js pj- j. yi '-ft r1 I -- ' .1 A ) "i'triiM of the Watchman: 5 P !tl!S Hut not paid In Advance, Two dollars " .T.-n.. im will h rharod. i ;"Vri Inserted at 81 for the first, and 25 cts. orders chvzed Si :f t-Jrl ct. higher jthnia these rates. A liberal dedoc- f'TTceilo the liuitors fnust be posi paiu. f nbtma ! tttatcljmau. ! : - , .;,. ,1,4 ' LL 1 TWO DAYS LATER FROM EUROPE. ' BRUNEB & JAMES, - ' ; . i, i Editors iSf Proprietors. jN ACCOUNT OF TllE BATTLE 'S MILL. TRAM jAlprson ! Rulers. Do this! akd Liberty is safe." Pen' Harrison. NEW SERIES. VOLUME V NUMBER 51. SALISBURY, N. C, THURSDAY, APRIL ! 2(5, 1849. SOUR lay Woltl form a very im jlttte of Rnmsour's Mill with-. out' a knou IedKe of the times and circom- stfincei connected uth it. Of these 1 will litV-corijefjt art Recount as I can. Riwan Upunty iook an active pari rn me IlWot6l ionarliut it win?bc remcmherfd that iiia districts: of. u-hat was then Rowan yn$ hot SQjicndl)jo,the'cause of Libehy i"aVc bedn desired. We know lilt littje alxfut that prt of it now caUed j5vldn County, except the lower por Itiin called f The Flat Swamp;" xhch wkv the place of Col. Bryant's retreat vv icn tfrivenj out of the Fork of the Yad. Jii ', as willl j)Q "more fully noticed in the ' Thiil latter, for a considerable distance uplthc'rive. was, originally settled b,y a H)iieJ,pojj)ulationftom every direction, having no' general trait of National char ac fr ' there vere about as1 many lories ks Whigs arhonpr them, and a third party i lUr, tirougnrcowardice, stood neutral. i raloMng Hunting Creek up toth(f brushy 4ijuntatns, you wouiu nave luutm mc m- knew how to; raise s sufficient fprce, but they determined upon it. J ' j j 1, About this time, news was received that Gen. Gates was on his way with a North em array to assist them: this greatly en couraged them to persevere ; for by: break ing up that encampment, they would pre- vent it from jcausing any embarrassment ! to Gen. Gates, or giving any assistance to Cornwallis. ' 'f ' : They, therefore, collected all the men they could in ijowan, and perhaps some from Mecklenburg. Air were under! the command of Gen. Rutherford. Having crossed the Catawba, they were joined by Captains Bpwmari and D'obsoti from Burke ; and Gen. Rutherford nowifinding himself atthe head of a considerable body of men, moved towards the enemy's camp : about 300 mpunted infantry many pf them officers, formed the advance guard, while the infantryfollowed on under the officer in command. The advance party, after a march of 5 miles, having reacied.the enemy's camp, reconnoitred it without be ing discovered. Some difference 6f opin ion now arose as to the best course; to pdr- of itself; being unable to stand,; he upon his side and loaded and Ored his musket several times. The loss of the tories was great in men, and all their camp equipments. U A num ber of-horses was taken, some of which had teen stolen in the Forks of the Yad-' k"n. And to return to the region, the peo ple there were much distressed at this time; for Col. Bryant, thinking this a fa vorable time while so many men were absent, to assemble his friends, who were ready to march at an hourrs notice, gave the word and formed his camp a few miles from Riddle's ferry on the big' Yadkin, He soon found himself at the head of a Guilford Court House in March ; all more or less favorable to the cause of the Ame ricans. We will mention one or two tradition ary anecdotes connected with the battle of which we have an account above. Capt. Iteid was ordered to take his men and flank the tories: in doing so he had f to cross a bottom and a branch and pass through some underbrush, sheemerg- eration the route of the proposed Turn pike from Salisbury to the Georgia line. On motion, Martin Sigman, Esq., was ; called to the Chair, and Jonas Bost. ap ! pointed Secretarv. , The ohiprf nf th ed in view of the enemy a man rushed j meeting beinexplained by M. L. McCor out towards him, and got behind a tree, j uie, Esq., the following gentlemen were watching an opportunity to shoot him. appointed a committee to draft resolutions But being a good marksman Reid kept his impressive of the sense of the meeting, eye on the, tree, and seeihg the shoulder ! viz : Dr. A. M. Powelf. 