Btuirjaet to OOVB. Cnrtln and Weary. The IJoj3 in Uluc of llarris'iurg, gave a complimentary supper to Govs. Curtin r.nd Geary on Thursday evening last, which was attouded by a large number of distinguished guests. Ihi following am jug other regular toasts weto offered : The (itst regular tcuit was"Washing ton and Lincoln —the Father and Savior i.f the lfcp'ibiie." i>rank standing ond in silence. Second. "Coagress—the hope of a l.iyal people,. the anchor of liborty and tlio safety of the nation," This toast created great enthusiasm. llotv t)«vid Fleming, Speaker of the feat Senate, respouded in glowing terms. Third. '-Our Flag—proved Symbol of Universal' Liberty." Prof. J. P. Wicker.-haai replied in a lengthy and eloquent speech, filled with high eulogiutns on tlio American soldier. Fourth. ' The hero—Gcu. U. S Grant.' This ra drauk stcuding, aud with ehccr upon cheer. Fifth. "Mnj. General John W. Geary, the Governor elect of Pennsylvania —the hero of two wars, the champion of free dom, the statesman and orator, whose past glorious record gives high promise of a brilliant future, and justly merits the high office to v.h ch the people h.ve cbcted him. His honesty, iutegrity ai d fairness are sure guaranties for the succe;s of his administration." This was re. ceivcd with unbounded enthusiasm. [Gen. Geary, though invited, and the invitation acknowledged in a dispatch announcing his intention to be present, was called elsewhere ou important private business, passing through here at eight o'clock P. M] Sixth. ' Gov. Curtin:—llis Adminis tration of the State, both civic and mili tary, so guided by statesmanship and im partial justice to all, and so tempered by mercy, as to leave at the close of his eventful terms of office no issue for ad justment by the people, is the cherished legacy of the State, and his name is a household word with her people; the first among the seutincls of liberty to uive warning to prepare for war, to pledge the the faith aud support of our good old Commonwealth to the lauieutud Lincoln; to push forward troops to the scene of the cxpectea struggle; to organize an army in reserve, which after the disaster at Bull llun saved the nation'* capitol and honor; and to care for and educate the children of our fallen comrades; he is entitled to the thanks and re;ogniii n of the citizen soldiers aud the people he has served so well." The applause which greeted this toast was general and unbounded. Demon stration ujion demonstratiou ensued, and the enthusiam was prolonged for several minutes. Gov. Curtin rose aud said : Getlemen : —Our hearts can reply even in the accompaniment to that happy toast. Thank God ! we are now at peace. 'J lie war that has so long desolated our coun try has closed. No longer is the soldier exposed to the dangers and perils of the fc if; to the long vigils of the outpost aud the picket. God grant we may long remain at peace, and that he uiay till our rulers with wisdom that, they may been* abled to transmit to their children and their children's children, the blessings of a lasting peace. No man who has been connected with the army desires this country again engaged in war. When wo reflect that all over this land thero grp widows nnd orphans, wretched with sorrow, care, and anxiety, every true man will desire that our country may remain in peace. Give us no war. It means that civilizod people shall relapse into barbarism. It means neglected homes and the hurried hopes of thousands, aud we should all desire to avert calamities so laleful to our country. We pledged our soldiers that they should be eared for. Alt the people cared for them when they were sick and woun ded, and sore and weary. The whole na tion stood aghast when they read the list of killed and wounded. All liberal, true, patriotic people at home were en gaged in sustaining the army in the field. Rich men poured forth their wealth, and the women toiled by day and by the light of the lamp for the soldier. It was not only the hero in the field who strove to sustain the Government—there were lierots at home. [Applause.] If there be a man before me to whom you can bow down in respect, it is the private soldier of the Republic. His funeral march was not accompanied by the pomp and pagcapfry of rank. Give praise also to the wife, the children and the friends of the soldier. For the man who stormed the battlement, who faced the enemy, and who took part in the battle charge, is no more a hero than* the woman who, at iiom>, knit stockings for the man at the front, and who, morning and evening, prayed for him. [Applause.] Aye, at day time and at eventide, in the still si- Jencc of the poaceful night, there were going up prayer for your safety. They could not bo with you but they asked G n d to be with you. [Applause ] For (you struggled lor a free