Newspaper Page Text
the locomotive isconstanlly and fully employed. The
* „ y ar e in daily expectation of one or more Engine
; so that by the time the road reaches the
0 j. e> they will be a complete state of preparation to
1,4 II pie demands of the trade along the whole line.
111 Norfolk Deacon.
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ASS) STATE KICHT’S ADVOCATE.
MILLEDGEVILLE, MARCH 13, 1833.
\ Student has been received, and will appear in our next.
EACE. HOEV PEACE, ABIDE WITH. VS!
The bone of contention between the North ajul
nth is broken and divided. The great Tariff ques
,t is settled upon amicable and generous terms,
e Southern Delegation, with a few exceptions
ter to be erased from the calender of infamy, hail
thc proffered conciliation as the drying up of the
od of trouble, and nobly and zealously seconded
efforts of the Father of the Tariff to reduce the
•de;:s of taxation and to restore harmony and
icord to the disquieted bosom of the Country,
ere were some friends of sanguinary measures,
:has Webster, Clayton &c. of the Senate, and
ams, Everett &e. of the House of Ropresenta
;s, who fearlessly avowed that they prefered the
rijfto the Union. We have never harbored a
ibt in our mind that tltese men would be glad to
the Union destroyed, if the States could be so
kled together as to form one nation of people and
■ government. They hoped to eftect that darl
cbject thro’ the agency of the Tariff. In this,
(ever, they have been disappointed. Their grand
i is to gyve and fetter the people and make them
missive slaves to the arbitrary will of a despot,
a this compromise is the strongest refutation of
foul and slanderous imputation, that the oppo
its of the Tarilfin the South desired a dissolution
lie Union, and sought to involve the country in
il war. Never was there a better opportunity to
■c affected such fell purpose, had it been harbor-
Their noble and devoted attachment to Union
ill Liberty was displayed in the readiness with
lich the opponents of the Tariff accepted even
Ig deferred justice. We had a rigid to demand
il expect a more speedy, if not an immediate rc
nto equality of taxation, but the safety of the U
in would have been imperilled by’ delay and jow
ng—& who was found among the most violent of
s enemies of the Tariff to say, let us reject the
ofli red conciliation? The restoration of their vio
ed rights was the idol of their hearts and we have
en, in the strength of our unconquerable love of
lion, accepted a promise of that restoration. What
s feel strongly we avow boldly, and in the violence
our abhorrence of tyranny and slavery, wc have
»de resolutions which a show of the returning
isc of justice among the T ariff men has softened
and disarmed. Wc surrender every thing, but Lib
ly, to Union.
Estimation ©£ laim Forsytti, at lioine!
flie betrayal of the feelings of constituents, and the
Us’ of their confidence, was nevermore plainly
‘need than it has been bv the Republican citizens
Hillsborough, and its vicinity, in Jasper
their recent manifestation of abhorrence at the
nduct of Mr. Forsyth, in his support of the Moody
ll—his opposition to the peace-making and re due.
11 hill, and his unnatural alliance with
in Burcn & Cos. His apostacy to the views ofliis
nstituents, has very deservedly incurred their most
iignant displeasure and reprobation ; and whilst
: nrc no advocates or justifiers of (he manner in
Inch they manifested their proud spirits and sore
-tings at the strange course which Mr. Forsyth
ss ° madly pursued, yet we admire and applaud
c motive which actuated them. Let an insulted
“'pie frown with indignation upon an insulting pub
-1 servant, and they’ thereby’ teach him his depen
!|Ke on their suffrage.
Hut wc have not yet told our readers of the fleets.
• le )'may be comprehended in this short sentence.
I hi the arrival of the mail at Hillsboro’, on the Bth
st - ‘t was ascertained that Mr. Forsyth had sup
>rtwl the Collection alias bloody Bill—and opposed
e and peace-making effort made by
* patriots of the country. Tliis mortifying in
“geiice, induced the citizens to shew their indigna
"hereupon, a gallows was erected, with an el.
