(2-2Sj IKETTSSSJCKBIS £3 IPUHiI&IISSiIEIBSs Whole No. 2748. Ijewistown Post Office. Mails arrive and close at the LawistowD P. 0. as follows. ARRIVE. Eastern through, 5 33 a. rn. " through and way 4 21 p m. Western " 44 44 10 38 a. m. Bellefonte " " " 230 p m Northumberland, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, 6 00 p. UJ. CLOSE. Eastern through 8 00 p. m. •' 44 and way 10 00 a. m Western 14 " 330 p. m. Bellefonte 8 00 Northumberland (Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays) 8 00 p. rn. Office open from 7 30 a. m. to 8 p. m. On Sundays from Bto9 am. S. COMFURT, P. M. l,ewistown Station. Trains leave Lewistown Station as follows: Westward. Eastward Baltimore Express, 4 40 a. m. Philadelphia 44 533 " 12 20 a. m Fast Line, 020 p. m. 350 44 Fast Mail, 10 38 " Mail, 4 21 " Through Accommodation. 2 35 p. m. Emigrant, 9 12 a. m. Through Freight, 10 20 p. m. 120 a m fast 44 340a. m. 815 44 Express " 11 00 44 235 p. ru. Stock Express, 5 00 " 9 05 Coal Train. 12 45 p. m. 10 38 a. m. Local Freight, 040 a. nr. b 2t) p. m. 4®-Galbrtu4h's Omnibuses convey passengers 'o and from all the trains, taking up or setting them dowaat all points within the borough Unnts. GAZETTE FOR 1864. JAM AHV. FEBRUARY^ Pundav , I3ToIT 24 31 Sunday . 714 -.'l Js Monday i 411 IS 25 Monday 1 815 22 291 Tuesday - 512 19 2'. Tuesday 2916 23 IVod'sdav ; 613 20 27: Wed sday 3 10,17 24 Thursday • 1 7 14 21 2s' i Thursday 411 18 25 Friday " ,l; 81522 20 | Friday ,5,12 19 26 Saturday |2 9.16 23.30; ' Saturday :6|10,20,27 MARCH. APRIL.. Sunday , 101329 27 ; Sunday 31017 24 Monday i ! 714 21 28 Monday 411 IS 25, Tuesday T 81522 29 ITuesday 51219 20 Wed'sday 2 91623 30 WedVday 6:13 20 27 [ Thursday 3 1", 17 24 31, i iThursday 714 2128 Friday .4 11 18 35 I jFriday 1 51522 29 Saturday |5 12119.20; | j |Saturday ,2j 9;10;23|30| ItAY. JUNK. 1 81522 29 ; Sunday |1512 19 26j Motidav 2916 23 301 Monday jI6I •. 20 27j Tuesday 3101724 31 Tin-day I 714 21 28. Wed'sday 411 lIS 25i j j j Wed'sday 11 81522 29 Thursday 512 19,20; ! Thursday.2! 9 10,23 301 Friday 6 13120 27! : I Friday* >3 1".1. : 24. [ Saturday 7114;2i;25| I j [Saturday !4:11|16i25| J_ JULI. Al GUST. Sunday i 310 17 24 31 Sunday 7 14 21 28 Monday 41118 25 Monday 1 815 22 29. Tuesday 51219 26 Tuesday 2 9 16,23 30J Wed'sdav ! 01320 27 Wed'sday 3 lo 17 24 31 Thursday 714 21 28 j | Thursday .4,11 18 25: Fridav ' 1,8 15 22 29 j i Friday 10 12 19, 20| Saturday 2 9i 16;23130 I ISa'imtay |6|13J20|27!_ SEPTEM BER. OCTOBER. Su tidily > i4lllß 25 Sunday 1 . 2 91623 3( .Monday i 51219 20 M>uday 1,310 17 24 ~1 Tuesday ! 613 20:27 Tuesday 1.411 1825, Wed'sdav 7 14 21 28: Wed'sday, > 5 12 19 26 Thursday 1 1 815 22 29! ! Thursday ;61320 27 Friday .2 91023 30 | Friday 7U 21 2s: Saturday |3! I 4 | 17i24; | | (Saturday il 8,15 22 231 _ "ROVBMBER. DECEMBER. Sunday I 20 Sundav j 41118 2o M n Monday j j 6 12 19 2ii{ Tuesday |li 8 15 22 li' Tuesday 13 20 271 Wed'sdav 2: 'J IS 23 30; Wed'sday •7H21 2V Thursday Hit" 17 24 Thursdav 1 8 15 22 29. Friday Uju}lß I [Friday 13 9is 2:5 30 Saturday j5;12j1U,26; j Saturday jS lO 17 24 Ml, County Officers. President Judy, Hon. S.S. Woods. Lewistown. Associate Judges, Hon. Elijah Morrison, Wayne township. " James Turner, Lewistown. Sheriff, I). M. Contner, Esq. Deputy Sheriff, John C. Sigler, Esq. Prothonotary, Clerk of Common Pleas, <£c., Nathaniel C. Wilson. Esq. Register and /.' carder ant Ci&rk of Orphans' Court, Samuel VV. Carr, Esq. Treasurer, Amos Hoot, Esq. Commissioners, Samuel Drake, Esq.. Newton Hamilton. O. P.Smith, Esq- Armagh township. M. Miller. Esq., Perry township. Commissoners' Clerk —George Erysinger. Auditors, H. C. Vanzant. Esq.. Decatur township. H. L. Close. Esq., Armagh township. M. Mohier, Esq., Derry township. Deputy Surveyor, John R. Weekes. Esq., of Lewistown. Coroner, George Miller, E.