Southern banner. (Athens, Ga.) 1832-1872, December 01, 1832, Image 3

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sionist* to prevent (be ratification of tho pro ceeding* «f the convention by tho people— H>. therefore, who aro not prepared for un- niiaiified mibmisaion, roust raise tho warning voice and rally to the standard of Stale sovo- rC '\fier the secession, it was found that the majority of the delegates remained, and the convention proceeded to art wiih unparalleled unanimity. Tho course recommended i« any thing but rash, and by far more forbearing than the mildest resistance uian could have export ed. You perceive by the resolutions that a Southern Convention is the prominent part of the mode; this is in accordance with the views of the great body of the Troup parly. The resolutions of the convention reiterate the great doctrines of Jefferson—declnro the Ta- r ifflaw8 unconstitutional—announce the de termination of the state not to submit to Pie protective policy j that it will resist it by the exercise of all the rights of the slate aa a so vereign member of the confederacy, and by consultation and concert with other states having like interest with itself—respectfully recommend to tho seveml Southern states to assemble in convention by delegates, to meet at such time and place as shall be hereaflor agreed upon, to confer together and recom mend to the states respectively such measures as may conduce to the removal of the Tariff grievances ; that a poll be opened in each county, and the people be invited to vote upon tho ratification or rejection of (heir procee dings, and if the people are found to approve the measures of the convention, they are invi ted, by general ticket, to elect eleven dele gates to meet in the convention of the states. The convention adjourned to meet again on the first Monday in July, and all the counties not represented, are invited to elect delegates. Such are the prominent features of the mode of resistance recommended by the con vention. A Southern convention is the main object, and all they have done is submitted to the approval or disapproval of the sovereign people. Is there any thing ra*h—-any thing wrong in all this ? Who can object to this action! Will not the people ratify these movements 1 He who eon object to this mild procedure, is prepared for slavish submission; and yet Mr. Forsyth, Col. Cumming, and Al fred Cuthbert, could not vonturo even to deli berate with thnso who suggested action, so revolutionary as this. Are they not the auxil iaries of the manufacturer? They can be no thing else. They have exhibited bad faith to the parly with whom they have ever acted, and nhich has conferred honor and office upon some of them; and they have proven recreant to tho cause of Southern rights. It was bad enough to array themselves in opposition to the cause of tho people in the convention of the people—it was bad enough to desert us in the hour of peril; but worse than this, than all, they havo leagued with our enemies nnd their enemies, and have become the leaders (unquestionably so) of a parly always in oppo sition to the dearest interest nfOcnrgin. Mr. F. bus absurdly sealed his own (ale with the Troup party-lie is lost to them forever. It is right that we should spurn from our ranks false friends, nnd the higher the character of tho of fender, tho more indignant should be our feelings. I am more than ever convinced, that if Georgia ever is absolved from her oppres sions, she must owe her absolution to the union, energy, and purity of tho Troup parly. The Clark party rare not for the Tariff; their object is to acquire slate power, and they hail our divisions as the harbinger of their triumph. It is matter of curious speculation here, to witness tho perfect amalgamation of Troup sereders with Clark submissionists ; men, a few months since more obnoxious to the Clark party than poisnn to human life, tire now gree ted by them in private, honored on tho high way, and serenaded with hosannnhs. 