M "THIS PUBLIC GOOD SHOULD EVER BE PREFERRED TO PRIVATE ADVANTAGE." Volume 4. Lincolnton, North Carolina, Saturday Morning, September 23. 184S. Nl-meer 33. printed and published wkekly, by tiiomasj.kccl.es. Tehms. Two dollars pel annum, payable in tdvance ; $2 50 if payment be delayed 3 months. A discount to clubs of 3 or more. Advertisement will be conspicuously insert ed, at $ 1 pet square (14 lines) for the first, and 25 cents lor each, subsequent insertion. Lincoln Business Directory Court Officers Superior Court V. A. M'Bee, clerk. Equity Wm Wil liamson, cleik. County court llobt. Williamson, clerk. A W Burton.Soli citor. J. W Lowe, Sheriff". Caleb Miller, Town Constable. Register, J. T. Alexander ; County Surveyor, J. Z. Falls ; County Proces Bsioner, Ambrose Costlier. Tc'islee, J Kamsour. Treasurer Pub. Buildings, D. W. Schenck. Coroner, J M Jacobs. Building Committee J. Kamsour, P. Summey'jJohn F Phifer, and H Cansler. Lawyers Haywood W. Guion,main st. one door east. L. E. Thompson, main st. east, 3d square W. Lander, main st. east, 2d square. V A McBee, and W. Williamson, offices at McBee's building, main st 2d square, east. A. W. Burton, 1 door north ot Courier office. T. T. Slade, main st. 2d cor. east of sq. Physicians Simpson &. Bobo, main fit., west. D. W. Schenck, (and Apo thecary, main st. two doors east. E. Caldwell, east olFemale Academy. Z. Butt, office opposite McLean's hotel. A. Kamsour, botanic main st. west. Merchants-lien' S Johnson, north on square, west coiner, J. A.- Kamsour. on square, north west corner.' C. C. f lenderson.on square,(post office) south J. Ramsourdj'Son,main st. 5 doors west. P. E Johnson, on square, suulh west cor tier main st. K Keid, on square, south east corner. Hoke & Michal,on square Boot, Shoe Hat Store Horatio Thomson, main st., on 2d square, west of court house, nor'.h side. AcademiesyialetT J Sumner; Fe male, under the charge of Mr Newson. Hotels Mrs Motz, s. w. corner of main st. and square W. Slade, main sr. 2d corner east of square. A. A. McLean, 2d corner, west, on main st. B. S Johnson, north west, on square. Groctry W. K. Edwards, main st. east ot square. Tailors Moore & Cobb, main st. 1 door west of square. A Alexandei, on main st. 4 doors east of square. Watch Maker and J etc eller David Welsh, main st. 8 doors east. Saddle and Harness Makers J . T. Alexander, main st. 2d "corner east o( square. B. M. & F. J. Jetton, on eq., north b3- west. J. Ad. Jetton, 6outh west on square. Coach Factories Samuel Lander, main st. east, on 2d square from Court House. Abuer McKoy, main st. east, on 3d sauare. S.P.Simpson, street north of main, and n. w. of court hou&e. l3aac Erwin, main st., west, on 2d sq. James Cornwall, main st. 2d square, w. end, south side, corner. A. Garner, on main st. east end. Blacksmiths Jacob Rush, main st. 5th corner ' east of court house. M. Jacobs, main st., east end. A. Delain, main st. near east end. J. Bysanner, back st. north west of public square. J. W. Payscur, west end. Cabinet Makers Thomas Dews & Son, main st. east, on 4th square. Carpenters, iSfC. Daniel Shuford, main st., east, 6th corner from- square. James Triplet!, main st. M'Bee's build ing. Isaac Houser.main st. west end. Wells, Curry & Co. main st. east end. Brick Masons Willis Peck, (and plaisterer) main st. east, 4th corner (rom square. Peter Ilouser, on east side of street north of square. Tin Plate Worker and Copper Smith Thos. I. Shuford, main st. cast, on south side ot 2d square. Shoe Makers John Huggins, on back st. south west of square. Tanners-Paul Kistler, main-st. west end J. Kamsour, back st., north east of square. F & A. L lioke, 3-4 mile west of town, main road. Hat Manufactories John Cline, n. from public square, 2 doors west side of st. JohnButts & son, on square, south side. Printers T. J. Eccles, Courier of fice, 5 doors north of court house, Isl' and Ford road. Oil Mill Peter and J E Hoke, one mile suoth west of town, York road. Paper Factory G. & R. Hostel er, 4 miles south-east of court house. Cotton Factory John F. Hoke & L. D. Childs, 2 miles south of court house. Vesuvius Furnace, Graham's Forge, Bievurd's, and Johnson's Iron works, east. LimeKiln Daniel Shuford and oth ers, 9 miles south. Letters for the above to be addressed to the Lincolnton rosf Office THE FORSAKES GIRL. BY JOHN O. WUITTER. They parted as all lovers part She with her wronged and woken neair, But