The Macon advertiser. (Macon, Ga.) 1832-1832, November 13, 1832, Image 2

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'aaaamk &3>aaai^g3;aß^_ CONTINUED I'ltOM I'QI'UTH PAG*. To alter a:n! amend thoseveral acts incor porating the town of St. Mays ; and a!. j o to reduce the Sheriffs bond of this State so ur ns concerns of Camden f —Wurd Harden,, and Overstreet. * ’ To prohibit the sale of land in the county of Cherokee, far a certain time, and to com pel phintilf- in execution, who intend to levy on said lands to /He their executions in the' Cferks Oliiee of the Superior Court of the c'nuuly wherein the laud is bv a certain time ——messrs. Rogers, 1-zz*r J and 1 ace. To amend and alter in part the 31st sec. of •an act to authorize the survey and disposition pi i tails within the limits of G. orgiu, in the ottcupauee of t't; Clrerokec tribe ol Indians, iirul on all atSier unlocale-.l lands within the li mils of said State—messrs. Mays, Steelman Stud ilutc'iings. To alter and amend the act passed 2Gth Dec. 1831, su far as rcl ties to the removal of the imJisbursed t.iuds ofßm.thvillo Academy to the tow aof Foil Gaines in said county irfessrs. VViisoaof Early, BltiCK and Clitton. To alter an - amend the election laws of this Slate, o far as respects the county cf Kin.v j, r;l ssrs. M , Pearce awl Bacons To p. p-.ratc aud divorce Ezt-kit i ;w! Sarah Tread a .vay his wife, also Dinah Thor.non and lahant Thornton, her husband—and likewise to repeal so much ol the'sth section ot the n-t, incorporating the town of La Grange, as gives exclusive government ot the persons within said town liable to worn on roils, t.* the commissioners thereof- —messrs. llurral- £o,i, McCoy and Solomyn. To provide fortlio compensation of grand arid petit j;iroi, and toiepeal the act to alter the fees of Attornies and Jurors in this St ate —messrs. Stanford, Burnrs aud \\ ilcox- To oiler the 3rd, 7th ami 12th sections of the 1 art. and Ist and 3d secs, ol the 3.1 art. of the constitution of this Slate —messrs. Ash, ltyan and Burney. To amend an act to lay out the gold region , in the lands at present in the occupancy ofj tho Cherokee Indians, into small lots and dis pose of the same by lottery, so far as to an- ] thorisc certain persons to give in their names \ for draws in tho gold lottery—messrs. Kmg cf Greene, limns of Elbert, ami \\ avne. * To aid too completion cf tile Brunswick Rati Road—messrs. Wav is, Dart ami Dennard. M thing it a high misdemeanor for the di r-ctors and officers of chartered banks within this stole to exceed or violate the limits ol thoir charters, or by fraud or mismanagement to cause sud banks or any oi them to fail, and to prescribe the punishment for the same— messrs. Bites. Calhoun and Tarver. To appropriate moucy to purchase hands to work oil the road leading from Gainesville through Cherokee county —messrs. Bates, Bowen andTJynl. To take into consideration that part of the Governors Message relative to the preven tion of the issuing and circulating of hank lulls of, and under the denomination of five dollars—:m ssrs.Shelton, Murray and Merri vv< tlier. To alter and m ange the place of holding precinct elections in the 3rd district ol tho county of Troup—tncssrs. McCoy, ilarralson am! Ector. To authorise the Sheriffs ofTalhot comity to ad vertise the ir sales in one of the Millegc* Vtlle pipers—messrs. Burks, Face and Holt. To compensate the superintenders for car rying up to the Court House, the returns of; ■elections from the different precincts in Tal bot—messrs. Banks, P.ice and Robson. To prevent the tax collector of Leo coun ty from collecting the taxes from the citizens of Lumpkin county for tin;year 1330 &. l’rdl, and to authorise tho tax collector of Sumpter cminty to call on the collector of Lee county and transcribe the names of the citizens of Sumpter county from the collec'ors hook of l.’c county, ami to authorize the collector of Sumpter co. to proeed firth with to tho col lecting the same. Also to appoint one com inisiouer from tlie county of Dooly, one from the county of Sumpter, one from the county of Lee, anil one from the county of Randolph, to mark aud lay out a ixJ.kl from Berrien in Dooly oounty to the nearest & most practica ble route to Fort Gaines, on the Chattahoo chic, and to compel the Supcrititcudaiits of tho public bands of Flint River anil Chattn hoochic to open, bridge and canscway the sune—messrs. Cowart, Warren and Barr. 