'I o what shall all this lead ? To one thing I trust at least, and that is union and energy on the part of all true friends of the state, in support of the measures of the convention. To tny own humble self, my bnnner is hung upon the outer wall in token of ’.var, ay, wur to the hilt. An explanatory and oxhorlatory address to the people will accompany the resolutions of the convention ; the resolutions were penned by Mr. Berrien—the address also, as I am in formed. On yesterday, Mr. Rvan laid upon the ta hie of the House of Representative* a string of resolutions, proposing a Southern conven tion, requesting the slate to elect delegate' whenever it should be found that all the Soulb ern stales would unite in convention, and do nnunciug the late convention, and requesting the peoplo to disregard its recommendations. This is the second act in the drama, and to my mind forebodes evil. This movement has for its object the defeat of the objects of the con vention. These resolutions will no doubt pass both branches, and will then have the conven lion and the majority of the Legislature in di rect collision; these resolutions no doubt ema nated from high authority, and this act of hos tility to Georgia, for it is nothing else, has the sanction of one name nt least, heretofore hon ored hy the Troop party aa its ornament. Oneo more I »\y, the conflict in Georgia has begun and it will be no ordinary ono; we should, therefore, prepare to encounter its toils, its •rials, and its hazards. Your obt. aervt. VIlion €h:tate anil \. II. i!Vi»l>et. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1 1832. K Tis done! the long agony is over!”—South-CaroUua has nullified the Tariff Laws of the U. States!! Wo publish to-day tile Ordinance of the Convention. Comment is unnecessary—we call upon our readers, to peruse the document—reflect upon Us character, and judge for themselves. erlainl) have derided for gard to the eligibility of v of its proceedings. Wo Cotton Market. Jhigusta, 29, 1632. COTTON.—The article has receded within a few days. The Liverpool accounts to the 15ih October did not meet the B.inguii.e expectations of the holders in this market—a general disposition has been therefore mani fested hy them since to let go. We quote **le# of lots from 10 to 11 ct«—general sales trom waggons 10 a 10i;a fancy brand, hi bund some packages, might command lUcts-— North \merican Gazette. Presidential Elect ion.—Indiana lias gone for Jackson hy an overwhelming majority—and little Delaware has most unexpectedly contributed her mite to the good cause. —QQfc— Ootdand Land Lotteries.—W c have this week discontinu ed the publication of the drawing of those lotteries, ami for reasons which we trust will bo satisfactory. Tho claims they made upon our columns under the former arrange ment, was considerable; but since the appointment of new Commissioners, we find,that to do any thing like justice by all the counties where our patronage is liberal, wc should be obliged to devote four or five columns weekly, to their use. This would place it out of our power to give much that would be interesting to the general reader. Besides, partial returns arc seldom satisfactory; and we doubt not thattho general circulation of the complete lists from the Recorder and Federal Union oHir.es,as well as Mr. Slade’s “Journal of the Times,” at Milled gevillc, lias superseded all necessity on our part to devote any portion of the Ban ner to this subject. — Caucuses.—Mr. Hatcher, l\\o. distinguished member from Wilkinson, lias introduced into the H. of R. a resolution to prevent meetings, commonly called caucuses,being held in this place, other than such as have in view the interest of Franklin College. We arc decidedly friends of this caucus or Convention system. Wc believe it to be the most correct and republican mode of nominating candi- dates for office, nnd wo should be pleased if the leading men from all parts of the State, who arc in the habit of meeting here at Commencement for the purpose of ex pressing the will of the people, in the nomination of suit able individuals for office, would select 3omc other place for holding their Conventions: for although, when held here, the College has no more to do with them than has the University of Gottingen in Germany, yet, they have always operated on the minds of such men as Mr. Hatcher,to the prejudice of the institution-and everything calculated to prejudice the minds of the ignorant touching the College, should be scrupulously observed, and obvia ted if possible by its friends. Mr. Hatcher’s resolution, we look upon as the very quintessence of the ridiculous; yet, we think such demonstrations of ignorant prejudice, should not be lost on the friends of the Colleg *; and that Millod^evillc, or some other place, should bo fixed upon for holding such meetings. If Milledgcvillo should be selected, Mr. Hatcher will have them more immediately under liis eye, and aliould they prove obnoxious or con taminating there—why, ho will hnvc nothing to do but •gislatc them out of the place, with other nuisances, sueh as gamblers and pickpockets—not forg tting the ignor amuses who happen to find their way into the legislative Ilalls. —QiGfr— The Convention.