. ! y.~ ~--c--'''.l°.";`'"-'"--.F'"M1.',11,9'z7t7r.',-7,W-01--';l'-Tr:rt,-:.,_=-.,,,,,5r-f,.r;:.!:::0,-1-.vIn';:k'.7.-;:4',-i7,..s1,'w,z-v,,:-=,..,.:-I.n.,,,,,-,---- . . . , . . .. itifiburgit 435azettil. PUBLISHED BY TB GAI e., PUBIIBII3O ABSOOIIIIOI. TERMS OF THE GAZETTE. lass= Ilternos, by saso, per year--. 59 00. " math— TO ........ aser,lek L Lenunga Lamm by mil, per year..—. CA scialb—... EL 10. angle enP O "..--- - " Wltto,l Ronan, tingle motes, per year... 1 03. • 0 olds of 6to ID, " 1 10. • • climber 10 orritore 1 23. ...unions extra to the party tending club. for • Hob of Ilftwinore will send the E 171 .10 G.LEXIM■ ilatly. for • club of twenty, we will wed the Olozarso Gamma daily. Single «vim I ceata a Mail ontworlptioni Okay le wiwaws, anikpaperi also stopiwa erhpo tlm th 0.12131130, The Beading Matter on this Page is from Yesterday's Evening Edition. As ins been announced In our dispatches, Mr. Cann her decided to discontinue the sale atibirtificates in New York topay [open duties, having devised • better way of re lieving the mounts on the gold market, or what at /list, owing to the rage of specula tion and other exolteatents, Ii taken for such by those wbo read the quotation's In the daily papers. loatead et selling three Curl:innate, the Treasury will hiiinforth redeem at par the coupon falling due on the lit of May ensuing. In othei words, the Government °ornateness now to pay in Cold interest on **bkwitich.does not fall doe for two weeks yet. This will probably. 03 the N. Y. Tribes. remarks, largely and 'steadily' increase the apply — of Gold, and .coontervall, to tone ex tent, the efforts of those reeking to' Increase beyond reason its present market value. iatge necelpte at the New York Cas- UM $OllBO tm The recapts at the Custom noose for port duties during the present week have reached - the large amount of about three mil lion,dollers. Yesterday the deposits for du ties on rods from bond was one million and Aftraairen thousand dollars, the largest cam - elreilxifore received here in one day for do dos. kfionsiderahle proportion of this amount seas paid for goods imported by sailing vessels, a tarp last of these ships havingarrived here within a few days. The largest lam pro- Srlomly Laken in one day for duties was a lit tle over eight hundred thousand dollars— which was paid on the 01st of July, the day -before the new tariff went into operation. Among tho valuable cargoes recently ar rived at thii - port, are some of tea, which were not warehoused, bat the duties were.at once paid and the property taken in charge by it. owners. There have bean - Urge withdrawals from bond, of sugar end molassei. One arm yesterday paid the sum of 4190,000 castaini duties on these 'vides. The unsettled state ' . of tift gold market, it should he observed, tend &lino:realm the receipts stets tame; but the inipirtatious are alto large.--N. Y. Port of &Socks,. Hem Ward Beecher , ' Interview tvi the King .of Belgium. Mr. Beecher gives tho foliating account a an Inter. law with the Sind of Belgirn: "When I weir in Ghent, at the request the Americas hfinister, I commuted, in thi IMPae Of doing acme good.to our ooant oury, tt, can on the King -of Belgium. It Wld not do for me to go without some preparation. As to harrowing icourt snit, S world not; ' butl itisfeeinsent gei • white vest; and I • - did consent toget tome white gloves; and I did Canaan - tweet a stiff hat. When I had got *teat arranged for.going to can't,' a taanneruolOns that which I had been ac6ne toned, I procured a oplendid carriage and started. As I rode through the 'treats, all the bofvlooked at me and . I felt very much like a fool going to Lori. And, as I tame bathe king's residence, I thought the soldierrs knew that / was dressed op for the first time In my life in such;things—whieb:was thelfact. - I did net know what to coy to the servitme Ahem font of the stairs, or to the servitors at I the top of the Astaire;. but I made my way along 'matches; they eondaeted me through aludlouldwhisked me at once before the king. avenerabh personage. lie speaks the EnglislCiangisge.hissuitifally. lie ia tho iiintordte is the adviser of European mon-, arclut,::llloa were to lee him stressed in or ~diner}, clothes, yen' would think him :a plain ' "..Atatrinn.eitirett; butbe was dressed, from • 'TAO Crowned: bbeheed to the sole of his feet, in all sorts of .6e:staffer things and outs , • dents; "Hsstalkedtowardsmainaverystatc 1, manner;idth hieswerdrattling on the floor by his Ode; a nd :I walked toward hhe the logat:11641153.1314:: Ile bowed, and I howod. together, anal called him 'Bit' ell *rote, mad said • good many things that. I shaMd not haws said. I could not get it but of my head and I was not afraid of the King, and that I was doing some thing -disreputable. I wanted to observe Court forms; but the very desire to do so ren dered the thing impossible. I saw that he. knew it; for he smiled benignantly, and seem ed to have a fatherly tonsidaratiaa for me. Finally, In leering the room, I might to hare backed out. I did go bookies:a for one or two . steps; but then I turned and whisked through the door, .fate foremost." ItTititUTISO riot • lettor to I the editors of the New York Etttmgclitt, from Yon-Chan, - ..we drid - Chto following “tioochoir and other important cities between Shooshae and hisnkinisve yielded -to _ the assaults of the obroblnettlmmiel and disciplined Micas* lore's under-Segllsh Officers. The Imperial • ennie seems stesdlly on the advance, end it the government Octal:tuts to receive foreign aid you win probably soon hear of the down fall of Nankin and complete overthrow of die nehelpoweri his the moral hello( that ail dlXelatiet withlepen *Oil)* adjusted. Bete nits hue paid the ' indemnity of $llOO,OOO for the murderer Mr. StolutrdlOtt. It WAS lent ' to the British legation in hoed carts. Satsumee Envoy elm signed en. agreement that their master would undevistingly eesk oat the rem , Mere of Mr. 'illehirdson, and execute tern ' in the presence of the British authorities. donna Mims Caudate Da/Lenore; ot the United States steamer Vanderbilt, 6 nor en trial before a court martial assembled In the Ilsibellelphls - Eery Yard, charged with the Mordant James Gray, Damao of the Brit trh bark Saxon' on the high mu, by ehooting • noloard•ilut nuel, AS the Island of Assn ravine, maths tout of Africa, In the' month of . October lent: The Posen was seized on as Tlingit; the Vanderbilt, the commend or of the steamer ssearting - that the bark nu employed as a tender to the rebel privateer usploNe, and then hide pertion of her con-, treasta sago on board. Mr. Gray wee ahot soon situ the capture. The nbjeot has been greinently amused In the English Parlla. l alwat t end gave . =nip an Important ofHttlal LitiorellOndenue beurimr. Earylnutil, Lord MODS and Ms. inward. • , • Tie Bonk BILL . Lao Beinok—' , Where the ammois them will the oakum , be gathered together/'ii true to ying , sod one often Tallied in ...the world'a experience. So uld we as we read the •fdllowlog telegram frost Weehington in Anemia:ln paper t commlues of banters from ?few Text city has already commenced lobbying spinet the new Banking Aot. Their presenc marldon and on the door ' of the llrmse vu undid, felt In the tithe bill oppositiTon the e bill whit& blinked It yeeterdey. hey hsv liken s room at Willard's, which is aorantooly Mont sc.** Aqua parlor. where opposition to a most important =MUG of the - 00TM , mut Is Indutrloarly banked. Ws.birw bora dui' arias" of Gorarnoro D.12":11 Tall vokut of for twc of th Aitat• Union Delegates to the National Con e • v•ventht. We see the llenis Tomb Light boa a oonuntotbstion on _the• inhieet, and heartily ertu rmitgestion. There woalt be it *ma vica noselnetlons; Abe two ittattw• taw* bioro Ulm" Miles Gorannini dotes 'the :";entrinent ltwie-preve4falttaninna able Knee. Ahns represent the two grang - politioal - "Ipso 'ot polities that noartostoe lip the one -ea AO, of 00 troliine;r,Cls47o. /Emmy v as : • idiao drigad 4- VOrth a d i t lro u '• Il ta vamott It the --,,.;.„. 