Government— the Government of a civilized aud Chris tian people. It was not the citizen that .rallied to. It was the citizen that rallied around you. Soldiers of the Republic you were the firsjt to enter the buule field. And now you were the first to enter the field in this political eontest. You gave in nomina tion a distinguished and gallant soldier. You placed your candidate in nomination und the citieens rallied around you, and the election was the result. [Cheers]— Your thoughts were upon your homes : jind now that pq, j et the people waged war, and we, of the people, by bur represen tatives in Congress, must see to it that its triumphs are garnered. And you, by the ballot, have declared that the Itebels shall accept its condi tions. [Cheer .] That id our ultimatum. Cougress will staiid by the amendments in good faith. [Cheers.] Never,in the history of the world, did ihc people of this or any other nation offer such just and magnani'uous terms. And I would l.ave uiy Government patient in allowing the Itchel to accept these toims. Ltrust we will act \u gofd faith ou tint cove nant. IJut »112 they fail to adopt these amendments, Government must rest upon somebody in the South, and it will be the duty of Congress to find some people who are loyal and true without a peradven ture, and then rest that Government upon them. [Great cheering.] Justice and liberality to all mankind, of all colors, races and climes, and our flag, I trust, is the symbol of that Christian spirit of justice and liberality to all T hree cheers were then given for Gov eroor Curtiu. WHAT IT COSTS TO UEBEL.— One of tl\e editors of the Scltna ( \la.) Messen ger writing from Tuscaloosa, says : "A little business in the courthouse led me to anquire into the financial con dition of this country, and I lcaru that sheriff's sales are becoming so common that almost no purchasers are to bo found for the valuable lauds and other property exposed for sale. A gentleman informed me that some twenty farmers had been sold out lately, their lands briuging less than one dollor per acre A sad instance of the reverse of fortune produced by the war was mentioned iu the case of old Mr. Prewett, of this county, whose estate was sold out jn the first monday of this month. At the breaking out of the war he was the wealthiest citizeu ofTusealoo sa County, lie owneJ three hundred and sixty slaves, and large tracts of land. He had large sums of money out at in terest, secured by mortgage of negro prop erty and land. He was a homespun, economical countryaian, who bought ev ery thing at the lowest price for cash.— lie paid his physician's bill before the doctor left the house. When Gen. Crox ton came to Tuscaloosa, ho took from this old man some forty head of horses and mules, all his money, provisions, etc., which was his first calamity. Next came emancipation, which swept his slave pro perty. Next came the breaking up of all the men tq whom l'rewett had loaned money, or for whom he stood security Finally an execution was levied on his property for a few thousand dollars, and all his real estate wag sold under the sheriff"s hammar for six hundred dollars!" DRUNKEN CHILDREN. — The repre hensible practice of supplying children with intoxicating drinks for their owu consumption is still carried on by many publicans and beersellers all over the countiy, and we are glad to notice that in the metropolis an effort is about to be made to enforce a clause in the police act against supplying with drink children un der sixteen years of age for ih.irVwn con sump'ion. A correspondent of the Star says the extent to which beer shops, pub lic housei, and gin palaces are frequented by mere children for the purpose of drink ing is simply frightful. On Mouday morning the magistrates of Liverpool hail before them twenty boys and girls under the age of seventeen, "all of whom had been found beastly drunk in the public streets on Sunday, and incapable of tak ing care of themselves." On a given Sunday the publicans of Manchester had the pleasure of seeing 22,000 children enter their premises. A clergyman en tered a room in a Manchester beer shop at about one o'clock in the morning, and found it full of boys and girls drinking. In Derby mere children have been found drunk in thi! top room of a low house.— In Salisbury a gentleman saw a crowd of young people, some of Sunday school scholar?, imbibing beer in the back pre mises of a beer shop on Sunday mooning during church hours. So great is the evil of juvenile drinking in Middlesboro' that the chief constable has thought it his duty to issue a police notice in refer ence to it. Near Portsmouth is a sort of public house fair, and from it young peo ple have been seen rolling home drunk at seven o'clock in the morning, they hav ing been drinking and dancing all night. In Scotland, also, this sad evil prevails. —Liverpool Times. A New and Grand Fpoch in Medicine! I)R. MAGOIEL is the founder of a pew Medical #ystonj! The quantitarians, whose vast internal doses eufeeble the stomach and paralyze the bowel.