—Wo conclude this week the publi cation of tho proceedings of this important body. We havo always been decidedly in favour of a convention of the people as a measure better calculated to effect the great object which we nil profess to have at heart —the removal of Southern grievances—than ordinary legislative action. Yet, wc cannot disguise the fact that, at tho same time we have approved of this mode of proceedure, and sanctioned tho late effort to arouse the people to action on the subject, wo have had hut alight hopes of its effecting that unanimity of feeling and singleness of purpose among them, calculated to insure a degree of success commensurate with tho im portance of the object to be attained. Tho first grnnd error, snd wc conceive that from ..hich nearly all the misfortunes consequent to the proceedings of l he convention have originated, may be attributed to its original projectors—to that over zeal oneness in the cause, (and under the circumstances very pardonable) which seems to have blinded them to the fact of the moral impossibility of getting up a con vention of tho people, successfully, in the very short ipace of three moritns nnd a half! Those gentlemen jljould have reflected on the difficulty of uniting a whole people on a subject of such vital importance, bo- fire they resolved to risk the consequences of a defeat or a failure on a campaign so limned, and means inadequate. They should have reflected well on the aitualion and character of parties in our State—of th« oil and water qualities which have ever characterized those parties—of the great difficulty of uniting them heart and hand in any general course of action, on any given subject, snd on the utter hopelesanesa of ulti< mate success, w ithout unity of feeling and unity of ac tion, between parties so nearly balanced as are the two great parlies in this State. Had they given them selves time to weigh well those difficulties—fixed upon and matured a plan for reconciling the discordant ele ments upon which they had to work, and given »ho people time to reflect before they were called upon to act, we should in all probability, have been spared the infortunate, nay disgraceful scene witnessed at Mil ledgeville on the 16th inst. Yet, whilst we lament this oversight in the original projectors of the convention, we would by no means justify the course of those gen- tlemen, who, taking advantage of it, entered into the deliberations of the convention with but one apparent ■ bject—its entiro overthrow. To say the least of it, their object and their courso lor effecting that object, were unpatriotic in the extreme. We have no fault to find with Mr. F-*rs}thand Ins friends in contending for the prinriplca involved in his resolutions—they may have been legitimate and correct in the abstract—but the practical attempt at nullifying the whole conven tion, because a majority ot its members differed in their views in relation to them—exhibited by the secession of those gentlemen, we are not prepared to sanction ; for, although this secession did not produce the entire effect calculated upon, yet, it hia weakened immensely the weight of tho convention at home, and greatly in jured its influence abroad. Thoae gentlemen certainly should never have entered into the deliberations of that body as a convention, unless they had been fully pre- people, and the )v if.it? Mr. F. and his friends the convention, and *h conceive that the will of the people expressed either hy tho adoption or rej- ction of the proceedings of the con vention, would have settled the point in a most satis- factory manner ; and have saved those gentlemen sc ceders the necessity of claiming for themselves the an* ti-Uepublican privilege ot settling it in their stead. W e observed before, thAt the comae of those gentlemen to say the least of it, was unpatriotic in the extreme. This may he considered a very harsh charge—we are very reluctant to make it, for among them we find gentle men of the first order of intellect —gentlemen who have faithfully and ably served their country in the field and the cabinet—gentlemen with whom wo have .been proud to act as politicians, and whose public comae up the time of their secession from the bio Anti-Taiili convention, has elicited our warmest approbation; yet, if wc “loved Cwsar, we love Home more”—and cannot hesitate to choose between the cause cfour op pressed State, and those of our friends who may prove recreant to herennse. Had those gentlemen the sight est ground for believing the convention