Whole Ao. 4S)U. Tarborough, (Edgecombe County, X. C.) Friday, February 1 , 1834. Vol. XXo 22. cmmm wwi The "Tarbornugh fiWr. Press " BV GBORGE HOW A It ri, Is puMishcd weekly, at Two Dollar and Fifty tents ju t year, ,t paid in advance-,,,, Thrre Do 'l lur, at the- expiration of the subscription year. For any period ess than a yeur, T,vnai,-Jve Cents per month. M,!)scnieis are at liberty to discontinue at any time, on ivm notice thereof 'and paving arrears those residing at a distance must invariably p iv in auv-anccorgive a responsible reference in this vicinity. Advertisements, not exceeding 16 lines, will be in serted at 50 cents the first insertion, and 25 cents each continuance. Longer ones at that rate for every 16 lines. Advertisements must be marked the number ot insertions required, or they will be continued until otherwise ordered, and charged accordingly. Letters addressed to the Editor must be post paid, or they may not be attended to. COU.NTIES OF SOUTH CAROLINA. cant in tied.) 1734. Onslow Precinct. Tint part of IMevv Hanover county lying on New riv er, together with a small part of Carter et on this west side of White Oak, was this year erected into a precinct having nearly the same extent with the county bearing the same name and called after Arthur Onslow, Speaker uf the British House of Commons. Bladen Precinct, was separated from New Hanover on its north western side;, (leaving to New Hanover the county of the same name, Duplin, Brunswick, and part (if Columbus) and called alter Mar tin Bladen, one of the lords commission ers of trade and plantations Thisheiii" n frontier precinct was unlimited on the north west. 1738. By an act passed this year it was directed that tin; precincts within the province of North Carolina should in uttire be called counties. Wholesale UoUnitrjnutts.uj arrest in Missouri of a swindler railing h'unsvW James Garland, we have receiv ed some new light in regard to tin; busi ness of maunf.iciii! ing atui vending coun terfeits, which we find to be carried on in a much more systematic way Mian we bad supposed possible in this country. It seems that the establishuiem of which Garland was the principal was in such condition as to enable him to print jW thousand dollars of assoi ted notes in one day, and that, since the breaking up of the band of counterfeiters in Canada, last hpring, he Ins sold counterfeits to the amount of out million dollars; and thai, in the prosecution of the business, he has realized the sum of $100,000! Northampton county formed bv the reparation of the upper or north western part of Bertie was called after the En glish county of the same name, GO miles N. N. V. of London, he was absent oh" a hhboih "... ... where he is now engaged in extending the business of his hopeful concern. Forty or fifty individuals are said to he implicated in the affair, uud their fina trial is fixed for the second Monday it February. Johnston county resulted kom" a cor responding division of Craven, leaving the latter in addition to its present extent the county of Jones called after Gabri el Johnston; at this time Governor of the province. 1749. Duplin county, cut off from New Hanover included at the linn? of its erection the present county uf Sampson. There is a barony of this name in Scot land the occupant of which became an English Peer in the reign of Queen Anne and was taken into custody under suspi cion of tampering with thj Pretender in 1715. The greater part of t,c BOj uf the enmity was purchased originally of the crown by Henry M'CuIloch, also of Scotland but settled in London, by whom titles were given to the first emigrants. It is not improbable that some connexion which we cannot now discover between the Scottish Lord and the Scotch owner of the soil may have led to the imposi tion of the name it bears. Anson county. Bladen where it bor dered on New Hanover Ivin 0I, k0th sides of the Cape Fear and being with out limits on the upper waters of that stream seems to have been regarded at 'his time as comprehending the whole western part of the State. The country f the Yadkin and Pedec was erected in to a county, called first Ansa then Anson, alter the great English circumnavigator, who was at this lime admiral and com mander in chief of his majesty's fleet. Name proposed by some romantic novel reader unquestionably. 1753-G. Rowan county. Within these three years this, and the two follow ing, were laid off and established as counties. The original act creating them having been disallowed by the king in council as containing clauses injurious to the prerogative of the crown they were re-established in 1756. Rowan compre hended the country on the Yadkin north of Granfiile's line, and was named in honor of Matthew Rowan, President of the council from the beginning of 1753 till the fall of 1754 Orage county was formed of fragments of Granville, Johnston and Bladen: in cluding Caswell, Person, Chatham and part of Rockingham, Guilford, Randolph and Wake. Subsequently to the year lG3o this name is of frequent occurrence on the map of North America in honor of king William "the immortal and glo rious memory," as he is still called in Ireland. 