iiiiiii, y " THE PUBLIC GOOD SHOULD EVER BE PREFERRED TO PRIVATE ADVANTAGE." Volume 5. Lincolnton, North Carolina, Saturday JNWmng, C iobfr 27, 1849. Number 35. PRIMED AND PUBLISHED WEEKLY, BY THOMAS J. LCCLES. TEtiMB. Two dollars pel annum, payable in auvance ; $2 50 if payment be delayed 3 months. A discount to clubs of 3 or more. Advertisements will be conspicuously insert ed, it $1 pet square 14 huesj lor the nrut.and 25 cents ior each subsequent insertion. "UNCLE NED." The admirer? of negro melodies who are familiar with "poor old Ned," (and who is not?) will be amused at the para phrase below, which we find in theSalem Register, taken Irom a Cincinnati paper. ""Uncle Ned" was written by S. (J. Fos ter, of Cincinnati, who also computed the music. The Pitisbur Despatch j'ssys, it was composed of three more ; verses not now sung, The following are the three verses )Of the song heren fore unpublished, par aphrased by the author: f Dechild'en all loved htm bekase he was so kind, And nebber got tired ob dere talk. Ilf'd play for dem to dance, or totter on be hind, When Dinah took them out to walk. Chorus. Den lay down the shovel and the hoe, Hang up de fiddle and the bow No r ore hard work for poo- old Ned, - For he's gone bar de food niggers go. Some niggers like to play the tamborine, Kase it cultivates the noble tones But when dey hear Ned on the old violin, Dey lay down the banjo and the bones. Den lay down the shovel, &e. Some say old age wes de cause ob his death, But this chile tinks dafs a lie, For I'6e ob de 'pinion dat he couldn't get his breath, And dai am de reason why he die. Den lay down the shovel, &c. PARAPHRASE. , Tained the hearts of the juvenile members of" the family by his uniform forbearance, Inasmuch as h never became weary of their loquaciousness. He vtould enliven with melody, the inno cent rambles, Which they were wont to take under the surveilance of the indulgent Dinah. There are individuals of Ethopian extrac tion. Who prefer the Chinese style of music; This prejudice has, however, been in many instances eradicated. By one dclcet strain from the bow of the now lamented musical defunct. It has been asserted that his death was the result of the extreme longevity; But this I consider an erroneous supposition, Being impressed with the belief that his demise Was partially owiny to a physical inability to inhale the vital gases. From the Ashsville Messenger. JOHN HILL alias NIXON CURRY.' 'Truth stranger than Fiction." j This is the heading of a slor publish ed in the "Democratic Review," and ex tensivelv copied m the Southern coun try. As the ancle occasionally stum bles on the truth, and as many of the events occurred in North Carolina, and said Curry was confined in Buncombe jail for one of his offences, we deem it a matter of justice lo put the public in possession of some facts, unadorned with romance, imagination and false coloring. We copy the articles (that precedes the main article) giving a glimpse of his public life in tho West. ."Among the truest friends of the pen- p . ol all tn the present Convention, may "y be named John Hill, of Si. Francis Hi ftneriyv. eloouenre and courace lulU . . . j i and we trust, will long retain Lxtxle Rock, Gazette, tn the days of the Con rentton. "Bloody Affray.- h. desperate ren contre occuned last week inSi. Francis. Two distinguished citizens were killed, and three others dangerously wounded. The? difficulty resulted from an atten.pt to arrest John Hill, a member of the lat Legislature, and formerly of the State Convention, who, as it is alleged, is the notorious robber, Nixon Curry, thai committed such atrocities fifteen years ago in the mountains of Carolina Little Rock Guzette of May, 1640. The writer gives Iredell county tie place of his nativity, correctly, but all iii gammon about his being the son ot .a Presbyterian Minister, ol high morl charaotsr of the Governor offering five thousand dollars reward oi Curry running " 200 armed men" of the re nowned "fighters of the Weu" off the "prairie" &(., &r., are all uuerly wih out the least foundation ot troth. Said Curry, while confined in our Jail, (ha ving been removed here for safeiy.pend- ing his confinement for the murder of a negro,) got in with the Jailor's wife, m some way, so as to get hold of the key, with which he made hi escape in