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TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. Tho ADVERTISER is published regularly ev ery WEDXESDAY MORSING, at TITREE DOLLARS per annum; ONE DOLLAR and FIPTT CTs! Mr Six Months; SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS fur Thre? Months.-ulnuiui in udwc*. .?S?-Al! pupers dh-eoutinued at tb?: expiration of tb?; tims for which tbjay Karo iieeu paid. RATES OF ADVERTISING. PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Advertisements will be inserted nt the rate of ONE. DOLLAR aud FIFTY CENTS per Square (10 Minion lines or loss,) f.ir the fir,st insertion, nnd 0 SE DOLLAR for each subsequent insertion ?r5r-A liberal <li?co!int will be made to those wishing to advertise by tb:: year. Announcing Candidates SJ,lil), "tu advance. 'Washington Nejvs. WASKI:.?:TOS, June 11. Samuel HSh^ohj formerly a clerk iu tho Con federate Post Guien Department, commit ted suicide to-day. Want ol employment ami reduced circumstaaevs the cause. The ?'.iir ??rU? thai the votes of tbe moro conserva:iv? I'nio'i men were obtained b?r the C.? >titt:'ioi:a! Amendment bj a pledge from their Radical colleague*, that :o aetb-n t?houl? bo faku : ?.'u:i:ig tho present . o*M(?n upon ?hu billa reported from tho Joint Cum mitt un on Reconstruction. This virtually relera the whole matter to the people. There was considerable excitement on tie steps fronting the Capitol-to-day. Mr. Rous se-tu, who hud ti rattan, approachfid Afr. Grin nell, and r>aid Le had waited several elsy s for him to apologue for the outrageous assault tn -Je on him iu debute. Mv. Griunell said, M I luve no opolofv to make." Mr. Rousseau thereupon caned him, Mr. Grititte'l makins: no reaiMane* whatever, i- When Mr. Russcau had finished thc llvel latum. Mr. ?riuuell merely- said, "It is a l right," and thu parties separated. Senator Morgan presented the memorial oi the New Y.<rk Chamben f Commerce, ir C vor ot bankrupt law, and expi es.-ed himself ii: favor o? the bill, and hop..d it would bu re p ried at an early day from ?he Judiciary Committee. Mr. J larri?, pf Maryland, made a bold ai:J extraordinary speech in the House t'-lay. Ht; maintained the rijrht of secession, and Paid tho South hnd exercised that righf, .ind weWnOW loreign Statis. Ile said he would vote against their representation here. Duti:ig ibis extraordinaryspeech, Mr. liar ris said that though the Confederate standard had lur-n lowered, the standard of Southern pride was ns high as ever. Ha Paid the fact that their soil covered the bones of three hunored thousand of their invaders was uoi calculated to lower their tone. He al$o s?.i?l that Johnsen wa3 illegslly President, because he was a citizen of a lorolgn State. He like wise denounced the military trial and execu tion of Mrs. Surratt. The speech created a great sensation, as well it night, on ace :unt of its bobines?. VVASHIXGTON, June 15.-The Senate Fi nance Committee have fixed the tax on cot .t n at two cents per pound; probably the two H jtifes will compromise on three cents. Tho general principles of the House will have not boon altered. WASHINGTON, June 15-Senate. The Pres ident returned th? bill incorporating New York and Montana Iron and Mining Compa ny with his objections. Tho President tbirks thc biil gives .-. monopoly to a corpora'i-m ol unknown corporators and to the detriment ol settlers who have the ri.- ht to claim land un der the homestead law. Ia the House a comnvTTeO "was appointed to investigate the facts of Rosseau's assault on Grinnell and to report the same with res olutions looking to the vindication of the dig nity of the House and protection of the members. "WASHINGTON, Jane IC. The Senate waa not in session. Nothing of interest in the Hmse but unimportant pc Utica!, speeches. War Prospects in Europe. From the Paris correspoudeut ol Columbia Carolinian dated 2od May, wc extract as f J?OW8 : Notwithstanding thc leading powers of Eu ro i? cmtemplate sending representatives to pu; their respective limbs under diplomatic ma'iogor.y, rtnd repaint the map ot Europe, iLe probability is that the now much vexed question will not be settled without an ex change of *hots. No confidence is to be plac ed in thc diplomatic intcntious-of either Italy or Prussia. If the war has-not broken out b?fore, it is because neither Bismark nor Vic tor Emanuel ure ready, and all pretence of agreement or coneilation is out' a ruse de f/ucrre to gain time. Such provinces as Dal matia and thc Tyrol are only come atable in thc month of June at thc soonest. The arrival of Mr. Layard from London yesterday bringing with him the acceptance of the British Foreign Office ol tho program me of the Congress, is a wbif of peace. It appears that Russia has accepted the propo sal, and Prussia, Aunlria and Itally will not dare to refuse the-invitations to send repre sentatives. There will therefore be a pow wow, in which a strong attempt v.,ii be made to stave ott' tbs thunders of the Whitworth*, Arm strong* and Minies, but no peace is possible unless Austria yields Venetia ; and tuo>e who know the obstinacy of tho House of II ps burg indulge ia little hops? of such a conces sion. Tho fighting furore of the Italiana ls im mense. Garibaldi called for twenty thousand volunteers, and more than sixty thousand of fered. Iudced tbe Government itaelf can sc?tcely stop the ardor of young Italy, and an attempt to this end would doubtless provoke a revolutiou at home. The sympathy tor their Venetian brethren bound in Austrian fetters is toostrong to be quenched by compromise. " On to Venetia" is tho popular cry. Viva il lie, "Long live thc King" " Garibal di and italy" are to be heard in Florence and through tbe Peninsula ou every breeze. Thus far the Government has not deciioed to accept th:s army of patriotic volunteers. Nor is there less enthusiasm among the German States ol Franz Joseph. But cveu wero this matter settled, those who are behind the scenes assert that there will be a new difficulty in determining tho Oriental question which has again appeared on the horizon. The elect of the peoph of the Moldo Wailachian provinces, Charles of Hohenzollern, has gone in person to ?uehar * e3t, notwithstanding the protestations of the Powers which signed the Convention of 1S58. The young Prussian Prince wa*- received with eathugiasm, and Turkey urged un by Russia, has entered the arena of the coming struggle. It is more than likely that this new compli cation-will he diifjenlt to unravel and the Memorial Diplomatique'* may have been j quite right in calling n:teiilion to thc sighijl cmt attitude of Russia on the barti;3 of thc I Danube, anti In prophesying that thc ?irst] cannon shot, would wake the Quent ion d' (fri- j cut from its uneasy slumber. ,rt is believed here that fighting will com mence in less than twenty days, arid that Austria or Prussia will strike the first blow. Rp that ns il may, Itaiy with her army of half a" mil lion aiready i the field, thoroughly equipped, will if necessary, precipitate tho strife and encounter thc Austrian Eagles cin gle handed. The position of Napoleon is ft study. J/ke an eagle! iu bis eyre, he sjts brooding, but watching with eye acute, every movement of th? game around him. His great jincle would probably have been foremost in thc stri/e, an active particip?t ; but the nephew has becomo an arbiter not more feared than fearless. Tho silken glove covers the iron hand ; a seeming desire to conciliate shields the proud ambition, ?nd jct Mon t?a WN b? iairh hegav, ibo ._JC"_-S.