Georgia times and state right's advocate. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1833-1834, December 11, 1833, Image 4

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PROSPECTUS or AND Journal of Foliiiral Economy. I • This paper is published on the first and third W eduesday of e»erv month, on a super-roy al sheet of lf> pages octavo, corresponding in nils with the Free TraPe Advocate, (the pre nrsnrofthe Banner of the Constitution,) and constituting in tnc year, with an Index, a volume of 400 papes. 2. It is chiefly political, bnt in part miscella neous; its design being to disseminate the great principles of Constitutional Libertv, end to assist in drawing men’s minds from the worship cf their fellows to an acquaintance with the tialnre of their government. 3. It will be open to the examination of all political questions of a general nature, and will communicate to the people of the North the po itieal movements of the South, and to those ol South, the political movements of the North. 4. It will advocate the Republican doctrines of »!*<*, as set forth in the Virginia and Kentucky! resolutions, and as maintained by JelTerson,Mad ison, M’Kean, and the other distinguished cham pions of State Rights and State Remedies. It will also record the most important documents and Stale Papers connected with the proceedings of South Carolina, so ns to preserve a complete history of the limes, for the future reference of politicians and statesmen. 5. The principles of Free Trade will he illus trated,and enforced, as useful to reconcile the pub lic mind, at the North, to the approachingereduc tioit of the Tariff to a uniform standard of ud valo rem duties, as well as necessary to prevent any future attempts to re-establish the restrictive sys tem. 6. The impolicy and of ap propriations lor works of internal improvement hy tlie Y'edcral Government, will bn maintained, and all attempts to encroach on the rights of the •States hy that Government, will be resi :ed, from whatever party they may emanate ; and espe cially w ill its interference with the peculiar do mestic policy of the Southern States, should any unhappily he attempted, denounced as a viola tion of the federal compact. 7. It will oppose monopolies, special privileges, and sinentres of every description, as interfering with the equality of rights upon which our institu tions are founded, and will he emphatically the advocate of a Cheap Government. 8. it will also be opposed to man-worship, the bane of republics, and it will expose corruption and dereliction of 'principle in public servants, tn ivhatcrer party they may profess to belong. —This, however, it will do in a manner which shall not degrade the press, and upon no occasion will the columns of the Kxamincr he the vehicle of scur rility or vulgar personal abuse. TERMS: 1- The price of the paper is, per annum, paya ble in all cases in advance, as follows : Far a single copy - . - - - $1 50 For 4 copies, paid for at the same time hy that number of subscri bers, $5, equal per copy to - • I 25 For 10 copies, paid for in the same manner, $lO, equal percopy to - I 00 2. Each remittance will be considered as a distinct transaction, and every subscription will he discontinued at the end of the year paid for, unless renewed by a second payment, ily this means, subscribers may withdraw without in curring the expense of postage in giving notice of withdrawal, and th« trouble of furnishing re ceipts will be avoided, inasmuch as the transmis sion of the paper will be of itself evidence of its baring beenpaed for. 3- No subscription for less than a year will be received, and in all eases where money is remit ted, it will be considered, unless otherwise ex pressed, in payment of the current volume, and the back Nos. will accordingly be forwarded: Provided, however. That this stipulation to fur nish the back Nos. shall not continue after the number on hand shall have been exhausted, of which we shall give due notice. 4. All postage must be paid, except upon let ters containing five dollars in a single note, or any larger sum : but the risk of miscarriage by the mail is assumed by the publisher. 5. There are no agents established for this po per at any place; but any Postmaster or other individual may constitute himself an agent for others, \,y availing himself of the discount allowed upon a number of copies. All communications tn be addressed to the subscriber, who respectfully requests that the names of persons and places transmitted to him may be distinctly written, so as to avoid mistakes, which can only be corrected by incurring the ex pense of postage. CONDY RAGUET. Philadelphia JlugustT, 1833. PROSPECTUS or THE Complete Periodical Library. TJORTY-EIGHT pages weakly—nearly 2500 r octavo pages in a year for five dollars, fur nishing annually select reading equal to fifty volumes of common size. The Library will contain nearly all the new works of merits as they appear viz: Voyages and Travels; History; Biography; Select Memoirs; the approved European Annuals ; Ad ventures ; Tales of unexceptionable charac ter, &c. Ac. The “ Complete Periodical Library,” will he found indispensable to all lovers of