1,1 horsy th attached, and lie was mock-executed,
diigy \ Vug susjiendcd lor an hour, with the
bill in one hand and Jackson's Proclamation
u ' mouth, and many other significant terms ; after
I', it was consumed by fire, fee.
e received a communication from a respectable
111 ’ embodying the above statement, and 1o pub*
*" ’lie particulars, at the request of many of the cit
-1 "ho witnessed tl»e exhibition.
Comity Officer* of ihe u, ewtM cirenu
rtie following persons have been elected Officers in
LUMPK t N COUNTY.
John S. Fields, Ambrose K. Blackwell, Wrn. Dean
■loan Ox lord and John C. Joi.es, Justices Inf. Court.
Jesse 1. Riley, Clerk Superior Court.
>' dbain Qnillian, Clerk Inferior Court.
B«tn:icl Jones, Sheriff.
Thomas Moore, Tax Collector.
James Martin, Receiver of Tax Returns.
John Hanson, County Surveyor.
Isaac R. Foster, Coroner.
CASS COUNTY.
Samuel Mays, James F. Thompson, Isaac L. Parker,
James Orr and Nath’l Woffor A, Justices Inf. Coirt.
benjamin I'. Adair, Sheriff.
C hester Hanks, Clerk Superior Court.
Ueatlicrn Rankin, Clerk Inferior Court.
” illiam Da moron, Tax Collector.
Khj.ih It. Forsyth, Receiver Tux Returns.
Nealy Goodwin, County Surveyor.
John Pack, Coroner.
Gilmer county.
Ralph Smith, Benjamin Cooper. Cornelius Cooper,
Bcnj. M. Griffith,and Robert Berry, Justices Inf. Court.
Levi Ilufsteller, Sheriff.
1 honias Burnett, Clerk Superior Court.
Henry K. Qnillian, Clerk Inferior Court.
State SligAit* ou the ©titer side of the Tweed.
Gov. Southard ol N. Jersey’, who has lately been
elected u Oenutoi to Congress from tliat State, de
clares that a Stute can resist the laws passed by
C ongress, and that the General Government can not
enforce obedience to such laws as a State may de
clare void and inoperative within her limits. This
declaration is to be found in bis Message to the Le
gislature, anterior to his election to the Senate. He
was elected by a handsome majority. The country
is rapidly rallying round the Rights of the States
and repudiating the Federal doctrines of the admin
istration and its new-born supporters. The ey’es op
the people have been hood-winked by over-much
confidence in the honesty, patriotism and democratic
principles of Gen’l. Jackson. Give them the means
ot information and the clouds which have so long
hung over us will be dissipated by’ the light of
truth.
Cooing and Billing.
'1 he Editor of the National Gazette, an open and
undisguised advocate of the British form ofgovern
fftent is in much doubt as to the constancy’ of the
President to bis Federal doctrines. He conjures
him to hold steadfastly to that faith, and ho may al
ways know where to rely for support in any emer
gency. The Ga’Cße has exerted all its powers of
persuasion and fascmif’- n ff eloquence to retain the
wandering and unsettled ailccL'ons of the President
upon the object of his present espousals, ’flic Pre
sident reminds us of Henry the Eighth, pf-England
He is striving to find a political faith between ’' 1C
Federal and Republican doctrines, as that Monarch
strove to establish a religious creed between the Ca_
tholieks and Reformers, but from his violent, head
strong passions, is alvvay’s running full-tilt from one
extreme to the other. But the President is a sworn ,
elected Magistrate. Wc should be gratified to see
his conscience analized.
Made up of nought, but inconsistencies.
The President has vetoed Mr. Clay’s land bill.