-q.. Lewistown. Mercantile Appraiser, James M. Lashell. Superintendent of Common Schools, Rev. J. Williamson. LIST OF POST OFFICES. Offices. Postmasters. Lewistown, Samuel Comfort Decatur, A M. Ingram. Strode's Mills, Jos. Strode, Jr. McVeytown, J. Criswell. Newton Hamilton, S. \Y. Norton. Atkinson's Mills, R. S. Gamble. Reedsville, Samuel M Greer. Milroy, A.W.Graff. Kishacoquillas, E. W. Hill. Locke's Mills, E. E. Locke. Belleville, W. C. Nelson. Menuo, Benj. Groff. AUenville, N. Hartzler. CLERGYMEN. Presbyterian—Rev. O. O. McCLEAN. Lutheran—Rev. H. R. FLECK. Methodist —Rev. JOHN GUYEB. Episcopal—Rev. JOHN LEITHEAD. Tiie Rev. J. S. MCMIRRAY. Presidiug Elder of Car lisle District; Rev. S. LAWRENCE, and J. B. STRAIN, Pres byterian ministers, are also residents of town. African Wesley Church—Rev. Williams. African Bethel Church—Rev. John Henry. THE IIASIAGI-. THE CHARGE OK THE PEW V. RE SERVES AC GEH VSIILKu. PUBLISHED IIY REQUEST. The sun in his glory was sinking to rest. The army by legions and carnage o'er-prest; The columns were flying, The wounded were dying— But hark! what is swelling? the enemy swerves— Ts the old battle-shout of the galiaut Reserves. Right onward they strode with a firm, measured tread. Unheeding the wounded, unheeding the dead; Their banners are streaming. Their bright eyes are gleaming; With hearts beating proudly, with unshrinking nerves j Is poured forth the shout of the gallant Reserves. Xow quicker their footsteps are pressing in wrath, And many a comrade is left in his path; Still onward they're dashing, With bayonets flashing. Till victory smiling o'er those she preserves, Rolls back the proud shout of the galiaut Reserves. Oh! let not the nation forget the brave deed Which saved our groat land in her uttermost need; Where treason so vaunting His banners were flaunting— But give in your annals the -Meed" it deserves, To the desperate charge of the galiaut Reserves. MMELLAMOHI INAUGURAL ADDRESS Delivered at Harrisburg, Jaa 19, 1364 tdloweitizens of the /Senate and House of Representatives : Called by the partiality of my fellow eit zens to the office of Governor of Pennsyl vania for another term, 1 appear before you to solemnly renew the prescribed obiiga tion to support the Constitution of the Tinted States and the Constitution ol the State ot Pennsylvania; and to discharge the responsible trust confided to nie with fidelity. When first summoned before you, three • years ago, to assume the sacred duties ol the Executive office, the long gather ing clouds of civil war were about to r> break upon our devoted country. rot years treason had been gathering in might —had been appropriating to its fiendish lust more and tuore buuntifully of the na tion's honors—had grown steadily bolder in its assumption of power until it hud won ! the tolerance, if not the sanction of a for midable element of popular strength even in the confessecly loyal States. The elec tion ot a President in 1800, in strict con formity with the Constitution and the laws, though not the cause, was deemed the tit j occasion for an organized attempt to over j throw the whole fabric of our tree tnti tutons, and plunge a nation ot thirty millions ot people into hopeless anarchy ; The grave offence charged against the : President elect seemed alone to consist in j his avowed fidelity to the Govei nment, and his determined purpose to luifil his solemn covenant to maintain inviolate the Union of the States. When inaugurated, he found States in open rebellion, disclaiming allegiance to the Government, fraudulently appropriating its property and iusoleutly ; contemning its authority. Treason was struggling for supremacy in every department of administrative power Lu the Cabinet it felonouGy disarmed us— ! our arsenals were robbed to enable the ar mies of crime to drench a continent in ; Iraternal blood —our coasts were left com- i paratively defenceless to tall an easy prey | to traitors —our navy was scattered upon distant seas to render the Republic helpless tor its own protection —officers, educated, commissioned and sworn to defend the Government against any foe, became do sellers, detied Heaven inshamele-s perjury, and with fratricidal hands drew theirswords against the country ol their allegiance, ; and when treason had thus completed it* I