good reading in town or country. Every number will contain forty-eight pages, in a sise expressly adapted for binding when the book is completed; printed with type so large as not to fatigue the weakest eye. Its immense size will enable the Editor to crowd any common sized book in two numbers, frequently into one. New works will thus he despatched as they arrive from Europe, and sent off to its patrons. The subscriber in Missouri will be brought as it were to the very fountain of literature. Worksprinted in this Library will be furnished to him, when without it, he would be wholly unable to procure them. A book that will cost us six dollars to import, cau be re-print ed and distributed to subscribers, owning to our peculiar facilities, for about 20 or 30 cents, with the important addition of its being fresh and new. We will give nearly 2500 pages annually, equal to 50 common sized books ! Eveiy work published in the Library will be complete in itself. A Title Page will he given in each volume, so that the subscriber, if he please, may sell or give, it away, without injury to any of the others; or it may be bound up at the plsasure of the subscribers. This work presents an extraordinary, feature unknown to any other periodical in the conntry. The subscription price may be considered a mere loan for the year, as the work at the year’* end, w ill sell for cost, and in many parts of the United Slates it wilt bring doubla its original cost to the subscriber. The works published in the “ Complete PeriJ odical Library,” w ill be of the highest character, both as regards the author and his subject. New works of approved merit, w ill be sent out to tire Editor by every arrival from Europe, giving him an unlimited field to select from, w hile care will hr taken to make his publication equal to uuy hint: of die kind published in America, t The first number will be issued on the Bth es May next, and regularly every Wednesday thereafter, secured in handsome printed covers, and on fine w hite paper, at $5 per annum, pay able in advance, ('tubs remitting s>2o, will be • applied w ith five copies for that sum ; agents at the same rate. Address T. K. GREEN HANK, No. 9 Franklin Place, I’hila. N■ B. The usual exchange to Editors who ndvarwue. 41:... GEORGIA TIMES, AND STATE RIGHTS* ADVOCATE, PKOSPIXTI « ron rt'BLISIiI.MO AT ScOTTSROROPCH, NEAR MII.LKIH.KVILLI-', Gs. .9 Lite-ary Periodical, entitled, The Georgia .Imriemiciau AND koulhern Journal of Flstarntion,*' To be devoted to the interest of Education in our own Stale pirticularly and adapted to the wants cf Families, and Communities, by KOBT. C. BROWN, of Seottthorough. The Editor is of opinion that Philosophical Education as it is generally conducted in our Universities and Academies, is too much confined to the communication of knowledge, and that 100 little attention is bestowed > n the formation of the intellectual habits, of jndging, reasoning, and communication, by which aione, tire prosecution of science, after leaving School or College, and the business of active life, can be successfully pursued. It is therefore, his design, to conduct this work in reference to the analysis of the hu man mind, and to endeavor to forward the grand object of fitting our sons and daughters for thacti cal LIES. There being no work of the kind in the South ern country, it is taken for granted, that no one w ill question the propriety of endeavouring to establish an organ of good, so much needed : We adopt the sentiments cf no party, w* are pledged to no society, nor is it our wish to dictate as to any mode or course to be pursued in general, or particular instruction. Ouraira shall be, to open the avenues of thought on this important subject, and by our efforts, endeavor to bless the country of our adoption; the land cf our children; the home that w e love! Ala time when manual labor schools Bud other respectable institutions are rising around ns, it is reasonable to expect, that some mode of communication, with regard to the success or failure of any attempts, is very desirable.... Teachers need a periodical wherein they may express their views, and from which they may learn the views of others, and getlier encourage ment and guidance in the arduous task of instruc tion ; it is our design to collect information from every source and make cur paper an organ of communication between distant teachers and fha friends of Education in general. Perhaps at nn period of our history could there be a greater call forcorrect views on school-books and apparatus, necessary to facilitate the progress of the pupil We will, therefore, endeavor to supply our columns with respective views of manuals and information with regard to all the machinery of Education. That our piper may interest every thinking man, and be an inmate of the family circle: it will embrace Agricultural, and Me chanical essays: Polite Literature: Essays en Moral and Physical Science ; Biography, Origi nal, and Selected Poetry ; and Strictures on the best modes of Education; discipline of Schools, notices of literary institutions, and literary works; in fine any subject calculated to interest the planter, the teacher, mother, father, guardian