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if* 1MU--1..-J -- VOL. 2. r Cljt loittfjtru Cttterprat, A KEFLEX OF POPULAR EVENTS. R>a JPMlftB* EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR, i\ ,3CL pniHo in advance ; $2 if delayed. CLUH'E d1 FIVE and nnvrards !. the mon<>v in evefv inafcfthoe to accompany the order. ADVERTISEMENTS inserted conspicuously at. the ratea,of 76 cents per square of 8 lines, and 2.1 ?i5ts*:sr sad* wbrnqiMnt insertion. Co.V tracts for yearly advertising made reasonable. LfCBUSHKD Br T. J. PRICK. ] Ifltrteii $octrtj. [From tho Baltimore Ameriean] lo On It Jobed Ones. A The following lines were composed by a sweet little girl of 14 years of age, now at one of the Seminaries of learning noar this city, and sent to her mother: The shades of night have taiien, And zephyrs are flitting past, Bearing on their cooling wings, Tho uiein'ries of the past? The Bret that left our circle, W?8 the bijou of the Bock ; The your.gcat and tho fairest? And ho ia not forgot. My darling sinter Katv, Who waa so pure and truo; She wns uot fit for earthy cares? So she soon left us too. God gave us then another, A little bud of love; That bud was soon transplanted, To a brighter home above. Imagination pictures. That glorious angel band. Singing 'round the throno of God, In tho far off happy land. And now there are but two, To sooth our parents dear; To fun each shadow froth their brows, And wipo away the tear. My own dear little brother, May he stilj remain the same; When he treads the rosy pathway " To glory and to fame. . i . dli i_ . l_i_ J J -1 _ May no aim do Kina ana genuc, A? happy?pure aa now ; With the marks of truth and innocence Upon his bright young brow. May his life be always happy, Without one single tear, To dim the hopes of hi young heart? Is the prayer of his sister dear. My gentle, loving mother, Who has to bear much pain ; God's blessing be upon her, And make her well again My kind and noble father, May his cup be fraught with bliss; May he live to see his children Be all his heart could wish. So may we live in peace and love, While on this earth we roam; That when our days are ended, In Heav'n we'll find a home. Lizzie. j 6j)*h Credit. If you would get rich, don't deal in passbooks. Credit is the "tempter in a new bspo." Buy dry goods on trust, and you will purchase a thousand articles that cash would never hive dreamed of. A dollar in hand looks larger than ten dollars seen through the perspective of a sixty day due . billJhCasb is practical, while credit takes horf^y to taste ami romance. Let cash buy ,a(di niter, and you will have a beef-stake flanked onions; send credit to market, and he Will return with eight pair of woodcocks and a pocket of mushr-?oin*. Credit believes in doable breast pins and champagne suppers; cash is more easily satisfied. Give hiin three meals a day, and be don't care rouoh i( |wo of them are made up of roasted potatoes and *!iule*alL' Ca?h is a good adviser, while credit is fellow I do not like to be on litfUing terms with. If yon want i doubieofrios and contentment, do business >^with otfih. A special e< I ict with a vermil%? Peris mint is now engaged in, striking i medid in commemoration of the visit ofQ-.umft Vjetoria. It will be executed in 3* l ' ' ?.*, Ill rSSiii nrimi . W ' if, mi*. iW , .1 m mnrn- ? ? ?=sessgg? GREENVI1 Letter from the hon. jere. Clemens. ^CONCLCDKD FROM LAST WEEK.] ~ ft is gravely urged us an objection to the order ofK,now Nothings that it ogrinated at the North, nti/1 ought therefore to be regarded with suspicion bv the South, by this reason I linvo seen advanced and such men as Tootrtbs ahd Stephens of Cfeorgia, nod Proston of Kentucky?gentlemen whom I know* personally,am! for twlsnts attainments and morAl worth I have very great respect. To my mind it is an evidence of the weakness of anv cause when men of fair abilities resort to such flimsy means to supr>rt it. I do not know how the fact' i*, but shall concede that it did originate in New York, and then I shall proceed to show there is no spot upon the continent where tho people have sulfered more from foreign emigre tion, or where they have more *ijn erious reasons for arraying themselves against it.? By leferonce to the annual report of the Governors of tho Alms (louse, I find that there were in the New York Alms House during the year 1863, 2108 inmates?of these only 535 Were natives, and 1063 foreigner^ supported at the expense of the City. And%uow I propose to use on our bide the argument of our opponents that there are only 8.000,000 foreigners to 20,000,000 natives. According to that ratio there ought to he about 7 natives to one foreigner in the Alms House. Whereas we find more than 3 for eigners to one native. No wonder that a people who are taxed to support.such a body of paupers should be tho first to set about devising means to get rid of thein. Let us pursue the record?in Bellevue Hospital, in ino name city, there were 702 Americans? 