3. iM. LowranrP. of the tory not entirely covered by it, he Esq.t Jonas Bost E Cq1 w l Mehaf. The steamship Hermann, fiora Southampton, arrived at New York on Friday. She saited on the 26th March, and bring! London paperi' two days later than before received. - . ; All the e (Torts used by the GoTernments of France and Great Britain to renew the armis tice between Sardinia and Austria bare failed. Hostilities would therefore recommence, and be carried on with great rigor on both sides. ; Al though European sympathies were strongly en listed on the side of tho Italian cause, ye it MEETING IN CATAWBA. 1,,5e,ne?"3r "V e bal K,n5 Y-! Ji I would be beaten bv his nowerful enemies, vt ho A large and respectable meeting of the J to the numler of 100,000 strong, meditated a citizens of Catawba was held at the Court j direct march uPn Turin, there, as Radetzky' House, in Newton, on TnUv th in.V, nianifesto stated, to negotiate the terms of peacei, r. - - y l be laiest accounts from Hungary abundint- instant, (Court week) to take into consid- I lr prored that the ImDerialUts weie nol makmi? . c large body of tories that flocked to ;his i took a,rifle from one of his men, and shot i rv an(j rjol M II l?iifi;nt him through the part exposed. Alter the close of the battle he went among the standard from every direction, particular ly his friends in the Fork. What increased still more the distress of the Whigs in that region was a false report from the army in Lincoln, that it The Committee retired when M. L. M Lorkle, Lsq., was called on. Mr. M. wounded and finding one shot through the , addressed the meeting Mcnmolpnoth nn - - waaav Sj V shoulder, and on enquiry ias to the way he 1 only contending fbr the usefulness of the received his wound, found himio be the I Turnpike contemplated, but internal im- had been totally defeated ; that Captain I man he had shot, and dressed the wound Armstrong was killed, and his w'hole com pany either slain or made prisoners. This news soon reached Bryant's camp, and encouraged the tories, somq of whom provements, generally ; he concluded with the hope that the rdad would pass through Newton, as being the most direct route. tha utants yearly all tories throughout the i tloughi that they would better wait till (lUhTains to tile uatawpa uiver. r or i t. m .fn ntrv nrr:Vpd - Cantains Fal s. f$t few years of tfui war, they took j Armstrongf ;c0l. Brevard, and rjerhas Sljvc part in it; but some ol them ?l caused considerable annoyance o the I AujigS by -their Tobberies, especially by hohW-alirig. Having committed depre- i daiibi in this way, they would fly ,to the I m-iuntaihs. and Were there concealed. M'Jh'e Whig's 6( the Fork, assisted by. ;.Uieir friends South of the South Yadkin, ! and ftrnished with a sufficient force for - potfction, would pursue thp rogues, often I retoyer their property, and punish the of. fehdefs by' Lynch law. Juf aa the i seat of war seemed to be . i i I I' . : changing from North to South, the tories becarrie more active In the beginning of Ithoi year 1780, they began to collect in companies, nut the Whigs would always scatter them before they joined fbr him. In one case a whig and a tory were each behind a tree watching to shoot each other, when the whig employed thisstrat- iip l.iA T. rirkr. and nei hans somd Others. ! thrptfnr1 tr rrU n nrl L-ill ovari? raViaV in affem to iret hi npmv tn firrv TTp. nnt w. ua -'i , w ' ..V4 l&l.A V.l W tW.'ft III ! O - " " J " I . 1. 1. . . . rl!lfltA I 1 I 1: - ; B ' ' I f fli mfirl foL'inrr n t- . I, . ' 1 ICIOII1 C l(J or near the Forks, in three daysi But the his hat on the end of his ram rod and pro- i "V " "iec,l"'n ! good efTec. w. . i a " w i i rr j "--wB.wvsusra'vrwsi,VBi Whigs at home, not willing to believe jjeciea it oeyona tne tree, 1 tic tory sup- , , i nff the road such reports concerning their army, sent j posing that a head was there as well as a j The Committee, then, reported as ful- messengers from several neighbprhoods to i "f" liretl a ball through it, when the whig i lows : ' taking the advantage of him put a ball 1icrcas, a publication has appeared in through his body, before he could reload. ; somc of the