'i’o appropriate money to open the naviga tion of the St. Ilia River—messrs. Hilliard, Blackshear cf Lowndes, and Williams. To incorporate the village of Roanoke, in tho county of Stewart—messrs. Jernigan, (pamper tnd Hilliard of Ware. To amend an act entitled an act for the hotter regelating tluj measurement of Lum ber Within this State—Kittles, McCall, and Harrison. To appropriate the sum of dol lars, for the use of St, wart County Academy, to place said Academy on an equal footing with other county Academics in the slate — messrs. Jernigan, Long and Irwin. To cause a part of the State hands to work the market road from Lumpkin, Stewart county, to the Chattahoochie river in said county—Mossrs. Jernigan, Morgan, ami Sims of Crawford. To alter and amend tho several acts in rela tion to cstvays, now of force iti this State— messrs. Kittles, Bowen, and Sellers. To incorporate the Augusta Insurance Company: messrs. Davis, Rhodes, and Cilas coek. To hate opened by the public hands a road from Appling Court house to Warcshorougb, in Ware county, the rice to Franklinrillc in bounds, thence to Thomasville in Thomas 9mm tv—messrs. Hilliard, Melntirt, and Overstreet. To authorize the levying of executions on defendants’ undivided interest in property, & for the sale of the same. Also, to separate and divorce Sarah and Henry Brace her hus band, and John B. and Elizabeth Camming his wife-v messrs. Clascock, Davies of Rich mond, and Flo and. To amend the law of contempt. And to provide for digesting and publishing the principles and provisions Af the common law, as far as they are in force in this State, and To authorize the Justices of the Inferior Court of Montgomery county, in conjunc tion with the trustee of the poor school fund of said county, to loan out said fund at law ful interest—messrs. McLennan, .Moseley &: Prichard. For drafting a code of laws governing court martials in this State, and to define the powers of the same—messrs. Rutherford, Vinson and Warren. * To incorporate Fellowship Academy in tiie j county of Mcrriwcther, and to appoint trus i tecs to the same—messrs. Ector, Towles, and Howard nfl.ee. To place a part of the public hands on the Ogee lice rive'r for the improvement of the navigation of said river—messrs. Barr, Hud son, and Ijowis. To repeal the 2d section of an act, entitled an act to appoint .eleven additional trustees of the University of Georgia, and to provide a perm •tent additional fund for the support of the same, and to declare the number of trustees which shall be necessary to form a board, and to authorize a loan of ton thou sand dollars to the board cd - Trustees of said University, and to provide for the education of certain children therein mentioned—mes .-rs. Strickland, Glasscock, and Graves of Clark. To authorize the public bauds for Colum bus It) work and make good a road leading from Col umb its to Foil Games, by the way of Lumpkin in Stewart county, aud Cuthbrrt in - Randolph county —messrs. Spivey, Thornton, ■ and Williams. To reduce the grant fees.on town lots in the town of Columbus—messrs. Thornton, Spivey, anti Day. To make permanent Ihe public site in the county of Lee, and to name the sttmc —mes- srs. Howard, Engrain and Pitman. To authorize the Justice’s of tiic Inferior Court of Warren county to provide lor and \ establish an asylum for llie invalid poor o! said county —ntessrs. Jones, Wilson of War ren, aud Ryan. To compel tiie