The Athenian. (Athens, Ga.) 1827-1832, December 14, 1827, Image 3

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'J-V / convert them into sheep-walks of great va lue.”— Also, that v the crab or crop grass, already so trel^lcnown to the planters, though an annj^u, is yet the best grass for hay, at preaflftknown in the low country.” In addition tijlwhich, your committee would respectfully recommend, that the attention of the pubV^jfshould likewise be turned to the cultivatiriri of the Lucerne, and of the Sain Aft» r ; *^o^h of which, besides being tvelijpuiied to our soil and climate, are also eyfremely profitable ; the first of which de lights in rich sand, light but substantial; and tho other possesses the very advantageous quality of succeeding in the very poorest ^and, and upon declivities of which it keeps the ground. * Your Committee would likewise very res pectfully urge upon the attention of the pub lic, this fact, that the argument in relation to the culture of the grasses, applies in full force to that of the Ruta Baga Turnip, and of the Mangel Wurtzel, or root of scarcity, as food for. cattle.—If the pursuits of the herdsman ar? any r ways to be consulted, they are of opinion, that these products, al ready tested in our soil, and their value ap preciated by.jyjortion of the people of Geor gia* however small, should really lead to some inducement on the part of the Legis lature to encourage the nurture and the cul tivation of them. The Committee therefore recommend, that whenever the necessary appropriation ^dhall be made for the specific object, that th© Board of Commissioners for the Inter- . l aal^Improvement of this State, as soon as the same shall be constituted, be empower ed to award Premiums for the following ob jects : 1, To the person who shall deliver to the Board an effectual method of counteracting the rot in cotton, and of destroying the in sect, commonly called the catterpillar, both of which are occasionally so destructive to the cotton plant: and to the person who Shall devise the best mode of improving the quality and value of each variety of that staple. 2, For the greatest quantity of raw silk produced by any person in Georgia, from Silk-worms bred in the State. Specimens of tho Silk, not less than one pound, with account of the method in which the sil.. worms were managed; the kind and size of the Mulberry trees front whence they were furnished with food, and particulars respect ing the culture of the Mulberry trees for tHbt purpose, to be exhibited to the said -j 191h,il 8tjT, -half of the 2&J and 17th districts I ed his character i j of Muscogee, and the lower end of the 5th, In common justice* Bcr-14 th and 3dcl|$tricl{j of Troup^ aojve him from all conduct respecting provocation, though si should wo not t We have the v thority ofJVfr: Stephen Elliott, for saying, that *.* the cfflfjfei&TOr.. ^ r . muda grass on the poor ottd>extensive sand-1 Muscogee county how consists of the Sth, hills of bur middle country, would probably. 9th, 7th, 6th, half orthe lOth, 5th, 33d, 32d, and 22d Lee, ai Marion county consists o'] inal county. I vocation, which 1 could e 11th, 12th, out of the question fori fore us toV becoming e. The ill a pro- t overlook. It is to explain, retract, opplic 3d, 13th, 1st, 2d, 4th, half df the 5th, and or apologise. I will no', hear of any settle- craven sub*. man, who dwells fcfa <ntn skill as a as a duelist, 10th Muscogee, half the* 2Sth, 29th', 30th, ment short of some one third of the 31st, and half the 32d efis- mission from hint. trictsofLee. . . ; *1 Mr. Barton is a Talbot county of half tlie 22d, 23d, 24th, very complacently half the 17th, 16th, 15th, 14th, and first of marksman; on his/ Troup to the mountains. and on his accuracy as It peteon of ton. .1 A division of the