-7 I IBM 0 J THJS PUBLIC GOOD SHOULD EVER BE PREFERRED TO PRIVATE ADVANTAGE." Volume 5. Llncolnton, North Carolina, Saturday Working, June 9, 1849. Number 13. PRINTED AND PUBLISHED WEEKLY, BY THOMAS J. ECC1.ES. Terms. Two dollars pei annum, payable in advance ; $2 50 if payment be delayed 3 months. A discount to clubs of 3 or more. Advertisements will be conspicuously insert ed, at $ 1 pi square ( 1 4 lines) for the first, and 35 cents lor each subsequent insertion. 'JSc Quiet, do ! I'll Call my MOTHER As I was sitting in a wood. Under an oak tree's leafy cover. Musing in pleasant solitude. Who should come up but John, my lover ; He pressed my hand and kiss'd my cheek J 1 Then, warmer growing, kiss'd the other. While I exclaim'd and strove to shriek, Be quiet, do! I'll call my mother!' He saw my anger was sincere, And lovingly began to cbide me ; Then wiping from my cheek the tear, He sat him on the grass beside me. He feign'dsuch pretty amorous wo, Breathed such sweet vows one after other, I could, but smile, while whispering- low, 'Be quiet, do! Ml call my mother!'0 i talked so long, and talked so well, Ana swore he meant not to deceive me ! I felt more grief than f can tell, When, with a sigh, he rose to leave me 'Oh! John said I, and must thou go? I love thee bettet than all other Their is no need lo hurry so; I never meant to call my mother!' THE FOREST FUNERAL. She was a lair child, with tresses of long black hair lying over her pillow. Her eye was dark and piercing, and as it met mine sin- started slightly, but looked up and smiled. I spoke to her father, and turning to her, asked her if he knew her condition. I know that my Redeemer liveth," said she, in a voice whose melody was like the sweetest strain of the Alohau. You may imagine that the answer start led me, and with a very few words of the like import, J fornrJ 'turn tin. A half hour passed, and she spoke to that same deep, rich and melodious voice. Father. I am cold lie down beside me," and the old nan lay down ly his dying child, and she twined her arms a round his neck, and murmured in a dreamy voice, "dear father, dear la ther!" "My child," said the man, "doth the flood seem deep to thee ?" "Nay, father, my soul is strong." "Seest thou the farther shore?" I see it, father, and i is banks are green wiih immortal verdure." "Hearest thou the voice of its inhab itants ?" " I har them,, father, the voice ol angels, falling from afar in the still and solemn night time and they call me. Her voice, too, father. Oh ! I heard it then." "Doth she speak to ihee?" "Shespeaketh in tones most heaven ly." ' "Doth she smile? "An angel smile! but a cold, calm smile. But 1 am cold cold! Father, there is a mist in the room. You'll be lonely. Is ihis deaih, father?" "It is death, mv Mary." "Thank God!'' Sabbath evening came, and a slow, sad procession wound through the fores' to the little school house. Thre, with simple rites, the clergyman performed his duty and went to ih grave. The procession was short. There, were hardy men and rough, in shooting jack ets, and some with rifles on their shoul ders. But their waim hearts gave beau ty to their unshaven faces, as ihey stood id reverent silence by the grave. The river murmured, and the birds sang, and so we buried her. I saw the sun go down from the same spot and the stars were bright before 1 left for I always had an idea that a grave yard was the nearest place to hea ven on earth and with old Sir Thomas Brown, 1 love to see a church in a grave yard, for even as we pass through the place of graves to the temple o! God on .earth, so we must through the grave to -the temple of God on high. To prevent Horses rubbing the Hair ' ff thtir Tails. Grease the rectum, or fundament, with hog's lard or bacon; repeat it until the hair grows out again. The habit is caused, it is thought, by an itching of the fundament, occa sioned perhaps by the discharge of a species of worm. At any rate, we have been well assuied that this is a V certain cure. IHajor-Cciieral Worth. When we entered the following some months since in our scrap book, we had but little thought so soon to bring it into requisition. Gen. Worth died at San Antonio de Bexar, Texa9, on the 7th of May last, at 1 o'clock, p.m. of cholera. His gallan deeds through a service of thirty. six years, are a portion of the common glories of the republic ; while the nobility of his character will long cause him