17Tm tVlce countU- This the iwith military weapons. Thev received i frkMtll-lfiv .. .1 .1- I.. . . .. J tf7i f 1 I I 1 II' I f I ,r ......... I .1 tVUIl. tjrecieu mis vear chiefly with the view of breaking Orange and Rowan into fragments and weaken ing the Regulators by division. Wake included also part of Johnston and Cum berland and is said by Martin to have been so named in compliment to the la dy of Gov. Tryon. Guilford county. The western part of Orange and eastern part of Rowan extending from the Virginia to Granville's line and including therefore Rockingham and Randolph, was erected into a coun ty named utter Frederick North, Earl of Guilford, at this time first commissioner of the treasury. 1771. Surry county including at this lime the present county of Stokes was cut from Rowan by a line running paral lel to the northern boundary of the State, so that the three frontier counties, un limited on the west, were Surry, Rowan and Tryon. It was named Surry after the county in England lying on the south side of the Thames, opposite London where Governor Tryon was born. 1774. Martin county, the last erected before the 4th of July, 1776, and named in honor of the last royal governor, Josiah Martin was formed" chiefly at the ex pense of Tyrrell but included also a part of Halifax. to be continued.) .... v UCJ 13 It ll 111' Cumberland county. The part of eJ 1,1 ; lisl ol' ,,,c Governors of North Carolina Bladen Iving below Lord Granville's line fn,rn 17'' (,mvn 10 1,10 P'U lime, copied wns divided leaving Robeson and Co- fro,"lIt,,e llt"lcr inlV,he arWnK" ' J"ua" lumbns i the ri?n. .i ..... , I L . rygornorol tins State-but only Pre- luinbus to the original; and the tract cut oil including Cumberland and Moore, erected into a new county. Named af ter a county in the north of England or more probably in honor of William Duke of Cumberland second son of George II. and victor of Cullodeu in 1753. 175o. Halifax county heretofore u part of Edgecombe was named after the Earl of Halifax, at this time one of the Secretaries of State. Dobh county cut from the eastern side of Johnston and including the present counties of Greene and Lenoir was thus denominated in compliment to the governor Arthur Dobbs. 1759. Hertford county, erected chief ly at the expense of Bertie, but including parts of Northampton and Chowan; na med after Francis Conway Earl of Hert ford. 17u0. Pitt county was formed by a division of Beaufort. Name in honor of William Pitt, afterwards Earl of Chat ham. 1762. MecLlcnbu rg county separated from Anson included all that part of North Carolina lying west of the present county of Anson and south of Lord Gran ville's line. In the summer of 1761 George the III. had married Charlotte, sister to the reigning Duke of Mecklen burg Strelitz. 1764. IJrunswick county, including a long with half of New Hanover a small part of Bladen took its name from the town that had been established on the .western bank of the Cape Fear and in corporated as early as 1745, and where if a person be romantic and inclined to wander amongst ruins, he may gratify his taste to more advantage than else where in North Carolina. The precinct of New Hanover and town of Brunswick combined the two principal titles (duke of Brunswick and elector of Hanover) borne by George I. before he mounted the throne of Britain. Bertie county, the eastern part of Gran ville included the cxiefing counties of War ren and Franklin. Name in honor of John Stuart, Earl of Bertie who had educated the reigning monarch and was at this lime Secre tary of Stale. 1 7GS. Tryon county comprehended all that part of Mecklenburg 'lying tvest of the Ca tawba. Named after IVilliam Tryon for merly a colonel in the queen's guards, next lieutenant governor and now governor of Mc who were drawn un in battle array, to the . - i . province. number ot 300, on a bill, armed parti v .MaUhcw Rowan was never as is represent- ident of the Council as wa Nathaniel Rice im mediately before ami James Hasell sometime alter him. Our friend (Sales who commonly does things accurately smd well, is found nap ping in this list. Did he trust to some other person, or are the errors his own? George Uur- ringtou who reigned from 1730 to 1733 is omit ted altogether. Nor was (Jeoige of a temper to take such slight and insult as this tamely. (See proofs and illustrations of Williamson's history, the second volume page 22S 9.) Tis well the honest fellow laid his bones on Urn other side of the Atlantic or there is no telling what frightful form might draw the curtain and look in "upon the slumbers of the editor of the Register. their assailants with a volley of fire arms. but were rooted by superior numbers, and were pursued on their retreat, througlt the woods. The battle was one of great rage and