remainder of Lee county pretend to"nqpe of these, and therefore, must is also spoken of, but probably will not take | oppose the raftst inflexible obstinacy. After place this session. Most of these new coun- he is perfectly satisfied, I may, perhaps ties now present a very considerable popijja- apologise—that is, in. case I am fatally tion, although but a few months have occur- wounded. It is heedless fi|r me to say, I red since their first occupancy by white po-1 heartily detest and despisfe this absUfd mode pulation. The rapidity of their settlement J of settling dispute's, and cubingthe wounds we believe to be without a parallel ih any I of honor. Bat what cart a poor devil do ex part of the country. Their division’ has cept bow to the supremacy of custorfff*, been rendered necessary, as well from theirj * * * * * * * * * increase of population as the extent of their God bless you, W. G. GRAHAM, territory.—Macon Messenger. j His associate, the Editor df the N. Y. Enquirer, thus speaks of his talents and List of, Reprt the Twl and House oj . United St at First Se ATE. v , * Albion K. : ‘ Bell, Ual SllBDCC) ! to scribed by hy said letters should not be granted^ I therefore toclfc and admonish all i * Ired and creditors of ‘ rty my office within the iw, to shew. cause, if any they hit's Given Caiv 'Maine—Joh New-Hamp. Massachust' Connecticut—* Rkode-Island—Neh’ah Vermont—.Dudley Chase, New-York—Marti if Van' Ntw-Jemey—Mahloh Pennsylvania—William Delaware—* Louis M’Lanc, Maryland—Samuel Smith, End Virginia—Littleton W. Tazewell, North-.Carolina—John Branch, Nai South-Carolina—William Smith, Georgia—Thomas W. Cobb, J. M. Kentuckey—Richard M. Johnson, John Tennessee—John H Eaton, Hugh fit Ohio—William H. Harrison, Benjamin aykand, this 8th December, 1827. JOHN II. LOWE, Clerk* Shot absent Bio . V m J. 7. The Board of Physicians of the State of character: Georgia, commence^ their annual session, “ Mr. Graham, for nearly two years, has in this place on Monday .last. At 12 o’clock I aided us in our Editorial labours.—What- the President, Dr. Milton Anthony, deliver^ ever occasional differences he may have had ed the Anniversary address in. the Repre- with his associates, * jie never had any with sentatives, Hall. - us : he was one of the first young men o r The officers of the last year have been the age, in point of education, general infor- re-elected, viz mation, wit, talent, great and varied; he had Dr. Milton Ant\ony, President. higrt chivalrous notions of honor, and has Dr. Benj. A. White Secretary. thrown away his life, a victim to a custom Dr. Alexander Jones, Dean. which he himself despised, and satirised Dr. Richard Banks, of Elbert county has even within a few days. We shall take fur- been appointed by the hoard, to fill the va- ther notice of the melancholy event.” cancy occasioned by the resignation of Dr. I - William N. Richardson. j Growth-of Boston.—The Boston Cohtinel Thirty-four young gentlemen have an- states that the first Boston Directory was plied for licence. Of these, twenty-four published in 1789, by John Normhn, and have presented 7 theses on medical subjects, contained the names of 1456 persons, being and the remaining ten, have presented di- j the mechanics, traders, merchants, attor- plomas, as evidence of their professional nies, &c. then living and doing business in attainments. * [Boston^ as also the names of the public of- We subjoin the 17th article of the bye- jfices, and the one bank. The Directory of laws of the Board. , 1826, contained 10761 names. That of „ u The Board will require of each candi- j the present year 11104.-—Jotyrn. of Oom. date [for a lieence^ a competent knowledge of Chemistry, Materia Medica, Auatomy, Physiology, Surgery, Midwifery, and the Theory and Practice of Medicine ; and will not grant »licence to any candidate, mate rially deficient in any of those branches.”