4134 foreigner* ; now the proportion rise* to nearly six to one. There of ont door poor ?that is person* who had some place to ?lcep. hut nothing to eat and nothing to make a tire?957 native adults, and 1044 children?3131 foreign adults. Hnd 5229 foreign children, or children horn of foreign parents. This ntttcher were relieved during the* year with money. Of those relieved with fuel, there were 1248 adult Americans and 1801 children, 10,355 adult foreigner* and 17,857 children. liu't the record is not yet complete?lot ns turn to the statistics of crime. In the city prisons there were during tho year 0,102 American*?22,220 foreigners. I pass on to an abode even more gloomy than that of the prison cell, and call your attention to thoae whom God in hi* wisdom ha* seen fit to deprive of the light of reason. In the lunatic asylum there were admitted from ?he year 1847 to, 1853 779 Americans, 2381 foreigner*. For the year -1853, there were 94 Americans? 393 foreignur*. Those table* might he made more complete by adding organ gtindera. strolling mendicant*, and professional beggars, but of these I have no reliable data, and therefore pas* tbein with the single remark that I have never seer. a native America?) who belonged to either class. These figures are far more exclusive that, any language could In* to prove the necessity of arresting the tide of emigration. Let every American impress them deeply upon hi* memory, 42..109 foreign paupers and invalids. 2381 lunatics, and 22, 229 criminals taxing the indusUy, and hlightning the prosperity of a single city.? In that list of crimes is embraced murder, rape, arson, robbery, ptijury, everything which is damning to the character of the individual, and everything which is dangerous to society'. In our section we see but little of the evils of,emigration?compartively few come among us, and those are generally of the best classes of the countrymen.? It is not as a State that w? ?ufter most, hut as an intregral part of the Republic.? The crime, vice, disease destitution and beg gary which Hows in with every tide of emigration afflicts us hut little! it is through their political action, in their capacity of voters, that the curse extend* itself to us.? When thousand* upon thousands are carried to il>* noil* and made to vote in favor of any man. or any pa. ty for ft shilling, corrupting the ballot !> >', and rendering liberty insecure then we sinler?,hen the law of self preservation give* u* a right, and make* it ? duty to interp?me. With stltfh dangers thickening around us, the memorable order of (Jen. Washington should be upon every man's lip*: "Pitt none upon bill Americana on guard to-night." In time of peace your public officer* are vour sentinel*. Put none on guard whose inisoni do not swell with exulting pride at the mention of Hunker Hill, of Monmouth or Saratoga, or of Yorktown. Put none on guaul whose national tradition* are not c .n lined to otfr own commonwealth. Put noue on guarfTwhn can dwell by the hour upon [jibe eloquence of Daniel O'Oonnell, hut have never hear I the name o Patrick Uenp? Put none otf|ghnrd wbo turn with odd indifference from the story of Niagara, or New Orleans, to boast of Marengo, or Leinsic. or Waterloo. They oh not love yew late! as jj wotz do?they will not watch over it with the same* absorbing interest. Oppression, wbt choice, has brought liim tier#, and though he may fee) a certain amount of gr attitude for the shelter he hfe foggd, he eatit looks ^ ii yi "f&i 'wPP^" iflh * ' * LLE, S. C.: FT.IDA.Y ] ' , back to the gray fields of his childhood, he retiimnbers every stone upon the highways, ' he rends the history of hie nativo land, and Imrtakea in the pride of its great events; in ?is heart of hearts lie feeU that there his holiest affections are garnered up. Fear, necessity, common sense, irtA'y keep him here, but he loves not the land of the stranger, cares nothing for its former glories, sheds no tear over its former disaster*. With what reverence can the German ro> gnrd tho name of Washington, when lie remembers that his pathway to freedom was strewn with the dead bodies of German mercenaries? What exultation can the Briton I feel in the faino of Jackson when he reinem hers that it was won by trampling the lion banner in the dust? It is not in human nature that they should feel as we do, and we j are false to ourselves when we put them in | power, or give tliem tho direction of the law. | Perhaps no party in this country baa ever j been the subject of much invective as the American party. All the depths of the language have been sounded to fish up degrading epithets to lie applied to men whose sin consists in loving