he, rejoicing he is tree, Bounds like the captive from his chain, And wilfully believing she Hath found her liberty again." L. E. London. If there is any act which deserves deep and bitter condemnation, it is that of trifling with the inestimable gift of woman's affection. The female heart may be compared to a delicate harp over which the breathings of early affec tions wander, until each tender chord is awakened to tones of ineffable sweetness. It is the music of the soul which is thus called forth a music sweeter than the fall of mountains, or the sone of the Houri in the Moslem's Paradise. But wo to the delicate fashioning of that harp if a change pass ovei the love which first called forth its hidden harmonies. Let neglect and cold unkindness sweep over its delicate strings, and they will break one after another slowly perhaps but surely. Unvi9ued unrequited by the light of love, the souMike melody will be hushed in the stricken bosom like the mysterious harmony of the Egyptian statute, before the coming of tunrise. I have been wandering among the graves ihe lonely and solemn grave. 1 love at times to do so. I feel a mel ancholy not unallied to pleasure in com muning with ihe resting-place of those who have gone before me to go forth alone among the thronged tombstones, rising from every grassy undulation like the ghostly sentinels of the departed. And when I kneel above the narrow mansion of one whom I have known and loved in life, I feel a strange assurance ihat the spirit of the sleeper is near me a viewless and ministering angel. It is a beautiful philosophy, which has found its way unsought for and mysteri ously into the silence of my heart and if it be only a dream the unreal imngs, mary of fancy I pray God that I may never awaken from the beautiful delu sion. 1 have been this evening by the grave of Emilv. It has a plain white tomb stone hidden by flowers, and you may read its mournful epitaph in the clear moonlight, which falls upon it like the smile of an angel, thicugh an opening into the drooping branches. Emily was a beautiful girl the fairest of our vil maiden?. I tninK l see her now, as she looked when tho loved onethe idol of her affection was near her with his smile of conscious triumph and ex ulting love. She had then seen but eighteen summers, and her whole being seemed woven in the dream of h-r first passions. The ol ject of her love wa9 a proud and wayward being, whose haugh ty spirit never relaxed from its huhitual s;ernness, save when he found hinuell in thepreser.ee r.fthe young and beauti ful creature, who had trusted her all upon the " venture of her vow," and who loved him with the confiding ear nestness of a pure and devoted heart, Nature hid deprived hi of the advanta ges of outward graces and beauty ; and it was the abiding consciousness of this, which gave to ha intercourse with so ciety a chaiater of pride end. sternness. He felt himself in some degree removed from his fellow men by the partial fash ioning of nature ; and he scorned to 9eek a nearer affinity. His mind was of an exalied bearing and prodigal of beauty, Tho flowers of poetry were in his imagination n perpetual blossoming; and it was to hia intellectual' beauty ,that Emily bent down hearing to the altar of her idol the fair flowers of her affec tion even as the dark eyed daughters of the ancient Gheber spread out their offerings from the gardens of the East upon the altar of the Sun. There is a surpassing strength in a love like that of Emily's it has nothing gross, nor low, nor earthly in its yearn ings it has its source in the deeper fountains of the human heart and is such as the redeemed and sanctified from earth might feel for one another, in the fair land of spirits. Alas that such love should be unrequited or turned back in coldness and darkness upon the crushed heart of its giver! They parted Emily and her lover but not before they had vowed eternal constancy to each other. The one re tired to the quiet of her homo to dream over again the scenes of her early pas sion to count with untiring eagerness the hours of separation and to weep over the long interval of hope deferred.' The other went with a strong heart to mingle with the world girded with pride and impelled forward by ambition. He found the world cold and callous, and his own spirit insensibly took the hue of lhose around him. He shut his eyes upon the past it was too pure and j