preparation, wanton, wicked war was forced upon our loyal people. .Never was war so causeless. The North had sought no sectional triumph, invaded no rights, inflicted no wrongs upon the South. It aimed to preserve the Republic, not to destroy it, and even when rebellion presented the sword as the arbiter, we ex hausted every effort consistent with the existence of our Government to avert the bloody drauiaof the lastßyears. The insolent alternative presented by treason of fatal dis memberment or internecine war, was met by "enerous effort to avert the storm of dearly which threatened to fall; but the leaders of the rebellion spurned peace, unless they could glut their infernal ambition over the ruins of the noblest and freest Government ever devised by man. Three years of bloody, wasting war, and the horrible sacrifice of a quarter of a mil lion lives attest the desperation of .heir purpose to overthrow our liberties. Mourn tug and sorrow spread over the entire na tion, and defeat and desolation are the terri ble trophies won by the traitor's hand Our people have been sorely tried by dis asters, but in the midst ol the deepest gloom they have stood with unfaltering devotion to the great cause of our common country. Reiving upon the ultimate tri umph of tin right, they have proved them selves ett ml t > the stern duty, and worthy of their r clt inheritance of freedom. Their fidelity i.,n been well rewarded. In God's own good tun'-. He has asset ted His aveng ing power; and if this war is persisted in by the leaders of the rebellion, as has be come evident, then slavery and treason, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1864. the fountain and stream ot discord and death, must soon share a comu on grave. In this great struggle for our honored nationality, Pennsylvania iias won iiumor tal fatue Despite the teachings of the faithless and the hesitation of the timid, she has promptly and generously met every demand made upon her, whether to repel invasion or to fight the battles of the Union whenever and wherever her people were de nanded. Upon every field made historic and sacred by the valor of our troops, some of the martial youth of Pennsylvania have fallen. There is scarce a hospital that ! has not been visited by our kind offices to ! the sick and wounded, there is not a de : partmert in wh eh brave men do not : answer with pride to the name of our no 1 b'.e State, and while hisroiy endures, loyal hearts will turn with feelings ot national pride to Gettysburg, where the common deliverance ot Pennsylvania and the Union will stand recorded in the unsurpassed glory of that blood 4" field. 1 need hardly renew my pledge, 'his during the term of office on which 1 am about to enter, i will give in" whole moral and official power to the prosecution of that war, and in aiding the National Govern ruent in every effort to secure early and complete success over our malignant foes. For the preservation of our national liie, all things should be subordinated. It is the first,, highest, noblest duty of t e citi zen—it is bis protection iri person, proper ty, and all civil and religi us privileges, ; and for its perpetuity in form and power, be owes all bis efforts, his influence, his means, and his life To compromise with treason, would be but to give it renewed existence, and enable it again to plunge us into another cau-eless war. In the destruction of the military power of the rebellion is alone the hope of peace; for while armed rebeis march over the soil of any State, no real freedom can prevail, and no governmental authority, consistent with the genuts of our free institutions, can properly operate. The people of every State are entitled under the Constitution to the protection ot the Government, and togive that protection lolly and fairly, rebellion must be disarmed and trodden in the dust. Hy these means, and these alone, can wu have enduring union, prosperity and peace. As in the past, I will in the future, in fanhful obedi ence to the oath I have taken, spare no means, withhold no power which