1(Y jgjjY fJjY -iff 9 Editor and Proprietor. plHTTCIIIg ISO, Publisher. BLTJME7. jST OF TOST OFFICES. .j;c(3. Tost Mailers. District. ."own, Steven L. Evans, Carroll. Wings, Henry Nutter, Chest. .,b A. G. Crooks, Taylor. It. II. Brown, Wasblht'n. John Thompson, Ebensburg. C. Jeffrie?. hite 1 5 X Vfc i-u J 1 z; -J. M. Christv, Gallitzln. . ,CV Wm Tiley, Jr., Wa3ht'n. von, E. Roberta, Johnst'wn. tJ l. Adlesberger, Lorettd. er A. Durbin, Munster. rh, M. J. Tlatt, Susq'ban. Justine, Stan. Wharton, Clearfield, revel, George Bcrkey, Richland, n, A. Shoemaker, Wdsht'n. rhiil, B. F. Slick, Croyle. t, Wm. M'Conncll, Washt'n. re, J. K. Shryock, S'uierhill. I RCHES, MINISTERS, &.C. CI1j Paitli riarman KllSfl hail. hvterian Rev. T. M. Wilson, Tastor. inf: every Sabbath morning at 10 v and in the evening at 7 o'clock. Sab- vUooi at 9 o'clock, A. M. Prayer meet- Tbnrsdftv evening at t o ciocs. c . . , ".,,iUet Ll. R. Powell, o lock. Preaching every Sabbath morning at --a ;n tht pveninz at 6 o clock. I t . ?u", ". 7v. .in,v. P. M. Praver Ath Scwooi in ' , iVz on the first :.lonaay eveumg ... j ,.,.,.wTiK5(laT. Thursday and lilt ; RDU UH C"-'J J - - , . fcav evening, excepting the first week in Jnonth. iiniilic Methodist Kev. .MORGAN .LLI8, Jrpreacbinp every Sabbath evening at uiir. 1LL 6o clock, sabbatu bcnooi ai i o ciocn, ) t Piaver meeting every Friday evenir.g, dock. Society every Tuesday evening e 3 ari 'clock. vies Rev. W. Lloyd, Tastor. Preacn- ;rv Sabbath morning at 10 o'clock. tular Baptists Rev. David U.VAK9, Preaching every Sabbath evening at i. Sabbath School at at 1 o'clock, P. M. j.ir Rev. R. C. Chbistt, Pastor. f every Sabbath morning at 10$ o'clock cfpers at 4 o'clock in the evening. ERCXSDIIRG MAILS. MAILS ARRIVE, dailv, t 9.25 o'clock, A. M. :a, 44 " at 9.35 o'clock P. ii. . MAILS CLOSE. EI i, daily, at 8 o'clock, P. U. a, " at b o'clock, r. ai. The muils from Grant, Carrolltown, w , rrr . 1 J A MI nrrive on Monday, weuneeuay uu of each week, at 3 o'clock, P. ii. e Ebenebutg on Tuesdays, Thursdays vardays, at 9 o'clock, A. M. 11II.ROAO SCIIEDUI,E. CRESSON STATION. , u 8.25 A 0.23 A 9.52 A 0.64 P 7.52 P 4.32 P, M. M. If. M. M. M. fhila. Lxpreas .N'tw York Exp. it tt 14 4 II II 14 I tin Fflst Line I'ay Express Altooni Aceotn. 3d. ,es. kl'hila. Express 8.40 P. M. 2.20 A. if. Fa.st Line l)y Express Cincinnati Ex. Altoona Accora. e, : 7.16 A 1.55 P 1.21 P. . M. M. M. KEH cocj.vty orriCERS. i of the Cmiris President Hon. Geo. Huntingdon: Associates, Georce W. Hcnrv C. Dcvine. . xoiary Geo. C. K. Zahm. r nr:i Recordtr James Griffin; T Jamc-s Myers. 'lAltornty. John F. Barnes. j Cmmifsioners John Campbell, Ed- ?.m, E. R. Dunnegan. : fo Commissioners William n. Sech- Y r Barnabas M'Derrnit.. iluse Directors George M'Cullough. 'rri, Joseph Dailey. ll'itue Treasurer George C. K. Zabm. rs Frnn p riemcy, Jno. A. Kcn- 'i aim.! Bral'.ier. "j onifior. llenrv Scanlan. r -VTiUiam Flattery. Mile Apj.raisT John Cox. "Common Schools J. F. Condon. B!nG IIOR. OFFICERS. AT LARGE. James A. Moore. the J'eace Htrrison Kinkcad, ' -1. Waters. i hirtetors D. W. Evans, J. A. Moore, i-uwi. David J. Jones. llliam ii. ''3 Treaturer Geo. W. Oa'tman. to Council Sanil. Sinjrleton. : Commissioner David Davi3. - EAST WAHD. Council A. Y. Jones, John 0. Evans, fravis. Charles Owens, It. Jones, jr. 'e Thomas Todd. 'f Election Wm. D. Davi3. '"J David E. Evans, Danl. J. Davis. ("--Iliomas J. Dsvis. I WEST WARD. Council John Llovd. Samnel Stilus. , 1 " -1-" Barnabas M'Dermit. 'f Election. John D. Thomas. :ir William H. Sechler, George W. ;r-Jo sb.ua D. Parrish. SOCIETIES, &C. '--Summit Lodge No. 312 A. Y. M. : Masonic Hall, Ebensburg, on the ""slay of each month, at 7J o'clock, It- Tliehland Lodj-e No. 28 I. O. pZn Odd Fellows' Hall, Ebcnsbtirg, I --tuj- evening. Higlland Division No. Sons nf We-jJ?.'