and student. Disputed points in politics or religion, shall he entirely excluded, nor is the Academician ever to he the vehicle of malevolent insinuations, or ungenerous aspersions. It shall be the constant aim of the Editor, to unite all conflicting cats, snd views, in the noble object of training children in the ways of wisdom, and diffusing a taste for literature, the arts end sciences, which ever tend to make a happy and enlightened peo ple. Advertisements of Teachers, School and Books, will he inserted at the usual rates, hut this class of advertisements only, as it is intended to make the Academician subserve the purposes of Education and general information. Tbs pa per will be published semi-mentlily, at Three Dollars per annum, payable In advance, and will contain eight pages. In a geed type oil the plan of the American Farmer. 24 Nos. making a vol ume, which will be accompanied with an elegant jitlc Page, and general Index. Editors willing to further the cause of educa tion in our State, will confer a favor by publish ing this Prospectus, and the favor will be re ciprocated in any way desired. It is eonteinpla ted that the first No. will be issed in November next. Any person forwarding to the Editors subscriptions for five papers shall receive the sixth copy gratis: Communications addressed postage paid, to R. C. Brown, Scottsborough, will be attended ts. Sept. 11, 1833. PROSPECTUS •>* the COLr.UBFS ENQUIRER. NEW SERIES. Er Mirabeah B. Lamar A William B. Tikslzt. FROM the commencement of the ensuing year. the COLUMBUS ENQUIRER will be published by Mibabeau B. Lamar and Wil liam B. Tinsley, in support of thejpvinciples of the “STATE RIGHTS’ PARTY OF GEOR GIA,” as announced in the preamble and reso lutions of the State Rights’ Meeting in Milledge ville, Nov. 13th, 1833, which are already before the public. Its columns, however, will not be do voted exclusively to politics ; but such attention shall be given toiLiterary and Miscellaneous Selections, Commercial and Foreign News, and General Intelligence, as to make it as acceptable as possible to every class of readers. The Enquirer will be printed with entirely new materials,and on the best paper used in this country, for such publications. Tite change of Editors, aud the contemplated improvement of the paper, have been made the occasion of issuing a prospectus for increasing its patronage and extending its circulation.— Those friendly to the cause w hich it will advo cate, are requested to give circulalieu to this notice in iheir respective counties. Terms —Three Dollars per annum, payable in advance, or Four Dollars if not paid within the year. 45.... ON or before the first day of June next, we promise to pay William Johnson, or bearer, forty five dollars for value received, this 28th January 1832. QUINTON STEPHENS. LITTLETON TURNER. August 21 32 —1 6m. Georgia Jones County. BEFORE me Joseph Day. one of the Justices of the Inferior Court of said county, person ally came Henry W ood, who being duly sworn, deposeth and saith, that he owned and possessed the original note, of which the above is in sub stance a copy ; and that said original note, is lost or mislaid, so that be cannot find it. HENRY WOOD. Sworn to before me this 22 July 1833. JOS. DAY, I. i. C. August 21 32—1 Cra> RI LE NISI. Inferior Court, July Term, 1833. IT appearing tn the court, upon the petition and affidavit of Henry Wood, that he owned and possessed the original note of which the a bovs is in substance a copy, and that said origi nal note, has been lost or mislaid, so that he can not find it. It is therefore ordered, that said Quintain Stephens aud Littleton Turner, shew cause (if any they have,) at the next term of this court, why the above copy should not be estab lished, in lieu of the original, so lost or mislaid; audit is ordered that a copy of this rule be served upon the said Quintam Stephens and Littleton Turner, personally, if to be found in this State, and if not to he found in this State, then this role to he published iu some public Gazelle in this State, for the spare of three months. A true extiacl taken from the minutes ofJoe.es Inferior court, this 22 July 1833. M. A. MARSHALL, C. I. O, Augesl 21 3C—3hi. 3iua;:dgi:vii.i.i: Authorised by the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Dame Fortune stands in merry mood, Pouring her favors to the crowd; B>> ready friend, before they fall— Who knows but you may catch them all. - IRONEY-HONEV! LOTS or ITONKY ! ! tve consider that Fortune WW is daily diffusing wealth and happiness in all parts, stul every corner of this expensive country, through the medium of the LOTTERY SYSTE M ; that scarcely a week or a day j wheels by us without bringing the Intelligence, that some one of our friends or fellow-citizens has drawn a prize; and that it only requires an investment of the trivial sum of tec dollars to give us a good chance for a prize of 20.000; Surely it is unnecessary to urge upon this liberal and enlightened people, the policy cf stepping in the way to wealth and the favor of the propitious Dame. The next day’s drawing Will take place, at the courl-1 reuse, in the town of Mi Hedge vilie, on Saturday, the 14th of December next, at 2 o'clock I’. M.; at which time the follow ing comfortable prizes will be floating to wit: one of 810,000, one of $5,000, two of SI, OOO, three of S9OO, two of 8800, two of 8700, three of SOOO, three of SSOO, two of SSOO, live of 8300, two of S2OO, anti eighteen of SIOO, besides several of §SO and 820. The holder of Ticket No. 8,155, is enti tled to a capital prize of SIO,OOO, and permis sion is, hy the Commissioners, requested to publish her name as the fortunate holder of said auuibcr. SCHEME. 