*% S?Mfc,.. . "... ? C?LtlMElMfe-t Stturday Horning, Sept. 23,1865. When the armies of the Confede? rate States were retreating -before those* nf Sherman, .they burned . the railroad bridges as they retired, thus doing the very thing which Sherman had principally set forth to do. Sher? man was very grateful They saved him feue and trouble. The question ?tras, why our troops should do this thing and thus save the invader all the labor* and loss of time ? They could not be pursued over these bridges, which were useless without the roll? ing stock and the usual connec? tions. So we lost the bridges over the Edisto and Congaree. They did not know what else to do, and when folks are' greatly worried or badly' scared, they have a notion, that some? thing should be done, that t?y are expected to do something, iffrnly to keep themselves busy, and so they do mischief. We appear to be carrying this insane military policy into our Legislature, and law-givers, with the desire to be doing something, and perhaps a little bewildered as to what should be done, are about to do the P very things which our political an? tagonists are proposing to themselves to do for us. The excellent Generals Schenck and Cox, of Ohio,* have de? clared themselves for denying, to tho people of the Sqjith any represen A tion of thd negro population' in the Congress of the United States ; and f they avow, as their reason^or it, the necessity of stripping the South of all possible political power. They are now busied in teaching this doctrine and desire, and upon- this one mea? sure they indicate the organizationOf a party. We are ail acconiumdating people. We take our cue* from Wheeler's cavalry, and save dir po? litical enemies the labor. We burn the bridges for them which they have set forth to burn. We help ?heir en? deavors, and in our eagerness to ob? tain exclusive power in certain local sections, at the expense of others in the State, we cut the sinews of the State itself. We strip it of half its power in the Union, and reduce its^ representation to a thing purely nominal, destined to be as great au ab/surdity as that shadow of repre? sentation which the Colonies in 1775 enjoyed in tho British Parliament. We hold it to be certain that Messrs. Schenck and Cox and their associ? ates will be baffled-that, a census being taken, the representation of thc negroes of the South, as elements of its population, will be insisted upon by the abolitionists themselves. In? deed, it is the inevitable law-^of the land. It would then be seen, the curious anomaly, of negro represen? tation in Congress, when the same population is denied recognition at home. No longer a chattel, we deny that negroes are persons-are a por? tion of the people, the inhabitants of the country. We do not say citiz . is -such they, arts not, and Under the laws of the United "States, and'the ruling of the Courts, sr$h they can? not be. But to deny'th?m tc? be peo? ple and inhabitants, is to fly in the face of a fixed fact. There they are, four hundred thousand of them, moro o? less, a multitude in compari? son with the whites. It is patent that they are people, and equally so that they are inhabitants in the land. It is a miserable fiction to deny this, Which s tarps us in the face, and glares out upon our imaginations with so many hideous aspects of future evil. We may loathe their presence-we may desire to be rid of them; but to ignore their very existence, as an element of population, may well . alarm the Abolitionist faction with the question, "Ignoring them thus, is your purpose their extermination?" . Tho question will occasion lively in? quiry, and no little suspicion and apprehension. They w?l not conceive it possible that, having our wits about us, we shall foster with our institu? tions, protect try our" laws, shield and teach under our guardianship, a race whose very existence m oitr country we deny in our legislatfon. The pre? text for .this; denial is a mere social bugbear. Representation does not imply citizenship or the right of suf? frage; nor can the latter follow, unless it be that, in despair, shorn of all political power in the State, the regions of country into which these people will naturally crowd, being crowded now/ shall insist for their security* on according the 'inferior race those privileges which are essen? tial to the safety of their own,. Des? perate measures are all that are left to menin desperate situations. The negro at the North is represented as an inte? gral of the community, is subject to taxation, yet denied suffrage. There is no political or social wrong done to him in assigning him this inferior statu?,- since it is tho very same which ! we assign, und for a like reason, to our vjpmenwmd children. They are, from ?ertain peculiarities of constitu- j tura, condition and character, held in minority and under guardianship; ,In j tho case of the negro, he is a creature j necessarily of perpetual^mrdianship, as the Freedman's Bureau will proba? bly discover fast enough, az soon as the