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BOU.AK-
Al.o? SIX at,
yem p p(| tiIKKK DOLLARS per
Reßl.V‘ , 4 \®orVufK .»OLI,AR O a,,
Rlii■:* .ininuod (except at the choice of
■ !'alia rrmiutvUy •
»veHtW. t tw.l« 3-4
Bi;; 1
o"m MnSre.
■%ev-r -"yfSLw in« * nave the number o.
,ii!er.'le'l to I* or vvtwkly. written on them, 01
it- M ,'i''er<!wi'-weell/ull f.rbi.l, and car-
Hl'iC 1 '■ i-,.« i,r,<iD himself the of ah remit-
K..IM' ’ ,sl t. ultn y Mail-tl.e person rci.iu-
B I.t -otey "t a '"I , ltn rt obtaining from the VI.
B*S ,p: ""' orthe -
Bvuvs^ ,r n^' ; ‘^^ j ;° STATK! '
1“K :»■,““Si"'
■? tael three ii. the an.irnoori. tu
■ L rnnnty in wliifli the property n
■*£? iifMM sole, meat be(ttven ma P«W*
fie . ,-* nrev is lo Hus day oi >aU*.
Mt ..roperty, must tie Rivet
■of" 1 |l|C Xen'.Uv--revioil- to the<ltiy ol etif
J creditors of at. estate, must 1/
be nm.le to the t'cirt .
■^(Srto™”cll LAND or NKITHObS. it.-
-
fjrgwf fysrogScr ib.
fcssil FvToC Mt)>o'-K
•• |{t* just, ami lt«r not.**
I TO COKR3-SP0 VIM-iXT s *
■pumvH," and the account of the recent
■nog in Oglethorj.e County, a. o received,and
Hi be published.
I 'pm; FLF.i TION.
He present below, the Returns of the Llec-
I, in tins County, on Monday last, will, the
Ltimiof the votes fur Delegates to the Lou
■lion, which we have not teceivod; but the
■itnlaies noininatecl by the ComniitteiT ap
Illegal the bile Meeting .at Windsor—Alt. ssi b.
Huh, Chiming, and King, wore of course
as there was no opposition.—Ewd. J-
Im. Ksi|. the Nullification candidate, though
■ten, received, it will be seen, a very respect-
B vole, connideting all the discouragements
Bit wlnch lie uni —a vote much larger, we
Bu.lk.ii. I, tit.m was expected by his opponents,
Buns which cannot fail to cliter his political
Bus. And Hi niiy Mealing. Esq. who was
B »rli d hy the Nulliflers, hoc. him:, though op-
Btil to Nullification, he was no To iff man, has
Bn n It.s highly popular opponent {a man, who
Boirii b eisled, mid his friends also, that lie
■ld not he batten In the county,) by a linnd-
Biu in.ij'i uy.—The Nnlliti.ns, though beaten,
■ llirir ila'y like free men, and have, under nil
ButiW, mees, much cause ot enuoufngeinent. j
B theiu liiild on ii anly lu then principles, and |
■I maud, whatever the odds against them, I
II '■ truih is inigbiy and must prevail." In nil j
Biggins for tintli, and great principles, all Ids j
■y proves ihiil the f.iiih of their disciples must |
■ tiifcdoieit he trusted; and now is the lime.
lidal lor the Niilhliers; let them not slirink on-1
r it, and there i? no fear of tin; result. Their
umpb \i ill iissiM-dly he glorious, in proportion
•bo eeverity of the trial.
SEN \TE,
City. Spirit Creek, Tarver's, Total.
tajina. 457 44 25 550
wi, 38D 10 4 40(j
111 I‘RESENTATIVES.
' wn ' k ' 14 685 1
'its, bill) no 9 C 47
l t s - 6® 22 9 OMO j
Kk ' “ lj 37 22 374 I
CONGRESS,
tide, 7)5 51 09 035
byno, (07 59 03
HM» 21 i 504 i
m#r i 5(18 30 23 501
J" 4 is a 525 :
,rrell . «1 20 4 405
T S ’ 400 19 25 441 •
*5 449 18- o M I
Sl,!r ' 3411 28 q.j tm
anbam, 289 nl ?8 m
279 32 2- :;| 7 !
J > to ». 854 35 do oTI (
371 20 13)
s'van, 188 r, ”
tins 174 o ', *1 206
*4 *> r » QQO
iivna,,. jrij *•>
,rrls «. 178 17 ..