1 Prize of 820,000 is 8 20,000 3 Prizes of 10,000 is 30,000 4 do 5,000 is 20,000 0 do 1,000 is 9,000 5 do 900 is 4,500 5 do 800 is 4,000 5 do 700 is 3,500 5 do 000 is 3,000 5 do 500 is 2,500 5 do 400 is 2,000 5 do 300 is 1,500 5 do 200 is 1,000 35 do 100 is 3,500 50 do 50 is 2,500 050 do 20 is 13,000 5,000 do 12 is 60,000 Less limn T*V© hiatiks tnaPilliCE All the Prizes to he floating from the commence ment, except the following, deposited as follows, viz : First Day’s Drawing. —2 Prizes of 5,000. 1 of 1,000, 1 of 900, 1 of 800, 1 of 700, 1 of 600, 1 of 500, 1 of 400, 1 cf 30A, 1 of 200. Second Day’s Drawing. —One Prize of 10,000, lof 1,000, lof 980, lof 800,1 of 700, 1 of 600, 1 of 500, 1 of 400, 1 of 300, 1 of 200. Third day’s Drawing. —One Prize of 10,000, 1 of 1,000, 1 of 900, 1 of 800, 1 of7oo, 1 of 600, 1 of 500, 1 of 400, I of 300, 1 of 200. Fourth Day’s Drawing. —o::s Prize of 10,000, 1 of 1,002 1 cf “39, 1 cf 800, 1 of 700, 1 of6oo, 1 of 500, 1 of 400, 1 oFJOO, lof 200. Fifth and last Drawing.— One Prize of 20,000, 1 of 1,000, 1 ot 900, 1 of 800, 1 of 700, 1 of 600, 1 es 500, 1 of 400, 1 of 300, 1 of 200. And on the commencement of the First, Se cond, Third and Fourth Day’s Drawing.the first drawn number shall be entitled to a prize cf SI,OOO, and on the conclusionof the last Day’s Drawing, the first and last drawn numbers shall be entitled to a capital Prize of $5,000 each, in addition to such prizes as may be drawn to their numbers. The whole Lottery to be completed in Five Day’s Drawing only ! PRIZES ONLY' TO BE DR AYVN. The whole of the Prizes payable in sixty day® after each Day’s Drawing —subject toa deduction of fiifteen per cent. All prizes not applied tor in twelve months fro*® —-*t-trrawing to >e const acretl as a donation to the luuds ol the Mtl- Jedgevjlle Street Lottery. The drawing to take place under the superin tendence of WM. W. CARNES, SAM. BUFFING ION, RAM. ROCKWELL, WM. 11. TORRANCE, E. E. PARK, JOSEPH STOVALL, JOHN H. WARE, J. W. A. SAN FORD, & ROU T. M’COMB, Commissioners Also, a Board of Visitors. PRESENT PRICE OF TICKETS. Wholes 10. Halves 5. Quarters 2 50. For sale in a great variety of numbers at the Commissioners Office on Wayne Street, opposite the Post-Office and State Bank. ORDERS for Tickets, from any part of the U. .States, (post paid,) will meet withprompt at tention. Address to PRYOR YVRSGIST, Secretary tn Commissioners. Milledgeville, Feb. 18, 1833. s—ts CENTRAL. HOTEL, • liar ttii, Georgia. John Carter, LATE OF CLINTON, HAS opened the CENTRAL HOTEL, in the extensive Fire Proof Brick Building, recent ly erected in this city. The location is central to the business of the place, and the house is con veniently arranged for the accommodation of fa milies or single persons, either as regular or tran sient hoarders. The Beds and Furniture through out are new and superior. The Table and Bar will always be furnished with the best the mar ket affords; and no pains will be spared hy the proprietor, to render comfortable and agreeable all who favor him with their custom ; and be hopes, from his long experience, and the satisfac tion heretofore rendered the community, to merit from his friends and the public,a libera! share of patronage. Extensive and convenient Stables are attached to the Hctel. June 1833 33-ts The .tVtr-lltrfc JlMprcury, • SS published every VVedncsdy at noon, and sent offby the evening mails of that day and the morning mails of Thursday. The Mer cury is made up of the principal articles of the Journal of Commerce, including the review of the market prices of stocks, Ac. But without ship news nr advertisements. It is neatly print ed on a very larga and beautiful sheet. Price $5 per annun ; $5 for one copy two years, or $lO lor four copies one year, payable always in ad vance. 'l’liis paper is admirably calculated for agricul'uralists and professional gentlemen and for all families Jh-il IPJLtYrjLCiT® OF every description, executed with ne itness and despatch at THE TIMES ami STATE mtiirrs advocate oa*, JiiM i>iil>li»ht‘d< At tueTimes A State Right’s Advocate Office, Milledgeville. TBSE PHIZES DRAWN IN THE 01L133321213 or THE Ist and 24 quality, and of the 3d having im2>rovemeut.s; WITH THE I>R AWER’S X A M K A Nl> RESIDENCE. Corn pi I'eti from the .Numerical l!ook>, After a careful • \Mmiiißt ton of them by the CnmniliMitourrß. Price Three Dollars. The Interest w hich is manifested throughout the State, to be possessed of information relating | to the interesting section known as the Chero- j kee country, and the importance of all informa tion that can lie obtained in regard to its geo graphical position—the quality of its land—its