hands now working on the : road from Savannah to Dublin, to work on the ' road from Dublin to Macon, aftt r they have ! finished tho road from Savannah to Dublin— | messrs. Warren, Blackshear of Laurens, and Spivey. To amend the Academy laws of this State so far as later, to the distribution of the fund in counties where there are more than one Academy—messrs. Liddell, Burris, and Bowen. To suspend the operation of judgments against the estates of deceased defendants— tncssrs. Morgan. Williamson, Hatcher. To compensate the grand and petit jurors of Henry county:—messrs. Smith, of Hen ry, Johnson ol Henry, and Varner. To have a part of the public hands placed on the road from .Monticello to McDonough by the way of Key’s ferry on Ocmuigce riv er—messrs. Smith, Johnson and Varner. To place a part ofthc public hands on the road leading from Monticello to Covington, for the improvement of the same. The following bills were read a 2d time and ordered for a committee of the w hole house. To alter and amend an act to lay out the gold region in the Dads at pr: sent in the oe ctipancyof the Cherokee Indians into small lots, and dispose of the same by separate lot teries, and to repeal so much of the sth sec tion of said act as requires tho commissioners of tho land lottery of Georgia to superior ;d the same. applicable to its situation—messrs. Turner, Burney and Haynes. To incorporate a company to construct a | turnpike road from Pumpkin Vine Cieek in j Cherokee countv, to Dawson’s Ferrv on ’ I fig litowcr or Etoee river, and from the Mis-] sionary stand to the intersection of the Ala bama road with the ferry road—messrs. Alcr rivvether, Malone, and Sparks. | 'l'o place a part of the public hands on the i stage road leading from Miiledgevillc to j Hartford. j To. authorise the Governor to have the i name of Tiiouias a lunatic, put in the wheel of the gold lottery. A hill to be entitled an act to alter and j amend an act entitled an act to incorporate! i the Indcdcudeut Pieshyterian Church in the ! town ofEt. Marys. lortlic relief of the widows and orphans of Lewis Svveett, deceased of Lincoln. The House went into a committee, Mr. Glascock in the Chair, on the resolutions’ relative to tendering the Representative j Hall to tlie delegates of the proposed Anti | I ariil Convention, and making appropria-’i 1 tions for stationary foi the same,and having' j spent some time therein, the Speaker resum ed the chair, and Mr. Glascock from the com mittee reported the resolution with an amend ment by substitutes. Tho House took up the report, viz: Resolved, that this branch of the Legisla ture will on Monday next adjourn at t J o’clock, P. AL lor tho purpose of allowing! the delegates of the proposed eonvention to j meet anil organize in this Hall, which is | hereby tendered to the use of said proposed i convention; at and after the hour of‘J o’clock of each day during their session On agreeing to said report, the yeas were ; 134,—nays 19. The Speaker announced to the House the ! appointment of the following standing and! ! joint standing committees. On the State of Republic—Messrs. Young, ofOglethorp,Bates, Haynes, Glascock, King! of Greene, Alerriwcthcr, Burney, Turner,! Thweatt, Hutchens, Liddell, Waircn, Jlar ! raison, andSalFold. On the Judiciary—Messrs. Ilayncs, Hatch er, Blackburn,illackshoar of Laurens, Davis of Richmond, Floyd, Harris of Elbert, Mor | f'an, Steelman, Wood of Coweta Pace, Will iamson, Hardeman- On the Penitentiary—Messrs. Glascock, Hudson, Crawford, Hubbard, Johnson of Alorgan, Grubbs, Redding, Ware of Newton* Harrison, Burns, Ware of Clark, Lewis and Anderson. * On Finance—. Messrs, Neal, Cone, Day, Sparks, Stroud, Gholson, Aikin, Allen, Bow en. Dennard, Fkwellen, Stanford, and Mavs of Bbt'j. ’ ’ On Internal Improvement—Messrs. Ryan Hamilton, Nicholson, Johnson of. Henry, Jones of Warren, Philips, Thurmond, Dart, Rhodes Curry of Washington, RoheAfe, Rob inson, Sims, Davis, of Glynn, and Younw of Mclntosh. On tiie Military.