their own blood something bettor than that of the stranger. Practices which are daily used by other parties suddenly become heinous sins when resorted to by the American*. ?i?d editors in the excess of their zen! not frequently run into the most ridiculous inconsistencies. I have seen one column of a nowspaper filled'*with denunciations of the secret feature of the order, while tho next not only purports to'give the principles of the party, hut even the very forms < f initiation. Ono thing is certain, either those forms were forgeries, or all the indignant denunciations of secrecy with i which we have been favored were hypocriti cul pretences, in no way creditable to those who employed them. All parties olwerve more or leva secrecy in relation to certain portions of their tactics.? The secrets of a Democratic caucus are a* profound as tlnne of a Know Nothing Council, and the will of every niemher is more completely subjected to tlie majority. A Know Nothing, after liia party have made a nomination, may abandon the order, and then rid himself of all obligation to support, it, but a Democratis .who has once taken part in acusensis held in honor bound to abide tire decision of that caucus, no matter how distasteful it may bo. If the term "daik lantern party" was applied to the rrif U ililirrlit lilottimr ?wl?" v/i invoo HHV/ ailtlliuirlt'iun? in caucuses and convention candidates without consulting the will of the people, it would he much more appropriate. The State and the National Councils having both removed the injunction of secrecy, that reproach is disposed of; in point of fact it never existed. Their principles were known from .the l?eginning. and he must have been ignorant indeed who had any doubt of the aims and purposes of the order. Bot it is alledged that it is a Whig trick gotten Hp to injure the Democracy. Such arguments are the usual resorts of weak men, who, when reason fails, attempt to enlist prejudice in their behalf. The head of the order is an old - fashj ioned Jackson Democrat. Wherever they have nominated candidates they have taken the larger num'tei from the Democratic ranks. Judge Cone, of Georgia, who reported the platfonn adopted at. i'bildclphia, is an old line Democrat. He was a member of the Baltimore Convention in 1844 that nominated Mr. Polk, and reported the reso lotions adopted by that liody as principles of the Democratic party. IIow stnnds the case on the other side I Mr. Wise confessedly owes bis election to the Whigs. Messrs. Toombs, ami Stephens, Whig leaders in Georgia, are at lite bend of the anti-Atneri can party, and so with Mr. Preston, in Kentucky. Everywhere you Hnd Whig leaders among the bitterest opponents of American ; J :f : - \\ri-: ? ? |n iucij>iv?, niiji :i 11 in it vt illg HICK, lliev have been a long timo finding it nut. There is another brutal) of the question which [ approach with more re)tictanee than will enable lire to consider it dispassionately. Without behmgiug to any church, I grew up in the Methodist persuasion. It was the faith in whieli my mother lived and died, and 1 could notehauge it if I would. Amotw the eiolscat be which foil Into my hands, I found accounts of Catholic persecutions of the early Protestants. Of men, women, and children thrown into dungeons, stretched upon the rack, tortured with (numb screws, and finally burned at the stake, for llw crime of worshipping Qod as reason and conscience dictated. Then enroe the "Order of Jesus," with the inquisition in its train.? For centuries ovory page of history is blackened by the iniquities of that Church whose . PiilitilV Jirro<rnrillv ftluimi In Ko I tin [ uui representative of the Almighty, end who h'M not hesitated at nil tinio* to exercise Jjow orw in accordance with that claim. Subjects released frdm obedieno? to their legjal rulora ?murder, perjury, incest?every on me made venial if it tended to the advancement of lb* Church. I know it is said that Ihesapoweis are not now exercised or claimed.. Where haa it ever been abandoned when they had power to ctiforee it! What wihe u?o of the Coufeesional, ?f the Prie>thood do pot etiil claim the power of forgiveness for.aiti* committed, or to I* commend ? I hat* searched io va.n Ibt-apv *uthemio docuiWMrt which, show, that thefhavc ever abated ohejot.or title of mk &. r II (FRl IB wKfl HI j? m$?ii< lORNING, SEPTEMBE the pretensions which characterized them in other years, and characterize thein now in other ijuuN. I have visited two conntries in which the Catholic religion ia established by law-, and 1 found in both the same intolerance,. the same bigotry, the same hatred of the Protestant as of yore. Even the dead Itodiea ,?f Protestants are denied the right of buiial i.Tt a Catholic grave-yard. The inaMave' taught to believe that the rotting corpses of the faithful would be polluted