would adopt a rash or unconstitutional mode of action in resisting the faritl laws, we could then find at leas? tho shadow of an excuse for them. Hut what are the bet 4 in the case? Did they not know that there were not ten men in the convention, who w’erc disposed to pursue such a course? Were they not apprised that barely a dozen members of that body advocated the doctrine of nullification, nnd that they, even if they had power, would not have dared to outrtgo public opinion so far as to rccmnmenrt nullification to the people of Geoigia ? For ourseltrfes, we have looked in vain for any thing objectionable in the course recommended by the committee of 21; and indeed we could not have desired the convention to have presented to the people for their adoption, a course more liberal, more conciliatory, mote linn or more dig- itied, than the one contained in its resolution?. This document, as amended, we present to our readers in another column, and earnestly recommend it to their consideration. pared to recognize it as such ; and after having taken ] their scats ns members, we can conceive ofno apology, I carrying with it the slightt st'shade of plausibility, for! their conduct afterwards. There is ono consideration which must of itself baf fle forever their attempts at a satisfactory explanation ! of their course. They objected to the convention, mainly, because ofits illegality. Now, the convention,! whether i'lcgally constituted or not, claimed no right I to act independently of the people—its object was not | to dictate a oourao fur the people of Georgia to pursue * in the vindication of their violated rights, but to consult and devise f-r tlie-o. n nlr.n far the attainment of this desirable end r > tie hilt tcagent of the 7th November, 1832. Resolved bu the Senate and House of Rep• resniLtlives o f the State of Georgia, in Gener al Assembly met: Thai the Governor lie, nnd .1A HI US WHITTEN, W ISHES to sell liis l.ot ot In") Hundred and fifty Acres, ofncartv all good firmin'; land, lying 14 Nurth from Gainesville, in (lull county, (conti- I.P in ||< r-l.v authorized to contract and suit- Vu-uMo the fi-dd Region.) with a plantation of .bout .. r . r.i. n ti jt ,»Jt) Acres of cleared Laud, enclosed with good fences t imho for n pnn’cd copy of Ihe Gold and Land is also on the premises, a comfortable dwelling * house, with other necessary buildings sufficient to ac commodate a large family. The plantation is well wa* icred and situated in a very public place. The terms of payment will he made easy, and possession given to suit the purchaser. December, 1—37—2L Good liar gains. drawing of the present land lotteries, mid liaiisimt to the clerk of tin; inferior court of e.v h rottn-y in this Slnlp, such prinlptl lists of said I'llleries, for the benefit of (lie citizens of tlioir re-pceltvo counties, und thnl lie pay for the sonm out of any money in the treasury, not otherwise nppinpriuted—ntitl stud clerk is hereby insiruelrd und required to keep in his office, snirl list, und bv no means to permit it to he tirlien or enrrted therefrom. Read nnd agreed to. THOM AS STOCKS, President. In llto House of Representatives, 22d Nov. 1832, rend nnd eoncurred. T. IIWNES, IMF. subscriber has on hand for sale between Two 3 an,I I hree Hundred tread ot fine tut bog., at sever al Plantations near the l.ongnwsni|>, ill Cherokee coun ty; snd several line Stocks of Csttle, among which H Twenty nr Tbirtv line milch Cows. Also, seversl Ann l.nts of Corn nnd Fodder, at tive different plantations; nil ot wlueli I will sell low lur cuab, or will take in pin one or I wo likely ydOegnegro boys of good character, or one or two good vonng horses would be received also in Speaker of the H. Roprosontulives, pro torn. I those who are disposed to purchase Slock , .1 v... nr io„i i mid Corn low, would do well to call and see for them- Approvcd, Nov. 24. 1832. I M | V c.. AMBROSE H.VHNAGE. Dec.—I—37—31. WILSON LUMPKIN.Gov. To Ihe Clerks of Ihe In ferior Courts oj Ihe several Counties. Under the foregoing resolution, wo have hern directed by the governor, to furnish to each of the clerks of the inferior courts of the Stntc, n register of the gold region nnd land loilcrics : mid the lists heretofore furnished to those officers tiro embraced with the same provisions. Ifnny of them have not received 'lie entire lists issued up to this lime, or should they fail to receive any of Ihe numbers hereaf ter published, on receiving notice to that ef fect wo will promptly supply tho deficient numbers.