—Messrs. Vinson, Mitch- Chastain, Rutherford of Washington, Ruth erford of Monroe Cox, Lowe, Tutle, Asit, Buffington, Smith ol Ilcnty, Wilcox, Smith of Coweta. On Public Education and Free Schools— Messrs. Long, Irvin, Ezzard, Jones, Jerni gan, Harden, Black, Ward, Burks. Rogers,Thornton,"White, Wilson of Wai ron, McCall, Engrain. On Banks.—Messrs. Turner, Calhoun, floit, Brown, Easley, Flournoy, Spires,Groce, Davis of Richmond, Wayne, Murray, King of Meklntosh and Shelton. 'i’o examine the Journals—Messrs. Sheets, S. Hers, Pinckard, Stamper, Sharpe, Howard, 1 lowed. On Printing—Messrs. Wood of Coweta, Hardman, Rawls, Blackwell, Taylor Strick and, King of Crawford, Harris of Pike, Ex urn, Barr, Mclntyre, Hutchins, Calhoun. On Enrolment.—Messrs. Liddell, Wil liams, McLcnilon, Mood of Hall, Kettles, Solomon, Curry, of Decatur, Hinton, Clifton, Martin, Itobson, ITiliiard, of Ware. On P< tition. —-Messrs. Bates, Bacon, Dan iel, Moore, Hilliard of Booly, Bryant, Cow art, Pilman, Varner, Pierce, Malone and Kel ly. On Privileges and Elections.—Messrs. King of Green, Ector, Edmondson. Stark, Rhine, Byrd, Moseiv, McCoy, Lockhart, Blackshear of Laurens, and Mays of Dekalb. Adjourned. MACON. ,/tir Uouk rilat.-ili) alltbc set? and ment* ot' 9liiu> TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1833. AtithTarif! State Convention. Hie H. of Rep. this day, Nov, 8, with a spirit of legislative courtesy and high patriotic state feeling, which must forevercummend the mem bers of that body to the grateful consideration of their constituents, passed a resolution, tendering the use of their hall, to t! e approaching State Convention during its sittings, which will com j inenco on .Monday next. Several energetic and | eloquent attempts were made to put down the re ! solution, but notwithstanding, it triumphantly ! pr< vailed. 5 The resolution was introduced by Mr. Merri j wether, and was opposed, as it seemed to us, j with a view to depreciate the Convention hy a le j gtslative vote. The gentlemen who opposed it. i ought to have recollected, that, like themselves, I the delegates were elected by the people—and e- I lccted too, he it remembered, todetermine upon a j a subject of mricli greater national importance, j than any otbersubject over yet presented to then j consideration. Indeed, we view the members of j the Convention as being clothed with more iegit | imate authority than the members of the I.egisla ; tore themselves—for they will present them j selves before us as the representatives of a ma jority of the people of Georgia, who, finding, that the ordinary modes of legislation cannot restore the violated the United .States, or re move the oppressive exactions under which they have labored for almost tiie quarter of a century, are determined to resort to *’ first principles” is the impolitic, unjust and unconstitutional Tariff j policy is not abandoned.---Times STATE C©A VEATIOS. Wo give below, so far as heard from, tb' names of the Delegates elected to tin- Cos: - vention which meets this day in Milledgcviiie. it will be seen bv a reference to our table that there arc fifty-seven counties heard from r all of which are fully represented. As many of the elections* vvete held on the first Mon day in this month, it is very probable that out of the reiqamiiig twenty-five counties half ol them will be returned, wh\ph wiil give us six ty-seven counties out of the eighty. ThU will represent, in round numbers, very nearly ! seven-eights ofall the counties m the State. The represesentative population of the Suite is, 445,554. From this population it will, he seen that 337,120 of the free people of Geor gia arc already represented, making moi-• than throe-fourths .of the entire representa tive population. 7’liese results we present to our readers— and in presenting th. m, it would !