the night, and after leaving the village he got bewildered and lost in the wood, and the next day was ai rested twoor three miles from town, by some persona who were out driving for deer, and sale ly lodged in jail again. Curry had not the advantages of education, but was possessed of a prepossessing appearance and uncommon shrewdness. Those persons familiarly known as "granny's" held a consultation over him belore committing him to the cradle, and' de cided in Solemn conclave and prophe cy.1 that that child would be hung." lie missed the prophecy but a little he was killed. Hi- due, from what we know, wou'd have been a rope. His character, in short, from whit we con reive to be the best authority is, that he was distinguished from his earliest youth, (or the most marked and com plete desperation of character. Out of a 'youth rf idleness, irregularity, and dissipation, he emerged into munh' od ot most atrocious villainy. His first great crime was stealing a negro from a re spectable farmer by the name of John ston, and carrying him off from the country. His second was dealing ano ther nero from a farmer, by the name of Jnes Gibson, which he took to Ti ger River, JS. C, where, for fear of de tection, he led him to the river bank, under pretence of gelling wood, and knocked bis .skull off with an axe, and cast him in the river) His third was the murder of Benjamin Vilson who he believed, was in no-session of informa tion that would convict rum of both the former murders. Fur the murder ol Wilson he was tried and acquitted at the Superior Court of Mecklenburg. For stealing the negro of Gibson, he nan tried in Iredell Superior Court and convicted, and while under sentence of death, escaped from prison with all h'.s guilt and crime upon him, and fid to the West, where there i no rMonal doubt he appeared and figured so ex tensively as the great leading Democrat "John Hill," of Arkansas. He was well calculated to deceive and betray any individual oi community a travel injt embodiment all the evil propen sities cf whicir tne numan mind is sue- ccntiMe" ; a will and nerve to execute every wicked imagination. And unless , .ii his life in Arkatiras was totally diiierem Irnm tits course in North Carolina, we d not wonder at his covering up and Bulweizing his native and historic meanness. The writer of the story ends the life of Hill in Pope county, Ark., 184d, by a bowie knife in the hands ol ivioses Howard, at he Court-house which said Hill had cleared Judge, Jury, and all, 1 wmle in a tit ot rage and drunkenness. Those papers that have copied the "story" w.u!d do well 10 nonce these facts and "er justice.be done, though the heavens fall. A Dry Clay Brick Press. We re cently t xamiued in theilall ot theFran!; ltn Hoiel, Chestnut street, a model of one of the most ingenious and uccessfui machines for brick making, that vbas ever yet been produced. It is the in vention of Mr. I Cuibeiton, and is patented by Messrs. Cuibertson & Scott, of this citv. Already one ot these presses lain lull action near New O leans, where the Biloxi Steam llnck Cnmnanv have cnteied into co .tract to supplvthuty millions ol bricks cbteflv lor the building of the new Custom n...0 .n thP .rrat Kn.ithern rami! nnd nort. The Machine is very ationg, i . ;i ..,ctri,n,.n h4 lint fpw BIIIIUIG til iu mug'iuniuii, " I r ... ear.nguriawS,irHu..wuui r u.. l.t.in I er to drive it. and uui a lew nauds to attend it. Ii is sell-feeding aud sell- delivenng, and opera.es witn great cer tainty and accuracy,and will make with eat,e 25,000 Brick per day, requiring no preparation of ihe clay other man pulverising or running through rollers attached to the machine, and no yard room for drying, as liis liricks are sufii ciemlv hart to stack up in the kiln at once. 1 he linck are of a uniform s ze and shape, are harder, smoother, and stronger, and being iess porous will ab sorb much less water : and it is tso a ell established tact, will stand fir better Uui those made in the ordinary way. The pressure being gradual and conunuous,al!ows the air to escape free iy as the clay is forced into the moulds; and as each mould passes twice under the cylinder, first in one and then in other direction, reaving clay from the hoppers each wav, the Bnex is not only full and perfect n all the comers and t'uges, out tne omereni particles