papers, purporting to be the Thp. tnrip Wpro ,aI, Kv f!r TAn ! proceedings of a public meeting, held much headway against the-valianl Majgars, aj success had latterly crowned the arms of, the latter, and the Austrians bad sererallimes been beaten with considerable lots. ' The Republic of Palermo has rejected the constitution and proposals made by the King of Naples. The French and itritish fleets were about to withdraw, and the Sicilians were pre. paring for the hostilities which would immedi ately ensue. The King-of. Naples could with great difficulty keep bis throne, as a formida ble insurrection ws about breaking out Ui Ca labria, and the Neapolitans themseltes were unquiet. . . ; I The proposal to appoint the King of Prutsu Emperor nf Cemmany was rejected by ihn Frankfort Parliament on the 21st March. This unexpected decision caused great excitement; and would, it is feared, lead to unpleasant cot, sequences between Prussia and Austria, j The returns of the Bank of France were not quite so favorable for the trade of Paris as some of the previous returns. t' A manifesto on the part of the Socialists and r i.H largre . 5 bddre.s. . i I n May, 1780, when Charleston Itrft-nde'red .to the British arm and Lird. Cornwallis was full of hope that he V uld redeem1, his pledge made to his lr ejnds before? he left England, (which was tli-aUf thvy vyouldgive him four regiments oiegulars. jiie would march triumphant froWone end 6f the Continent to the other ;) v and 'he' had marched up as far asXJamden, lHriy of the South Caroliniansljoining bis tnqaru,; and the news had spread Ihiroiiirh all the' upper country; then all ; tories weire in motion; the encamp-- mentnear Li0coln1on was founded the.lat f; icr :pa,fi oi mat spring, or me uegmnmg jhjsumrrief, for when taken in June, V )t ba.iifpu'nd'tto beold camp. Their ob- 'fl was tobc ready to joirr Cornwall is on jiVrrjarch,' and a considerable bpdy of J t-rntti soon collect cd. The tories were in HtTKition in eery direction. The Whigs S iWf ail ;mcans in their power to keep tkcm downi succeeded in distressing them before "they, collected in. large numbers; the AVhigs pften ventured ouUn one direc tiofi Ih the j e venihgand before day the next rnorhing would be called upon to go ipt a'nbthp.r, ;But they were always ready and filling I to go, never lying down at some others, and among them Maj JaYnes Rutherford, thought that they ought, to avail themselves of the advantage! of at tacking by surprise. After some ;dispus sion the latfer opiniPn prevailed. The first step was to send an express (o Gen. Rutherford to hasten on with the infantry for they intended an immediate attack: , The Spartan number. 300, with some thing of thes Spartan spirit. now divided into two equal bodies; the first was to advance and fire, then retreat, ana forrn t . . i . . . .1 ii" . in the rear pf the second, in thej mea,n time to load as they retired ; the -second division was to, advance and fire, retreat and in like1 jmanner form in the rar and load; thus' to draw tki enemy Jon, till Rutherford came up with the maip body of the army., I ! This wasithe plan of attack, with the clear understanding that each was to watch the other's motions, and actlin con cert. The arrangement being thus made and understood, the attack was made Mr. McCorkle delivered himself ably, and ! Communists was expected at Paris i) tho26lh. his remarks were well received. j Creat military precautions were to be taken by A. H. Shuford, Esq., being called on,! lhe G0''"01601 to preserve the public peace, erave some facts, relating to iU hill K 1 Lord Aberdeen's speech in the House of Lbids " r, ... v.v , . . . .... i . reiauve io European auairs naa produced a i . r rt . r. . n.-r r - ucins. were o-i. uc ; o per crnis oil. voc. I he trench Government had received. tele. about un-rise, while the tories Were en gaed in preparing their breakfast. And so completes was the surprise that they found themselves falling by the alls!pf their enemies almost as soon as they dis covered them. jj The first jlivision, after firing, retreated, opening to the right and left from the cen tre, for the jsecond to advance.ijre, and retreat in the same' way. The jenemy, notwithstanding their surprise attempted to form a line, but a Whig of more cour age than prudence rode up, seized their colors yand 1 rode off with them funhpft i amillst a shower of balls Having npyvii i .. 