>e supero gatory in us to tell them, that it is tho voice of Georgia, proclaimed in language not to be mistaken. It speaks resistance—a determin ed and effectual resistance to that part of the Tariff which is called Pkotectivk. Out of ! the one hundred arid nineteen delegates oleo ted, we verily believe there is not ten of them who havetiot already denounced that syvstcin of aristocratical monopoly, as a system, op pressive, unwise, unjifstand unconstitutional. Thus agreeing, almost unanimously, upon tin I main point of our violated rights, and tlje vio latcd rights of the Union, can we hesitate up on the course to pursue ? If any other evi dence, than the evidence already presented, were wanting of the intention of the manu facturers to fix perpetually upon us, a TAX for their PROTECTION, it is to he found in the declarations of the Hon. Air. Webster, made by him, in his speech, at the Worcester Massachusetts Convention. It is needless for us to say, to the intelligent people of Geor gia, that Mr. Webster comprehends wjthin the circle of his political influence, the ral lying points of the protective tariff men. And what does he say in the speech to whibli we have alluded ? Why, in plain terms, that the protecting tax must not, cannot be abandon ed—and in this declaration he 13 supported by Mr. Adams, Mr. Clay, Air. Wirt, and Air. Dickerson, the Magnus Apollo’s of our inex orable and tyrannical adversaries. Is it not then, we seriously ask, with this mighty in fluence opposed to us, a matter of moral im possibility to bring the majority which that influence wields in the Congress of the Uni ted States, to a sense of justice ? The ques tion will be with the Convention. For our selves, in the dark vista before us, we cannot sco the faintest gleam of hope, to light us to peace & unity, unless it he in a resort to fihst pnixcm.Es—and in tho exercise of first principles, one State has as good a riefit as One hundred. TR2 COWIIVTIOV. Considerable debate occurred last eve ning, on the subject of organizing the meet ing, and of appointing committees. Tiie ap p dtment ol committees wore opposed, upon the ground tftat the character of the conven tion nad not been ascertained, ami that it was essential to know whether the members who iiad presented themselves came as the repre j sentatives oi the sovereign people. 'l'he hon i arable members who urged these obj- ctious ) must have certainly been aware of their f’u < tility—because the tr very presence was an in jcontestible argument that the meeting was a legitimate one: for, it should not be presum ed that any gent! .than who had taken Ins scat would have had the effrontery to do so vvith ; out proper credentials. The object, it scctn |ed to us, Was to disorganize and dissolve tiie convention—and in doing so to weaken the determined stand which Georgia has taken jin relation to the protective system, and thereby place the convention in a ridiculous point of view. We ardently hope however, ihat. \vc are mistaken in our conclusions— Georgia is, embarked on a subject of the highest importance, not only to her interest, j but the interest of the South, and the general 1 interest of the Union. No Georgian then, I should by ■parliamentary management, at j tempt to throw obstructions in the way of the | glorious struggle in which we are engaged. All miss and regulations havinga tendency ! to forcstal, circumvent, or evade free discus- I sion, should be dispensed with—fot it is net to be presumed tlnft every rritemher of tlfi Convention is Versed in the usages of Parlia ment or Con; ress, notwithstanding he may ! be well qualified to discharge his duty as the unqualified ref representative of a free pie who have sent him to defend th ,r rights. ATTI-TAIUFF fOUfVESTIO^. The delegates to this deeply important and inter esting body, assembled in the Representative cham ber yesterday afternoon, and at 3 o’clock proceeded to business, by the election of a temporary chairman, when John