™ ilf . 161 1 o
115 3 » !»
ll l '™; P “« j iIIUAII.V tIIKIINICLI -
ironicle I >U >,,51 " l, S ,h « proposed Daily
ligne.t ’«° r ’‘® fu,low ' n g reasons It was
ilh due's a Da ‘ ly Pap ° r must bc ' 10 ~locl
I, tobe rV nd M tlle i* rt T oaa ls indicat
'PPe-1 r s “ Com,nfilci “l character, and
8 Comine 616 ?' f ° r patrona ß e > principally to
Mti. ercial wronmnity 1 and of course,
ilpLn halU r ° UroW " Cityi Tl '° Cummer
uni, . 1,1,3 cil y, «nd indeed of tiro
“rtliCTi I,* 11 " ’’ * 8 cb ’ u *ly in 9io hands of
tula,| v J" 1 a "f ,hc Politics of the cily, par
ei of lyranr, S T y Und ° r " ,eir co,,trol ' A se
)J t atieiit o|l, ' r<ißs ' oria i °" ibu one hand,
e ®Ufur itiHti Ul nt f l,!(;tecl a,1( l contemned ap
f'i ce on the oiher^a'-e,unfortunately,
stvveen n!,’, Crealin ß mark «'‘ distinctions
ft/ Wl . s . at ;‘r n a,ld Soulhe ‘" /«t«r«s(s and
C T^ UMli °“' ,on S agitated and
ir.,: -" '—, be plundered, beg
-taiii,y to cmici * no.ui, Bn d its
I* decid 6( ] ami / Capl ’ allßtß? is nt, w about to
row,’, of ea 'to the self.pro.ee
°- e cl 'iusticß ~ Sovereignty ; since all
at at R nrt , h 8 , 1 10 :mcls of >be oppressor.
B 'lHinged,ijl, J T* cn,,urunce
-ofti .’fiiiaU. ~*• i * ’ ‘b- “- ? i■•iiliaing cxistGiirf
u 'nd.h,
es ’ ,le «‘tttnone “: ,n " b ■ h:cr;
ed 10 th «
ICBa , and i t .. ' ••• ; ’< ctmmer lal hi.
I 1
on of a S ‘l Will
c ' 7 n-- . ' •' ‘J - •- t,av(i ui
lies, '' ' ur " h u,.v ;
. ‘ ' 1 *• aili
•» .... .....
' "■■■ ■
the North. Cherishing no preferences with re
gard to men, hut devoted lo p.inciple, and, in
die contest alluded to, uking side with the in
ipied and oppressed, and the State and people
to whom "we owe a first allegiance and support,
;it has been our lot honestly to differ from the
Noilherners in opinion, and our privolege, as a
; freeman, and our duty, as the conductor of a
; free Press, candidly and freely to express our
differences of opinion. This has rendered our
Press generally unpopular, with Northern men;
and the first decided act of our professional ca
reer, immediately after its commencement, in
I the advocacy of Gen. Jacksov, the Southern
choice for the P.estdency, against Mr. Adams,
who had been supported hy us former conduc
tor, caused a withdrawal of the principal portion
of thou subscriptions, and the settingup of a
new Press in opposition to us. Os this we did
nut, and do not complain. They had the right
to take their course, the one way,as we had the
other —to withdraw their subscriptions as they
pleased, and give them<whero they pleased.—
The country people sustained us, then, as they,
mo, had tlie right lo do, and far more than sup
plier! the amount of patronage wo lost; and the
extent of our circulation rendered it to the in
terest of even those who wore not subscribers,
to give us a portion of tbeir advertising custom
Thus proceeded our paper, till the interests
and WK-hes of the community, seemed to call for
one'.f more Daily papers, and wo offered pro
pi-sals, which were at least as favorably received,
as we could have expected; and, wo then de
signed, as we deelu.ed, to devote it principally
to commercial manors. We were absolutely
sick of politics, and tho contentions into which
they had drawn us, and desired to withdraw
from them, as much as we could—and disgusted,
toti, with the selfish, unprincipled, and heart
less sjii. it, which pervaded tho politics
of tlie whole country; and foreseeing the ap
proaching crisis, an I its violent contentions, wc
had several times offered our Press tor sale, and
on terms, far below its actual value, with a view
of retiring from public life altogether. Nut suc
ceeding iu this, we determined to withdraw tho
interests of our paper, as P.tr as duly vvou’d per
mit, into another channel, by devoting it, as a
Daily paper, to commercial affairs. But the
grout political question of tho countiy, becoming
moro exciting and critics’, by tlie final refusal
ofCongiess, to moot tiro Just and moderate ex
pccthtions of the South, the usually free expres
sion of our sentiments on dial occasion, piompt
jcd by an honest sense of duty, and a contempt
of all mean, selfish, and hypocritical disguises,
called down upon us those denunciations and
heartless calumnies of the presses of tho
.Suite, and political opponents around us,
which rendered the defence and advocacy of
our principles inev liable, and threw us farther,
mid more inextricably than ever, into the atena
of politics. Regret! lug this, but still determined
, to do our duty, in whatever sphere wc find otir
-1 selves, however painful it may ho to us, and re
j gatdless of all consequences, we have gradually
■ become more and more obnoxious lo those, upon
j whom a daily paper must depend for support,
| and were thrown thereby, tho more completely
| on the patronage of the Agricultural interest of
j the South, to which such a paper is neither ua
| cossary or desirable. That,interest,so far,has not
j been unmindful of our honest efforts in its be
half; for while we have lost most of our few
remaining Not them subscribers, and the North
ern advertising custom, our subscription Itstdias
increased, within the last few months, upwards
of one third of the whole amount, and continues
| lo increase more and moro rapidly as the time
| progresses. And though our pecuniaiy in
leresl may suffer much lor a time, by the loss
i of the Northern advertising custom, yet we have
■ no fear that a Free Press can ultimately be put
j down, merely because it is a Free Press; yet,
if it must be so, why be it so, and the shame
I upon others, not us. V\ e will continue to do
1 our duty, regardless of consequences, personal
or pecuniary, and had rather it should die a ffeo
press, than live a servile, subservient, and sla*
j visit one.