8 ; L ' : no rallying point, their consternation in- creased ; and the quick succession of de structive fires, kept up by the assailants, rendered their confusion complete. The Whigs not pnly stood their ground, but advanced, after a few rounds, upon the enemy's camp, and in a short time obtained a completefvictory, and had possession pf learn the truth ; and by them intelligence of Bryant's movements reached Ruther ford's army, and all the men from that quarter were dismissed to return and de fend their families and property. They left the &mp the morning after the battle, and those on horsebap reached home that night. The next morning was .the time appointed by Captains Caldwell, Nicholas, and Sam'l. Reed, to meet at some place in the Fork to oppose Bryant. Those who had returned from Lincoln after a short rest, went to fneet their friends, and a camp was formed two or three miles Iast of Anderson's' Bridge, on Hunting Creek, known ever since by the name of Liberty Hill ; it was five or six miles from Bryant's ycamp. When I this encampment commenced they were not 100 in number ; but men continued to col lect during the day, and in the evening they were joined by a company of Light Horse, fromthe Mountains, commanded by Capt. Doak. At night theylnumoered between 200 and 30Q, and had taken about 20 prisoners on their way -to! join Bryant's camp. j ; They were in constant expectation that he would attack them, and made every effort to give him a warm reception, and convince him how much it frould cost him to gratify his friends in their thirst fbr plunder. In the mean time he; received a true account of the fate of his friends in Lincoln, and seeihg the army assembling Moore, Maj. Welsh, andjCaptainS Keen er, Williams and Warlicjc ; the latter and a whig by the name p( Winston, were neighbors, and rivals at shooting matches: both good marksmen. They met, and one said to the other, " The time has come," alluding to some understanding they had before between them. Their guns were unloaded, and each took ja tree for shelter. The whig1 succeeded in loading first and somewhere north of the central line, for the purpose of making an impression up on the public mind that a northern route, for the Western Turnpike, would be most beneficial to those for whose interest the work has been projected ; and whereas, such an impression would be extremely erroneous, inasmuch, as the lower route, the greater would be the travel therefore graphic despatches announcing that the Sardin. ian army had crossed the Ticini on the 20ih .March, in three division. On the 21st an Aus. trian corps had passed the same river, andt exv i perienced some resistance. It Mas supposed I the King, Charles Albert, would be forced to recross theTicini, and that a great battle would be fought on the plains of Vercetli. j A French expedition of 12,000 men was ready to sail immediately the Austrians should set their foot in the Pootificial Slates. rj . The produce markets were unchanged 'and dull. The advices by the Sarah Sands and Europa had reached Havre, and produced a s.ihl re action on tho cotton maiket of ihat city. Business generally in the French manufac turing (owns was improving, and active spring Resolved, That a route from Salisbury, via Newton, is the most central, passing; lU l. c 1.. 1.: J l i i i. i ..jjr'. li looked around his tree, just as the tory i l,i,uu 1 ll"V cum.vli ea anu oenseiy ; aue was expec.ea k .ne new e.ecuons passeu , , . . . j , . J populated region : and that we, the citi- i olt favorably to the existing Government, of shut his-pan, knowing that his opponent I zen$ of Catawba, will exert our united ef- ' " h'ch there was not much doubt, would look around his tree before point- ; forts to have the road take this location 1 n L-ndon it was stated that the navigation ing-tiis gun, the whig aimed his, and the ! fully persuaded that this would be in ac- ,aw cou,d no1 he carricd ar,d that they would moment the other1 put his head behind cordance with the interests of a very larffe be rejected in the House ol Lords A change his tree, si: a bin throuhi, majority of those who are anxiousjy look- Traces of the battle may be seen now j "molaed n lo ,he Xu,'rio' beinK ,he f,rsl at the battle ground, about three quarters sohcd, hat a judicious location of ffi in churcfI oi a mite irom tne lownoi L.incotnton, : the 1 urnpike on , the most central and on a ridge, situated between Clarkrs creek practicable route, is of the utmost impor and one of its tributaries ; some of the ,ance to our Pp,0Ple. ; and. that to run it graves are yet visible ; the pine trees still I . z ... 