I 1 ; r Ho mCJ r-. ; ' Aw THE FEDERAL UNION IT MUST AND SHALL BE PRESERVED. Andrew Jacksos. '; - ': , . r -. . - , , , . - ..'"-. , . i - - VOL I. .GREENSBORO, N. C., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1871. NO. 3. 2 fcjfe-fc JHt 4ri- 1UJUJS11ED WEEKLY AT GREENSBORO. By JOSEPH II, FETZER, OFFICESOUTH ELM STREET, .Opposite D. W. C, Eenbow. Terni? of SuToscrip tion; One Year, .- - .. .. - $2 00 Six Months. - 1 00 Three Motulis.. - - - 50 : IXARIA DLY IX A D VA XCE. AD VE RT I SIN G RATES . $ i oo 60 4 00 6 00 10 00 5 00 One Square, first insertion, Each subsequent insertion, One square threw months. , ;(;ie square six months, 1 0 n ej s i k rti tw el v ejus p n th's, C'.oUti.ii first insertion. R ich .allitional itt&ertioti, 1 50 Three months, 15 00 I Six months, -5 00 On year, . 40 00 j Half Column and Column advertisements received , on proper discount. . Ten lines or one inch lengthwise of the column . .-coii'titufe n"sijkare - .. SprciuljXetieejh&O'jytr cent, higher than above rates i i. w ;t v . - - - - - K - Court Xotices, xix weeks 7.00 ; 2Iagistritesfour ' "iaeek's $".00 inadcatce. Yearly advertisements changed quarterly if desired tjSf: Transient advertisements payable in advance Yearly adottU.stmen.ts 'quarterly in advance. Some time passed, when he rapped at the door of my study,- was admitted, passed a few "I ordinary words, looked into my Greek Test oient, made some sensible rem arks upon the aneieute, and finally reclined upon a lounge, where, to my utmost surprise and grief, I per ceivcd,creeping slowly over him, the comatose state of semi-intoxication. Upon his recovery, he made some lame attempts at an apology, said something of peppermint as a tnedicine.and desired my company to the car, that he might go home. A -neighbor, shortly after, told me that hishnbits were the real cause of his being at his father's that they had already severed him from his' wife and children, and shut him out from the privileges of his Louisiana home. The next tim I saw him, some month's af terward, was when he was snoring, in the deep sleep of a drunkard, on a sofa in my parlor, where he had hastily cast " himself, when ad mitted during my absence After suffering TELL YOUR WIFK. If you are in trouble, or a qumdary, tell your wife that U if yoa have one all about if at once. Ten to one her invention will solve your difficulty sooner than all your logic. The wit of a woman has been praised but her instincts are quicker and keener than her reason. Counnel -with your wife, or your mother, or sister, and be assured liht will flash upon your darkness. Women are too commonly adjudged as verdant in all but pure ly womanish affairs. ' Nohiksophical student of the sex thus judges them. Their intuitions or insights are subtle; and if they cannot see a cat in the meal, there is nocat there. In counseling a man to tell his trouble to his wife,, we wjmld g father and advise him to keep pone of his affairj secret from her. Many a home has been happily saved, and man jt fortune retrieved, by man's full confi- dencfrfn his "better half" Woman is far THK DESTRUCTION OF FORKST3. DEATII OF AN OLD MORAVIAN While the first news of the northwestern BISHOP, fires I in, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Michigan! Oa the morning of the Mlh ulL, the suggests the necessity ef fpeedy relief to the; Kight ter Wolle, fenior Bishop of the homeless citizens, ia greater need of succor Moravian Church, died at BetlilehccC Pa., tharf even the tens cf thouMuds ia Chicago, it in Lia lnl : r- He was born oa the also suggests forebodings of serious clioiatie ;JIariJ of St- Join W. I., January 5. 1792, changes. These changes are inevitable if.t wucro Ul Iaiuer oiiasiouaij oi lue wiurca. without replanting, foret after forest is swept away by the blow of the woodman's axe, and by the wholesale destruction wrought by fire. was stationed. In 1 SIX) he accompanied his fatht-r to the Uoitexl Sutes, aoi entered Kax aicth UalL Having coup!eted the. regular neighbor already mentioned, who, upon enter ing the room, took the sleeper by the arm, and said, somewhat sharply, " Dick, come ! " Ah me ! my Richard L , Esq., was staggering out from my door as nothing but bare "Dick." And I soon found that this was his current ap pellation. He was "Dick" H ," here, and Ay one passing the Alps into Northern ItJ' cHool couise, in 1S07 he was admitted to aly, and proceeding as far south ss Naples, orllhe faret theological cj of his Church or- Castilc down to Cadia and 'ganizeil in Aciv nca, wJenc Le was gradual- travelling from old Malaga, or visiting Sicily and Greece, and still further to the east, Palestine and the Euphra- ed four years Liter. Entering the ministry Lc received the ap him to lie awhile, I resorted for help to theT fe and .t Jf she haT(j :ki i j : i , i n ' POETRY. : , A GREAT SECRET. - My friend, here's a secre.t By; which you may thrive ; I am fifty years old, " And my vife?s forty-five A queen among beauties, The weddiug;guest8 said, "When we went to the church. With the priest and were wed. That's thirty ;iong years past; , And I can avow. She was no more a beauty ' ' To me, then; than now.. For never the scath of a Petulant frown Uas ploughed with its furrows Her young roses down. And still, like a girl, when Her praises I speak, Her heart fairly . Dlnshed Itself through her cheek. Her smile is more tender ' : For being less bright ; And the little bit powder , That makes her nair .white. . And all' the soft patience . That shows. through, her face; In my eyes,' are only Like grace upon grace. For still we are lovers, As I amalive, - Though I, sir am fifty, ' , s . And she!