-', must give precedence to the man who restores health and appetite, with from one to two of his extraordinary Pills, and cares the most virulent sores with a box or so of his wonderful and all-healing Salve. These two great specifics of the Doctor are fast superseding all the stereotyped nostrums of the day. Kxtraordinary cures by Maggiel's Pills and Salve have opened the eyes of the public to the inefficiency of the (so called) remedies of others, and upon which people have so long blindly depended. Maggiel's Pills are not of the class that swallowed by the dozen, and of which every box full taken creates an absolute necessity for another. One or two of Maggiel's Pills suffices to place the bowels in perfect order, tone the stomach, cieates an appetite, and render the spirits light and buoyant ! Qhere is no griping and no reaction in the form of constipa tion. If the liver is affected, its func tions are restored; and if the nervous system is feeble, it is invigorated. This last quality makes the medicines very desirable for the wants of delicato fe males. Ulcerous and eruptive disoascs are literally extinguished by the disen fectant power of Maggiel s Salvo. In fact, it is hcie announced that MAOGIEL'S BILIOUS, DYSPEPTIC AND DIARRHEA PILLS cure where all others fail. While for Burns, Scalds, Chilblains, Cuts and! all abrasions of the skin, MAIIGIEL''B SALVE is infalliuble. Sold by J. MAO GIEL, 43 Fulton Street, New YojJs, and all Druggists, at 25 cts. perbox. F.or Sale at Dr. GRAHAM'S Prug Store, fiolo Agents in Butler, P». («u»y 'St': HOItTIOI LTURE cuibracinir farming. Uardenir.g, Irnit-ralalne, * . our labora |S this department lor over Ihlrly yeu.a t huvo Diet the lor ml approbation uf the public. Onr purp -so bra been lo tutuialt uaoinl and reliable Inform tti n these very Impoitmt branches of In luatry. an I to it.,- 'I 10 ™ within our power ug.i nat the lain. U ictri..es and 9 -lllsb |>lll|iOee* i.f ibe HIHIIy enip rea ai.d 112. oa.l ionstlveiittlfera by \>ln h tho Kirmri la oicea ant ly nasa.lotl - Tlill portion of tho lit mux tow* i ELI . tmwil la aline worth the priro of a ihacriptt.n •NBVVS UKPAI.'IMIKNI-Tho mii. in, lu.tr,, ear*, »||.l ill KTiiuiiiatioti. in gatueriiig and preparing t|„. Sth rinje K venta ot the Day, eapryaaly for this paper, which blth'-i t. b.u h.en oue of lia 111 like I featnreasHd »l>e aj uulveraal aatlafactlon, will liecnitlnned w.tn redonb 1*1 -10 Hit Incrcaalnn demand of the public. TKIIM..— I'w . ilollara and NITJ cenia perananin. An ■ orders re el veil without the cash, an I subscription istot p *d at the en have count mlly on litnd Hil lf .r *:•!.» I* I»u: e qmli(y ft DItUOS CIIKMICAI,* nn«! PA!NTH Oil.* V VMMSHKS A S l> Of,A!»{*, lil IT. LEAD. Kill) LEAD AjLTTIIKRAOH Dye-Stuffs, Glasa and Putty, TUit PEN TIN K, AND ALCOHOL, LAHI>. PISH It SKATS-FOOT ni|.* 112 UOTn.Ki', VIA 1,8, A .YDCOKKS, SO A I*. BPONO K8 it I. A MPS, PU)(K GIIoU.ND SPICKS *e.4»\4*. *n*, furnhheri at co>t. Phtfnciiin* pres cription* carefully cnnpoiuMM. Tli»« (»nbtic I* reipnctfiilly invited to call nnd examine our i>t«K°k, we araconliilent that \4»'PIIII «f|| an reasonable' a* any -hnilur ft-.t.i!>lUlinmnt In UIM county. N nw.il iMVrly. DEMOREST'3 YQTOG AHEaiCA, A NEW AHTISTIC, KSTtItT A!»D BPI.KXDIDLT ILI.U.sTk ATfcD MONTHLY MAGAZINE FOR BOYS AND GIRLS. T"" Teacher'i Monitor and Parent * Oracle. Fbi.ifiifiirj a MUSRUH or INBTBCCTIO* in PHILOSOPHY Ar.T.S' lENCZ, AXO LITIIUTUKK, rn.) Include Sloriea, Pt»oni«, History, Biography, An- I tronomy,Chetnl»try. .Music, GUIIUH, I'u/xle*. etc., i«uited tp the capacitlea «-f\ery Young America, without frivolity'or exaggeration. Its content*, from thepei* of the v« ry l»e«t Author*, will be foui d to dpnrkle wlih interest, iu lliuttraiion* 11 charm with beauty, nnd tho whole to Inspire with virtue and Intelligence, and prove 4t a Wfll-npi ing i.f pl« n*ui e" In e*cry hoiiMehol-l. Sinnle copies, 15 cent*; yeai W. sl,fiO: each add tlonai copy »l, or Ave ccpieH for $6: Voting America mtd Dc inorest .1 Monthly together,♦!. AildreM W. .iKNMNOa UKMORKT, No. 47:J llroiulway, New York. A large and beautiful colored steel engraving given froe wit.i the first number, nnd Inith mailed tree on re c- ipt of price. Kacti elnglo stibscril.er, «t $ 1.50, will bo entitled to a .Mlcior*c<.|ie ..f highly magnifying powers, with i heivy glass cylinder to confine living object*—. sent by mail, postage six cent*; or a package of Magic Photograph*, pontage 2 cent* i THE liDY'S FRIEND. ' ' —A BEAUTIFUL PREMIUM BXURAVING REDUCED PRICKS TO CLUBS. 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