?.111. TemP".aoce Hall, Eb- i5 SCRSPPTn-rmv 'TIALLEGHANTAN:' $2.00 LV ADVANCE, " 0f PAID TV ADVAKCH. to r,dit Episcopal unurch itsv. -a. sin Yv in charge. ne. .i. .a't ivl V Preaching every alternate S-bbath riffij L.t 10$ o'clock. Sabbath School at9 I f. ' mptinir everv Y fcdnes- I A. 31. " o " - , - - Tlie Soldier's Revenge. Thi3 golden legend first wa3 told When Swedes and Danes were foes of old. One morn the Swede3 gave way eo 60on The battle ended at the noon. Two foes lay sweltering on the sand, Each wounded by the other's hand. The Swede exclaimed, "Oh day accurst, That sees a soldier die of thirst." The Dane replied, with anguish wrung, "My water-flask shall cool thy "tongue. "I filled it at a mountain spring ; Drink thou to Denmark and tho King I "But precious lo3s if any drips: So hold it steady to thy lips 1" Tho Swede replied, "If thee I kill, The flasTc ia mine to drink my fill I" Then, drawing po'gnard from his girth, He struck a blow, but stabbed the earth. The Dane exclaimed, "Oh ! wretched wede, How durst thou try so base a deed 1 "By heaven I I take revenge, oh ! knave," Then snatching back the flask he gave, "Thirst thou !'' he cried, "while I shall quaff; Thy throat shall swallow only half I "But curse thy loss, oh I dastard soul, I meant to bid thee drink the whole." The King of Denmfrk overheard, And smiling at the deed and word, Proclaimed in front of all hi9 train, "I dub :hee knight, oh I noble Dare." Uprose a noi3e of Danish cheers Heard yet through twice a hundred years. So every hero hath reward Of men, of kings, or of the Lord I THE GROCER'S STORY. Ours was a quiet street at most times a lazy, shady place, where tbe green blinds were forever closed, and where there waa so little passing that spears of prass grew lire and there between the flagstones, and the stone curbs of the iron railed areas were fringed with soft green moss. A very quiet place at most times, but lata one autumn afternoon a strange cry sounded through it, which awakened all its echoes, and called curious faces to the doors and windows. "Stop tbief ! stop thief 1" The strong voice of a policeman ut tered the cry at first, and the shrill treble of two boys at pJay near by took it up and repeated it, and by-and-by there was a full, deep chorus, like the cry of a pack of hounds a sound you might have known at any distance, however ignorant you were of the language; to be tho cry of men who hunted something. Policemen with their clubs, errand boys with bundles, bakers with baskets on their arms, young gentlemen just released from the academy close at hand, and ragged urchins, whose school-house was the gutter, all joined together in the hot pursuit, and followed the miserable object with bare, begrimed feet and hatless head, that flitted along before them with a speed which only fear could lend to one 60 worn and wretched a speed which kept the crowd a long way off, and made the burliest of his pursuers pant for breath. They were out of sight in a moment, but in a little while the cry was heard that the thief had baffled them, and some amongst tho crowd rushed back to 6ee if their prey had doubled on hia track ; and others, sulky and indignant with the re sult of their useless chase, came back mut tering angrily or swearing, with many violent oatIi3, that they would have hiui yet. One policeman, a well fed fellow with a crimson face, made quite a hero of himself by asserting that he knew the fellow, and would trap him before sun down. There was a good deal of sympa thy for the gentleman who had lost his pocket handkerchief, but none that I could hear for the poor, degraded wretch who had purloined it, untifa placid voice at my elbow uttered the following words, apparently in soliloquy: "Well, I may be wrong, but I somehow hope they won't catch him." I turned in surprise, and confronted our grocer, on whoso steps I had sought shelter from the crowd, which, at such a moment, could not be expected to think much of the safety of a woman. Our grocer was a portly man, with a shining bald head, fringed with a twig of whito hair, like the tonsure of a Roman Catholic priest, and wearing at the moment a Holland apron and a 6hort blue jacket. "les m, he went on, "1 really hope the miserable, 6tarved-lookiDg creature will get off." "Then you don't believe he picked the gentleman's pocket," 6aid I. ''I'm afraid it's only too certain that he did, ma'am," 