We approve the act, but we disclaim the motive
which prompted it, as being narrow-minded and
dishonest. Who docs not know, that has .observed
the course of events at Washington, that the Presi
dent secretly favored the prospect of Mr. Clav to
dispose of the public lands ? Mr. Clay lias mortal
ly offended that dignitary by uniting with Mr. Cal.
houn in effecting a modification of the Tariff, and
thus strip! Kim ami hie ttai-U«g tw»«tling of the tiellll
of the measure; and he has cast Mr. Clay’s bill into
the ditch to be revenged for the insult offered him
in the abandonment of the protective system. There
is scarcely an act of the President of late day’s,which
docs not savor, more oi less, of this detcstiblc vice
o (spile, mixed up with the malicious spirit of the
demon. The President Could not, consistently with
his present principles, throw Mr Clay's bill from his
hands unsigned. But we are unfeignedly rejoiced
at the act. Good, will sometimes come out of evil.
“Sufficient unto the day is Bie evil Sliereof.”
The Richmond Whig thinks that the South will,
at no distant day, be found advocating the doc.
trine of protection, to sustain her against the com
petitiou of the South American cotton planters.
Wc do not think that the South will ever need pro
tection for injurious competition from that quar
ter, but should it prove necessary to extend to
them the fostering arm of the government, who can
doubt the power to do it? Is not the right to
protect agriculture conferred upon Congress in di
rect terms? We do not believe that the situation of
the country can he pushed to the extremity of in
ducing the Southern people to lay aside their pre
judices against the policy of protection—the power
itselfis undeniable. The Whig can not intend to
give the two powers equal constitutional sanction.
The power to encourage agriculture is one of the
rights which the Federal Convention almost u
nanimously conferred upon Congress—the right to
protect manufactures is claimed by implication, and
when it was proposed to insert the words “manu
factures” it was rejected as being impolitic. Upon
the quest ion of agriculture but cue objection can be
urged, llic impolicy of all fostering legisation. Wc
should bo sorry to sec the South make such a call
upon Congress, and we can not indulge the opinion
that it will ever be done by those now so strenu*
~u*ly op|sited to protection. The Whig should not
indulge in such speculations after having adandoned
the policy of protection, and whilst it is appealing
so eloquently to the patriotism of statesmen to fore
go a present interest for a permanent blessing. The
Union was endangered by the Taritijand the Whig
in the true spirit of patriotism and devoted attach
ment to the Union, generously abandoned its favo
rite system and called upon Congress to lessen the
burthens under which the South believed she wa s
groaning and sinking into premature decay. Why
then should the W hig meet this agitating question
when all the elements ot strife are dashing against
the Ark ol Union? Rather pour oil upon the waves
and calm the tempest.
X!ic Bill to nullify Koiith-Carotina.
If the President of the United States had asked
Congress to pass a law to hamstring Calhoun, Mc-
Duffie, Hayne, Hamilton and others, we do verily
believe that they would have been Subservient enough
to ave done his bidding. The Bih which strikes a
death-blow at liberty’, but designed especially to
draw the life-blood of South-Carolina, lias passed
both Houses of Cotigress, and we need scarcely add
received the sanction of the President. We do im
plore Heaven, if it ever become necessary to ad
minister the sanguinary remedy, provided in dun bill
for the cure of the disease with which South-Caro
lina is infected, that the bitter pill may be swal’ow
ed first by those States so eager to clothe the Presi
dent with unlimited authority over the land and na_
val lbrccs of the Union* and to place the whole na
tional Treasury’at his disposal. We should be sor
ry’ to see the detected felon ever forced to swallow’
the poison he intended for another, but we do be
seech the Ruler of nations to make the wretches who
would have drugged South Carolina with the infer
nal potion intended for her, may be compelled to
drink the cup to its very’ dregs, whenever they may
be infected with the like malady, which will not be
long. But that Bill and its originates and suppor
ters will meet the same fate with the “Alien and Se
dition laws” and their authors. They will soon be
heard calling for the rocks and mountains to fa’l up
on them to screen them from the vengeance of the
people.