boundaries, watercourses, roads, Ac. has induc ed the publishers hereof, at the entreaties of ma ny persons, by industrious application, and at considerable expense, to undertake the publica-1 tion of this little volume. They are flattered j with the hope, that its usefulness will be ap- ! predated by all who are interested in the acquire ment of this important portion of our State. The ! publishers feel assured that they do not over es timate the information it imparts, and the great j convenience and facility, by which it can he , acquired; and, altlio’ there may be inaccuracies in its descriptive character, (from the possibility ! tiiat entirely correct returns were not always made by the District Surveyors) yet. as it is the most correct that can be obtained, without a personal knowledge ofevery lot, it must be con sidered the best information the nature of the case admits of. Os one fact, the reader is guar anteed, that this Book wears a correct and official stamp —as it was copied with accuracy from the Numerical Books, now of file in the Executive Department of the State, after those Books were thoroughly examined by the late Land Lottery Commissioners. The accuracy and fidelity of the quality of each lot, was ascertained, hy espe cial reference to the field notes of the District Surveyors, and their detached plats. To these de siderata, may be stated, that the No. of each lot, in its district and section, by whom drawn, in whose captains district, and in what county, are equally, and entir. ly authentic. It must he a de sirable object to both the drawer, and the pur chaser, to have a Book es the kind we here with submit to the public ; as it embodies in a com pressed and in a portable form, all the memora nda information which both purchaser and seller could have, without occular knowledge or from information dearly purchased, if procured other wise. The Book will contain a Numerical list of all the lots drawn in the different sections of the Land Lottery, excepting such as are returned third quality ; and if any of the third quality has any improvement on it, such lot also will be embrac ed. To each lot, will he affixed a letter a, b or c, which designates the quality ; « for the first, b for the second, and c for the third ; and have also attached the Nos. of acres improved—the draw er’s name, the district in which he gave in as for lunate drawer, and the county in which he resides, and the No. ofhis lot, and the district and section in w'liich it is located. Whenever a dis trict is not represented particularly, the reader will learn that all the lots in said district, (as In the stli and other districts,) are returned third quality—To each district its boundary is stated, w itli some brief, but applicable remarks. The publishers forbear any further exordium of this, their “little effort” —prefering that its me rit and u-ifulness shall speak more audibly its awn praise. Such as it is, (and it is hoped, it will be pronounced good) is respecttully dedica ted to the people of Georgia, by THE PUBLISHERS. Orders, (postage paid,) enclosing Three Dol lars, will be promptly attended to. Address M. D. J. SLADE, Milledgeville. rfffacon Carnitare XV A RE -II OUSE, VoSlou •Mrenue, ,IO!I\ 82- OLUIKKNBIATC. INTENDING to close his present business, - offers his stock at reduced prices, consisting •side Boards of various patterns, Secretaries and Book Cases, Grecian Sofas, of various patterns. Sets of Dining Tables, Single Dining Tables, Pillar and Claw, Card, Tea and Break fast Tables, Centre Tables, Ladies Work Tables, Candle Stands, Portable Desks, Piano Stools, V\ ash Stands, Ladies Dressing Bureaus, Do. do. with Looking Glasses, Bureaus of various patterns, Mahogany Chairs, with hair seats, Cribbs and Cradles, Wardrobes, Counting House Book Cases, Spring Seat Rocking Chairs, Mahogany, Carved, and Maple Bedsteads French Bedsteads, Mahogany Stools, Cots, Curled IJair Mattresses, Feather Beds, Bokt-rs and Pillows, Spring Mattresses, Ac. Also, an elegant assortment of tint] I’ier Glasses, Cane and Rush Seat Fancy and Wiadsor CHAIRS, Willow waggons, with a variety of articles, all of which are of the best workmanship and materials, and will be warranted, having b -en made under my own in spection, and will be sold for cash, cotton, or approved paper. Macon, July 15, 1833. 28-6 m 11. S. HOTEL. HENRY COSNAKD, [Laic Proprietor of the Eagle aad Phoe nix Hotel,] lias removed to thatelegant, extensive, and well known Establishment, the l SITED STATES HOTEL, vy HERE all those who may call, will find » f him disposed, as usual, to spare no pair* in bestowing every attention calculated to prcil mote their comfort anfl satisfaction. His Caro lina and Georgia customers, who so liberally patronized him, when at the EAGLE & PIIQJ NIX HOTEL, (and to whom he takes this op portunity of tendering his most grateful acknowl edgements,) w ill find him ready with a renewed zeal, to accommodate them with the best the market wiil afford. Attached to the Hotel, is a separate Tenement, appropriated exclusively to the accommodation of transient Ladies and Families; to w hich there is a private entrance, both in front and rear, and where