or ciay are by this rolling or kneading process completely united. By a slight .altera lion of the moulds alone, Brick ;of any desired size or shape tniy be made for paving, lining cisterns, building srehes, &c. As theworks will all be; under envr, Brick ean be made as well in wet as in dry weather ; they can also be made earl er in the Spring and Mer in the Fall than in the ordinary wa, A large "Brick Press' is atxut to be erected immediately at the exensive brick fields of Messrs. C Ss Sv, Pea Shore four miles from Camden, '. N. J., in which, we learn, that the enormoVs pressure of one hundred tons wili be ap plied to the formation and compression of each brick. Mwrnmoth Gazette. Remains of Whitfeld Rev. Jona' than F. Stearns writes to the Newbury port Herald.that it has been well known "that one of the principal bones of Whitfield's right arm has been missing from among the remains of that eminent saint, deposited iu the vault under the pulpit of the First Presbyterian Church in mis town. 1 he bone was in pos session of a person in London. Mr. Stearns srates further that he recently received a package, containing the sto len relic, with a letter, from which an extract is given beiaw, with Mr.Stearns remark thereupon : "Some years ago a brother clergy man was requested to obtain an original letter ol the dear and honored Whitfield for me, which he thought he could easi Jy do. He failed, however, in the at tempt ; bui to my great surprise and mortification, sent me what he called a precious relic ol the holy man ol God, one of his bones ! and preetous it is, bui it was of too sacred a nature to expose to the public eye, and I have preserved it, hoping to restore it to its proptr place with my own hands. This 1 must now intrust to you, and I shall be happy tu learn irom you that it has been done The trust committed to me, 1 am happy to say, has been discharged.- The venerable relic was convened to the vault where its kindred remains lie, and in the pretence of the Session ot tne Church and the Pariah Committee, re sn rea to its place yesterday "earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dus: to oust." As u seems not proper that names 6houid be mentioned in this matter, I would only beg leave to add, that (he gentlt-mau by whom the restoration has been made, is known oy reputation to me and others tn tins community, and .u ....... f .: -l - i . .. iTL ... ioe wumt ui uit tuaraticr uauim icm guarantee mat ine transact-on is gooum, and tne motives which have influenced his course honorable and sincere. Jonathan I. Stearns. Newburjpon, bept 28, 1B4U. Departed Friends. The preserva tton ol tne memoirs ot lost friends u l0l oniv a cood exercise for Hie affec- u0!1s, and the soutca o: a pleasing hope l0 a,j wuo are ye: to die, but it is cl culated to have a soothing and refining effect upon those who indulge ti. Our departed tnends always appear to us in the light of beings removed to a purer existence aud a higher s'aie of intelli gence, so as to br enabled to see and judge correctly of all our thoughts aud scions. If we bear tnem any res pect, wu will hesitate, under this ideal censorship, lo do things wnicti are un worthy of us, and lor which perhaps the ptesetil world has no punishment We will try, on the contrary, to be us pure in thought and deed as possible, in oru r that we rnav be the more pea- sing to those who, we conceive, are aho- g- l""ca'w ? ,u'ly desire lo concise. lu ihs midst, too, ol the bustle auC shock oi me present lite, wheu Mile mterestsa.id pei- l jealousies are i earing memaeivts Ate serpents in our heans, now salutary - I -k to .ttlect that all advantages we can now aeek either to gam or deienu, are but trash aud dross in me estimation ot those from whom we lately parted, and in no long time will be the same in our own. Are we proviuea wnu a large are ut such fio-to as this world lias lo give ihen wal we couirol our appre ciation oi them, by reflecting oi how ut ile accouutihey will be wnen we have rejoined mose friends in another worid Are we poor, and injured, aud iritnd less, tneu will the recollections ol ou departed mend tend to enter us, by presetting tne idea ot iheir superiorly to ail bucn evus a super.ority soon be our own. Robert Chambers W hat is the safest capiial a man ca invest in business, and wmcn snail in