can strengthen the Government in this con ilict. To the measures ot the citizens chosen to administer the National Govern merit adopted to promote our great cause 1 will give my cordial approval and earnest co-operation. It is the cause of cuustilu tional liberty and law. l'owers which are essential to our com utun safety should now be wisely and tear lessly administered, and that Executive would be faithless, and held guilty before the world, who should fail to wield the might of the Government tot its own pre servation. The details of my views on the measures which I recommend are contained in tuy recent annual message, and need not here tie repeated. 1 beg to return to the generous people of my native State my hearty thanks lor their unfaltering support and continued confidence. They have sustained me amid many trying hours of official embarrass merit. Among all these people to none am I more indebted than to t! e soldiers of Pennsylvania, and here I pledge to these brave men my untiring exertions in their behalf, and my most anxious efforts for their future welfare, and I commend here, as I have frequently done before, those de pendent upon thorn, to the fostering care of the State. 1 cannot close this address without an earnest prayer to the Most High that lie will preserve, protect and guard our he loved country, guiding with Divine power and wisdom, our Gove nment. State and National, and I appeal to my fellow citizens, here and elsewhere, in our existing embar rassments, to lay aside ail partiz.tn feelings and unite in a hearty and earnest effort to support the common cause which in volves the welfare of us all. Gentlemen of the Senate and House of Representatives, I pray you, in God's name, let us, iu this era in the history of the world, set an example of unity and concord in the support of all measures for the pre servatiou of this gre„t Republic. AG. CURT IN. A Man St 1 icenl in Two. —The Horns viiie (N Y.) Tribune says: 4 A most ter rible accident occurred at Reynold's Saw Mill, a mile north of this village, last Thursday morning While a man who gave his name as Frank Smith, who has been employed in the mill four months, was engaged in edging boards with a buzz saw and attempting to remove the edging, the saw caught his sleeve, instantly sever ing his right arm, at the same time draw ing him down upon the saw, almost sever ing his body at the breast, separating the great arteries, and killing him instantly. The real name of the deceased was Alonzo I). Lewis. He was a single man, las been a soldier in one of the Pennsylvania regi merits, and was said to have been a desert er, which accounts for his having changed his name.' DO you attend church ? FULL PARTICULARS OF THE TER RIBLE CALAMITY IN SAN TIAGO, CHILI Tw Thousand Women and Children Smothered and Burned to Death M e briefly notiied last week that one of the most horrible calamities that has ever fallen upon any people occurred in the city of Santiago, the capital ol the republic ol t'hili, on the night of the Bth ot Decem ber last. The Church < f the Jesuits, in which was being celebrated the immaculate Con Ception of the Virgin, was destroyed by fire. and with if were hnrned and sifora ted over two thousand wom/ n and children One can hardly realize the terrible catas troplie that has fallen upon the p ople of Chili \\ hole families b .ve ben swept away in all instant, as it were, and tlo-re is hardly a home in Santiago that has not been thrown into rite depths of woe. The battle field hath its horrors; but they are the incidents of war In this ease it has been women and children who have been destroyed, and none were able to render them any aid. Husband", brothers and lathes have had to stand by and witness wives, sisteis and children perish in the flames and not be afile to render assistance. 