mildly beautiful, and holy as it wss pure be turned not back to tho young and lovely and devoted girl, who had poured onl to him in the confiding earnestness of woman's confidence the wealth .of her affection. Hecamo not back to . fulfil the vow which hs had plighted. Slowly and painfully the knowledge of her lover's infidelity .came oyer, the sensitive heart of Emily. She . sought for a time to shut out the horrible sus picion from her mind she half doubted the evidence of her ovn senses she could not believe thai he was a traitor for hor memory had treasured every to ken of his affection every impassioned word and every endearing smile of his tenderness. But the truth came at last the doubtful spectre which had long haunted her : snd from which, she had turned away, as if it were sin to look upon it, now stood before her a dread ful and unescapable vision in reality. There was one burst of passionate tears the overflow of that fountain of afflic tion which quenches the last ray of hope in the desolate bosom and she was cairn for the struggle was over, and she gazed steadily and with the awful confi dence of one whose hopes are not of earth, upon the dark valley of deal tr, whose shadow was already around her. It was a beautiful evening of summer that 1 saw her for the last time. The sun was just retiring behind a long line of blue and undulating hil's, touching their tall summits with a radiance like a halo, which circles the dazzling brow of an angel and all nature had put on tho rich garniture of greenness and blossom. As I approached thequiet and secluded dwelling of the once happy Emily I found the dcor of the, little parlor thown open; and a female vpise, of a sweet ness, which could hardiy be said to be long to earth, stolo out upon the soft summer air. It was like the breathing of an iEolian lute to the gentlest visita tion of tho zephyr. Involuntarily I paused to Listen and theso words 1 shall never forget them came upon my ear like the low and melancholy music which we sometimes hear in dreams Oh no I do not fear to die, For hope and faith are buld, And life is but a weariness And earth ia strangely colJ .. In view of death's pale solitude. My spirit has not mourned 'lis kinder than forgotten lute, Or friendship unreturced ! And could I pass the shadowy land In rapture all the while If one who is now far away, Were near me wiih a smile. It seems a dreary thing to d;e, Forgotten and alone Unheeded by our dearest love The smiles and tears of one ( Oh ! plant my grave with pleasant flowers, 1 he fairest ot the fair The very flowers he loved to twine At twilight in my hair. Perchance he may yet visit 'them, And shed above my bier The ho!ir6t dew of funeral flowers Affection's kindly tear!" It wa3 tho voice of Emily it was hor last song. She was leaning on the sofa as I entered the apartment her thin white hand resting on her forehead. She rose and welcomed me with a mel ancholy smile. It plnved over her fea lures for a moment, flushing her cheek with a slight and sudden glow, and then passed away leading from existence like the strain of ocean music, when it dies avvav slowly and sweetly upon the moonlight waters. A few days after, I stood by the grave of Emily. The villagers had gathered together, one and all, to pay the last tribute of respect and affection to the lovely sleeper. They mourned her loss with a deep and sincere emotion they marvelled that one so young and so be loved should yield herself up to melan choly, and perish in the spring-time of her existence. But they knew not the hidden arrow which had rankled in her bosom the slow and secret withering of heart. She had borne the calamity in silence in the uncomplaining qui etude of one. who ielt there are woes which may not ask for sympathy uf Mictions, which like canker concealed in the heart of some fair blossoms, are pis covered only by the untimely decay their victim. of Kidnapping.'