1 1 . i i e . .L . . standing there, it is said bear the marks of the musket balls. In their confusion, and retreat some of the tories, attempting to escape cross the mill dam by a narrow bridge, pushed each other off and were drowned : some too ton, would entirely defeat the object in tended to be gained by it ; for it is clear, that the farther south the Foad is located, the larger will be the transportation upon it. Resolved, That we approve of the Inter nal Improvement Convention, to be held in Salisburv. in June next, to take into rushed into the pond and were mired in consideration the important Acts of the the mud and never escaped. Legislature, and that a committee of six The whigsdid not pursue them, for fear he appointed a delegation to attend that ; vernmeni of Sterbi An attempt was made at Bordeaux, on, the 19th, by lhe Socialists, to create a disluibanco by parading the streets at midnight, singing se ditious songs, and vociferating Ca ira !u ' Les aristocrates a la lanlerne " Dan ton la Caramagnolc " The nocturnal vocalists were, however, speedily surrounded by a body of police and lodged in prison. Cardinal Orsini has died at Gaeta, and Car dinal Mezzofdiiti, the celebrated linguist, at Rome. ' 1 j The principal leaders of the uhra Republic ! cans, have left Rome and accepted some mil ( ston abroad. The greatest anarchy prevailed at Rome, and the people even regretted the Go the smallness of their numbers would be Convention. The following gentlemen were appoint or at Liberty Hill, he became alarmed, andidiscovered ; in all, the battle lasted about i eJ lhe commUtJefe. M L M'Corkle. A. M. while the Whigs were preparing to re ceive him, to their great surprise, he broke up his camp and fled across the Yadkin ; finding the people of the " Flat Swamp," more friendly to his cause thanithe Scotch Irish, the other side of the river. These two hours, and was brought to a close by a: flag of truce sent out by a tory of the name of Blackburn. There was no gen eral officer in command at this battle : Col. Francis Locke was present but did not take the command for fear of being READ THE NEWSPAPERS. : , i John H. Prentice, in his recent valedictory Powell, W. J. Gunter, A. II. Shuford, Geo. j detzer, J. w . uatmel. on retiring from the Editorial chair, which he Un motion, the Gha.rman and Secretary j had fillcd for forly.Uvo Far8f give. ,he follow. were added to the committee On motion, it was Resolved, That the proceedings be pub lished in the Lincoln Courier, Carolina Re- ghj.jWlthont plttcing their arms sp that j the camp bpfore Get). Rutherford arriVed , qnuta lay. ineir nanus on tueiii at any 9.; 9 . e. i mprDeht; ! C0I4 Bryant, a iitizen of the Fork of lciauKin, a man 01 some tatents, nau with the main body of the armj about 1,500 men. j The general engagement was only about 15 minutes long. .The place had the appearance of camp long occu- eohmdcrablej influence with the tories of J pied : they .were well supplied wjth pro bis vicinity ; ie was not idle, but was afraid to come-out publicly. He, how-M-er, paused ' it to be reported that the war would soon end, and that all the land belonging to ithe rebels would be confis- t.cdiatid tuej King's friends would be the owners., . . f r 4 ; ' tThls'drew ofT many of the neutral par Ijj I;h6rse-stealing now increased : horses jwetejn greater demand ; but the Brushy lojjnlains were not a safe retreat, they to I Lihcolnton, and there found a ; tket visions, armsfec, and at the lowest ac count were' about 1,200 strong, sdme say L700, While the Whigs in action were 3Q0 in number The loss of the latter was mostly in officers, who distinguished them selves in so signal a manner, that they were selected by' theiK enemies vho had some cxpprt riflemen. Captain jDobslpn and Captain Bowman, of Burke, were both killed. I ; Capt. Falls from the lower, arjd Capt. John Sloan1 from the upper end ofllredell, or their horses, and protection for i and Canr. Wm. Knot fmm tV.o it?oLr. fperspps i as was evident from the , part of it, fell that day ; also Capt. Arm .mn v.i. J.tl .. 