1 give you the full acC' unt from the Mcr euro del \ apir of the 17th ultimo, which lias all the details; also remarks from that paper concerning the catastrophe, all of which are of deep interest: One of those awful visitations which from time to time inflict nations with eter nal mourning took place on Tuesday, De cember 8, at the festival of the luitnacu late Conception, in what was the church of the Jesuits in the capital. A magnificent temple reduced to ashes, hundreds of dear lives sacrificed, the wh. le city weeping its lost ones—such is the picture Santiago of fers us since the fatal night; the miniver sary of another mortal catastrophe—the battle of Longs mil la. On the c.x memo ration of the lumiaculute Conception, the last of the festivities of the month ol Mary, the most popular and frequented of all our solemnities, thousands ol fair devo tees thronged to the lust performance, which was to eclipse all that had preceded At six in the evening the spacious steps and part of the open place before the church swaruied with ladies in veils, fran tically struggling to enter a temple where not one more could be made room for. A lew minutes before seven, and when the religious performance was about to com meitce, they were still, lighting the last lights in the chancel, when tlie portable gas in the half-moon canvass and wood that formed the pedestal of a colossal image of the A irgin Mary began to burn one of the extremities of that apparatus Some out' rushed on the rising flame, and succeeded in smothering it; but by a fatal rebound the gas, compressed by the effort, I urst.out with redoubled vigor at the other extremi t.y of the false half moon. Immediately a ! fierce flame rushed up The persons who j thronged the chancel flew towards tile sa oris r\, crying 'water, water;' whilst the i w.nneu, who filled the n ive, arose in tu uiukous confusion, screaming tor help. The suddenness of the tire was awful The dense mass of women, frightened out of their senses, numbers tainting, and a!i entangled by their long swelling cresses, rushed, as those who knew death was at their heels, to the one doo', which soon be came choked up. Fire was everywhere. Streaming along the wooden coiling, it i ilung the camphene lamps, hung in rows there, upon the struggling women In a moment the gorgeous church was a •ma of flame Michael Angelo's tearful picture of hell was there, but exceed-d Help was a.l but impossible; a Hercu4es might have strained his strength in vain to pull one from the serried mass ot iren zied wretches who, piled one above anoth cr, as they climbed over to reach the air. wildly fastening the grip of death upon any cftie escaping, in order that they might be dragged out with them. Those who longed to save them were doomed to bear the most harrowing sight that ever seared human eyeballs—to see mothers, sisters, tender and timid women, dying that die id ful death, that appalled the stoutest heart of man, within one yard of salvation, with in ore yard of men who would have given their lives over and over again for tbeni. It was maddening—the scre.niing ard wringing of hands for help as the remorse less flames came on ; and then, while some . already dead with fright were burned in | _ hastlv indifference, othe sin t! eir borri : i le agony —some in prayer —were tearing their hair and battering their faces. Wo : men, seized in the embraces of the flames, were seen to undergo a trait-formation as • though by an optical delusion ; first daz i ziing bright, then horribly lean and shrunk I up, then black statues, rigidly fixed in a | writhing attitude. The fire, imprisoned by the immense thickness of the walls, had devoured ev erything combustible by ten o'clock ; and I then, defying the sickening stench, peo pie came to look for their lost ones. Oh. what a sight the fair, placid rai on looked j down upon ! Ciosely packed crowds of calcined, distorted forms, wearing the fear ful expression of the last pang, whose smile was once a heaven ; the ghastly phal anx of black statues, twisted in every var iety of agony, stretching out their arms as IP^STO il imploring mercy; and then, of the heap that had choked up the door, multitudes with their lower parts entirely untouched, and some all a shapeless mass, but with an arm or foot unscathed. The