Om* Diplomatic Relation*.
It is not a little surprising that at this moment the
great unit nation should be left without a single rep
resentative at the most important Courts of Europe
At St. James, wc have had no minister of the first
grade, since the recall of Mr. Van Buren. At St.
Cloud, no representative of any kind, since the re
turn of Mr. Rives, and none but a boyish Secretary’
of Legation at the Court of St, Petersburg, since the
return ot John Randolph, of Roanoke. Never, in
‘he whole range of our extensive and important di
ploma.‘.:c relations have we been so disgraced and
humbled i.' v *h e bead ot tne great unit nation as au
rinc the present administration of the Government,
and yet the incumbent of'he Executive Chair and his
submissive and cringing para- 1 '" 3 arc eternally’ pra
ting about the character of our count.')' f or indepen
dence, stability’ and dignity, übroad. Not a siß®.e
representative at the Courts of three of the most pow
erful nations in the world I Is our character abroad
to be sustained thus ? We shall in all probability be
blotted out from the remembrance of the nations of
Europe, unless our puissant President of the great
unit nation send a herald to make proclamation in
the Courts of Europe that a grand consolidated na
tion (called in the late Proclamation of its majestic
Ruler, the United nation of North America) does ex_
Never was there a period of peace and tranquility
which called for an able, skillful and active diploma
tic corps from the goverment, more than the prcscn (
crisis, and it is astonishingly true that we have not
a minister abroad, fit to be a groom of the bed-cham
ber to our mighty monarch of the unit nation. We
entertain but .little doubt, that Envoys extraordinary
will be dispatched very shortly to the several Courts
of Europe to communicate the joyous and important
change effected on our government by the abracada
bra of a Proclamation and to receive the thanks and
gratulatiom of the Monarchs of Europe upon the fa
vorable turn the divine right is taking on this side of
the water.
JOSiA BAADOLPH, OF ROANOKE.
This honest and independent statesman has tra
velled,in his enfeebled state of health, to Washington
City, to learn something of the origin of the Procla
mation. It was such a singular monster to come
from the Republican President whom Randolph aid.
ed to elect, and under whom he accepted an office
that he wishes to know the history of its birth, &c
The meeting between Hickory and Roanoke would
make a fit subject for the pencil of Hogarth. The
sight of Roanoke will set all the curs about the Pal
ace to barking, and the keepers of the Old Lion will
not open the cage for a meeting if they can possibly
avoid it.
Wc hope that Randolph may be returned to the
next Congress. He will probe to the scat of the
corruption which gave birth to the Proclamation
and (bo message ol the President upon the South
Carolina affairs. Mr. Randolph can not be bough t
or awed into silence. He is an able, fearless and
persevering friend t< the government of the Union,
as it was transmitted to us from Jefferson. Ile will
prove a wooden-horss to the Federalists. In him is
concealed all the elements of destruction to their
doctrines.
The Washington Glob*.
1 lie Globe is deeply mortified that its claims for
governmental patronage should have been overlook
ed all-together in the late elections for printers to the
two houses ot Congress. Me do not sympatizt:
with the unprincipled Editor of that paper. We
heartily rejoice at his defeat, and we should haveen
teituined as bad an opinion of Congress* as Jugur
tha did ol the Senate and people of Rome had they
conferred upon so much baseness any of the emolu
ments in their bestowinent. Could the Editor of the
Globe have indulged, for a moment, the belief that
iMr. C lay or his triends would have voted for the
election of the adder which stung him, when lie was
warming him to life in his bosom ? Could he have
supposed that John C. Calhoun or his friends w r ould
have helped him to an office, when they had been the
constant objects ol lhs ceaseless vituperation for the
two past years ? Upon what was his expectation
based ! Did he believe that his tyrannical and iin
perious master could awe them into his support ?