& forty-five And, here's half the secret' " T meant to ' unfold, She don't know my friend, -' S Nol the leasi,4iow to scold "DickX there. Rum had shorn him of 4 If 'Nor does she sell And sulk to a pout, So, since we Jell in love,' e never fell ou ' And here's the full secret . That saves us from strife ; ' I kept her a swee$eart, In making her wi'fe ! Si? "And if you but wed, on My patter yoAlll thrive, f . . xFoxrl, sir, am fifty, a . wife, forty-five I. Alice Gary tn Appletons Journal Hok JLAW?R FELL. The first trmehat Iever saw him was while :one'ofjour iilge churches and an accomplish ed head of an accomplished household. "My son Richara,,k' said the . lather, as he introduced ATntf tern first glance fell penhluiUe adatf immeoiately ' . ... - . . . . .ii. :.v awakened; at his general., ,urtane air ana uear- inJ or was it at; all abated as he entered in-. T ftBejsi'eonVcxMtiont the circle, and I I etercised bis silvery tongue. Richard L , Esq., was inc)ligenti courteous, af able, elo quent, and showed m every wora ana moye- f&OWm Vgopd, society can produce. iProminejit at ihe-ibari oouisiana,, he had . raaTrie'dihe.daugbter: of a leading lawyer of that state, and was a father. Why he was at the north, I did not then understand. all his titles of honor and respect among men as well as robbed him of everything that could make his life happy and useful, and compensa tory to those fond parents who, notwithstand ing all, yet doted upon him as their son. A. few penitent words from him after a de bauch would open all the treasures of their generous affection toward h'm, and nothing was too good for their Richard. That he had pawned his former wardrobe, even to boots and hat, for rum, was all forgotten ; and a new out fit, choice and elegant, brought.thcir son again to their board," and into the bosom of. their home circle. For was he not their son ? Ala?! that could not alter the fact that he was as one asleep upon the top of a mast, and - away he would plunge again, after awhile, into the boilinsr sea below. And successive rescues were only followed by successive plunges. At the breaking out of our late civil war, he still retaiued enough of an accomplished man hood to secure an entrance into the army as a subordinate officer, whence, had he been out of the clutches of the rum fiend, he 'might have climbed to higher positions and honors. But this arch demon, inexorable, and ursatiated, by whom he had fallen so far cast him down still farther. Cashiered, and disgraced, he re turned to his native town to renew the old scenei, and to press out at last from a broken hearted father the despairing lament . "O Richard, my son ; my son Richard I Would God I had died for thee, O Richard, my son, my son !" Thus he fell, as thousands in our land, from the ranks of all professions and oceupations,are falling after him, by the siren seductions of the intoxicating bowl. He fellas another illustra tion of the solemo admonitory saying of God'ai spirit to the world, that "Wine is a mooker ; strong drink is raging." Jouannes. FAILURE NOT A FAILURE. The secret of hanDiness is to make the best of everything j no matter what happens to an noy, let' it all glide along as easily and with as few words of complaint and fault fiuding as possible. Little inconveniences will intrude upon the most fortunate people, so the only way to be master of every situation is to make up your mind not to notice small annoyances. People may keep themselves in a constant broil over what amounts to nothing; and, without accom plishing the teust good, may ruin the peace and quiet of a, household. We cannot have everything just as e want it in this world, and the sooner a person understands that fact, the sooner he may have a true basis for happi- a fair" chance. As a generr rule, wives con fide the tnimitest of their plans and thoughts to their husbands, having no involvements to screen from them. Whv not reciprocate, if but for the pleasure of meeting confidence with confidence 1 We are certain that no man succeeds as well in the world as he who, taking a partner for hie, mikts her the part. ner for all hjp purposes ' and hopes. What is wrong of his impulses of judgment she will check and Sebright with her almost universal ly right instincts. "Helpmeet" wjs no insig nificant title'as applied to man's companion. She is a meet to help him . in cjery darkness, difficulty, and sorrow tf life. And she most