silence, alter those piercing screams were hushed in death, was horrible. It was the silence of the grave, unbroken but by tile bitter wail or laintingcry— over two thousand soid.s had passed through that or deal of fire to the judgment seal of God. Heroic acts of sublime daring have not been wanting. Enduring gratitude has been excited in every Christian heart, by the gallant efforts of Mr Nelson, he Min i>!er of the United States, his countryman. Mr Meiggs. and several other foreigners There were generous men who defied the lury of the flames to save lives, and some of th"so died HI irt yrs t ■ t heir nob t- heat ts An Eng ish Uot OR HI V :. .■< HI if >s tin Known which, wa a to rush through the tl ions, and seize in h s powerful arms a lady, stride with her a little way, and then, with his h ir in a blaze, choked with smoke, fall hack into the volcano never to rise again. A young lady named Ovello, having in vain implored some bystanders to save her mother, rushed in and shortly afterwards miraculously issued forth wiili her parent in Iter arms, saved. A young lady of the name of Solar, just before the smoke suffocated her. had the presence < t mind to tie her handkerchief around her leg, so that her body might he recognized Additional particulars state that 'Twenty two hundred bodies have been counted out from the ruins, and it is sup posed many were entirely burnt The pre vailing opinion is the number of lives lost will reach twenty five hundred. The count. ;.nd names collected to date amount to some fifteen hundred. Many families have lost the entire ft-tnale niemhets—six, seven, eight and nine from one family. All those that could not be recognized by their surviving friends are now buried in ooe grave or hole. A place twenty five yards square war, excavated; into this they were laid, or tumbled and shoveled.' Governor Wriguit's Repirt of the Hani buig Exhibition. Ex Governor- Wright, of Indiana, who attended the International Agricultural Exhibition, held at Hamburg, has made an official report, n which he says that 80 acres of land were occupied by theexhibi tion. Buddings were erected lor the ac commo'Jation of more than tour thousand ei tries of stock, machinery, locomotives, steam engines, ste-m plows and farm im 'elements, mineral products, artificial man ures, plants, trees, fruits, flowers, and seeds Thirty four nationalities were represented by contributions, including 400U of the finest horses, cattle, sheep, and swine, some of the Sovereigns being contributors Three thousand machines, and farm ituple nients, and 75 steam engines wete exhtbi | ted. Governor Wright is convinced of the complete success of steatn plowing, and thinks we are not sufficiently mindful of ihe progress of Great Britain and other portions ot Europe in agricultural iniple tu -nts, though we surpass others in cheat, labor saving machines, such as threshers, reaj ers, etc. The American reapers were awarded the superiority Alter stating other interesting facts, he says he antiei piti s iruportai t lesults torn the sympa'by awai ened and xisting friendships strength etiod towards our people hy this exhibition, am] testifies to the ardent sympathy for the restoration of law and order in the States, and for our sucee-s and u ity. It was not thought possible for this country to achieve triumph- in comptting at the exhibition amid the scenes ol civil war, and our ac tti.i 1 success exhi' ited a m >ra! power illus rative ot the energy ot the people and the resources ot the com try. EJC.I IITION }?• Difioe. Samuel Wilkermm, e>q , formerly of the Buffalo Press, n >w of the N V. Timers, in his a Imiruhle address as pre siding officer at the ' Press di m-'i',' gv en at Washington recently to Speak*, r Colfax, related tiie folio wing pleasant incident: E.gliteen years ago, at one o'clock of a wint ni >ouiiglit in >roing. while the horses in the stage coach in woieh I was plowing the tin k 111 i 1 of In li ana were be ng changed at the t tvern in S null Bead, 1 walked the to > way ot' the principal street to siiake oft a great weariness 1 saw a light th l on.; i a window. A sign. •f :e 11 •g.