Government of the United States shall deprive their officials of fat sala? ries and a grateful *exercise of autho? rity. We turn once more to thc busi? ness of our legislation. Mr. Aldrich was only half right when he sought, by his amendment, to accord a three fifths representation to the negro. Why this arbitrary 'assumption that the negro had not his full physical proportions-that he was minus a right arm and a right leg? The arbi? trary dismemberment of him, as it occurred in tho maimed and halting^ compromise between the States at the junction of the bond of Union, was a coixccsijiuii 1-?y th*? So\ith tn ishness and prejudice of the North, and should never have been made. The South should not have entered, the Union unless with a full recogni? tion of her population guarantees. But. even this was based upon the idea that the negro was a chattel was property. He is so no longer. Neither the Congress of the United States, as. in relation to thc States, nor the districts or counties of a State, as in ' relation - tf? each other, should be permitted to.enter within thc sectional bound, and arbitrarily prescribe and declare the status of its. -classes. They should know us re? spectively only by our totals, os sworn . to under the State or National census. We trust that all this legislation will be scrutinized with great care before a step is taken. We should not be such blockheads as to burn dowii our own 'bridges with our own hands, thus facihtathng the objects of our political or military opponents. L?t them do it if they will or eau ; but I?t us, if we cannot find betterdwork to do, go, in the language oft Hamlet, and be idle. When we know not exactly what to do-wh?n God has dropped the cur? tain so closely before our eye and at our feet, that Reason is compelled to i 3 silent, and Conjecture.alone ven? tures to deal in idle prattle-it is th en that the wise statesman recognizes tho advice of Burke, and awaits Ins time in a masterly inactivity. This in? activity, in our case, not implying idle? ness, however, nor indifference, but a steady watch, ? calm method, great good order, sobriety, moderation, and the furling of the sails against the storm, and the maintenance of lights and a good lookout from every mast, keeping the pumps working all the, while and all hands ready, either to take in new reefs, or loose and spread sail for running before the wind. To do just as litt J* as possible at such a juncture as the present-to do no moro than is . absolutely essential to safety-to try no hazardous experi? ments-keep close in shore-ecbno W -, ?L Jj i .' *"?? ?6 mizas, force and provisions, and feel diu: way cautiously along Sic sound ings^rtt?ese should be our present rules of conduct. 'Zeal, howey;er pa? triotic and g?nerons, sho'ti?d not be allowed, at such a time, to seize upon the'hehn and take command. Good senswrand great -prudence are' the. essentials of command, and these are to be. confined to the one objeot of bringing the ship of State safely into port. "We are greatly relieved^ to find'tiutt our excellent friend, the Hon. J. Orr, has had InV pardon issued Tinder the great seal of Stalte. He% is now secure. His head is safe on its shoul? ders. He is in no danger in the fu? ture for his deadly . S^DS in the past.' More than once, during the session of the Convention, while he lias been thundering and lightning as he had been wont to do in "Washington, we trembled lest the Provost Marshal should walk in, cut him off in the midst of his finest passages, tuck him under his arm, walk ham out in front of the Convention Hall, decapitate bira, and leave his head stuck up in lerrorem to all future rebels, at the. junction ol Plain street with Main, looking up at the Capitol. The idea was a source of continual apprehension. We had enjoyed the honor of serving with Mr. Orr, some twenty years ago, in tho Legislature ; we had travelled to? gether in search of" the picturesque had peaced our knees under his ma hogany; had hob-a-nobbed with hin in Washington; and our association! had always been so pleasant)? that, tin idea of his.head, stuck upon a pol< in the streets of Columbia, looking still toward the Capitol, kept us fron goodly sleep more than one midnight We rejoice that he is safe, that he stil retains the integrity of his h?atl, an< trust that he will continue to do so just so.lejig as ho is able to pay th capitation tax, setting a goodexampl of patriotism to the population a large, white, idaoV, i>oi?