to be lamented by a large nnmberof personal friends- for None knew him but to love him. None named him but to praise." En. Courier. Gen. William J. Worth was said to be the handsomest and most soldierly looking officer in the army, ilis height was over six feet, and his person com manding. On horseback he presented a figure of unequalled grace. His na ture was somewhat impetuous, like many brave and rash men. He was excee d inglv popular among his soldiers. As one of the heroes of Monterey, as the victor at Molino de Key, his name will go down to posterity second only to that of Scott and Taylor. Worth, like many other able men in the army, rose from the ranks. He be gan life as a clerk in a mercantile house in Albany, New York, the latter being his rmive commonwealth. On the biea king out of the war ol 1612, however, fired witli that patriotic ardor which is a leading trait in his character, he enlisted as a common soldier. Another clerk was his companion. Fortunately lor Worth, his friend soon committed some indiscretion, lor which he was placed under arrest, in this emergency he applied to Wort h,who undertook to write a petition for him to the Colonel. The officer happened to be Scott,who,truck with the elegant style of the memorial, enquiicd the neme of the writer, and sending for him, made him his private secretary. He procured for Worth the commission at a lieutenant in the 3d regiment of 1; fantry. From that hour up to their unhappy difference in Mexi c:o, the closest intimacy existed between Worth and Scou lo the baule of Chippewa, Worth pro ved the correctness of Scott's estimate of chiiracter, by signalising hunsell es pecially; ana was consequently rewarded with the rank of Captain. In the battle of Luudy's Lane, Worth, alter several hours of severe fighting, received a dau ger us wound. In consideration ol this he was raised to the rank of Major. Afier the peace, be was tor a considera ble period Superintcndanl of the West Pomi Military Academy, a post which is always a guarantee of high ability on the part of the occupant. In 182'i, he was appointed a Litu. Colonel; in 18.'i2 a Major of ordnance; and in 1833 Colo nel ol the 8th regiment of infantry.w hich was the rank he still held in the line. I Sub.tequen'ly he was raised successively i to ihe. brevet rank of Briiradier. and af terward, of Major General, the first for his gallantry in the Florid war, the last for his brilliant conduct at Monterey. When Taylor, Twiggs and Worth met at Corpus Cnnsti, be to re the Mexi can war br.'ke ou, a difficulty arose as 1 lu who should command in Taylor's ab- j se;ce. Twiggs chimed it, though only a colonel, because an older coionel than Worth. The latter chimed it as a bre veted brigadier. But Tw igga asserted that a bvevti conferred no nght.to out rank a full commission. The matter was referred to Taylor, who, adopung the rule laid down by J.ickson, decided against Worth. On this Worth, fol- j towing a precedent set by Scott, resign ed his commission, and hurried on to Washington. During his absence the battles oT Palo Alio and Resaca de la Palma were fougbt, on hearing the in telligence of which, Worth recalled his resignation and rejoined the army. E very one knows how gallantly he fought at Monterey! He was rewarded for that bloody day with the brevet rank of Maj. General, W hen it was determined to besiege Vera Cruz, W orth, wiih most of the o ther generals, was detached from Tay lor's at my, ami placed under command of Scott. At the landing at Vera Cruz, Worth commanded the first dtvision,aud took the lead, consequently, in leaving the ships, Havirg effected his disem. barkation in the face of the enemy, he drew up his troops in gallant style, and awaited the arrival of other divisions. Or. the capitulation at Veia Cruz, W orth was at the convention that dictated the articles, and when the city was taken possession ot by the Americans, rode m advance, at the head ot a brilliant cor tege, into the public square. He was now appointed Governor ol Vera Cruz. When the army began its march for the interior, the van for a while was under me command o l wiggs, out suuse- quently it fell to Worth again, who was thp first to enter Puebla in consequence. It was at this city that the unfortunate series of misunderstandings between him and Scott aiose, which interrupted a friendship ol 35 year-" continuance. Tins is not the place to canvass trie