-ter. was legible above it an i 1 saw thr >a d the window a man in his shirt sleeves walking quickly about tike one that worked. 1 paused and looked, an l imagined about the man and ihout tlt-* lateness of the hour to which it was protracted; and I wondered it his wife was expecting hiai a id h id llgh'ed a new candle for his coming, an i d he was very tired. A conn ig step inter rupted this idle dreaming. \V aeu tiie walker reached my side I rejoined him, and as we went I asked him questions, and naturally they were about the workman in his shirt sleeves. 'What sort ot a mail is he.' - 'lie is very good to the poor; lie works hard; he is soci al le with the people; he pays his debts; lie is a safe adviser; lie doesn't drink whisky; folks depend on him ; all this part of Indiana believe in him.' From that day to This I have never taken up the South Ik ml Register without think ing of this eulogy, and envying tiio man who had just ly entitled himself to it in the dawn of his manhood. The Spirit, of a True Union Sol lier- A correspondent writing from tlie Army of tue Cumberland gives the following incident-: While riding up Mission Hill on the memorable 2ot h, turning my horse to the rght and left to avoid treading up on the wounded. I bad dismounted from r y horse to give water to a dy ing boy, who lay upon his gun with a bullet hole through bis head, when, a few yards to the right, 1 observed an officer being carried down the hill on a stretcher. Hiding up, i inquired of the men : •V\ ho have you here?' 'Adjutant Marsh, of the 21st Michi gan.' 'Where are you wounded, Adjutant?' 'ln the left arm,' was the reply. 'Badly?' I inquired; when with a smile lighting up his face, at the same instant 1 discovered the arm adheting to the body by a small piece of flesh, he replied : •My arm is gone; that's nothing; we've beaten them, thank God, and the slur of the Chickamauga defeat is obliterated. Let the arm perish; such a victory is worth a thousand arms.' A Presbyterian Horse. A short time since, a certain minister in a certain vsihsge not iar from Buffalo. start ed in a buggy to fulfil an appointment in a town some 2U iuiies distant. He had driv en but a lew miles, however, when he dis covered that bis horse was quite lame, and as the evening began to draw nigh, he deemed it best to top tor the night, in a short time be espied a farm bouse, in front id which stood a yeoman considerably ad vanced in yeais As be drew up the fol lowing conversation took place: • Can you tell rue, my friend, how far it is to a hnye ol entertainment?' ' Weil, if you mean a tavern,' said the old man, ' it's close on to twenty uiiles; but if you mean a house of entertainment, we have one ourselves.' •Ah, very good. My horse is quite lame as you see, and I am somewhat fatigutd myself. Can you accommodate us for the night, my friend V 'Well, yes, we can accommodate you; hut if you ate a minister, as you seem to be, I must tell you that 'he fare )ou'ii get depends upon your religion.' ' 1 low so, my friend ?' 1 Why, you see.' replied the farmer, 'if a minister is a good Presbyterian, we give him the best the house affords; if he is a Baptist or a Methodist, he gets tolerable hv.ng; but if he's so unfortunate as to be an Episcopalian clergyman he can't expect much. We dou t thins much of them out this way " 1 Well, my friend, I am sorry that your prejudices are so imbedded.' remarked the other with a bland smile. ' Unfortunately in this instance, 1 am an Episcopalian clergyman, and I suppose I must content myseli with a scanty meal, but (more caro ful of bis lior-e's comfort than his own) let me assure you of one thing, that my horse is the bluest Presbyterian you ever saw.' The old farmer was not so obtuse that he did not discover and appreciate the min ister's joke—a joke that procured for man and beast the bust the farmer's larder and barn afforded. Bgu A couple announce in the Prov idence Post their inarraige, and add to the notice—'No cards nor any money to them with.