craves, and most deserves,ls confidence without which, love is never free from shadow. tee valley, cannot shut his eyes to the causes . pointment of pastor at Salem, N. On and in which have brought aboat the decline of em-' 1826 was transferred to Philadelphia, where pirei Foremost among these causos has been he remained until 1S3G. S jbse pienlljr he the celibcrate destruction of forests. . In the Boutf, of France the disastrous consequences bcca;oe so evident that the late imperial gov ernncnt submitted the question to the most scarqjhtng inquiry, and the unaaiuious opinion give by scientific observe was that the cli matejof a country is subjected to a serious change the moment the mountains are shorn waa stationed at Lancaster and Latiz, Pa, Canal Dover, Ohio, aid other points. After his consecration to the Episcopacy in 1S45 he filled various important p.sitfons in the Church ; was elected a rnemUr of the Pro vincial Elders' Conference or Executive Board of the Northern Province, and re moved to Bethlehem, the seat of that body, of their moisture-attracting forests. Suffcrit . where, siuce his retirement from active ser-' fromlnrolonscd drou ghts and detractive innn-. v!ri Ya ho rcill 4 J - - I V A VV 4 V datiopa, a country deprived of its woodlands finds.it8 agricu'tural interests in constant dan ger, nd sinks at last to a precarious state of dependency on the gjain production of other! cuuuiriea. TEre is but one opinion on the subject of the downfall of the nations of the Euphrates valley. The prolonged droughts enftebled the physical, and therefore the moral, nature Bishop Wolle was one of the old-time Mo ravians, a man of varied attainments, and an eloqnent preacher. He took a great interest in all Church literature, assisted in its pub lication, end translated many valuable pa pers pertaining thereto from the German. He was a thorough and cultivated musician, and by direction of the synod revised and re-arranged the hymn tune now used in the- of the inhabitants. When the Romans land-! Church, and added several of his own com ness. 1 f It is the greatest folly to Set the heart upon uncertainties, and then, if disappointed, refuse to be comforted or reconciled. Do the very best you can, ' and then take thins as they come. If a man strives with his best knowledge, energy, and untiring labor to accomplish a certain object, working with skill aud patience, he is a success, whether the scheme fails or succeeds, and he ought to rec oncile himself to failure if it was inevitable. If his labors have beed of brain and hand, he is the better fitted to succeed in other under takings. LET THE CHILDREN ALONE. Let your chijdren alone, when they gather around the family table. It is a cruelty to hamper them with manifold rules and regula tions about this, and that, and the other. As long as their conduct is harmless as to others, encourage them in their cheerincss. If they do smack their lips, and their suppings of milk and other drinks.can be heard across the street, it does not hurt the street j let them alone. What if they do take their soup with the wrong end of the fork, it is all the same to the fork ; let them alone. Suppose a child does not bit as straight as a rain rod at the table; suppose a cup or tumbler slips through its little fingers and deluges the plate of food below, and the goblet is smashed, and the table cloth is ruined ; do not look a thousand scowls and thunders, and scare the poor thing to the balance of its death, for it was scared half to death, before; it "did'nt go to do it." Did you never let a glass slip through youM fingers since you were grown?. Instead of sending the child away from the table in aa ger, if not even with a threat, for this or any other little nothing, be as generous as yoa would to aa equal or superior guest, to whom you would say, with more or lee obsequious smile, "It's of no possible consequence.'' That would be the form of expression even to a stranger guest, and yet to your own child you remorselessly, and revengefully, angrily mete out a swift punishment, which for the time almost breaks its little heart, and belit tles you amazingly. The proper and more efficient and more Christian method of meeting the mishaps and delinquencies and improprieties of your chil dren at table is either to take no notice of them at the time or to go further and divert attention from them at the very instant, if po sible, or make a kind of apology for them ; but afterwards, in an hour or two, or, better still, next day, draw the child's attention to the fault, if fault it was, in a friendly and loving manner; point out the impropriety in some kindly way ; show where it was wrong or rude and" appeal to the child's self-respect or manli ness. This is the best way to correct all fam ily errors. Sometimes it may not succeed ; sometime harsh measures may . be required ; but try the deprecating or the kindly method with perfect equanimity oi miuu, mu iums will be of rare occurrence. Dr.UaU Health, of Good Living,' - ' , ed in Spain the country