==IIMM 1 itisturgij tit t. .esuit Lizancuer:4. u. into. R. BRFIAITTAVO.. ,PROPRIB7OB.S {~. I;:Ziti:Eia=a FrODAY-morttilso, dyNE 29, 1860 - TOIL PIIESIDENT, -ABRAHAM LINCOLN, ' TOR VICE PRESIDENT, : 11; . -7 44 ,, TN IB AI. 11 . A. 14 LI N, : .. v . ... .. " ~. • ~.•.: l o matOns ' _ • : , ~ __ . N. JAM ...s. roo \ • - •'ev,„ . 2 ! . ...keesed o.lColgta, V; '...4..4f•'1.' t Fr " 4:intai Wg' Z.. - • ' ' ..-.ff• t'llOtstrela.• Banal, t ~.. • , • 6 - Malben Mil , k ... , ' • 6 Jambi. Broomall ' - 1 . • - ' Y James IC-p.n... v. ...r:...'•••-11. Uri a. EaVtk , '' '....t.",-_ I. „r.9.•TnakeLm S i r ~ Cbtist, . I. ' ' ':'-': , ', l•N ' ' '. r Altrra N T ° . ~,m r” ' l ' ' ' ' . l' ;1- 12 Viommt - lin i tl, . ~ ... •,. . - 708 013468N0R, iiol 4 r. • ArrpttErcv G. CURT'IN, 'tiv can cantrr 9CacoNaTits3—ixui DISTRICT, 4.7-*M. El a . K.. 14. 0 0 FL EL IQ A "JD 3 . - ., - .. . : : • ',J IMA.CONGHESS-XXlrd DISTRICT. . -.- '--'• " - - ~--..,-• .' - . a. 0.13'111, - - xt!r, Asp FE NIGP rt ..r Kvarzy. 4118n&Li, ott.burgh• •'" '• ' • ' AuerAbly, 211011A8.W/LLIAIIB, Allegheny. •0118L18 1.4 80611.81N0, Henry. Clerk Af ao awls. VIRLLIAM A. EltallON. Pat.: //vista: M1T..14.1.11 J. HICILtEUMON, Toropetercgvills. Recorder. ROA " Gbs ukatittro9, ritutnrsh. -•,•• ••• • • -_-A.aie,r LAKe, 411sanat • \ AfeCKIIYAN, rittabargh. Diadem of the nar, `;••• cittiserir. 1 HE N RY• , Tam HOMCIIMD But —No not of the present weak, c o rruptrand infamous National Adminis tration has crested more indignation through out tie community thaiiihe President's veto of the Homestead Bill. The frauds upon the treas. . - orY of which the Administration Is the aoknowl ...dged_parent, sink- Soto comparative insignifi canoe before this giant fraud upon the free labor— " . ere of theacnintry,* whom" the public lands be long, of right, Haley Are willing to.occupy them. ~.Fowler may 0W1176,000 of the public money; bid, the government, poor sell le, is better able to bear that loss than the poor laboring man is to *sir hie rightful shareof tie public lands. The bill vetoed was not the House bill, which ..,.."..,,..:„. met the general approial of the country, but the Siezct. Bettalebill, which the House accepted as the beet 4 that',:ciiiild be had Under existing cirque:- ,'f,,,.r-:..itantias. , It was framed eep'ecially to meet ~---- 14 very - objections which the pettifogging Presi• dent so unfairly states in his veto message ; end it *creditable to Mr. Jonseux, of Tenneesee, who *bored hard to make the bill as little objection able all round as possibte, that, when the veto Message was road, be denounced its author in gooa set berme, and exposed cot only:the liol lownessof its togio, but the petty quibbling in witch the =mime abounds. The free and bold deriudeiation thus administered to the President by a Southern democratic Senator cruet bare ortdo the old hypocrite in the While House wince if if another Covode were after him. The miserable quibble of the President that the bill dieoriminatee to favor of foreigners, is refitted by the bill itself, which' in the very first featicin contradicts hie noeitive assertion. This ''native Amerioan" doctrine comes with an ill' grams from the President, who has all his life been eourtimg the "foreign vote," and who owes' his 'election icr tip Muni* and the free use of matitifectured naturalization papers in Pennsyl vania; and it is all the more despicable from the fact that there is nothing in the bill to justify it. But even' if' it were true, Satan rebuking sin Would afford an instance of niodeety compared with:Buchanan rebuking the American Congress for pandering to the "foreign vote." - His other objection, that it woubpdecrease the public T0V012120, is none the lees deepicable. If he had, ot squandered the public revenue by millions,- and ran the government hue a heavy . debt debt in a time of profound peace, the' Treasury wonanot need, now, the few thousands'of dol lars which the sales of pubile lands afford. It iti ~ a humiliatiog confession for him to znake—hu -4.f.'-.. -- niiiiacig to i the country it not to him—that an 1 , -.;.,' 1 administration which found $17,000,000 in the 't - Treasury when it came into power thrCe years ~, ; ,a g o, should now be so lamentably short of funds F . ::: Attic: after borrowing $100,000,000, it:cannot 4 . 