4 f,, m cserdpo,sad if ~rw h ichiluchllbg initioitigarattr a t Awls, ~"1 4. _ ;,, . ...000:4 4% 1 - 0 242 r 311 :31thref ir tAtaTIW 4 , t entike Yeldcut lhae!e' ' 1 • 1 • . _ THE DAILY PITTSBURGH GAZETTE. Tbo Assault and . Capture of Fort PII- low... Rebel 'Atrocities. In addition to the pretty fall amount al ready given is our dispatchee of the capture of Port Pillow and the atrocities which 101-1 1 'lowed, we give some particulars from the Cairo correspondence of the SL Louie Demo- TUB ASSAULT AID C•rftrall OP inc PORT. We have gleamed the rebate of the fight from !authentic sonnies, and they Amy be relied up on as truthlul. The rebels, under Forrest, appeased and.drove in the pickets about sun rise on Tuesday morning. The garrison of the fort consisted of about two hundred of the 13th Tennessee Volunteers and four hundred I negro artillery, all under command of Major Booth ; The gunboat No. 7 was also 'in the river. The rebels first attacked the two outer forte, and in Berard attempts to charge were repulsed. They were eon etantly reinforced, and extended their lines to the river on both aides of the fort. The garrison in the two outer forte were at length overpowered by superior numbers, and about noon evacuated them and retired, to the tort on the river. Here the fight was maintained with great obstinatly, and continued till about four p. m. The approach to thi fort from the rear is over a gentle deelivilT/6thared and fatly exposed to &raking fire from two sides of the fort.. About thirty yards from the fort is a deep ravine, running all along the front, and to steep at the bottom as to be hidden from the fort, and not commanded by Harms. The reb els chargedielth great boldness down the de clivity, and faced without blenching a mur derous flre from the gone and small arms of the fort, and crowded into the ravine where they were sheltered-from fire by the steep bank which had bean thus left by some unaccoun table neglect or ignorance- Here the rebels organized fora final charge upon the fort, af ter sentlisga flag of true, with a, demand to surrender, 'Was refused. The approach from the ravine Wks up through a deep, narrow gully, and the eteep,embankmenta of the fort. The last charge was mode about four P. lit , by the whole rebel force, and was suceessfel after a most desperatemated a and gallant d 2, ef 000 ense. The rebel armyfrom to 4,000, and succeeded by mere force of num bers. The gunboat had not been idle, but guided by eignals from the fort, poured upon the rebels s constant stream of shot and shell. She fired 200 shells, and a, testified to by those who could see, with marvelous precision and fatal effect. Major Booth, who was killed near the close of the fight, conducted the de fense with great coolness, skill, and gallantry. His last signal to the boat, was, "We are hard pressed and shill he overpowered." He re fused to surrender, however, and fought to the lath. By the uniform and voluntary tea • timmay of the rebel officers as well as the sur elvers of the fight, the negro artillery regi ments fought with Om bravery end coolness of veteran!' and served the gun. with skill and precision. They did not falter or Meal until at the last charge, when it wee evident that they would be overpowered, they broke and fled toward the river, and here commented the most barbarous and-, cruel outrages that even th e liencilikness of the rebels has perpe trated during the war. After the rebels were in undisputed posees. elan of the fort and the survivors but aurren dared, they commenced the indieeriminate I butchery of all the Federal soldiery, The ,colored_ eoldiers threw down their gnu and rated their arms In token of surrender, but not the lout attention was paid to it. They . 'continued to shoot crown all they found. A" number of them finding no quarter was even, ran over the bluff to the river, and tried to COllOO2l themselves ander the uk arid in the Moshe', were pursued by the rebel savages, and implored them to spare their lives. Their appeals were made in vain, and they were all shot down in cold Mood, and in full sight of the gunboat chased and ebot them down as they would dogs. I passed up the bank of the riv er and counted fifty dead strewed along. One bed crawled Into a hollow log and was killed [nit, another had got over the bank in the ricer, and got to • board that ran out Into the''. water. Ha My ankle (see, with his feet In the water. He laid there when exposed stark and stiff. Several had tried to hide In crevices; Finds hi-the falling bank, and could not be seen without .dilLeulty, but they were singled oat and Itilled.',Yrom the best infer motion I could:get, the white soldiers were, to every isenalderable extent,. treated in the I same way. - One of the -13th Tennessee en board—D. XV. Harrison—informs me that after the surrender he we, below the bluff. and one of the rebels presented a pistol to shoot him. Ile told him he had