— Journal. FOREIGN. The advices from London And Liverpool by late arrivals, are to the 20th of October. The following we consider the most inter esting of their contents. ______ Mr. Gallatin and familv embarked at Mr. Cruder, the Engineer employed by I Liverpool, on the Sth October, in the packet _ c A r«_ Suvanus Jenkins on his return home. It is the Savannah,Ogeechie, and Alatamaha Ca- T7a1 Ti l IT TT\u Ltt nal Company, Who is highly recommended k‘ a, f d tl,at lh , e Rues,an iVIim8tcr t0 thc U - by Col. Wright, arrived in this city on Sun- * P lsse "* er ' , day last from New York. He is accompa- Tho . ®"*“* 8e '™ u0 fot lho ' ast < t' ,ar *f r . - -- - — - — - - 1 exceeded that of the corresponding quarter Board Commissioners for the Internal I nied by Mr. B. H. Wright and Mr. C. O. e * c . e ^ u * XrlS “ owLentlof this State. Pascal's, who are his assistants. Mr. Cru-1 ° f 1826 ;^ J* ^ ** '* © greatest quantity of merchant- being the produce of Georgia; mt of the number of trees, their tho quantity of fruit on each {pft^HP^nvsnanner of culture. v/fiK/*^i» iiiiiiiii n• raarnauiJ' jDdijaixiiii tvu^yiw, a Louisiana—Dominique Douligny, J. B. Johnson. \ Indiana—William Hendricks, James Noble. v V Mississippi—'Thos. B. Williams, *Powhatan EH; N lUinofir—Elias K. Kane, Jesse B. Thomas. w3/a6an»a—*John McKinley, .William R. King. Missouri—David Barton, Thomas H. Benton^ HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIYES. . Maine—John Anderson, ‘•‘Samuel Butman, ♦Ruhis M’lritire, Jeremiah O’Brien, ’ *James W. Ripley, Peleg Sprague, *Joseph F. Wingate-—J, New-Hampshire—♦ David Barker, jr. Ichabod Bart lett, Titus Brown, Joseph Healy, Jonathan Harvey, Thomas Whipple, jr.—6 Vermont—'•‘Benjamin Swift, {Daniel A. A. Buck, ♦Jonathan Hunt, Rollin C. Mallary, George E. Wales—5. Massachusetts—-Samuel C. Allen, John Bailey, ♦Isaac C. Bates, B. W. Crowniushield, John Davis, Henry W. Dwight, Edward Everett, {Benjamin Gor ham, *James L. Hodge, John Locke, John Reed, ♦Joseph Richardson, John Varnum—13. RhodeJsland—Tristam Burges, Dutee-J. Pearce—2. Connecticut—John Baldwin, Noyes Barber, Ralph . Ingersoll, Orange Merwin, Elisha Phelps, *David Plant—6. Mew York—Danhel D. Barnard, ♦George O. Bol den, Randolph Bnnnei, C. C. Cambreiing, ♦Samuel Chase, +John C. Clark, {John D. Dickinson, ♦Jonas Earll, jr. Daniel G. Gdrnsey, ♦Nathaniel Garrow, ♦John T. De Gruff, John Haflock, jr. ♦SeJeh R. bie, Martin Hoffman, Jeromus Johnson, Keese, Henry Markell, Henry C. Martindale, Marvin, *John Magee, John Maynard, {Thomas J. Oakley, S. Van Rensselear, Henrj’ R. Storrs, James Strong, *John G. Stower, John W. Taylor, Gullian C.-Verplanck, Aaron Ward, *.Iohn J. Wood, Silas Wood, {David Woodcock, *Silas Wright, jr. *Phine- haa L. Tracy—34. New Jersey—Lewis Condict, George Holcombe, ♦Isaac Pierson, Samuel Swan, * Hedge Thompson, Ebenezcr Tucker—6. Delaware—*Kenscy Johns—1. Pennsylvania—William Adams, Samuel Anderson, ♦Thomas Barlow, James Buchanan, ♦Richard Coul ter, Chauncy Forward, * Jos. Frey, Jr. ♦Innes Greeh Samuel D. Ingliam, George Kremer, Adam King, Jos. Lawrence, Daniel H.. Miller, Charles Miner, John Mitchell, Samuel M’Kean, Robert Orr, JM ♦Wm. Raifisay, {John Sergeant, James S. Stephen- ♦John B. Storxgers, Andrew Stewart, 4Joel B. «ne,wVmcs Wilson, George ‘Practice 1e very low. BDW T ARDS- ta subscribers, the Practics of ^ui'ding now occ of them can yengaged. iated Thcitj Judge Me ibe found■ c* pelves in i is in the DRS. POND & I n, Ga. November 21,1827. %■ JVF.NS & BULLEN, WHOLESALE^ ,*. . Shoe Deklers, Sutherland, Iispy Van Wolf—29, >’ T° arc j“ S aa9,3lanIS - lur - ' jr , u -1 excess, about 1400,000 was produced by thelG^^^S w! 7 i2eTui?ltoK.«l c" ger, we understand. w.ll contmenee tmmed.