I suie him the greatest amount ol liter the lest ! Answer: Civility. A COLLEGE LARK. i The following capital iory is told by "one who knows," ol Dr. Alaxcey, and rannot fail to amuse our readers. On one occasion, several of the students of South Carolina College resolved to drag the doctor's carriage into the woods, and fixed upon a night for the performance of the exploit. One of their number, however, was troubled with compuuet ious visttings, and managed to couvev to the worthy President a hint, that it would be well for him to secure the door of his carnage house. Instead of paying any heed to this suggestion, the doctor proceededon the uppointed night, to the carriage house, and e scon ced his portly person inside the vehicle. In less than an hour some halt a dozen young gentlemen camp o his retreat, and cautiously withdrew the carriage iito the road. When they were fairly oht of the college precincts, they began to ke freely with each Other by name. One of then) complained of the weight of the carriage, and another replied by b wean ng that it was heavy enough to have the old fellow himself in it. ror nearly a mile they proceeded along the highway, and then struck into the woods, to a cover which they concluded would effectually conceal the vehicle. Making themselves infinitely merry at the does tor s expense and conjecturing how and when he would find his carnage, they t length reached the spot where they ad resolved to leave it. Just as they tere about to depart having once nore agreed that "the carriage was heavy enough to have the old doctor and all his tube in it" -thev were star- i ed by the sudden dropping of one of tue glass panels, and the well known voice of the doctor himself thus addressed tnem: "So, so, young gen'iemen, you are going to leave me in tho woods, are you? Surety, as you have brought me hither for your own giatificaiion you will not reiuse totakenie uack ior mine. Come, iVlessts. , and , and buckle to, and let us re urn, it's getting late !' I'here wai no appeal; for the window was rdistd and the doctor resumed his seat. Almost without a word, Hie dis- cotnfiited young gentlemen took their places at the pole, at the back ot the vehicle, and quite as expeditiously, u with less voice did they leiracw their course. In silence they diagged the car rmge into its wontei place, and then retreated prccipaieiy to their rooms, to dream of the account they must rendei on memoi tow. W nen they had gone, tne doctor quiteiy vacated tne carriage. and went to bis house, where he reia.ed e iory to his family with, much gtet He never called ihe heroes of tnat uoc iural expedition to an account nor was the carnage ever afterwards drugged at nigh into the wooos. THE Y ANKEE FOX SKIN. BY YAJSKEE HILL. 1 Morniu squire!' said 'down east, giving a nod uid a wmk to Lyman and 1 owie, as iIioaO gent stood in their store one morning, up aud dressed,' lor business How are you, sir?'said ine merchants. 'Pooty well, cousidenn tne siate of mugs ui genera w. 1 say, yeou sell kins here, doui yeoul We do, occasionally, was ihe res ponse. Well, sol calkelated; buy Fox Sknia teou 1 reckon?' Sometimes. Why have ou got some tor sale?' Some. Yo-s, guess I hev one, us some teou, 1 tell yeou.' 'Lets look at it, says one ot the merchannt. Ihe ownui oi the skin tugged at the capacious pocket of nis yaner overcui, a few minutes, aud out came a prettv considerable, sizcauie bdtjg-upot a venerable reynanl. 1 here a is, a perfect bewiy it is, too. Ami u? Seen many finer ones, says Towle. Praps yeou hev, aud praps you hami; but I deou think us a rate bewiy -slick dad snmv as a bran uew hat. When did you get this sKioT sys the merciiam. U heu did 1 get it ! Why, whenl kilted ihe daru'd critter, ot course!' 'leg, ve know; but was it iu the fall or summer, or wueu: On! ye-s; weil, 1 reckon, 'iwarut fur irom 4i u July, any wax, lur iu jest cieuo d up my oid shouiin p ece, lor p'rade on tne glorious anuiversdry , and along cornea Hit old cnuer, and 1 jest give nun a np in ihegizzaid i4iit settled uis hash uiignty auJucn 1 tell yeou.' 'Fox skins,' said me mercuanis, 'are not very good wiieii taiteu Ui hot wea iu r; tne ior and luir is imn, and teji fit mi much in summer. ell, neow 1 reckon since I come toihmk it ever, 'iwar'ut not weather, when i shot the critter; no, I'll be darned ef it was; made a thunderin mistake uaut that, lur 'twas nigh on to Christ mas, was by golly fi'r 1 and Seih Peur kins wur gmn to iroltc. 