQ ii We are SELLIN? VERY CHEAP. (^NER^lnlr^ . . vd .. / A?.?JfTA, GA. Mtt24 Im-_U O. 1*. CKEATHAM, AT J, ,B. SH LL TV AN'fiiftL DST AND, DEALER I]V ?R0CER?ES, COM, BiCON, Wined, Whiskies, Brandies, HARDWARE, CROCKERY, TIN WARE, iVc . Tir-; .j..' . . . OW opening a FRESH. 8T0CK and FULL SUPPLIES of. the above Gooda, ail which he il selling at the lowest Auguit?. prices; transporta tion added. OT* A liberal sharo of pab?c patronage is so IN CITY AND COUNTRY. Domestic Economy ls the Order of the Day. Too MUCH PRAISE cannot be bestowed on any improvement that will lessen the burden of House-Keepers, and at tb? same time save in the expense of living, Th? demand and general ac ceptance of these inventions, when well approved, ?ttost their utility, and are readily brough., into ase by all persons capable of appreciating sn improvement. Take for instance thc Cooking Stove, (especial ly the " CHIEF COOK," ?ld by D.-L. FUL LERTON, Angosta, Ga,,) where is the Man, We man or Child, in this CE lightered country, that docs not a?mit the Cooking Store a thing indis pensable-especially the " CHIEF; COOK" where its merits are known. ; ' You may talk, and laugh, and swear if you -will, But the 'Chief Cook Stove' is the 'Chief Cook' still. But our efforts to relieve poor drudging human ity do not step with the Cook Stovo. Washing must be done, and neat people will havo clean clothes. We say therefore to all persons not blind to their own. interest bay the BEST CLOTHES WASHING MACHINE EX TANT, viz : The Hydraulic Clothes Wash er, sold by D. L. FULLERTON, Augusta, Ga,, opposite Augusta Hotel. ^i We will exclude our own further praise of this Machine, and annex the opinions of some of the citizens of Georgia, who are using if: GBEES CUT, Burke Ga., Mar. 21,186S. MR. D. L. FULLEIUOK,-Dear Sir: I have your letter asking me how I like tho Clothes Washer I purchased from you. I unhesitatingly reply, that so far as we have tried the Hydraulic dottie? Washer, wo ?re well pleased. It is no ICSJ a labor saving machine than a fabric saving one. We have washed out in three or four hours what would have taken us all the ' week to do by hand washing, and I am of opinion that the Clothes washed by the Machine Will last as long agaiu as those washed by the old wash board. Tho Union Churn, I bought from yon, does finely, and is much thought of by the little folks, who uso it willingly. I can recommend them to any one who think a's wo-do, that WasbiDg and Churning are family drudges. Very-respectfully, yours, ?. J. COX. WARRESTON, GA., Mar. ll, 18CS. Ala. FuLLF.r.TOS,-Dear Sir : I have given the Hydraulic Clothes Washer several fair and im partial trials, and am fully satisfied with the re sults. It is nil that it is recommended to be as a Clothes Washer, add I wculd not be : without i t fur several times ita co*t. I have always looked upon Washing Machines as humbugs, never hav ing seen any but that rubbed or would grind the Clothes so as to injuro them. But this does not, and a couple of half-grown freedmen do ocr washing in a few boors. Youri*, truly, H. J. WALKER. Wo also refer to Messrs. J. F. BUNCH and S. E. BOWERS, of Edgefield District, and others who are using it. Apr 14 4t 16 Administxator's Notice. a LL persons baring any demands against the ,& Estate ot WM. R. SALTER, dee'd., will { resent the same, properly attested, by or before Wednesday, the 22d April next, aa on that day a final settlement will bo made, ia the Ordinary's Office, on said Estate. Those indebted to ajos Estate will pay op forthwith-, or. the Administra tura will bo forced to place all suoh claims ; suit. M. M. PADGET, Ad'or. Jan. 22 _3m_ 4 NOW"IS THE TIME! THE Subscriber bas oponed a TIN SHOP at Edgefield C. H., and will furnish TIN W ARE, at Wholesale or Retail, at very low prices. Work done in all its branches, each as ROOF ING, GUTTERING, Ac. REPAIRING done with neatness and dispatch. Bting op all yooT old Tin Ware. as* All work warranted. W. R. BOONE. Apr 7_tf_15 Notice. DURING my absence from the State, I ap point Mr. THOS. W. CARWILE my Agent, and authorize him to receipt for and receive all monies due me. Parties indebted to mo by Noto or Account are urgently requested to call on him and settle. JAS. B. SULLIVAN. Apr 6_2t*_15 Final Settlement. ALL persons indebted to the Ettate of MAR . SHALL STEIDHAM, dee'd., are notified to pay the same forthwith. Those having claims against the said Estate will present them, daly attested, by the 22d August next, as oh (bat day a Final Seulement on said Estate will be in the Ordinary's Office. JAMES GREEN, Adm'or. Mar. 3 _6m*_10 Notice. ALL Persons indebted to the Estate of ELI JAH TIMMERMAN, dee'd., are requested to pay tho samo forthwith, and those having ilaims against ?aid l?state are notified to render them in without do:ay, duly attested. DAVID PARDUE, Adm'or. A pr 7 3l* 15 Come all that suffer with Tooth Ache! JUST received and for sale Dr HALL'S ANO DYNE-a sure euro for Tooth Ache. THOS. W. CARWILE, At Sign Golden Mortar. April 1 If 14 Sheriff's Sale. ~ John S. Coles, ") . vs. > Lien on Crop. Robt. J. Crafton. J Y Virtue of an Execution in the above stated _I oase, I will proceed to sell at the residence of thu Defendant, R. J. Crafton, on Thursday, the 30th instant, the following property, to wit FOUR BALES COTTON IN .THE SEED, moro or loss. TWENTY BUSHELS CORN, . ?? A TWO HUNDRED LBS. FODDER. Terms Cain. ISAAC BOLES, & E. D. Apr 15 2t If B