by the neighborhood of a brother who bad in life a different creed. In Spain An assemblage of more than fifteen Protestants for the purpose of religious worship is declared an aniawfui assembly, muu a" the rcnsoasiances of England have failed to ameliorate this detestable tyranny. What we see existing elsewhere, wliat wo know lias always existed wherever Catholics hud the power, wo may surely dread for ourselves, without bring liable to the charge of excessive timidity, partiollliirl V when wa <ion fhe tvir.Ii! ul.ifloj it>air 'v making to power and influence among us.? From 1840 to 1850 tlio number of Catholics in the United States doubled, and now they exceeded two millions of souls. At that rate it will not take thetn long to acquire all the power thev want, and when acquired they will not fail to exercise it. In the very nature of, things the Catholic must bo a persecutor. . When he believes that every Protestant is on the highway to hell, when he believes that it is charity to torture, atid piety to murder tjiose whom ho looks upon as enemies to his God. it would bo absurd to expect tnercy, or look for toleration. Another great danger we have to dread is the prevalence of-the mischievous dogma that the Pope is superior to the Constitution, and can absolve his flock from oaths to support it. I know how bitterly this is denied; hut if American Catholics do not acknowledge it, they are widely different from their brethren elsewhere. History is full of instances of kingdoms laid under interdict, monarch* excommunicated, and a whole people doomed to purgatory for some real or imaginary fault of their ruler*. We all remember that a King of Franco was assassina ted bv a priest at the bidding of his superiors. We all remember that a King of England was compelled to walk barefooted, 111 ...I..I. at - J - A - ? - I * sai-Kcioiu ana asoes, 10 i?e torao 01 lnomas A. Becket, und tlmt tlic g eat Bruce wunder* ed for years as an ouMaw, hunted by assassins and blood-hounds, for daring to punish a traitor to his country within the preciucta of a Catholic Church. The beet way of judging a tree is by its fruits, and these fruits are familiar to us all. It is objected, however, that the Constitution sociues to every inan the right of worshipping Cod as he pleases, and that in proscribing Catholics we are guilty of ? violation of that instrument. Not at all. The same Constitution which gives to them the rights of conscience secures to me also the rights of voting as I think best. It does not compel me to vote for a Catholic, any more than it compels me to vote for an Abolitionist. One may bo just as sincere in his belief as the other, and both be equally dangerous to the country. T)f that each voter must iudge for himself. There is no nrooo | nation to changb the Constitution, none to I p.iss u lnw inconsistent with it. The Aiueri j can party undertook to show precisely as the Whig ami Democratic parties undertake to show tor themselves, that it ? safer lor liberty, safer fer the Union, safer for religion, to place none but American Protestants in office, and they leave it to their countrymen to decide upon reason and argument how far they are right, or how far they are wrong.? We do not propose to disturb l.beir public worship?we do not propose to declare an assemblage of Catholic unlaw ful, but we claim the priv ilege of voting to ?uiy*ourselves. I can see no difference in tbe evil tendency of the higher law of Mr. Seward, pr the higher law of Archbishop Hughes. I do not choose to vote for either, and he who attempts to force me to, is guilty of the very proscription bo condemn*. I wisb I could bare devoted more lime to the preparation of tin* letter; but it is sufficient to give a tolerably correct idea of the position I occupy upon thequesliou to which I'AII kvUUil OuHm. I IUU tllAllll/vM l HUi, very truly a??.l r&np'l&lly, youre &c. J ERE. CLE.VIEN9. J. E. Peebles, ftunteraville, Ala. Tub following characteristic story is told of the Commander-in-Chief of the French arrny in the Criinon : "Some yearn ago, Pelitsier on parade one morning got angry with a touaojjicier of a cavalry regiment, whose Untie seemed to him quite defective. He ab.used the man most violently, and out him across the face with his mlip. The man seized one of his pistols, iumMw '.eavored to lire at his commanding officer, but the pistol missed fire. Pelissier, swearing a fearful oath, bat otherwise quite calm, said: 'Fellow 1 I order you a three days' arrest fo* not having your arms in better order tn Thb name of Teotouiiam is said to have originated m the stammering of a^speaker at a temperance meeting, who declared that oalkiing would sathfy (urn but t-total abstinence, The audience eagerly caught op the pan. and the name was adopted by the ohampton* of the cense. t ' t; ' *"*y * " , V * ' "" 11 ' 1 1 't ;R 21, 1855, Snterrstiiig JHistfllumj. 