Moore, esq. of Oglethorpe was elected by eleven votes over Dr. Reese, of Jasper. The members then announced their names and presented their credentials ; Cl counties represented, and 195 members present. The election of President then took place—Geo. R. Gilmer 70, Dr. Reese 53. Af ter being conducted to the chair, he made an appro priate and happy address: ho returned his thanks to the convention, declared his reliance on its liberali ty and courtesy—made some patriotic and spirited remarks on the present struggle for justice and right on the one hand, and lawless power and misrule on the other—& the high character of the assemblage,& its importance to the rights, interests, and future welfare of the state and people—invoked a general spirit of harmony and conciliation among the mem bers—strongly enjoined them by foe sacred inter ests they represented, the hopes of their constitu* ents, and the vital importance of their deliberations, to discard all minor and selfish considerations—all private interests and personal jealousies—looking only to the best means of attaining the great com mon object of all, RELIEF from a burthensome & unjust oppression: he declared his ardent wish for a fqvorable and happy result from their deliberations. VVm. Y. Hansell, Mansfield Torrance and Moseley, were elected Secretaries. Mr. Torrance offered a resolution for the appoint ment of a com. of 13, to draft suitable views and re solutions for the consideration of the convention.— Mr. Spalding moved to amend it by inserting 21, which being accepted by the original mover, Judge Harris moved, to lay the resolution on the table: his motion was loet. Mr. Forsyth moved a postpone ment of the ree. until to-morrow, and on this motion considerable debate occurred betweenmessrs. For sytlit Berrien, Gumming, Clayton! Torrance, Gam ble and Spalding; after which the motion was nega tived, yeas 52, nays 67, and the resolution was then adopted by a large majority. Col. Rockwell offered a res, to appoint a com. of three to draft rules and regulations for the govern ment of the convention, which was adopted, and mesrrs. Rockwell. Dawson and Alien, were appoint ed. The convention then adjourned at half past 6 until 3 p. m. on the following day—Times; 66arction—Legiilatnre—Land S>ra\iiMg. The convocation of people which thes< bodies have brought together, has crowded ilfilledgeville4o overflowing. At Lo form r period has there been such an immense con course. The interest excited is yreat, and many are the hopes and fears which excite the great crowd now thronging the Capitol. The politician and statesman are watching with grqat solicitude the proceedings ot the Convention and Legislature; and the plant. 1 and speculator are looking to the results ofthc gold and land lotteries with equal anxiety.— The Hotels are wedged,crammed, antf inun dated with visiters, members, dtc. Several of the Hotels contain at least 200 persons— and the consequent difficulty of rendering a prompt accommodation to evwy one, gives rise to many amusing, and, some tirm s, per plexing incidents, 'i he following humorous notice of art occurrence which took place in Worcester during its convention, may be con sidered as illustrative of our situation sof ras regards want of room. 14 is taken from*the Boston Transcript. O.i the first evening of the Convention, t. teamster dropt up to the door of one of tiie principle* taverns and asked for “ lodging for himself and beast.” The landlord said U: t he could not accommodate him, every bed m the house being taken up. '-Well,” said the teamster, lk l am not at all particular, 1 will put up with part of a bed,’ “Part of a bed?” re plied our host, ‘why my dear sir, there is not a bed in the Inn, that has not two in it alri :ulv and some of tiffin three and four.” ‘Well, can’t you let mp sleep in that . r parlour?” ‘No, we are going to make up seventeen beds there to-night, and they are all engaged.’ ‘Well now, that’s curious; caji’t you give I tne a buffalo skin and let me lav down here in j the entry, 1 shant discommodatc nobody.” j ‘No, I shant have you iti the entry, wcsliali !.bc up all nigld, and 1 don’t want anv folks differing and sprawling about the floor w in re people are passing all the time.” ‘Well, by Gosh, you are an accommodatin ' follow,l don’t think,’ said the teamster—‘wo / <li r it yo’ve got a tavern licence! Tell you what, mister, yon have got no beds, no but Dio shins, no nothing—well that ant vour fti'lt just now, exactly, ut,’ continued he, looking at the rack where a multitude ol cloaks and surtouts was suspended, ‘what will you take to Lt me hang on one of them there pegs V The laugh was fairly turned against the landlord, —the company present interceded, and the teamster was entertained princely— hut at whose cxponcc the Boston delegation 'Sr)* Civ” We ate requested to say that Col, ' l:rain Warner of Crawford, was not a candi date for Brigadier General of the Ist Brigade, tSh Division. His name was run without hit know ledge. We also take this opportunity to say that Col. Moughon, and Mr. Butts of Jones were not candidates for delegates to the Anti Ta riff Convention, as it would have appeared from the result of the polls in our last pa per. * STAYL RIGHTS. Why were the articles of the' old Confede ration given up and the present Constitution adopted in their stead? It was mainly fertile purpose of giving the power to the General Government of managing our foreign rela tions. Previous to the substitution of the Constitution, the States found no difficulty, each for itself, in doing their own legislation —they knew best their respective wai.ts anu interests ; were fully adequate io self-govern ment, and felt no necessity of having a Fed eral head as a guardian over them. This was the strong bulwark of liberty under the old Articles—the weak point in that government consisted in want of power sufficient to main its exterior regulations binding alike upon all the States. Under the first confederacy, if war for instance had become necessary, suci. States only as were disposed to enter into it, would furnfsh their proper quota of men and means—the rest would withhold assistunci and refuse supplies. So in treaties, some would be disposed to abide by them alhl oth ers to disregard them. Hence the necessity of forming a Central Government whose for eign negotiations should be (• ligatory upon the whole Union. This was the essentia! consideration which lead to the adoption o! the present Constitution. It did not have its origin in the inability ofthc Stab* to domes tic legislation but in their inadequacy (acting separately) to the management of their inteV coursc with other nations. The framers of our Government never designed it to inter meddle with the internal policy of the States —this was to be the work of the States them selves. With a few specified exceptions flic, have the full and exclusive control of tin municipal government of the country each one legislating tor itself, and to Congress be longs the sole co'ntrol of our foreign affair.- w it!) no power over internal mattars, save in the few instances set forth in the Constitu tion. This is the true spirit of our iiistitu i tions—this is the true division of power bc- A SbSst of the Delegates elected from the vavioris Comities enumerated tse Anti-Tariff State Convention, wliidt commences its sitting MilietSgeville, lovember, 12,1832. ■g' i?-"o I g-jp •§ < g = Sag - -c £ Counties. Dej.eg.vtes. s. jL SO 3 * < 3 c r * O -I O C 2 t H - H *? o - —, — . r* ?c. • g Appling • Morrison ~ Tnoj Baker Allen Baldwin Torrence, Rockwell - r-j. Bibb Beall, Collins : * £j.,q Bryan . . oi-o Bullock Lockhart Burue Lewis, Taylor. Hughes gqji) Blltld 101 Camden Ward, Hull ‘ J -win j Campbell 3361 | Carroll qoao I Chatham . ' C herokee Hargrove, Williamson * Clark Clayton, Moore, Ligon, • 7533 ( olunibia Ramsey, Collins, Cartledgc g;)()i) Coweta Kenan, Watson 534^ Crawford Warner, Crowell 3804 Decatur Keith, Fort 3500 DeKaib Dupree, Kid Goo, Clark 10140 Dooly Key...: 2000 Early Patterson jg 27 Effingham Powers ! 