6aid the man, shaking his head. "Ho looked straight at me as he passed, and ho had hungry, ' desperate eyes that looked like theft, and murder, too, for that matter." "And yet you wish .him to escape, when he has broken the laws of the land, and will probably do so again 1" "God forbid that I should help to break the iaws," said the old grocer. "Good men made them, and they are right ; but there are other lawn that I read in my old Bible Sunday nights, that ueem to be as binding. One of them is 'Do unto others ai you would that others should do unto you;' and another, 'Lova thy neigh i WOULD RATHER BE RIGHT THAN PRESIDENT. Hesby Clay EBENSBURG, PA., THURSDAY, JUNE bor as thyself.' When I remember these words, I think that you may be too hard with a poor sinful lellow-beiog, and not go beyond the limits cf tho law either. "That rich gentleman who had his pocket picked, will go home to. a fine dinner and a bottle of wine, no doubt, and the wretch of a thief may have a crust of bread and a glass of burning gin, if he can sell or pawn what he stole tor enough to get them. Somehow, if I could, I wouldn't have him hunted down to-night I vow I wouldn't. "Still, I don't blame those young fel lows ; I'd have been as furious in the chase as any of 'em years ago ; but I learnt a lesson .once that I never have forgotten, and hope I never may. I was a young man, and a poor one then, and had a hard struggle to make my little shop keep my little family. It was only by .pinching and saving, and keeping a sharp lookout for every bargain, than managed it at all. "We lived in a shabby street, and had only very poor customers. A loaf of bread, a quarter of a pound of butter, and two ounces of black tea was quite an order, and most of those who came wanted trust. "As for laving in fine fruit or vegeta bles, I never thought tfsuch folly. Dia monds would have been as saleable in that part of the city, where washerwomen and the poorest laboring meu were the aris tocracy. "Now and then, when a foreign ship came to port with a load of ruined pine apples, or decayed oranges, I bought a lot of these, and, charging the next thing to nothing, sold them easily enough. Altha', I own my wife used to say the miserable babies, who rolled about the gutters, died off faster after every stock of damaged foreign fruit I sold in the old shop, and I'm afraid that she was right. Well, as I told you, I struggled along a3 best I might, and after a while things beiran to improve, and I began to have visions of a cle&n store in a good street, when I laid down to rest at night. "So one day when I had been to mar ket I brought home half a dozen hams and hung them up about the door, more for show than anything else, for hams were a grand holiday dinner in those regions, and not an everyday affair I can tell you. They went off slowly, as I thought they would. Now and then some one would come in for a pound, and once I sold half of the smallest one to a woman who wanted it for her Sunday dinner. She was to pay me on Monday morning, but she never did, for on Sunday night her husband killed her with a rum bottle, and they took her body past my shop with its poor head all beaten out of shape and bloody. "And so the hams hung thero through the summer and through the fall, and quite on into the winter. "It was just as the December nights began to grow long and dark and cold, that I noticed a tew policeman on our beat a young, handsome looking fellow, with very bright eyes, but with such thin cheeks and hands, although he seemed to be powerfully built and made for a rather 6t.out man, that I could not help watching him, and wondering whether he had been ill or not. Tbe first time that I noticed him, was about eunsct, and he passed and repassed my window a dozen times, look ing all the while straight at those hams, which dangled from the frame of the awning. '1 hope he means to buy one I said to my wife, as we sat together over the tea table j 'and I shouldn't wonder if he did, for he seems to have taken quite a fancy td them.7 "But the evening passed, and though I saw him every-now and then on the other