a mount ut b'ame rightly belonging to each party. Both, perhaps, have been seme what in the wrong. At the battle ofContreras, Worth was not present; but at Churubusco his divi sion was engaged ai the tett du point, and fought, under his own eye, with as tonishing intrepidity. It was the Cha racteristic of Worth, that he coulJ in spire his soldiers with a portion of1 his own headlong valor, and thus secure victory . The march around ihe south ern sioV of Lake Chalco was suggested by Worth, to whom the practicabil ty of the road was communicated by Colonel Duncan, of Worth's division. The change in the route ol the army thus induced, placed Worth again in thevan. When Scott determined to storm Mjlino del Rey he committed the almost des perate attempt te Worth. Owing to an insufficient reconnoisance, the loss cf the assaulting columns was immense ; they were even repuLsed at first, and vouM havp been defeated, but for the a.rival of Cadwa'lader with the reserve. At Chapultepec, the storming party wt-s principally selected from Worth! and Pillow's regulars. Throughout the whole war, Worth carried himself in the field with a splen did gallantry 'hat fascinated the popular imagination. As an ofTicet, he has been said partly to resemble Murat.and partly to resemble Ney; for he has the dashing air ol one, with the indomitable courage of the other. Such is a hnef history of the man. By the afflicting dispensation General Worth's family hae been thus deprived of their protector almost as soon as they had arrived at the point of destination, where they anticipated a residence for some time to come; and the count rv de prived of the services of a man whose brilliant aci-ievemt ins are deservedly the pride. f the people, and will adorn the pages of our history to a remote "fene ration. The death of such a man is truly a national bereavement, and will undoubtedly be followed with demon strations of mourning throughout the whole Union. General Worth's family consists of hs wife and two daughters. From the Charlotte Journal. Small Pox in Greensboro iV. C. It 19 now ascertained beyond a doubt, that the Small 1'ox has made its ap pearance at Gieensborough. 'Ihe Pa triot of the 26th uit. says that "the de velopments of the last tour or five day s have been such as to convince (he most incredulous that this loathsome disease exists in our community." Five cases in town and four iti the country is all that 19 reported, of these 3 only repor ted to be critical. The Patriot says "sufficient precaution was not taken du ring some two weeks alter the appear ance of the disease, owing to the incre dulity of a respectable portiou ol the in habitants, including a number of the physicians and town authorities." It also staies that "the panic in the sur rounding community exceeds any thing of kind we ever witnessed. The trade ot the town is almost entirely stopped. Our stores and thops stand open without customers, and a strange quiet reigns in our hitherto busy streets. Ibis is May court-week, but suttor6, witnesses, and many of the jurors have f-tilud to appear; no causes have been tritd, and none will be tred, unless some scamp who is indicted and bound to appear on thisState's day) shall take it in his head to come. On l uesda) a day when our streets are usually ciow ded with citizens who come up from all pans of the county to transact business and to interchange saluta'tons there were not a hundred persons present. "Fair Ground" where tobacco, cakes, beer, pies and other noions, to say no'hing of ond liquor, are dealt out on 1 uesday ot coor! to a dtnse and jolly throng of customers was debited ioi a soul was seen ti.e;e. it was desolate as the streets of Tadmor of the desert." As an "ounce of prevention u better ilun a pound ot cure," we advise our mends to adopt measures 10 prevent this disease spreading in tin coiumnm ty should it reach here and that it will visit us we think it highiy probably, tor it is at the South and also at the North In view of its reaching us, we pubn the lull wing mode tor preventing its progress, whicr is copied from a South Carolina paper: Vaccination is so far from being un t iversally adopted, that it is, at all times, a matter of fear when it ia a announced that the small pox has made its appear ance in the neighborhood. In this country, the contagious character of the disease is universally believed; and the violent measures which have been la ken with patients, have been iu many instances, disgraceful. It is not many years since a poor wagoner on the high way, in Georgia, was known to have the small pox. Some courageous fellow ihrew down a fence through which he drove to a barn into which he entered, where he lay neglected and died with out, so far as 1 have heard, the presence of a human foul. His burial was as savage as his treatment ; a torch was applied to the barn and it was burned down. But little less savage has been the practice in other places. 