244 ii Elbert Tait, Allen, Davis pc'l3 Emanuel Daniel,, " 04 79 *>***? . 5346 Franklin • - 8761 Glynn Ring . 3331 J 1 re cue Dawson, Matthews, Greer 9234 'Gwinnett Park, Maltbie, Holt, MeMullin .’.'..’.'..'.V. 12141 Habersham 9 10371 |J a " Underwood, Garrison, McAfee, Sanford. 12(577 Hancock Haynes, Lewis, Vinson 9473 Harris Garey, Martin 6018 Heard Fitzpatrick - 1855 Henry Moore, Clark, Coker, Johnson! . 9971 Houston Campbell, Lawson, Wellborn 7958 I , r ' v , m ... 1134 Jackson Witt, Pittman, Parks . 8507 Utsper Cuthlert, Reese, Phillips 10253 Jefferson Gamble, Lemlcy >. . 5723 •fones Lewis, Reid, Barron 1(1319 Laurens - Blackshear, Allen ", 4410 2044 liberty , 51136 Lincoln 4732 Lowndes °3SB Madison (Delegates not ascertained.) 4355 Marion. Williams 1621 Mclntosh Troup, Spalding * 3'33 Merriwether Alexander, Ector 4647 Monroe Berrien, Beall, Cabeness, Gordon 1423/ Montgomery Ryals 1151 Morgan Stokes, Campbell, Leonard.. 0092 Muscogee Clifton, Lpwhoti. 4282 Newton Sims, Kennon, Storrs ? 9884 Oglethorpe Gilmer, Moore, Lumpkin...............,....’ 9*4 Pike 5855 Pulaski Rawls, Bracewell. * 40f3 Putnam Mason, Gordon, Hudson. ' ’ 9694 sab“,\5 ab “ , \ , * 3031 Randolph Richmond Forsyth, Gumming, King 92)91 Scriven I Jones, Wade " 3./611 Stewart Boykin. 17301 Sumpter Rep. pop. not ascertained, anil no returns. ...A ralbot Powell, Flournoy 544(1 Taliaferro Janes, Jeffrie* 4/ILI , """ 2168 telfair 1832 Thomas Dozier, Reynolds 920 J Troup Bailey, Alford 676*1 Twiggs 6860 „, ( J Upson Robertson, Crews j Walton Harris, Hill, Stroud ‘ 99bfl Ware ' . * 1104 . I Warren' Lockhart, Lazenby, Gibson Washington Brown, Peabody, Robinson.... ciMl Wayne . f|3 Wilkes • 10807 M tlkinson I 5917 I , RECAPITULATION. *V hole number of counties, - . . . gg 1 Counties, already heard from, represented . - * . 57 I 03 1 M hole number of representative population, . . * 444,554 I iiepreseuted in Convention, . ... . . 337,429 I , ~M7J31 1 Mak.ng more than three-fourths of the representative population of the Su e. 1 1 ncrc ,s 110 doubt llj at many oi the counties not heard from have elected delegate- ■ * P“Presentniri populati/n nett ai'eermipid. + Only entitled to 3 delegates. tv. ecn (lie State Governments and the k ■ ■t'T- T'“ is'oJ" our “ and the latter our external legislation. l ’ tms important th sfrtiction be borne m* ntina 1 am! thv plainest comprehension will fi n and diffieulty in determing on the constilutionalih of their respective acts. Neither shoe. 1,1 h allowed to encroach u|mn the rights of p ° oilier, and ifboth are made to more in tie" 0 proper spheres, 1 cannot conceive a [,/•', if government. ei KLECTIOA’S. Ist Brigade, Bth Division. . Beall, Bartlett, 7... iir ‘"J Warner, Scattering, Judge of the Cliattahoochie Circuit. Fourth Balloting. Thomas, ° 129 Colquett, Iverson, jj Lawhon, Blank, j Solicitor General Chaltahoocbie Third Ballot Campbell, . jj., Flournoy, 6 ( Gary, Prior, Oyer and Terminer, Savannah. Nicoll, .joj Comrnoti Pleas, Augusta. John AV. Wilde, j, B Wm- T. Gould, iq 7 Blank, j 2d Brigade. Oth Division. Ford, Third Ballot. jog Lucas, 404 Lewis, - y Fannin, ■ . g Maj. General, 3d Division. Sanford, irr, lloxey • _ 70 • Electot* for President. Pennsylvania is doing immortal credit to jhersclf. From an extra Harrisburg Reporter ofthc <i)h inst. we have the returns from tfo city and county of Pluladelphia, and fro-n eighteen additional counties. From them the Jack-son majorities are 9127. and the at,.' ti .1 /ieks, majorities -1960 —the lortaer ha • ,i :g nearly doubk and the latter. There isa p jiitical virtue and moral energy' in the < bane-1 ter of Andrew Jackson which hate raiaedl him proudly conspicuous, above the hcalJ ■of his distinguished anti formidable antam-1