—Editors Federal Union. MARKI5D On the evening of (he 22<I Nov. 19.12, by Ihe Rev. Ilcnjamin Rlan'o’i Mr. FRANCIS DOMER, of Colum bia county, to Mims ELIZ \BETH HOWARD, of Ogle thorpe. SCHOOL. T HE Subscriber will oiicn % School on the first of January next, far the instruction of boys snd youth, lie Mill teach afl the bianchca belonging to a regular Academic courso, and prepare thoae for College who may on desirous to enter it. A new house !iuh been erected on hia own premises for that purpose. EBENEZER NEWTON. Athena, Dec. 1.—37—At. C LARK SHERIFF’S SALE.—Oo the first Tuesday in JANUARY next, will be sold at the Court house in W atkinsville, Clark county, within the usual hours of sale, tho following property to wit: All the Right, Title and Interest of Janette Davenport, in and to five Negroes, to wit: Betty a woman, about 23 years of age, and her two children{ Car a hoy, about 4, and Milissa n girl, about 2 years of age; Easier a woman, shout 2« years of age; and Cato a boy, about 20 years of age : levied on as the property ol Janette Davenport, Hid.it ct to the life Eo> tale of Mrs. Susannah llcwcll. Also, one Negro wo man by the name of Hannah, about 22 years of age: levied on aa ihe property ot William Davenport, to •*- UHty a ti. fa. in favor of Shields and Manly, and sundry other fi. fart. vs. said Janette and William Davenport. All tho Right, Title and Interest of Samuel Gann, in nod to Two Hundred and ninety-nine Acres of tund, more or leas, on the waters of Call’s creek, ad- jomirg Alexander Epps and others: levied on as tha property of said Gann, to satisfy sundry fi. fas. in favor of James Yates and others, vs. said Samuel Gann* ISAAC S. VINCENT, 8h»ff. Dec. 1. host, DEATH OF CHARLES OARROLZ., OF CARROLLTON! We noticed in our last a report in tho Augusta pa pers of Ihe death of thiti distinguished gentleman — -Subsequent uinil* have confirmed tne painful intelli gence.! Cntiles Carroll of Carrollton, the last of the Signers of American lode\ endn.ee, cud ol the resi dence of his son in law U. Cuton, Esq in the City of Baltimore, on Wednesday morning the 14th ult. Full of years and full of honors, the patriot and the sage has boon gathered to his fathers-gathered to that hand of noble spirits, who with him in *76 M pledged their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor,” at the altar of their Country’s liberty. On the announcement of his death, the Major of Bal-1 timure convened the City Council, which adopted reso lutions " prepara’ory in the final arrangements of :he honors ofihe occo9 <in”-iuviting the President of the l'. S. and the heads of departments to join the corpora tion and Citizens ofB iltimore in paving the last melan choly honors to the deceased patriot, &c. His funcrul, which took place on the 17th, is said, notwithstanding Ihe inclemency of the day, to have exceeded any thing of the kind witnessed at Baltimore for many years—his body wus interred at Daughaiugan the manor of tho deceased. O N Monday last, between Mr. J. Ilillyer’s Office and the west cud of town, a Sum of Money.— Among the Bills were n twenty dollar note, of the Merchants and Planters Bank, and one of ten on the Commcrri.il Bank of Macon. A liberal reward will he given for she recovery **f ihe money. Any information will he received at this office. Athens, Dec. 1—37—tf. To Journeymen IIotters. W ANTED immediately by the subscriber, a Journeyman Hatter f itendy hnhirtt, tn whom a perma. rienl aitirution ami g rod wage. wilt tin given. EDWARD LAMPKIN. Per. 1—37 -Ct Death o/Cot. E. C. Talnot!—The Savannah Rrpnhl: can nf the 21 at inat. thus unnnuncca the death of oncof (leorgia’a noblest anna: It is with extreme regret we announce Ihooeiuh of mir fellow townsman. Col, F.ilwanl /’. TalnaU, for- merly a representative in Congress from this Stater— lie was a patriot in everv sense of the word—devoted to Iris eountry- in whose defence he had shed his Mood; chivalric, honorable and brave. Fuithtiil in the ilia- rharge of the different stations which ho held, l>e de servedly possessed the confidence of his ennstituonta. til health caused him to retire from public life ninny years ago—until recently, when ho received tiro ap pointment of Appraiser for this port.” His remains were interred on the23d lost, wiih mili tary honors, at Donadvonturc, near Savannah, the seat of Iris ancestors. From the Boston Daily Advertiser. Death oj Dr. Spurshtim.