-. ****-*m???m*WmmmWmmmammW?MmMmm tread of French battallions and the echoes their guns may bo resounding at the.vt gates of the Austrian capital. Napoleon wt on Russia, and Russia eyes with envy C stanlinople, thejewJ she bas tried in vain add to her crescent. Tho death bur vest pens. But enough of politics. As yrt Paris has not been much affec by the financial crisis. The .only remarka circumstance in the money world is the r bery of three millions of.francs by the c.-.slu of one of the banking institutions. The tinquent suifered so grievously from the st ol conscience that he L-ave himself" up to authorities What adds gre-t'er interest the event is a statement of the rm fives wh induced the unhappy tuart to commit Crime. ?urovenn New*. NEW YOKIC, June 10 The City i-f Paris, with Liverpool date. the otb, via Queenstown the (?th, has arri v The conference was abandoned, cmscqui upon the demands of Austria, which rendel the mediation of neutral powers an impos bilitv. The neutrals hive broken off all negoi lions, and it remains {'or the belligerents negotiate anting themselves or inaugifr? wir. I: is believet.nhatho.sti ilies will commet in the Kihi d'tchit-s. and that ?ho Austria great move will he to *c5Xe Silesia. Pmsi-ia will probably commence the w >i'.il h s sent circulars to the neutral pow?; chatting Austria with a (hgraut breach livalie?. The.Prn<sia:i army comprises l-il but ions ut infantry, Sill .-qoadruus of cavil mid l,08li Geld pieces ol artillery. The Italian vol- merrs mirabel Do.OOiV The AMS! nan anny nov. e uni hers UijO.O ui-n. 't is pupp ?sfd '.'>') 0?U will open ?.?r-uiipt Prussia. 25?O00 jijiaiast Paly, exe sives nf the reserves nqrrted. Il Prussia seizes Holstein the Austria will cross the frontier. Spain's fjrees have been augmented to H OOO men. The Loudon 77MM declares all hopes peace have vanished. The Government Reform bill in the Briti Parliament v.a*5*referred vithont discussie TliH iiiip:e&Jiun ia thal it wiiF be withdraw but there are no such indications'. iluni.tx, June ?. ?Prince Frederick Charles leaves to-tu orre for the headquarters of tin Prussian army Silesia"; FLORENCE, Juue C. Great excitement prevailed in Venice 01 ing lo a forced ioan and the refusal of tl municipality to cooperate in collecting it. A large number ot* perseus lied thc city avoid Conscription. ElVKKPOOL, June ?. The sales of cotton for tie last three da were oti.UOu bales. Thc market opem biicy&nt, with id. advance; but closed hea\i with th? improvement mor-* than lost. Breads!nils are limier except ce:ru, whir wai quiet. .Mixed 29s. ."ld. Beef dui!. Poi inactive, but steady. Bacon lintier Sugi quiet. .Rica without sales. Rosin dull. Tu pentirte flat. The crisis on the continent continues au war is inevitable. GEN. TILLSON ANO CAPT, ?{?VANT.-An Ai gusta correspondent of the-C harleston Couru wtites as follows : The second ".natter agitating ihe commun ty grows out ul'the old imbroglio in referent to I hu decoration of tho graves ol' the Feder; dead in the Augusta Cemetery, by the black in April last, lt is-?aid tb?.i*at ?n erdnrtair ment given Generals Stead; ian ami Fulla tm some days siuce, General Tillson, formci ly chief official of the Freedmen's Bureau i Georgia, and now military commandant, di el? red in tho course of a speech then delivei ed, i hat J. R. Bryant, a gp?at light arnon thc negroes here, had asked him (Tillson) o the occasion ol ihe cemetery disturbance t furnish bayonets wherewith to force a wa through the city police, who kept out thc rub ble from the gravevard. This *fc*te??iMi ?ru T'Tinu ornery nrto-trafflci-uig.'e-c-' wirfr i? blacks, have, it is further reporied, been si distasteful to Bryant as to lead him to indi: General T?son a noto of belligerent import setting forth his grievances, and dcraafcditi redress, on penalty of beinc publishea as ; calumniator and slanderer. To this, it is reported, the General respon ded by declaring he would publish Bryanl i: turn, were such a thing done and so thc mat ter hangs. Bryant's letter seems to have con rained a proposal for a sort of arbitratioi b?j.rd-either pr.rty to choose a fricud, North eru mun or nigger-which two were to selec a third, the three to consider the truth o falsily of charges alleged. Mr. B. also make prcll'er of his books, etc., and if the matte proceeds it will be of refreshing iute-rcst. BAD ron TUE FINNEGANS.-$fce followin; is Ihe Canadian law under which the eaptut ed Peuiiius will probably be tried by the Ca micks. It is the first ?cc?on, chap. 9S,of th< consolidated statutes of Upper Canada: First : In case any person, bei 'g a citizei or subject of any foreign Stut' e>r country al peace with Her Majesty, be )r coutiuues ir arras against Her Majesty within Upper Can ada, or commits any act of hostility therein or enters Upper Canada withelesign or intent to levy war against Her Majesty, or to com mit au/ felony therein, for which any person would, by the laws of Upper Canada, be lia ble to BU?fi.T death, then the Governor maj order tho assembling of a militia general court martial for the Iri?l of such person, agreeably to the Militia Law, and upon be ing found guilty bj' such court martial of of fending agaiuft this act, such oerson shall be sentenced by such court martial to su Her death, or such other punishmi nt as shall be nwr.rded by thc court. WlCFALL'S ESCAPE.-Severed of the mem bers pa%sed themselves as paroled soldiers, and were transported ur such without detec t-on, on government steamers, to points near their homes. Of these were Mr. Perkins and Mr. Wigfall. The latter, in a disguira that precluded ali suspicion, eutercd freely into conversation with the soldiers ol' the guard ; and in the course e?f the Conversation asked what tb-fy would do with old Wijfall if they wore to catch him. " Ob, wo would bang him, certain," was the reply. " And you would serve him right," replied Wigfall. "If I should be with you I have no doubt I should be pulling al the end of Ou rope myself" Double entendre was not suspect-id, and its wit was therefore: loat, but is worth producing now. -Richmond Enquirer. PnoniECY DY THE POPE.