'I he suf ferer with small pox, has been with us, too frequently a doomed man. Those whose humanity have induced them tovi6 it him, have been forbidden their own houses. Even the phj sician has been made an outlaw and avoided; as if his in tercourse with the sick constituted him an embodiment ct pestilence. That a great part of this fear is groundless, ought to be known to the world ; and that the common calls of humanity should never be denied to the victim of this disease, ought to be a fixed princi ple. When the small pox makes its ap pearance the individual in whom it has appeared, if he is a traveller, should by no means be allowed 'o proceed. ' His wants should be provided for at the near est convenient point. He should be placed in some location where he can be separated iron: others to a distance of thirty feet or more ; and no cruel at tempts to send 6uch individuals into re mote and lonely places, should be made. It will seldom be necessary to remove the individual be)ond the precincts of any town or village in wmCh the disease may appear, lie should be placed in the custody of individuals who have had the small pox, if such can be found: if rot, those who have been vacc.nated, may perform this duty, with pericct safety to themselves, and but iittle dan ger to the -community. Great care should he taken in bringing an- thing from the sick. The matter ot the in lection may produca the disease, either by being applied lo the suriace pf an individual, or placed too near for breath mg its odor with safety. 'Ihe articles that must needs be brought away, re quire no further cleansing than the or dinary use of soap and water ; and nothing is intected except by tbe actual application of the matter of small pox. Ihe hanging of clothing in the same room with the sick does not convert that clothing into a means of transmitting tne disease, ihe caie necessary to a- void the transmission of the disease will hardly be observed by nurses or atten dants. These should remain at home neaj the pattern. Nor is it necessary to destroy the clothing of patients or at- tendants. All are rendered .clean by the ordinary operation of soap and water. The physician whose duty calls him to attend to patients under these circum- s:ances, shoulu be exceedingly careful in the mode of proceeding. Many have in the performance ot this duty, in tected their children and all should be informed of the safest means of entering into, and safely leiving the abodes of the sick with small pox. The sugges. lion most commonly relied on, is an ex change ol clothing on entering, and pur ting them oft on leaving. Such clo filing is generally mnde loose and flow ing and more apt, th3n ordinary raiment to come in contact with the matter of small pox. I am decidedly of the opin ion that such arrangements increase rather than diminish the danger. The physician should carefully avoid com ing in contact with anything in the room. He can perform his duty with out any contact except the hand ; and this he should always take tie greatest care to cleanse before leaving the room At the door, a charge of shoes for a pan that should never leave the place, will be prudent ; and these are all the precautions I have found it necessary to use. 1 have in this way, made many v8its to the sick with small pox, and have never had reason to believe, that I brought from these visas any portion of the infection. We weed ot add much on the subject of avoiding the propoga- tion of small pox. Those who have been exposed to its contagion, in a way loo aianilesl to admit of -caee, should be instantly vaccinated it that be posi ble. 1 w.ll not surest a resort to in noculauon, because vaccination is, or ouirht to he, possible under almost any circumstances which may arise; ou should the time occur in which vaccina non shall not be possible, a resort to in noculation would unquestionably be proper. A