they will be completely retired from the bustle of the public department. His STABLES will lie attended by a very careful Ostler,and ins Bar furnished with thebe ': of Wines and Liqueurs. (O'All the principal STAGES to and from this City, arrive and Hnpart from the Hotel. This Establishment is situated in a central and highly respectable part of the city, nonvenii nt to the Post Office and the Banks, and w hile it is be lieved to he unsurpassed by any other in the Southern Slates, in it* extensive ami elegant! ne- uta of accommodation, the proprietor is deter mined to spare no exertions or eipense to reodet them in svery respect satisfactory to bis custom-1 *r*, It, COSKAIIf* Charles Ltabuzan. TIHLL continue the Commission Business * * in Augusta, and solicits the patronage of the friends of the late firm of A. Slaughter, & C. Labuzan, and of the planters generally. The sale of cotton, and purchase of goods, will beat tended to exclusively by himself. Cotton order ed to be sold on arrival, will meet with prompt attention, and if directed to he stored, will be placed in a first rate Fire Proof Ware-House, and tiie usual advances made, if required. Augusta Aug. 1", 1833. 32 3m If *are-ilo use And Commission il»«iitcss, MACON, Ga. THE Subscribers will continue the above bu siness the ensuing seasou, and return their grateful thanks to those who favored them with their patronage the past season. They have taken the Ware House, known as Lamar’s LOWER WARE-HOUSE, situated immediately on the river.Jiaving a good wharf attached thereto, and very safe from fire. For the convenience of their friends residing be tween the Ocmulgee and Oconee rivers, they : have taken the large and convenient Ware-House ! recently erected by Mr. G. B. Ward law, in East Macon, which from its peculiar situation, is rendered quite secure from the danger of fire, and 1 from whence Cotton w ill he taken to the wharves I free of charges. Each of the subscribers will rc i side in Macon the ensuing season, and promise i their unremitting attention to the interest of those who may favor them with their business and confidence. Liberal advances will he made on produce, merchandize and other property confi ded to their care, and strict attention given to the filling of orders, receiving and forwarding goods &c. Insurance in the best offices can be effected at the usual rates when desired. EVE HARD HAMILTON, JOHN U. HAYES. August 29 33—1 m. M D. Hi: SO A I ATE of Milledgeville, and his mother, have A taken the establishment in Macon, formerly kept by Charles Williamson, Esq. known as the WASHING TON IIA LL. The house has undergone a thorough repair.and with other improvements, a Dining Room, eigh ty feet in length, has been added to the south w ing of the building. The bedchambers have | been re-painted,and the furniture is entirelv new. particularly beds. His servants, the same as were employed in his house at Milledgeville. From tb* central situation of his establish ment and his long experience in the business, lie confidently looks to the public fora liberal share of patronage. Macon, Oct. 29, 1832. 0 Tlse Tiioittaslou Union Hotel Property Lottery , AS the public lias sustained this lottery up to the present time, and from recent events which have taken place, since the I last notice, the Proprietor deems it proper to j give a succinct history of it from the beginning j to the present time; leaving out as much as pos sible what has been already published. ! The proprietor sometime before he offered this i Lottery to the public, had mortgaged nearly | all the property to two persons whom lie owed— | one contained the negroes,the other the lands, j Ac.—And as he believed for less than half of 1 its value: however, with a view to take them up I before, or at the time they became due, and j proceeded on with his mercantile business; but i iie was from misfortune unable to take up the mortgages, and having made many other credi tors, and perceiving that landed property had fallen nearly half its value, and finally finding for what it would bring that even all his property would not satisfy his creditors, unless he gets its value ; and having been thus fixed, and being anxious to do justice to bis other creditors, as well as the mortgagees, offered bis property in said Lottery. He applied to his creditors for their approba- I ion—and amongst them one whose claim is ! quite inconsiderable, refused—and issued his fi I fa (after which others issued and levied on the ! property, and it was all sold from the Ist Tues , Jay in last Aiitntsl and mi In tl*» Ist Tuesday in September—and bought in by two mortgages lat comparatively small prices—but more than j the amount of the fi fa : and the properly left | with the Proprietor, to carry on the Lottery. Said creditor’s claim being younger than others, 1 the money was paid to the eldest claim—and i be still not paid. On visiting Savannah, the Pro j prietor was taken by this same creditor by casa, and placed in confinement on the twenty-t iird of last March. And in the mean time the mortga gees attorney took possession of the negroes offered in the scheme of said lottery and sold them. It is proper to state that