side of the way, looking across with his bright eyes straight at the hams, he did not come in or speak to me on the sub ject. And so I made up my miud that he would send for it in the morning, and somehow made sure cf it thatcwheuever I eaw a decent looking woman o by with a basket on her arm, I said, 'That's the policeman'6 wife coming after the ham.' I was mistaken, however; and alter the street lamps were lighted that night I began to see the man pacing up and down, up and down, up and down, with eyes still fixed as they had been the night pre vious upon the hams. Once he caught me peeping at hiru, and then he turned so red and looked at mc with such a wolf ish glitter in his eyes, that I grew angry and said to myself, 'It's well that keeping unsaleable articles isn't a crime in this country, for if it Ta3 I should expect to be arrested So I gave him back his look, turned on my heel, and walked back into the shop. I did not see him again that night; but long after everything had been taken in and locked up, and I was snug in bed, I heard a tramp, tramp, tramp, upon the pavement, and knew it was the new policeman, and that Jie was looking at the hooks where the hams hung, as well as though I had seen him. "On the third evening he was there again; that, you may say, was no wonder, for it was his duty to be upon that beat and no other ; but it was curious that he should keep on staring at those hams with those bright, wolfish eyes of his. I didn't like it, though I could not have said why. A vessel had been wrecked at sea about that time, and an extra, with the latest news of the disaster, came" out that even ing. I bought a paper and eat down behind the counter to read it. It was a stormy night and but few customers came in, and those were easily served, and somehow, between reading and thinking, time passed on, until the clock struck eleven, and I had not yet taken in my goods or put up my shutters. "Just as I was about to do eo, (in fact, I had already put my hand upon the first piece of the shutter,) my door opened and an old woman came in. She was a sottish, miserable creature, known about the place as Irish Kate, and with her red nose and bleared eyes and bloated limbs, was as ugly a figure as any one ever cast eyes on. 'Another dram, I suppose I said to my self, going behind the bar at once, for I wanted to get rid of her as soon as possible. But she, to my great surprise, came close up to me, and put her great, red paw upon my arm. "I've made a diskivery, mister," she said. "You've not been keeping as bright a lookout as ye should ; there's been a thafe at work widout this blessed night." "What thief?" I asked. "More than I can tell ye," she answer ed. "But I think it's a policeman, no Icsf, the blackguard." "A policeman !" I cried, and my thoughts flew at once to the man I had seen staring at my hams. "It'3 too dark to see his face," she said : "but I caught the shine of a star on the co3t he has on, and whoiver it was took a ham from your pegs and hid it in the ash-box beyand the corner. Ye'll find it there, if ye look ; and sure ye'll not refuse a sup of whisky for the information ?" "I gave the old creature whet she wanted, hurried her out of the shop and put up the shutters, growing angrier ev ery moment. "If it is the policeman, I'll make him pay dearly for it," as I slunk along the sidewalk to the corner, keeping in the shadow all the way, and when I stood be side tbe box and saw by the l'ght of the lamp, close by, that the ham was there, wrapped in something which looked like a handkerchief, I bit my lips and clench ed my hands with rage. Had it been a common thief I should not so much have minded ; but a policeman ! it was more than I could stand. So I crouched my self in a doorway and waited. Tbe watch were relieved at twelve o'clock ; I knew that, and knew also that this would bethe time when my policeman would come to take the ham from out of its hiding place. And sure enough, when the time came I heard him challenge the man who was to take his place, and come marching down towards the corner. I let him get the ham well under