-Th3 Pope uttered a double prophecy. At a ceremony held in the chapel of Palazzo Massimo, in commem oration of a miracle which, acco-dingto a Ro man legend, was performed by St. Philip, who raised from the: dead .a youth of the family of Massimo, a select party was present, chiefly belonging to the high clerical or legitimist noblesse. His Holiness rando a brief speech in an inspired and prophetic.tone, and spoke of the fut ure, says the reporterons if from thc impression of second sight. He said that the present year would be one ol I ri a m ph and ol brilliant.victery over the enemies of the temporal power. " I shall," l e -remarked, " behold the triumph, and. in 18G8, I shall render np my soul to Qod." This- singular prophecy is said to haye produce-d a powerful effect on the audience, some of whom were moved to tears. A New Yorker of the nama of Campbell has just given to the world some queer reve lations concerning the testimony lately adduc ed by thc Judiciary Committee of the House tending to implicate Mr. Davis in the assas sination plot. He shows that a gross system of frauds and perjury has been resorted to prove Mr. Davis and others couspirators in the matter, and backs up his assertions by facts that startle all who arofami'iar with the testimony. It seems that many of the wit nesses testified under assumed name's, and that no Fuch persons ns the ostensible and recorded witnesses exist. In addison to thu, he states that when Mr. Connor;;, who wai the principal aitaftfiS. or detective in tho oa'se, was asked to proceed to New York and pro cure some corroborating evidence of his own statements, which ho had previo:?aly volun-j teered* to furnish,-that he gave the officer who was sent with him the: slip in New York ; has. actu illy run away, as is supposed, to avoid a prosecution for prejury, and has not been beard from by the officer or Comniittae for several weeks. Other witnesses have come 'forward and confessed to having sworn falsely. Tf? E A D V E R T7S?R~ JAMES T. BACON, EDITOR. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 180.G. Severity of thc Weather. A strange phrase fur this lime of year; but nevcrtbtle-.s quite apropos. It is past ibo middlo of June, but fire? and wrappers have been com fortable for two days pa^t It certainly bus been hailing al; over the fate of tho eiirth, except right here. As w o write, Tuesday morning, it is fe till actually cold. Would'nt bo- surprised if* we ali went down to the Ma. s Meeting on tho Ridge in sleighs ! Flashing ? SouNEntruuciug V Generally said of ruby wine. But. HS ruby wine bas bceomo a shadowy thing of memory, wo say it of the bottle of reilly superb Whiskey sent us tho other Any fr?m the ''Variety Store," by Mr. MCEWEN, presiding genius. And in thc .'. Variety Store" arc many moro, such bottles And many moro (lashing and soul-'jntraucing thiugs. And the presiding genius is always smiling aud bouignaut. - . - -. ?as?? i- ??-* Three Items of Intercut. Es President DAVIS is not to bo bailed. Ho will in all probability rt main at Fortress M?n r o anti: Li? trial ia October. Tho Fenians havo quilled Caiiadn. Their whole attempt was au iguoblu failure. Roberts and Swee ny ar? How Ubderan obscurity. The great Irishman Stephens ?ill probably manage the next move. For .another ni .ve there will certainly bc. The Peace Coiiforouce proposed by England, 'France and Russia to fettle tho hostile affairs of Austria, Fruida aud Italy, hus been abandoned. Things had guuc too tar.. Advices by the latest steamers ?-jy that, according to present.'appear ance?, nothing can proven?, an overwhelming Eu pean War. A Reliable Merchant and a Reliable Salesman. We mean Mr. JOHN M. WITT (ind Mr. ERASMUS J. YOUNCLLOOI). Tho first-named gentleman is noWs.de proprietor of tho large and valuable stock of goddi lately owned by GOonn i WITT; he holds forth at the same desirable stand; and ho has been fortunate enough to secure thc intel ligent services of (but old and popular salesman, Mr. E. J. YOL'NGDLOOU. Mr. WITT respectfully solicits at tho bands of tho peoplo of Edgeficld District, a share of their patronage. Ile has on hand at present aa infinite variety of miseellano cus goods-a fair sample of almost every suit ot thing-Such as is generally found in a first class village store. From time to time in the future, he will make such additions to his present stock, us will always enable bim to meet thc wants of his customer?. As to rates and prices, bc will endeavor to bens low as tho lowest: or at all events as moderate as ho can bo in jnstice to himself. Wc regret that we cannot find raoul for bis advertisement in this issue. It shall cer tainly have placo next week. Invitation to thc Vultures. From tho National la'clligcncr of June 5th, wo clip the following, an extract from a letter to that paper : EPOF.FIELD C. II, S. C., May 25, 1S60. General min stares nearly all in the face. Creditors insist on being paid, and there is n<-th in<? to^>ay with. Confessions of judgment nnd assignments are the order of the day. I have no thought that one tenth of the land can bo kept from sale, unless where it is sottled in trust. All this is unfortunately too true. Who is thc writer ? Would that he had gono further, and advised the Northern vultures not to swarm down upon us, flapnine; their win?** cr" "I"V1 Tv -}i'rr Ana tc- timk Ina*, we citrwot noli on to. our lands even if wc would. Well may the peo ple meet together, and try to devise plans to stay tho ''oncr.nl min ! Yield np the Recipe. Mr. B. P. LASDBL'U, Jr., has our tumultuous thanks for a bottle of very delightful Swcot Ci der, ono year old. Yes, ono year old, and Etill tweet. Tell tho world, dear young friend, how you manage tho interesting matter. Wc aro thankful for the bottle and its cheering contents, but would be still more thankful for tho valuable recipe. -? -o- ? Thc South Carolinian. Thie popular paper, which has left Charleston and returned to its old homo, Columbia, is now issued daily in thc latter city. It has boon very much enlarged lately, and is still, as it hus been for a long time vast, very nbly couductod. Thc American Patriot? Wc cheerfully recommend to our community, 77ie Amer/eau Patriot, a new daily and tri-weekly paper published in Columbia. It is a practical, reliable and entertaining nows iboet. Owned nnd edited by J. E. BRITTON, Esq., a gentleman old and skilful in the newspaper business. Daily $rt.OO per annum. Tri-Weckly-$1.00. Death of Mr. John A. Addison. The friends of this gontleman, until tho last few years a citizen of this Districr,.will regret to luirnof his death under tho following circum stances. Tho Charleston Courier of tho Ililli, says: On thc 20th of May, last, a difficulty occurred at Williston, S. C., on tho Augusta branch of tho South Carolina railroad, betwoen Mr. Stephon G. Graham ?nd John A. Addison, in which ibo l itter was shot by the former, and dangerously wounded. Atter tho occurrence Graham loft Williston and ca no to this city. OJ Tuesday evening last Ad dison died, and a warrant was issued tor tho ar rest of Graham, on the charge of murder. Officers Farrell nnd Cotos, in whoso hand tho matter wui placed, unrested him last Saturday ovouiug, and and bc has heon committed to jail to stand his trUL" Freedman's Organs Suspended. It is Btated that the publication of thc Augusta Loyal Georgian bas been suspended by military authority, and the Charleston <Sotif/t Carolina Lender has fallen into tho hnnds of the Sheriff. Th ? earcor of these candidates for popular fuvor wm rather brief. Is thc "Bureaw" Needed? Tho Constitutional!