—Died on tho ove- ■ting ut (lie 10th mat. ulier tin tllnous of two or three wnuka, of typhus lever. Dr. Gnspard Spmzheitn. He was u distinguished Germ in physician, the author of seven I works on ihe Anulomy und Physiology of the (train and the Nervous System, und the eelebra’ed coadju tor of Dr. Gull in expounding and propagating a peculiar system ol Phrenology. Dr. S. was born near Treves, tit the year 1776. He pur- atied his medical studies in Vienna, where, in 1800, he heard the lectures of Dr. Gall on Craiii logy. From that time th-atudv became his chief pursuit, und he visited several coun tries for the purpose of prosecuting his re searches, and at ihe same lime giving public lectures mi his favourite subject. Since his arrival in this city, which was a few months since, Dr. S. has made n most favorable tin- ptesston, from his extensive learning and Ins agreeable manners. His lectures were atten ded hy a large audience, und gave great tatis- iHClinn, lor Ihe ingenuity und learning which they displayed, independently of tho peculiar system which it was their leading object to de- velope. Ills death is sincerely lamented,aa ’hat of an amiable and accomplished man. We presume that our citizens, m commuting his body to the earth, will not do tt wnlioui some demon- stralion of respect for the memory of a learned stranger, who has closed Ins days among Change in Ihr C'ahil't.—Letters from Washington mention fiat Mr. Lni.i,:»o>n n to go abroad—Mr. Mcl.ane lo become Secr-uryof State, and Mr. Itives Serrctarynftbe Treaamj --liar, Georgia*. University of Georgia. rjDpllK Faculty of Franklin (’oIIvl’c ask the attention .Cl of tin? public to tlio following sUmenieiitft : For adiiiifrtion into the F'oahman Clan*, a Crtmlidato miiHl have a correct knowledge of lit least !> of Cicero’H Ointton*, the whole of Virgil, John nnd Arts in tho Groi-k Testament, the whole of Grren Minoru, Englinh Grammar and Geography, and lie iituat be w ell acquaint ed with Arithmetic. Studies of the Freshman Year. 1st Term—From August to .November—l-ivy, Gneca Majoru, 1 nt vol. and (lie French Language. 2d Term— From Junuarj to April—Livy, Grata Ma- jora, 1 hi vol. nnd French continued, and Geography. 3d Term—From April to August—Livy and Green Majoru, I at vol. concluded. French continued, and DuyV Algebra, through ratio and proportion. Studies of the Sophomore Year. 1 At Term—Fiom Auguat to November Horace, Greta Majors, 2d vol. Algebra concluded, and three bookrt of Geometry. (Playfuir’a Euclid.) 2d Term —From January to April—Ureca Majors, 2d vol. continued. Horace and Geometry concluded, and an abridgment of Rhetonck. 3d Term—Front April to Auguat—Gnoru Majors, 2d vol. concluded, Modern Languages, (Main Trigonometry, Mensuration, Surveying and Botany. Studies of the Junior Year. Navigation, Engineering, Conic Sections, Spherical Geometry, Spherical T ignnninoirv,Natural PhiloHopliy, Natural lii*ior), Logic, Bdlea l.eltrea, and Critici-m, Evidence of the Chrisiian Religion, Cicero de Oratorc, a >d the (Hind of Homer. Greek Testament every Mon- duy morning. Studies of the Senior Year. Natural History continued. Agronomy, Chemistry, Moral Philosophy, Mental Philosophy, and Political Economy; together with attention to such clasirir* air may be directed hy the President, and Forensic Dispu tation. Strut nltenrinii iv paid to Composition and Declama tion hy all the Clasae*. Eveiy Candida'** far admission into the Frcrthman Clasrt, iiiutit he nt l*«Hfit 11 years old, and every one for an advanced standing, nt prop wrionai age. I he rates o Tuiti n, the Library fee, and Servants' •tire, ate 39 dollars per annum, psjatde half yearly in advance, viz. 13 ilolUis on the l?*t of February, ami 13 dollars oil the 1st of \iignst ; and any (Undent entcung College after the before mentioned tunes, is required to pay ptoporlionally in advance. Parents and Goardiaua, who wish to wend their Sontt and Wards 10 this Institution, can by reference to tie firegoing statement ot the (Indira, at once ace what are the requirements fur joining any class of College, at any time of the year, as they can be received at any tune, it pr« pafed, upon the requlktlc atudiea. Any in< dividual, however, who duet not with to pursue a regu lar course, can attend to such subjects an lie may choose, for the study of which he is prepared, and will oo leaving the Institution, receive from the Faculty a certificate of the progreea he has made. All wh • desire it will have opportunity of atudying iLhrew, Spanish, German and Italian, for which no additional chatgcs are made. Instruction in the various Departments of Literature •*nd Science, Is given by Lectures, as m ell as by the stu dy of approved text-nooks. The faculty regard it important that each atudent should be present on the first day of every Term, as recitations will commence on that day. B .ant can be obtained in reaped able houses, at from Dto I idollars per month. The next College Term will com me < ce on the 1st January, 1833. By order of the Faculty. WM. L. MITCHELL, Secretary. Dec. i.