3JUonfteirfni lugging,. 'Vk extract the following from mi irticle in the Crayr/n, descriptive of travels in Brit ish India. The scene of the occurrence is] laid in Madras !?r "But tho most wonderful peiformaneeithht we saw this morning, whs a teat of pure jug gling, of which I have never been able to find snv solution. One of the old men came forward upon tho gravel led and hard trodden avenue, leading with him a woman.? He made iier kneel down, tied her arms behind her. and blindfolded her pvm TWa bringing a great bag net made with uj>cu meshes of rope, he put it over the woman, and laccd up the mouth, fastening it with knotted intertwining cords in such a way that it seemed an impossibility for her to extricate herselffrom it. The man tben took a closely-woven wicker basket that narrowed toward the top, lifted the woman in the net from llto ground, and placed her iu it, though it was not without the exertion ot tome force that he could crowd her through the narrow inouth. Having succeeded in getting her intb the basket, in which, from its small size, she was necessarily in a most cramped position, lie put tho cover upon it, and threw over it a wide strip of cotton cloth, hiding it completely. lu a moment, placing his hand under the cloth, ho drew out tho net quite un~..A A'. ? 1 I XT- .1 I- I ucu aim uisvuwiU^ICUt ii'J UlCIl UMlK ft IWlg straight, sharp sword, muttered some words to himself while be sprinkled the dust upon the cloth, and put some upon his forehead, then pulled olF and throw Aside the covering, and plunged the sword suddenly into the b isket. Prepared as in bome degree we were for this, and knowing that it was a deception, it was yet impossible to see it with out a cold creeping horror. The quiet and energy with wiiich he repeated his strokes, driving the sword through the basket, while the other jugglers looked on, apparently as much rnWreeted as ourselves, were very dramatic and effective. Stopping after he had riddled the basket, be again scattered dust upon its top, lifted the lid, took up the basket from the ground, showed it to us empty and then threw it away At the same moment we saw the woman approachiug us from a clump of trees at a distance of at least fifty of sixty feet. Throughout the whole of this inexplicable feat, the old mran and woman were quite removed from tho rest of the party. The basket stood by itself on the hard earth, and so much beneath the verandah on which we were sitting, that we.could easily see all around it. By what trick our watchful eyes were closed, or by what means the woinuu invisibly escaped, was an entire myste ry, and remains unsolved. The fcat is not it very uncommon one, but no one who had seen it ever gave me a clue to the manner I in which it was performed. Stooging Bog?. Smokiso man are bad enough tin* hot weather, ami those pleasant evenings when, if the people of uncorruptcd brea'l?, like to put themselves in the wny of gulping a mouthful or two of fieah air; but smoking boys, what shall we say to them? Like I brothers among sisters, Hbey is nuisances,* that's a fact. Nevertheless, at the rate we are going on ?we may have smoking girls before the season is over, as they have in the Havana, and in Mexico. Mercy on n?I what are we .coining to! Why, yon can hardly turn a : corner, or drop into the post office, after sundown without stumbling over half a score of little small peimy-hiip ?nny whipper snappers. hardly clear of their first bib and tucker, aprons and penny whistles, with?a cigar in their mouths ! Hoys, boys !?if you knew how the grown people about you?'the business tnen, boys ?not the idlers no- t' e gossips, nor the family paupers, who have made their fortuues by marriage? or something worse?if you knew bow lhay regarded your dirtine**, your watchfuluesg, and your folly, and what, the chances were of your ever being good for anything kcr4, you would be frightened. Young man ! Beware ! Should your employer see you on a Sabbath evening, or any other evening, after the business of tho (IftV Wttfl five*r latincrtnrv oivainui ? ^ !? ? J ? ?""? n jtvI VI >nc Custom house, with y<?nr Ioj^h hcioh*?y?