.) i VOI.. 1. GREENSBORO, N. C., THURSDAY, JANUARY 27,1^76 NO 20 POETRY. ‘Are You a Mason?” Rev. Ml-. Slagill, Rector of St. Paul’s Cltiirdi, -IVru, Illinois, beiii"- a.sked the iibovo (iue,stioii i)y a lady, rc.'poiuled as follows : 1 am of a band Wliowill faithfully stand* In tlie bonds of aiieci ion and love ; I have knoeked at the door Once wretched and poor, And tliero for adoiission I stood. B}’’ the help of a friend, Who assistance did lend, I succeeded an eutJ'unce to gain. Was received in the West, By command from the East., But not without feeling some pain. Here my c.mcience was taught, Witli a 111 >ral quite fraught; With >catiments iioly and true; Then onward I traveled To have it unraveled. What ilii'am intended to do. Veiy soon to the East 1 made known 1113- request, And "liglit” by command did attend; When lo! 1 pieceived, In due ionn revealed, A Master, and B.other, and ITiend. Thus fir I have stated. And s'-iiiidy related Wh.it happ -11 I W..C I was made free ; But I’vg “pits^ed" since then, And was‘‘rai-ed” np again To a sublime and ancient degree. Then onward Inia’-chcd, That I migiit be “Arched,*’ Aii’:l lind out the treasures long lost; When belioldl a bright ilame, Erom the mi 1st of whicli came A voice, which my ears did accost. Through the ‘‘vails” 1 then went. And succeeded at length The “Sanctum Sanctorum” to find; By the ‘‘Signet'’ I gaiuo 1, And quickly obtained, Employment which suited my mind. In the depth I then wrought, Aud most cheerfully sought -For treasures long hidden theic; And by labor and toil I discovered rich spoil Which arc kept I13' the craft with due care Having thus fiu* arrived, I further contrived Aiuimg valiant Knights to appear; And as PilgTim and knight, I stood ready to light, Xor Saracen foe did I fear. For the "widow distressed I’herc’s a cord in tlie breast For the orphan aud hclplo.ss I f ■cl; And my sword I could draw' To maintain the pure hiw Which the duly of Masons reveal. The Quaker Detective. We were five passengers in all; two ladies on the back seat, a middle-aged gentleman, a Quaker and myself on the front. The two ladies might have been mother and daughter, aunt and neioe, governess aud charge, or might have sus tained any other relationship which makes it proper for two ladies to travel together unattended. The middle-aged gentleman was sprightly and talkative, and soon struck up an acquaintance with the two ladies, toward whom, in his zeal to do the agree able, he i-ather overdid it—bowing, smil ing, and chattering in a most attentive manner. He Was evidently a gay Loth ario. The Quaker wore the usual garb of his sect, and confined his speech,, as .uany an M P. would save his credit by doing, to simple “yeas’, and 'nays.” As for my.self, I make it an invariable rule of the road to be merely a looker-on and listener. Toward evening I was aroused from one of those reveries into which a young man, without either being a poet or a lOver will sometimes fall, by the abrupt query from the talkative gentleman: “Are you armed, sir’f” “I am not,” I replied, astonished, no doubt, visibly, at the question. “I am sorry lo hear it,” he said, “for before i-eaching our stopping place it will be nearly midnight, and we most pa.=s over a portion ol the road on which more than one robbery is reported to have been committed.” The ladies turned j-ale, but the stran ger did his best to reassure them. “Nor that I think there is the slightest danger at present,” he resumed ; “only when one is responsible for the safety of laaies, you know, such a thing as a pistol in one’s possession would materially add to oiie's confidence. Your principles, my friend," he said, addressing the Quaker, “I presume, are as much opposed to car rying as to using deadly weapons.” “Yea,” was the response. “Have the villians murdered any of their victims?” inquired the elder ladv, nervously. “Or have they contented themselves with—with plundering?” added the younger, in a timorous voice. “Decidedly the latter,” the amiable gentleman hastened to give assurance; “and as none of us are prepared to offer resistance in case of attack, nothing worse than robbery can befall us.” Then, after blaming bis thoughtlessness in having unnecessarily introduced a disagreeable subject, the gentleman quite excelled himself in his efforts to rai.se the spirits of the company, and succeeded so well by the time night set in, that all had quite forgotten their fears, or only remembered them to laugh at them Our genial companion fairly talked himself hoarse. Perceiving which, he took from his pocket a package of newly- invented “cough candy,’ and after pass ing it first to the ladies, he helped him self to the remainder, and tossed the pa per out of the window. He was in the midst of high encomiums on the new nostrum, more than half the efficacy of which, he insisted, depended on its being taken by suction, when a shrill whistle was heard, and immediately the coach stopped, and two faces, hide ously blackened, presented themselves, one at each window. “Sorry to trouble you,’’ said the man on the right, acknowledging with a bow two lady-like screams from the back seat; ■‘but ‘business is business," and ours will soon be over if things go smoothly.” “Of course, gentlemen, you will spare as far as may be oensistent with your disagreeable duty, the feelings of these ladies?’ appealer] the polite passenger in the blandest manner. “Oh, certainly,” was the reply ; “they shall be first attended to, and shall not be i-equired to leave their'places or sub mit to a search, unless their conduct ren ders it necessary.” “And now, ladies, continued the rob ber, the barrel of his pistol gleaming in the light of the coach-lamp, “be so good as to pass out your purses, watches, and such other trinkets as may be accessible without mnch trouble.” The ladies came down handsomely, and were no further molested. One by one the rest of us were compel led to get out, the middle-aged gentle man’s turn coming first. He submitted with a winning grace, and was robbed like a Chesterfield. M l' own affair, like the sum I lost was scarcely worth mentioning The Qua ker's turn came next. He quietly hand ed over bis pocket book and watch, and when asked if he had any other valuables, Said ‘Nay.” A Quaker’s word is sood even among thieves ; so, after a hasty “good night,” the robber thrust his pistol into his pock et, and, with his two comp.inions, one of wiiom held the reins of the leaders, was about to take his departure. “Stop!” exclaimed the Quaker, in a tone more of ..ommand than request. “Stop! what for?" returned the other, in evident suiprise. "l-oi at least two good re.asons.” was the repi'. i mphasized with a couple of pistols cocked and presented. “Help!" shouted the lobber. “Stop !” again exclaimed the Quaker, “and if one ot lliy sinlul companions ad vances a step to thy relief, the spirit will surely move me to blow thy brains out" The robber at the opposite window and the one at the leaders’ heads, thought it a good time to leave. “Now get in, friend,’' said the Quaker, still covering his man, “aud take the mid dle seat; out first deliver up thy pistol.” The other, however, hesitated. “Thee had better not delay,” said the Quaker ; “I feel the spirit beginning to move my right forefinger.’’ The robber did as he was directed, and the Q.uaker then took his place by his side, giving ihe new comer the middle of of the seat. The driver who was half frightened out of his wits, now set forward at a rapid rate. The lively gentleman soon recov ered his vivacity and was especially fa- cetiou.s on the Quaker’s prowess ; but the Quaker relapsing into his usual monosyl lables, the conversation soon flagged. Time sped, and earlier than we expect ed, the coach stopped where ive were to have supper and a change oi horses. We had deferred a redistr bution of our ef fects until we should reach this place, as the dim light of the coach lamp would have rendered the process somewhat difficult before. It was now neoessarj', however, that it should be attended to at once, as oni- jovial compahion had previ ously announced his intention of leaving us at this point. He proposed a post ponement till after supper, which he of fered to go and order. “Nay,” urged the Quaker, with sud den abruptness, and laying his hand on. the other's arm, “ ‘business before pleas-- ore,’ and for business there is no time like the present. Will thee be good enough to seaich the prisoner?” he said to me, still keeping his hand in a friendly way on the passenger’s arm. I did so, but not one of the stolen ar ticles could be found, ‘‘He must have gotten rid of them in the coach,” suggested the gay gentleman, and immediately offered logo and search. “Stop 1” thundered the Quaker, tight ening his grasp. The man turned pale, and struggled to release his arm. In an instant one of the pistols was leveled at his heart. “Stir a hand or foot, and you are a dead man !” said the Quaker, who must have been awfully excited so to forget both the language and principles of hi.s pe.-suasion. Placing the other pistol in my hand, with directions to fire on the first of the tivo men who made a suspicious move ment, the Quaker went to work on Loth ario, from wbo.se poc-ksts, in less time than it takes to tell it, he produced ev ery item ot the missing property, to the utter amazement of the ladies, who had begun in no measured terms to remon strate against the shameful treatment the gentleman was receiving. The Quaker, I need scarcely add, was no Quaker at all, but a shrewd detective, who had been set on the track of a band of desperadoes, of whom our middle-aged friend—who didn’t look nearly so mid dle-aged with bis wig off—was the chief. The robbery had been adroitly pla:;ned. The leader cl the band had taken posses sion of a seat in the coach, and after learning, as he supposed, our defenceles.s condition, had given the signal to )iis companions by throwing out the hit of paper already mentioned After the un expected capture of the first robber, ah attempt was made to save the booty bv secretly passing it to the accomplice, siill believed to be unsuspected, who counted on being able to make off with it at the next stopping-place. The result was that both for a season, “did the State some service.” What is tt-e difference between a girl of sixteen, and an old maid of sixty ? One is careless and happ-y, the othc.t hairless and cap-py,