Singular Transaction We find the following notice of a very singular cise in the last number of the Indiana State Sentinel: The marriage of Mr Henry Apple and Mrs. Sarah AppJe was solemnized at the clerk's office in this city, (Indiana polis,) on the 7th inst., by Judge Smith, one ot the Associate Judges of this county. Mr. and Mrs. Apple have been living together some twenty years, and have raised a large family of chil dren. Tlieir re-marriage was made necessary by the following mysterious train of circumst uices, as we learn by a friend who was present at the examina tion ot the case in the Circuit Court now in session in thi city. Mr John Apple, many years ago, left this county as a volunteer to the Black Hawk war. Du ring his absence, a traveller passed through the county, who informed Mrs A. that her husband had been killed ; that he, the traveller, had aided in bury ing him, and had marked with an axe, the tree under which he was interred. Apple did hot return, and no doubt was entertained by hie wife or her friend of his decease. Time pasesd on, ind nothing was heard to discredit be navel ler's story, and Mrs. A., after having continued for a proper length of ttmo in a state of supposed widowhood, was formally married to Mr Henry Apple, a farmer of this county. A few months since, it whs authentically ascertained that John Apple was actually living ! A divorce was obtained by Mrs. Apple, and he wos re-raarricd, on Mouthy last as above stated to Henry Apple, the man with whom she had beer, innocent ly livii-g for many y-ars past, as her supposed hushand. We have heard of no cause assigned for the singular man nerin which the first husband acted. The Pine tree Insect. Some weeks since, we mentioned that the insect which was so destructive last year to the pine trees in this, as well as other parts of ihe country, has re-commenced operation with the warm weather. We htjve recently, to our very great grati fication, been informed that the tuow of the noddle of last month had the- ef feet, as is supposed, ot checking the -vit in a grcai degree, and, in cotj-mction with another caue, will, it is generally supposed, arrest it altogether. This other cause is the appearance in im mense swarms of a large fly, which attacks and kills the insect. 1 his may seen, a strange statement, but it is as wo are assured by men of veracity, strictly true. Wilmington Chronicle. The last of the Rtd Coats. -The London papern briefly announce tho death of the oldest commissioned offi cer in the English army, Field Marshal General Sir George Nugent, K. C. B. at his seat at Great Mario- His nge wns ninety two. lie entered the army as ensign in the 21st regiment in May, 1773, when he was only seventeen years old. lie came with his regiment to our shores, in tbe early part oftho revolution, and served in the expedition under Sir Henry Clinton and General Vaughn up the Hudson in 1777, when forts Montgomery and Clinton were ta ken, and lisopus, or as it is now called. ivuigsion, was burnt, lie participated in other batis during the war,and at tho peace in laa had risen to rmk of lieutenant-colonel. He terved under the Duke of York in Holland, and wan a short time in the peninsula. He w.-as one ol tl'-j lourteeu field-Marshal s ot England at the time of his death, and the last British officer who fought a gainst us in the revolution. 'So old Dr. Quill is dead, said Mrs Partington, as 6he pot an extra piece of butter to her bread; 'they do say that he died of information on the brain but they musn't try to make me believe sich an unprouable tory as that in formation on the brain, truly ! whv he was ihe greatest fool 1 know on 1 can't help laughing at his presumptuous ig norance ; whv. dicn't he. at ono of h:n lectures one co'd n'ght last winter, try to make me believe, together with the rest of a large and spectable ordinance, that the sun was then nearer the earth than it would he in the hottest day in summer ? and didi.'l he try to suppress on my mind, when he cMed on me, thai time was money? Oh, the dolt! Why there's cousin Slow he ha3 h:s who!e time he never was known to do any thing but lodf and the L..rd knows how poor he is. Oh, y u can't make me believe sich sinff. 1 wonder what will carry me off, if he oied of informa tion !' and she aroe from the table flushed wiih excitement. Boston Post. 03"The Siamese Twins are exhibit ing in New York, to Urge crowds. r 4