- < . J ’ 0 J a.' Spigfc *G. C. Wwhisgt.^ John C. W. ems , !; >E P h. ately to survey the’route of the Canal from dut Y On 1 f0re ' ( f,°r'', n T he re . reaaa ^ r the Ogeechie to the Alatamaha—Sou. Rep. |* nim .f *“«> moO.OOO 4 jw* the greatest .quantity of merchant able* F,™* fttoducod by a citizen of Georgia; ^.accoant^lho »nodo of culture pur sued whether native or exotic greatest product^ the to proems and method of preparing thei wine, together tho numher of gallons so mad*. • 5, For jtt&S reatest quantity of Sugar, Spanish Tobafr°>. °P um ‘‘ r, ‘ d valuable ve getable dves; same, and an account of tf of culture Pursued. 6 To tile pej&n F^ho shall most success fully culti Atte d® greatest quantity of artifi cial or natf* 1 «***■«•» in a manner the best calculated assist the farmer in the rearing of stock ; ^wficularly the Sainfoin, Lucerne, less than The exei Thames The last Charleston Courier informs us, that “ the subject of connecting Augusta with J 1 ■ n ®mc Charleston by a Canal or Rail Road is talk- * ta ‘‘ aa cement: ed of with a seriousness indicative of its ulti- J arc ea a ?* os ^ ^ male execution”—one individual proposing) e5Cc fP t i |i0,000 of. the stdek, and a number j mejt employ' of others being ready to become interested! in the work, to a more limited yet respect-] P a, Jr a ion ds; under the illy., A new , which preserves the fir^m dampness; the breath of the solicited the able extent—popular opinion is stated to he ... favor of a Rail Road—the Courier expres- ses the hope that the Legislature of S. Caro- j ^ cnaracU in telligence from the Archipelago, is of The accounts of the M W chants on i southern of Dry 521^8 !ST0Jf, (S. C.) apply of ‘th-J t country Mer- i obtained in tji« ' Assortment i terms. sale l tho balance in woods. , and has fron It will be i purchasers. It i ct of Land m McNutt’s which is elegant to 100 Acres of fcood bof*. c parcel ordlvyetl to ' on i [.and i enqu* place, or the' county. MERIWETHER. \ HRON, will be issued iji thereafter as the ar- from the North, will •• v on of another verily believed, the list. The at their raim K . AVilson—9. ‘Vv. T he fii Februai rival of the permit No apologv rsr paper at this vlacC: would not add one: undersigned, therefore, w own risk, and leave it to acquire friends and support.; ♦his enlightened age, and writ , distingaished for the possesmoO'df discrimination, the Southron wfU cced as it proves worthless or ber to the community." . v ^" Tha undersigned will not make pCUH they cannot keep. They will riot re spectators of passing ovente, in the presen of the country. In order, therefore, to pi Southron beyond the reach of disappointed e; tion, and in justice to the undersigned, and to erits, to Kna will “ move in this first act toward a d yi ded an . d ac «’ , ® i utayoiltion of theAUi- Grads (Digitaria Sanguina- Bermuda Grass (Digiiaria Certificates from persons the same in a proper state, one pr other of tho grasses great aw! execution injure S trade to the alert undertaking.” As the ad fleat ?’ m betl ^f of ,f be Greeks, are con ch a project would greatly firmed from 90 many different sources, that by directing much of its there is no room to question their substan- it behoves us to bo on tial accuracy.—“The Greeks are in posses sion of alLthe denies. The appearance of the combined fleets has prayed to the Hel lenists th&t they are 4Pt abandoned by the Christian Powers; and in the churches, the protection of our principal and only considerable sea-port town; and to adopt in time the most energetic and effi cient measures to counteract this scheme kmed{ indicating clearly the par ses,! ana stating that the sample of aggrandizing Charleston at the expense are ofiltred op to God to bestow of Savannah—South. R<c. hta blessing on the_.merference of the monarchs.”