>r^a anti equi vocal. Amen! [For the Columbia PhonLc] To thc Editors ?f-"New?p?pcrit in th Southern States? "GENTXAMEN : At this critical tim in our political condition, I take th liberty of addressing myself to yo on a subject of vital interest to th whole South. When the Legislature of the different Southern, States meei the great and leading subject fcrthei consideration will be the pas jage < such laws as will be most poi' ac an proper to?Tegulate the new relatipr of the whitfc-aad black population.' To effeftt this great object, ii will ri quire thft most 'mature wisdom an wisest f tatesnnuiship. It is of th first importance that the Legislature of the Southern States should adoj ? a similar course of policy, and be ? ! near as possible uniform in their ai tion. That tl*isc desirable object may be attained; I respectfully recon mend that the people of the Stmther States send to a Convention to mei at Augusta, Giorgia, on the secon Monday in November next, some < their best men to dejjberate on an mature such a oMirse of policy as thc may think best It will be for tl: Legislatures of the difl'erent Statt to adopt or repot the recommenil: tiona of the Convention, as they ma or may not apjrove. If you approve of these -views! respectfully asl that you recommen this course to your fellow-citizen Let each bounty, town or vii1 age sen up their delegate. "In a multitut of councillors there is safety." SENEX. The Grand Jury, at Salem, Oregoi have been endeavoring to briD odium and contempt on the Sunda law by indicting everybody in sigh They indicted a ferryman for breal ing the Sabbath by carrying peopi over the rivei-io church, and a doAcc for collecting money with the contr bution box, and were about to indie the preacher for noisy and barbaroi amusement. ? . ? i STAT E jCJ?N VENT 10 N Krii?ny, September 33,-1805. v The President took the Chair, and the pig?feedings were opened with prayer.-' % ' i The "discussion of the representa-, tion question was continued, and sun? dry amendments were ordered to be laid on the table. jt* The report of the Committee on Amendments to the Constitution was ordered to he on the table. The report of the Committee on the Legislative Department was taken up for consideration, was discussed and was finally agreed to. The report of the Committee on the Legislative Department, on a resolu? tion as to the qualification of voters, was recommitted. THE SMkjTHERX STATESMEN AN? THE NIGGERHEADS.-It is very evident that the negro worshippers of the North estimate the Southern charac? ter by their ftwn standard. They are constantly charging them with hypo? crisy, and "with ruanife?ting a desfre to return to the Unio ; only for the purpose of deceiving the North and then secure an opportunity to carry? out their secession dogmas. It is weD known thai the niggerheads of the North are, as public men, the most unreliable in the country. They are constantly professing one thing one hour and doing the very reverse the next, .there^is no reliance what? ever to be placed upon their .pro? fessions. But ! in basing their judgment of \ tthe Southern people upon their own standard, * they fall very 'short of the known character of those people. It is well understood that the South? ern men are open and above board with their deeds. Long before the war commenced they informed us that they intended to break up this Union, They made no secresy of this met, nor the least attempt to conceal it. Ort the stump, in their own State legislative halls, and ia both houses of Congress, it was proclajmed with? out any effort or desire to disguise it. So ifc-always has been; but the trouble was that the Northern people would not believe them. Now that the war is over they are equally Jpold in pro? claiming their d?termination and wil? lingness to abide by the result and come back and be good and faithful men to the Constitution and Union, accepting all the consequences ot the war." This they are just as honest and earnest in as they were in their assertions to break up the Union when the war commenced. But the* radical negro worshippers know that they themselves are full of hypocrisy, and judge everybody else by their own standard. The President, who was brought up among the Southern ?people and fully understands their character, does not view them in that light, but, on the other hand, assures them that he is satisfied that what? ever they promise they will do. The public believe the President is the best judge, and prefer to follow him rather than the niggerheads. [New York Herald..)* \ MEBTING OE FBEEDMEN ON ST. HB jjiNA IsnTND.-A large meeting of freedmen, held on St, Helena Island, South Carolina, on the 4th instant, adopted the following resolutions: 1. Resolved, That we, the colored residents of St. Helena Island, do most respectfully petition? the Con? vention about to be assembled at Columbia, on the 13th instant, to so alter and amend the present Consti? tution of this State as to give the right of suffrage to every man of the age of twenty-one years, .. without other qualifications than that required for the white citizens of this State. 2. Resolved, That, by the Declara? tion . of Independence, we believe these-are rights which cannot justly be denied, us, and wft hope the Con? vention will do us full justice by re? cognizing them, 3. Resolved, . That we \ will? never cease our efforts to obtain, by all just and legal means, a full recognition of our rights as citizens of the United States and this Commonwealth. S 4. Resolved, That, having hereto* fore showu our devotion to the Go? vernment, as well as our willingness to defend its Constitution and laws, therefore we trust that the members o? the Convention will see the justice af allowing us a voice in the election* jf our rulers. 