4 - ", get almig without the paltry revenues from the V.. ' 'labile land*. The tree tenon for vetoing this bill is to be ,i . hind In the fact that the Booth is opposed to it.. A . ?i-,-.:.-:'Nir.;Jetineori, pt Tenn., was its only Southern :.:friendr. The Homestead bill is dreaded by chi ' , liietth beoeitse it will foster free labor and emu) .. : 4 , . ..i,.._ - the new territories. to freedom. it was for Mot • . i.., -: ! it was vetoed, and for the eaves reason the dein ‘::4:4';----'''-- meek Senate refined to pare it hy_ the oonsti.. ''''.l.:-!‘ • .. lulioniii majority. s ii.',.- ',''s_Thei Homestead Bill is thus, by no Ist of ours; .'•3:1:; . - ~ . au issue in the campaign, as well as Free Kan ".Sas end the Tariff. - So let. it be. Old Abe, if elected, will settle all these questions promptly; and We may safely trust the people to promote their early abatement by his triumphant election. ,~:, •~y ~. Tug Tatar Bui..—No amount of eqatrtaing, dedglog or explaining CID relievetbedemocracy from the odium of defeating the Tariff bill. The .'Maitillllll wausent from the House to the San '‘atiticto tbe 10th of....fday, and, notwithotandiog the reorte.of our &leads fa the Committee of Finance, it was notriouched until near the clues ;or the aression,and then only to be postponed till ;next eeitrion. Mr. Lytham, of California, waS the' . ontly demoorat who came to the relief of Mr. on; tberteet. question. All the others who bad premised so =oh, and of wheel) support he had eeen sti many itooddent assurances, failed at the Mime, aid the tariff bill failed solely be 'oinett4he democracy was Inezorebly 'panel it, ~ it Is true that Mr. Bigler made a ehow of sin. "cesity and that Mr. Henry D. Foe. ..ter went to Vlaeltington on tensibly to promote iltepseesse; batall their influence failed to hoe the bill ooneldered at all lathe Finance Committee at the Senate. Mr. Hunter, the Chairman of that Committee, igreed to report it, but as it now appears, mainly toi attack it with an elebo. rate emetoh, prepared upon data furnished by the agents of foreign manufacturers, who, have been swindling the treasury for years by p eye 'tail of trplalent invoicing, and by the Custom, Hopes in New York. Upon hie motion and by a. _~ ~. ~Y trarty vote, the bill eras postponed MI next win ter., until the'farce of reconsidering was per' formed a few days ago.' Mr. Bigler became ex . tainted by the effort of that motion and hie own :speech, hadafter the reconsideration bad been , obtained, the /bject wae - dropped as if it bed never been beard of. • •While dentocratio Benatori.pretended that the objectionable in some of its 48- 24 ,:'4Ark, they Dever undertook to amend or modify :it twiny Manner or form, or to present a sub-, jiiticta,whiah would'relletie their alleged difileuF j - ..titi;- ; Mile the House had expended so roach pine In perfecting it, and Mr.' BlunnOtta. or :11beide faland—wio may be retarded sit tba • highest authority upon this subject—hail eland In the' Senate it wee less complained of 1•.:!: than any -tariff for thirty years; yet its 'friends • 'emit all timew willing to give up the for* if • coniiipertierve the pubstance and principle. TbittAiveto ut; obstinately wedded to it, but - -.T.attoted rokii . ...ifiryieid to !bessoeselties of the" =4164 the Benete more than ball wet, if nit eidfamiel,lundbeen made. %Bat no step was tromp intended.,, bill and Bluely bil:iieddediawd . or ale cal l bipr4 alvay b e tamed iti'itotioUtitilii •' tkitiither,,.Frpt*or can 4ll l eated avartekii.l4 , lo:o 4 ? ll sTeri deul 'P r,°7 " solitria(gt*Thiltr ques4on Is them ' the 41.!hpiu0,apt,,,,,, ~~;~:... IVMSI2IIM=SE :it ::7 ,7, :t;, ,, ' , .'.' . . , : ,- " . '-'..!- 1: ':''..•- • . : 4- ' :-: ' 7.. '.1-. 1 , - -:•P . '''..!.-.:,:'':. ''. , ',;.':- . f. '' „...._ ;-.•;; ..- -•z:' - ,'-;::i '- -'....:',-, --11',•-,'• 1 - _'• . ,.ft: - -; - • ~..•,...!• 'Dtmeeralta Rattetattan Meeting. • Dt.riew ofthe fact that our Democratic friends are bolding back in the matter, we blare with magnanimity which must be appreciated, con cluded to colt a Ratification cleating for them on our own hook. We submit itio following pro gramme for the occasion : _MILANO DoUDIA SACK-ACTION RATIWICATIOO tiILITIND OF TUS “NfoiTioNAL D1110011AOT" IN TUN ARAB OF TOO "STItPoRIUIi," ON FIFTU Sr , PISTABURCIII, SATURDAY EVINING, Jowl 30,1860. Tlio following gent.' en are expected to be present and address the ' , acting. . The speakers on each side, with the e caption of BAset. BAR PCR,IEaq , are nemesia ly limited by the Com• mlttee of Arrangements to 1l Minutes each. 133E3 • at I...aike, ES rotimcm, 8188 24. 