1 remember it like a book, cold as sixty, snowin aw 'ul, was, by finger!' WHi, siys the merchants, 'was the Fox very fat!' Fa "t! O! Molly, warnt it fai? Ne ver did see such a fat iet.'er in all my beoin days. Why yeoo, tbe la-tcamo clean through the critter's hide, run down his legs, vtill the very ainh was greasy where the darned varmint crawed areound. Did by peunkinsl' 'Too tat then, we guess, said Towle. Fat skins, sir, are not as good as ihose taken from an animal not more than or diuary Int.' Weil, guest 'iwar'nt bo darned fat nuiher; come to think on it, waa anu tner Fox our Siah shot last fall; this old critter war'nt so da rued tat, not over ly fai lact, I guess it was rey.ther poor ; kmd of lean, tree-menjus lean; poor old varmant was about lo die ot pure biarvanoii; never did see such a darned etarnal starved, lean, tank, lainwned live critter on airth beiore?' Very poor, eh' said Lyman Very poor? I guess 'twas; so al mighty poor that tne old critter's bones stuck clean eout, almost through his skin; had nt killed it jest wnen 1 aid, it would died afore it got ten rods further along. Fact! by golly!' An! weil, says the merchants, we see the skin is poor, very poor; the lur is linn atid loose, and would not suit us. Wuntsuit yeuu? Neow look ahere yeou,' says ine Yankee, folding up his versatile skin 'J dunt kind o like sicti dealing as that, no heow, and 1 11 De darned to darnutton el you ketch me a tradm tox Skins with yeou agin, there ami no lumber in the state o Mainel and tne holder ot the sktti vamosed. Tie Yankee. No other man is like him. It has been said of him, that he was made lor all stations, and manages to work his way in all places. Place him upon a rock in the mid9t ot the ocean, and with a penknife and a bunch of slt.ugies, ne wouid work his way on shoie. He sells salmon, from Kenne beck, to ine people oi Charleston ; hud' dock, fresh from Cape Cod, to the plan ters of Maianzas; raises coffee in Cuba swaps mules and horses tor molasses in Porio Kico ; retails ice from Fresh Pond in Cambridge, in (he East Indies ; takes mutton from Brighton, to New Orleans and to South America ; manufactures mucalis ior tne geveruor of Jamaica ; becomes an admiral in a foreign nation: starts in a cockei-suell craft oi h7:een tons londed with onions mackerel, aud tnotions," ior Valparaiso; bans his trap on ihe ( oiumoia river; catches wild beasts in Amca, for At scomber's caravan; sells granite on contract, to rebuild fit. Juan 4e Uiija; crosses tue Rio Grande, and daguerreotypes dead Mexicans ; he is ready , tike Ledyaid, lo start lor Timbuctoo lo-morrou u.orn ing,--ex lies himself lor years Irom home, to sketch in their wilderness the wild men of tne woods, and astonishes refined Europe wuh the seeming pies ence ol tne uuiutored savagt . Intro duced lo Metiernicn, he aaks, "wtiat's the news?" Says "how do vou do. inarm?" toQueeu Victoria. Prescribes rnompson's eye water to the mandarins of Chiua, and if lie pieases, makes ttie scouting Noulneins rich vvnn cotton in veiuious. He is lound loremost among those who sway tue eiemeuis of society -is tne schoolmaster ol his couotry. and missionary for the heaiiieu world. tie is untOjUaica, m tact, and instead of gomg round about ways, atarts across lots tor any desired point. Ii peip' tual motion is ever to be discovered, oe will be sure to b; the lucky cummer ior he is the factotum lor the wiioit world. Jin Easy Rule for Farmers A quarter oi wheat 14 au English measure of eignt sianda.d bushels; so n you see lhai quoted at ntty-six shillings, it is seven shillings a bushel. A smiling it twenty lour cents multiply by seven and you nave Si 68 ptt bushel. The Men with Tails. The tribe of canmoal negroes uteiy discovered uiAf rica, b the Fiench traveller Ducouet, wun a tail three or lour tuches long, number about 4U.0U0, aud a lew rnern oersot 11 are staves 11 tho city of Mec ca. 1 beir owners nave u gorge them . once 01 twice a week with raw meat, lo keep them trout being sJangerous. It is said that most of the suicides in this country are cotnuuUed by foreign ers, as every ifankee ex peels lobe Prts- idem, and he lives 10 see what the dos trine of chance may bring forth.