-37—4* SHERIFFS’ SALES. C LARK Sheriff’sSnle.-On the first Tuez- day in JANUARY next, will be sold at the Coutt I louse in the town of VYatkinsvillc, Clark county, within the usual hours of sale, the following property, lo wit; Ono Hundred nnd Fifty Acren of Lttnd.moret or less, in the county of Clark, on the waters of the middle tbrk of the Oconee river, adjoining Cheatham und others: levied on aa the property of John Kinney, to satisfy a fi. fa. issued on the foreclosure of a Mort gage in favor of Stevens Thomas vs. John Kinney. One improved Lot in tho Town of Athena, known and distinguished in the plan of said Town, by Lot number Thirty-eight, (38) containing One Acre, more or less, hounded on the west by Lot number thir* ty-suveii .* levied on as the properly of Gage D. Ed* wa.ifa, to satisfy a fi. fa. issued on the foreclosure of * Mortgage in favor of Adrian N. Mayer, and other fi. fag. vs. Gage D. Edwards. One improved Lol or Parrel of Land, tho number of Acres not known, situate,.lying and being in the 1'ovvn of Athens, not within the original plan of said Town, hut adjoining thereto, and bounded on the north by tho Lot owned hy Adrian N. Mayer, and on the south hv John Talmage, and fronting Ihe main road to Augusta by w av of the Town Bridge, end owned for merly hy David Meriwether: levied on as the properly ot Rodmun Sisson, deceased, to satisfy a fi. fa. issued on the foreclosure of a Mortgage in favor of John Shep herd vs. Joseph Lignn, administrator dc bonis non of Rodman Sisson, deceased. JAMES HENDON, D. Sheriff. Dec. 1. C LARK Sheriffs Sale.—On tho first Tues day in FEBRUARY next, will bo sold a! the Court House in the town of Walkintville, Clark county, within the usual hours of sale, tho following property, to wit. Two Negroes, to wit: Rachel, a woman, aboil' 2G years ul age, and Hester, a woman, about 27 years of age: levied on as tho property of George W. King, to satisfy a fi. fa. issued on the foreclosure of a Mortgage, in favor of Stevens Thomas vs, George W. King. JAMES HENDON, D. Sb’ff. Dec. 1. ACKSON Sheriff's Salo.—On the firm Tursdayin JANUARY next, will he aold at the Court*house ill the town of lefierson, Jackson county’, within the usuul hours of aalc, tho following property, to wit; One Rond Wagon nnd Go*r, Ono Grtv stud Colt, one hay Mare, one sorrel Horse, one blank et, ono jug, two aiid a half bushela corn, one axe, onu skillet, and eighteen head of Sheep: levied onto satis- fy a fi. fa. issued from Franklin Superior Court, In favor of the State of Georgia, vs. John G. White, Thomas «lute, and William White. Property pointed out by antes Morris. JOHN RANDOLPH, D. Sh’ff. Dec. 1. a ACKSON Sheriff’s Salo.—On the first V® T'leadajr in JANUARY ntr.l, will b- .old, »t the Court-house in the town of Jeflcrann, Jackson county, within the usual hours of sale, the following property, to writ ; Four Hundred nnd three and ono half Acres of Laud, more or loss: levied on as the property of Edwaid I'harr, granted to Wagnan, adjoining Jaatis and others, to vatisfy a fi fa. in favor of Wood & Hob son, vh. said Pharr, and Jainea McMillan aecurity on stay of execution. one Tract of Land, containing One Hun* dred and Forty Acres, more or lean, on the waters of the Mulberry, adjoining Burson and o'hera: levied on mi* the property of Dchlu Shaw, to satiety a ft. fa. in fa vor of Suiannah Shaw, Ex’x. kc. vs. said Delila Shaw. Ono Tract of Land, containing Two Hun* dred and seventy Acres, more or Iras, on the water* of the Oconee river, ad|«iiiiing MtCluskey and other*:—• levied on a.-* the property of John Kerlin, to sa'irfy a n» fa. m favor *.f Henderson and Willis Willingham, Ad- uuniatrators, ti;c. vs. Middleton Cowan and said Ker- li,,. G. F. ADAMS, D. Sh*fC Dec. 1. For Sale. A NEGKD MAN, in excellent labourer, with hi* wile, whoix .good wuher and iron.,, and plan, cook. Term, accommodating. Enquire at this office. No*. 10- 34-31. “NOTICE. [ HEREBY fore warn alt persona trom trading for a ten dollar promissory note of hand, given by m« to Thomas J. Galiglnly and Samuel A. Wale* in preten ded Co. The note was given in June, or July lost, and payable to the eaid Wales hy the first day of October thereafter. An the same was fraudulently obtained by th* said Galightly, therefore I do not intend to pay th* same unless couipt lied by law. WILLIAM GOBLE. •Vov. 17—33—1'.