1101VE. 13 Francis a PetiDllll/21, 14 11124,6,4 2.lernar, 11 °mfr.,Baader, 16 ..1.. B. Sharp, 17 Daniel 0. our, 18 8.,m0al Only'lu, . 12 rigor &Inn • 20 William 16617.0,202104 21 Jahn M. Iltrnpatrick, 22 James Kate, 23 Richard P. Eloberta, 24 Cleary Souther, .n Greror, ge- The meeting w' Mir-Shaeffer Bore Brectinridge ..Smash counter. JIID4II &TAUB, of tbi St. Lotlie Democrat, ma. inridge;men io thot cit A largiorowd of Break arldge men had assem bled to pay their respeCts to COL Preston, our Minister to Spain, who was then in St. Louie, when they were disturb , d by aorowd of Douglas men, who hooted, shoal 4, groaned and mani fested the most malign at feeling toward the Breokinridge crowd. After they bad quit th . Bienkinridge meeting sod order was restored, edge Studer addreseed those present is what the Democrat calls • very sensible speech. As there is no nonsense about Judge Slater, we aro not orprieed to hoer that he is openly against Don lee Rady Patterson, John 0. Dunn, J. Augustus Gibson. UNRIDGE. Gan. Will A. Stokes, Joseph R. Muter, Janielchi. Richards, D. D. Brace, ook, Al D. • • rroti r r:;! . Brozhiro ,! Wthrough the land. convene at 7:60 P. M. eigoty Cocktails and ." served out at the Judge iShafer, Ed. Campbell, Jr., R. Biddle Robert, FOB FOR inue James P. Barr, Samuel Harper, Cherie/ Barnett, Goo. M. Kayeer r M. D., George Me , Id roc—Were bend o Were • baud o Were a baud o Add arelloo city, we learn from the e a speech to the Break- on Monday night last \, Tue Pout denies that Mr. 11 lb Foeren said that be would decline If Dal Ise were not earn hilted; but it has no right to speak In the mat ter, as it knows nothing Irk lever of what it affirms. Mr. FOtlrall did say that very thing, 1111 will not deny it; and be tsar at Baltimore, ele tioneering tir listless, as hundreds who re eau testify. The Breekintidge men know these facie, satins denials. such no that of the Pm, can blind their, eyes. [Vex the Daily rtheinago dalctlel I . Editors: Whoever' will examine the re orts of Lunatic Asylums, of this country or Europe, annot but be struck with the very large and dis troportienate number of Insane classed as being nosed directly or hilirectly by intemperance. cal men all admit that the offspring of drunken' .arents are predisposed to some of the forms of in anity—and-it in a well established fact that drunk do frequently transmit to their children a tiered!. ary predisposition to intemperance, (as n scrofulent C0...D0N diathesis may be heralitary) and the victim fir this inherited cause, obeying the laws of • is organisation, falls readily into the eta that doth o easily beset him. Most authors on insanity dr•ide the exciting .res into moral and physical—•the line of denier tion in many instances being , very obscure and • fficult to trace. Among the physical canter, in• •mperance forms the most prominent one. Dr, take, in his valuable work on Insanity, says that • moog ttphysiesl causes, intemperance ranks first in te scale," while under the bead of moral MIR. • .me reverse of fortune. loss of friends and docostie .obles. in analysing the reported reuses of the ass. admitted into sixteen of the Hospitals for the issane in ike I aired States, we find that out of six .n thousand and forty-ono cases in which the cause was ascertained, nine thousand five hundred and •ighty-eight wore dna to physical, and six thousand ourAundred and fifty-three to moral causes. but 'DIKED thousand four hundred and sixty cases re. .orted by Drs. Antoine! S There, we find that four housand six hundred and thirty-one originated in hysical, and only two thousand eight hundred and wenty-nine In moral ceases; and in WYEtilnumber f twenty.p inn thousand seven bandied and sixty. ine case. 