*!, of Wednesday last, says: " Thc notorious J. E. Bryant, editor of the Loyal Georgian, wti3 arrested last night by the civil au thorities, on a charge of attempting to defraud negroes out of funds borrowed from them while he was an officer of tho Unitod States Govorn-; mei/t. Bryant gave ns bail Robert A. Harper, a.: ver;- respectable colored men of this pity. lr. will be remembered that Moses Gardner, on Sunday boforo last, ia the prosenco of Gen?. S teed man and Fullarton, *-nid : " Even tho officers sent out hero by the Government that professes to protect us (the froedaicn,) won't give u? a fair showing." M'Jscs mus:, havo known something. Anticipating tho adoption of tho Consti tutional Amendment, passed by tho United States Senate, and just concurred in by tho House, Gov ernor Curtin, of Pennsylvania, has ^j^assed a circular to Governors of Northern Statcs suggcst ing tho propriety of. union in action and the call ing together of legislatures for immediate ratiG cation of nmondrnent, end before thc adjournment of Congress. ?Sftbe famous Confederate ?tlenmer Ohicka mauga was sold at the Gosport Navy Yard, a day or two since, for $15,000. It is .?aid that r?o steamer was originally built in England in 1803, and that she cost $200,000 in gold. $?r The Huntsville (Mo.) Citizen lins in its office a printer with only one arm. He tcts, jus tifies aud empties bis sticks, and sets a mof t cof rect proof. As be can do nothing but set typo, ho manages, by constant "pegging away," to gel | up abont five thousand oms a d ly. ?Sf Gov. Orr loft.Corumbja for Charleston on ? Saturday last. Ho cpmmutcd the ?enfoncei pf Rantin Smith, Wetfierhorn aud Herjrh, Mass Meeting on the Ridge ! Thursday, the 21st June. In our. last hsuo was published a cord, signed bymany prominent citizens of the Ridge coitnT try, proposing, to hold a.public meeting at Bethel Church, od Thursday next, for tho purpose >f con sidering tho all-important and all-absorbu^ Debt Question. . Siuco then, the signers of this card hav.en^ tured their plans and mado out a fuller-pro ?rnmmc. j. M. Nonmsj Esq., Chairman of thc Cntuiuittce of Arrangement?, Jia.? addressed us a letter, authorising us td make thc following ?tate me uU U the public : J' Firni.-Our meeting is, to be a MASS MEET ING of the CITIZENS OF EDGEFIELD AND LEXINGTON DISTRICTS. Object, to consider the Debt Question." "-?Sccind;-The lion. A. P. ALDRICn? Major JosKi'ii ABNKY, and otb .r gentlemen, have been invited to address thc meeting." " Th?VcLr-Our Delegation to the Stato Legivlrf ture, and thcMlferthee., Corps, are respectfully invited to honor us whith their presenco at the meeting;" '. Fourth.-Our fellow-citizens of both Districts aro respectfully invited to attend thc meeting and co-operate wRh us iu its discussions and proceed ings." v r " Fi/tL -Tho Ladies arc very respectfully .so licited to be presenten the occasion. A Pic-Nic will be provided for them. A Barbecue will bc provided for tho gentlemen. A Band of Mu.-ic will enliven tho day." It'will be seen by?ho above that our neighbor? of tho Ridge are making preparations to uphold thcr ancient reputation for amenity ?nd hospi tali-y. These meetings are being held in many parts uf our Stale. We hope the one in questiou may be numerously attended, and productivo of much good tb thc comm'unity'a0krgo. Stealing A Side Nigger's Soup." Truly may, we give it this caption, for it treats rf but little else. The Report of Genis. Steed: raan'and Fullarton on tho condition of thcFreed men'd Bureau tn South Carolina,Florida, Georgia, a ml tho Sea IMauds, has been forwarded to the Secretary of War, and subsequently published. It Joes not ..unfold to tho world quite such a bud JJ? t of infamy as did tho Report upon Virginia and Kurth Cand?na; but nevertheless its cata ligue of crimes and potty meannesses is enough to intensify ?ur disgust for tho Freodme'n's Bureau, and our contempt of most of its agents. The Assistant Commissioner of tho Bureau fur South Carolina ls'Brevet Major General Scott, with headquarters at Charleston; of Georgia, Brevet Major General Tilsou, with headquarters at Augusta; of Florida, Broret Col. T. W. Os born, with headquarters at Tallahassee. Of all tboso three officers, of their administration, of Freedmen's affairs, aud of their efficial course and conduct-generally, thw late Report speaks it bi?h terms. ^ But upon sundry " Sub-Assistant Commissioners," "Bureau Missionaries," "Bu reau Superintendents of Marriage Relations," "Bureau Counsellors," "Bureau Superintendent? of Education," "Bureau Printers," "Bureau Sur geons," "Bureau Rental Agents" and "Bureau Storekeepers," is visited withering condemnation. Justlnoditate upon tho above list of harpies ! Isn't itaprotty roll? Carrion crows and vumpires! And to think that wc must quietly t lernte ic our midst snch men and such doings. Verily when we meditate upon th"i3 Freedmen's Bureau, to say nothing of other radical enormities, we cannot look upoiTour present condition as one of peace ; it seems to us rather tho dead calm of chains and slavery. Genis. Steedman and Fullarton unmask so much lying, stealing, and knavery in general, on the part of tko a'.ovo mentioned "Subs" and " Assistants," that it would be a hopaless task ic: us to enter Into tho details. And wc do not ox actly seo why thc Assistant Commissioners, th head men in each State, who are so woll spoken ' irr '? *'?o-- - --*S - ? ? ? ? ** * perpetrate ull theso villanies with so much im ponily. Do ihey never leave thei head-quarter to look around tkcm ? It is hut justice however to QeulV. Scott and Tilson, to stato that these abuses grew up under the administration of juc nou? Commissioners, and that they, Scott am Tilson, arc doing their best now to'uproet them With the condition and future prospects of the negroes generally on tho Sea. Islands, Gin's. Steedman ind Fullarton do not seem to bo at all pleased. A few who are working for white men, appear to be doing protty well; the great mass are doing astoegroos, without restraint and with out compulsen, will inevitably do. Of tho occupation of thc Sea Island lands by negroes, Gells. Steedman and Fullarton spoafc as fallows. I " In our otniojJ the-most equitable solution of the question jf (lie occupation of thc said island; and the coast, under thc order of General Sher mau, will bc ii> surrender tho lands to tho formel owners on thdjst day of January next, requiring tho owners topay the freedmen in money the val siro to surroabr the lands they arc now occupy ing, at any titi prior to that period, hy a'rrange mcut between'themselves and the owner of the land. Genen? Tilson and Scott both concur With us that tis nrrangoment will giro genoral satisfaction toluth thu freedmen and tho land owners. Shojd this recommendation bo adopted hy the Government, wo respectfully