Under these circumstances, tho publication of
a Daily paper is out of the question, and wo
( therefore decline it, and shall continue our Semi
weekly and Weekly, as usual. They who have
proscribed us, both politically aud professionally,
as fur us they have tire means, and attempted lo
“set a MAttK on us,” and all who think with us,
for the free and proper expression of our honest
I political opinions, are not to be expected lo sum
I lain any paper in w hich those opinions arc ex
pressed, either a Daily, or any other. Os this
we make no complaint. Complaint is no part
of our nature. They have chosen tire it course
and we ours—and of the course we have taken,
wo aro prepared to lake the consequences, be
they what they may. The question is, Which
shall be sustained by lire Statu and tlie South—
they who fearlessly support them and their in
terests, or they who take the antagonist side
lire side of the lordly Not them capitalists—and
strenuously oppose them? And this question ne
cessarily presents itself to the Southern people.
That there are antagonist interests between the
North and the South, is no fault of ours. W'e
did not make them, hut have long labored to
remove them. And how have vve excited the
enmity of Northern men? How, but, finding
those antagonist interests, and being obliged
honestly lo take one side or the other, vve have
taken that of justice and right, and the countiy
which supports us and gives us bread! Ami it,
in advocating the interests of the Sou'-h, vve have
been proscribe:) by Northern men, vvliat does it
prove, but w hat vve have honestly arnt fearless
ly alleged against them, and now defy them to
disprove—mat they ate decidedly Oj posed lo
the interests of the South, and are laboring, by
tbeir proscription, to promote those of their io
l,uions, friends, and acquaintances, “at home
he Manufacturers of the North—the oppressors
the South? Did the South proscribe them?
trdi.i her sons go lo their section, the Noith,
nd there vote for resolutions to proscribe and
| ul do*.- u Northern men, or those politicians and
| ..rpers who support Northern interests? Have
.|.iut they voted to ptosenbe and denounce those
Southerners most opposed to tho oppressions of
1 1 tbeir relatives and friends at the North, and
thereby to put down the opposition to that op
•* | ptession and promo*- arid probing the injuries
, . under which the South basso long groaned? And
-, can they reasonably expect tho Southern people
11 quietly and lamely to submit to all litis? —or just.
1 j 'y complain, when those whom they would pro
r i Bcl i * lo as B-cbcls, Traitors, aud Dieunionists, ex
r; orcise the equally unquestionable right, of she w
> ing that they are “a class of people with distinct
* | interests and feelings, decidedly opposed to the
1 country whi.h protects and supports them?"—
>| When they commenced the game of prose, ip.
, j tiun, they shouhl have recollected, that like most
- . others, it has two sides to it, and that, unequal
i I as it seemed, they might possibly bo tiio losers;
i { lo i, as “llio race is nui always to ilie’swift, nor
1 i the battle to the strong," so the game of pro
tjscription may not always ho lo the most cuiiii
)' dent and proscriptive of spirit? Southern men
i j commenced not this game against Northern !