his arm before I stirred, but then I pounced upon him like a tiger. "I've got you !" I cried. "A pretty policeman you are, indeed, but you shall suffer for it; you shall suffer for it, I can tell you." "He struggled with me for a moment Hke a wild thing, and then all of a sud den dropped the hamnd fell down in a helpless sort of a heap upon the ground. "I'm a ruined man !" he groaned, "a ruined man I there's no hope for me now. Oh my God ! my wife my poor little wife !" and he burst out crying, like a woman. "The sight softened me, but T was angry stilh "You should have thought of that be fore you became a thief," I said. "If the guardian of a man's property is not to be trusted, what is to become of him ? And you look like a gentleman youdonotseem like a scoundrel; how have you stooped to do such a disgraceful thing as this V' He was standing beside mc now, and the lamp-light fell on his face. It was wbite as any corpse's, and his eyes glitter ed terribly. "I'll tell you what made me do it," he said, "it was the only thing which could have driven me to an act like that; my wife and child are starving, I tell you, and 1 had nothing for them !" "Policemen's families do not often starve," I said with a sneer. "Aly Gcd ! can't you believe me won't you believe?" pauted the man. "I have only been appointed three days; I have not received a cent of salary yet. I have been ill a long while, and had neither money nor credit. Last night we went to bed supperless ; to day there has not been a crust'in the house, and those hams tempted me so. You can never know how awfully they tempted me, and I meant to pay you afterwards." He covered his face with his hands, and I could see great tears dripping through his fingers, and before I knew it my own cheeks were moist, and so we stood silent, with the ham lying between us on the grounc At last he turned towards me and said, "Do what you like with me. The last hope is gone." "But I put my hand on his arm and said, 'God forbid that I should take that last hope from you, that I, of all men, should be the one to ruin you. If your story is true and I believe it is I pity jou more than I blame you "He looked at me in a sort of bewilder ed way, as though he scarcely understood me, and I took him by the arm and led him back to the shop. There I filled a basket with bread and butter and coffee, and put the ham ou top of all. 'Take it home to your wife I said, 'you'll pay me when you get your salary, and if you are in need before that como to me. I'm a 21, 1866. poor man myself and I can feel for other poor men "I shall never forget that man's frrce in all my life, so wondering, so thankful and so awe-stricken. All he said was 'God bless you but there was a whole sermon in these words, and I slept better for them. "On Christmas night he paid me every cent, and from that day until I left the neighborhood dealt with me regularly. But times grew so much better that I took a store in a good street at the other end of the town, and one way and another saw no more of my policeman for three good years. "One night, just such a cold night as that on which I first saw him staring ou the hams, I was awakened long after mid night by a cry of fire. I started up to see tlie flames through the floor, and to know the store down stairs was all ablaze. The stairs were cn fire also, and when, as I opened the entry doir, the hot air and smoke rushed in and almost smothered me, I gave up all hope of getting my poor wife and helpless little ones out of that burning building alive and safe. I was so faint and ill from the accident, you see, that I hadn't all my wits about me, and believed there was no one missing. My blood ran cold when my wife, clasp ing her hands, and with an awful look upon her face, screamed : "Our little Lucy, our little Lucy is left behind." "She had slept with our hired girl since her baby brother was born, and the wo man in her fright had forgotten her little one. There she was at the top of that burning building, out of tho reach of any human help ; it seemed to me, as I looked up at the walls, a great red and yellow sheet of flame, with blue gleams here and there, as though devilish heads were peeping out and grinning at us. Still, hopeless as it was, I should have gone back into the burning house and saved my baby or died with her if I had been able to stand. No ono else would ven ture. It would be a foolish sacrifice of life, they said, for no doubt the child was already smothered by the smoke, and though I raved and pleaded and made wild promises, they shook their heads and only ade me have patienee. "Patience !" 