suggest that tho"ordcr bo isjued bofore tho 1st of Septembor next, so us toMvo both parties ampio time t" make their arangementa for tho next season'; planting." In Florida, ?ioraver they went, Genis. F. and S. found Burea matters, and relations betwoen tho wbitosTondolac'xS, in a very satisfactory abd promising conition. for tho Advertiser. Announc?ient for District Clerk. Mn. Barron! Deer Sir,-Very many friends and comrades i ams, respectfully ask to an nounce througb^our columns, Capt. L. YANCEY DEAN as a CaVdaU for Clerk of (ho Court of Common Pleask tho insuing election. Alargo portion of the iters of Edgeficid are personally acquainted wit!) Capt. Dew, os ho has"?h^ijsn.en gaged ia a busijua capacity in tho District from oarly boyhood, ind know his business capacities are not to be suWsscd by any. Ami tho gallant mannor in wbicjho conducted himself in our late struggle will ccfainly recommend him to all who aro acquainted irith his heroic deportment Ho ontcred tho ecijlco early in tho struggle in the gallant Hnmpta R?gion, ond romained with it until the scvos days light around Richmond, when he lost bibrin, which .caused him to retire from tho aervicd->-tiJ hia own State became in vaded ; whon hisjouthful companions of the Saluda Regimont choscilin as.their leader, and there ho conducted him^lf well as an officer and a gen tleman. Respectfully! SALUDA. The Yoknic Enquirer says: "Wo arc gratified to annoj?eo that Sirs. Emily E. Alexan der has been coiplsp|oncilby tho Department, as Tost Mistress fonty., town. Postage Stamps may now be ootalnod^tho Post Office. Ihe Nevfrork Tribune objects tb tho term "colored personTiasuujed by or applied to the lalo siave populaL 0f the" Southern States. It says lt is only apjljcaye to those of mixed blood,' and that tho full^cd black is a negro, nolh lng more^ or lcss.t? 539" A Utter Lj Atlanta to tho Cincinnati C.onmcrciul report outrageousaot by anegro, .Hy threats Qfdcufcij?forcod awhile lady uaniod Gresham, to go i?a llense swamp where he de tained her for'jLur8> Half dead she finally escaped to Ber hL I[cr husband tracked tho nogro and shot??ft?? Tho first LjaD pr?f"uer tried hy drum- ! ?n hoad court marti},, c.inaJft an(| ?hot, leavos a ' be wife and fivo chilL ," fbtj oity 0f Xow York. ^ ovi . jSST-Edward I, ? tJ|0 ^r0 rj ot i-, charged roi with atrociously ta fcringMr. Whitehurst during j Tb the negro c?l?br?t ?of the Civ?i R^hta bil', in wb Norfolk,, tome tin waJ foumi gu?it>v in the for Plrcnjt CpWt in Cjt wi ?ntenced to eight j poi For the Advortisor. The Stay Law. To ike Editor of thc Edgnfitld Advertiser. The flat hes gone forth; the doom of oursuffei ing people has been pronounced; tho. Stay La has boen.declared unconstitutional,'mill'and voit by tho Court of Just' resort ; and tho harpies < tho law aro'now to bo turned loose.upon.our ur fortunatg?c'otintryntteu: tb/coniplote' the work ( destrucoRi deft unfinished by the.dogs nf war.. ' The m??a'of the pcnplo havo *doubtloi<8 bee stunned by thia decision of thc Appeal Ccur Thc Stay La? had been re-cnacled by thc Legi; hil ure KO often, it had been acquiesced in so bm: and so unanimously by Ibo peuple, that it wa generally taken for granted, tho Legislature coul enact or repeal it at discretion according to th exigencies of the timos. But any one wbo ha Opportunity to ascertain the opinion* of o"ur pres oise. Judges has not been takon by. surprise. 13? foro thc adjournment of the last session of tb Legftlaturo, it was notorious among those wh took tho pains to infirm tbeinsclvos, ?hat th Stay Law would bo overthrown at tho first or, portunity prcsontiug itsplf to tho pr?tent Judichi ry of the Statoi .Whcthor a Stay Law enacted by a State is o is not constitutional has been a vexed questio from the foundation of Ibo Government of th United Statos. In somo of the States such a lat hns been, dcclarod constitutional, while in other it has been hold unconstitutional. In still otbc States such n law hns at ono timo buen held con Stitutional and at other - limes unconstitutional according to the varying opinions of Judges wi constituted tho Courts. In most of those State* where the doctrine of State sovereignty prevailed in tho North as will as in tho South, tho tenden cy of tho decision? has been that State Stay Law aro constitutional ; but in tuch .Stales ar h av long h-.-ea tainted with Federalism and Consolida tionuli.-m, the tendency of the decidions has beci .that such laws arf unconstitutional. In th,e,icnrlicr and porer days of the Rcpubli the Supreme Court of thc -United Slates itsel ilocid?d and uttered dicta that State Stay Law are cou-titutioti"?l, but with the progross of con iwHdation, that Supremo Court also progressed ii thc opinion that such laws aro nuconatitutional Sinco the disastrous rojult .of tho late war ha demonstrated that'thc GovernmcnLof thc Unltei States iii a consolidated jGoveVrimefitp-'oven Sont! Carolina and Mississippi, the" very " Bowers" b State Rights havo said am?n ! and reversed th whole tenor of tho decisions fiilbor'to announce! by tho Courts of those States! So that from ta extreme of-StaCc Sovereignty, our Judges seen disposed to bound at a leap to thc extremo o consolidation. I attack not thc motives of tho August Tribunal .'but it doc3 seem that a decent regard for thc pas ought to have made tho Judges of the Palmotti State at least stand upon tho old ground so a's ti compel tho Judiciary Department of the Unitci Stitts Government to perfect the work of consol! dation by spilling upon the State Legislatures as thc Legislative and Executive Departments o that Government, have been doirig. of late years, The Scnato of Venice,, in conformity with th< behests of >'apo!eon,'dccreed that * the Itcpublii no longer exists." . The-Judiciary of South Caro lina should never have acted an equally ignobli part in abdicating tho reserved rights of th! States ; especially at so early a day after tho wai and under a condition of circumstance? in tin country, which' will inuke their decision work al most as much ruin among tho landed estates, a; emancipation has'wrought among the slave cs^ tates, of the people. It may be said that as tho right of appeal ex ists from a Stato Court to the Court? of the United Slate? in all ca?ca where thc amount, involved ex ceeds $500, that if the StHtc'Courts had not de creed our S tr. y Law unconstitutional, the United Statos Courts would have done it for them, anti that in any event thc evil to tho peoplo would hare been the same. But such an assortion would be altogether gratuitous. Our people havo never well known they havo refortcd to those Courts less than tho poople of any other State in the Union. They hnvo in nearly every litigation been content to abide by tho decisions of their own trrhunal?. Litigation in tho Fedoral Courts is very expensive; fur more so, than in the Siajc Courts. The former aro Autant from most plain-" tiffs and witnesses, as thoy aro held at but two points in tho State. Again, as no suit, even ly appeal, for a less sum