>u call them legs, don't you I?ami with a cigar in your mouth?as you seem to believe, though the odor in often wo offensive as to make woman give you a very wide berth? what think you he w ould way of you ? Not to you?and what would he thihk of you? ?and how long before he would find lome excuse for ailowiug you to 'better yourself if you coft'ld ?' Ami tliia, even though he smoked hhmelf??tfUhy practice at best? and growing more nnd more so. every day, and hence about all the air we breathe in a crowded city m charged with the nouomr and pestilential vapor of your lazy after-din ner folk*, who first over-eat themselves, am? then over-sleep themselves; and then smoke, not themselves, for that might be borne with, j bat other peoplo ?out of house and horns, # . - ? ' " ' . ? ' - 4 . f ?? L>&?? * Jit ' ' : ' V:' ^ ' .i NO. 19. till our very women are linlf persuaded to avow a liking for w hat is called 44a good cigar I"?as if thero was any such a thing a* a good cigar 1 or, as if your cigar smoker, however beastly, ever smoked auy thing worse than the very best! Many a young innn hasrast his jAtco by^. smoking, only, or Sahbatff bi^Bing? thougli he never knew it, nor suspected, petbaps, fncrely because his employer, bciftg himself a smoker, or th inker, or a Sabbathbreukef, durst not give the true reason.-? Wherefore, young man, bewaro! In othef wor^is, k>oi? out! or, by and by, if you do Hot lose yourself, you are certain to lose your place, and your temper, (no groat losa to a cigar smoker.) if your employer can manage to do without vou?keep hi* owu secret, and give some other and worse reason, more disadvantageous bv far to the reputation of a young mau of busine*? ??, ..... 8 irebities, 1 iVAuhignc, In tho History of the Refor* I mation, says, Tho gospel triumphs by the I blood of its confessors, not by that of its ad* venwies." Happiness can bo m;^le quite as well of cheap materials as of dear ones. The man who does most has the least lime to talk about what he does. A quiet exposition of truth has a better effect that? a violent attack upon error Truth extirpates weed", by working its way into their plftcc, ""d leav\,g them uo room to grow. Nothing but a good life cau fit men for a bettor one. A French proverb, "The nolso of the world drowns the .thunder of God." A Turkish proverb says, "Tiro devil tempts other men, but idle men tempt the devil." A Spanish proverb, "What the fool does in the end, the wise man does in the beginning." Cod. Thomas II. BknVon ia busily engaged at Washington upon his "Thirty Yeara in the Senate." His powers of body and mind, it is sard, are taxed to the uttermost, ifnd no other but Col. Benton could undor* go the daily labor that lie now performs.-? A letter says the second volume of his great woik will be ready foT the pre.-s early in the spring. It will be recollected mat he lost I lie tirft hint ivinlf>r nit rti.i otwl nmnn scripts intended for this volume ; yet, by indefatiguable toil and thetaeprci-e ofhi* ginnt intellect he will ooon bo ready to supply his publisher with this manuscript copy of the econd volume/ This is a great national work, and will tend much to give tone to American literature. Edoc at/on.?The object of all truo edu* cation is to vitalize knowledge. Some teachers instruct their scholars very thoroughly, who never educate them at nil. They teach them to commit the rules of their arithmetic or grammar by heart, but never lead ~ them to comprehend a single principle; make them learn thousands of names of places, without giving them an idea of geography, ^ ^ ^ ^ Cckiol'8 Result.?A French office", while making rcoonnoisance nearSebastopol, whs knocked down by the wind ofaeannon, ball, and the shock was so severe as to cause a paialysis of-his tongue, so that he could neither move ?t or speak. Obtaining leave of absence be returned to Marseilles and placed himself under electrical treatment. After a few shocks he could move hie tongue with more facility, and at length, after an unusually powerful shock, his speech was restored, and lie was fully recovered. The tfalt Lake City people have their' troubles as well as others. The Uuitetk States soldiers have been playing the mischief with the hearts of Mormon girls.?? imgliain Young says tlioy have corrupted the moraU of the women, and he threaten? . the soldiers terrib y if they return to play the .same game again. The soldiers have gone, and with them a number of the Mormon girls. _ ? In* the town of Beverly, |fiu8., which contains a large and prosperous community, there is not, it is saW a ?ingle. hotel or place of public entertainment. A stranger in the place, who wm left by the cars a few dnye Kf'U couid find no lodgings for the night, and was obliged to walk into Salem. Wo don lit if thie > ase has a parallel in the county _ acorns, uutrerto ol not much uso, save for the f?*edin<| of swine in our western wildc, where iho Hliog crop" figures so largely* Imve l>een fount! by Mens. Duplet, a French chemist, to yield both oil and ajcohol. From u hundred pounds of acorns he has obtained half a pound of oil, and five pounds of ahxv ho), applicable to chemical purposes. A California defaulter has made restitution to a Pittsburg creditor, in the sum of over one thousand dollars, principal, and interest in payment of five hundred dollars, which ho borrowed about two years Ago.? Instances like this rare, and should bo bald1 before the public gaae as a model and itxKUtlive.