1 .1. T... 5 . . . . - 1 . :. j InfU 1 strong Irorn the region ot Third Creek in Kti Raniisour'sl Mill. Lynch-law vasmlili,of Mecklenburcr.Cant. David Cald. iTn 'enforced, and offenders joined the j well, and Cant. John Reed were unhurt. in Lincoln, till a formidable body in Capt. Janjes Houston was wounded 1 Pcen collected. This caused no H!e easiness to the Whigs, who re pci to attack rhemrand break up their as brave as themselves, strove to see who would perform the noblest deeps for their I country. Unlike other ambition, thiss j strengthened the bonds of friendship be- tween them. ' ! . Thus was the power of theUories bro ken in Lincoln,jand in the Forks of the Yadkin. Bryant, after spending a short time in the Flat Swamp, retired to the Eastern part of the State ; and Captain Samuel Reed's company, with a few others as an army of observation, was sufficient to keep order in the Forks. I orders. The above is for the most part in the words of the different narrators, from whom the traditions have been taken ! down. ! EXAMINER, j lei latter, mingled with a few . Mjiry landers, S tried by court martial for exceeding his j publican, Salisbury Watchman, and Ra gh otanuaru. The meeting then adjourned. MARTIN SIGMAN, Ch'n. Jon'as Bost, Secretary. The Stdrtreasury. We presume that, ill ing good advice : " No man should be without a well-conducted newspaper. Unless he reads one, he is nol upon an equal footing with his fellow. man who enjoys such advantage, and is disregardful of his duly to his family, in not affording them an opportunity of acquiring a knowledge of what is passing in the world, at the cheapest possi ble leaching. Show me a family without a newspaper, and I venture to say that there will . be manifest in that family a want of amenity .of manners and iruiicauons of ignorance, most, strikingly in contrast with the neighbor wh allows himself such a rational- indulgence. I Young men especially should read newspapers. If 1 were a bo even of tvelve years, I would read a newspaper weekly, though I had to work' light to earn money enough :lo The boy who reads well, will learn moned to Winchester early on Monday morning to fulfil a professional engage- The tories in Lincoln, being so roughly i mertt in a great will case which came up handled at the Battle of Ramsour's Mill. Jr trial on that day in the Clarke Circuit e . , t. , , 4, i Court. This case, (Joel Quisenberry s what of them escaped, retted to the j .jh 5 which large amount of properlv Western part of the country, and re- j is involved. we learn by a letter from a mained there till Ferguson arrived tP their ! friend in AVinchester, was most ably and assistance, whose fate is well nov:n. ! elaborately argued on Wednesday and ' It will be sen from the aboU that he j Thursday by Hon. Chilton Allan and 7, . r j at 1 1 Ju Hon. Garrett Davis, in favor of the will, Whigs of Rowan and Mecklenburgj were iandby gamuel Hansfo Esq.f and Mr. greatly relieved from the erabjirrassment ! clay in opposition. The speeches of all of the toriesVand now had an; opportunity ! the gentlemen fully sustained their well- j to aid their friends in other parts of the j earned reputations as forensic debaters, country; this they did promptly. They i e speech of Mr Clay is said to have ! V .t t j . n-i been more able and eloquent than the one I (U1C 111 SCI llVb UL1 llll Jt u$v. , , II II' " tr ri t .u r ' by general consent, the Subtreasury vi Mr. Clay. In noticing the return of 3 fo 1 , .. the. Hon.-Henry Clay to his home from his : now unuer, 1110 lorcc ' l,ubllc visit to New Orleans the Lexington Ob- '; P"n- W ""'' n"ree ""h La w"'" i on this subject, who shs that the Sub server savs : 1 . . . " ... ! . i .i i 1 1 1 I : ' . , After spending Saturday and Sunday ; treasury is ine ... au.u a,, aiuru.