-' Two men.named Bry ant Saunders and Needtuan Stevens, of Johnston countr, were arrested in the Cars at Dud'ey Depot, on Sunday morn ing, the 3d tnt, having m their posses sion two negro men and.ono negro wo man, to when thev had no right. It is supposed, of course, that they were car rvn.L' them South to sell thern. It has since been ascertained that these indi viduals, aided and abetted by others have devised and partially executed sn exter sive plan ot kidnapping. Severn I negroes are missing, from Johnston county, and there is now but little doub of their having been taken away by this banditti. Much excitement prevails in Waynesboro, and. the adjacent country. Wo trust it will sot subside till ull the authors of this infamous project, are exposed and punished. Raleigh Register Extensive RobbirylW'a were in formed a few days since, by a Gentle man from Lenoir, that Mr Richard M. Blount of that County, while on his way to Newbern, during tho past week, to procure Northern funds, was assaulted by three desperadoes, stunned and rob- i i r.L i . t , . oea oi tue targe amount oi 54,cuu in actual money. The abandoned scoun drels who perpetrated the crime have, thus far, escaped detection. Mr. B. describes one of the robbers to be a tall mulatto genteely dressed, and very rapid in his cnunication. The other two were white men ono of them being small, fleshy, and having very dark hair; the other, tall, pale and quite thin-visaged. Look out for the vill- ians! Ibid. Evening JLoctnrc of Mrs. Hetty Jones. CONCEBNINO NEWSPAPERS, fell, Jones, you are a pretty fellow here you've come home sgain as drunk as a biled owl, and you don't know yourself from four dollars and a half. I he children are crying for bread their clothes worn out, and here I have to slave -slave sluve slave the whole blessed day, t:li 1 have not a rag to my back, and what thero is sticks as tight to me as the skin does to the Model Ar tists, old Mrs. Smith tells about. We must lietrcncni Ketrencn in- deed I'd like to see what you d retrench about this house, except vittles and clothes, and I'm sure we've none to spare in them respects. You wouldn't want your own flesh and blood to go na ked and hungry would you? You're too much of a man if you be an old brute, Jones, for that. If you'd keep to your work, and mind your business, be stea dy and stop your drinking and spreeing all night, times would be a heap better for us you ain't the man, Jones, you was when I give you my virgin affec tions you don't come into the house modestly and lift off your hat, and say, good evening, Mi6S Hetty, and draw your chan close up to mine, aDd then take hold of my hand and kinder blush, and then hitch up a hale closer and Don't make a fool of yourself 1 I ain't a going to, Jones, but it sort a does my old heart good to call up these re missnesses, nd wish it always had been so. Kut vou re ss tender hearted as a turtle dove and just as sensible when you have any sense, as any body set down, Jones, and eat your supper, and tell me all the news a flying You're stopped the paper! You lie, Jones, you know you lie you'd stopped your wind first- you'd a You couldn't afford it! Ain't you got a conscience, Jones, to let on so! The paper costs you four cent3 a week, and tho printer takes all kinds of truck for pay and here it's Saturday night and I'd like to know how much money you've thrown away this week Fii count it up I'll give you a blessing a fore I get through. It ain't often 1 ketch you at hum, and when 1 do you'll take it', fjr better or for worsa, as tho ea;ing is. There' a gallon of whiskey on Monday morning costs 27$ cents there's half a gallon of beer on Tuesday costs eighteen pence there's a shilling to Heat that old flurnmix with lhat come along and said he knowed you when you wag a boy and tho Lord knows how much you've spent lo-day it must have look a hc3p of change, for you ain't an old sponge, Jones you don't get drunk on any body's money but your own and I reckon it must took at least a quarter to make a man diunk enough to go and stop his paper well, now I'll count it all up three shil lings and eighteen pence and one shilling and a quarter, makes just fii'ty cents, in my opinion as good as ihtt ve ry suxt thrown into the tire, and hotter too, and lhat would'uv pa d for the Lin coln Courier for three months and I expects the printer needs the money as bad most folks. Tin-re's a power of 'conomy in 6uch doings, why what would a body know if it warn't for the paper and now, too, when there's a great election coming, and a body want to know how to vote? Wimin don't vote Well, I know it, and it's a great pity they dou'i, they'd revolutionize the world and have a pro visionary government every where a they call it,hnd they'd they wouldn't kill otf all tho men, no quite, cause thej 're useful in their pltces, mind 1 tell you, Jones. But I was say ing about the primer, we