—Count Viaro Capo d Istria, Colonel McEfcNNEY, of thelndian Office, l writea under dateof 28th August and 5th i weeds or mixture with lily. leriments on the feed- free fro same , For rtie-hest e? of cattle, in^OrdA- to prove the earliest irity and greatost\propensity to fatten; w.fhl an account specifying the nature of the food given, together wilh the daily consump tion of each beast,with as weekly increase in weight; and such other observations upon thi| method employed ant expense attending tha system pursued, as pay be decided of Consequence / 8, For_ the ..most satisfactory account of v|ie best method of improving any one of the soils, commonly known )among the people of this State, by the denomination of the red, the grey, and th^Pine Barren lands; with a statement of tKe number; of acres, of the quality of the land so improved, and of every operation and expense, the state it is in as to the proportion of grass to krablo, and the overage value thereof. Bat, your committee cannot conclude this ReMrt, without reminding every liberal and enlightened patriot of an aphorism derived from Dean Swift, well worthy bf the young and aspiring, that, the man whb causes two blades of grass or two stalks of cprn, to grow front the same soil, where only one grew Before, is worth the whole race of politicians put together. # returned from his Northwestern and South- ^pt. that “ the Greek* have chased the em tour among the Indians, the evening be- Egyptians from Vplitza, and by that means fore last, having travelled, since May last, ^masters of Ihe important grape harvest we ere informed, about seven thousand °! C ®" a ** lh « had possessed miles, and been successful in all the trusts tanselfot Nmetashas surprised a convoy reposed in him by the Government, and °. f a thousand horses—All tho .strong pos- among these, the important one of settling “ ona °f Continental Greece are in the pew- ° ...... - 'erof the Greeks. Concord has been re established at Napoli .’’—Advices from the Creek controversy, with which duty he was specially charged, by obtaining o cession wiaqnsnea at in apon.' -Aavices irom o fall the Jon* Zoned, or claimed hy Ihe Conslantmopteare to the-7th.ofSeptember, Greets, within the chartered limit, of\ t™ 1 aUho ''S h they, confirm tho laet Ihet the Georgia.—JVotioiml IateUigeneer. I combined Powe^jxgMockaduig, or at least We grieve to learn that Hejjrt Wi Con- 1 way, the amiable, honorable, and univer sally esteemed Delegate in Congress from the Territory of Arkansas, has fallen in a duel with a gentleman of the Territory, the result of a quarrel which grew out of thp dis cussions which attended the recent election for Delegate.—lb. Troup county now consists of the 12th « of tho 6 th, Sth, 4th, two thirds of the 9th 3d,and of the 14th and 15th districts of Carroll, and such of the original county as is not included in the following boundaries Of other counties. 1 * ' Meriwether county consists 2d and 1& districta-ef Troup, to of one third of the 3d, of Troup. f the 2Qth/21st, Duel.—Mr. Graham, the associate edi tor of the New-York Enquirer, was killed on the 28th ult. in a duel, by a gentleman from Philadelphia, by the name of Barton.— |A cajrd table dispute. ■The following letter was written in con templation of the fatal rencounter: im ^11 o’clock. Dear Sir: What may be the result of the unhappy rencounter which is to take place in the.morning between Mr. Barton and myself, capnot of course, be predicted by |rr».' In the supposition that it will be fatal combined. Po watching the differ in some uni the statements The Ampassadors, the 16th of Se Porte. The Greek the mediation on the Egyptian fleet 9th. The Ei port on the. 12th, while the Franch blockaded Motion, VirgFO%-—*Rohert Atten, Mark. Alexwidfcr, <Vu?