-1 men; and when commenced against them,
, shall they be blamed for shewing that they are
-. not without fault who threw the first stone? 1
- | fehall the Nullihersbu blamed fur thus fairly hs
! oa }' ll R to nullify the unjust proscription leveled
, against them? Are they indeed expected hy
j the Northerners here, as hy those at the North,
j | tamely and meekly to bow their necks to what j
r I ever yoke of oppression may bo prepared for
j them? And shall they indeed rail, because "the 1
, i measure they mete out unto others, is meted out'
• unto them?” II id they hut “done unto others,
' as they would hat e others do u* to them,” vve i
’ - should have been the last ‘o assail them. When |
i yet were wo ever known to take the side of pro i
set iption, persecution, or oppression? When did 1
, ,wo ever hesitate to deletid tho proscribed or \
; persecuted, the abused or oppressed, however '
, 1 weak they, or strung the oppressot? Often have j
! vve openly & boldly defended Northerners, when
! assailed by Southern men; & but little more than ‘
I twelve months ago, when tiisy were assailed bv
' one ol the most disdngiiished and eloquent
statesmen of Georgia, in a Public Meeting at
> Athens, who alone, then rdse and defended
thorn, and vvunrly contended against arousing
i sectional prejudices, and urged a spirit of liar
1 mony and eoncil.ation—appealing to every
; argument in their favor, and in favor of
I an appeal to reason and aigumcnt, and a reli
i ance on their sense of justice ? The Resolution
■ which lod to this defence, was first passed with
but one nay, and that one outs; and wo after
- wards moved its reconsideration, and that it bo
’ stricken ouq and it was ultimately stricken out,
1 though strongly defended by several distingue?!
’ od gentlemen, and opposed by ourself alone,-
i Had vve entertained prejudices against Noitheni
1 men, is it likely vve should have done this? If
’ they have belied our arguments in their favor,
1 and our reliance co their justice, tho fault is none
1 oi ours. And if there he strife between us, let
* them bear in mind, who cast tho first stone.
• We were not tlie assailant, nor those whom we
’ defend against their proscription ; and if or
* of us turn when troddop on, it is because we are
i not wholly divested of that spirit which God has
t given even unto the Worm.
f .
HENRY' COUNTY MEETING.
t A Meeting of tho citizens of Henry County,
■ was held in Macdonough, on Wednesday, the
/ 19th hist, to discuss tire subject of the Tariff,
• and the propriety of sending Delegates to the
s Convention in Mtllodgeville. Tito number of
s persons assembled was very small, for the large
s population of the County—probably not more
i than 150—perhaps 175. The notice given, was
very shot t,and pi obably but very partially known,
s It was giveni by the Submission men, without |
3 the least consultation with their opponents, and
t was first seen by the latter on Monday morning,
, j tho 17!It, only two days before. It is presumed,
3 that those who gave the notice, took advantage
3 of the opportunity they had, of duly informing
1 their parlizans, at a distance,.in all quarters;
31 and vve are informed, that Submission man o
■ lone, camo in from some distant districts, where
| there are many warm resistance men, perhaps
f a majority. Tlie result, after all this, may bo
i! easily imagined. Tho Submissionists triumph
■ I cJ —if such a success, so gained, can be called
)j a triumph. The first measure, after the ap-
Jpointrnent of Chairman and Secretary, was a
3 decision, that no person present, not a citizen of
, i the county, should be permitted to address the
t Meeting, which was opposed by Col. Pi itit
■ and Col. Tuoulu, and advocated hy Co). Clark,
- Col. Moore, and Mr. Sellers. Resolutions
s were offered hy Col. Ciatk, asserting the ino- j
t quality ami oppressiveness of the Tariff, hut not,
3 its uheonstitutionaliiy ; denouncing Nullification,
( and Resolving to send Delegates to the Slat*
g Convention, hut denying to the Convention, tin;
h authority, to do moro than make a simple ex
. prussion of opinion against the Tariff, and in fa- ,
. vor of its repeal. These resolutions were a avo
- cated hy tho mover and Col. Moore, who,
j while they asserted tho oppressiveness of the
- Tariff, did not i resend to show it, but gave some
. hundred arguments against it —thereby leaving
e it to be inferred, that they thought a simple as
e Hurt ion, that it is oppressive, all sufficient, huij 1
0 that it required much argument to show loal it j
„ U not so. They are light—Countcr Rcsolu- ■
a nuns, mild, but ossetiing the ( -
il as well as oppress!voncss of the Tariff, ami re- j 1
a solving to resist, hy all constitutional mean ~
y wore offered by 'ones, Esq. and advo tated (
*, by Col. IVmr and Col. Tcoolr, in very able |
e and animated speeches, which called forth ; ,
1 and well-deserved applause, by their p
- appropriate, and patriotic sentiments. T: eor j
3 dinary mode of putting the question, on the sub
3 slitute firs*, was opposed by the advocates ot
y the original resolutions, who contended, os they ■
said, for “ the Miller’s rule—first come, first
- served)" and the question was accordingly pul 1
s on tho original resolutions first; ami they vve.o i
I adopted, on a division, by a majoiity of about
, one-fourth, or perhaps, one tliiid—say, about9o, i
1 „ r 100,to about 50 or 00. It would seetnff, om this, '
1 that the Nullifiors are pretty strong iu Henry
2 county. ,
3 1 Now, if those who got up the VcctidJ:
conscious of the truth aud ju.-tico of their cause,
arid desired that truth and right, wherever they
might be, should prevail, and not men or party,
why should) they have been afraid, or opposed,
to hear atgument against it ? When were the
Nullifiers known to oppose argument ugaimt
themselves, come (ioni whom it might ? What
mattered it who spoke, whether citizens of tire
county or not, it truth, the be«t information from
boih sides, and a correct and impartial decision,
aiming at the good of the country alone, vvoto,
as they ought to have been, tho primary objects’?