1 thought that I was goiug mad as the face of my little girl my sweet, pretty pet rose up before me. But just thee a tall man dashed through the crowd and came towards me. "Quick!" he shouted, "which room is the child in speak quickly which room ?" "The back one on the upper floor," I groaned, and he dashed away from me, parting the throng with his strong arms, and in another moment I saw him mount ing the ladder. I heard them calling him to come back, bidding him beware, and speaking of him as though he were dead already. But he never heeded them, and as I saw him hidden by tho black smoke which poured from the window, I covered my face and prayed that the angels who walked iu the fiery furnace might go with him. "Perhaps they did. Something strong er than an earthly thing must have been there, for in a few minutes they seemed years to me then wc saw him coming down the ladder with something in his arms. 'The burnt body of my child, per haps I thought, but as he came closer I saw that it was my own laughing, living darling, with her blue eyes open and her little aims about his neck. The roof fell in the next moment, but my treasure was safe and that was all I cared for. "What shall I say or do tojthauk you," I said, as 1 grasped his 'Cdud. "I'm a ruined man, and 1 can only give you my blessing; but let me know your name at least." "Have you forgotten mc ? don't ou re member mc ?" he said, as he bent over me. "Look again." "I did ; and I saw a pair of bright gray eyes, a face I knew, and something glit tering on his breast. Aud the scene at tho rMirnrr of the dirtv little street, on a wet December night, came b-ck to me, . and I saw my policeman once more. "I; is you," I said, "and jouhavo saved my child from such an awlul death." "'And what did you save ire and mine from V he said, with tears ia his eyes. "Starvation, ruin, utter degradation. I should have been a le'.on, aod my dear ones paupers this night, but for you. I have not paid the debt ; I never can ; but when I heard that it was your child that lay at the top of that burning building, I prayed that I might save it, and I know God heard me." "And then he told me what had bro't him to the neighborhood on that night of all others in the year. "I had lost all, for I was not insureJ, but he was prosperous and stood by me like a brother; nursed me through my illness, and loaned me money for a new start in life. So that in a little while things grew bright again, and here I am, you see, k comfortable as most people." "And the policeman?" I asked, "His hair is as white as my own now," said the old man, "and my daughter, the little one he saved that night, is mar ried to his son." m m m . t5u Patent bone crushing machines. Railroad trains. TSRMS-J 3. ft. It AilAL 31 I 2.00 IX ADVAKCE, NUMBER 36. A Surgical Lecture over tlie Ic;:d Kody ol Probst. An autopsy of the body of the executed murderer Probst was made in the clinic room of Jefferson Medical College on Sat urday afternoon, in the presence of as many persons aj the department would contain, all of whom were present by in vitation, and most of whom were members of the medical profession. . The occasion was the subject of a lec ture by Professor Pancoast, sou to the veteran professor, now unfortunately suf fering badly from inflammation of tho eyes, and not ble to be present. Tho lecture and the operation lasted for two hours, and was to the medical students and physicians assembled an occasion of special interest. The body, dark and discolored at tho extremities, was placed upon a revolving table in the center of the amphitheatre. The professors