'admitted Into Dark,. Apilerms, we find •reefifthe referrible to phyriorit-nritbitern-afthe to "oral causes. The anneal report of our Woeterif Pennsylvania ospital for the Insane, for 1559, shows thirty-three .ages, out of throe hundred and thirty-two, as being , reduced directly by Intemperance — ranking as sec , .od in the scale et known causes of imanity, peen: • tar, difficulties and domestic troubles, coming next to frequency. In nearly all then reports, among the physical arises, comes second—and alter first—intemperance prominent among the moral causes, come -vane of fortune and domestic troubles and when e consider how very frequently these tame moral antes aro loperinduced by intemperance, we are °repelled to adruitthe frightful agency of drunken • ens In peopling our lunatic asylums sad almshouses. ' ow, in -view of these facts, is it not au imperative • uty of society to provide Immo moans of lessening his terrible cause of no moth misery and disease.— he most feasible plan, undoubtedly, is the establish emit of an Inebriate Asylum fur Western Penney!- ' ania, at or near nun city. At present, the poor in .briate is often consigned to, our common Jails, to • end with felon., pickpockett and thieves, or if over ken with Merlons, tremens, he frequently becOmes •e Inmate of our lunatic teylntge, though by DO o cans a legitimate subject for inktitutions of—that Md. We want an institution set apart and adapted •xpressly for the needs of the inebriate, and connect. • . in no manner whatever with anything that would egrade or lower the r • pectability and self respect rf thrum who may deli • to sock its advantages. The State of New Yet- ' aroused to the necessity .f providing some men.- for the reformation of lee- briates, donated $100,0 , 4 to the trustees and com missioners of the New 1 rk State Inebriate Asylum, bilabials, providing by •. act, fur ■n annual income to the same by o per .ntege levied to a certain amount upon all moni s received by the different commissioners of excise paid by those applying for, and rat:sailing licenses ' rougbo4 the State.. Goo. Morgan in his recent .. errage states that $7:000 more are needed to corn .lete it. They have already had over three thousand. applic•tiona for admimion, annul larger number start even that large iestitu. lion will be able to acco modate. Why would not the Western Pennsylvania tal near our city make an excellent 'natant° Asy. lure? We understand (bat in a short time its in. mete. will ho transferred to the new and commodi ous balsas Asylum now, to process of erection neer ilayeville, and in that event, we know of no more judicious, useful or benuvolent purpose to which it could be appropriated. 1 It would require little or no alteration to adapt it to the requirements of a first elms Inetniate Asylum than which, no institution is more imperatively needed in Onfslorloas old Com. wealth. , I. Ma. Johnson's NOMINATION.-A committee assumed the responsibility of nominating lion. Herschel' V. Johnson as ITlce•President with Mr. Douglas. This contingency was not eon templated by the anthp Convention; as Mr. For syth nod othere had urged • s:'r. Fiterrtakafter a full understanding Of his views . M r. John son, who le nominated, was - refuse admission into the Douglas Convention for not being act credited sea delegate properly. lie was for merly Governor of Georgia, and one of the most thorough placed ultr. fire-eaters and secession lets in the State, beef a being in favor of reopen ing the slave-trade. hen Mr. Cobb was pat forward as the Unto, candidate in 1850, Mr. Johtuson was amcng •Itiviolent opponentaforeur rendering the tights dale South. Thin combination s peculiarey appropriate, la view of Mr. Dangle.' denunciation of the Din unionlete, which th very conservative gentle man, Pierre Soule, r Stated as his mouthpiece et Baltinlere.--.N. Y. rib. ADTICEII-bITO bo•a rsoeired from Melbourne in London of tbo de .ferttlto for England of the undermentioned gol ships Marna Polo Owen Glendower—. Venilis.