than $500 could bo carried into a Federal Court as thc act of Congross now stands, new laws would havo to bc passed by Con gross, and tho very organization of thc Federal Courts would have almost to bo recast so as to give efficient, corrcurrout, original jurisdiction in causes between citizens of the same State. But few coujatry Attorneys practice in the Federal Courts of South Carolina, and most clients, espe cially Farmers, wish to know tho lawyers thoy employ personally ; and generally they prefer'to retain their local lawyors. True those Attorneys ;ould easily bc admitted to practice in the Fed- j aral Courts, but it would take time1 for the Law yers, Judges and Con'gross to do all those things, ind time ls the one thing needful for debtors. | Moreover, public opinion would have deterred most men from suing in Ih6 Federal^burts if it tvero known that-tho State Courts had held the Stay Law to be constitutional. Ii* over thcro were a timo and ocension when >oth principles ?nd authorities should havo been tretched to subserve tho public good, to alleviate i public calamity, to promoto the public peace, norah'ty, industry and prosperity, that time and .ccasion should have been to EU?tain tho Stay jnw, and lighten tho burden of private iudebted tess as far as possible, until our new system of abor could have been organized into something ike an institution, and until the ?un of liberty, r civil law at least, could have risen onco more ipon our long benighted and down-trodden land. The position may safely bo taken that tho peo de of South Carolina owe moro private debts to ay than tho entire land of tho State would bring rt opon market under tho Sheriff's: hammer. Tue 'ankcos destroyed at least tbreo-fourths of thc roalth of the Stato by thoir devastation?, and by be abolition of Slavery; and now it appears as ! tho Judges of tho State propose to destroy the tber fourth by putting np at auction all that is ?ft,-to wit, the land,-to bc sacrificed at a song i 3 home Shyloeks and Yankee purchasers for i Ireenbacks ; and moat of the small proceeds to ? o paid over to Attorneys and officers for costs. ? ho vultures of the law will indeed havo a long, i ad rich carnival to satisfy their wolfish appe- < tes, and although the feast may be flavored with L ic tears of ruine^widows and orphans, yet the c ligh sounding maxim is at banu to bo glib!}' r noted in answor to prayers for indulgence,-" Let ? mtico be done though the Heavens fall." ' ?j Every body ; will sue ovory body, for whero is t ie man who doos not owo something,-generally ? largo amount either, on his own or another's ac- h mut? All confidence betwoon man and man c lost.. Ab.' many unlike Job, havo almost ), st confidence in their God, as tho irr?ligion tl td immorality around U3 abundantly testify. ' A gi ?.nie will seize tho people, and each ono will j, rive for tho /tnt litt as hardly any individual xi 10 wa how even bis noxt door neighbor stands in rc- ol .rd topocuniary liabilities. Fraud ! freud ! expa- m iation, vagabondism, idleness and extravagance, ?B 11 bc tho order of tK day. Thousands of hith- m to honest debtor?, who, if they had been allow- ?n & reasonable time, would havo paid thc last si nt owing, will now -from a smarting sense of cc .ong and oppression, study and practice hy e? P'ht and day haw to evado their debts, and how m spll their property and invest tho proceeds in of iblic H?nde, so as-to secure both, an estate and th :omc, ?in a way unknown to any one but them- no ves. Ihoy.wlll oven dream of the best manner is? make sham sales, give bogus mortgages, conT th s false judgments, and to spend their substance an riot In a word, the sociciy of the State will EJ literally broken up into chaotic elemente, and w! ?ry digimont that binds even thousands of near WJ ativeswillbc severed, except that of blood, no e one? happy homos of numerous 'Tamil ?er, no ere .wi alth and refinement have had their abode* Co generations past, will soon know tl;oir ancient ,its< ?season, no more sar '< A, stranger dwella in wy father's hails/' fia i will bo tbo iflMraonsoling'rc?lccticn of these out cast?, when JjeWuanco a Yan koo has bcon" placed ia possession of their patiioionid estates by tba wise Judges of tbo land. ';Tho'sorrows of most of our people are just bogionipg. IJie dark nigh^?f haunting care.?3 just elosinj/ in around them, in-, stead'of having cr?de'd, as. ma ay hat! fondly hoped. Tho^ivllizatipn'of Southern society bas been up heaved by thc YanKcc?, and 'dasi the f?biles a'nd-' individuals of that'society- ii South Carolina at' Loa:t, are to be-beggared by thoir.oyrn cons^tated authorities. It may ho contended that many debtors were wasting their substance instead of paying their dobts;-granted. But many others, and a large majority of the debtor class, were not doiug so; but were energetically, hopefully and honestly addressing themselves to the task of working out their debts. As matters now stand, the welfare of three hundred thou?and agriculturists and ar tizan* is tb'ho sacrificed' for the benefit of a few hundred Attorneys, Mcrcbauti and Money lenders. Tho legal and mercantile chisses have long, been clamoring for the overthrow of tho Stay Law, becauso as long as thal; law-continued of force, the occupation of tho Bur wasgono. Money londers'and merchants having thoir capital lockod up in crodits, desired to havo those-credits col lected, and thc Bar sighod fur tho opportunity to' be paid for collecting them. It waa with groat idifficulty that any Stay Law was enacted at the last session the General Assambly. Tho main cause was that there are more lawyers, merchants and non-producers in. thc precut General Asscm. bly than perhaps ever met before in Columbia as the Representatives of tho ?acoplo; for which state of things tho people may thank thoir own apathy, and tho anxiety of certain men to get into a position which would enable them tc re vive thc prosperity of thoir individual occupation, whether it subserved tho public good or not. It may bo that tho strong parry in th? Legislature' who wero opposed to enacting any Shy Law whatever lastwintcf, deludod tit* Judgos with the idea that tho peoplo want and ticed no' Stay Law, and that tho Bench could pronounce the death warrant 0/ the.prosperity of the State for? yea? to come, in ?ccordanco with .tap public opinion ns reflected by tho people's m is representatives. In thus annulling the-Stay Law, '.ho Ear have but ruled the State, r.s they haye ?vcr ruled it for good or evil. Having always been the.controll ing politicians of the State they firjt taught thc people the principles of Secession which convert ed tho other States of tho South,-lcd to tho war -to emancipation-to pecuniary ruin ; and now that Bar age punishing their ton devoted convert? for tho folly Of docility. They aro "cdurting in famous immortality, by unveiling themselves like: the pro'phet of Kbrassan, with this darning difference, that he was a conscious impostor from the first, while they were perhrpa sincere, until