surrendered, and requested him not to fire. He spared him, and directed him to go up the biotite the tort. Harrison sakedhim to go before him, or he woe/114 shot by others, but he told him to go along: He started, and had not proceeded fat before he met a rebel who presented his dila". Harrison begged him not to tire, bat paying no attention to his request he fired and shot him through the shdutder, and an other shot him in the leg. He fell, and while he lay nimble to move, another came along and waVabout to fire again; when Harrison 'told hire he WU badly wounded twice =dim— Oared him not to fire. Elo asked Harrison It he had any money. He said be had a little money and 0 watch. The rebel took from him his watch and ninety-dollars in money, and left him. Harrison is probably fatally wounded. Several each eases hare been related to ma, and I think, to a , great extent, the whites and negroes were Indiserimizodely murdered. The re b el Ten • nmseaus have about' the same hitterneee egainst,Tennesseasts in tho Federal army, as 'Ultima . the siegrossa; I was told by • rebel officer that Gen. Format chat one of hie men and cut another with Ma sabre who were 1 ,shooting down prisoners. It may be so, but 1 responsible for the conduct of hie men, I land General Chalme r s stated publicly while lon the' Platte Valley, that though be did net encourage or catuntenanoe his men in 'hoot- leg down negro captives, yet that it war right and jailifiable. • - T.:plosion of a CalsSon...4 Horrible A letter from Charleston, Kanawha, gives the particulars of a disastrous accident which occurred to that vicinity a few days ago. A limber, flied with cap shell and belonging to 1011:10,zp.perationsartillery,was be g,transfen *4 from Fayette Conn House to .Lient. Frank St. Stade,. orilnence j otHier of the Division. The limber, driven by a soldier of flitamonds' Battery, named Onineky,had come from Fay ette to the 'foot of Cotton Mountain, end there laid over.until the morning., The horses were then attached; Int' had not proceeded snore Alan ons yard, before an explosion co. cured, which hurled the unfortunate driver, who was sitting on the limber, such a distance in the air, that when his mingled and muti lated form reached the earth !tan burled:at taut alert' Pelts below, the swam Um examination, it was found' - that that one leg was blown entirely etre and 'the skin, from the knee down; of *toothier on; was oomplezily severed from the bone, which appeared as dry lilt had been flestleu for weeki: One of the horses was sti l e? tir'hurt, the other escaped uninjured. Tiotatrg could be . found of the pieces bat the toogne, one hub, - and a few -spokes. Another soldier, who, at the tine,, aaisitting within twenty feet of the emmocof I the 'catastrophe, narrowly cusped .• horrible death from one of the tires, which whirled put his head with the nlooity of lightning. Tha silver adzes of Utah are creating con siderable esciturient, and knowing ono , $l7 410 surtkips. deselaymenta will tie Midi in the southern out of that Territory as soon se the weather shell permit. The rein aireadi worked is over fifteen feet in width end in messes iss tits 'workmen go down. A tunnel U Mow being tun into' it from the in side. The . southern-put Titsh modeng been knowrsto; etlatain • considerable amount of gold.-1321otado Macre Itegissar, rei 23. - - -Attic=gosnrifsri nomoau,—The Mainland Rata We:"Oa Monday of last rook, a manby tho nano of Eddliftoln PEW bona, appilod at the boasding boas. of 0.6. WilliarnAt. Clairstreet, for 100 for htn, self. and ,wife., ropronotad hitaiolf ai being alontifiaad . about 844 to mit hon. On sudsy his wife iinto.and plater 467 atoning they left. , -After tholliftt. goo the prolisiatoiet the' boardialiousa =Lied aonstassablo qnantlty`of boddlngnid ;Oar thing', and, a boarder who had prostontly tn. =plod the mane LTOOIII:erak to Eddy and Me vita; anima to have lost PM in worm "Mob was In tronkthit lad bee loft to the room, sad aooldantally left unlocked. It to 0 012 6 111 ' Eddy and his wife have gone bank to.Elttst. burith. , _. .._ , `XN II ' TieW : Orleans lino Delia notlos:' the retarn -to-ths•loysl fold a two dlittoptatterl eittisii ;:ot ,taulstani, lib°. tuivi bean sottris mith.thornamk*-1 O. At tinnar il< E. RIM wattpinsu4 .40. samba of thopYLlVldf P.srth biLv.inic a 'daliptAi