lu most ol tho other similar Meeting s, vve bulievo
st-.Uigurs have cither been specially invited to
| speak, or permitted to do so, without exclusion.
jOne might suppose it desirable, that the utmost
freedom ot discussion should prevail, on all such
occasions* and vve mistake much, if tho people
du not soon distrust the motives and objects of
; those who oppose it.
I In thb County, (Newton) the people of both
parties, st e almost unanimous fur Resistance—
j decided, positive Resistance, “ at all hazauls,”
i as theirdale palriotio and spirited Meeting indi
cated. Tiio old party land-m irks ate broken
jtlovvtt, r;inl it is cheating and gralif-ing in rite
i highest degree, to see both parties thus forget
ting, at once, all their old contests about Men, in
their equal devotion to principle, and palriotio
i regard fur the rights and interests of the State.
From wh.it vve have learned here, wo believe
, litis gratify ing result has been brought about,
chiefly by tho “ Political Tracts," which, in
this county, fell mostly into the bands of public
spit Rod and influential men, of both parties, who
I circulated them, and their valuable information
i and powerful argument, (ieuly and industriously,
among their neighbors and others. In one in-
I stance, a gentleman who received them, (a
jClaik man) sent them regularly, after reading
. tlioiii, to a neighbor, an elderly, anil highly in
tel’igunt and influential, but some what violent
Troup man—who silently read and returned
them, till he came lo Judge Harper’s speech,
delivered in Charleston, which ho returned per
sonally. renruiklng that ho could stand their ar
guments no lunger, ami was satisfied of tliei:
correctness —that the two parties had been quar
relling about men, long enough, and it was now
high lime foi them to look lo principles, and the
suffering interests of the State—and that, for his
own part, warm as be had been about party, be
had now done with it entirely, and hoped others,
aho had been equally warm on the other side,
would join him, in what ought to be the common
object of all, of both parties, the promotion of
those great principles, on which ho felt satisfied
depended the liberties of the country. lie bad
been violently opposed to our paper, but can
didly acknowlodgud that vve wore right, and re
quested to have tlie use of the paper, taken by
the other gentleman, (ill ho subscribed, which
lie h i.; since done, and,vve believe, considerably
advanced the interests of our paper, by bis ex
tensive and much respected influence. We
could relate many other somewhat similar anec
dotes of lire valuable effects of tiro Tracis, as
relate J to us, in various other sections; and, lire
requests fur those publications, aro very numer
ous and general.
Covington, Sept. 21s?, 1832.
NDLMITCVnON.
Tho doctrines of Nullification are rapidly pro
gressing in all quarters, in defiance o( the pro
scription leveled against them, and the odium at
tempted to bo heaped on them, in Gwinnett
county, notwithstanding the resolutions lately
passed there, there arc a large number of openly
avowed nullifiers, principally of the most rutelli
gent, independent, respectable, and worthy ci
lizens; and it is not u little gratifying and flat
terintt to find the nullifiers generally, and almost
uniformly, everywhere, of this class of the peo
pie. Io Lawrenceville, where, hut a few months
ago, hut one Ntillifiur was to be found—(Dr.
T. W. Alexander, a highly respectable eiti
zeu—who, by the by, ho it known to the
traveller in this section, keeps the Law
rencciillii Hotel, one of the very best houses,
l,oth in the excellence of its table and accotno
dutiutis generally, that we have met with in the
up-country)—the population is about equally
divided on tlie subject. And of tho Altornicb
of the Circuit, who attended the Superior Court
in that Village, last week, almost all are openly
and decidedly in favor of the doctrine.
At a numerous aud respectable meeting of
citizens of that county, and others from the ad
[ jacenl counties of Dekalb and Newton, atßock
i bridge, on Saturday last, though very few nulli
i flora were known there previously, after the die-
I eussion a number openly acknowledged the
doctrine, some very violent against it formally.