occupied the nearest seats, an up to the highest bencn every inch ot room was filled. The result of the exam ination showed that, aside from its igno miny, the manner of Probst's death pro duced but pne single pang. He died not from congestion, from asphyxia, or fronx the fracture of the vertebras of the neck; he died from an immense shock, that shattered in an instant the entire nervous S3rstem. There was a livid mark around the neck made by the rope. Where the kiol had been there was no discoloration whatever, and this showed the constriction was only around the portion of tho neck. There was no laceration of the strictures or the tissues discernible when the neck was opened. The jugular was distended with blood. The weight of the man wa3 ono hundred and seventy-six pounds, and the surgeons expected that a fall of his body three feet and a half would havo sundered every part in this locality. Not even the delicate veins were injured. The cavity cf the chest being examined showed muscular development to a high, degree, and the presence of a strata of fat Death was not caused by want cf air, for the lungs were fully distended and per fectly healthy ia appearance, and the right side of the heart, usually congested under these circumstances of death, was found in its natural condition The digestion was perfect. Though the prisoner had breakfasted upon bread and butter with, two boiled eggs, the whole were found to have been absorbed, and the stomach was absolutely empty. The brain was healthy, but of less than average size. Its weight was thirty-six ounces ; that of Green, the Maiden mur derer, was four ounces less. Looking over the whole ground, the young professor pointed out the inevitable conclusion that Probst died from the nervous shock re sulting fiom the fall, and from the com pression of the nerves and arteries Tho demonrator took occasion here to say that he considered the size of the brain as having no bearing upon the question of intelligence or its opposite In the course ot the lecture Dr. Pan coast narrated some interesting anecdotes. He said that it was necessary to have these examinations in order to advance tliG cause of science. The country will bi at no cost for tho interment of this murderer. His skeleton will ba preserved forever in the anatomic al museum of Jefferson College. 1'hilad. uYcws. m The Two Voices. When Guttcnburg, the first printer, was working in his cell in the monastery of St. Aborsgot, he tells us that he heard two voices address him. The one bade him desist told him tho power his invention would put in the hands ot bad men to propagate their wickedness ; told him how men would profane the art ho had created, and how prosperity would have cause to curse tho man who gave it to the world. So im pressed was Guttenburg with what ho heard, that ho took a hammer, and broke to pieces the types he had so laboriously put together. His work of destruction was oiily stayed by another voice sweet aiid musical, that fell on his ear, telling him to co on, and to rejoice in his work : I that ail good might be made the cause ot evil, but that God would bles3 the right in the end. So to all of us still como thu?e voices that came to Guttenburg ; ih'! one calling us to work, while it is called to-Jay to try to leave this world bctteT tl an we found it; aud the other tempting us to give over and take our easo to itavc the plough iu mid-furrow, and to rest on our ours when we should bo pulling against the strc.u. Immense Immigration. A gentleman ju?t from i;ioux City -tates that between that place and Iowa I' alls, be met over five hundred teams with immigrants, all bound for the West, some to Dacotah, some to the Sioux City region, and others for the fertile valleys of the Desmoines and other streams this side of the Big Muddy. The rush westward this spring ha3 never been exceeded even in the flushest of the flush times. ' - E,John C. Breckenridge has gone into tbe pork business in Cauada. Judg ing from the past, it is just the thing for him. "When he left Jeff. Davis iu tho lurch, he showed that he k.oew how ta "ave liis bacoD."