5. Resolved, That we believe the uture peace and welfare of this State l?penos very . materially upon the protection of the interest? of the co ored man, and can dniy be secured >y the adoption of the sentiments em? bodied in the foregoing resolutions. To call a man a special telegrama jflt, is the modern mode of impeach ng his veracity. ? We have been reqw?sted t<> state that the Kev. B. M. Palmer, D. D., will preach in the Presbyterian Church to-morrow morning, at 10J o'clock, and in the afternoon, at 4.J o'clock. Mr. T. C. Polook has just opened an es tablishmen t, near Main Street, opposite the old jail, Where the best brande of wines, liquors, etc., can be obtained. The thiraty. can give him a call, with tho assurance that their wants will be fully satisfiocl. By reference to our advertising columns, it will be seen that ^Ir. C. S. Jeukins has removed his store to ? BOW building, on As? sembly street, near Washington. His stock is varied and well Worthy tho attention of purchasers. . Mr. Patrick Walshe, who is connected with tie New York ?fffropofitan Record, is here as the ajent of tn*t paper, of thc Now York Day Dook, Freeman's Journal, New York Neics ?nd several other "journals*-all of wliich we believe totVeof tho Democratic order.. Our people kWw the character of some of tlfese^ journals-possiblv of all. Mr. Walshe is to be found at.NickersonV Hotel, where those who desire* to have a journal from New York may find him and procure it. _ THE POST OFFICE.-Mr. Jauuey tells* us that he will open the j^st office on Monday, having received his commission as post? master. Some-delay has been occasioned by the difficulty of finding proper quarters for the department. When oponed^ the mails will be made up for Charleston New? berry, Wmnsboro. Augusta. an# all route? severally connected with these placos. Wc ?thon trust that tho' embarrassments of the mail will cease, even though the transmis? sion of letters bc slow. Thc Greenville car? arc now running daily. We hopo that Mr. .Tanney will procure promptly a? ade? quate supply of post-stamps, the lack of which is greatly felt in Columbia now. . NBW ADVERTISEMENTS.-Attention is call- ' ed to the following advertisements, which are published for the first timo this morn? ing: Gen. Richardson-General Order? No. 1. ' Lumsden * McGee-Com. Merchants. . T. C. Polock-Wines, Liquors, kc. Resumption of Exercises S. C. College. C. S. Jenkins-WT and Choice Goods. " -Flour. Richard Caldwell-Groceries,Ac P. D. Lee-Mules for ?Sale. Wm. Hitchcock-Budding Lot for Sale. Apply ai this Office-Planing Machino. T. S. Mood-Watches, Clocks', RESUMPTION OF CIVIL AUTHOIUTT. Our readers will bo pleased to learn that ?ivil authority is now a fact ac? complished. Oen. Bennett and J ohii E. Carew, Esq., Sheriff of the Dis? trict, visited the jail together yester? day, when the charge thereof, to? gether with the prisoners, was turned over to the civil officers. Possession of the court house has also been de? livered, and the Sheriff, Clerk and Magistrates enter on th/or several offices, as we mentioned in our notice of Gen. Gillmore's orders. It is not probable there will'be Judges to pre I side in the Courts-for some tim? yet, but *he Clerk will jssue writs and the Sheriff will execute them as of yore, and all the entertainment to be found, in thc light literature of initiatory judiciaP*proceedings, is now open to the public. In conversation with Col. Carew yesterday, he remarket!, and we are pleased to record it, that Gen. Bennett has acted towards him, in his official capacity, with a cour? tesy and consideration wliich was ex? ceedingly grateful, and he entertains the hope that he wjjl find, in the au? thority under that officer, relief from many of the embarrassments which he is Mkely to experience in entering so unprepared, anil with such defi? ciency of moans, upon the discharge 'of his official duties. The number of prisoners is large, and it will not be an easy matter at^onee to take charge of them.-Chitrleston News. BILL OF MORTALITY.-By the report of deaths sent us by the City Registrar, we find that there have been during the past week thirteen whites and thirty-five blacks and colored who have died. Of these, there were eight cases of fevfer-three ?yhites, two .of them children, and nv$ black adults; of dropsy, five blacks-four adults anet one child; and of convulsions, five children one white and four blacks. It will ba ;>bservea, also, that the black adults who have died are over three times ;he number of the whites, and the dack children are more than double he white. The rest of the deaths tppear to be of general diseases, and n the same ratio as of former years, ;t this season, and we must still be hankful for'the extraordinary heaitfa, vhich has blessed our city. [CharUston Netcs. - Bigotry murders rehgipn and fright ma fools.*