from the sales of tickets, there is a larger amount of money on j hand than the amount of the nine negroes in the ' scheme in said Lottery. On taking now near-J lyt wo months to consult (both personally and 1 by letters) a number of gentlemen, the best course to be taken, the Proprietor from their advice, as -well as his own convictions has come to the I conclusion, to continue the said Lottery ; hut ad- I (nits he must have the aid of his country : Ho ! will present a petition to the next Legislature ; ss soon as itsils, with a number of respectable tigners, praying leave todraw said Lottery; (and | to pay cash to prize holders instead of negroes I o the amount set forth in the scheme of said ne- j groes. Then justice will be dona to purchasers ; of tickets, and to his numerous creditors; and 1 lie will feel grateful to bis country which will i verify the old adage, “ a friend in ueed is a friend indeed.” j He does not make this appeal to the public j with a hope of obtaining the fame of Timole | on of old by means of chance and fortune—no; < be only asks, what can hedone by hisstate— , for its aid so as to act legally—and only to main j tain his steadiness of purpose and firmness of mind by which although poor, he will be able to pass the remainder of Ids days, neither to be grieved with past prosperity, nor to be broken down by present or future adversity, but to be gratified for having the satisfaction of doing jus- I lice, and for the following very good reasons: ! —it will balance his affairs', restore his credit, i satisfy his creditors, and to injure neither indi j vidual nor country in this peculiar case, I It is therefore requested that the purchasers of : Tickets remain satisfied until it is known whetlj-l er the Legislature will have rejected or granted) his Petition.—ls rejected, all the money will be J ! immediately returned by the Agents, but if on j the other hand the Petition is allowed he will J , have time to sell the unsold tickets, and draw I said Lottery by the first of next January, the I lime specified in the last notice dated the 25th of March. J. B. BATEMAN. I V Editors who , have published any of the j notices that have been issued respecting said ! Lottery, wiil be please give the above one iriser- tion per month, ’till the Legislature sits in next , November; and in addition the Proprietor re quests lie editor of the Hickory Nut, to do the I san *®- june 5 GLOUUIA ALMANAC,’. HTMIE publication of the Georgia Almanac, e which was regularly printed in this office, •tit failed lor two years, ow ing to circumstances i which could not be controlled by the former edi i 1,,r < will hereafter lie continued every year, with the calculations of Robert Grier, Esq. The Al manac for I H‘ft w ill be printed with new type and new X ,-laical and Astronomical signs, on good paper, and carefully superintended. I\f. sous wishing t, purchase by the groee, are re quested to make early application: the price will j be as low as it can bn tfforded, to save expense "il l a truall profit. Afucsta —•rtrr rrcpvAi t»». Just published, srsiaa a? ADOPTED in Convention, by the Judges . - V the -Superior Courts. Price One DoM lr Orders enclosing the sum of one dollar ed (postage paid) to M. D. J. SI ADK THE NUMERICAL BOOk^ Os all Prizes AND drawer 3 names and residence in the Gold Lottery, lately drawn, i 8 now ’ preparing, and will shortly issue from the r. gia Times Office, price Ten Dollars, bound Orders for the same, will be received by ’ M. I>. J. SLAD& The Cheapest Work ever offered to the Pair CHARLES ALEX A A HER & LOUS A. CODV under the linn of *• INTKNO COMMENCING ON TIIK FIRST OF JANRAY 1633 SF KI -MONTH LV I-ÜBLICATION, TO RE CALLED * The .Votxltsf's •Magazine. "V 0 braricl ' of 'he 'iffluer literature of tb*' . AN font age offers a wider field, or or-auuM r.ety lor selection, than those works familijf; known as Romances and Novels. The unbound ed encouragement which these have have induced many of the most gifod writers ( engage in their compesition, and they hav. consequence, attained a degree of merit and ceilence which, with a few splendid exception/ were until the present centu-y, entirely nnknom Amongst the gre-at mass of Novels which a,, constantly in course of publication, there are of couree some w hich,are very superiour to the oth ers. To select these and present them to th. reading community in a neat, popnlor and con renient form, with greater expedition and at cost than they can be furnished by tbrhook -w* lers, is the principle object of the proposed n»Mi cation ; an object whicu the publishers ar. sah, lied they can accomplish more easily than ... other persons, on account of tbs extraordinary facilities winch they enjoy* * Besides a constant and direct iuterceurse with the London publishers, through which thev , enabled to receive the latest British Novels soon as they can be transmitted to this counirv they are connected with the most extensiv. B rin* tng establishment in Philadelphia, and can n print in the shortest period any work they rnav choose to undertake. If, f or example thev should wish to furnish as part of their regular J. rtes, any New English Novel, they can' do sort