/ ; v ^ 0 ma y become subscribers, it is solemnly declared, :,£ rcl L er ’_ S Y m * Anuatrong^ jr. John S. ® & ri¥> ur »,'p,that they will support to the best of their abilities— The republican party, and the republican prin- of the Jeficrsonian school in their most extend-’ Egyptians, yet they iculars, from other sources, is said, continued on r, to treat with the ment accepted 'September. Tho Navarino on the n was off the ept blockaded— in like manner purpose o£ inter- {Philip P. Barbour, Burweli Bassett, Thomas New ton, {John Randolph, Wm. C. R. Ives, *Joha Roane, Nathaniel H. Claiborne, Thomas Davenport, John Floyd, UaacLefHer, Lewis Maxwell, Char.e&F. Mer» cer, Wm. M’Coy, {Alexander Smyth, Andrew Ste venson, JohnTaHaferio, JaAes North CanoKno—Willw Alston, DarJH —. Barringer, John H. Bry>n t , c )ainn<M’. Parson, HSfiry W.Connor, {John Culpepper, ♦Thomas Hall, Gabriel Holmes, John Long, Lemuel Sawyer, * Aug. H. Shepherd, ♦Daniel Turner, Lewis WilliamB—13, - South Carolina—John Carter, *Warren R. Davis, a Wm. Drayton, James Hamilton, George M’Duffie, ♦Wm. D. Martin, Thomas R. Mitchell, *Wm. T. Nuckoffa, Sterling Tucker—8. Georgia—+John Floyd, *TomUnson Fort, Charles E. Haynes, {George R. Gilmer, {Wilson Lumpkin, Wiley Thompson, {Richard H. Wilde—7. Kentucky—Richard A. Buckner, James Clarke, ♦Henry Daniel, Jos. Lecompte, Robert P. Letcher, ♦Chittenden Lyon, Thomas Metcalfe, Robert M’Hat ton, Thomas P. Moore, Charles A. Wickliffc, *Joel Yancey—13, Tennessee—*.Tohn Bell, John Blair, * David Crock ett, * Robert Desha, Jacob C. Isack, *Pryor Lee, John H. Marable, James C. Mitchell, James K. Polk—9. Ohio—Mordecai Bartley, Philemon Beecher, {Wm. Creighton, jr. * John Davenport, James Findlay, Wm. M’Lean, ♦Wm. Russel, John Sloane, *Wm. Stan- bury, Joseph Vance, Samnel T. Vinton, F.Hsha Whit tlesey, John Woods, John C. Wright—14. Louisiana.—Wm.,L. Brent, Henry H. Gurley, Ed ward Livingston—3. /nc&tria—*Thomas H. Blake, Jonathan Jennings, ♦Oliver II. Smith—3. Mississippi—William Haile—1 Illinois—♦ Joseph Duncan. JMSkana—Gabriel P. Moore, Geo. W. Owen, John M’Kel—3. Missouri—♦Edmund Bates—1 DELEGATES. ' Arkansas—Henry W. Conway. Michigan—Austin E. Wing. Florida—Joseph M. White. ♦ New members. { Members of a previous C6r.- grefs, but not of the last.—Senate 7, House 77. ie union of the States, as indispensable to the anff future welfare of the States comprising 3. andi 4. as Union. 5. The system of j of elactiouhy geh« 6. Annual i And annual elect t Legislature of the { ccptingany supplies that iptght be sent there. An account from the sami\ place, of the 17th, states that the expedition from Egypt was met by the combined squadrons near Milo, and ’obeved the summons of Sir Ed ward Codrington to.withdraw.—But intelli gence of a more belligerent aspect reached London by express from Parisian the 16th of October, which, by some, was construct ed into the conjjmenoement of hostilities in the East of Europe, It is, that-one of the BXAB.RZZSB, . On Tuesday the 11th inst. by Ripley.jfsq Sir. Jeremiah Trout, to Miss Pemelia Wileiam* son, both of Jackson county—making nearly ei marriages which have taken place this year ' county. On the 22d ult. at Meansville, Union di Mr. Henry H. Means, to Miss Rebecca leneral Andrew Jackson to tb^'. GEORGIA, FRANKLIN COUNTY. M R. CHARLES W. BONDS,—You are hereby notified' that 1 do this day revoke and set aside the Power of Attorney that I gave you, to sell Lot No, 212, in the Ninth district of Lee county, as the nvytner by which you obtained.said power,’was by or through fraud.. December 10, 1827. JOHN HARRIS. NOTICE, A LL persons indebted to the estate of John Alex ander, late of Clark county, deceased, arc re- quested to make immediate payment, and those ’ * ’ ids against said estate, are likewise re- iBeni them within the prescribed time, ie law' directs. 