[ who declared that they had altogether misim
deistood it, and looked upr n it as a proj cl of
1 disunion and revolution. They vvhp had pre
pared the resolutions, doubted, mild as they
were, that they would pass ; but yet they pass
ed unanimously; and one gentleman who had
doubled it, drew up a resolution after the dis
cursiort, approving of nullification, which ho told
us he vvo.s satisfied, ftota (■on.-ultniioii with ninny
off, its, would pass by a very large majority—and
1 would havu offered it, but that vve entreated
him not to do so, hut to leave the impressions
he behoved were made, to time, to eonfjjn and
strengthen them—particularly, as oi>< of the
«l makers in favor of Nullification, had strongly
expressed his approbation of the caution with
which the people adopted what appeared to
them new doctrines, and uigr d them neither to
adopt nullification, nor proscribe it, till they per
feclly understood it—declaring that the Repub*
lie and its liberties were safe so long as the peo I
pie were determined to judge for themselves,!
1 would neither adopt nor proscribe any doc. |
titne’or measure, however lauded or denounc-j
ed, on the authority of any man, or set of men, I
or under Ihe influence of any popular excitement. 1
Among the speakers was Gen. NevvnaN, whose |
able and excellent address made a very deep j
impression. Ho set forth the inequality, tnjos- j
tics, and oppressions of the Tat iff acts generally, i
aud particularly that of 183*3. in ihetr true light,
•;d *.*. a clearro’jj jr-t r j:r il.a...y which must |
i j have rendered them altogether obvious even lo
> i the dullest mind. And, after explaining and
j justifying his vote against the Tariff of 1832, he
• alluded to ilia proscription attempted against
u him by the editors of itie Federal Union and oth
4 cf®, aud appealed to flie audience, wiihnnevi.
11 doul sincerity and depth of feeling which w r e
B believe reached every heart present, whether it
11 j was likely, after repeatedly shuikling his blood
’! iu defence ol his country, and filling various olft
> ces, during the last twenty five years, with gen
! oral approbation, llnit ho could new be an eno-
D ., rny to that country? Tho deep effect of this ap
-1 peal was evident, and w*o believe every bosom
• internally and promptly responded, IVof We
1 wish evety citizen ol the State could have hoard
1 Iris speech, and they would not have failed, as
> those will not who hoard it, lo do him full jus-
I lice, and repel the attempted preset iption back
j upon its authors. ■
1 ; Iu this county, also, (Dekalb,) them is n large
- number of nullifiers, and in tho Village, (Deca
|tur,) probably an equal portion, or very nearly
• so ; and they are, as elsewhere, continually in
' creasing. “When we consider the odium level
> ed at the doctrine an 1 its odvoeates, how recent
• ly the discussion of it commenced in this State,
1 and how very few persons acknowledged il a
B lew months ago, so far from wondering that it
. j is not more popular, we may well bo astonished
J that it is bu popular as it is, and l ontimiully in
, ( creasing. And under those circumstances, who
i can doubt that it must soon become the uil-pre
■ vailing doctiino of the Slate, and the whole
i South?
t Decatbr, Sept. 17ih, 1832.
Abbeville C. H. 4:h Sept. 1832.
Mr. Pemberton: —Vou will no doubt be inter
ested in an aecooul of tho Submission Meetifig,
held in tins village,yesterday. Tho Meeting took
; place in the Court House, and proclamation was
made, inviting all men of all parlies in. I think
there were four hundred present, about seventy *
or eighty of whom wore submissionists. Dr.
Davis (the Stick Oiirlor) culled Col. Lomax to
the Chair, and a Mr. Seiekin was appointed
Secretary. Tim object of lire Meeting was ex
plained in a very awkward manner by lire
i Chairman, after which, u motion was made by
i the '‘Slick Orator” lo appoint a Committee lo
draft Resolutions, expressive of tiro views of lire '
Meeting. Tlle Committee vetoed for the space (
often minutes, when they returned with a pre
amble and resolutions—(said to have been pro- i
■ pared out of the District.) Tho rioanible, I
which you will see in due time, was decidedly 1
the must objectionable affair I have ever seen.