most deadly violence. Five men were found on the field in the ago nies of death, several dead bodies were seen in the woods, ami a number wound ed in everv ilirpriinn. Tht victorious party returned quietly to their sections and shantees, through Williamsport, a bout 10 o'clock at night. The military was immediately called out, and an ex press sent to Washington for regular troops. At the latest advices, a nrinci- pal leader of one of the parties had been. arrested lor examination. lb. Measles. The contagion which has been harrassing this community with un common malignity, is believed by several intelligent physicians here, to bo a com bination of measles and scarlet fever it is, however, (uite variant in its modes; and from what little we know on the sub ject, would judge it to be extremely diffi cult of treatment; we understand that a malignant form of measles has been ra ging in the neighborhoods of Huutsville, Kjiuiun iimj, wvjuue s rum, ami in me northern parts of this county, and from what we can learn it is pretty nearly the same disorder that lias been afflicting us in Salisbury. The family of the Editor of this paper has suffered and is still suf fering intensely with this dreadful com plaint, insomuch that we have been able to bestow but little attention upon any thing else. Salisbury Watchman. Scarlet FtTcr.The Charleston Mer cury states that the Scarlet Fever has made its uppearanco in the neighbor hood of Sawney's creek, Kershaw Dis trict, S. C. attended with symptoms unu sually malignant, and is spreading terror throughout that neighborhood.. Hal. Star. Riot in Ulica.'Vhe Utica (N. Y.) papers give an account of some riotous proceedings in that city, a few evenings since. A procession marched through the citv, blowing horns, rattlinn tin nans. &c. and among other acts alike offensive to good order and decency, they hung the Itev. Dr. Beriah Green, of the Onei da Institute, or Manual Labor College, in effigy. The immediate cause of these outrageous proceedings, was the fact that Dr. Green solemnized a marriage be tween a negro man and a white girl. In ordinary times, we presume, an incident of this kind would scarcely have attract ed notice; but Dr. Green has made him self particularly conspicuous of late, in opposing the Colonization Society, and advocating the immediate emancipation, of the slaves at the soutlh. He also ad vocates the expediency and propriety of an amalgamation of colors, by marriage. Having inflicted lasting injury upon a col lege in Ohio, by preaching those doc trines, he has introduced the same into the Oneida institution, and which, unless arrested, will be the ruin of that also. Hence the people thereabouts are ex ceedingly exasperated at his conduct. But their feelings should be manifested in a different manner. C?"The New York papers furnish an account of a destructive (ire at Roches ter, in that State, said to be the most ca lamitous that has ever occurred in that village. Terrible Outrage. The riot which recently took place among tho laborers upon the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, above and below Williamsport, Md. mentioned in our last, it appears, was desperate and bloody to an extent unpre cedented in this country. The two par ties assembled in large bodies on ihe 17th ultimo, and commenced hostilities; and on the next day, they had a general and disastrous engagement. The party called the Lonsfords, numbering about 700 strong, astacked the Carhonians. A Puzzle for 1334. We are a litllo more than forty years of age four in number and Brothers and Sisters. Each of our places of residence has been in the same town. When we journey or have any business we go together. Wc brothers have the most hardship to en dure, because we carry our Sisters. We never spoke to each other, and nev er heard each other's voice. We never saw each other; yet, when either is in trouble there is an exertion by each to relieve, and seldom fails. We never warn each other of approaching danger, because we are dependent for a living, acting, thinking, being, &c. We have travelled day after day, and we know when to give the path for our brother tra vel I ers to pass. Our Sisters are seldom tired, and are not less than two, nor moro than seven feet from us. If we are in trouble, they are quick to relieve us. Wo have never breathed the vital air; yet, wo are alive, quick and powerful; and thou sands have been slain by us. We sel dom refuse any spot or place. Wo know no fear, luvs or mercy; yet mercy we have shown to man and beast and by our exertion, thousands of the animate creation are supported. By our exertion the most populous cities are built and kept in repair: and many times through our means they are prevented from de struction by fire. By us, the maiestic . - j vessel that sails on the deep is made: and the same made to meet each invi ting breeze. And now tell me, my friends, what are our names, what causes us to move, and where we exist. Drat. l.nq.