1827. JOSEPH ALLEN,-Adm’r. Mr. Barton (towards whom I have not the the l^br faintest enmity of any kind) may escape. ' ‘ W 1 I admit that I am in the wroyg—that by giving him a blow, l have ‘forced him into the condition of a challenger a. and that by not doing what he h^g, he woijld have blast- ron, under the command of Sir Codrington. Spain.—From Spain we have a variety of details respecting the movements of the insurrectionists.—The spirit af insurrection was extending itsel, to such a degree, that the three divisiorjp of-thq Array of Observa- i rcsidcnc Figs. heirs and day of sale. Dec. 14,1827, JTRATOR’S SALE. 23th of Jan'iary next, will be ice of John Alexander, jr belonging », one Cow j.one Sow and 2 benefit of the known on the 7. The election < Presidency. But they uwl strenuously oppose— . . . 1. A liberal construction of the federal constitution.! 2. Any encroachment on the independence and sovereignty of the States by the federal govcrnnicnt. 3. The assumption, hy the constituted aulhorititN of the country—whether federal or state—of ai power not expressly delegated by the constitute or by a law emanating from a liberal construction j that instrument. . 4. . 4. The establishment of a large standing armj time of peace, and the expenditure of the money for other than useful purposes. 5. Political alliances with foreign nations. 6. The appointment of Judges for life, longer term than 3 or 4 years. 7. The passage of any law tending to 1 section of tb« country to the detriment of section. 8. All sectional pn indices. * The undersigned have thought proper to bo thus explicit: th^^nficnl times, when the federal coa- i/\ stitutkm is da^mgly violated; when the principalj a offices of the giwCmment. art? in the hands cf corr«pc [ - and designing individuals; when the rights of He ' States are openly invaded; when sectional prejndi» are excited, in order to promote the views.* “ ' ambitious, and of Ihe bankrupt in fame and - and when public cBices are sought to j views than the desire to serve the ‘ patriot shoold anp r ‘ the lows, and opf«se fmj» the nrraneas c the efforts made to change the public in the. country, and the forther progress at and power ofe^#l%erousset of politicians, who aim at tbooorteql^'Aion of the States, and at the destruc-. form of the government; op es a virtue, and is loudly cal!- liesolatioB and ruin will be tho cqd- i particular Community in which they Ijfned will follow the same course.-** They will act ind ependently, and support such policy.; and such measures only as will coincide with the general principle;- they have laid down for their guide, and nc man, whatever may be his talents, title to eminence among hi^fellaa-citizens, or his past ser vices, will receive their support, if a criminal ambi tion and sinister motives guide him, if the acquisition; of wealth and power be his ruling passion, if he ba in heurt and soul an enemy to liberty and equality among men ; or if be be a friend to the political principles maintained by the present administration of the federal government, and, especially, to a liberal construction of the federal constitution. The un» dersigntfd, m short, will heartily support only such men as thevbelieve will, by policy they will adopt, and the iheasutcs they will pursue, promote the best iutt^ests of the State of Gcorgim With these declarations, the undersigned present themselvfes before the public. It Will bo for that public to dedda whether the Southron is to succeed or to fall. PHILIP C. GTJ1EU. v’ ; ' JOHN A. JONES. The SocraRON will be published wcekkr, .0^ i imperial sheet, wtfli new type, at three dollars p annum, pavable in advance, or four dr"- at the expiration of the year,—.TermB i Nov. 94, l&ff, ims fywk .. . ^