It is there contended, that any lair jmsseil by a '
majority of Congnss. however unconstitutional
anil oppressive, is binding, until a majority think
, proper to repeal it. The Resolutions wore
equally Hilly. This preamble, and those reso
, Unions, were carried nem con—the Chairman
. having staled that the Meeting was exclusively
for party purposes, and refused to admit tire j
, Republican or State Rights party, tho ptivilege
. of either voting oi debating. At this rime, the
Chairman culled on those of the Submission
party, who wished to address the Meeting, to do
so; whereupon,one arose, Si ranted in a most silly
manner, denounced Messrs. Calhoun &. Mi Dce
eie,produced a roheuioua calculation in reference
to the Tariff, & lint pound sterling, and denounc
ed D. L. Wardlaw, Esq. as tyrannical in his
disposition—he dented ever having been heatd
10 say that he considered tho Tariff'd blessing,
and very wisely took Ins scut. flit. Wardlaw
surd he hud been invited to attend tho Meeting,
and asked if he would be allowed tire privilege ’
of replying to so much of Mr. John 8. Pheslv’b
remarks, as applied to his private character,
which being relused, ho notified the meeting, ,
that bo would address them after the adjourn
ment of the Submissionists, A Mr. Lomax, i
(candidate fur the Legislature) then addressed 1
the Meeting, and his only object seemed to be, 1
to convince tlie people, that bis northern relations
were not Tories. The Meeting having adjourned,
.Mr. Wahdlaw was culled lo the stand; where
upon the Submissionists, true to then* feelings,
and knowing w hat would bc dealt out to them,
left the house. Mr. Wardlaw was greeted
with loud, long, and rapturous applause, which
having subsided, ha told those present, (in num
ber at least three hundred,) that he had notin- 1
tended to be cn actor in that day’s work, but
having been invited by general proclamation, tol
atleird, and having been nimccestaiily referred j.
to by Mr. Piesly, he fell it his duty to repel bis
attack—“ Mr. Piesly has said, gentlemen, that
lam tyrannical—l have never (said he) made
an attack upon an enemy whose hands vverej,
tied} nor have I fled frotp tiiat enemy, when !i
left free lu act. This Mr. Piesly has done.’’— j t
Tins sentence, or the substance thereof, appro-11
pilule as it was, had a most happy effect. After | '
making a very brief reply to tlie attack of Mr. (
Piesly, he staled that he had never heard him
(Piesly) make tiio remark attributed lo him— ,
“ But, said he, there may be those present, who
have heard him say, that the Tariff was u bles- I
mng jo the country —If any, let them speak.’*’ I
At this moment about twenty voices exclaimed,
“ 1 have beard him say so I” Mr. W. llion took
a brief view of tire Tariff, in rnuiiy ol its bearings, (
and proved to all present, that the policy pm sued \
I by the parly in power, was lo raise the expen
ditures of the Government to the ptesenl rave- I
nue, aud not reduce the revenue to the necessary I
expenditures of the Government. He took
- other views of the subject, which it is unneces
sary to dwell on; but suffice il to say, that it all
terminated in tbc most glorious tiiumphof iVhig ,
principles. I
A GEORGIA NULLIFIED. ;
! vi **! n sg£6«;i.Ua»
Ciiaiilkston, Oct. 1.
COTTON-—Tlie only sales we have
Inuqiorl I Hiss week, are about 60 bales of
1 the new* er*o|> of IJ|rland, at from K'J u
11 c.ts. There have bean os yet, but a
i bout 100 bales received. On tßalarday,
i vve made particular enquiry as to the
stock of Cotton that remains on bund in |
(this market, and ?rivc ;Jse fcilowing as
<
t..«- result, assuring our r. adcrg t | lat i(8
I'l rcc-liiees may ho depended on.
Snn«ees,47o I. UC r»; Upland*,*
bull's, ol llu* latter, iU;out 50 bales Os
•he now t-rop The total expert of the
.•‘•or, amounts t > 18,313 bolt s Bea Is
land, 301,033 do. Uplands; same period
mst year. 30,317 Sen Island; IM,WI Up,
■and.— Courier, ‘
Livirpodi., Angu-t 10.
Tlu* stiles of Cotton (bis we.nl*. havo
hcen 13,(130 bales, including filly I plat,:,s
<‘i to 7g; 1(570 Mobile »V Alabama oto 7.-,;
-720 N. Orion ns at (’( to M*,d, Nolwitliu
standing' tire heavy import, the juarlut
has continued sternly.
Livi.KPOob. August 13.
'l'he Cotton market this day has becrj
very lively. Several pan els have oh
lained prices that u ere refused ojj SjUup,
day. 'l’lie sales are if,500 hub a
l.tvi Ki ooi,, Sept, 10.
The sales of Cotton this we 1* are «
bout i 4 >••() bales, at the prices *,f
week. The buyers generally nre kr< p
L'<>r back uutil the bulk of the recto.}
arrivals shall he landed.