their doctrines were put down hythe sword. The interpretation and construction of tho Constitu tion is determined by common law rules, and hence our present Common or Judgo-made-law on the-subject of staying Executions is to vi&late the golden rulo of the greatest ,;ood to the great est uumber; ajad a law is roado to punish thc honest majority of debtors as well os the few dishonost ones. The exception, not the rufe, in the conduct of men is to govern. Reformed ?in ners generally become pemcuting saints, and us most of our Judges are but rt cent converts to consolidation, it is to be feared that they iutend by their zeal in tho canso of the new faith, to atone for tho errors of-their past lives in thc sorvieo of State Bights. Wore the Judgos afraid that oar Representatives would not be admitted into Congress ? Did they shkir at tho rising clamor of Northern creditors -of Soulhorn men '.' If yea, ar*,tbcy Ea innocent 0:' human nature and history as pot to know that tho more you yield to a radical thc more bc rec aires ? Bid the' members of the Bench have an overpowering dread of tho crime of treason, and of a sojourn in Fortress Monroo or Fort La fayette, if they should decido that tho S tato Legislature yet hos -rome cuutrul ovcT thc welfare of thc Stato ? Tin Judges are but mon, and some of them very, woak men 'at that. Boos tho property nf any .of cither xieuch consist mostly in Notes, Brads, Mortgage* and Executions ? Have any of them Lawyer sons, friends and relatives, whobad nothing to_do. as lone 9* continued of loree? Hsvo.tbc Judges and Chancellors of South Caro lina fat, very, very fat, salaries, which do not lopend upon freedmen's labor, 01 the intormed dliiig of the blessed Freed meas Bureau ? It is to bp deplored that Judgo i nocrcn proud ly stands alono in -bis. glory of independence and do?ancc of military authority and -adic?l clamor. Ho at least is true to tho past. No charge cf apoalacy can be laid at his door, nor yet can an j praise bc awarded h'm for simply doing his duty. He bas hut justified tba friends who urged iii: 1 election to the B-ncb. and exhibited to tho world 1 that he ?3 a man worthy to wear th j judicial .er- f mino in these disjointed tiiies of eil il strife, when ' no branch of cither thu State' or Jr.?ted States ! Governments can save the endangered liberties of ? the country, except-the Judicial De;)artmant. ! Judgo ALOMCU'S ruling on thc Circuit that he ' i?ould bold no more civil Coutts until thc Military 1 should censo to interfere with his proceedings, ! wus also reverted in tho Appeal Court. SrTodcs S of our departed Judges, ?poa whon have your n mantles fallen? Oh! fate! Oh Liburly! Oh do- * moralising effects of- cruel war ' Arc the Superior a Courts of South Carolina to have their proceed- t ?ng set-asicl?'ibo nn ignorant military upstart, and tl :ho presiding Judge to have no sen: 0 of dignity ti jr independence to resent it? A magistrate wor- n by to sit for tho trial of small and mean causes I -vonld scorn to hold his scat upon FU. h tenn.?. _ is Lot Judge ALnrticn take no shame to himself li br having boen rebuked by tho ones proud'and fi ndependent Appeal Court of South Carolina for oi imply doing on the. Circuit what t'10 Judgo of ai ivory Civil Court should de under Uko ciroum-' a tances, in resolving to hold nc rioro Courts inder tho bayonet, ho but did what even Chief ai Rustico 'Chase, tho wouId-bc-Prcsulcnt of the ti ladical Party, has done in rcg?rd to holding fii Jourts in Virginia;-but did what all the great tj uJgos of England havo done, when tho King th as sought tu in tim ida to them, It is respectfully di uggcetcd to our expounders of tho law to refresh fo heir minds with an bour.'s reading of precepts to nd examples of thc English Judges in tho reign to f tho Stuarts, when the-.-Jamoses and Charleses- th ttemptod to overawe tho Bench. Without some*! ne neb tonic to their flagging judical courage, they ' tay forget that they represent the dignity of thc toto, aswollastbatof their own persons; andmay sa Iso proceed to declar? that alFbutsUnding ouli- no ?tions for negroes that wero warranted- "?laten sai ,r life," which is tho greatest item of private- 70 ubts, except perhaps thoso that aro r?duoiary, j lust now bo paid in full, instead of expounding Yo ie old doctrino of worranty,- so os not .0 make 10 purchaser Hablo for more fha? reasonable ?C3 ?re, orTintcrcst upon tho purchoso money, until fr0 uanciputlon took place, when- the sci 1er would "", ivelost his slaves, had ho not previously sold 0a icm- It is alse ta bo apprehended thu without KS mo change conics over taespirit. of ^.heir new. risprudence, it wjH shortly be judicially ennn- -- Btod that all pas:, private and official payment* ^ debts duo before the war, -and investments tno ado in Confederate securities, by persons hold- R> gjiduciary relations, aro also " unconstitutional, ^ ill and void" like the Stay Law. If tbo words- - tho Constitution of the United States " no State nil pass nuy law impairing tho obligation Of ntracts,'' mean that no Stato Legislature shall aot any Stay Law whatever, not even an inslal jut law, Mich aa that-passed at tho lase Session our Legislature, then it ls but a short step for. o Judges to advance to the position *hat even Convention of the people of a Sta?oc*.n legal executed contracta. For one, the irriter of is ia prepared for such judicial ?iimiiiatioiis; T d Sborifl', Commissioners in Equity, Q?UrdUna, line :ceutor?, Administrators -and private parties 70 I 0 have paid thoir debbVas they suppfso, ?ro noti rued to put thoir houses in order to receive thc Ci f Ghost that is likely to haunt them.' .Cn met, a sil u?? noed ho taken by ?urpriso if.our Appeal Wo art Should declaro the Ordinance of Secession man )lf, and all tho proceedings had under tho JJ oe, unconstitutional, null and void ab iuitio. eh a decision would bt joyfully r*#eir?d at Ya'sh?ngt?loM ?vidence of returning "loyalty;'? Ithough it might inako a pandemonium of the itato, as far as legal rights aro concerned, to dtiTost ovory ono except the lawlers. As ex rames meet, South Carolina is henceforth to re .olve around tho Central Sun at Washington, and >y ber Judgos ; although it bodono by a wreck of brtunos and private rights wholly unnecessary. Tho Radicals at the North may keep quiet about miiisfiing traitors at the South, since, whether " mr people bavo committed troason or not, their jwn Judges will inflict punishment enough, by innulling the Stay Law "in the cradle of the rebellion," to gratify eycry fiend except THAU STETEXS, who to use his own words, as reported in tho newspapers, would "confine every man at tho South by bayonets in- tho Penitentiary of Hell." If abolition wrath can be appeased, even WEMDELL.PHiiLjpSvnee.d-wa.it .only-tfll the Sher iff- of .South Carolina commence their grand auc tion of the Prodigal Son's remaining estate. Let it bo repeated that annulling tho Stay Law ivHHiring sorrows -upon our.poople, ne?," In battal ions," but in -regiments. - ICetr isjhcre