must have nc.v, v.sey vcr s?y we must have printers, ar.d if they cati live without nothing to cn :ho they'ie ihe critters that's in adv.:i;re t-f the ar, lor the people of this gt iit-n-tion make a gt d of tleir bellies, at or ding to the best of their knowedg and belief anoihor thng,l should'nt wonder if you'd stopped ihe paper and never paid for it and ihrn you'll b published on the black list, and your wife's repu- tation be ruined- and your children go to the-plenipotentiary it won't do, Jones, it won't do and hers sh broke off, for Jones was asleep! Honest Intents. In a recent political discussion in Richmond, between Mr. Caskie. democrat and Lyons, fed, Jho former gentleman surprised his antago nist, by reading Mlmore's Abolition Letter of 1833. Mr. Lyons immediate ly declared that if that letter was Fill more'8 ho would cot vote for him ; and further declared hi intention to write to Mr. Fillmore. Mr. Lyons is chair man of the Whig Central Committee in Virginia, and has occupied a high posi tion as leader of his party for years in tl at State. Let him carry out his de clared intents like an honest man. Ha will have enough company from his pr ty depend on it. Flag. "Lewis Cass is a living example of the progress of man. In this country the path to honorable fame is open to all. The avenues to elevated distinction lead as well from the dwelling of tho humble as the mansions of the proud. That man wiio has b6en selected by the great Democratic party ofthe Union to wear the highest honors lhat human suffrage can bestow, was once a poor lone boy, who crossed the Alleghanies on foot, with his staff for his support, to seek his fortunes in the wilds of the far West, with a single dollar in his pocket and a bundle upon his back ; but having a priceless treasure in his bosom the order and legion of an American noble mana bold and honest heart, throb bing with high hopes and fired with the. genius and 6pirit of progressive Democ racy. - The broken sword nt Detroit and the glory which he won in the border war, attest the chivalry of his youth ; while his gallant defence of the freedom of the seas, his bold position on the Oregon question, and his fearless vindication of his country in iho Mexican war, show thai" " Old age neer cooled the Doug las blood:' The Veto. Upon no subject has Gen Taylor been more expl'cit than in his pledges to refrain from the exercise of the veto should be be elected President. A mere majority in Congress are to ex ercise, uncontrolled and unchecked, the power of legislation, and the whole pow1 er ofthe Government will be thro-vn into the hands ofthe Representatives of the Free States. With what justice and moderation this powe-will be exer cised in questions wher the interests of the North and South happen to be an' tagonislic, we can readily imagine from our past experience. Of what avail are Gen Taylor's opinions, or his Southern predilections, if lie have any, when he positively pledges himself not to exercisa Ins constitutional privilege of enforcing them. That the surrender of the veto power is neither more nor less than a surrender of the South to the tender mer cies of the North is sufficiently apparent from the following paragraph from an article in ihe National Intelligencer, re viewing the Buffalo Resolutions. 'The avowal, considering the quarter from whence it emanates, is bold and explicit. Ponder upon it, friends ofthe South. The Jirst of these six resolves de mand freedom and established institu tions for Oregon. Well, they have got all that they ask for Oiegon. That de mand is therefore satif fitd. The ground has slipped from under them. They also demand ihe same for the Provinces of New Mexico and California. What suit of government is t be giv?n to these provfnett", now Territories of the United Stoles, is a question to be hereafter dc cided by congress ; aud.by the blessing of Procidcnce, we are going to hate a President icho is pledged, as Mr. Va Buken is not, to respect the legislative authority on that and all other questions u:hich viay arise during his Adminir rrarion." Gen. Cass. Gen Cass was vn tin.es noeiiinatvd in the office of GiTr-r-nor of MuhiMi irjory by four suc cessive Pre d'-ots, n-d each time unai iiDouilv cot'finred bv ihe Senaie. There is no pl ico I-ke home, unless it the hou.e of tho young womin nre 'after.' This is, cl course, an ex ception. Future poets will pleas no tice it.