— Prieto of Waleo Mail of Judah Total ouncte Woad! The iggregoto on t to $3,745.000. .... ....... ..ccoa,ooo Iry to lEagland 111210011i1 A large field of wb l the river, harvested nod it fine crop. 51 neighborhood are no their hey crop. The be anywhere with th. !at on tha opposite side of •la week, is good wheat oy of the farmers in Ibis libarmattag and securing atter is am good as it. oan - dame trishaw:it: ~ eit .very favorable for lea and for- growing mops. has been very' favorable Ceredo eriseens. The weather has ht days, for • harremlog In, feet the .weather eine° plsottog time . Too histories of m n and parties are best writ ten after their de th. The late ,Demoaratio party is pow ready for history. it Iq a maxim to !meek no evil of he dead, bat. anything not evil said of that pa ty vouldPbe falai. It did evil sod ooly evil d that coationally. It was evil to its birth, wet la ;int 1ife...10 evil inns death. Its first bre • wir off:noire, and Ile lest s eteoth......fou raffle Jew. • • •.• TI:11 EMMEN CrT ZAtiminiipunot.:—Madi feeling. is exalted one the he Mende of this Administration t neither of the Conventions gore it the first war al ramignition,Aoletntion qv ,arinfort. Hu iIISIM.4IIII/(4ls , Atiierred se, -much from the Smith' seMr.i , Pierce received, having , enrrendered lintehl'inorc , . /I;PlinkrifCelaist, hevlcen'nentitsted: for Coogrope le the Math Mettler otMelne. Mr. Pikevretthe list !relater, of ItieViae Bones of Benvwntatf*ts, ' - Tait Wanderer of Vienna' pnblishes • letter from Ancona, dated thellth, watch says: "The Irish yesterday had ♦ fight among them selves, and wounded some of the gendarme who interfered to separate them.' The delegate btu hitherto treated the Irish like princes, and their pretensions are,. in consequence, unbounded. Every soldier insists on having hto own room, table, &a. It is to be feared that, after all, the Pontifical government will be under the nous sill of requeetiog the Irish to go home wilt:" Tue %stoney's / (Win) Democrettasin that the 1 farMers in the vicinity . of Fort Atkinson who give mortgages in aid of the old Chicago, fit. Paul, and Pond du Lac Railroad, are compro mising the hallway they oso with the mortgages Several instances are reported where the old mortgagee have been surrendered upon the pay ment in cub or moray, with Interest, of 2414 cent of the "mount. Ten Huntingdon "Union" anoonocee that Maj. Thos. Pt Campbell, (who has all hie life long been a leading Democrat to that piece,) bee bolted that vile party and come oat for Llueolo, Hamlin nod Curtin, and purposes to slump the State for them. The Major le an M lL:lent partizan worker, and his labors we bate no doubt will tell in "Old Mother Huntingdon." Tun Lancaster Intelligences eopporte Dangles, but says : " Disaster and defeat stare us In the face for the present, but the party will, sooner or later, recover from Its proetrate and disrupted oonditton, and those who were directly or lndl rectly Instrumental lo producing the present lemeatable* state of tbloge, will be held to a fearful accountability in the future." Tun Chicago Times_ says that General Joe Lane never does things by halves, but that hie opinions place him under the lian with thd Notheru Decocraay. So, dear old- Joe; you all no half-Joe but under the ben-Joe. —Louisville Journal. RAILVZOMO Iw iIIDIAMA—Many of the far mere In Tippecanoe county, will commence out tiog their wheat this week. From what we can lettro, the present honest will be one of the most plentiful known for years.—Lajayelle Journal, June 28th. A cow journal of Palermo, L' Unita halter, .comes ont with the following motto at the bead of lte programme: "One ormotry—lisly. nue Kiag—{'Motor Emanuel Ouo hero—Garibaldi." Dyspepsia I Dyspepsia I I Dyspepsta II I What is it 1 Grout Cartd' Drovers's is our National Disease—weak st.m.rb, feeble dlgreiloo, distr.. later gallon, costive habit, 'Mons toodniutt. lloar many surf. eltb It and Its attenlant . pt.oms of low spirits, bad taste, waled ofcttopernol torrof end attark• of beed•chel Yet boo few knot, ho• t C 11 1 .5 111 Ornerally, because the bowels ere conttlpeted. noon I. had to outflanks or le:alive*. Put sorb a coodlnon was serer rand by cathartics .bolo only oftlre I. to treaken the digestion .cad Impair the Integrity of the sot seelotllatlee system Hot IIfriIYLIREY'S lIUMEOPATIIIe DORY kt Pl 4 I A PlLLS—.simple costlcaLra anger plh—hare cured ban. drod. of the Inset sod moat °ballasts [611 , 81 Mole done lamp!, by Improvleg the ludo .cad restoring the Integrity of the Apr-Ilea orgatt a from •blrh good appeilts, re)t. Wes habits, • ckas hold awl buoyant spirits. Poch • med icine Is • gem, and only required to be known to be *pp-t -asted. Prtre,::.s