Did he consider that the President’s sudden conver
sion to the heresy ol Federalism could unite the sup
port of that party upon his favorites and servile
minions ? The Globe is destined io meet the fate of
all faithless followers. Its meridian glory lias pass’
ed and it is now rapidly descending from the high
place it held in tlio firmament of Court favour. So
passetli away the glory of the world.
mu. POH\»i:’»Tr,st or
Pending the passage of Mr. Clay’s bill in the Se
nate, for a modification of the Tariff, on a question
of formality, about the introduction of the bill, Mr.
Poindexter held forth ihe following pithy and piquant
remarks. With the Senator we agree, that a cure
is much more desirable by the bill, than by “gun
powder, bulls and cannon.”
Mr. Poindexter said—We have arrived at a most
singular state of things. Here were gentlemen
loudly dcnouncidg all tariffs—who were yet perfect
ly willing to vote fleets and armies for enforcing
them. The olive branch of peace had been offered
by the patriotic Senator from Ky.-—shall we refuse
him leave to introduce it, because forsooth the bill
which contains it must, like most other hills, be y
mendedf If one of its provisons could not constituti
onally be adopted here,it is worse than a precious bill
now under discussion which violates the Constitu
tion from beginning to end, and ought to be kicked
out of the Senate? lie hoped tiie proposed bill
which looks to a state of peace and concord would
be heard. The Senator from Ky., had bis thanks
for proposing it. lie regarded it as a more saluta
ry panacea for the disorders which now pervaded
the nation, than gunpowder, balls and cannon. lle
was was willing to accede to any proposition which
approached towards conciliation, rather than clothe
the Exccujivc with the whole physical force of the
nation.
ITVAUOtTKAIi AOOUESS
Ol (he President of (lie United States, -Ids
march, 1833.
Fellow-Citizens : —The w ill of the American people, ex
pressed through their unsolicited suffrages, calls me before you
to pass through the solemnities preparatory to taking upon
iiijact f i».i, a--*. -e n—..; a -c tUciTmin] (Stales for another
term. For their approbation of my public conduct, through a
period which has not been without its difficulties, and for this
renewed expression of their confidence in my good intentions.
I am at a loss for terms adequate to the expression of my grat
itude. It shall be displayed, to the extent of my humble a
hilities, in continued efforts so to administer the Government
as to preserve their liberty and promote their happiness.
So many events have orcurred within the last four years,
which have necessarily called forth, sometimes under circum
stances 'he most delicate and painful, my views of the prin
ciples ann which ou ffbt to be pursued by the General
Government, that I nefff on t!us occasion, but allude to a
few leading considerations co.mee'ed with some es tliPin.
The foreign policy adopted by oilr Government soon after
the formation of our present Constitution, and very generally
pursued by successive administrations, lias been crowned with
almost complete siieress, and haselevrted our diameter a
mong the nations of the earth. To do justice to all. and sub
mit to wrong from none, has been, (luring my ndininisUation.
its governing maxim ; am) so happy has been its results, that
we are not only at peace with all the world, but h-ve few cau
ses of controversy, and those of minor importance, remaining
unadjusted.
In the domestic policy of this Government, there are two
objects which especially deserve the attention of the people
and their Representatives, and which have been, and wiil
continue to be the sujcctsofmv increasing solicitude. They
are the preservation of the rights of tha several States, aud
the integrity of the Union.
These great objects are necessarily connected, and sun
only be attained by an enlightened exercise of the powers
of each within its appropriate sphere, in conformity with the
public will constitutionally expressed. To this end, it becomes
the duty of all to yield a ready and patriotic submission to
the laws constitutionally enacted, and thereby promote and
strerg hen a proper confidence in those institutions of the
several States and of the United States, which the people
themselves have ordained for their own government.