- by torct, . 1 ,i 1 ' . i u:.. 1. . i iip5. and infinitelv more iniunoUs than pay lor it at Asnianu wuil uis lauuiy, ue WS sum- ( r- , j r - aHiinalv,P. and if o. he will be a'mmt "the Monster was.in its paimy uays, De- , J ' , .. . . 1 .11 i- 6,,re lo make a man of himself, hating vicious j cause the latter had the power to relieve 1, which reading is calculated to be. a stringent money market with its depos-' get a distaste for." 1 ites from Government and individuals;! ' f but the Subtreasury - opes its ponderous 1 MEDICAL CONVENTION. i ; and marble jaws to receive. nothing but j coin, and there it lies to rust till the Go- On .Monday lasi, in pursuance of pref rlpbt tnnav WI.mu.i-m nonce, numucr-i i iij.iuuiis.Mi-m.i.ru .., ... , 1 . . c, , . 1 , Ciiy ;' and on Monday eveninc, at seven o'clock the .ums in the Subtreasury become large . . ' ' ... 3 . v i mi, .uiiis iii'i"- j b i jhey proceeded to organize. Dr. rredrick J. the money market is tightened, and by in JrBrunsiwicll Counfv. wa." chosen IVesi. consequence money becomes dear, busi- ; denl of fhe Convenl5wi . ;j i)r. William H. ness unsatisfactory, &c.,'and such a state McKee, of Wake, was annobted Secretary., ' of things often occurs in the large cities, ; Af,rr 8omo jeoate and due consultation;' i ;"famPment This was in the latter part Jafie, 1780. and r it appears to be a cri V" Revolution. Jf the men. for this ?P!.ere to) be taken from the Fork d:; Vi,cniryas many from there were out , r-Mt cxneuitions; 'llrvnnt was tn thcrh. They scarcely cu; behind William Wilson had a horse shdt under him and was wounded the second fire. -Several inferior officers were killed. Thirteenrrjen from the vicinity ofl States ville, lay dead there after the battle, and many more died of their wounds the next day. Joseph Wasson,- from Snow Creek, received fife balls, one of whichi he car- ried 40 years to a day, when it came but One jaccount says 450,; which he delivered in the same case last ; sjDe mington, at King's Mountain.it the Cow- falianj produced a fine impression. The pen's, at Guilford C. H., with many other jury failed to find a verdict, and another places pf minor importance. H trial at the next term of the Court will be We might say that the Battle at Ram-1 necessary sour's Mill was the first of a series of mis- . . . ,r f r , ; . . , . A company of emigrants to 1 exas trom Jlon- fortunesto the British arms in upper Caro- ; roe Co., Qeorgia, were atfacked wiih cholera, lipa. Gates', defeat was the prily action after leaving New Orleans, and at the last ac of importance in theirfavor. ( J ' counts eighteen of the company had been buried m.. , . I , . . seven necroes in"one grave. Some died in 1UC 'msour oatye was-anoui tne n. , r- fi thev nltackf.d. The especially New York, where receipts from Committee was app.iii.'ed t prepay a Omsfi. ; customs are so large. The Subtreasury ' jution and By-Laws for a Stale Medical S6cie. ing the monster of the times, it should , ty, and was directed to report io the i.onren demolished with as little delay as pos- ' tion yesterday at ten o'clock. A. M. Ae.-Alex. Gazelle. In our next we shall lay '7 1 a detailed account of the Proceeding of thu in being be ... - I W:rt.K mtnorl -ilil.- liflitr. The charter election in Columbus, Ohio, S'orth Carolina Standard. took place last Monday, and resulted in ! the total defeat of the Locofocos by an unprecedented majority. The Whigs have elected their Mayor, marshal, nnd five out : of the six councilmen. The vote was un 1 usually large, and the most strenuous se cret exertions had been made by the Lo cofocos to brinff out their entire vote, with ( George The elections in the ciiics of New Orleans " and Cincinnati, for'ciy officers, have resulted, in both cases, in favP of the Whigs. 20lh of June; hat at King's Mountain in ! paity wa8 cornposed of six (Umilies with their ; the full anticipation ot a victor), j uc , joJ' October; at the Cowpcns in Jiniaryr at servants, in all 77 persons. Whigjnajority for Mayor is J. . , j Appointment. U i ofiicially ar.hruncecl; JL Little, of Raleigh. N C;, ba been lib at ao n of NoMh Carolina, in place vf 4 I I1 t n ,-M- 1 i't Yr