was inhabited by forty millions of comparatively prosperous people, the Iberians. The country : was then well wooded, but during the Roman, and subse quently during the Gothic and Arab, occupa tion, the destruction of forests ras continued in the most merciless manner, and not a tree has been replanted to this day. From forty millions, the population during nineteen hun dred years dwindled , to nine millions at the commencement of the present century I In Castile, especially on the plains, the traveller may not see a tree during a whole day's jour ney.! Hailstorms, droughts lasting, without a drop of rain, from April till October, or sud den and destructive inundations, are the con sequence. The same thin;? is observable ia every land of Southern Europe where the con ditions are similar. We are a prosperous s&tiea now. The en tire failure of any crop throughout the land is unknown am one us. vet it cannot be denied that scorching and prolonged droughts, espec ially, outside the Gulf stream influences, are yearly more frequent. These northwestern fires, are an illustration of this fact, having had their origin in this cause. -The sensitive na ture of bur leading staple, cotton, should not be forgotten. Along season of dry weather, position tor the collection. He was the old est ordained bishop of the entire Moravian-denomination. which r A glass of whisky is manufactured from sev enty grains of corn, the value of' which is too small to be estimated. A glass of this mixture sella for a dime, and if a-good brand, is consid ered worth the money. It U drank in a min ute or two. Itfircjthe brain, deranTca and weakens the physical system. On the same sideboard on which the deleterious beverage is served lies a newspaper. It is covered with half a million type it brings intelligence from every land. The newspaper costs less than the gloss of grog, yet there are many people who think corn juice cheap and newspapers dear. Don't be too Sensitive. There axe some people always looking out for slights. They cannot carry onlhe daily intercourse -of the family wilhout thinking some offense ia de signed. They are as touchy as hair trigger. Innocent persons who never dreamed of giv ing offense are astonished to find some unfor tunate word, or soma momentary taciturnity. misLiken for an insult. To say the least, the after the plam is a foot from the ground, will Lbit Js uuforunate. It is far wiser to take ... - m , the more jcharitaUe cxew ct our Jeuow-De-ings, and not suppose a slight is intended, unle&s te neglect is open and direct. Alter ill, too, life takes its use iu a great decree - from the color of our own mind. It we are -frank and generous, the world treat us kind ly. If, on the contrary, we axe i uspicious, men learn to be cold and cautious to us. not do it much harm, but a continuation of raio, and of occasional inundations, may easily teduce a crop from five millions of bales to three millions. The longer we proeeed indis criminately to destroy forests, without replant ing a single tree, the more capricious the cli mate becomes from Maine to the Rio Grande Oa bur Pacific eoast, this year, the drought has been such that more than a quarter of the wheat crop is lost. Taking example, in their distress, from the Romans and. the Moors of The celebrated Thomas F. Marshall being Spa'n, the farmert of that State purpose to ob- hn the- bar-room of the Capitol Hotel, at tain irrigation by aqueducts through the wheat nnihri, ona night, got into an altercation . m. . c r .r r - :r - . . regions. ine cenrucuon oi loresisin umwiith & vounc man named oneed. xouncr w I J O nia and Oregon has heen on a gigantic scele gneed, in great exciiement, jerked oat a pis- during these twenty years, and the consequent an(j throwing it upon the counter icixed ces begin to bo felt already.' a elf S3 tumbler, saying. Now, Mr. Max-i Is it not time that a subject of such para- shall, take that pistol, Sir, acd I will take mountimportance'should be discussed in Con-1 this tumbler and fight you, Sir T, Captain gses3,rand in the legislative bodi am lies of every I Marshall, with one of his peculiar leers, re- k mm . m..ii. mm m m a m , mm m a mm State? Ialtnottime that some strineeut laws P"1 " Dls caaucuge. au. u.jr, x should be enacted to coint! the1 individual too smart for you: you can't fob xnel Ton ' i . m. .." . !iL . al enow tnat you are more expert wiw ui The Republicans carry the State of Mis sissippi, by about 15,000. and companies that are destroying our majestic American forests to repeoplc the waitc places with' trees wherever agriculture docs not claim the land? . Legislative measures shonld be taked, too, with the cooperation of the Canadi an authorities, aa the people of the Dominion are forest destroyers like ourselves- New York Evening Pott, glass than 70U axe with the justoir Never' attempt to do ' anything iht i pot right. Just as sure as yoa do, you will gt into trouble. If, you even suspect l&i til thing is wrong, do it not not until yoa ixe J sure your suspicions axe groundless.