My experience in public concerns, and the observation of
a life somewhat advanced, confirm the opinions long since
imbibed by me, that the destruction of cur Slate Govern
ments or the annihiliation oftheir control over the local con
cerns of the people, would lead directly to revolution and an
archy, and finally to despotism and military domination. In
proportion, therefore, as the general government encroaches
upon the rights of the States, in the same proportion does it
impair its own power and detract from its ability to fulfil the
purposes of its creation. Solemnly impressed with these
considerations, my countrymen will ever find me ready
to exorcise my constitutional powers in arresting meas
ures which may directly or indiretly encroach upon tin
rights of the Slates, or tend to consolidate all political power
in the General Government, llut of equal, and indeed of in
calculable importance in the Union of those States, and the sa
cred duty of all to contribute to its preservation by a liberal
support of the General Government in the exercise of its
just powers. Vou have been wisely admonished to “ac
custom yourselves to think ami speak of the Union as of the
palladium of your political safety and prosperity, watching
for its preservation with jealous anxiety, discountenancing
whatever may suggest even a suspicion that it can in any e
vrnt be abandoned, and indignantly frowning upon the first
dawning of any attempt to alienate any portion ofour country
from tha rest, or to enfeeble the sacred ties which now link
together the various parts. \\ ithout Union our Indepen
dence and l iberty would never have been achieved—with
out Union they can never ho maintained. Divided into
twenty-four, or even a smaller number of separate communi
ties, we shall see our internal trade burdened w ith numberless
restraints and exactions; communication betwen distant
pi ints and sections obstructed, nr cut off'; our sons made sol
diers to deluge with blood the fields they now till in peace ;
the mass of our people borne down and impoverished hy tax
es, to support armies and navies ; and military leaders
at the head of their victorious legions becoming our lawgiv
ers ami judges. The loss of liberty, of all good government
of peace, plenty and happiness, must Inevtiantv follow a dis
solution of the Union. In supporting it, therefore, we sup
port all that is dear to the freeman and the philanthropist.
The time at which 1 stand before you is full of interest.—
The eyes of all nations are fixed on our republic. The event
of the existing crisis will be decisive in the opinion of man
kind of the practicability of our federal system of govern
ment. Great is Ihe stake plac ed in our hands : great is the
responsibility w hich must rest upon the people of the llniled
Slates, Ist u* realize (he importance ol the altitude in
which we stare! befue the world, I,ei u* exercise forbeat
ance and firmness. lit us extricate our country from the
dangers which surround it, and learn wisdom from the les
sons they inculcate.
Deeply impr* i w itii tha trut.i of these observations,
unu iindi r tin- ■ I t.■ >ii ol ifiat soli n.n oath which 1 am a
•- 11 t: n. int-iiii tt.e jo ; powers, f the Constitution, aid to
tjrunmit to.impaired to p, t.-rty the blessings of our
todrr.fi I nil n. At .t tl.i-s.uire time, it will be my aim
to i- culrato ;.y my i-lm.-ia! art.-, the etc, .-fity of exercising,
by the General Government, thosepqwprsonly that are clear
ly delegated; to encourage simplicity and ermiotny it> the efr*
penditiut sos the Government ,• to raise no more motley from
the people than may be requisite for these objects, and in a
manner that will b it promote the interests of all classes of
the community, ami of all portions of the Union. Constant
ly hearing in mind that in oiit. iii n into Society “ individuals
must give up a share of liberty n pro erve the rest,” it will
be my desire so to discharge my duties as to foster, with onr
brethren in all parts of the country, a spirit of’ibertl conces
sion and compromise; and, hy reconciling our fellow-citizens
to those partial sacrifices which they must unavoidably make
for the preservation of greater good, to recommend our inval
uable Government and l nion to the confidence and affections
of the American people.
1 inally, it is my most fervent prayer, to that Almighty Br
ing before whom I now stand, and who lias kept us in his
hands from the infancy of our Republic to the present day.
that he will so overrule all my intentions and actions, and in
spire the hearts ufmy fellow citizens, that up. may be pre
served from dangers of all kinds, and eontinuu forever a UNI
TE D AND HAPPY PEOPLE.