The supply which hue recently con...
in, all at once,so far exceeds what h,|
generally been looked (hr, that the
lidetioe of ito'in”, in oar h wing j.c.s :■ it*
Vineriea than last year,is enmen h.d , hr,,
ken; hut no still think tt. will i.-s,
mid if so, there may be room fir s-njv*»
general nmcndinent in ttio m'rhet
August 17—There is more <h nan f lop
Cotton Home little for ep-cuhitiun, but
prices are not belter; the ordinary de.
script! 'ns •< t olf ■ d •■•oh i * , *
wwww»M»»wi«wmiinMg»awK«Hitg>yTT<n.T.n-».-.'F-<,
o not.
On Hnainluy In-', fiEum-M a jCKI.Ii g, \onru!- rt
*on of Hama .M' Kmnr, Iv-f| «f ittls t'ily.
«———»**—.... »,»»■,*», .. . ,
11 nc * ,l, y i'bitln I Til.‘.l.vs (i,
|KtST ii am., are my duly autlio.
rized Atlornics during my
absence.
* CHARLES L. HA Mb,
<»et 3 if I
( OlilfM BSI "'' ‘
TAX COLLECTOR’* KALE!,
On the first Tuesday in November next,
Ji/A li.i. tie v.ul at • Hinmtiia i oiirt
T ▼ House, within ’the legal hours of
sale, the lidlowieg Lands, or aw much as
w ill satisfy the Tuxes and Costs, duo idp
the year 1831.
-OvJ acres second quality Land, gran
led to Jacob Ituily, lying in the lib Him
iriel. No. 3, Dooly county, to satisfy Ja
cob Daily’s lax—<lne!J3j cents.
311*21; acres pine I,ami, lying in lions
ton county, in the I4di District, : s<» d7,
"Plumed by James Gray—Tax due, (tv\
cents. Terms cash.
JOHN UOLLINH, t. c t o.
Pet 3 o ld I
TO THIS JPVBtiW
IN in nsequenee ol'an urrnro'tenicii! tic
tween some of the credit' rs of the
lute linn of Itaternun A Ditneajf, aid J,
15 Bateman proprietor of the
UNION IIOTI‘I li PKOPEUTV
fiOTTIOItV,
Hood titles can be depended on to prii-.u
holders of Tickets, and the drawing of
said Lottery will take place the lOUflti
Monday in next December.
TIHMIAS BEALL. )
JAMES SPIERS, | Pamerir,
T. VV. GOODE, • Undent
U. J. ( HEWS. f to M.-
11, 15 (114 ANT, j iMltry.
VV. I* VON HR. J
Setit 39 staid Ml "
’ WnTT:r'"
rEMHE Stockholders ol till’ Ullglo |»f >k
Phoenix Hotel Company, are it
quested to meet at (he I), and I*. Hofi 1,, u
Wednesday the Hid October, at H *>’
clock A. ill. to elect Trustees, and tram*
act oilier business of importance, tu ibtic
interest.
A. C’UMMINO, S. <f- T. E ,}• P. li Co.
Sent 39 MJ’*
w FiioHi''
IS A€ OA AJV.fi> I a % If Sl*
:jo BBLS. superior New Flour,
39,000 pounds Dncon, nil sides.
30 Jars Lard, put up for family
use. Just received, and for sale by
JACOB MOJSE.
Aug 35
ATCrI ST i I ; KM A Lil
SEMINA
Mlty, H. L MOIBK respectfully in
forms the inhabitants ol Augusta,
and its vicinity, that she Ims taken (hat
commodious establishment, well know,,
as the Mansion House, which barb- en re
paired «A lilted up as a Boarding School;
where she will resume the duties of her
Academy, on Mommy, tlio first day of •
October next.
The following branches,comprise hop
course of English studies;
Kudiments—First principles of Dram
irmrnrnl Ucography, w ith Orthography,
Heading, Writing and Arithmetic.,
(ieogrnphy with theme of Maps and
Globes, Grammar, i’arstng In blank v» r -e
and prose. History sacred and profane,
Composition, Orthography, Orthoepy,
Writing and Arithmetic.
The above, with Botany, Mythology,
Philosophy, Ornithology, Lectures Oft
Rhetoric and Belles Let lies ,p Dictation.
Also, French, Spanish and Music.
(£/" Competent assistants will 1)9 em
ployed.
Parents and Guardians are assured
that every attention will be paid by Mrs,
M. to the morals and deportment ol' the
young Ladles entrusted to her cure,
Sept 30 2t MU
.11 XT UKiniViilli
boxes (W. Leo's bert) Cfivtft.
dLh Tobacco,
1 pipe Cognac Brandy,(4th proof)
5 do. Holland Gin, '
25 Mils. No. 2 Mackerel,
20 coils Bide Hope,
100 reams Wrapping Paper for na)e
low for cash or appro veil paper, Ky
,! MAK'JUALIk