as early a date as any American bookse'ler w that distant subscribers may receive itsimulline ously with the bookseller’s republicatioa j,*/ larger cities, and at but a trilling expens* o fp„. In selecting works for this publication, n«n. will be taken list those which convey both grati fication and instruction; and especially snehtu have the charm of freshness and interest. If these objects cannot be accomplished fro* *, abundant supply of the modern press recourse 'may be bad to those sterling productions es a for mer age. which being almost entirely out of print I are comparatively but little known, and, it som I cases, would be found more attractive thai Most ; of those which are of more recent origin. As the Novellist’s Magazine, though intended, i expressly for preservation, w ill be furnished t» | subscribers in pamphlet form, it will be conveyed. - by mail to the most distant places, and at a very moderate expense of postage. It will furnish a ! large amount of agreeable, useful, and improving | reading, for less than one fifth of the prico at i which the same might be otherwise obtained, and with little or no trouble to tbe subscriber.— To families resident in the country, remote fit* | the Atlantic towns, this publication will be parli , culariy serviceable, as supplying their literary ! wants in the best method that could be devised. Determined to use every available means «f } making the Novelist’s Magazine interesting end | valuable to subscribers, and for the further par poso of giving Encouragement to Americas win* | ters to stimulate their exertions, the pablishw* propose a premium of SSOO TO THE AUTHOR Os the best •Yovel, Upon a Natioual subject, which shall be present j ed on or before the Ist of October, 1833: This premium will be awarded by a committee, j to he chosen for the purpese, and as itispresu*- ! cd tbe successful competitor will possess usu.su- I al merit, the publishers of the Novelist’s Maga | z.ine, besides using it for that w-ork, engage tw ; have it printed in handsome bonk form, corres ponding to the Best Louden Editions of popular, j novels. For every thousand copies of the writ | thus printed, which may be sold, the author shall J rec eive, in addition ts the Five Hundred dollars, j FIFTY DOLLARS, or five dollars fsr every hundred, I Gj’Tbose novels presented for the premium : which shall prove unsuccessful, will be returned | to their respective authors, the publishers claim j ing no control over any but that te which the | prize may he awarded. Ali w ritings intended as competitors for thio I premium, must be conveyed free of postage, to i lie addressed to the publishers, prior to the Ist of ; October 1833. | The Novsiist’s Magazine will be published i* 1 semi-monthly numbers —each number containing forty-eight extra imperial cetavo pages, with double columns, arranged after tbe manner of the Lady’s Book : to w bich work, though it will be considerably larger, it will bear a general ex ternal resemblance. Ihe Magazine will ma*o two volumes annually of more than six hundred pages each, and at the expiration of every six months, or thirteen numbers, subscribers will be furnished with a handsome title page and tab.o of contents. The whole amount of the matter furnished in a single year, will be equal to mot* than fifty volumes of the common sized l-nglm* duodecimo books. The paper upoa which the Magazine will be printed, will bo es the inc>» quality used for book work, and a size «lcgM“T adapted for binding. As the type w ill be entire ly new, and of a neat appearance, each volume when bound, will furnish a handsome as wells* valuable addition to the liberties of those who patronize the work. ..., The price of tbe Novelist's Magazine will • Five Dollars per annum, payable in advance. - the publishers intend issuing a limited number impressions persons w ishing to subscribe are re quested to do so without delay. Orders mu* addressed to nn C. ALEXANDER,* CO. No. 3 Athenian Buildings, Franklis i’iacorhi j deipliia. a I A commission of 20 percent, will be » ,i0 j to Agents, and all remittances by mail will • i the publisher’s risque, if accompanied by a i .Master’s certificate, and not otherwise. Any ’ i gent or Dost Master furnishing ten suhicn ' and remitting the amount of the subscrip j shall be entitled to a commission ol ‘-0 I one copy gijitis one year, ami th® Dad} 6 » i for the same length of time. Uncurrent 1,0 solvent hanks received in paymant at p* l ' A specimen of the work, or any ititonu* 1 specting it, may he obtained, by addrcsai g publishers, (post paid.) Agents s f (Un '> ' * subscribers, aad preferring a copy *>' e , f ofl to the commissions, can have it regular; warded. ( ... ] MJ * Editors of newspapers generally, wi P insert the above as often as conveni rn t’ an . tic themselves thereby to a tree exchange year. 7/rr Journal of IS published daily nt $lO pci a week at per annum, or '* P a . c( cttc vance t?l per annum. Orders must panted with money or a reference, •"'! t|l r , md forwarded hy mail at the risk of th® ‘ L l( . f jbcrv without the payment of postage- • tP i for the Journal of U< mtu®re« tw ice * .ft S s th« Mrreury, nr« net rtrciwed 3 ” • a#