OBIfUARY.
Died on the first of March, near Macon, Mr. CHARLES
\\ ILLIAM WASHINGTON, son of Robert H. and Eliza
beth Washington of Milledgoville, aged ihirtv years.
“An honest man is the noblest work ofGotf;" lie wasone.
It virtue, magnanimity and integrity, should command res
pect, lie was entitled to it—lt an ardent anxiety to promote
the welf are and happiness of his kindred and friends should
make a man beloved, he should he beloved and esteemed by
a JI D a dutiful child and an affectionate brotbe.r, should ex
cite admiration, his character should be admired,aud his prin
ciples imbibed, for he loved and venerated his parents, and
his heart was pregnant with fraternal affection—lf a strict
adherence to honesty and truth, should make the character of
an individual exemplary, he should command interest; for
Ins actions were invariably guided by both. He lias left an
father and mother and numerous oihtr relations and
fi iendst to bere ave his loss, and shed ihe tear of heart-broken
sympathy for his premature fate.
11c is gone, he is gone, to worlds beyond sight,
His spirit has flown, to the realms of delight.
• fl&lif ary EJisemtipineal .
Will I a view to the promotion of Military
-Science, and the encouragement of Volunteer Corps,
n system of at-mini one impotents is proposed.
Arrangement*are in progress (or an extensive Encamp
ment in this neighborhood, to commence on the *-2<l itlou
cfn.y in JUny in which all the Volunteer Corps of
Infantry in the State, arc respectfully invited tojoia us.
i ho time proposed (nr the contim anceof the encampment,
l 8 one week. A beautiful location has been selected,com
manding im extensive view of the Town and surrounding
country. An arrangement has been made for the construc
tion of comfortable 1 ents and Marques* for the accommoda
tion ot all (lie companies that may come. A contract has
been made with individuals who will act as sutlers, and fur
nish the men with good board, on the ground, at 75 eta. each
per day. On the last day an ICacampment Medal will be shot
Jor. Ihe first cl the proposed series of encampments took
place near Macon last Spring, and was attended with much
benefit to the companies present.
L. V. IHJCKXER/V
i. F. GREEN, I Committee
K. E. I*A UK, y 0 f
J.O. POLHILL, I Arrangements.
JOHN MILLER, J
G3*Thc Georgia papers are requested to publish the above
two or three tiroes, as a matter of public accoutodation.
Milledgeville, March 10, 1833.
I'll AISLES*
T'US distiuguislrefi, beautiful thorough bred Racer and
’ 1 , er °, u * er . s ’ vv *ll ‘‘gain stand at my son George W.
Johnson s tlio ensuing season, within one mile of Moody’s
i uvern, I" the county of Chesterfield, 18 miles from Pfcters
>lll ;r, and trom Richmond, and is now at his stand ready
T‘ :,r ? S ’ a . l * 7 ;i % f***'". payable on the Ist of Au
viil"i-’ W , " m " 1 L cx f lire ; but m;, y be discharged with
4-on before that time, $ 100 insurance, payable as sewn as the
m,-re IS known to be in foal, or parted with ; One Dollar cash,
to the Groom. Wares that tailed to Sir Charles last year by
the season, will be insured this at the season price. ' Mares
lurnielind with pasturage, which are excellent and extensive,
..ml servants sent with marcs hoarded gratis. Separate grass,
rye, and wheat lots tor marcs and cults, with Stables to pro
tect them from bad weather, and fed if required according to
order, or without limit as to grain, at 25 cents a day. No li
- " < ’ Cl<len . t ' butevtr >' necessary attention to prevent
-SIR CHARLES was never in finer health, and there he
' ver was a surer horse. He will he 1C years old this spring
and lias br. n so clicn advertised, and it is so well known,
that n IS only necessary to - ,y that some of his Colts have
won the fi Mowing races within the last year:
The Jockey Club purse at Columbia, 4 mile heals; the
$,.>000 match race at Charleston, -1 mile heats; the Jockey
Club purse at Charleston, \ mile heals #1000; the club
two mile day there ; the
jockey club purse, s- 1000, at ’Free I'iil; tho 2 mile day there
the 2 mile (I,iy at Fairfield; the best three in five there ; the
1 mile race at Rultimore, $2500; the 3 mile day there; at
Norfolk tig- l mile and tlio 3 mile days; the 2 mile day at
Dread Ii- ;-k ; the 1 tnilo day and the 2 mile race at Law
rencevUle ; the 2 mile race at Jerusalem; the club race at
Gloucester Cnurt-b< use; the Club &. mile day at Wiiiterfield.