no relief from the effects of this murderous judicial decis on ? Is there no way to prevent intensifying the Velings of bitterness, wrecklessncss and woe, so .ifc in tbo'land, before this judicial snicidtf? Ia here no escap? from this very Pandora's Box, v'mch hos been oponed hy a friendly, hand to : well our already unnumbered troubles ? Must mr unhappy peoplo be plunged still deeper into ;he abys3 of despair, until tho whole State shall [lave become a ruined Carthage, and every man m it as desporato as Marius? He at least was blessed in having to contemplate only tho frag ments of his fallen foTtuno.', without also being sompclled to bobold the abject condition of bis icraquercd country,-the pleasing sight ever be fore the eyes of Southerners ? Tho only remedios,'which seem to present them j'alvcp, arc to abolish the Courts, and enact a Bank? rapt-law. There'js'a-'way indirectly, 'but practi cally, to.cnacL a S.tay-. Law, by", tho Legislature iboMsbuag. tho "present :'organiza'tion_'of our State Court's and creating-.amew'^brganization of those Courts, but -postponing the election of Judges [excopt to try crimes) so as to have na Courts at all ; or by filling'thc now Judgesh ipa wUh ofAcr mien who will co-operate with Judfca . ALDRIC II in sustaining tho -Stay Law; The people of Ken tucky once did such a thing, 'an thc only remedy to save themselves from ruin by their own Judges ; ind'the South Carolina Legislature once abolished in Appeal Court for rendering a decision' obnox ious to Stato Riglrts. But the cx?s?ng. Tribunals of the State will not be abolished by the present Attorney "Legislature, since the Bench have,served the Bar top faithfvjly in annulling the Stay Law, for the Bar not to stand by tho Bench in ovcry smorgency. Still our lately converted co?s?ltdati?nists had botter pause before they drive the people to mad ness, clso the pauperised, sovreigns may, oat of revenge, or in tho hope of bo?cring their condi tion, elect a majority of tho next Legislature pledged to destroy those who hove destroyed them. Tho Sheriffs all over the State will be pay ing their respects to nearly every voter in it about .lection time in 1SC?. Although the present organization of the ?Dourta ?viii remain intact, at all events until after tho next general election, yet it is obvious* that a Bankrupt law will be pissed to administer upon lebtors estates,.as the . lawyora.are to be the Ad ministrators. A Eankrupt law differs from tho ?>rc8ent insolvent dcbtor's.and'priflon bounds laws jf ' tbe State .in."several .important.particulars. Under a Bmkrupt act, thc debtor caa compel oil iiis creditors to accept bis effects and absolve him 'rom any further obligation to perform "his con Tacts, whereas under , the other two classes of aws none hut the finny creditor..U JO compelled, ind he only by the suspension of his remedies at aw, not hy tho destruction of.the contract itsrlf. [Jndcr.tbc insolvent and prison bounds laws, tho lebfor is altogether pantile-tho creditor- is the mly active party. Tho latter can lie in wait like L wild beast, watching his prey, and can pounco rpon tho person, property or earnings of his vic im at bis own good time: but a Bankrupt, by ;iviug up oil his present estate, may voluntarily vipo out all his existing obligations.-tum w<. )6JA(V"^-^rcwTTom nubility to arrest, and his 'ature earnings exempt from molestation. Under ho present laws of. tho Stato^ not only are a lector's proporty and earnings '?ra.bl? for "bis Con rads, but his" very brains and muscles are mort ;agcd as it were to his creditor ;-not so under a lankrupt act, as one who hus taken tho benefit f it can commence the business world anew, ree from let or hindrance. i A Bankrupt act will and must be adopted at ac iiex' or some future Session of tho Legisla aro, unless Congress in tho mean timo docs it >r us. Fortunately tbcro is not and.-.cannot be ny doubt ?bout thc constitutionality and practi ibility of this remedy, for the embarrassments f tho people. It has been decided by. the Su rfine Court of the United'States that if Con ress fails to enact a Bankrupt law, tho States ioy do it, each fir itself. The Philanthropic adicnls are too much devoted to the welfare of ?grocs-to waste timo upon, measnr.es to relieve hito people in tho South. But when Greenbacks ?t sick, as they are sure to do, becanso paper oney is strength in thc beginning,' but ruin in 0 ond, and after an age bf Shinplastcrs there is *ays an age.of hard mcney and harder times, cn the troubles of the North will bring-philan ropy to its senses ;-will restore the Constitu ya; rights of tho South, and compel the cnact ont of an uniform Bankrupt Law for the whole nion. Aa "the ruin in tho end of paper money" not yet at band, although ia sight, eur Legis ture at its n??'?" Session, or the people at some turo election, are free to act ia the good work rolieving every ship-wrecked debtor^n the S Ute, id.permittlng.him once miora to launel at least canoe upon the business sea of the world. 1 haro written this communication, hurriedly id fearlessly, to state what I beiievo to be the i tb, from a sense of duly to the people of Edge Id, with a view somewhat to allay public anxie , and to inform debtors, who constitute almost 9 entire State, of tho estent of tho feeble r?mo is for their cumulated and accumulating mis tunes. It may afford some grim .satisfaction know that at thc wor?t, they hare only to strip the; skin-that their fcMos,' their bands and >ir. heads at least, ara their own, or will bo at distant day. . .. COKE? Fears aro entertained in New York for the ely of. tho clippo^ahfp Monarch of.the Seas, Frforty doys over duo from Liverpool. Sho lcd from that port on the 20th of March, with ) passeugors. . ST Thc Cholera is on., the increase in New tk city, and at quarantine. ?E3e>"The Columbia Carolinian says : " We rn that James Egan, whose releaso was ordered m tho Albany State Prison by Ja?go Nelson, ter a writ-of "habeai'cnrpu*, has boon ro-arrest by the military authorities." IARRICP. on tho 12th inst., ot the residence of bride's aunt, Mrs. M.vnv MOBLJW, by Rov. J? Piekott, Dr. J.,RM. RUSHTON and Miss ?GIE T. HERRIN, all of Edgefield. " Upon the bridal pair look down, ' Who.n'ow have plighted han'As ; Their arnot with thy favor crown, And bless the nuptial bunds. With gifts of grace their hearts endow, OJ all rich dowries best; Their substance bless, and peaco bestow, To sweeten all tba reit. \ Ir. purest love their souls unite, Tha'Ubey, with Christian care, Muy make domestic bardens light, By taking mutual share." 0 all tho good wishes -"axpreWd in the above il we heartily say : Amen t; Wc all said it uti ? lat the delicious cako whieb. accompanied^* ;TV ce ; and wo all say it again. rbssahl lpid has transfixed yow bleeding heart with vcr shat, Dr., bul'we are not sorry for you hope the d?lierons arrow will quiver there for - y a long year to c?me. XnRiSD, on tho I2th; Inst., by Rov. D. D. ison, Mr. JOHN ARCHY, of Augusta, to 1 GENEVA THURMOND, of thia flutr?t.