tall l»Jl —The jockey club purse at llroad Rock; the club
purse, 1 milt sand repeat at New Market; the two mile day
Riere ; at Baltimore the §3OOO stakes, 1 mile beats ; and the
jockey club purse, 1 mile heats there; one day at Winterfield;
the 2 mile race at \’ >rf !k ; the jockey c üb, 4 mile heats,
at Tree Hill, $ loot); the Club purse at Jerusalem; the pro
prietor’s purse at New Hope: the jockey club, and thepro
prietoor’s purse at Liberty; the-club race at Milton ; the 3
mile club race at Halifax, Virginia; the 3 mile day, the 2
mile day, and the best 3 in 5 day at Christiansville ; the club
race at Franklin Court-house ; the club re.ee at Wythe (’ourt
house; one day at Wheeling; the Sweepstakes at Beach
Rottom ; the race at Elizabethtown, aud the race at Zanes
ville, Ohio, where the field was distanced. All these Races
wen won hy Sir Charles’s get in-183 J T/icse facts speak for
themselves, and recorded facts they are.
W. R. JOHNSON.
Chesterfield, February 19, 1833.
flic Tkoroiigii-flrert Race Ilorsa*,
MEII El
rt’lllE Property of WM. R. JOHNSON, Esq. will stand
5 *he ensuing Season at the Plantation of Paul Fitzsiinons
near Augusta, and lie let to map.es at Thirty dollars the Sea
son, Fifty to ensure. The money to be sent with the mare.
Season from 10th March, to Ist July. Good pasturage fur
nished gratis ; Grain at 25 cents per day. Mares at the risk
of the owners.
Pl3 R FOR fl AHTCI3 S.
HERR CLINE is only four years old this Spring—he
will he trained and run again next Fall, and has run the foi
lowing races:
MAY, 18321—Tie won the Sweepstakes at New-Market,
Virginia, heating four others, with the greatest ease.
Same week, he w ithe gr--.it Stakes at the same place, one
mile and repeat—9 Sulscribti.-s, $-'OO each, with ease, at two
beats.
Same month, lie won the Sweepstakes over the Central
Course, at Baltimore, one mile and repeat—s -Subscribers,
#2OO each ; beating e ixily four others, among them Mr. Cor
bin's imported fillv. lie was then sold for §IOOO.
OCT. 1833. Me run-fur the great Stakes over the New
Market Course, two mile lic-tt —13 Subs -.fibers, §2OO eaeh ;
and preyed second in the race, winning the second heat in
fine lim-
Next week, be went to Baltimore, am! run for the great
Stall s, two mile lira'-, §SOO, half forfeit and was second to
Modoc who wen the race.
Next week, he returned to Ri ihmond, and won the Stakes—
-7 Subscribers, two mile heats, S2OO each ; heating easily,
Mr. Holt's Rolla, by Gohsnna.
He then went to t .fiumhiy,and won the Proprietor's Purse;
2 mile heals, beating two Olliers.
W R JOHNSON.
March, 13, 1633. 9 if